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Dragon Boat Races at Mud Island River Park

What do 46-foot-long teak-wood Dragon Boats have to do with poetry and tasty rice dumplings stuffed with sweet treats? Today, in America, Dragon Boat racing exists primarily as a festival sport and corporate team-building exercise. Its Chinese origin dates back to 278 B.C. and is inspired by the death of poet and politician Qu Yuan, who, in despair following a rift with his king, threw himself in the Miluo River to drown. According to tradition, friends and fans took to their boats and raced to save the poet, or at least to retrieve his remains before it was eaten by fish or pecked apart by hungry birds. When nobody could find a body, the people tossed sticky rice balls into the water so the fish and birds would have something to eat other than Qu Yuan. This is said to be the start of both Dragon Boat racing and the banana leaf-wrapped treats called zongzi.

Gentlemen, start your dragons!

The traditional boats are awfully narrow, but there’s good news for everybody who’s over-indulged in zongzi — or barbecue, as the case may be. The boats used for Memphis’ Duncan-Williams/St. Jude Dragon Boat races are made of fiberglass. They still have the traditional dragon head at stem and tail at stern, but are specifically designed to accommodate American appetites.

Dragon Boats require 22-person teams. One person steers. Another pounds out a steady drum rhythm. The remaining 20 are charged with synchronized paddling.

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Indie Memphis Film Festival Partners With Starz

Television network and streaming media company Starz has announced a partnership with the Indie Memphis Film Festival to begin during the upcoming festival, running from November 3-10. 

“Starz Digital is pleased to announce sponsorship support for the Indie Memphis Film Festival,” said Mara Winokur, SVP, Digital at Starz. “Our group has shown the film community that we are ‘indie-friendly,’ providing a high-quality home for their movies. We are delighted to continue our collaboration with independent filmmakers by showcasing this event to our partners and consumers alike.”

In addition to sponsor support, Starz will be flying in representatives from its various distribution partners to scout the festival’s offerings. 

“We are thrilled that Starz Digital chose to join Indie Memphis as a Spotlight Sponsor and host guests in our city,” says Ryan Watt, Interim Executive Director of Indie Memphis. “Sponsor support is critical to the success of our festival, Starz Digital will have a significant presence at the event, joining presenting sponsor
Duncan Williams Inc. It means so much to have an industry leader in digital media endorse what we are doing at Indie Memphis.”

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Opinion

Investing in The Bass Pro Pyramid

Bass-Pro-Shops-Memphis-Pyramid-Store.jpg

Moved by mordant curiousity and a falling stock market, I called a local bond trader to see how those Bass Pro Pyramid bonds are doing now that the Bassmasters have admitted that this deal won’t be done until late 2014, if ever.

Bass Pro founder Johnny Morris has changed his mind again. The new details are, why bother, check the daily and its puff piece. Something about an elevator. Or an inclinator. Or two of them. This is his baby. It will probably change a few more times. Remember the glass band all the way around when he came here for the big announcement and fish fry a couple years ago? Here’s a less flattering piece from the national media.

All Memphis can do is wait and hope. And invest, if you’re brave enough.

Thanks to Johnny Lessley at Duncan Williams for the bond info. You’ll need a minimum of $5000 or more likely $100,000 to get in the game. These bonds are not widely traded. Mutual funds and insurance companies scooped up most of them in the initial offering. Some days they’re available and some days they’re not. It isn’t like buying cheeseburgers at McDonald’s except that a bad one can make you really sick.

There were three different bonds on this project, two of them taxable and one tax free, with different maturities as far out as 2030. A taxable 2030 will get you five percent interest if you can find one. A tax-free bond priced at $98.50 at issue, slightly below par, is $108 or $109 today. Not because Bass Pro’s prospects or the future of downtown Memphis has changed, but because interest rates have fallen since 2011. The bonds are rated “A.”

They’re backed by Tourism Development Zone (TDZ) revenue. A TDZ is a legislative creation to build convention centers in Nashville and Memphis, since distorted for all kinds of purposes and places. The Bass Pro bonds are not revenue bonds or general obligation bonds, which would be backed by the taxing authority of the city of Memphis. The interest payments come from TDZ funds collected downtown. MLGW is a big contributor. Nothing says “tourism” like “utility company” does it?

Bass Pro doesn’t start making payments until the super store opens. That will improve the debt service outlook because more state sales taxes will be rebated to the city.

Could Bass Pro Pyramid become another AutoZone Park, where the bond holders took what is called “a haircut” and didn’t get the payments they expected? Possible, but those bonds were backed by luxury suite revenue projections which turned out to be way too optimistic. That said, Bass Pro was supposed to be open late this year, so we’re talking about several million in lost sales taxes if this store is the retail monster it is touted to be. And Bass Pro, we have often been reminded, is just one part of the overall redevelopment of the Pinch District and Convention Center. Nothing is happening there, and nothing is likely to happen for at least another year in light of this week’s announcement.

So show your love and buy yourself a bond or two. If you can put your treasure in the promises of Johnny Morris and Robert Lipscomb and the retailing future of downtown Memphis for the next 17 years you’ve got a stronger stomach than I do.