Categories
News The Fly-By

MEMernet: Palindromes, Parades, and Potholes

Memphis on the internet.

Savor It

“3-20-23. The first day of a week of palindromes,” Shelby County District Attorney Steve Mulroy wrote on Facebook. “Savor it.”

It’s a Parade

Posted to YouTube by NBA on ESPN

Ja Morant interrupted Luke Kennard’s post-game interview this weekend with a victorious, hilarious, “It’s a parade inside my city, yeah!” The line is from rapper YoungBoy Never Broke Again’s single “Fresh Prince of Utah” and has become a rallying cry for the Griz this season. It’s also a viral TikTok hit. One video mash-up of Morant saying the line has more than 3.3 million views.

Potholes

Posted to Facebook by Char-Neal Capps

“Memorizing pothole locations is a survival skill in Memphis,” Char-Neal Capps wrote on Facebook last week. h/t to Memphis Memers 901.

Categories
News The Fly-By

MEMernet: Trump, COVID-19, and Poplar Potholes

MEMernet is a weekly roundup of Memphis on the World Wide Web.

Tweet of the Week

MEMernet: Trump, COVID-19, and Poplar Potholes

This Guy

Why covid is spreading in Shelby county from r/memphis

MEMernet: Trump, COVID-19, and Poplar Potholes (2)

Too True

The right side of poplar be like from r/memphis

MEMernet: Trump, COVID-19, and Poplar Potholes (3)

Categories
News The Fly-By

MEMernet: Mayo Man, Alton Speaks, and Pothole Flowers

Mayo Man

Not OJ Mayo. This time we’re talking mayonnaise in Memphis sports.

Some rando was seen at a Memphis Redbirds game last week eating mayonnaise with a spoon from a huge jug. The Redbirds Twitter kept an eye on him through the innings.

It was unclear who the guy was or where he got the jug of mayo. Some suspected he might’ve been a plant by the Redbirds to gin up some free press. Just. Like. This.

Alton Speaks

Old Memphis stuff resurfaces online from time to time. This Alton Brown comment about Memphis food seemed to be one such internet zombie.

He’d said Memphis was the greatest food town back in 2015. Loves Gibson’s Donuts and Gus’s Fried Chicken (see photo below). Apparently, he repeated his Memphis love during an interview this month.

Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams

Problem meet opportunity. Memphis pothole meet Memphis wildflower.

Categories
News News Blog

City Looks to Ease Pothole Problem With Technology, Re-Paving

City of Memphis

The city of Memphis says it is just as frustrated about the many potholes riddling the city’s streets as you are, and that it is “confronting the challenge head-on.”

The city explained what causes potholes, how the city is working to repair them faster, and how the public can help in a blog last week.

The number of potholes grows exponentially in the winter, according to officials. When water seeps into the road and freezes, it expands, which often causes a pothole eventually. A lot of traffic means quicker-forming potholes.

There are up to 10 city crews assigned to repairing potholes at most hours, according to the city. However, rainy weather in the winter is a “double-whammy.” Heavy rain accelerates the pothole-forming process. Also, when rain fills the holes, crews aren’t able to repair them. Still, last year the city repaired close to 63,000 potholes.

The city asks that the public report potholes by using the Memphis 311 app, submitting a report online, or calling 311 between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Also, if your car has been damaged by a pothole on a city street, you can file a claim with the city.

[pullquote-1]

The city wants you to know that Memphis isn’t the only city with ubiquitous potholes, citing in its blog Los Angeles, Topeka, and Seattle as other pothole-plagued places: “So, we’re not alone in our challenge, though that’s of little solace to us here in.”

In step with tracking and repairing potholes faster, the city is in the early stages of a partnership with a technology company in order to pilot a project that could allow cameras attached to city-owned vehicles to scan for potholes. The effort was announced during Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland’s State of the City Address last month.

As the project is still in developing phases, Dan Springer, the city’s deputy director of media affairs, said he is not able to name the company that the city is partnering with at this time.

City of Memphis

Still, the long-term solution for potholes is paving more streets. The city said it is working to catch up on the backlog in street paving due to the small amounts of funding allocated for re-paving in the past.

The city’s current fiscal year budget sets aside $19 million for paving, compared to $16.5 million during Strickland’s first year in office in 2016, $15 million in 2015 during the last year of A.C. Wharton’s tenure, and $5.8 million during Wharton’s first year in 2009.

But, Memphis can only pave so many of the approximate 6,800 lane-miles of road in the city, estimating it would costs “more than half a billion dollars” to re-pave every street in the city. The entire capital budget was $87 million for fiscal year 2018.

As the temperatures begin to rise, crews will begin repaving these streets.