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Fairs & Festivals

For the past two years or so, our calendars have been a bit bare. But things are looking up as Memphis is going full-throttle with events once again. With food, fashion, art, music, and more, it’s time to celebrate the return of the fair and festival season!

APRIL

Bluff City Blues Crawfish Festival

Where crawfish are red and the music is blues, this festival is perfect for a rendezvous. Benefiting A Betor Way, the festival will have arts and crafts vendors, food, and music by Memphissippi Sounds, Mick Kolassa and the Endless Blues Band, the Eric Hughes Band, and more.

Carolina Watershed, April 16, tinyurl.com/bluffcityblues

Farm to Tap Festival

As part of an initiative to have more Tennessee brewers use more local farm products, the festival will showcase more than 20 guild member breweries, with tickets including unlimited samples, tasting cups, and great times with farmers, food trucks, vendors, and more.

Wiseacre Brewing, April 16, farmtotap.org

Shelby Forest Spring Fest

Shelby Forest Spring Fest is going to be a hoot — at least that’s what the owl there tells me. With live music, shopping, kids zone, food trucks, and wildlife exhibits and lectures throughout the day, you won’t want to miss out.

Shelby Farms, April 16, shelbyforestspringfest.com

Africa in April

Saluting the Republic of Malawi for its 35th festival, the family-friendly Africa in April event will be filled with live performances, food and merchandise vendors, and the International Diversity Parade.

Robert R. Church Park, April 20-24, africainapril.org

Double Decker Festival Oxford

In 1994, Oxford, Mississippi, made the bold decision to import a double-decker bus from England. A momentous occasion for the history books if you ask the Double Decker Festival, which speaks to the momentous-ness, with 100+ art and 20+ local food vendors, an impressive slew of musical performances, art demonstrations, and a Best Dressed Pet Contest.

Oxford Courthouse Square, April 22-23, doubledeckerfestival.com

Sashay! Memphis Fashion Week walks the runway. (Photo: Courtesy Sierra Hotel Images)

Memphis Fashion Week

Walk, walk, fashion, baby. You’re gonna want to work Memphis Fashion Week into your schedule. The live runway show will feature emerging designers and a special headlining designer guest, Amanda Uprichard.

Arrow Creative, April 22, memphisfashionweek.org

Juke Joint Festival

The Juke Joint Festival celebrates the Delta’s past and living history. Kicking off at 10 a.m., the day will include blues music, racing pigs, arts and crafts, food, and a dozen free outdoor stages of blues and roots music.

Clarksdale, MS, April 23, jukejointfestival.com

Taste the Rarity: Invitational Beer Festival

The best and weirdest beers from breweries all over the country are coming to Memphis to celebrate the seventh Taste the Rarity with unlimited drinking, plus live music, food trucks, and other nonsense.

Wiseacre Brewing, April 23, tastetherarity.com

Rajun Cajun Crawfish Festival has crawfish galore. (Photo: Courtesy Porter-Leath)

Rajun Cajun Crawfish Festival

Too few occasions present themselves when you can bob for crawfish, race crawfish, and eat crawfish, but you’ll have the chance at Porter-Leath’s festival.

Downtown Memphis, April 24, porterleath.org/rajun-cajun-home

Art in the Loop (Photo: Courtesy Greg Belz)

Art in the Loop

Some of the region’s most talented artists will set up shop at this festival celebrating the arts, where you can also enjoy live music and food trucks.

Ridgeway Loop Road, April 29-May 1, artintheloop.org

Storyfest

Forty Memphians, ranging in ages from 9 to 93, will share their stories through live performances at the Halloran Centre. Engagement activities and community reflections will follow at the free fest.

Halloran Centre, April 29-30, orpheum-memphis.com/event/storyfest

May Day Festival and Memphis Children’s Theatre Festival

Theatre Memphis celebrates a century of entertaining with live entertainment, an array of artists’ and artisans’ booths, food trucks, and more. On the same day, Theatre Memphis will host the Children’s Theatre Festival as a pay-what-you-can event.

Theatre Memphis, April 30, theatrememphis.org

MAY

Beale Street Music Festival

Megan Thee Stallion, Weezer, Van Morrison, Lil Wayne, and many more (60+ artists) are coming for the city’s legendary springtime music festival.

Fairgrounds in Liberty Park, April 29-May 1, memphisinmay.org/BSMF

Memphis in May International Festival

For the month of May, this annual festival brings the world to Memphis and Memphis to the world, and this year, it is saluting Ghana through cultural events and performances, museum and gallery exhibits, films, luncheons, and a gala.

Various locations, May 1-31, memphisinmay.org

Bookstock: Memphis Area Authors’ Festival

You’re gonna want to book it to Memphis Public Libraries for this festival of author talks, activities for teens and children, and 60 local authors’ exhibits.

Benjamin L. Hooks Central Library, May 7, memphislibrary.org/bookstock

World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest

When May rolls in, Memphis knows that’s the cue to start getting our tummies ready for what USAToday calls the “Most Prestigious Barbecue Contest.” For four days, the best of the best barbecue buffs will compete in such categories as Ribs, Shoulder, and Whole Hog, as well as Hot Wings, Sauce, and “Anything But Pork.”

Fairgrounds in Liberty Park, May 11-14, memphisinmay.org/WCBCCtickets

Bluff City Fair

This fair isn’t bluffing when it comes to fun and excitement. You’ll be entertained with a majestic thrill show, rides galore, fair food, and an all-day petting zoo.

Liberty Bowl Stadium, May 20-30, bluffcityfair.com

DreamFest Weekend

A dream is a wish your heart makes, but this festival is doing more than just wishing for its dream of unity, collaboration, and community. For this three-day event, an impressive array of artists will come together to promote Memphis music and artist collaboration.

Overton Park Shell, May 20-22, dreamfestweekend.com

Memphis Greek Festival

Cue the groans from children as parents inevitably evoke the phrase “It’s all Greek to me” at this family-friendly festival with scrumptious Greek food, tours of the Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church, live music, artisan booths, and activities for kids.

Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church, May 20-21, memphisgreekfestival.com

Beale Street Artcrawl Festival

Before the barcrawlers creep onto the street we call Beale, artcrawlers can go amuck at this pop-up market of art and merchandise.

Beale Street, May 21, bealestreetartcrawlfestival.com

Memphis Mushroom Festival

All fungi, fungals, and funpals are invited to this five-day, four-night camping festival that celebrates the foods and fungi grown in Tennessee, Mississippi, and Arkansas. With speakers, workshops, forays through the forest, yoga, dancing, cooking classes, and tastings — let’s just say this festival covers a lot of ground.

Shelby Forest Park, May 26-30, memphismushroomfest.com

JUNE

Memphis Italian Festival

Is it sauce or gravy? Well, the folks at this fest have taken a side, seeing that the festival boasts a Spaghetti Gravy Contest. In addition to their food-related competitions, the event will have live music, along with art vendors and, of course, tons of great food.

Marquette Park, June 2-4, memphisitalianfestival.org

Memphis Pride Fest Weekend

Spanning four days, the celebration includes a Drag N Drive, dance party, parade, and full festival with two stages, more than 150 vendors, food trucks, and so much more.

Various locations, June 2-5, midsouthpride.org/pridefest

Memphis Margarita Festival

Sometimes all life gives you is limes, and all you can do is make margaritas. Thankfully, the city’s best margarita-makers are ready to inspire you at this festival where you can sample margaritas from your favorite restaurants alongside awesome entertainment.

Overton Square, June 4, memphismargaritafestival.com

Craft Food & Wine Festival

Showcasing scrumptious, locally-produced breads, cheeses, fruit preserves, cured meats, and more, this event will raise funds for Church Health.

The Columns, June 5, craftfoodandwinefest.com

MidSouth Nostalgia Festival

Veteran actors from your favorite classic movies and TV shows — from the likes of Leave It To Beaver and Laramie — are appearing in person to talk about their careers and give out autographs at this fest.

Whispering Woods Hotel and Conference Center, Olive Branch, MS, June 9-11, midsouthnostalgiafestival.com

Memphis Vegan Festival

If you’re living on the veg, you’ll want to check out this day full of vegan food, live entertainment, and a marketplace featuring local businesses, plant-based health and beauty products, and clothing.

Pipkin Building,, June 18, facebook.com/901veganfestival

Tri-State Black Pride Weekend

Tri-State Black Pride presents workshops, lectures, a drag show, stand-up comedy, and a Sunday Funday of live music.

Various locations, June 16-19, tristateblackpride.com

Bluff City Balloon Jamboree

Scheduled for Father’s Day weekend, the Bluff City Balloon Jamboree will delight its attendees with hot air balloon rides, a balloon glow event, carnival attractions, arts and crafts, and live music.

Shelby Farms Park, June 17-19, bluffcityballoonjamboree.com

Performers dance at Memphis Juneteenth Festival. (Photo: Courtesy Memphis Juneteenth Festival)

Memphis Juneteenth Festival

With Juneteenth being declared a federal holiday in the U.S. last year, the 29th Annual Memphis Juneteenth Festival promises to celebrate African-American culture, food, entertainment, and the overall significance of the holiday. Along with food, music, and entertainment, festival-goers can look forward to the annual Juneteenth Career and Health Fair Expo, the Memphis Juneteenth Lifetime Achievement Awards, the Juneteenth Ultimate Dance Showdown, Food Truck Sunday, and Praise Fest at Juneteenth.

Health Sciences Park, June 18-19, juneteenthfreedommemphis.com

Mid-South Air Show

It’s a bird. It’s a plane. No, it’s … yeah, it’s a plane. While Superman might not be in the sky for the Mid-South Airshow, the U.S. Navy Blue Angels are just as impressive, featuring military demonstrations, aerobatic performances, static display aircraft, and local emergency response helicopters.

Millington-Memphis Airport, June 18-19, midsouthairshow.com

Memphis Crafts & Drafts

Shopping is exercise. Exercise gives you endorphins. Endorphins make you happy. So if you don’t want summertime happiness to be smothered by rising temperatures, you’ll want to head over to this market of local makers and artists. It’s called the transitive property, right?

Crosstown Concourse Plaza and Atrium, June 25, memphiscraftsanddrafts.com

July

Summer Cocktail Festival

Shake it up a bit this July with this epic dance party with summer-inspired cocktails, fresh local food, photobooth ops, and fun activities.

Overton Square, July 29, memphisfestivals.com/summercocktailfestival

AUGUST

Memphis Chicken & Beer Fest

If, like the Zac Brown Band, you appreciate your chicken fried, a cold beer on a Saturday night, a pair of jeans that fit just right, and the radio up, you’ll appreciate the Memphis Chicken & Beer Fest where you can get all that — except the jeans. With live music, interactive games, a bungee run, and more, tickets include more than 90 beverage samples, and a portion will benefit the Dorothy Day House.

Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium, August 6, memphischickenandbeer.com

Elvis Week 2022

This August marks the 45th anniversary of Elvis’ death and the 44th anniversary of the first Elvis Week. What began as a small group of fans gathering at Graceland’s gates has turned into the multi-day phenomenon we know today. Highlights from the week include personal tours of Graceland led by Priscilla Presley and Jerry Schilling, the Candlelight Vigil, the Ultimate Elvis Tribute Artist Contest, and nightly parties.

Graceland, August 9-17, graceland.com/elvis-week

SEPTEMBER

Delta Fair & Music Festival

Carnival rides, live music, attractions, livestock shows, oh boy, there’s so much going on every day at the Delta Fair.

Agricenter International, September 2-11, deltafest.com

Germantown Festival

This festival is one of the few places in town where you’re guaranteed to see a weenie and say, “Aww, look how cute.” In addition to its Running of the Weenies race, this festival of arts has children’s activities, rides and games, entertainment, a car exhibit, community displays, and more.

Germantown Civic Club Complex,
September 10-11, germantownfest.com

Cooper-Young Festival

There’s no need to stay cooped up in your house when you can join in on the fun at the Cooper-Young Festival, where art, music, and crafts come together to celebrate Memphis’ culture and heritage.

Cooper-Young, September 17, cooperyoungfestival.com

Gonerfest 19

Music enthusiasts won’t be able to resist Goner Records’ siren call, and yes, somehow, this siren call reaches all the way to Australia. Be on the lookout for the lineup.

Railgarten, September 22-25, goner-records.com/pages/gonerfest

Mid-South Fair

At this must-do event since 1856, fair-goers can enjoy more than 50 rides, an array of ground acts, and of course favorite fair fare — funnel cakes, turkey legs, candied apples; you name it, they’ve perfected it.

Landers Center, September 22-October 2, landerscenter.com/mid-south-fair

Mighty Roots Music

Whatta fest, whatta fest, whatta mighty good fest. Mhhm, this event is back for year two, taking place at the same spot the famous blues singer-songwriter Muddy Waters began his love of blues music. The lineup will be announced April 11th, so keep an eye out.

Stovall, MS, September 23-24, mightrootsmusicfestival.com

Latin Fest

We may not be talking about Bruno once September rolls around, but we should be talking about Latinx representation year-round. Though this fest takes place for just a day, it captures that spirit of appreciation with live Latin music, Latin food and drinks, crafts, and fun for everyone.

Overton Square, Saturday, September 24, overtonsquare.com

Pink Palace Crafts Fair

The Pink Palace Crafts Fair is back to celebrate its Big 5-O with 150 artists from around the country, ready for you to explore their works.

Museum of Science & History,
September 24-26, moshmemphis.com

Mempho Music Festival

Mempho never disappoints, and you know it. Three days of music’s biggest names playing amid the natural beauty of Memphis Botanic Garden. The lineup will be released next week and tickets are already selling fast.

Radians Amphitheater at Memphis Botanic Garden, September 30-October 2, memphofest.com

OCTOBER

King Biscuit Blues Festival

Founded in 1986, this fest celebrates blues music with the highest regard across five stages; plus you’ll see a variety of buskers. Of course the three-day event wouldn’t be complete without the Flour Power 5K, the Tour da Delta bicycle race, and a Kansas City-sanctioned barbecue contest, all in historic Downtown Helena.

Helena, AR, October 5-8, kingbiscuitfestival.com

Memphis Bacon & Bourbon Festival

You might ask, what’s shakin’ over at this festival? Well, bacon, that’s what’s shaking — bacon and bacon-inspired dishes to sample. Oh, and bourbon, lots of bourbon.

Metal Museum, October 7, memphisbaconandbourbon.com

Edge Motorfest

Start your engines and gear up for this day of more than 150 cars, food trucks, vendor booths, and more in the Edge District. Trust us when we say, this’ll be more than a pit stop in your weekend activities.

Edge Motor Museum, October 8, edgemotormuseum.com

Soulsville USA Festival

We all know Memphis wouldn’t be Memphis without its roots in soul music, and this festival aims to remind us of that fact. In addition to educational and interactive activities, the festival will include live music, food trucks, vendors, games for kids, and free admission to the Stax Museum of American Soul Music.

Soulsville USA District, October 14-16, soulsvilleusafestival.com

Memphis Food & Wine Festival

Benefiting FedExFamilyHouse, the Memphis Food & Wine Festival, which showcases local chefs alongside acclaimed national chefs and top global vineyards, will leave your tummy so full and happy that you’ll miss the festival dearly until its return.

Memphis Botanic Garden, October 15, memphisfoodwinefestival.org

Indie Memphis Film Festival

If you’re a bit more introverted, a lot of the events on this list will probably leave you needing a day to recover from the social exhaustion. And while it’s worth it in exchange for all the fun you’ll have, what if I told you there was a festival where you can have fun while being your introverted self? Yep, at this one, you get to be a semi-couch potato and watch indie film after indie film to your heart’s content while in the company of your fellow movie-lovers. Plus, enjoy behind-the-scenes panels and discussions.

Midtown, October 19-24, indiememphis.org

World Championship Hot Wing Fest

A championship that is everything we wish it to be — dare I say, it’s the wind beneath our wings, there to bestow the glory upon the best chicken wings, content to let the winners shine and the festival-goers sample the fare, all the while supporting The Ronald McDonald House Charities of Memphis.

Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium, October 22, worldwingfest.com

RiverArtsFest

The largest juried artist market and urban festival in the Mid-South, the RiverArtsFest brings more than 180 artists from around the country to show off and sell their fine arts. As an added bonus, the festival features artist demonstrations, hands-on art activities for all ages, and local music.

Downtown Memphis, October 22-23, riverartsmemphis.org

Dia de Los Muertos Parade and Festival celebrates the Day of the Dead. (Photo: Angel Ortez)

Dia de Los Muertos Parade and Festival

If you think Dia de Los Muertos is Mexico’s version of Halloween, you’re dead wrong. The Brooks Museum and Cazateatro Bilingual Theatre will show you what the day is all about: honoring ancestors and celebrating the cycle of life and death. A parade begins in Overton Square with floats and performers making their way to the plaza at the Brooks Museum, where you can enjoy art-making activities, face painting, music, costumed performers, and more.

Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, October 29, brooksmuseum.com

Categories
We Saw You

We Saw You: Juneteenth at Orange Mound Tower

Guests got a sneak peek of Orange Mound Tower at the Juneteenth Family Reunion, which was held June 19th on the grounds of the old United Equipment building on Lamar near Airways.

IMAKEMADBEATS, founder/CEO/owner of Unapologetic, which co-owns Orange Mound Tower with Tone, estimated the crowd at “around 3,500 to 3,800.” 

IMAKEMADBEATS at Juneteenth Family Reunion. (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Tone at Juneteenth Family Reunion. (Credit: Michael Donahue)

The event was “to celebrate freedom for black people,” IMAKEMADBEATS says. “And it was also a celebration of Tone and Unapologetic’s new venture at Orange Mound Tower.”

Juneteenth Family Reunion at Orange Mound Tower Credit: MIchael Donahue

Unapologetic is “a label for musicians and visual artists and a creative ecosystem.”

Tone is “a nonprofit organization created to support and uplift black arts and black artists in the city. The executive director is Victoria Jones.”

The event featured live performances from Unapologetic artists and impromptu tours of parts of the property.

Juneteenth Family Reunion at Orange Mound Tower. (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Nicolette Hatchett and Michael Ivy at Juneteenth Family Reunion. (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Craig Brewer with Kayana Mitchell and London Porchia at Juneteenth Family Reunion (Credit: Michael Donahue)

Orange Mound Tower is the future home of his “Dirty Socks Studio,” says IMAKEMADBEATS, who sported a spiffy pair of watermelon-print socks at the event. “Unapologetic World will be a part of Orange Mound Tower. And in that we will include Dirty Socks Studios.”

And, he says, “Unapologetic World essentially will be our offices for our venue and our studio.”

They’re hoping to break ground at the end of 2022, beginning of 2023,  IMAKEMADBEATS says. “We’re waiting on some financial projections before we can know exactly when to have the grand opening. Because of phases we’re going to be in.”

Orange Mound Tower also is special in another way, IMAKEMADBEATS says. “I was raised in Orange Mound. And it just feels beautiful to come back home and build at home.”

(Credit: Michael Donahue)
We Saw You
Categories
News Blog News Feature

Juneteenth Questioned as National Holiday, West Tennessee’s Birthday Poster, Tax Coffers Full, and, Like, A Ton of Tourism Jobs

Questioning Juneteenth

With tons of Juneteenth celebrations on the horizon for Memphis this weekend, a national group of Black conservative leaders want a halt to make the day a national holiday. 

2019 Memphis Juneteenth Urban Music Festival (Credit: Michael Donahue)

Project 21, “the leading voice of Black conservatives for over 25 years” and sponsored by the D.C.-based National Center for Public Policy Research, said making Juneteenth a national holiday could further divide Americans. 

”I constantly hear everyone taking about unity, but would a federal holiday end up being a unifier?” Project 21 member Marie Fischer asked in a news release. “Or, would it give fuel to those who support critical race theory by pointing out a day that marks one group as an oppressor and another as the oppressed? 

“Such a holiday could be easily hijacked by those who insist that Blacks only advance when it benefits white elites. Nothing seems to get pushed these days unless it fits a specific narrative.” 

A birthday poster

(Credit: State of Tennessee)

Tennessee is readying to celebrate 225 years of statehood, and posters for each of the state’s three Grand Divisions were unveiled Thursday. 

Posters for each Grand Division feature music and a musical instrument. Middle Tennessee (home of Nashville) got an acoustic guitar. East Tennessee (birthplace of country music) got a fiddle. West Tennessee got an electric guitar that looks much like Lucille, B.B. King’s famous six-string. 

The West Tennessee poster also features a Stax album bursting with sun rays, looking like those from Sun Studios in an interesting mash-up. West Tennessee also got a big river, river boats, a plow, and some grain, noting the region’s rich agricultural history, and a bald cypress tree. 

(Credit: State of Tennessee)

Not too bad for state leaders. If you believe the standard Tennessee license plate, you’d think it’s completely covered by the Smokey Mountains. 

Tax coffers runneth over (by $432M)

Tennessee tax coffers were fuller than expected for the month of May.

May tax revenues were $1.6 billion, according to Tennessee Department of Finance and Administration Commissioner Butch Eley. That figure is $432 million more than estimates. State tax revenues were $587.3 million more than May 2020 and the overall growth rate was 59.8 percent.

“Just as April tax revenue receipts revealed substantial growth, May state tax revenues continue to reflect extraordinary increases compared to this same time last year when most economic activity was weakened because of the pandemic,” Eley said. “When comparing May 2021 tax growth to May 2019, the monthly growth is 34.5 percent rather than the 59.8 percent growth over May 2020.”

Sales tax revenue grew across all industries, except for groceries and food stores, which saw slight reductions. 

Tourism/hospitality jobs: we got ’em

State leaders are hoping to help attract workers to the state’s tourism sector, the second-largest industry in Tennessee. 

The “Come Work, Come Play” campaign launched this week by the Tennessee Department of Tourist Development and HospitalityTN. It “urges prospective employees to consider hospitality jobs for their flexible hours, career advancement opportunities, and strong sense of community.”

(Credit: State of Tennessee)

“Tens of thousands of Tennesseans lost their jobs during the pandemic and the leisure and hospitality industry was hit the hardest, accounting for 72.3 percent of net jobs lost in the state over 2019,” according to the Tennessee Department of Labor and Workforce Development. Tennessee’s leisure and hospitality industry added 9,100 jobs in April 2021. 

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We Recommend We Recommend

TONE and Unapologetic Host Juneteenth Family Reunion at Orange Mound Tower

The month of May brought a lot of changes in Memphis’ Orange Mound community. Let’s go back so that we can move forward. The Collective (CLTV) was a nonprofit organization dedicated to honoring and propelling African-American culture in Memphis. Primarily the focus for CLTV was on the arts.

Note the verb “was.” In mid-May, the organization changed its name to Tone and expanded its mission to the community as a whole. By the end of May, it was announced that Tone had partnered with Unapologetic, a music-centric arts and culture organization, to develop the United Equipment tower and surrounding property on Lamar.

Now, the partnership is having its first event at the Orange Mound Tower. The celebration will host musical performances, food trucks, games, and more to celebrate the legacy and freedom of those who came before. In a historically Black neighborhood, community-forward Black ownership definitely honors the Black community and ancestors.

The Juneteenth Family Reunion will be the first event at Orange Mound Tower. (Photo: Jesse Davis)

The emphasis on family for this Juneteenth celebration is intentional, says Victoria Jones, founder and executive director of Tone. “Family reunions used to be a highlight of my year when I was a kid. The desire to expand that experience to include the artists and creatives I have grown to call family through the celebration of freedom was a huge inspiration for our Juneteenth Family Reunion. We are inviting our ancestors into the space — it’ll be a real family affair as we celebrate their perseverance and hope that got us this far.”

Juneteenth Family Reunion, Orange Mound Tower, 2205 Lamar, Saturday, June 19, 5-11 p.m., free.

Categories
News The Fly-By

Juneteenth: Leaders Explain Significance, Why It Should be Recognized

As the Black Lives Matter movement picks up steam around the country, so has the push to make June 19th an official holiday.

June 19th, deemed Juneteenth or Emancipation Day, marks the day in 1865 when the Union Army arrived in Texas and announced the end of the Civil War and slavery.

Though Juneteenth is not designated as a federal holiday, 46 states have made the day either a state holiday or state holiday observance. Here, June 19th is neither.

Rep. Antonio Parkinson is sponsoring a bill in the Tennessee House to change that. The legislation, HB 1626, would make June 19th a state holiday.

“It’s very important for us as African Americans to recognize something that ended the biggest trauma toward black people in the United States,” Parkinson said. “Everyone needs to be educated in all of our history in relation to all people. There’s a rich history in our state and I think when people receive that education in cultural matters and truthful history, it sheds new light and it gives you some glimmer of perspective from people who don’t look like you and haven’t had the same experiences.”

Citing racial division and a “culture of racism” in the Tennessee General Assembly, Parkinson said he is not confident that the bill will pass, but he “will do everything I can to get it to pass.”

“You have to understand the culture we have in the Tennessee legislature,” he said. “There’s a culture of ignorance that exists. And when I say that I don’t mean in a demeaning fashion, but the actual definition of ignorance. There is a need to overcome those things.”

Noelle Trent, director of Interpretation, Collections, and Education for the National Civil Rights Museum (NCRM), said Juneteenth is an “important moment,” because it’s a “moment celebrating black freedom.”

Trent said historically Juneteenth has been largely celebrated in Texas, but it’s evolved into a “national moment to pause and celebrate the end of slavery and bondage.”

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“There hasn’t been a national moment of recognition of ‘yes, we enslaved millions of people for hundreds of years,’” Trent said. “We owe it to those people who were so critical to the foundation of this country in a number of different ways. Also, we should celebrate the fact that their descendants are still in this country. It’s worth taking a moment and doing that.”

Trent said that Independence Day and Juneteenth celebrate different milestones in the country, but are equally important from a historical standpoint.


“Both of those dates deserve to be on the national calendar,” Trent said. “As a country we owe it to citizens to take pride and recognize both of those moments.”

This year, the NCRM, in partnership with five other museums and historical institutions around the country, will host a virtual Juneteenth commemoration Friday. The site BLKFREEDOM.org will provide educational content, artistic performances, and discussion prompts in an effort to explore the meaning of freedom, justice, and democracy.

“We’re using this moment to celebrate what we’ve overcome and use that to galvanize and catalyze the next part of the freedom struggle,” she said. “We have a unique opportunity to do so this year considering the current climate of the country.”

Parkinson said he believes you can’t “remove racism from the hearts of people.” That happens through life experience or “divine intervention.” However, he hopes his legislation and the current protests happening around the state will help.

“It’s not like you can turn on a switch with legislation,” Parkinson said. “You can’t legislate people’s hearts. It’s going to take some intervention. And that’s happening right now with everyone expressing themselves related to the killings of unarmed African Americans and these racist symbols and statues. Maybe those things will begin to thaw out some of the hearts that are operating in our capital.”

Read Parkinson’s legislation below.

[pdf-1]

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News News Blog

A Note From Our CEO: We’ll Be Closed on Juneteenth. Here’s Why.

Much of the work needed to heal centuries of racist harm will take time. Finding our way to a more whole, more equitable future will take time, and contemplation, and strategy, and heart, and anger, and listening, and love, and all the determination and courage we as a community can muster.

Within this long journey, though, there are moments of simplicity.

One such moment of simplicity: This Friday, June 19th, is Juneteenth, commemorating the end of slavery in the U.S. On June 19, 1865, Union General Gordon Granger informed enslaved African Americans in Galveston, Texas, that the Civil War had ended and that they were free. More than two-and-a-half years after Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation, it finally took effect.

Starting this Friday, and every June 19th thereafter, Contemporary Media Inc. will mark Juneteenth as a holiday, in recognition of freedom, joy, and Black lives.

In a year that has felt often crushingly complex, it’s helpful to be reminded that sometimes progress looks like merely choosing to make the immediate changes we can, while keeping sight of farther-reaching goals.

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We Recommend We Saw You

Brooks, Juneteenth, Wine Down for BizTown

Michael Donahue

HotHouse Gruv (everybody in the photo except the guy in the black shirt) performed at the opening reception for ‘Bouguereau & America’ at Memphis Brooks Museum of Art.

I get the feeling William-Adolphe Bouguereau would be a fan of HotHouse Gruv.

HotHouse Gruv, a dance company, performed at the members opening reception, which was held June 21st, for “Bouguereau & America.” The exhibit of works by the French academic painter now is on view at Memphis Brooks Museum of Art.

The subjects in Bouguereau’s sensual paintings, which often were set in idyllic glades with cupids and beautiful human beings, showed a lot of skin.

Dressed as satyrs and fauns, the HotHouse Gruv dancers resembled a Bouguereau painting as they portrayed a bacchanal.

Brooks representatives reached out to Cskik Gruv to feature his HotHouse Gruv dancers at the party. “HotHouse Gruv is a collaboration of artists,” Gruv says. “So, we have hip-hop dancers, classically trained dancers. All-style dancers. Bebop dancers, b-boy dancers. There was a deejay there. There are rap artists, vocal artists, and then there are graphic artists. It’s made up of all these people that are loosely connected, but very intertwined. We use each other to create what we do.”

Gruv told the Brooks people that the bodies of the dancers are painted by body paint artists. He told them, “This is very explosive, energetic. Are you sure you want to do this?”

He got the green light, but, Gruv says, “There were a couple of stipulations. We couldn’t have nipples [showing]. Normally, our body paint looks like clothing on top of a natural body. Then I said, ‘Well, we’ll do pasties.’”

The Brooks people weren’t sure about pasties on the dancers, either, Gruv says. Then, he says, “Word came down from the powers that be that they need to have something on top. At least the ladies did.”

For inspiration, Gruv used a Bouguereau painting that shows a drunk Bacchus, the god of wine. “Everybody is dancing and they have tambourines, and wine was there,” he says.

As for the dancers, he says, “I thought we would reach out to artists who are a little bit more acrobatic to be a part of the event, too.”

Music for the performance included Janet Jackson’s “Throb”— “a very erotic tune. And that laid the groundwork for the touchy feely orgy-type performance where they were on the floor.”

Videos of the performance were taken. “Sometimes I look at it and I blush,” Gruv says. “Oh, my God, we did this? It’s funny. When we were rehearsing I was like, ‘OK. Now, guys, we’re going to simulate an orgy.’ Everybody was, ‘OK. OK.’ I placed people and I was like, ‘Let’s just see where you go.’ And they started.”

Finally, Gruv says he told the dancers, “OK. That’s enough.’ I think it even stretched me.”

Describing the final product, Gruv says, “This is a little bit over the top, and I want you to feel this is just at the edge of raunchy and trashy. But it also has a little bit more culture.”

The performance was a hit. From where I stood, the audience appeared to love it. The applause was loud and long.

Michael Donahue

The HotHouse Gruv ‘orgy’ at Brooks.

‘Faun and Bacchante’ by William-Adolphe Bouguereau


Michael Donahue

Memphis Juneteenth Urban Music Festival

The Memphis Juneteenth Urban Music Festival, which was held June 14th through 16th at Robert Church Park, was “a great success,” says Telisa Franklin, Juneteenth president.

And, she says, the event attracted “a lot of out-of-towners this year.”

Temmora Levy (a.k.a. Queen T), who grew up in South Memphis, also attended the festival with her daughter Meisha’s pop group, KARMA. Footage was shot at the festival for Levy’s Lifetime TV Network reality show, Ms. T’s Music Factory, Franklin says.

“Juneteenth is not only celebrated here,” Franklin says. “It’s celebrated all around the world. The slaves in Galveston, Texas, had no idea they were free. It was June 19th, 1865, when the slaves found out they were free.”

This was the sixth year the Memphis festival was held in Robert Church Park. The 27-year-old event formerly was known as the Juneteenth Freedom and Heritage Festival. It began in Memphis at St. Paul Douglas Baptist Church on Brookins and then moved to Douglass Park, Franklin says.

“When it was in North Memphis, I felt like it was a Douglass community festival,” she says. “Moving it downtown, I brought every culture and race together. And it was for Memphis, not one isolated community. It’s important we work together. Memphis isn’t one color. We’re all colors. I want everybody to celebrate Juneteenth. It’s not just one culture and one neighborhood.”

Michael Donahue

Telisa Franklin and DC Franklin at Memphis Juneteenth Urban Music Festival

Michael Donahue

Memphis Juneteenth Urban Music Festival

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Michael Donahue

Wine Down for BizTown

To wind down the day, between 150 and 200 people attended Wine Down for BizTown, a Junior Achievement of Memphis and the Mid-South fundraiser. It was held June 14th at the nonprofit’s headquarters at 307 Madison.

The event featured a blind wine tasting and a silent auction. Food was catered by Coletta’s. DJ A. O. provided the music.


Michael Donahue

Wine Down for BizTown

MIchael Donahue

Wine Down for BizTown

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Juneteenth in Memphis

The U.S. celebrates its formal birthday on July 4th, but there’s another independence day on the calendar. We celebrate the day a free and united society became possible on June 19th, commemorating the day in 1865 when Union General Gordon Granger rode into Galveston, Texas, and announced, “All slaves are free.”

Memphis’ annual Juneteenth Festival has grown into a three-day event that’s expected to bring more than 40,000 people to Robert Church Park this weekend for food, fun, and an opportunity to engage with history. This year’s celebration gets underway Thursday night, June 13th, with an awards banquet and the performance of a new play, I Know Who I Am, at the University of Memphis Holiday Inn.

Ultimate Dance Showdown

“We will be honoring so many great, deserving Memphians,” says festival CEO and President Telisa Franklin, running down a list of pastors, artists, and entrepreneurs.

Juneteenth’s Urban Music Festival kicks off at 10 a.m. on Friday, June 14th, and runs through 10 p.m. that night in Robert Church Park. “It’s free admission for people to come out and enjoy arts and crafts vendors, food shops, and a kid zone,” Franklin says. “There will be a car show and a walking museum where people can literally learn what Juneteenth means as well.

“This year’s majorette showcase is really amazing, with teams coming all the way from Houston, Texas,” Franklin says, describing Saturday’s main event. Teams of majorettes, steppers, and cheerleaders will compete in Saturday’s Juneteenth Ultimate Dance Showdown.

The celebration closes June 16th with Food Truck Sunday and Praise Fest, a day-long gospel concert.

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Got To Be Free

Fourteen years ago, Glynn Reed started Memphis’ Juneteenth celebration — an event that commemorates June 19th, 1865, the day slaves in Texas learned that the Civil War was over and they were free. This year’s Crossroads Ford Juneteenth Freedom and Heritage Festival salutes African Americans in the military.

The festival will take place June 15th to the 17th in Douglass Park. Activities include horseback riding, picnicking, kiddie rides, moon walks, face-painting, storytelling, Little League softball, Afro-centric jewelry sales, health-testing opportunities, and more.

R&B artist J. Blackfoot (pictured) will be the music headliner, performing at 7 p.m. on Saturday, and the gospel group Kevin Davidson & the Voices will perform at 6:15 p.m. on Sunday. In addition, Juneteenth will feature lots of local musicians, including African drummer Ekpe, “because we’ve got so much talent right here,” Reed explains. And, as always, an abundance of food will be available, though families are welcome to bring their own.

Reed says that in just 14 years, Memphis’ Juneteenth has experienced extraordinary growth. “At first, there were less than 300 people, and now, there’s no way to tell how many people there are,” she says.

As for the reason behind the festival’s increased popularity: “We’ve been cooped up inside all winter,” Reed says, laughing. But, more importantly, “It’s a cultural event, and there are not a lot of opportunities for children and adults together to get history about their culture,” she says. “It’s a celebration of freedom.”

Juneteenth, Douglass Park, June 15th-17th, free. For more information, go to www.juneteenthmemphis.com.