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We Recommend We Recommend

Pink Palace’s “Dinosaurs in Motion” Exhibit Opens Jan. 30

The Pink Palace Family of Museums shuttered its doors on December 23rd. One month later, the Pink Palace Museum of Science and History is opening back up in a big way — with dinosaurs. Rawwwr.

The museum’s new “Dinosaurs in Motion” exhibit, opening January 30th, will get the temporarily extinct dinosaur season reanimated. This new exhibit is an interactive STEAM (science, technology, engineering, arts, and mathematics) experience built for visitors of all ages. As a STEAM-minded exhibit should, it will engage and educate visitors with 14 fully interactive, recycled metal dinosaur sculptures. The sculptures feature exposed mechanics inspired by actual fossils. An amazing blend of art, science, and innovation, the exhibit weaves in sketching, sculpting, kinetics, biomechanics, observing, and experimenting. Every piece is interactive for visitors to touch and learn.

Courtesy Pink Palace Museum of Science and History

Full STEAM ahead!

“The exhibit goes beyond merely the history of dinosaurs,” says Bill Walsh, museum marketing manager. “It shows the biomechanics of these amazing creatures in an intriguing and artistic way that allows the visitor to have a hands-on, interactive STEAM experience.”

The moving, human element to the exhibit lies in the story of the artist, John Payne. Through video and interactive touch, visitors will walk away with Payne’s inspiring message: “If you can dream it, you can do it.” The exhibition is one that inspires guests to learn, discover, and create.

Get to the museum before the exhibit’s ex-STEAM-tion on May 2nd or you’ll be really saur.

“Dinosaurs in Motion,” Memphis Pink Palace Museum, 3050 Central, opens Saturday, Jan. 30, and continues through May 2, $15.

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We Recommend We Saw You

Grandma’s Heavenly Meatball Eating Contest and More

Jon W. Sparks

This probably is what THE LAST MEATBALL on the plate looks like when you’re close to winning Bardog Tavern’s annual meatball eating contest. (And thanks to Leon and Manny at Bardog for making this monster meatball.)

Michael Donahue

A plate of meatballs before the contest began at Breakaway Bardog 5K & Monroe Avenue Festival

Alex “Mac” Fairly was top banana when it came to meatballs at Grandma’s Heavenly Meatball Eating Contest at the Breakaway Bardog 5K and Monroe Avenue Festival.

He was declared the winner after eating 31 two-ounce meatballs in 40 minutes and seven seconds at the festival, which was held August 18th in front of Bardog Tavern.

I asked Fairly what his trick was to winning the contest.

“It’s no trick,” he says. “I could just eat a lot. It hurts right now. It’s hard to think.”

Fairly is a veteran at the annual contest. “This is my third time. I finished third my first time in 2016 and second in 2017. And then here I am in Victory Lane.”

Former contest champion Brett Healey was on stage lending a hand, but not participating. Healey, who moved to Memphis in June 2017, won the meatball contest in 2017 and 2018. “Breaking the record for 40 meatballs each time,” he says. “In 2017 my time was 13:14. In 2018 it was 9:38.”

Healey didn’t participate this year for two reasons. “August has been a busy month for me with eating contests and food challenges, so I need to give my body a break to maintain my health. Also, since I signed with Major League Eating in May, I am not supposed to participate in any contests that are not sanctioned by the league. Since going semi-pro in May, League Eating has ranked me No. 215 in the world.”

Just so you’ll know what type contests Healey has been participating in, he says he competed in a Nathan’s hot dog eating contest regional qualifier for the Nathan’s Finals in Coney Island. “I set a new personal record with 32 hot dogs and buns in 10 minutes to win the regional qualifier and secure a spot at Coney Island next July 4th, 2020. That contest will be televised on ESPN and will take place seven days after my wedding.”

Healey is engaged to Gina Picerno. If they do a conventional wedding reception, Healey won’t have to use his hands when it comes to eating wedding cake; the bride usually feeds a piece of cake to the groom.


Michael Donahue

Mac Fairly and Brett Healey at Breakaway Bardog 5K & Monroe Avenue Festival

Michael Donahue

Emcee Sam Prager, Yours Truly, and Bardog owner Aldo Dean at Breakaway Bardog 5K & Monroe Avenue Festival

Michael Donahue

Breakaway Bardog 5K & Monroe Avenue Festival

Michael Donahue

Breakaway Bardog 5K & Monroe Avenue Festival

Michael Donahue

Breakaway Bardog 5K & Monroe Avenue Festival

Michael Donahue

Cassie Wiegmann were at Science of Wine.

Any homework involved with Science of Wine has to be fun. But this Science of Wine was a fundraiser, which was held August 16th at the Pink Palace Museum.

Including staff and volunteers, 750 people attended the event, says Luke Ramsey, who put on the event with John Mullikin and Alex Eilers. They raised more than $30,000.

More than 120 varieties of wine were featured at the event, which is “first and foremost a fundraiser” for the museum’s education department, Ramsey says. All the wine was brought by West Tennessee Crown. “All under one distribution umbrella. It’s their fifth year in a row with us.”

What’s the purpose of Science of Wine? “We’re hoping to connect people directly with the creators of wines and foods, so they can learn a little more about the science behind that. We don’t want to just have wines that they can sample and see what they like and don’t like.”

They also want actual vintners who can answer questions such as why a wine is packaged a certain way, Ramsey says. “There are just so many facets that go into wine from ingredients to packaging. And that does affect the taste.”

And a shout out goes to sponsor Bluff City Land Rover. They provided all the glasses.


Michael Donahue

Luke Ramsey at Science of Wine

Michael Donahue

Bobby Rush and Barbara Newman at Rush’s CD release party

The Blues Foundation hosted a special 75th CD party for Bobby Rush August 16th at the foundation on South Main.

Rush chatted with the crowd and then he played selections from his album, Sitting on Top of the Blues.

“Bobby Rush is a blues treasure,” says Blues Foundation president/CEO Barbara Newman. “Because of his position as a Blues Hall of Famer, we at the Blues Foundation wanted to celebrate his newest release with him and with Memphis.

“It was a wonderful evening for blues lovers and those who want to learn more about the blues to hear some great music and meet Bobby in person. Ultimately, we created the opportunity for the community to come together to celebrate this important musical art form, the blues.”


Michael Donahue

Peabody Rooftop Party

Up on the Roof by the Drifters is a good song to remember when you attend Peabody Rooftop Parties:

“Right smack dab in the middle of town

I found a paradise that’s trouble proof.

And if this world starts getting you down

There’s room enough for two up on the roof.”

The Peabody is sort of right smack dab in the middle of Downtown. And there certainly is room enough for two.

The roof was packed during the recent Rooftop Party, which was held August 15th. “About 1,000 is average, but we did 1,235 last week,” says Peabody marketing director Kelly Brock. “The band was Burning Las Vegas and the DJ was DJ Epic.”

The parties will return in mid April, Kelly says.


Michael Donahue

Silas Gaither, Chris Bramlett, Kevin Fair, and Shannon Dyson were at Peabody Rooftop Party.

MIchael Donahue

Burning Las Vegas performed at the Peabody Rooftop Party season finale.

Michael Donahue

Stepping Out at Napa Cafe

Darlene Winters is excited about “Stepping Out at Napa Cafe,” her first dinner/fundraiser for Company d. The event, which was held August 12th, also included a performance by the dance company.

The purpose of the event was “to build support for and increase awareness of a pre-professional dance company of adult dancers with Down Syndrome,” says Winters, who is the company’s artistic director.


She described the event as “a total success.”

“So many of those who attended did not know about Company d — or very little,” she says. “Having the event at Napa Cafe was a perfect setting to talk one on one with new people or stop by a table.”

The event also was “a wonderful way to share and increase awareness of the dancers’ abilities. The short program was perfect to highlight the dancers.”

Michael Donahue

Stepping Out at Napa Cafe

MIchael Donahue

Darlene Winters, Sancy Schaeffer, and Napa Cafe owner Glenda Hastings at Stepping Out at Napa Cafe

                                       WE SAW YOU AROUND TOWN

Michael Donahue

Jay Knight and Orlandria Harper at Gibson’s Donuts

Michael Donahue

Jeremy Leake, Savannah Jordan, and Landon Hammonds at Gibson’s Donuts

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News News Blog

Pink Palace Planetarium Re-opens January 30th

The Sharpe Planetarium at the Memphis Pink Palace Museum has been upgraded with full-dome digital video, and it will re-open to the public on Saturday, January 30th.

The planetarium will show Firefall, which highlights the impacts of comets and asteroids on the Earth’s surface, on opening day. 

The planetarium first opened in December 1954, after the Memphis Astronomical Society hosted a few public forums to gain support for the idea. They originally considered opening the planetarium at the Mid-South Fairgrounds, Southwestern at Memphis (now Rhodes College), or Memphis State (now the University of Memphis). But they ended up settling on the Pink Palace, which is where the society’s members often gathered on the lawn for star-gazing. 

The Pink Palace is working on a website to pay homage to the vintage planetarium, and they’re asking visitors to share (via email) memories and photos from its old days. 

Pink Palace Planetarium Re-opens January 30th

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News The Fly-By

Pink Palace Planetarium Gets Digital-Age Upgrade

The dim room goes completely dark. A pleasant whir begins somewhere above. Then, with a few nimble clicks in the darkness, the stars of the Milky Way appear overhead. The Pink Palace Museum’s Sharpe Planetarium seems to dissolve, lost in the infinity of what looks like a perfect night sky. 

Countless curious stargazers and students from across the Mid-South have witnessed this very sight inside the dome of the planetarium. They’ve sat in those laid-back seats in a circle around the skirt of a two-story wonder of the Electronic Age. 

The giant mechanical/optical projector — responsible for the whir and clicks — looks like a cross between a satellite and a laser-light rig for a rock show. It has shown the universe to Pink Palace visitors for 32 years.

But its time has come to an end. The planetarium closed for a $1.5 million renovation project last month, and those upgrades include a digital-age projector to replace the old mechanical one. 

Steve Pike and the Pink Palace’s master plan exhibit

“It’ll look like a completely different place,” said Steve Pike, director of the Pink Palace Family of Museums. “It’s going to be a much more friendly experience.” 

The planetarium will have new seats in a new configuration, and the seat count will rise from 135 to 165. The six-foot wall surrounding the seats will go away, giving a more open feel to the space for a more immersive experience.   

No new shows are being made for the museum’s mechanical projector, Pike said. He joked that in its time, science has lost Pluto and gained it back. The new digital projector will allow the Pink Palace to offer more shows and a wider variety of them.

The planetarium is slated to reopen sometime around mid-March 2015, Pike said. It will open with a show about an astronaut that takes an unexpected turn. Wanting to give no spoilers, Pike just said the “show is a great example of what the new technology can do.”

It may seem that interest in space education has waned since the days of the first moon mission, especially in the era of NASA’s now-retired shuttle program. But space exploration still ignites the imagination in films like Gravity and the upcoming Interstellar. The TV series Cosmos, hosted by astrophysicist Neil DeGrasse Tyson, was a can’t-miss event for many.  

Tyson urged other scientists to get people excited about science at a meeting of the American Astronomical Society last month, telling them science and astrophysics “are in the hearts and minds of the public right now.”

Space exploration and planetariums rank as one of the highest “category killers” for museums, Pike said, up there with dinosaurs and Native American studies. 

“Planetariums give kids a sense of wonder they can’t get otherwise,” he said. “It’s an aspect of nature that’s hard to get at all by yourself.”

But the planetarium renovation is also expected to bring more bodies through the door. Pike said he expects to sell 70,000 planetarium tickets per year, up from an annual average of 60,000.   

The planetarium upgrade is one part of an overall project to reshape and modernize the Pink Palace, which is expected to cost about $20 million. The museum’s master plan calls for opening up new spaces in the mansion, a new entrance from Central, and some new exhibits. 

“People think of museums as stodgy or unchanging, and that is not at all the case,” Pike said. “[Museums] are innovating all over the country, and we need to keep pace with what people want.”

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Film Features Film/TV

Stop Making Sense

What makes a great concert film? Is it a big event with dozens of stars, like Woodstock or Wattstax? Is it chancing into horror, like Gimme Shelter? Is it a gathering for a noble cause like The Concert For Bangladesh? Or is it a heartstring tugger like The Last Waltz?

Jonathan Demme’s Stop Making Sense makes the argument that the key to greatness is catching a group at just the right time. In December 1983, Talking Heads were riding a wave of creativity that had started at CBGB’s in 1977. Rhode Island School Of Design dropouts David Byrne, Tina Weymouth, and Chris Frantz, along with former Modern Lover Jerry Harrison, were the art rock center of the punk movement. Their tour in support of Speaking In Tongues incorporated all of the band’s advances into a loose narrative stage show inspired equally by Japanese Noh theater and Twyla Tharp modern dance. Demme shot three shows over one weekend in Los Angles with eight 35mm cameras and edited together the mountain of footage into something that is not quite narrative, not quite documentary, and not quite rock show. Byrne is scarily committed to his onstage persona, the wide-eyed, borderline autistic geek, an alien reporting on the human race through twisted, polyrhythmic songs that stretched the definition of punk and Western pop music. Demme treats him like a leading man in a musical, making brave choices like holding on a single shot of Byrne for four minutes of “Once In A Lifetime” and not showing the audience until the very end of the film.

In Byrne’s book How Music Works, he downplays the myth of musical genius in favor of the genius of scenes — groups of artists who push each other to greater heights. Stop Making Sense is the perfect meeting of musicians at the peak of their power and a director finding his voice. Catch it on the IMAX screen Thursday, October 23rd at 7pm to see what it looks like when all of the pieces come together perfectly for an artist.

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Bean Town

If you’re like us, you take your morning brew in the afternoon as well. Even in the evening, if there’s a slice of pie to accompany.

Fortunately, Memphis has three new spots to grab a cup of joe: Qahwa Coffee Bar on North Main, Bella Caffe in the Pink Palace Museum, and The Edge Coffeehouse, which recently relocated from Overton Park Avenue to South Cooper.

Qahwa Coffee Bar, named after the Arabic word for coffee, is the second local business venture for owner Farhat “Fred” Othmani. When the ex-marine and Tunisian native came to Memphis in 1990, he began a limousine service, Sfax Limousines. But he had a different business model in mind when he set his sights on the empty space at 109 North Main.

“I wanted to open something the Claridge [next door] could be proud of,” he says. “And I love coffee.”

After a few unsuccessful attempts to bring a Starbucks to the former location of the Daily Grind, Othmani decided to open his own coffee shop there instead. He chose the name “qahwa” not only as an homage to his coffee-loving home in north Africa but also to catch the attention of passersby.

“I like when people say, ‘What’s that?'” he says. “Even if they can’t remember it and just decide to call it ‘the Q.'”

Qahwa serves coffee, smoothies, espresso drinks, and a smooth, not bitter, cold-brew iced coffee. But Othmani also has arrangements with a number of other local purveyors. Bluff City Coffee sells its pastries and sandwiches there. Skinny South Incredible Treats, a local healthy cookie brand, has a space in Qahwa’s bakery case as well. A stack of T-shirts by the counter features both Qahwa T-shirts and a locally crafted line of “Memphis Is Me” T-shirts, created in the spirit of the “I Love NY” and “I AM Amsterdam” slogans.

The décor is elegant and chic but comfortable — the perfect place to sit and study or surf the web. An old vault safe, a relic from the former National Bank of Commerce, now serves as a meeting room. (The giant steel door has been welded open to keep anyone from being locked inside or, as the barista told us, to keep out “any funny business.”) And Qahwa sits on the corner of Main and Adams, making it a prime location for watching people and trolleys go by.

Qahwa Coffee Bar, 109 N. Main (800-2227); facebook.com/QahwaCoffee

The Pink Palace will soon be home to a new coffee and sandwich bar, set to open sometime in the next week. You may recognize the name Bella Caffe from various festivals around town, where owner Mitch Bucker served coffee concessions from his mobile cart. Now Bella Caffe has found a more permanent home inside the Pink Palace, in the former Palace Café next to the gift shop.

Buckner will continue to operate the mobile cart, but by adding this brick-and-mortar location (which has been vacant since the Palace Café left a year ago), he will have the opportunity to expand his menu options. In addition to coffee drinks, Bella Caffe will cater box lunches for school visits to the museum and offer sandwiches, salads, soups, pizzas, and more for other museum goers. All food items will ring in under $10, and the café will be open during regular museum hours, Monday through Saturday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sunday, noon to 5 p.m.

Bella Caffe, Pink Palace Museum 3050 Central (833-4276); bellacaffecatering.com

The Edge Coffeehouse, which closed its Overton Park Avenue location last September, has found a new home in its former location on Cooper. Most recently home to Harry’s Detour, the location at 532 South Cooper still features the front patio and will have all the coffee and food offerings you remember from the former Edge Coffeehouse.

Owner Frank James also plans on extending the current hours (5 p.m. to 1 a.m.) to include breakfast and lunch as soon as possible. For now, the space will be host to live music, a songwriters night on Sundays, and “very high-speed, free wireless internet.” James is also bringing back the drive-by coffee service, in which patrons can text in an order and have it ready to go and delivered to their car when they arrive.

In addition to their signature coffee drinks, the Edge will serve hoagie sandwiches, including the “Soul Sandwich”: roast beef, soul sauce, lettuce, tomato, and American cheese on a hoagie roll. You can pick up a Soul Sandwich and chips for around $6.

The Edge Coffeehouse, 532 S. Cooper (216-4282); edgext.com