Categories
News The Fly-By

MEMernet: Dancing Baby Man?

Memphis on the internet.

DANCING BABY MAN?

A Memphis video posted to Facebook last week is so fun and crazy that describing the action ramps up the crazy fun.

The video opens with a disturbance at the trolley stop at the corner of Main and Huling (close to the Grecian Gourmet Taverna). The camera operator wades through a crowd looking on and phone-filming a pregnant woman lying on the ground, apparently going into labor. The camera pans across a white sheet laying over her legs. Between her feet pops out a grown man, dressed all in black but with white shoes and a blue pacifier in his mouth. Someone throws a blue smoke bomb on the ground beside him.

Once the man stands, he dances silently in Hammer pants, pacifier still in his mouth. He then falls on his hands and drags his body across the sidewalk, under an ambulance where he disappears. The camera operator walks around the ambulance in search of Baby Man until he finds him dancing (again with the pacifier in his mouth) in the middle of the street.

He dances in the crosswalk and someone off-camera throws that blue smoke bomb back at his feet. The video ends. “Gotta love Memphis,” Marcoes Bean captioned. As of press time, the video had been shared more than 5,300 times.

Categories
We Saw You

New Building Coming to South Main

You know that empty lot next to Earnestine & Hazel’s on South Main?

Well, it’s not going to be empty for long. Phil Woodard and Paul Tashie are going to put a building on it.

They’ve been buying property on South Main for some time. “We started at 502 South Main and bought it from Shep Wilbun, back 22 years ago,” says Woodard, a developer with Woodard Properties.  “That was our first building together.”

They then bought the double building at 523/525 South Main. “We renovated them over the years and had several tenants in there.”

The empty lot came with 523/525 South Main, which has housed several businesses, most recently Paper & Clay and Primas Bakery + Boutique.

“It’s the last available lot on either side of the block,” says Tashie, a developer as well as owner of Ciao Bella Italian Grill. 

“When Harley-Davidson moved out of the 525 South Main building, I put a sign in the window,” Woodard says. “And I had four or five people want to rent that spot here during COVID. Here we are locked down and I had all these people that wanted it. I said, ‘If there’s a demand, we need to build.’”

The lot, which is about 25 feet wide and about 100 feet long, encompasses about 2,600 square feet, Woodard says.

He told Tashie, “We might as well build something with that lot.”

The building is being designed by archimania. “It’s going to be all modern. All glass front. I had one neighbor that wasn’t crazy about it, but I told them, ‘This is what I do and it’s going to be nice.’”

The design was approved by the Memphis Landmarks Commission. “They just approved it saying, ‘That’s what ought to go there.’ It’s an historic area. You cannot match the other buildings. It still has the lines as the other buildings. Same height — 18 feet tall. Just a one-story building. We could have built two or three, but one’s enough.”

But, he says, “I stay below the windows on the second floor of Earnestine & Hazel’s so they can keep the light in there.”

The building should be ready “before Thanksgiving.” Woodard adds, “I don’t know who’s going to rent it. A few people have called, but I don’t know.”

About 22 years ago, Woodard bought his first building on South Main.  “Most buildings were boarded up. My first building was 508 South Main. We had tours through that thing. Well, everybody vacated right after Dr. Martin Luther King was shot. For that many years it laid vacant. When I bought 508, there was a tree growing out of the basement.”

He bought the building for he and his wife, Terry, to use as “an apartment for Downtown,” Woodard says. “We enjoyed going Downtown to the Orpheum and the ‘great nightlife’ of maybe the Peabody and a couple of restaurants. We couldn’t find [an apartment], so we built our own.”

Their old building now houses Diddy TV. “We enjoyed it. Had a big time. We had a house out East. We lived Downtown during the week and went home on the weekend.”

He began to buy more South Main property because he liked it so much. “That’s when Paul and I bought 502. He owns 506 by himself.”

Woodard then built an ultra-modern home on the river, but he and his wife eventually moved back to the South Main area. He built the house at Nettleton and Wagner. He recently sold the last of 30 townhouses he built next to their house on Front Street and Butler. “Archimania did the design. Single family homes. You have so many apartments.”

Categories
Food & Wine Food & Drink

Giddy Up, 409: The Bar at Puck Food Hall

Three friends and a dog on Prozac walk into a bar. The bar this time around is Bar 409 inside of Puck Food Hall at 409 South Main. The dog is a well-medicated Italian greyhound named Tiger. The friends, probably also well-medicated, are just here for the drinks and conversation.

Puck Food Hall is a collection of various types of cuisine, including places that serve pizza, pasta, gelato (and vegan sorbet!), coffee, Chinese fusion, baked goods, and salads, but tonight, friends, we are here for the bar. We’re choosing spirits over sustenance.

Bar 409 is no dank hole in the wall. It’s a bright, airy space painted the deep reds, dark blues, and bright whites of a Memphis riverboat.

Bar 409 is bright and airy — and well-stocked with makings for fine cocktails.

Harvey Grillo is our bartender, and this man, when we walk in, is hard at work squeezing 100-plus oranges for drinks. He’s a Memphis transplant, having been here about seven years, but he eases into conversation with us like a born-and-raised Memphian.

Two of Bar 409’s featured drinks are the Purple Rain and the Kentucky Palm Tree. The Purple Rain is Wheatley vodka with Campari, hibiscus syrup, and a flowery liqueur, and it is as delicious as it is purple.

The Kentucky Palm Tree “tastes like the end of summer,” Harvey points out, and it does! It’s made with Buffalo Trace, Passoa, and fernet. We also tried the Ancho & Lefty, a drink with mezcal and Japones pepper syrup.

Like most brilliant mixology bars in town, Bar 409 employs homemade bitters and syrups and sets drinks off with unique garnishes. And unless the mountain of fruit before us is a mirage, the drinks’ fruity ingredients are freshly squeezed.

This is a bar made for some people-watching. It’s the first thing you see when you enter the food hall, and it’s a good place to park it if you want to take it all in. The place must be a circus with South Main’s monthly Trolley Night events since it can accommodate so many people, but, unlike most other places, it’s built for a large crowd.

It’s a multi-level hall that beckons to be occupied to the max on busy nights. On a date? Ditch them in the throngs! Have a kid? Plop them in the pop-up library adjacent to the bar! Have more than one kid? Stuff a $20 bill in one of their grubby fists and send them to get some ice cream! Have an affinity for fine drink? Venture no further than the bar!

A contained crowd in a place where there’s something for everybody is a nice change from spilling wine in a gallery, like we are wont to do most Trolley Nights, right? On top of that, Bar 409 has just installed a projector to show movies on the vast, empty wall behind and above the bar.

The bar staff is envisioning themed movie nights for bar and food hall guests, and suddenly drinking alone while watching a movie seems way less lonesome. This is now our city’s big opportunity for a collective Big Lebowski/White Russian gathering.

Bar 409 is not just accommodating of the liquor drinkers among us. They also offer a variety of local beers on tap and a small wine list, and those who want to dine can order food from any of the restaurant spaces and bring it to the bar to eat.

The night I visited, it was the middle of the week and not every restaurant space was open, but there was a decent crowd of people hanging out. It’s also an air-conditioned inside space that allows dogs, so no more heatstroke on a patio for our canine friends!

Three friends and a dog on Prozac walk out of a bar. One, a photographer, accidentally leaves his camera but, thankfully, remembers the dog. We’ve enjoyed some drinks in a place that was left empty for many years, only occasionally used as a wedding venue.

It’s another great new space for Downtowners and another beautiful building repurposed into something we can all get behind: spirits and sustenance.

Bar 409 is located inside Puck Food Hall at 409 S. Main.

Categories
News News Blog

Vintage Steel-Wheeled Trolley Testing to Continue on Main Street

MATA


As the Memphis Area Transit Authority (MATA) continues to work at returning the vintage steel-wheeled trolley services to the city, safety tests will resume on the Main Street line beginning Monday, Nov. 6.


MATA officials say the 50-foot-long, brightly-colored trolley cars will operate sans passengers, running from MATA’s trolley barn on the north end of Main to Central Station at the south end.

Testing of the revamped trolley’s new safety system and the electrical wires that power them will

continue both day and night for the next several months, officials say.

MATA

MATA officials expect that the Main Street line will be ready for passengers sometime in 2018. After it’s up and running, MATA will work to restore trolley services on Riverfront and then Madison in 2019.

Before the three lines were discontinued in 2014 due to safety issues, nearly 1.5 million passengers used the trolleys in a year. Of those, about half were tourists.

But, members of the Memphis Bus Riders’ Union (MBRU) continue to question MATA’s priorities, according to a newsletter sent by the union on Thursday. 

“MBRU always held the position that we should not be prioritizing trolleys for tourists and downtown developers at the expense of fixed-route bus service for minorities, working-class people, and people with disabilities,” the letter read. 



Categories
Music Music Features

Big River Block Party

The vision Mark Parsell has planted in Memphis for songwriters is taking bloom. After stepping into leadership roles with Memphis Farmers Market and South Main Trolley Night many years ago, Parsell partnered with Brad Matherne in 2015 to create a new venue and record store on South Main that songwriters could call home.

“That’s what South Main Sounds is,” Parsell explained. “That’s how we really put an imprint on the music scene — giving songwriters a place to present original music in Memphis.”

This weekend’s first annual Big River Block Party is the culmination of Parsell’s long-running determination to make Memphis the primary gateway stop for Americana acts, folk performers, and songwriters on the road to the annual SXSW Festival in Austin. 

Parsell and festival co-founder John Dillard had been talking for a couple of years about starting a songwriter festival of some kind downtown. “When Folk Alliance moved away from Memphis,” Parsell said, “nothing and nobody really came along to replace it.” It is estimated that the absence of the Folk Alliance meeting has cost the city of Memphis $2.5M in annual tourism dollars. 

While Parsell was in talks with radio station 94.1 The Wolf about possibly expanding their one-night songwriter showcase at the Halloran Centre, he had a chance encounter with Friday night festival headliners The Accidentals, an acclaimed indie-Americana act that was named one of Yahoo Music’s 10 Artists to Watch in 2017. Parsell recognized a golden opportunity. The trio adjusted their schedule to make an appearance in Memphis on March 10th, and the festival took root. “Once we had that commitment, we just decided the time was right to take a leap of faith,” he said. 

The Accidentals will perform at the Big River Block Party, March 10th.

Parsell and Dillard then garnered support from a wide base of influencers, including the Downtown Memphis Commission and developer Henry Turley. With their headliner booked and a weekend of activities to round things out, Big River Block Party was born.

While this year’s event won’t actually operate in the traditional sense of a “block party,” it will be a series of mostly ticketed events that will take place inside of various venues, allowing events to operate rain or shine. “Think Trolley Night but on a larger scale,” Parsell said. 

The weekend will kick off at the 5 Spot Friday night with music from The Accidentals, Jake Allen, and Talia Keys from 7 to 9:30 p.m. Afterward, the block party’s activities will shift to the Dirty Crow Inn, where Jennifer Westwood and the Handsome Devils from Detroit will take the stage at 10 p.m.

The next morning, Saturday, March 11th, from 10 a.m. until noon, South Main Sounds will hold an admission-free family variety show hosted by Bill Shipper and featuring music from teen songwriters Bailey Bigger and Merit Koch.

That afternoon, there will be a crawfish boil and beer garden in the courtyard behind 550 South Main, featuring music from South Side Supper Club, Tony Manard, Rice Drewry, and 3 Degrees. Throughout the afternoon, there will be a variety of musicians busking along South Main. At Guidingpoint Financial, directly across from the South Main fire station, Shufflegrit will showcase their ability to translate well-known songs into rockabilly stompers.

The Halloran Centre at the Orpheum will cap off Saturday’s activities at  7 p.m. when the 94.1 The Wolf Songwriter Fest presents live performances from Sarah Buxton, Casey Beathard, and Barry Dean.

Finally, on Sunday, March 12th, the Block Party will co-sponsor “Turn Up for Tilly,” a celebration supporting the charitable efforts of ALIVE Rescue Memphis to help defray the medical costs for Tilly and other rescue dogs. For each $6 donation, guests will be treated to a complimentary Yazoo beer and a raffle entry for special prizes.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

All-day Breakfast Bar, More, Planned for S. Main

Marcus Dorris has big plans for a suite of storefronts along S. Main.

Dorris owned Evergreen Grill on Overton Park, which was famous for his lobster burger. Three months ago, he opened Cajun Grill in the former spot of DejaVu (and most recently Pink Diva Cupcakery and Cuisine) downtown on Florida.

Cajun Grill

Dorris plans to resurrect Evergreen Grill at 302 S. Main in the old Ray’z Dr. BBQ space. He’s also planning an all-day breakfast/juice and coffee bar at 300 S. Main and a serve-yourself wine loft at 306 S. Main.

The breakfast bar will be called Early Mornings and will feature an extensive selection of mimosas (including grapefruit). There will be pancakes and crab omelets and crab benedict and lobster croissants. There will also be a healthy component will the juices, so, Dorris says, if your friend wants pancakes, you can stick to your diet with a juice. “I want to give everybody something.”

The wine loft will be called Shaken & Corked and will be like Greencork, Dorris says. Guests will serve themselves from a selection of 15 wines from a system set in the wall. He says there will be a light menu with a number of bruschetta and sandwiches.

As for the new Evergreen Grill, Dorris says the lobster burger will be back and he’s planning on offering his inventive takes on cheesecake, including red velvet, blueberry muffin, and banana pudding.

At Cajun Grill, they’re serving up seafood po’boys with alligator, lobster, shrimp, and oysters on 12-inch “legit” bread. There’s house-made remoulade, pasta with Cajun cream sauce, crab cakes, a porkchop sandwich, smothered fried chicken, bread pudding and more. And, says, Dorris, “the best seafood gumbo in the city.”

Dorris says he’s been a longtime friend of Gary Williams, owner of DejaVu. Williams hooked him up with the building for Cajun Grill, because he wanted to keep the building alive, according to Dorris.

Dorris hopes to have the S. Main restaurants open sometime before May.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Plans for Second Slider Inn Downtown

Justin Fox Burks

Aldo Dean

Aldo Dean confirmed plans for a second Slider Inn in the South Main district. 

Dean, who owns Slider Inn, Aldo’s Pizza Pies, and Bardog Tavern, says he currently finalizing the purchase of a building at 363 Mulberry. 

The building includes the bocce ball court, and Dean envisions the green space as outdoor seating, outdoor bar, and community gathering place. 

“I’ve seen how that area has sprung to life,” Dean of South Main. “I’m looking forward to getting involved and helping add to it.”  

Dean hopes to have the restaurant open by next spring. 

Categories
Style Sessions We Recommend

Spring Fashion with Leah-Claire Friddle Grawemeyer

I’m so thankful to have worked on the cover feature story and fashion spread this week. To follow the spirit of many of the style sessions I’ve posted here, the spring fashion spread shows fashion through the portrait of a person and their true style. Twenty-something Memphian Leah-Claire Friddle Grawemeyer portrays herself in familiar and favorite places in Memphis, the places she grew up in. Here, we learn more about Leah with additional images to supplement the original spread.

[jump]

Leah and her family are no strangers to the world of fashion. In 2011, her family opened a few boutiques on South Main – Everleahs and Sir Samuels next to their restaurant Grawemeyers, which has now become South Main Sushi. The two boutiques have since transformed as well into a vintage store called Broken Arrow run by Leah’s sister Olivia Friddle. Growing up in the boutique business along with traveling to fashion meccas such as Paris, Milan, and Rome has broadened Leah’s style.

“I’ve seen so many different styles. I always remember them and their influences. Anyone from Brigitte Bardot to Cara Delevigne to Elizabeth Taylor are my influences. I always find something about each style that I like. Whether it’s a scarf or even their lipstick. Body language and confidence is all about style too. The way you present yourself is major. ‘Perception is reality,’” she says.

As far as her personal style favorites for spring, Leah talks tassels, leather, and looking naturally beautiful.

“One of my favorite things I’ve been seeing is wrap-around sandals with tassels. I always love a good western influence too. Modesty is back in. Mid length skirts with booties, half turtleneck shirts, and long sleeve chiffon tops. You don’t have to show a lot of skin to be sexy, but exposing your wrist and ankles are always good. Good leather bags are always a good staple and investment piece. Look for local leather makers and spend a little extra for one. I love lots and lots of rings. Put one on every finger and own it. Natural hair and makeup is always beautiful. Especially when you add a simple red lip. For spring, let your eyebrows go wild and bold. It’s a defining feature of your face and dark eyebrows are always slimming.”

Leah is an artist, musician, and student now working with the Lansky family in their various clothing store locations. With her love for music and recent focus on the banjo, Leah also volunteers her time at the Blues Foundation and Blues Hall of Fame.

“South Main is my community. My sense of belonging is here. Everyone knows everyone and that’s a great feeling,” Leah says. 

Check out the issue on stands now and see the full outfit list with links below to the local shops and designers used in the feature.

Cover Photo at City & State
Shirt and Jeans – Lansky 126
Scarf – Local Designer Garner Blue, Stock & Belle

Rainy day with umbrella
Dress – Broken Arrow
Clutch – Lansky 126
Bracelet – Lesouque
Umbrella – American Apparel

Grand piano at South Main Sushi
Floral Dress – Stock & Belle
Cardigan – Lansky 126
Shoes (black pumps) – Lansky 126
Belt (Leather Tassel) – Lansky 126
Rings – Broken Arrow

At Broken Arrow
Graphic Top – Stock & Belle
Necklace – Local artist Nikkila Carroll, Stock & Belle
Jean skirt – Lansky 126
Bag – Lansky 126

On Stephanie
Shirt – Lansky 126
Jeans – Lansky 126

Under bridge at new mural in South Main
Shirt – local designer Tara Skelley of Dilettante Collection
Jeans – Lansky 126
Shoes (Brown strappy wedges) – Lansky 126
Purse – Broken Arrow

Blues Foundation Stairs
Top with Kimono Wrap – Stock & Belle
Shoes – Lansky 126
Scarf – Broken Arrow
Banjo – Model’s own

Blues Foundation Wall
Dress – 20twelve
Necklace – Lesouque
Shoes – Lansky 126
Kimono Top – Free People

Ernestine & Hazel’s upstairs
Top and Skirt – Stock & Belle
Necklaces – local designer Lauren Carlson of Question the Answer

Playing Pool at Ernestine & Hazel’s
Dress – Lansky 126
Hat – Model’s own

On Olivia
Dress – Stock & Belle

Bike and Flowers
Top – Broken Arrow
Skirt – Broken Arrow
Shoes – Lansky 126
Sunglasses – Lansky 126
Bag – Madewell
Bike – Midtown Bike

South Main intersection with trolley
Top (white fringe) – Lanky 126
Jeans – Lansky 126
Shoes (brown leather pumps) – Broken Arrow
Necklace – Lansky 126
Bag – City & State

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Lunch at Cafe Pontotoc

Cafe Pontotoc, which opened last June, recently started serving lunch. I, for one, welcome a new lunch option along that stretch of Main. 

The lunch menu has many of the same items as the dinner menu. The chief difference, as far as I can tell, is the addition of sandwiches, including a cheeseburger, grilled cheese, club, and reuben. There are a number of hot dogs as well — the Mexican Dog (with guac and jalapenos), Japan Dog (seaweed!, daikon), and the South Main (“If we’e got it, we’ll put it on there), etc.

I went pretty simple with soup and a salad. 

The soup was the Cucumber Avocado ($7) served with pita triangle. I liked the soup a lot — creamy, fresh crisp flavors, served cold. I don’t think it’s substantial enough to serve as a main part of the meal, but as a starter, it would certainly rev up the appetite. 

[pdf-1]

Categories
Style Sessions We Recommend

A Look inside Oxn – A New Men’s Clothing Store

In an unexpected part of the South Main district, 4-foot tall white letters “OXN” cover the glass of a previously empty storefront to mark the presence of new men’s clothing and lifestyle store. Oxn was recently launched by Zac Woolfolk as part of MEMShop’s latest initiative to activate a portion of the proposed Heritage Trail route with small business retail on South Second Street.

[jump]

After applying for the MEMShop Heritage Trail inclusion in January of this year, Zac already knew he would carry brands he personally had been buying and wearing for years. Quality basics such as jeans and T-shirts would define the stock. He points to his first pair of Rogue Territory jeans displayed on Oxn’s back wall. The retired pair is well-worn and well-loved. The wear of his jeans demonstrates the nice fade, not evident when glancing at a fresh pair.

Rogue Territory and other brands at Oxn like Ewing Dry Goods and Apolis are not only high quality and functional but also meaningful to Zac. For example, he recently featured on his website the Apolis Market Bag that sources fabric from a co-op of artisan women in a rural part of Bangladesh, demonstrating their company name meaning “global citizen.” Zac’s care for the mission and story behind each brand drove his choices and eventually led to Oxn. It would be the only shop in Memphis to carry most of these brands.

In the spirit of MEMShop’s mission, Zac developed a name to the retail store that spoke of its potential in Memphis.

‘Auxin’ is a growth hormone in plants. I liked the idea of growth with my type of store in the city of Memphis, so I played around with the homophone and ended up with Oxn,” he explains. Looking ahead, Zac hopes to test out and carry more brands.

“Earlier this week I was introduced to the best T-shirt in the world made by 3sixteen. I was skeptical but 3sixteen proved me wrong. So I hope to be carrying those in the next couple of weeks.”

Zac also is looking forward to carrying another brand acknowledged by GQ in their Best of 2015 Designers of the Year, The Hill-Side out of Brooklyn, NY, for their use of fabric in men’s ties, pocket squares and scarves.

“I’m looking into other accessories and men’s goods. While I may not carry women’s clothes in the immediate future, unisex accessories is something that I plan to always keep in stock, as well. Scarves, bags, and I even had women’s perfumes, which have sold quite well,” he adds.

Oxn will be in the Second street space through October 31 when Zac will then decide on leasing it further on a month-to-month basis or find a more permanent space for his store.

Visit them at 488 South Second Street, east of Central BBQ.
Hours are Monday, Wednesday through Saturday noon-7 p.m. Sunday 1-5 p.m.

The online shop is now open. Keep up with store updates on Instagram and Facebook – OxnShop.