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News The Fly-By

MEMernet: COVID-19 Vaccines Arrive, Tigers at Target, and the McRib

Wheels down

The first COVID-19 vaccines arrived here Sunday. FedEX Corp. captured this historic moment in a tweet that could not have come soon enough.

Positive 2020?

University of Memphis president Dr. David Rudd tweeted a bold statement last week. “One thing got much better in 2020.”

McRib Vaccine

E. Parkway McDonalds is still going strong on Twitter even though the restaurant there is not (it closed years ago). The account captured this gross but weirdly accurate moment in time last week as the mysterious McRib sandwich reappeared.

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News The Fly-By

MEMernet: Anthony Marcuzzo, McDonald’s Ice Cream Machine

Tony, Tony, Tony

Posted to Twitter by @BossesMemphis

Anthony Marcuzzo was excoriated on Memphis social media this weekend after he allegedly rammed protesters with his vehicle in Cooper-Young.

Within moments, Marcuzzo’s picture was all over Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook. People raged about the incident and raged more later when they realized Marcuzzo was released with a ticket. However, the Memphis Police Department issued a statement afterward saying that they are conducting a further investigation.

Here are some choice tweets:

@PEOPLEOFMEMPHIS — “HEARIN THIS IS THE MF THAT RAN INTO SOMEONE … OLE SONIC PARKING LOT, DIP CAN HEAD ASS BOY

@Thestablegenius — Real bass pro energy

@Marissakizer — THE ONLY THING HE SAID TO US AFTER ATTEMPTING MURDER IS “I’m trying to get to the lake”

By Friday, there was already a change.org petition called “Charge Tony Marcuzzo with an attempt for murder.” As of Monday morning, the petition had 10,335 signatures.

This man

Posted to Twitter by E. Parkway McDonald’s

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

UberEats Now Delivering McDonald’s

McDonald’s has partnered with UberEats for what they’re calling 
McDelivery.

This is a relatively new development. UberEats launched a pilot program in Florida and then rolled it out to other cities such as LA, New York, and Chicago.

UberEats will deliver from 30 area McDonald’s restaurants and will cover Midtown, East Memphis, the airport area, and some of Germantown.

The entire menu will be available, save for soft serve ice cream, and there’s no minimum delivery. Folks have ordered just a coffee, a rep tells me.

They envision people ordering late-night, and busy families having dinner brought to them. They see deliveries being made to Little League games or to a park. They think the all-day breakfast promises to be a hit.

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Cover Feature News

Hangover Helpers: 18 ways (we think) to get through the morning after.

Your head is pounding. Your skin is pale (or maybe even kind of greenish). Your hands are shaking. Your throat is on fire from all those cigarettes you chain-smoked last night. Or least the cigarettes you think you smoked last night. You’re just now realizing that you don’t remember much of last night. Oh god, what if you said something embarrassing to your boss? Or danced naked on a bar? And speaking of naked, where are your pants? And wait, where are you? This definitely isn’t your house.

We’ve all been there. It’s the hangover from hell, and summer is the prime time to be so afflicted. It’s the season of backyard barbecues, picnics, summer concerts, and trips to the lake. Much beer, wine, and vodka will be consumed, and you’ll more than likely experience your fair share of hangovers.

But if there’s one thing the Flyer team knows all about, it’s hangovers. And we’re here to offer our expert advice on beating the brown bottle flu or the vodka virus or whatever catchy, alliterative name you choose. Here’s our handy guide to the best hangover cures, foods for soaking up last night’s booze, and cocktails for a little hair of the dog. — Bianca Phillips

IV Hangover Therapy

“I need to get a hangover,” I tell the bartender. “It’s for work.”

I’m at the New Daisy Theatre’s Big Star Room. It’s the Daisy’s 74th birthday party, and George Clinton, accompanied by the current iteration of Parliament Funkadelic, is about to take the stage. I figure there’s a high probability of feeling good tonight and feeling bad tomorrow. The bartender nods and pours me a Jameson.

Any alcoholic beverage can produce a hangover when consumed immoderately, but dark distilled liquors are particularly potent. The goal of fermentation is to produce ethanol, the magical compound which produces the desired effects of mood elevation and lowered inhibitions. But thanks to one of organic chemistry’s great ironies, as your liver works to clear the ethanol from your system, one of the byproducts is acetaldehyde, a compound which inflames any tissue it touches. It also has a pleasant, fruity odor and is present alongside ethanol in dark liquors such as the Irish whiskey being poured over a glass of ice in front of me.

I’m not sure how many Jamesons I have had as I dance and catch up with old friends, but my difficulty in navigating my iPhone to call Uber at the end of the night indicates that there were several more than was prudent. But it was for work.

My headache awakens me the next morning. The blood vessels dilated by the decaying ethanol are struggling to return to normal, causing migraine­-like pain. I only had a small plate of nachos last night, and my stomach is in no mood to accept anything new. My mouth tastes vaguely of cat pee. I drink what little coffee I can keep down and head for Atlas Men’s Health at the corner of Madison and McLean.

Justin Fox Burks

Flyer film editor Chris McCoy gets IV hangover therapy.

“The reason people get hangovers is mostly dehydration,” says Anna Harnish, a physician’s assistant who also works at the St. Francis ER. Alcohol is a diuretic, which is why club bathrooms smell so horrible and why you wake up the next day with cotton mouth. Generations of medical students have treated the hangover’s debilitating effects by nicking a bag of saline solution from the supply closet and rehydrating intravenously. Some of those former med students decided to monitize the secret hangover cure.

“It’s very popular in Vegas,” Harnish says. “They have buses that go around called Hangover Heaven. But you pay a Vegas price there.”

Hangover Heaven can run upwards of $200. Atlas Men’s Health offers two options for Saturday morning detox: $75 gets you the basic treatment of one liter of saline solution doped with vitamin B, medications for nausea and indigestion, and ketorolac tromethamine, a strong, anti­-inflammatory drug in the same chemical family as ibuprofen. For $100, you get the Eraser, which adds a proprietary vitamin cocktail to the mix.

In the interest of science, I opt for the baseline treatment. It takes about 40 minutes for the bag’s contents to empty into my parched veins. The ketorolac kicker, which Harnish administers about halfway through, makes short work of my headache. By the time it’s over, I’m feeling good as new. Science. It works, people.

Chris McCoy

Hair of the Dog

Okay, you’ve got the hangover. One of the more ingenious remedies is that which goes by the name of “hair of the dog that bit you.” In a manner somewhat akin to the principle of the vaccine, drink something alcoholic to still the agonies that come from having drunk too much.

The Medical Daily website positions itself among the skeptics. The idea of drinking more to offset the effects of a previous day’s drinking binge “sounds so counterintuitive … that’s because it is; drinking more alcohol will only make your hangover worse.”

The article goes on to attribute those familiar morning-after miseries essentially to “methanol toxicity,” which is what happens “when we ferment and distill ethanol, which makes up most of the alcohol we consume.” And we learn from an article in the U.K. periodical The Daily Mail that “[i]n high doses methanol can make people go blind or even die because the body converts it to formaldehyde.”

Formaldehyde? The antique expression “getting pickled” is closer than we thought to the heart of the case.

The site recommends as a hangover remedy the consumption of “Pedialyte, long known for its use among children.” Now, really, is Pedialyte that much more appealing than methanol and formaldehyde?

Much more like it are three familiar (and alcoholic) remedies freely available locally — the Bloody Mary, the mimosa, and the michelada.

Here’s how the friendly folks at the bar of the Bahama Breeze in Wolfchase do it. For the Bloody Mary, two ounces of either vodka or tequila, with Bloody Mary mix, and garnished by lemon, lime wedges, and celery stalk as your taste requires. The mimosa is basically orange or pineapple juice and champagne.

Bartenders Jessica Tyler and Michelle Dickson of Bahama Breeze with a freshly garnished (and sampled) Bloody Mary.

At the Abuelo, across the road on Highway 64, there are three varieties of michelada: the Gato, the Tradicional, and the Roja. The last named is the most ordered. Ingredients include a salted rim, abundant ice cubes, lemon wedges, dashes of Worcestershire and/or Tabasco sauces (optional), Bloody Mary mix or plain tomato juice, and beer.

Do they work? Well, all these contain healthy juice nutrients, salt (helpful against dehydration), and a good stimulus to the bedraggled senses. Probably a safe amount of methanol. And they all beat hell out of Pedialyte. — Jackson Baker

Hangover Food

Some hangovers are so bad that just the thought of eating makes your stomach turn. Others, though, turn you into a ravenous monster with a craving for fries. With chili on top. And cheese. Maybe some gravy. Oooh, and what about bacon?

We’ve sampled our way around town through our various hangovers, and we have a few suggestions for dishes guaranteed to keep your hangover at bay.

Bianca Phillips

Oshi

Loaded Fries and the Sake to Me Milkshake at Oshi

You’ve overindulged. But now is not the time to be a quitter. Oh no, honey, it’s time to lean in. That means cheese fries. Oshi’s loaded fries are doused in a creamy cheese sauce and sprinkled with scallions and bacon and are satisfying in every way. What Oshi has going for it over the other places with cheese fries is those signature boozy milkshakes. Try the Sake to Me with coconut sake, vanilla vodka, vanilla ice cream, and toasted coconut. It’s something made in dreams. You don’t deserve it at all, but that makes it only sweeter.

Susan Ellis

I Love Juice Bar

Juices at I Love Juice Bar

That closing round of shots seemed harmless enough last night, but this morning it feels fatal. Your hands shake, your eyes ache, your stomach’s on spin cycle, and it appears a litter of kittens has taken up residence on your tongue. Here’s what you do: Be kind to yourself. Forego the greasy heap of food you so desperately want, and detox with a juice.

I Love Juice Bar’s pretty, garnet-red We Got the Beet has beets, carrots, apples, ginger, and lemon, with the beets working to detoxify your liver and the ginger settling your stomach. The Fresh Greens has cucumber to rehydrate and spinach for vitamin C. — SE

Picosos

Tacos Alambre at Picosos

When I wake up in the afternoon broken, with itchy teeth, a pounding headache, and the acrid smell of a man who had too good a time the night before, there’s really only one dining option that can fix me. I’ll soon be in my car, squinting behind dark sunglasses, and motoring down Summer, on my way to Picosos for a steaming platter of meaty comfort called “alambre.”

Alambres are a little bit like Mexico City’s answer to the Philly cheese steak sandwich, only way more decadent. Small chunks of beef, pork, or chicken — or a combination thereof — are grilled with onion, crispy bacon, and bell pepper, then smothered in cheese, and served on a platter next to a ridiculously tall, lumberjack stack of tortillas. Picosos’ warm, butter-yellow tortillas are hearty, more durable than most, and a key part of this surefire remedy for the brown bottle flu. — Chris Davis

Eclectic Highland

The Waffold at Café Eclectic Highland

Why is it that breakfast foods are the best for hangovers? We’re not sure, but it is something to ponder while taking in Café Eclectic’s massive Waffold. Sweet Baby Jesus, this is a thing of beauty! A plate-sized golden waffle hugging a whole omelet of eggs that holds within its folds melted provolone cheese and bacon. To slather or not to slather with syrup is your call. And while it may not cure what ails you, the Waffold does make a mighty nice distraction. — SE

Maciel’s

Fried Tacos at Maciel’s

Stuffing your face full of tacos is the answer to many of life’s problems. Hungry? Depressed? Bored? Hungover? See how that works? And we fully endorse stuffing your face full of Maciel’s tacos. (In truth, plenty of their dishes would do for a hangover cure; we’re looking at you, huevo torta.) You get your choice of papa (potato), frijole fritos (refried beans), or pollo (chicken), or you can get one of each. This plate has everything you need: crunchy, cheesy, salty, creamy. Served with rice and refried beans. — SE

Pink Diva

Totchos at Pink Diva Cupcakery

You might think nachos sound like a good cure for the old Irish flu. And they’ll do in a pinch. But you know what’s better than nachos? Totchos, that’s what. Tater. Tot. Nachos. At Pink Diva, a vegan cupcake bakery and lunch café, the crispy, deep-fried tater puffs come covered in black beans, brown rice, a dairy-free cheese sauce, black olives, onions, salsa, and vegan sour cream. They’re practically guaranteed to soak up all that vodka oozing from your pores. — BP

Imagine Vegan Café

Memphis Slam at Imagine Vegan Café

This ain’t no Denny’s Grand Slam. At Imagine, the signature breakfast mess pile is a meat-free plate of fluffy biscuits topped with tofu scramble (like a vegan version of scrambled eggs), country gravy, dairy-free cheddar sauce, and veggie sausage. That dish alone will cure what ails you, but for those Sunday mornings when you’re still a little drunk from the night before, I recommend ordering the Memphis Slam “Bianca-style,” with a side of two crispy deep-fried hash brown patties. Chunk those on top and cover the whole plate in sriracha. — BP

The Sampler at Bryant’s Breakfast

Bacon. Gravy. Biscuits. Forget a fancified brunch. To cure what ails you after a night of imbibing a few too many adult beverages, order the Sampler from Bryant’s. It’s way too much food for one person (eggs, sausage, grits, potato patty, and pork and dough), but when you’ve got a hangover hankering, this heavenly breakfast plate satisfies. — Shara Clark

Hash Browns at CK’s

They’re not scattered, covered, diced, peppered, or chunked, but the hash browns at CK’s certainly hit the spot at 3 a.m. These shredded browns are crispy on the outside, greasy on the inside, and best enjoyed with a side of piping hot, black coffee. Technically, it’s best to enjoy these BEFORE going to sleep to prevent an impending hangover from being the worst ever. Pro tip: Flyer photographer Justin Fox Burks recommends the “hash brown sandwich,” an off-menu concoction that involves tucking hash browns between two slices of toast. — BP

Fried Rice at Yum’s on Jackson

Yum’s — the chain of neon-lit, Chinese food/sandwich shop/fast-food joints — are all over the city. But I’m partial to the Yum’s on Jackson and Hollywood for one reason — the portions of fried rice are massive! A small fried rice (less than $5) fills a Styrofoam takeout container to the brim, and it’s most certainly enough for two meals (or for one really hungry hangover). I prefer the vegetable fried rice, but ham, chicken, and shrimp fried rice are also available. — BP

Two Timer at Ubee’s

For whatever reason — science, I think — greasy foods top the hangover craving list. When something light and healthy won’t suffice (and, really, it just won’t), go for the Two Timer, a double-patty, double cheeseburger cooked in Ubee’s aged, seasoned grease. They’re open ’til 3 a.m. and they deliver, so, technically, you could be proactive and order this before bed. Will eating a burger while drunk prevent a hangover? It’s worth a try. — SC

Crazy Noodle

Ramen at Crazy Noodle

Ramen noodles got me through college, and now they’re getting me through my failed attempt at adulthood. On those afternoons when I wake up with a pounding head, an insatiable appetite, and the occasional wave of nausea, only ramen can truly cure me. It may surprise you that the best ramen (a traditional Japanese dish) in town is served at a Korean joint. But Crazy Noodle’s ramen game is on point. Order it with tofu, mandu (vegetable dumplings), curry chicken, seafood, even cheddar cheese. Add extra spice if you dare. — BP

Pho Saigon

Bánh Xèo at Pho Saigon

This traditional Vietnamese rice flour and coconut milk crepe looks like a gigantic, greasy omelet. But it’s totally egg-free, and the exterior is surprisingly crisp. Order off the menu, and it comes stuffed with shrimp. But I make a special request to swap out the shrimp for deep-fried cubes of tofu. The dish is delightfully oily, which is why my friends and I have a New Year’s Day tradition of ordering Pho Saigon’s bánh xèo to heal our first hangovers of the year. There’s a crisp carrot-daikon slaw on the side that helps cut the grease and makes you feel like you’re doing something nice for yourself.

BP

Bar-B-Que Pizza at Garibaldi’s

If you’re in the U of M area, you don’t even have to change out of your PJs for this one. They’ll bring the goods to you. And what better way to soak up yesterday’s booze than a pizza feast? A good go-to is the Bar-B-Que Pizza, a cheesy, perfectly crispy crust topped with generous portions of smoked pulled pork. Throw in Miss Angie’s Italian Masterpiece (a salad piled high with veggies) for good measure. — SC

Hungover? I’m Lovin’ It!

On the exceedingly rare occasions when I wake and realize I was overserved the night before, I know exactly what I need to do: drive to the nearest place that serves a bacon, egg, and cheese breakfast sandwich. Speed is of the essence. I don’t want to have to park and walk and sit down and look at a menu and be waited on by a chirpy server. I want to sit in my car listening to NPR’s Saturday shows while berating myself for being an idiot who’s way too old to be abusing his body like this. (There’s a reason my old X­Terra has stains on the passenger seat.)

McDonald’s

True confession: I almost always go to McDonald’s. Their sandwich is perfection: a circle of scrambled eggs (or egg product?) topped with American cheese and a couple strips of bacon, all nestled on a gummy-­soft biscuit. It’s the greatest alcohol absorber of all time. Order it with a cup of too­-hot-­to-­drink black coffee, orange juice, and a pre­shaped oval of “hash browns.” Within minutes of finishing this magical mix of salt and meat and sugar and caffeine, you will feel much better. Trust me on this.

Bruce VanWyngarden

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News News Blog

Demolition Begins to Make Way for McDonald’s on Highland

It’s the end of an era for the eastern side of the Highland Strip. The building that once housed Whatever, the Super Submarine Sandwich Shop, and the Southern Meat Market was leveled last week.

After some resistance from the surrounding community in 2013 when the proposal was initially filed, McDonald’s, which is currently located at 657 S. Highland, will be relocated to the corner of Southern and Highland, right across the street. Initially, the issue surrounded how the fast-food restaurant would fit within the local neighborhood aesthetic and comply with the University District Overlay.

Since then, the issues were addressed, and the fast-food conglomerate was approved for its design a year ago last August: a wrap around drive-thru was scrapped for a double drive-thru in the back of the store, and the building is far closer to the sidewalk than originally planned.

The property was sold in March for $580,000, according to the Memphis Business Journal.

Gary Geiser, the owner of Whatever, said if the property had been up for sale, they would have purchased it.

“If we had even been notified that they were interested in selling it the property, we would’ve tried to buy it for sure,” he said. “But we weren’t notified.”

IMG_3087.jpg

  • Penelope Huston

The property, which now belongs to McDonald’s, has caused the collection of locally owned businesses previously located there to scatter. The corporation plans on the restaurant being completed by 2016. The current McDonald’s will be leveled and sold as property.

“I think [the new McDonald’s] is a really bad idea,” Geiser said. “I think it’s in a bad position. The train is always there. It’ll give them good exposure, but getting in and out of there will be a real bear.”

Originally, Whatever occupied a small corner of the building and expanded further into the property. They were forced to move to a space across the street at 555 S. Highland.

“We had a good run there,” he said. “It was an interesting corner. We were across the tracks from the rest of the Highland Strip.”

Since moving, however, sales have been up for Whatever. A second location opened on Madison Avenue, near Overton Square, and a third location in Cordova is opening in the coming weeks.

The Super Submarine Sub Shop moved to 3316 Summer Ave. The Southern Meat Market, after 114 years at the Highland location, moved to 3826 Park Ave.

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News The Fly-By

Fast-food Workers Strike for Higher Wages, Get Arrested

Local fast-food workers involved in ongoing national strikes for higher wages are not havin’ it their way, but they’re hoping a recent string of arrests will help.

Chris Shaw

Poplar during a strike last week.

The latest fast-food worker demonstration outside McDonald’s on Poplar near White Station last week ended with nine people in handcuffs. And demonstrators say they are hoping that the pre-meditated arrests will lead to a greater awareness of their cause.

In one of the largest fast-food strikes that the city has seen, workers from St. Louis and Little Rock joined fast-food and restaurant workers from Memphis to protest low wages. The group met at multiple fast-food restaurants before ending the rally at the East Memphis McDonald’s. Wearing shirts that read “Memphis 15,” “Little Rock 15,” and “St. Louis 15,” the protesters called for the wages of fast-food workers to be raised to $15 an hour and for the right for fast-food workers to form a union.

After a series of chants of “We’ve got the Blue Flu, too” and “We can’t survive on $7.25,” a group of protesters marched into the street, blocking the eastbound lanes of Poplar for a few minutes.

Police confronted the protesters in the street, and nine were arrested and loaded into a Blue Crush police vehicle. Following the arrests, police slowly advanced on the crowd, backing people up through the parking lots of local businesses before ultimately leading the crowd to the parking lot of Bed Bath & Beyond, where buses and vans were waiting for them.

Multiple sources who asked to remain anonymous confirmed that the arrests made last Thursday were planned and that police were likely informed of when and where the final demonstration at Thursday’s fast-food rally would take place.

“Originally we planned on having 19 people arrested, but people started going out into the street so fast that not everyone who planned on getting arrested did,” said a demonstrator, who asked to remain anonymous.

Shawne Porter, an organizer from Little Rock who brought a van of fast-food workers to the Memphis strike, said she was surprised that the local police acted as quickly as they did.

“We were out in the streets of Little Rock for over an hour before the police told us that we had to leave because we were blocking traffic,” Porter said. “There were six people arrested in Little Rock, but I was surprised at how fast the demonstrators were arrested in Memphis. It seemed like they knew we were coming, and they were ready to use force to make us leave.”

Following the latest nationwide protest in which more than 100 people were arrested in various cities, McDonald’s released the following statement: “McDonald’s and our independent franchisees support paying our valued employees fair wages aligned with a competitive marketplace. We believe that any minimum wage increase should be implemented over time so that the impact on owners of small and medium-sized businesses — like the ones who own and operate the majority of our restaurants — is manageable. Additionally, we believe that any increase needs to be considered in a broad context, one that considers, for example, the impact of the Affordable Care Act and its definition of ‘full time’ employment, as well as the treatment, from a tax perspective, of investments made by businesses owners.

“It’s important to know approximately 90 percent of our U.S. restaurants are independently owned and operated by franchisees who set wages according to job level and local and federal laws. McDonald’s does not determine wages set by our more than 3,000 U.S. franchisees.”

Even at the threat of being arrested or fired, local Church’s Chicken employee and protester Christopher Smith said he doesn’t see any other method to get his message across.

“They don’t listen to any of our demands we make at work, so this is our only option,” Smith said. “I’ve been there for two years, and I’ve only gotten one raise. I feel like my voice isn’t being recognized. We deal with public people every day just like everyone else, and just because we work at a fast-food restaurant doesn’t mean we are below everyone else.”

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News The Fly-By

Not Up in Smoke?

After University District residents delivered a stern message of “not lovin’ it” to McDonald’s regarding the fast-food chain’s plans to build a restaurant at Southern and Highland, they seem to have pulled their plans to purchase that property.

Now, a man who told the Flyer he simply goes by Mr. Z and owns the Highland Z Market and other convenience stores around the city, is attempting to purchase the property at Southern and Highland. And he says, if the deal closes, the building’s current tenants will be allowed to stay.

“It’s going to be remodeled, and if someone wants to stay, they can stay,” Mr. Z said.

Whatever smoke shop owner Gary Geiser says he plans to stay in the building where his store has been since 1971. He even held a celebration sale last week, but he says he won’t know for certain if he can stay until Mr. Z closes on the property.

“The problem is we don’t know what is going to happen with this,” Geiser said.

Southern Meat Market owner Randy Stockard isn’t so sure he’ll stick around no matter what happens with the building. Both men have been renting other storefronts for months just in case they have to move, and Stockard is considering moving to a new location on Park Avenue near Pete & Sam’s, where he’s been paying rent since January.

“I’m already paying rent on Park, but it would take me another month or two to get out of here. I started thinking about staying, but I don’t know. I’d probably do better on Park because of visibility,” Stockard said.

Geiser has a back-up plan too. He’s been paying $3,000 a month in rent for a location at 555-557 S. Highland, the old Double Deuce Dance Hall, since November 2012.

“We first heard about [McDonald’s trying to purchase the building] in September 2012, and we heard we only had two months to move. So like idiots, we rented space on the Highland strip,” Geiser said.

Geiser said, if they are allowed to stay put, they’ll turn the space on the Highland strip into office/warehouse space and another retail store of some kind. He said they’re also planning to open another smoke shop in town soon.

After hearing of the McDonald’s plan, the owners of the Super Submarine Sandwich Shop (better known as the “Chinese sub shop”), which was located next door to Whatever, quickly relocated into an old Captain D’s on Summer Avenue. Safeway Wholesale and Supply relocated a block away. Now their former locations are boarded up.

“I wish the sub shop lady hadn’t left,” Geiser said.

Business owners said they first learned of the potential McDonald’s sale in 2012 through rumors, and only after numerous calls to their property manager, Palmer Brothers Inc., did they learn they’d have to move. It sounded like a done deal.

But after University District residents petitioned against McDonald’s plans for a loop-around drive-thru that didn’t comply with the University District Overlay, an official set of standards that regulates all construction in the area, and the Office of Planning and Development rejected the site plan, McDonald’s withdrew its request for approval by the Land Use Control Board.

Calls to Palmer Brothers for comment were not returned by press time.

Categories
News News Blog

Memphis Workers Protest After Recent Nationwide Wage Wins

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Workers Interfaith Network and fast-food workers banded together this morning to protest minimum wages and the lack of ability to form a union. The protesters rallied at two McDonald’s locations before marching from the county courthouse downtown to the intersection of Danny Thomas Boulevard and Poplar Avenue, where Wendy’s and KFC are located.

“Before we were invisible, now our voices are being heard. We’re telling fast-food companies it’s not OK anymore to rake in huge profits but pay poverty wages,” said Ashley Cathey, a McDonald’s worker. “We’re standing up for higher pay, which will not just help fast-food workers but will help get Memphis’ economy moving again.”

In Memphis, the median wage is $8.49 and there are 11,400 fast-food workers, according to the Workers Interfaith Network. The organization also cites a model developed by a professor at MIT, which showed that an adult worker in Memphis with a child has to make $18.18 an hour to make a living wage.

“Corporations like McDonald’s are making big profits by paying poverty wages, and that’s just wrong,” said Dr. Herbert Lester from the Workers Interfaith Network. “They can afford to pay a living wage, which would put more money in workers’ pockets, so they can spend it in our community and lift our economy.”

Last month, voters raised the minimum wage in SeaTac, Wash., to $15 an hour, among other cities and states in the process of raising their respective minimum wages. The White House also announced Dec. 3 that it would support a Senate bill to increase the federal minimum wage to $10.10 an hour.

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News News Blog

City Council Delays Highland McDonald’s Hearing

mcdonalds_logo.jpg

In the case of McDonald’s developing a new location on the Highland Strip, members of the Memphis City Council said the fast-food company will have to compromise with neighbors in the University District in order for it to be built.

At the October 15th city council meeting, the company responsible for the project, SR Consulting, requested the hearing to be moved to December 17th. Cindy Reaves, the president of the firm, said an alternate plan needed to be developed.

David Wade, an attorney representative for university area residents, tried to convince the council to go forward with the hearing, rather than postpone.

“I’ve been shown the basic design changes that are being composed,” Wade said. “The design that is going to be recommended does not address the basic objection that all of these people in this university area have.”

The major concern of residents is the proposed loop-around drive-thru that does not comply with the University District Overlay, an official set of standards that regulates all construction in the area.

Council members Shea Flinn, Wanda Halbert, and Harold Collins voiced in favor of the delay.

Collins suggested giving McDonald’s the benefit of the doubt to come up with a new plan that satisfies the community, while Halbert expressed her disappointment and told the company to “seriously listen” to the University District residents.

Flinn was reminded of an earlier dispute with a corporate company.

“I’m gonna speak in favor of the delay for one simple reason — and it’s located on Union and Cooper,” Flinn said. “That’s the CVS that’s sitting there. At the time when we considered that, there was discussion about the delay. The opposition for [the delay] was very against [it], so instead of getting the best possible compromise, we ended up with something that I consider less good.”

The council passed the delay in a 9-4 vote, approving the hearing for December 17th.

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News

Dragnet: Memphis Tranny McBrawlers Busted

Three cross-dressing customers who attacked a McDonald’s staff late Sunday evening have been, um, dragged off to jail after police captured them yesterday afternoon. (If you somehow managed to miss this Memphis moment, get the details here.)

Dacorian Greer, Danny Mitchell, and Lynn Gillespie, all in their late 20s, were charged with assault and damage of property over $500 after their unladylike behavior, which included smashing the drive-thru window and peeling off accessories to better teach the workers a lesson in customer service.

We’re breathlessly awaiting the surveillance video from the fracas, which has been handed over to the Shelby County DA’s office.

No word yet on whether the assailants will be held in the women’s or men’s prison, or whether the manager of the fast food restaurant has caught all kinds of hell for getting a beat down from transvestites. Either way, the mug shots are priceless. See more at WREG’s website.