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Me and Jennifer Biggs

Jennifer Biggs and I used to say we were going to be the first two people to never die.

We said (not sure if we really thought it) that we were going to be the exception to the rule. It had never happened before in history. But who was to say — besides everybody — that it couldn’t happen?

Jennifer, the food editor for The Daily Memphian, died August 16th. Cancer. It was for me, like everybody I know, a shock. It just doesn’t seem like it was time for her to go. Not yet. She was always there for everybody who loved her. And even for those who just knew her from her newspaper writing, and appearances on TV and radio.

We met when we both worked at The Commercial Appeal. We shared the same sense of humor. We worked on stories together a few times. I remember both of us tag-team covering food stories where we’d set out early and eat at six or seven places from Memphis to Mumford, and then back to some places on Winchester Road. And we’d still squeeze in one more place before we called it quits.

When we weren’t working, we’d go out to eat. Sunday night dinners at Sakura on Poplar Avenue — usually, with John and Missy Stivers — were common. Or we’d go to fancy places with Peggy Burch. And then sometimes with Jennifer’s daughter, Megan Brooks Biggs, and Jennifer’s grandchildren, Jack and Chloe. Every time I went to her house before dinner her dogs Henry and Rouxby (both rescues — by Jennifer) would bark and bang on the inside of her front door.

Often it was just me and Jennifer at The Pancake Shop. We both religiously ordered the “Everyday Special.”

It was always fun to make Jennifer laugh. She loved pratfalls. There was a two-wheeler in the features department one afternoon at the CA. I told photographer Dave Darnell I was the “King of the Two Wheeler.” I told him to stand on the two wheeler and lean back. I announced I could pull anything on a two wheeler. He stood on it, leaned back, and we both immediately fell down. My head clanged when it hit a metal wastebasket. Dave and I immediately jumped up to show we were tough and this didn’t hurt us at all. Even though it did. Jennifer shrieked.

She also shrieked when I showed up for work one afternoon with coffee all over my shirt. I told her a guy at the paper decided to empty the rest of the coffee in his mug at the same moment I was walking by the truck garage. He threw the coffee on me.

I remember when I moved to the Memphis Flyer and Jennifer was still at the CA. She said she hated the idea of us competing with each other instead of being on the same paper. When I began covering food more for the Flyer, Jennifer and I were very competitive. We both loved scoops. We wanted to be the first to announce some restaurant opening or food news. But it was understood between us that was our job. We tried to get the story first for our own newspaper.  I will admit, though, it felt so good to scoop Jennifer.

Jennifer became the acclaimed food editor for The Daily Memphian. I watched her become an even bigger celebrity than she already was at the CA. She was in the top three “Best Columnist” category in the Flyer’s “Best of Memphis.” Her photo was on the side of MATA buses.

We never talked about our newspaper stories much. We’d get together at Sakura and talk about other things. People usually. 

I recently realized I don’t know Jennifer’s favorite book, favorite song, favorite band, or favorite movie. We  never talked about that kind of thing. We just talked, texted, and laughed about whatever.

We had a poster someone made in the features department at The Commercial Appeal. It read “WWJD.” It stood for “What Would Jennifer Do.” She had all the answers. And she usually was right. It seemed like she knew everything. She was the person I first asked what “AI” stood for. She calmly explained. “Artificial Intelligence.”

One more story. … Jennifer and I ran into each other in New Orleans many years ago. A buddy of mine, Blakney Gower, and I were there doing a get-out-of-town-go-to-New Orleans-weekend-bar-and-restaurant thing. Jennifer and her then-husband, Bob Brooks, and Blakney and I had dinner at Antoine’s, my favorite New Orleans restaurant. Many Beefeater gin martinis on my end. Lobster Thermidor, probably, for dinner. And Baked Alaska.

After dinner, our server took us on a tour of Antoine’s. I saw a piano in a ballroom and, of course, sat down and began playing. Jennifer and Bob danced. It was just one of those magical nights. Like you dream that your favorite restaurant just happens to also have a ballroom upstairs and you never knew it before. It was also a happy night.

And now she’s gone. No more new adventures with her to turn into memories.

But I keep seeing Jennifer at different places. Not the person. Just reminders. Like a plastic bag jammed full of metal — not plastic — forks she gave me a few years ago when I had a family Easter dinner at my home. They’re on top of a cupboard in my kitchen. Jennifer always took care of whatever you happened to need. All you had to do was ask her.

I went by to visit Jennifer the day she died. When I saw her, I knew that was the last time I was going to see her alive. She was in bed. Her head was turned to one side.

 I walked up to the bed and I said, “Jennifer, it’s Michael. Let’s go eat at Sakura.” She opened her eyes wider. I’m not sure she was able to physically smile. But I think she was smiling just the same. I said, “I love you, Jennifer.” And then I left. This was family time. I didn’t want to be in the way.

I didn’t know until the next morning that Jennifer was gone. I was charging my phone when the texts and phone calls about her death began.

That morning, I had to write a Flyer story on deadline. It was a self-imposed deadline. It was about an artist, Alexandra Baker. I could have waited, I guess, but I wanted to post the story before the opening of her art show, which was the next night. Like every reporter has had to do at least once, I wrote the story even though I was very sad. It’s never an easy thing to do. 

While writing the story about Alexandra, I came upon a quote in my notes. It suddenly took on more meaning.  Alexandra said, “I lost some friends along the way in life. And family members. But friends hurt more because they’re so young. And I felt life was kind of softened by them.”

Jennifer softened my life as well as the lives of countless others.

And I’ve now learned that Jennifer was right — as usual — when she said she was never going to die. She won’t. My memories of her will continue to live as long as I do.

See you later, Jennifer.

Categories
News News Blog News Feature

CA Dodges Layoffs In Latest Round From Gannett, Loses Open Position

The Commercial Appeal dodged layoffs in the latest round of news staff reductions by Gannett, the paper’s parent, but lost one open position.

Gannett was slated to lay off 6 percent of its national news staff this week, or about 200 employees. This move came after a previous round of similar layoffs a few months before.

Laura Testino, president of the Memphis Newspaper Guild, confirmed the Commercial Appeal news in a Friday tweet. But she said “everyone loses when working hours and jobs are cut.”

Testino put the situation into context in a Twitter thread and offered ways for locals to help reporters affected by the cuts.

Read the thread here:

Categories
News The Fly-By

MEMernet: Standing Brooms, Kind Strangers, and an MLGW Valentine

Swept up

The entire internet was swept away (don’t judge me) by a viral tweet that had folks all over standing their brooms upright. The tweet said that NASA claimed a day last week was the only day of the year brooms would stand on their own because of gravitational pull.

Our very own editor, Bruce VanWyngarden, got in on the miracle, uh, I mean action.

Posted to Instagram by
Bruce VanWyngarden

Kind Strangers

Reddit user u/trillsuave posted that one of his elderly co-workers rides his bike to work every day. But he had a wreck last week, messed up his bike, and needed a replacement.

Within a day, the co-worker was able to secure his friend a new ride, thanks to the folks on the Memphis subreddit. Thanks for the kindness, kind strangers.

CA on Valentine’s

The Commercial Appeal got downright funny (well, punny funny) on Valentine’s Day last week. They posted a series of shareable e-cards, made especially for the Bluff City.

“Let’s grit and grind,” reads one. “Like Peabody Ave., the road to true love was never smooth,” reads another. But here’s my fave.

Posted to commercialappeal.com

Categories
News News Blog

Commercial Appeal Suspends Comments, For Now

Justin Fox Burks

Comments on Commercial Appeal stories have been suspended “for now” in an experiment spread across 23 news organizations in the USA Today network, the paper announced Thursday.

“The comment sections on commercialappeal.com have often been a toxic space meant instead [for] the thoughtful exchange of ideas,” said Dann Miller, the CA’s senior consumer experience director, in an afternoon post. “That must change.”

Miller said the paper is looking for better ways to “have meaningful discussion around our content.” To do this, USA Today has teamed with the University of Texas at Austin’s Center for Media Engagement. This team also includes Coral, a company with a comments platform that allows for identifying journalists in the conversation, muting “annoying voices,” and more.
[pullquote-1] The move follows similar shutterings of comments sections by national media brands like NPR, CNN, ESPN, and more. Vice shut down its comments section in December 2016. When it did, Jonathan Smith, then editor in chief of vice.com, said the section was “prone to anarchy.”

“Too often they devolve into racist, misogynistic maelstroms where the loudest, most offensive, and stupidest opinions get pushed to the top and the more reasoned responses drowned out in the noise,” Smith wrote.

But the CA’s Miller offered up other channels for comment.  

“Our goal isn’t to permanently end comments, nor is it to discourage feedback,” Miller said. “We still want to hear from you and we’ll continue to welcome comments on our Facebook page and through letters to the editor, which can be emailed to: letters@commercialappeal.com.”

Comments can now also be sent to comments@commercialappeal.com.

Categories
News News Blog

Gannett: MNG Trying to “Derail Our Progress”

Gannett Co., owner of The Commercial Appeal, urged its shareholders Wednesday to vote for its slate of board candidates to stave off a hostile takeover from rival media company, MNG Enterprises.

MNG is backed by the Alden Global Capital hedge fund and is also known as Digital First Media. MNG recently sent Gannett an unsolicited offer to buy the company for more than $1 billion. Gannett board members rejected the offer.

MNG later offered up a slate of candidates to run for Gannett’s board, a move to take control of the company and, apparently, force the sale of the company to MNG.

The final vote on those candidates is slated for Gannett’s annual shareholder meeting on May 16th. On Wednesday, Gannett sent a letter to shareholders touting the experience and expertise of its nominees.

Gannett criticized MNG’s slate. It said MNG is “attempting to derail our progress and take control of Gannett.”

“In contrast to Gannett’s eight independent nominees, all of MNG’s nominees have irreconcilable conflicts of interest given their close affiliations with MNG and/or Alden – and in some cases their fiduciary duties to MNG and Alden,” reads the letter.

Touting its own slate, Gannett pointed to its board’s actions to build a “best-in-class digital marketing solutions organization and local-to-national news network that have driven growth in digital subscribers, audience engagement, and advertising and marketing services revenues.”

Here are some of the numbers Gannett listed as signs of its growth:

• Growing digital subscribers by 46 percent, bringing total paid digital-only subscribers to over 500,000.

• Growing ReachLocal revenues by 15 percent.

• Growing national digital advertising revenue by 19 percent and transforming USA Today’s advertising revenue to be 75 percent digital.

Categories
Letters To The Editor Opinion

What They Said…

About Bruce VanWyngarden’s Letter From the Editor, “Black and White and Read All Over” …

[The Commercial Appeal‘s story] was a good read. Even at the turn of the 20th century, readers were complaining about the violence, murder, and mayhem in the paper. But then this has always been a bawdy, violent river town.

If the CA focused on investigative reporting while balancing its coverage with the good and the bad, it would be a thriving metropolitan daily. I firmly believe that the CA can stabilize and thrive within the Memphis MSA.

J.R. Golden

When I lived in Middle Tennessee, The Tennessean was the standard for anybody who followed Tennessee politics. Broadly, the economic model of print journalism is in decline. It truly is a shame, because there is so much benefit it brings to society.

Papers create a public space. In many ways, local papers are like the town square, where debates of the day on current topics of interest take place. That’s why I think the comment sections of local papers are so important, and why I stopped my CA subscription when they went with their Facebook requirement. The primary value of my local paper to me is as a source for a curated discussion of things that might interest the local citizen. I am willing to pay for that, even if a new form of payment is necessary to keep the papers going. But I absolutely refuse to surrender my personal metadata to the Facebook abomination.

OakTree

The Tennessean is awful. It is nowhere near the entity it once was. The CA is better at this point than The Tennessean. That said, I cancelled my subscription about two weeks ago to the CA. I was a 25-year subscriber, but I got tired of not receiving the paper in the morning and the customer service refusing to have it re-delivered.

Packrat

About the Flyer editorial, “Memphis Zoo Study Provokes Controversy” …

The economic impact of the Memphis Zoo seems to be wildly overstated. The lack of empirical data and the multitude of assumptions leave the results of the study questionable. The tens of millions of tax dollars poured into the zoo have resulted in a shortage of dollars for other projects which would benefit Memphians. The zoo must begin to show a profit. If that is not possible given the current management structure, new managers are required. We must not continue to fund year after year deficits to the detriment of every other park program.

Enrico Dagastino

The zoo makes roughly $17 million in revenue. Suggesting that it has a multiplicative effect as it works through the Memphis economy is pretty standard in economic impact assessments. Questions about the amount of that multiplier we can leave to economists to argue over. Suggesting that it brings in additional business not seen in zoo revenues, since it is Memphis’ No. 1 tourist attraction, should be expected. Are we to believe everyone comes to the zoo, then goes and never does anything else?

DatGuy

The great majority of the out-of-Memphis visitors to the zoo come from West Tennessee, North Mississippi, and Arkansas. They come to the zoo, buy McDonald’s for the kids, leave the wrappers on the Greensward where they park, and return home from the zoo with exhausted children.

The zoo needs to produce its surveys, which are the raw data for this study. Who did they survey? How did they survey? When did they survey? It is high time that the taxpayers of this city stopped subsidizing the zoo to the tune of around $4,000,000 a year. That money would go a long way to funding a fire and police pension and to fixing our city parks for the benefit of our children and our citizens.

Memphis Tigers

About a visit to Memphis …

Last week I had the pleasure of travelling to Memphis from Ottawa, Canada. I went to Graceland, the Bass Pro Pyramid, BBQ festival, and several restaurants.

What my Google search failed to disclose was the polite, kind, and terrific people I would meet along the way. Without exception, everyone in the service industry was fantastic. Memphis police and several others stood out as being well above what I expected.

Great job. I will certainly return.

Paul Gagnon, Ottawa Ontario

Categories
News The Fly-By

Fly on the Wall 1410

Legendary Legends

A digital report that appeared on The Commercial Appeal‘s website last week received attention across social media for recounting the epic tale of UT-Knoxville student Patrick Goswitz, the Sigma Chi frat brother who invited porn star Cherry Morgan to a formal dance last weekend.

“UT fraternity brother declared ‘a legend’ for date with porn star,” was originally published by the Knoxville News Sentinel and tells the touching story of young Goswitz, who was, in fact, described as a “legend” as a result of his date with Morgan, a Knoxville-based actress famous for appearing in adult films where, like many porn stars, she gives blowjobs to plumbers, pizza guys, and other dudes who deliver.

The astonishing saga of Goswitz and Morgan was told using quotes from blogs and social media and is most notable for containing the worst sentence in the history of print journalism: “Goswitz told [Dan] Regester [of the website Total Frat Move] via an Instagram interview uploaded on TFM that he had invited Morgan to the formal via a message on Facebook and she sent him ‘her digits’ and accepted.”

Judging by quoted comments, people with internet connections and Google alerts for Cherry Morgan had many newsworthy things to say about the hot date. One person wrote “Atta boy.” Another said “Lucky guy!” A third anonymous commenter wrote “Good for him,” while a somewhat sadder post read, “I would consider myself legendary to even bring a girl to meet my family.”

This was easily the hottest story the CA has published since the previous day’s breaking story about how nicotine makes it hard to quit smoking.

Categories
News The Fly-By

Fly on the Wall 1378

Pig Wizard
Poor Andy Holt seems to be unclear on the meaning of many words, including, but not limited to, “civil” and “rights.” Last week, the outspoken Tennessee State Representative, in what some are describing as a strong bid by Holt to become the next Stacey Campfield, described Nathan Bedford Forrest (a slave trader, Confederate general, and the original Grand Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan) as being one of “the South’s first Civil Rights leaders … a man, redeemed through Christ, that fought for the rights of black West Tennesseans.” It’s helpful to remember that Holt, who’s currently being eyeballed by the feds for allegedly releasing 800,000 gallons of pig feces into fields and streams near his farming operation, once described the Humane Society as being nothing but a bunch of “fraudulent” and “reprehensibly disgusting” corporatists “intent on using animals the same way human-traffickers use 17-year-old women.”

Blaming Victims
According to a wide range of Tennessee media sources including The Commercial Appeal, The Tennessean, and Nashville Public Radio, the state of Tennessee canceled an anti-drunk-driving outreach campaign because it had been “criticized as sexist.” After reviewing slogans about poor judgment and the effect of alcohol on clingy, marginally attractive women, The Washington Post published a more accurate story headlined, “Sexist drunken driving campaign canceled on account of being really, really sexist.”

Categories
News The Fly-By

Fly on the Wall 1374

Logo No Go

Not only is it crude and embarrassing, the controversial new $46,000 Tennessee logo doesn’t meet the criteria for a trademark. According to the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), the red and blue box with the state’s “TN” abbreviation is too “geographically descriptive.” That means a trademark could grant the holder exclusive rights to design elements that other parties need for general identification and use.

Like the USPTO says in its FAQ, “Under U.S. trademark law, geographic terms or signs are not registrable as trademarks if they are geographically descriptive or geographically misdescriptive of where the goods/services originate. The theory is that other producers in that area would need to be able to use a geographic term to describe where their goods/services are from and that one person should not be able to prevent others from using that term.”

Guns & Money

Media outlets and gun dealers have a special relationship. Every headline about crime sells more guns. Every article about the virtues of guns sells more guns. Every article calling for gun control also sells more guns. At least the Commercial Appeal put its post-Charleston full-page gun ad on page 13.

Categories
News News Blog

The Commercial Appeal Union Holds Rally

It may have been a warm afternoon in Memphis, but members of the Memphis Newspaper Guild weren’t having a picnic on The Commercial Appeal lawn.

Employees stand outside The Commercial Appeal building on Union Avenue.

  • Alexandra Pusateri
  • Employees stand outside The Commercial Appeal building on Union Avenue.

The union held an afternoon rally to raise awareness about the roadblock that held up the guild and the newspaper’s contract negotiations. The point of dissent is the addition of disciplinary measures included in the union’s contract. The company tried to include the language previously, but the union struck down the motion unanimously in March.

“The company is trying to eat away at our most basic right — the right to have a fair hearing whenever someone is disciplined,” said Wayne Risher, president of the newspaper guild. “We feel like they would be able to fire us for any reason at their discretion if we agree to it.”

Currently, the company operates within a progressive discipline format. It starts with a verbal warning and moves up to suspensions and firings. The union’s bulletins have reported that the proposed clause by the company claims that “progressive discipline is not required,” although it is customary.

The union is also fighting against the control of discipline moving toward management — “something [The Newspaper Guild] believes will be used to reduce or eliminate the chance an outside arbitrator would ever reverse a bad disciplinary decision,” according to a bulletin released earlier this year. The new clause allows management to determine disciplinary measures against an employee at its own discretion.

“We had a tentative agreement that we had second thoughts about,” Risher said. “We ended up voting it down in the ratification process. We have not been back to the bargaining table since the company has not changed its position and still wants to impose that change in discipline language on us.”

According to Risher, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel’s newspaper union in Wisconsin has maintained a “better relationship” with its own publishing company than The Commercial Appeal union “historically.” (The newspaper joined the group last year.)

“They’ve always tried to keep the union down here,” Risher said. “It’s just an extension of that old-fashioned thinking.”

The union president said the contract allows the company to attract new employees and maintain current employees in order to provide journalism to the Memphis community.

“We’re not really asking for money, although we’ve only had three raises in the past 13 years,” Risher said. “What we have basically been working on has been status quo that would not be any new money. We look at it like we don’t want to go backwards. We don’t want these rights taken away from us. We feel like it’s a fair contract if it preserves our rights.”

A call to the publisher of The Commercial Appeal was not returned.