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Art Exhibit M

The New Planetarium is Dope and Space is Terrifying

Edit 1/30: The Pink Palace has confirmed that they are going to host live music in the Planetarium. “Space has no limits!” said Ronda Cloud, who handles publicity for the Museum. 

The day has come! The new Sharpe Planetarium, now known as the Autozone Dome, at the Pink Palace Museum is back in action. The old slide projectors are gone, replaced by digital “Full Dome” technology. In the place of the analog lighting effects is a more movie-like experience. 

This morning, a crowd of press, Mayor Jim Strickland, corporate representatives from Autozone and other private sponsors gathered for the grand opening of the new dome. The renovated planetarium is roomier, with a space near the the front of the theater that one of the presenters mentioned may be eventually used for live music. Hopefully this means more local multi-media performances — what could be cooler than opera or electronica or underground rap paired with star graphics? The planetarium manager also joked (I think it was a joke) that they could perform wedding ceremonies inside. 

After a tour through some of the neater educational features of the new planetarium, all controlled by an iPad, we watched a program called “Firefall.” Firefall is a narrative about the life and death of space debris such as meteors, meteoroids, meteorites and asteroids. The graphics were excellent and, while the storytelling was true-to-form campy, “Firefall” proved both visually and narratively gripping. I learned: space is horrifying, mass extinctions by way of space rocks are imminently possible, and, as Carl Sagan put it, there are billions and billions of stars out there. 

For those who miss the older technology, here is a useful timeline of planetariums. For those who want to book their band inside the new planetarium, I have reached out for comment from the Museum and will keep you updated. In the mean time, the new planetarium should be on the top of your list for the best date spots in town. 

The New Planetarium is Dope and Space is Terrifying

Categories
Opinion

Wharton Speaks to Friends, Employees, and a Stuffed Polar Bear

polarbear-sideview.jpg

How many times do you get to write a headline like that? Not many. Mayor A C Wharton gave his state of the city speech Friday in the foyer of the Pink Palace mansion where he stared down a snarling stuffed polar bear along with a bunch of television cameras.

Wharton, a master of such occasions after a decade of city and county mayoral years, managed to give an upbeat speech despite the bear, the rain outside, the cramped venue (the closet must have already been booked) and the crummy headlines about Pinnacle Airlines and police shootings in the morning paper. He talked for 36 minutes, or twice as long as President Obama last week in his inaugural address. He tempered that factoid by noting that his wife reminded him to slow down.

Wharton got his biggest round of applause when he appealed for a cease fire on gun crimes. “We won’t rest until gunfire is no longer the accepted sound track for far too many of our citizens,” he said. The mayor and Police Director Toney Armstrong scheduled a press conference Friday afternoon to tout a new program.

He didn’t mention Pinnacle and the as many as 500 jobs that will be leaving downtown Memphis for Minneapolis. Instead he plugged Electrolux, Mitsubishi Electric, and “jobs coming on line this year.” He said they were “real jobs for real people located in the real city of Memphis” lest there was any confusion.

“The best is yet to come when it comes to jobs for the people of our city,” he said.

He also gave props to the City Council for reducing the city tax rate without going into the messiness of overdue bills to the former Memphis City Schools or the impact of shifting the city payment to county government after this year. As he has said many times, he supports a half-cent increase in the city sales tax if it goes into a trust fund for pre-K and property tax reduction.

His second-biggest applause line, by my unscientific estimate, was a pledge aimed at the airport authority, on which his wife serves as a board member, that “we will succeed in bringing in other carriers and bringing down the cost of flying.”

The rest of his remarks were about such chestnuts as Bass Pro (attention shoppers, half the space will be devoted to conservation exhibits), bike lanes, conventions (“our facilities are inadequate”), the river (“we need to reconnect”) and job training.

As for the bear, it has dual significance as a big-game trophy and a reminder of the fate of Clarence Saunders, the entrepreneur who built the Pink Palace. He went broke after betting the wrong way in a big stock-market bet but his fame endures as one of the inventors of the modern grocery store and such names as Piggly Wiggly and Keedoozle.

Categories
News

Holiday Stuff to Do in Memphis

There’s plenty going on around town to bring out the holiday cheer in even the most Scroogely Memphians this holiday season.

Stop by the Pink Palace Museum for the Enchanted Forest Festival of Trees, an annual display of decorated trees, animated elves, and model trains. Proceeds benefit Le Bonheur Children’s Medical Center.

Have a “Blue Christmas” at Graceland where Elvis’ life-sized nativity set and blue lights shine in the night. Also on display are original Presley family Christmas artifacts.

More than 100 nativity figures surround a 16-foot holiday tree at The Dixon Gallery and Gardens‘ Younger Foundation Creche Collection and Bethlehem Tree.

Or check out school and church group holiday choirs performing classic carols in The Peabody Hotel lobby daily from 11 a.m. to noon.

For more holiday listings, check out the Flyer‘s searchable calendar.

Categories
News

Pink Palace Will Rock Thursday Night

The second of four “Rock the Palace: Summer Tour 2007” events will take place Thursday, June 28, at the Pink Palace Museum.

Also presented by 93X radio’s Traveling Twisted Thursdays, each after-hour music party provides live entertainment, an exhibit tour, food, a cash bar, and a live remote appearance by 93X.

This Thursday, featured local bands will include Chemical Zoo, Organ Thief, Roger Mexico, and Arma Secreta.

The museum exhibit throughout the summer is “Access All Areas: Your Backstage Pass to the Music Industry.”

Rock the Palace is for adults, 21 and up. Doors open at 6 p.m. For more information, call 320-6320 or visit the museum’s website.