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Memphis: Sports Talkin’

As a media market, Memphis ranks 51st in the United States, according to Nielsen, behind several cities of comparable size. However, when it comes to sports-talk radio, that rating number shoots up into the 20s. Much of that is based on the current success of one FM station, 92.9 WMFS, and its roster of talent — which includes Gary Parrish, the top-rated sports host in town. But it also has something to do with the fact that, as a format, sports-talk is as deeply ingrained in the Memphis community as the teams we follow. And that story starts with George Lapides.

Like most of the prominent sports-talk radio hosts in Memphis, Lapides (who died earlier this year of the rare lung disease idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis) got his start in print journalism. As a former sports editor and columnist for the Memphis Press-Scimitar, which ceased publication in 1983, Lapides had imbedded himself in Memphis sports culture from the mid-’60s. But it wasn’t until 1971 that he launched his pioneering radio show, Sports Time, and truly found his calling. In some form or fashion, Sports Time with George Lapides ran continuously on Memphis airwaves for more than 45 years, making it the longest-running sports-talk show in history.

George Lapides

“George basically introduced the format to Memphis,” says Eli Savoie, the program director and midday host (with Greg Gaston) on Sports 56 AM, home to Lapides and Sports Time for the last two decades. “He was one of, if not the first, newspaper man to switch to radio; he showed it could be done. There isn’t a sports-talk host in Memphis who hasn’t crossed paths with George or been influenced by him.”

J.D. Reager

Geoff Calkins

“You couldn’t have a lot of ego, working with George,” says Geoff Calkins, the lead sports columnist for The Commercial Appeal, Lapides’ former co-host on 560 AM, and the current host of the 9 to 11 a.m. slot on 92.9. “He made it clear he ran the show, but we had a mutual respect for each other. We both had our roots in print journalism. I thought we played off each other well. As I have often said about George, I admire that he always thought of himself as a reporter, always cared about getting the story and getting the story right. That was as true at the end of his show as it was when he first began.” 

Those sentiments are echoed by another of Lapides’ longtime radio partners, and a Memphis radio legend in his own right, Dave Woloshin, who currently hosts the show in Lapides’ old time slot (7 to 10 a.m.) on 560 AM and has been the voice of the University of Memphis Tigers team for 25 years.

J.D. Reager

Dave Woloshin

“George’s legacy can be found at every station,” he says. “It cannot be overstated.”

What also cannot be overstated is how much 92.9 is kicking everyone else’s ass in the sports-talk ratings. The station’s Nielsen ratings are more than double those of 560 AM, and the other local sports station in town, 730 AM, doesn’t even chart. A lot of that comes from 92.9 FM’s strong FM signal (560 AM simulcasts on 87.7 FM, but the strength on that band is weak) and the fact that it’s the local ESPN affiliate and the flagship station of the Memphis Grizzlies.

“We suffered with them through the lean years,” says Savoie, whose station was the Grizzlies home when the team wasn’t winning. “It’s definitely an advantage for them.”

The Unconventional Approach

But there is another element that has contributed to 92.9’s sports-talk success: its hosts’ unconventional approach to the genre. For better or worse, the hosts on Sports 56 tend to stick more closely to a traditional format — news and stories related to sports — and rarely venture into social issues or pop culture. At 92.9 FM, those rules have gone out the window. On any given afternoon, you are as likely to hear Parrish discuss race politics or local restaurants or celebrity boobs as you are sports, and that has become part of his appeal.

“I think the biggest thing is that I’m a natural storyteller, and I’ve always been one,” says Parrish, whose show is on every weekday from 4 to 6 p.m. “Sitting at a cafeteria table as a kid, standing at a bar with friends as an adult, I could always tell a story. So that’s part of it, for sure. And everything is rooted in that. I also construct the show in a way that appeals to a larger audience than most sports shows. For instance, sometimes people will tweet me and tell me to ‘stick to sports.’ What they don’t realize is that I’m purposely not sticking to sports, and for two reasons: One, because I have interests outside of sports, and I enjoy discussing them. And, two, because I’m going to have sports fans listening no matter what. I’m on a sports station. So I’ve got sports fans no matter what. But, because I venture outside of sports so often, I also have non-sports fans listening.”

According to Brad Carson, the director of branding and sports programming at 92.9 FM and the on-air producer of The Gary Parrish Show, that approach isn’t just limited to Parrish. It’s practically become a station-wide mantra.

J.D. Reager

Brad Carson

“Along with being a brilliant storyteller, host, reporter, and entertainer, Gary gave us the opportunity to learn how to build our radio station and develop something fun, different, and compelling,” he says. “We encourage all of our hosts to be themselves.”

This stylistic difference isn’t lost on the competition, either. “The moniker of the station [560 AM] is ‘Real Sports,'” says Woloshin. “I can only do the show the way I know how. I’m all for talking about myself and my life, but sports is still the most important thing.”

“Free Verno”

If there’s a chink in 92.9 FM’s armor, it is the recent departure of one of the station’s most popular and outspoken hosts, Chris Vernon.

Vernon, who, like most local sports-talk radio personalities, got his start on 560 AM before leaving for greener pastures (first 730 AM, and eventually 92.9 FM), parted ways with the station in September, when an agreement on a contract extension could not be reached. And while the higher-ups at 92.9 FM have certainly tried to keep the negotiations and subsequent ill-will under wraps, Vernon and his rabid fanbase would not be denied. Before long, the hashtag “#FreeVerno” was trending on social media and personal shots were fired — mostly between Vernon and Dan Barron, general manager of Entercom, the radio conglomerate that operates 92.9 FM. The rift became irreparable.

J.D. Reager

Chris Vernon

“I knew I would eventually have other opportunities, and I didn’t like the fighting,” says Vernon. “After the way everything went down, I just thought [92.9 FM] wasn’t the place for me anymore. Whether I’ve been on AM or FM, big station or small, my fans have always been extremely loyal to me and my advertisers, so I knew I’d be fine wherever I ended up.”

For their part, the higher-ups at 92.9 FM are playing it, if not tight-lipped, at least fairly cool, when it comes to Vernon.

“There’s no animosity from our point of view,” says Carson. “He is a super talent, and we had a great working relationship throughout his time with us. Chris chose to move on and do something different. We respect that. He has different professional goals that will advance his career. I think often times in these scenarios some folks like to find a villain. There’s no villain here.”

Whether or not there’s a villain, one thing is clear: There is bad blood. And Parrish, who is both Vernon’s longtime friend (and, briefly, former co-host when the two were on 730 AM) and an inside observer of the situation, sees it clearly.

“I hated that it got so ugly, publicly, because on one side, I had a close friend, and on the other side was one of my employers,” he says. “I was very much in the middle of everything. It wasn’t fun. But, ultimately, Vernon did what he thought was best for his career, and then the station moved on as best it could. In the end, I think all parties will be fine. But those were a wild few weeks, absolutely.”

For those who are still wondering, Vernon has landed on his feet. He hosts a podcast version of The Chris Vernon Show as a part of Grind City Media, the Grizzlies’ new in-house media outlet, and produces viral videos to go along with it. He’s also doing a regular NBA podcast for nationally known sports reporter/author/TV-host Bill Simmons’ latest, post-ESPN media iteration, The Ringer, and doing Grizzlies pre- and post-game work.

“He [Simmons] and I met when the Grizzlies were in the NBA Western Conference finals in 2013,” says Vernon. “He was covering the games for ABC. We stayed in contact, and I had him on my show on 92.9 FM a few times. Everyone over there is cool.”

As for his Grind City Media podcast, it has been somewhat sporadic in its early stages, with shows varying in length and regularity. But the long-term plan is for the Grizzlies to build Vernon a studio — similar to what DirectTV did for former ESPN radio host and SportsCenter anchor Dan Patrick when it hired him away from the mothership — and have his show available as both a live internet TV show as well as an on-demand podcast.

“We found out the same way everybody else did that Vernon’s relationship with 92.9 FM didn’t work out,” says Jason Wexler, president of business operations for the Grizzlies and the head of Grind City Media. “Once he was available, it seemed logical to have a conversation with him and see what we could do together. We liked everything he brings to table — a dedicated audience, marketplace credibility, and a unique voice.”

“I don’t need to be on terrestrial radio anymore,” says Vernon. “Things are changing in radio. People are not on my time, they are on their own time. They listen to podcasts on-demand, when they want to. Traditional radio is dying.”

Jason and John

If traditional radio is dying, that’s news to 92.9 FM. To fill Vernon’s 11 to 2 p.m. slot, the station has turned to two fresh voices — both former Commercial Appeal sports reporters: John Martin and Jason Smith. The duo launched their show in October, and despite some rookie jitters early on, has started to establish its own voice on the airwaves.

J.D. Reager

Jason Smith

“I’ve been incredibly impressed,” says Calkins, who originally brought Martin in to the 92.9 FM fold as his on-air producer and has been a steadfast supporter of Smith over the years. “Let’s be honest, it was past time for the station to add an African-American host [Smith], and Jason is going to be a star. He’s connected, he’s thoughtful, and he’s fabulous on TV and radio. Although I had great regard for Jason as a colleague at The Commercial Appeal, I often wondered why he wasn’t doing TV or radio. He’s a natural. He’s both passionate and genuine. That’s a combination that will take him far.

“As for John, I wouldn’t have insisted on him as my producer if I didn’t think he had what it takes. In many ways, John is the engine of that show. So I knew the two of them would be good together, but I didn’t think they’d be this good, this fast.”

J.D. Reager

John Martin

Both Martin and Smith have acknowledged the immense challenge of filling Vernon’s shoes in a market where he was clearly beloved.

“I’ll tell you this: I didn’t want that job at first,” says Martin. “Are you kidding me? Did you see the response on social media? I didn’t want to follow Chris. I wanted my own show, but not if it meant having to step into that firestorm.”

“There is no replacing Verno,” agrees Smith. “All John and I can do is grind and try to put together the absolute best show we can each day.”

One thing that has helped Martin and Smith through their first few months together on the air is the steadying presence of Jon Roser, Vernon’s former producer/sidekick for 10 years. In fact, one could easily argue that breaking up the team of Vernon and Roser, who were the Johnny Carson and Ed McMahon of Memphis radio, was the biggest drawback of the “#FreeVerno” fallout. However, one host’s loss has turned into Martin and Smith’s gain.

“Jon Roser has been very helpful for Jason and John and has made great suggestions,” says Carson. “It helps that they are friends as well. Jon has encouraged Jason and John to grow the midday show.”

A Good Understanding

So for now, with Vernon gone and Roser working on a new show, Parrish and Carson have become 92.9 FM’s flagship duo. Their chemistry — probably best described as “mock-adversarial,” with the more liberal, free-wheeling Parrish lightly (and, at times, not-so-lightly) picking on the more straight-laced Carson for a litany of differences in opinion — essentially drives the show and feels unforced. But it wasn’t always this easy for them.

“Brad and I have a really good understanding of each other now, and he knows how to be my producer,” says Parrish. “Did it take us a little while to develop that? Yeah, I’m sure it did. But we’re super comfortable together now. He’s very good at producing my show and being a character on my show.”

And for his part, Carson seems completely game to play Parrish’s straight man and occasional whipping boy. At least, as long as the ratings stay high.

“I don’t think Gary is tough on me at all,” he says. “The perceived differences and commonality between us, almost as if we were a married couple, are fascinating to people, I think. It was something totally different in Memphis.”

“I can’t tell you how many people have told me they don’t really care about sports but listen to the show anyway,” says Parrish. “Which is something I love to hear, because it suggests what I’m doing is working the way I intend it to work.”

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From My Seat Sports

Giving Thanks for Sporting Events of 2016

This is my favorite column of the year, a chance for me to fill that mocking space on my screen with the sports-related subjects I’m most grateful to have in my club car on this train called life.

Gratitude. Give it a chance.

• I’m grateful for Year Seven of the Memphis Grizzlies’ “core four.” I wish we could come up with a more distinctive tag for our “fab four”: Mike Conley, Marc Gasol, Tony Allen, and Zach Randolph. They’ve earned that much, sticking together in one of the NBA’s smallest markets in an age when as many as five years with a franchise — for a single player, let alone a quartet — is considered lengthy. For some perspective, the Lakers’ great foursome of the Eighties — Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Magic Johnson, James Worthy, and Michael Cooper — played exactly seven seasons together. More recently in San Antonio, Tim Duncan, Tony Parker, Manu Ginobili, and Bruce Bowen broke up the band after seven years. Four years with one super-teammate (Dwyane Wade) was enough for LeBron James, and they won a pair of titles together. We won’t see another foursome like this at FedExForum.

Tubby Smith

• I’m grateful for Georgia Tech hiring Josh Pastner . . . and Memphis hiring Tubby Smith. Exhale. Last winter was excruciatingly uncomfortable for anyone in proximity to Pastner and the multiplying empty seats on game nights at FEF. And that contract(!) that made it all but impossible for the U of M to dismiss him. Thankfully, these kinds of divorces seem to unfold as they should. A good man is in a happier place. And a good program can aim to be great again under the wise watch of a man aiming to take a sixth program to the NCAA tournament.

• I’m grateful for an early look at Alex Reyes. The big righty appears to be on his way to stardom with the St. Louis Cardinals. It was nice to watch a few Reyes outings at AutoZone Park, the latest Redbirds coming attraction.

• I’m grateful for George Lapides and Phil Cannon and all they gave the Memphis sports community. Like days of the week, a sports community — its teams, its fans, its sponsors, its venues, its media personalities — has a “feel.” George and Phil brought a warmth — and distinct passion — to sports in Memphis. They live on in every one of us who attends a ball game now and then.

• I’m grateful for Mike Norvell’s energy and confidence. He’s the first Memphis Tiger football coach in generations to face an imposing task in filling his predecessor’s shoes. He has graciously saluted Justin Fuente’s achievements in building the program . . . while emphasizing it’s not where he and his staff want it be. Not yet. His prematurely gray hair gives Norvell the appearance of a man beyond his 35 years. So does his attention to detail and single-minded focus in making Memphis a premium program. It’s the hardest sports job in town.

• I’m grateful for my daughters’ continued commitment to team sports. One will play her senior high school softball season as an All-Metro outfielder, while the other played her first varsity soccer season as merely a freshman. They are bright, skilled, beautiful young ladies. And they know well the values that make a good teammate. Such is necessary in the wide world that awaits them.

• I’m grateful to be following in the footsteps — literally, and rapidly — of my 5K-running wife. Her commitment to not just running, but competing, is a healthy rebuke of any middle-age ceiling on athleticism. I’m especially grateful for her waiting for me at the finish line, one race after another.

• I’m grateful for you. And every one of the Flyer readers who give us a platform to share news, views, and analysis of the people and events that make Memphis such an extraordinary town. I appreciate your counterpoints, value your applause, and listen to your criticism. You give my job redeeming value.

Happy Thanksgiving to all.

Categories
Politics Politics Feature

Filling the Space

Because I admire Lou Gehrig’s legend as much as anybody else’s who ever lived, I try never to skip a week’s column. Gehrig, for those who don’t know, was the New York Yankee great who set a record for playing in consecutive games — 2,130 before his forced retirement in 1939, a plateau that was only overcome in 1995 by the Baltimore Orioles’ Cal Ripken Jr.

Gehrig kept playing until he was felled, literally, by a fatal illness — amyotrophic lateral sclerosis — called “Lou Gehrig’s disease” ever since.

Lou Gehrig

I am also inspired by a more recent case — that of Shirley Povich, father of today’s TV host Maury Povich but best known as a sportswriter — and a good one — for The Washington Post from 1933 until his death in 1998 at the age of 92. 

How good was he? Povich’s last column, written the day he died and published the day after, on June 5, 1998, was, in part, a shot across the bow of the rest of the media for its uncritical enthusiasm over the the ongoing home-run heroics of Mark McGwire. Povich noted with some suspicion that McGwire had somehow “bulked up” on what he chose to call “the new diet of ‘nutrition shakes’ popular in the clubhouses.”

We would soon learn to call that diet by a now all-too-familiar name: steroids.

And then there’s the case of 60 Minutes‘ Mike Wallace and, well … I hope you get the idea. More than longevity, I’m really talking about perseverance, the kind, say, that was for so long demonstrated in Memphis by the late great newspaperman/broadcaster George Lapides.

My dear wife Linda died last week, an agonizing death from pancreatic cancer. She persevered through pain and discomfort that you cannot imagine. With grace — the amazing, proverbial kind.

For reasons that surely go without saying, I had to take some time off during and after her ordeal. But I found myself in the aftermath attending an event or two on my beat, more or less as an observer — to get out of the house, the way another person might take a long, head-clearing walk.

I went, for example, to last Thursday night’s meeting of the Shelby County Democratic executive committee. As anybody knows who’s been reading me or the other political scribes in town, the Democrats are riven right now, locked in a civil war of sorts over the issue of whether to endorse an arrangement, insisted on by the state party chairman. In the arrangement, a former chairman, charged with misappropriation of funds, would pay back a certain portion on an installment plan, thereby avoiding the prosecution that half of the committee members were insisting on.

After two hours of utmost rowdiness, the committee failed to ratify the arrangement by a tie vote of 10-10. 

But the most memorable aspect of that meeting, to me, was the fact that partisans on both sides of the issue, at various times during all the furor, took time out to come over to me and express the kindest sort of condolences. It reminded me of the genuine human stuff they were all made of. I never at any point felt like taking sides, and I thought I saw the way forward to their all getting somehow on the same page some day in a way that had nothing to do with politics.

I had the same feeling a couple of days later at a candidate forum at the IBEW union hall. There was a lack of venom and a comity in the way rivals for the same office spoke, something I found unusual and distinctive.

And I saw it again on TV Sunday night, as cops and protesters walked along together in downtown Memphis in an ambulatory common dialogue of sorts. You don’t see that sort of thing every day, either. (You didn’t even see it, by all accounts, at the follow-up public meeting at Greater Imani Church on Monday.)

So what am I saying? Well, maybe that it’s important, in cases like mine, to keep filling the space, if that’s what you’re supposed to be doing. We all have our space to fill, and the more we do it, the more we realize that it’s all really the same space. Q.E.D.

Categories
Food & Wine Food & Drink

Sports Talk on the Menu

Memphis is a town of many deep-rooted sports interests. Between the University of Memphis Tigers basketball and football programs, the Memphis Grizzlies of the NBA, et al, sports fandom in Memphis is as passion-filled and potentially divisive a subject as religious faith. And as revered as these teams and institutions are, so too are the newsbreakers and speculators that populate the local sports talk radio airwaves and newspaper pages. Inevitably, these sports media figures are recognized for their talents and influence in numerous ways, including the illustrious honor of having menu items named for them at local restaurants.

Chef Kelly English’s The Second Line features a po’boy sandwich called the Verno on its menu, a tribute to 92.9 FM midday radio host and Grizzlies TV commentator Chris Vernon. According to Vernon, the naming of the sandwich came from an on-air football bet between himself and Chef English.

“The deal was, the Cowboys and Saints were playing. This was before The Second Line opened,” he says. “If the Cowboys won, he had to name a sandwich after me. If the Saints won, I had to say ‘Go Saints’ coming in and out of every segment on my show. The Saints absolutely destroyed the Cowboys, but he named the thing after me anyway.”

The sandwich is built on a generous base of braised and shredded chicken thighs, topped with melted Swiss cheese, lettuce, tomato, and pickles on crusty French-style bread.

Justin Fox Burks

The Verno from The Second Line

“I love it,” Vernon says. “Kelly English is one of the best chefs in America, and there is a sandwich on his menu named after me. There’s not a week that goes by that someone doesn’t text or tweet me about that sandwich. It’s unbelievable.”

The menu at Republic Coffee boasts its own sports journalist-tribute item, a breakfast sandwich formerly known as the “Ahab.” “It’s funny, you always think that if you are going to have a sandwich named for you, that you would get to design the sandwich, or at least be asked if you want a sandwich named for you,” says Geoff Calkins, the lead sports columnist for The Commercial Appeal and a morning radio host on 92.9. “But that didn’t happen in my case.”

In fact, Calkins didn’t realize that the Calkins — large hunks of smoked salmon, cream cheese, capers, and onions, all packed inside slices of a toasted everything bagel — even existed until he walked in to Republic one afternoon after talking about great Memphis sandwiches on his radio show, and the barista asked him why he didn’t mention his own sandwich.

“I had no idea. Apparently they re-named it after me because I ordered it so much,” Calkins says. “I think I might have singlehandedly kept it on the menu.”

“The fact that I had a sandwich made Gary [Parrish] extremely jealous,” he adds, half-jokingly. “That’s how he got his sushi roll. He lobbied on the air to get it because he was jealous of me.”

Parrish, the evening drive-time host on 92.9 and a national columnist and TV analyst for CBS Sports, denies the claim.

“I would never be jealous of a man who turned a Harvard Law degree into a newspaper job,” he says, returning the jibe. “In all seriousness, that may have been where the whole bit actually started.”

Justin Fox Burks

The G. Parrish Anxiety Disorder at Bluefin

The bit Parrish is referring to was an on-air monologue about not understanding “anonymous donors” and wanting his name on everything, including fast-food items, buildings, etc. This resonated with the folks at Bluefin.

“Fast-forward a few weeks. I’m in Bluefin with some friends, and one of the managers approached me as I was walking out,” Parrish says. “He said he listens to the show and would love to design a roll with me and slap my name on it. Next thing you know, it’s on the menu.”

Dubbed the G. Parrish Anxiety Disorder, Parrish’s namesake roll is a kitchen-sink creation with tempura shrimp, crab, and cream cheese inside, topped with smoked salmon, avocado, eel sauce, and, most crucially, spicy Sriracha, which cuts through the richness of the other ingredients. Not surprisingly, the roll has become one of the restaurant’s most popular items.

“I’m genuinely and oddly proud of how everything has turned out,” Parrish says. “I honestly thought this would just be something that might be funny to me and only me for a few weeks or months, and then they’d change the menu and it would just go away. But here we are, all these years later, and it’s still there.”

Of course, anyone who has listened to sports talk radio in Memphis for more than a few minutes is surely familiar with the legendary George Lapides, currently a morning host on Sports 56. Lapides has been covering sports in print and on the air in this town for longer than some of his colleagues have been alive.

It is very fitting that Germantown Cajun restaurant Mister B’s offers a dish bearing his name, the George Lapides Special. Lapides has long been a spokesman for the eatery — for my money, “I want to tell you about Mister B’s” is up there with “I don’t think the Cardinals will ever win/lose another game” and “I want to play” in the pantheon of George-isms. He is also, in fact, the inventor of the dish.

“I used to always get a cup of the crawfish etouffee as an appetizer, and I knew they had wild rice as a side” Lapides says. “One night I asked my server to fix me a big, dinner-sized plate of wild rice, with the etouffee poured on top.”

And the results?

“Oh, it’s fabulous,” he says. “It was just a word-of-mouth thing at first, but people started ordering it so much they put it on the menu. It looks strange to me to see it, but I don’t mind.”

Not to be outdone, the radio voice of the Grizzlies and afternoon host on 92.9, Eric Hasseltine, has his own signature menu item as well: a dessert-y cocktail at the soda fountain inside A. Schwab‘s called the Eric Hasseltine Cherry. The drink is simple but effective — and delicious. Think of a lighter, sweeter version of a Manhattan; house-made cherry syrup, bourbon, and bitters poured over “Sonic-style” ice nuggets in an old-fashioned soda glass, topped with fizzy soda.

“It’s very flattering,” Hasseltine says. “I’m not a huge partier anymore, but I’ve always been a whiskey guy. Sometimes I’m disappointed they aren’t open later so I could go in and get one after a game.”