Categories
News The Fly-By

MEMernet: Moving to Memphis, Memphis AF, and Getting Back Out There

Memphis on the internet.

Pros and Cons

A YouTube video from a channel called Moving to Memphis Tennessee outlines some pros and cons of, you guessed it, moving to Memphis. The weight of the mismatches would be hilarious if they weren’t so sad.

Pro: Basketball. Con: Poverty. Pro: Memphis in May. Con: No public transportation.

Other videos include: “What’s in Atoka?” and “Should You Move to Bartlett?”

Define AF

“What does Memphis AF mean to you?” asked one Memphis subredditor. Responses included “drinking in church,” “terrible roads and bad drivers,” “drive-out tags,” “bootleg DVDs,” and “disappointment.”

Back at It

Posted to YouTube by the Memphis Flyer

Last week, the Flyer launched a new, occasional series called “Getting Back Out There.” In it, we’ll explore life in the (hopefully for real this time) waning days of Covid-19. We’ll get back to bars, restaurants, and more in the great indoors. Last week, we toured the new concourse at Memphis International Airport and the expansion at Southland Casino Racing.

Categories
Opinion The Last Word

A New Day in a Memphis on the Rise

When I say I’m from Memphis, I say it with pride. I used to shy away from revealing my hometown but not anymore. You know the giddy feeling you get when you’ve been out of town for a while, and you land in Memphis? I feel that now, sitting on Otherlands’ patio as I’m writing this.

There are two men sitting across from me. I don’t think they know each other, but one is telling the other about his new porch extension and the other is nodding politely as he sips his coffee. He offers the occasional “how much did that cost?” or “wow, man.”

I wonder on any given day how many random conversations like this happen around the city. The friendly conversations that strangers share are just one thing that I miss when I’m away.

I’ve been living in Washington, D.C., for almost a year now. I moved there for grad school and not a day goes by that I don’t miss my city. The longer I’m gone, the more I appreciate being a Memphian.

When some people think of Memphis, they might think of the crime rate or a random First 48 episode they saw once. Or some might think of Graceland or even Ja Morant.

But for me, Memphis is more than its problems, a tourist spot, or our franchise basketball player. It’s a special place. It’s a mecca of culture. It’s a town of relentless people who wear their passion on their sleeves.

Maybe it’s the city’s history and the trials and tribulations people here have had to overcome. From the sanitation workers’ strike to the library sit-ins, Memphians have always given their all when it matters and in the face of injustice. The unwavering work, along with the blood, sweat, and tears of the Memphians that came before us was not in vain.

My cousin, who is based in Wisconsin, recently came to visit and was awed by the sheer diversity and integration of the city. As we sat at Jerry’s eating our supreme sno-cones, she noticed a young Black man and an older white woman having a conversation. He asked about her dog, and she told him all about him (perhaps more than he cared to know).

“Wow. Y’all really intermigle here,” my cousin commented. “I love this.”

Her comment caught me off guard. Maybe because I’ve lived here my whole life, I’m used to it. But it’s true. Memphians are different. We are unique. We have a special kind of heart and soul. The way that Memphians support and root for each other is unmatched. The way we stand up for those in need here in Memphis and beyond is unparalleled.

I first noticed it when activists took the bridge in 2016, and more recently with the protest against Asian-American hate and the rally in solidarity with Palestinians.

From the artists and musicians to the activists and the community leaders, Memphis is full of grit-and-grinders making their mark on the city and making change where needed.

I believe we are basking in the dawn of a new day. High noon has not yet come, but we are well on the way. Memphis still has its issues. But it also has the potential to be a city of hope and a beacon of light for the rest of the state, if not the country.

And now is not the time to be complacent or settle for a “good” city. It’s the time to keep moving forward until the sun is peeking in the sky for every person in this city.

Until every child has the opportunity to receive an adequate education and a fair chance at success, we have work to do. Until the unhoused are safe and secure in a home, we have work to do. Until every Memphian is treated fairly by the police, we have work to do. Until every Memphian is prospering, we have work to do.

In the meantime, I will hold my head up high, stick my chest in the air, and proclaim I’m from Memphis. I am Memphis AF and proud of it.
Maya Smith is a D.C.-based reporter and former Flyer staff writer.

Categories
News The Fly-By

MEMernet: Sweetgrass Smash, Morgan & Morgan & Morgan & Morgan

Sweetgrass Smash

Details are fuzzy, but it’s clear that something definitely happened at Sweetgrass in Cooper-Young on Saturday, according to a post by Brad Gilmer on Nextdoor.

The restaurant did not post anything formal about the incident online. Nextdoor users had questions and theories.

“Looks as if a vehicle would have come in at a very odd angle?” asked Kathy Ladner.

“Someone ordered the large plate of nachos and then couldn’t fit through the door on the way out!” exclaimed Michael Cairo. But Cairo later explained that a driver lost control before midnight and hit the building.

“It was so loud it shot me out of bed. I thought someone was about to drive through my apartment. Wild Saturday night!” said Cady Mink.

Morgan & Morgan

Posted to instagram by memphisasf_ck

Categories
News The Fly-By

MEMernet: Hack Memphis & 901 Memes

MLG&Waiting

Posted to Instagram.

Hack Memphis

Last week, Reddit user runfreedog asked the internet for pro-tips or life hacks for living in Memphis.

Memphisvol8668: If you want to feel alive, drive in the lane closest to the sidewalk on Poplar in either direction.

KimJongHard-un: Or, alternatively, ride in the middle lane between a MATA bus and an 18-wheeler.

PenBandit: There’s no such thing as jaywalking in Memphis. If there’s no traffic, go on and cross. No one cares. We joke about turning your flashers on to park anywhere. This is not true. The parking enforcement people Downtown are some MFing, grade-A ninjas.

plentyinsane: If you grocery shop on weekends, do it (Sunday) morning when everyone is at church.

Posted to Memphis subreddit.

Memphis AF

That moment when FedEx said screw it and turned Memphis AF.

Posted to Facebook by Memphis Memes 901.

Categories
Music Music Blog

Harbert Ave. Porch Show Rides Again, With a New Label in the Making

Robert Jethro Wyatt and Moke O’Connor introduce Jack O & the Tennessee Tearjerkers, Sept 2012.

If this city has music coming out its ears, with pop-up shows, festivals, house shows, buskers, and impromptu jam sessions springing up in every corner, none of these is quite as Memphis as the Harbert Avenue Porch Show. Held at least once a year in the normally staid environs of Central Gardens, the porch show has become a tradition that brings together generations and neighbors from all walks of life.

Fans throng to see Snowglobe in 2017

The brainchild of Robert Jethro Wyatt, the porch show is a perfect expression of its host’s love of music. Indeed, one might not expect such levels of fandom from a Professor of Pediatrics at University of Tennessee Health Sciences Center, such a love of garage rock from a Pediatric Nephrologist at Le Bonheur Children’s Hospital. But Memphis is a city of iconoclasts and mold-breakers. A regular at many of the area’s hardest-rocking shows, Wyatt has given back to the rock ‘n’ roll community every year since 2012, on his very doorstep.

Jack Oblivian at the inaugural Harbert Avenue Porch Show.

This year’s show marks the return of Jack Oblivian, who played the inaugural performance six years ago. Keth Cooper, Frank McLallen, Graham Winchester, and Seth Moody, aka the Sheiks, continue to serve as his dream band.

When the tradition started, as Wyatt notes, “the event was attended by over 100 neighbors and friends. Since then we have held at least one porch show a year featuring musicians and bands from our region. Over 250 folks of all ages attended the 2017 Snowglobe show.”

Some  were documented and simulcast by the short-lived Rocket Science Audio project, taking the porch show to international audiences through the magic of the internet. 

This year also finds Wyatt on the cusp of an even deeper commitment to local rock, as he lays the groundwork for a new record label. “Black and Wyatt Records is me, Dennis Black and Mike McCarthy. Dennis is the Research Director at Le Bonheur – but he goes back to working at a radio station in Millington when he was younger – and keeps motel rooms booked in Tullahoma for Bonnaroo every year. One Monday about 10 years ago Dennis and I flew to San Francisco to see the New Pornographers at the Warfield.” Mike McCarthy, of course, is the punk film auteur, community activist, sculptor, comic artist, and underground film auteur behind Guerrillamonster, the catch-all enterprise for his many ventures. He and Ronnie Harris have designed the T-shirts for this year’s show, and he’ll be involved in curating the Black & Wyatt roster. The trio are brimming with enthusiasm for their new venture, although, as Wyatt says, “I’m just not ready to give out hundreds of handbills this soon.”

The Harbert Avenue Porch Show featuring Jack Oblivian is free; a donation to the band of $5 to $10 is suggested. Free beer and food in the driveway (while it lasts) including beer Memphis Made Brewing. The music starts at 6:00 PM. Eat at Eric’s Food Truck will be on the street.
Sponsors – Memphis Made Brewing, Memphis Sports Academy, Goner Records, Utopia Animal Hospital and Dennis Black.