Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Local Film and Television Commission Creates Emergency Fund for Film and TV Production Workers

courtesy NBC Universal

Director Andy Wolk on the set of Bluff City Law.

2019 was a banner year for film and television production in Memphis, with big, national productions coming to town to film in authentic environments. But now, with production at a halt worldwide because of the COVID-19 pandemic, the workers who staffed those productions are hurting. The Memphis and Shelby County Film and Television Commission has started a program to try to help.

“Our crew has worked hard on projects small and big – projects like Netflix’s Uncorked, Hallmark’s Christmas at Graceland, and NBC-Universal’s Bluff City Law,” says Film Commissioner Linn Sitler. “All have had a huge impact on the Memphis economy and Memphis tourism! Now’s the time for all of us to try to assist the local crew.”

The Commission’s help comes in the form of a fund that can help out struggling crew members and their families with emergency grants. More than $5,000 has already been raised through donations and a GoFundMe campaign. The program is modeled after one started by Nathan Thompson of the Nashville Filmmakers Guild, which was one of the early donors to the Shelby County fund.

“We’re hopeful that we can secure some major grants,” said Gale Jones Carson, chairman of the Memphis and Shelby County Film and Television Commission/Foundation. “When people think of the pleasure they have received from many of the productions our local crew has worked on, I think those that can give, will give. It’s all about helping those who have provided us enjoyment. It’s about securing the future of the film industry in Memphis and Shelby County.”

Relief grants of $500 are available to Shelby County residents who make more than 50 percent of their income from film and TV work, and who have lost work due to the coronavirus pandemic. If you would like to apply for a grant, or donate to the fund, visit the Shelby County Film and Television Commission website for details.

Categories
News News Blog

Shelby County Coronavirus Cases Up 41 to 1,807; Deaths Rise by 1 to 38

Shelby County now has 1,807 confirmed COVID-19 cases, up by 41 from Sunday’s count of 1,766. The total number of deaths in Shelby County attributed to COVID-19 rose by 1 to 38 up from 37 from Friday.

Categories
News News Blog

Artist Emergency Fund Distributes Grants

ArtsMemphis and Music Export Memphis are distributing $77,190 to 159 artists in Shelby County. The funds come from the Artist Emergency Fund, which became public April 1st and supports artists of all types across music, visual art, film and media arts, literary art, theater, and dance.

The fund was created through a Community Foundation of Greater Memphis COVID-19 Regional Response Fund grant and was compounded with contributions from the Assisi Foundation, Crosstown Arts, Hyde Family Foundation, and individual donors to Music Export Memphis.

Additionally, the Kresge Foundation is giving $100,000 to ArtsMemphis and $85,000 to Music Export Memphis to make continued Artist Emergency Fund granting possible.

ArtsMemphis began a community-wide survey on March 18, 2020 of arts organizations and individual artists across Shelby County to assess the impact of COVID-19. As of this week, 61 organizations and 200 individuals had completed the survey.

Survey data forecasts a total projected loss of income for March 2020 exceeding $1.19 million for organizations and $507K for individuals. Anticipated loss of income for April-June based on cancellations/postponements exceeds $7.4 million for organizations and $1.45 million for individuals. See full survey data here.

The application deadline for the next round of Artist Emergency Fund grants is April 22. Among applications of all artistic genres, Music Export Memphis will continue to partner with ArtsMemphis in receipt, review and reallocation of funds to local musicians.

“In our first round of applicants we saw an average reported loss for musicians of more than $4,000, just for gigs canceled in March and early April,” says Elizabeth Cawein, executive director of Music Export Memphis. “The hit to music professionals who rely on live performance to make a living is truly catastrophic, and it’s far from over.”

Artists may learn more and apply here.

Categories
Letter From The Editor Opinion

The Great Divide

I was driving back roads north of Memphis last Saturday, up around Shelby Forest, which, it turned out, was closed due to the COVID-19 situation. The locals, however, didn’t seem to be much worried about it.

At a country gas station/convenience store where I stopped, it could have been April 2019. There was no difference in behavior among the patrons, no evidence whatsoever that the disease that is consuming most of the country’s attention even existed. Six bikers sat at a picnic table eating sandwiches and chips. People stood in line inside, and came and went from the pumps to the store with casual indifference to the six-feet-apart warning. A couple of them looked sideways at the weirdo wearing a mask and wiping down the handle at the gas pump. I smiled at them, but they couldn’t see it.

Maybe they’re onto something. Maybe the sneaky virus doesn’t pose as much of a danger to country folks who already live separated from their neighbors, who gather only at convenience stores on a pleasant Saturday afternoon. It seemed to be a bet most of them were making.

It’s a point of view echoed by Rush Limbaugh and numerous other, er, conservatives, who contend that the economy is being closed down to ruin Donald Trump’s chances of re-election. They say that the disease threat is being exaggerated and that the “leftists” are all in on it, especially the media. According to Rush and the president’s other cheerleaders, those of us in the media are apparently so intent on bringing down the president, we’re willing to destroy our own businesses — and the businesses of all our advertisers — to spite the president. Logic!

Logical or not, it’s a sentiment that’s gaining momentum in the White House, as the president looks to “reopen the country” as soon as possible. Since the president didn’t “shut down” the country — governors and other local officials did — there is some confusion as to how exactly he’d open it up.

Trump said Monday at his daily briefing that, as president, his “authority is total.” When it was pointed out by a reporter that it’s actually the governors who have the power to decide when to open up their states, Trump fumed and turned red and insulted the reporter. The next day, he tweeted something about “Mutiny on the Bounty” and suggested the “Democratic governors” were mutineers who should remember they “need so much from the Captain.” Meaning, I suppose, that Trump will continue using federal aid for the fight against coronavirus as a political weapon, just as he has been for weeks. People are dying because the president doesn’t like the level of “respect” he gets from certain governors. History will not be kind to Captain Trump.

So, what happens when Trump gets antsy and decides to unilaterally declare the country “open for business” on, say May 15th? If past is prologue, most GOP governors will supinely follow the president’s lead and declare that their states — Mississippi, Georgia, Missouri, Oklahoma, Tennessee, to name a few — are magically out of danger and ready to roll. Everything’s back to normal!

Governors who think science and medical expertise are more important markers for public safety than ideology or obeisance to the president will likely move more cautiously, hoping to avoid a resurgence of the disease in their state.

This will “open up America” in an entirely new way. A great Darwinian experiment will ensue, as Americans divide into two camps: those who believe in the president and who will gleefully return to normal activities, and those who think he’s a fool and who will keep wearing masks and distancing until scientists and medical experts say to do otherwise. Masks will become the progressive version of the MAGA hat, the mark of a socialist wussy who doesn’t believe in Trump.

My clever friend (and former Memphis magazine editor) Ed Weathers proposed this week that when Trump reopens the economy, he should hold large rallies in swing states and shake lots of hands, just to prove how right he is. For the record, I think this is a brilliant plan and I hope someone suggests it to The Donald.

So which side will turn out to be right? It should be easy to keep score. If Trump is correct and the disease just “goes away,” the maskers will look like sissies. If, on the other hand, the scientists of the world are correct, those of us who believed them will have the last laugh.

Literally.

Categories
Music Music Blog

Memphis Flyer Music Blog to List Live-Streamed Performances

Erica Winchester

Graham Winchester live-streaming from his home studio.

Memphis musicians, who are deeply familiar with improvising, are quickly adapting to the new reality of the quarantined life now with a plethora of live-streamed events. And they are attracting music fans like never before. Once often considered an after-thought, a footnote to actual events in brick-and-mortar venues, live-streamed concerts are now the only way music fans can hear fresh sounds.

Accordingly, the Memphis Flyer will be making as comprehensive a list of live-streamed events as possible, every week here in the Flyer‘s music blog. We ask that all musical performers wishing to list an event do so in the form of a direct message to our music blog’s Twitter account, @memphlyermusic. This can be as simple as a link to the event on your social media or app of choice, or a written description of the performer(s) and platform, including the date and time, of course!

Because our emails are often inundated with other promotional messages, we ask that you use this Twitter account to alert us to your online shows. Do so by 5 p.m. every Wednesday to be included in listings that cover the week to come, to be posted every Thursday morning.

As we see it, this may be the new normal for some time, and even after COVID-19 tests or vaccines are more widespread, the live-streaming will likely go on at this ramped-up rate. Jump in on the ground floor of our listings, and you’ll be on our radar as we expand the attention we focus on live-streamed events. Watch this space for the day when we first post a review of a live-streamed show!

Until then, hone both your playing and your video-selfie chops and get ready to go virtual. Everyone’s doing it!

Categories
News News Blog

Groups Challenge Order to Postpone Elective Medical Procedures, Abortions


The Center for Reproductive Rights, along with two other organizations, is challenging an order by Tennessee Governor Bill Lee that essentially bans abortion procedures in the state.

Last week, in an executive order responding to the COVID-19 pandemic, Lee moved to limit “non-emergency healthcare procedures” until at least the end of the month. The order does not specifically cite abortion services, but instead reads in part, “All healthcare professionals and healthcare facilities in the state of Tennessee shall postpone surgical and invasive procedures that are elective and non-urgent.”

According to the order, these procedures include those that can be delayed because they do not “provide life-sustaining treatment, to prevent death or risk of substantial impairment of a major bodily function, or to prevent rapid deterioration or serious adverse consequences to a patient’s physical condition.” Read the full order below.

[pdf-1]

Patients who are less than 11 weeks pregnant will still be permitted to obtain medication abortions in the state.

The Center for Reproductive Rights, Planned Parenthood Federation of America, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), and the ACLU of Tennessee filed an emergency lawsuit Tuesday to challenge the order.

The lawsuit argues that the governor’s order effectively bans abortion in the sate, violating Roe v. Wade, as well as a women’s right to liberty and autonomy under the Fourteenth Amendment.

[pullquote-1]

Additionally, the lawsuit argues that forcing women to travel out of state for abortion care or to carry an unwanted pregnancy to term, will increase the risks of COVID-19 spread.

Hedy Weinberg, director of the ACLU of Tennessee, said the actions of the state government “must be driven by science and public health, not politics.”

“The COVID-19 crisis cannot be used to prevent women from obtaining abortions,” Weinberg said. “Abortion is time sensitive and essential, and is not an elective procedure. You cannot just press pause on a pregnancy. During pandemic, women must still have access to a full spectrum of reproductive health care, including abortion, to protect their health.”

Ashley Coffield, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood of Tennessee and North Mississippi, said “abortion cannot wait.”

Unlike some medical procedures, delays can make it impossible for patients to access safe and legal abortions, she said. Coffield also adds that this order will “undoubtedly disproportionately” impact vulnerable communities, such as communities of color, young people, those with low incomes, and the LGBTQ community.

“These folks are making difficult decisions about how to pay bills and care for their families during a pandemic — they should not be forced to continue a pregnancy against their will, too,” Coffield.

Rebecca Terrell, executive of CHOICES Memphis Center for Reproductive Health, said that abortion is time sensitive: “Our patients cannot wait until this pandemic is over. They are panicking and many have no idea when or if they’ll be able to have an abortion. Patients are now being forced to travel out of state, which will only harm efforts to contain the spread of the virus. There is no sense in denying them abortion care here in their own communities.”

Read the full complaint below. 


[pdf-2]

Categories
Letter From The Editor Opinion

Strange Days

Welcome to the Memphis Flyer‘s first digital-only issue. We’ve spent the past few days reinventing our production cycle in order to post our regular weekly print content for the web every Wednesday. And, to make it more fun, we’re doing it remotely, via Slack. None of that wussy face-to-face communication stuff for us.

In fact, I think it’s safe to say that none of us on staff have seen a Flyer compatriot for almost four weeks. Although that might have been Toby Sells I saw in the produce aisle at Fresh Market the other day. Not sure. We were both wearing masks and hazmat suits.

These are strange days, indeed. We hope you’re all staying safe and staying home — and wearing masks and staying six feet apart if you go out.

One of the hazards of staying home is that you might possibly be tempted to watch President Trump’s Traveling Salvation Show on television each afternoon. It’s like a train wreck into a dumpster fire, only not as well-organized. It’s supposed to be a daily update on the coronavirus, which it decidedly is not. It is, to be blunt, a shit show.

It begins with Trump emerging, blimp-like, from behind the curtain and proceeding to the podium. He looks down at the assembled reporters sitting in front of him. He smirks or sneers, depending on his mood. He then looks at the words that have been written for him to say in the notebook on his podium. He reads a sentence or two. Then, like a Bizarro-World hip-hop artist, he just starts free-styling, just letting his words flow, finding his groove, trying out new material. Almost none of what he says is true, but it fills airtime and keeps the president on television, where he loves to be. Here is some of the material he tried out on Monday:

People are being tested [for COVID] when they get on airplanes. Nope. You just made that up.

We inherited outdated coronavirus tests from the Obama administration. Nope. Coronavirus didn’t exist until 2019, so there were no tests for it.

The small business lending program is working really well. Nope. It’s been a total nightmare, with businesses and banks alike complaining that it’s confusing and difficult to implement. There have been well-reported system-wide failures.

China never spent money in our country. Now they will. Nope. China has spent an average of $100 billion a year in the U.S. since 2011. And that’s not counting their real estate and industrial investments.

And on it goes, ad nauseam. Lie after lie after lie after lie. The president of the United States, openly gaslighting the country on national television. It happens seven days a week, now. We’ve normalized this, let it into the country’s zeitgeist — a leader who brazenly lies to us. Every damn day. With no consequences — for him.

There are consequences for us, as Americans. In the absence of truth from our president, there is naturally an information vacuum to be filled. What’s “true” becomes yet another form of free-styling — just throw out some theories and see what floats to the surface on social media. In the past week, I’ve read:

1) Hospitals in blue states are claiming as many deaths as possible are COVID — flu, pneumonia, heart attacks, even cancer — in order to make the president look bad.

2) Hospitals in red states like Florida are hiding COVID deaths, declaring hundreds of fatalities as being from “unknown causes” to protect the president and Republican governors.

3) The COVID-19 virus was created by a Harvard scientist named Ron Leiber and unleashed on the world by China, which is in cahoots with Nancy Pelosi. I could go on.

And that doesn’t even touch the madness of the QANON folks, who claim the COVID is a cover-up for Bill Gates, whose 5-G internet microwaves are what’s really killing us all. The Q-Nuts also came up with the phrase “China Virus,” which the president and the secretary of state used for a few weeks.

Who the hell can you trust? I have to say at this point, we’re down to our local leaders, those we can vote in or out — or complain to in person. The November national elections, if they happen, appear to be the only hope of correcting the country’s course.

So it’s important to just … disengage at times, as difficult as that may be. Unplug. Listen to music. Get some takeout from one of your favorite local restaurants. Sit on your porch. Take a walk. Wash your masks.

On Sunday, I drove over to the Links of Galloway golf course to get some fresh air. There were no golfers, except for an occasional solo walking around and hitting balls onto greens with no pins. The course had become something of a public park, with lots of walkers, joggers, cyclists, babies in strollers, and even a couple of kids fishing in the ponds. It felt tranquil, almost — dare I say it? — normal. I took some comfort in it.

And these days, you take your comforts where you can.
Greg Cravens

Categories
Opinion The Last Word

It’s Time To Let Low-Level Offenders Out of Jail

The COVID-19 pandemic has people keeping their distance from each other, but what if you had no choice but to be in a crowded room, sharing a sink and a toilet, unable to so much as sanitize your hands or step away from a person when they sneezed?

America’s culture of mass incarceration is unnecessarily forcing hundreds of thousands of people to crowd together, often with substandard sanitation and medical care. They’re prisoners held for low-level offenses such as shoplifting, drug possession, and even driving with a suspended license. For their sake, and ours, we need to let them out.

Many of our prisons and jails are overcrowded. Even the ones not considered overcrowded house strangers in close proximity, with a revolving door of inmates. Jails, which mostly house people who have not yet been convicted, move people in and out on a constant basis. As medical experts will tell you, this is a recipe for coronavirus disaster. You cannot practice social distancing in prison.

Atman | Dreamstime.com

You can’t social distance in an overcrowded jail.

It’s also a constitutional issue. Keeping prisoners in unhealthy conditions can constitute “cruel and unusual punishment” in violation of the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments. The standard is lenient. Prisoners must prove that prison officials acted with “deliberate indifference” to prisoners’ well-being. The Supreme Court has stated that exposure of prisoners to a “serious communicable disease,” even if the prisoners currently show no symptoms, can meet this standard. Most would agree that COVID-19 qualifies as a “serious communicable disease.”

This injustice is even worse with respect to the roughly half-million people jailed in the U.S. who haven’t been convicted. Under the Due Process Clause, they’re entitled to at least as much protection as those actually convicted. Such people are being held awaiting trial — some because a judge has determined they are likely to flee or be dangerous, but most simply because they can’t afford bail. To add insult to injury, many federal courts have suspended jury trials under the Speedy Trial Act’s emergency provisions, ensuring that those people remain in jail even longer while awaiting a trial. Surely, we can release many of these people pending trial without serious risk.

This isn’t just a question of justice; it’s sound health policy. Prisoners constantly cycling in and out of crowded prisons can spread coronavirus to the population at large. The virus is already spreading at New York’s Rikers Island facility. Our mass incarceration regime can mass-produce thousands of Typhoid Marys. No reasonable person would urge the release of dangerous prisoners who have committed serious crimes. But a large percentage are held for nonviolent drug, property, or “public order” offenses like prostitution, public drunkenness, and even driving on a suspended license. They would pose less of a public safety threat healthy and released than as potential pandemic vectors.

Los Angeles, Cleveland, and Boston have already decided to release prisoners deemed low-risk. Other cities are not only releasing some inmates but slowing down the influx of more. Baltimore prosecutors are no longer prosecuting most drug, prostitution, and other public order offenses.

The federal system has announced no policy regarding releasing low-risk prisoners or slowing the influx of new low-level, nonviolent offenders. Thankfully, Immigrations and Customs Enforcement has temporarily suspended most immigration arrests, reserving arrests for those who pose a public safety threat or whose confinement is mandatory.

New Orleans prosecutors have gone the opposite direction, arguing to judges that inmates have to be kept in jail precisely because they may pose a public health risk even if they don’t have the virus. They have also argued that release policies are unnecessary because there are no confirmed COVID-19 cases in the jail — precisely the type of short-sighted decision-making we can’t afford in this pandemic. If we wait for outbreaks in our jails and prisons, it will be too late.

Prosecutors should suspend prosecutions for nonviolent, low-level offenses. Jails should release nonviolent pretrial detainees who languish in jail simply because they cannot afford bail. Prisons should release low-level, non-public-safety offenders who are near their release term anyway. For others charged with or convicted of similar offenses, they should consider parole, home confinement with ankle bracelet monitoring, or other alternatives to traditional incarceration until we are certain the pandemic is behind us. Finally, we need to implement nationwide testing for COVID-19 in jails and prisons. The time to act is now. It’s a matter not only of justice, but societal self-defense.

Steven Mulroy is a former federal prosecutor and county commissioner who teaches criminal law at the University of Memphis. Brice Timmons is a civil rights lawyer at the law firm of Black McLaren Jones Ryland & Griffee, P.C., Memphis.

Categories
News News Blog

Fund Set Up For Laid Off Hospitality Workers

Welcome to Memphis is disseminating financial assistance to Memphis area hospitality professionals affected by the coronavirus pandemic through the Welcome to Memphis COVID-19 Fund.

Hourly workers in the hospitality industry who have been terminated due to the COVID-19 crisis may apply for a one-time grant online at the Welcome to Memphis website. These grants are funded by the Mid-South COVID-19 Regional Response Fund, hosted by the Community Foundation of Greater Memphis (CFGM).

The application period ends at 6 p.m., Monday, April 6th. The week of April 6, Welcome to Memphis will start awarding one-time grants of $300 each. There will be a limited number of grants depending on the amount of money available.

Eligible applicants include hourly employees of hotels, restaurants, bars, tourist attractions, convention services, and tour operations in the Memphis area. Applicants will need to provide their name, contact information, employer and employer contact information, proof of work such as a pay stub or W2, a government issued ID, and proof of termination.

Recipients will be chosen through a lottery-style system after the application deadline closes.

The Community Foundation of Greater Memphis has established a separate fund specifically for the Memphis hospitality industry. Donations can be made here.

All donations made through this fund will be disseminated through Welcome to Memphis to Memphis-area hospitality workers who have been furloughed or terminated due to COVID-19.

Welcome to Memphis is a nonprofit subsidiary of Memphis Tourism. It trains hospitality employees to know about Memphis, and offers professional development training, certification, recognition, and resources.

Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

Lee Firms Up Previous Order, Makes ‘Stay-at-Home’ Mandatory

Tennessee Governor Bill Lee announced Thursday he would sign Executive Order 23 requiring that Tennesseans “not carrying out essential activities” must stay at home as data shows an increase in citizen movement across the state.

Until now, the Governor had resisted mounting pressure to issue such an order, having previously contented himself with “urging” Tennesseans to stay close to home.

In his statement Thursday, Lee said, “Over the last few weeks, we have seen decreases in movement around the state as Tennesseans socially distance and stay at home. However, in recent days we have seen data indicating that movement may be increasing and we must get these numbers trending back down. I have updated my previous executive order to clearly require that Tennesseans stay at home unless they are carrying out essential activities.”

The press release containing the new order cited data from the Tennessee Department of Transportation regarding traffic patterns for March 2020. “While safer at home measures and further restrictions on businesses showed a steep drop-off in vehicle movement from March 13-29, data beginning on March 30 indicates travel is trending upwards, again.”

Analysis of cell phone mobility and other “movement trends” in the population, “trending toward pre-COVID-19 levels,” figured into his reasoning, Lee said.

The new executive order will remain in effect until April 14, 2020 at midnight.