Categories
We Recommend We Saw You

WE SAW YOU: Rajun Cajun: A Raging Success

It was easy to spot Rob Hughes in the crowd at the Rajun Cajun Crawfish Festival benefiting Porter-Leath.

He was the one wearing a crawfish on his head. Other people carried crawfish in buckets.

Actually, Hughes, who is Porter-Leath’s vice-president for development, was wearing a crown with a red crawfish hat pinned in the inside. “It’s the official crown for the ‘King of Crawfish,’” Hughes says.

And who bestowed that title on him? “I just did. In the last five seconds.”

Crown or no crown, Hughes was the happiest “crawfish” at the festival.

The crowd was estimated to be in the 30,000 to 35,000 range, Hughes says. For their estimates, he says, “We usually rely on our food trucks and our food vendors and certainly the [Memphis] police department.”

And, he says, 16,000 pounds of crawfish were sold. “We sold every last pincer down there.”

Rajun Cajun Crawfish Festival (Credit: Michael Donahue)

Ethan Sao, Jennifer Rogers, Sarah Straub, Perri Chan, Hayden Perez, Aubree Vaccaro at the Rajun Cajun Crawfish Festival (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Tre’ Matthews, Alaina Matthews, Timothy Matthews, and Tyus Matthews at the Rajun Cajun Crawfish Festival (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Austin Prudhomme at the Rajun Cajun Crawfish Festival (Credit: Michael Donahue)

Vendors were on hand with culinary items, including corndogs, for those who didn’t want to stand in line for mudbugs.

Michael Galindez and Elysia Green at the Rajun Cajun Crawfish Festival (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Justin and Kiara Hughes at the Rajun Cajun Crawfish Festival (Credit: Michael Donahue)

The festival, which celebrated its 30th anniversary, moved to a new location this year. Actually, moved over is more like it. The event was usually held between Beale Street and Union Avenue. This year, it was moved between Union Avenue and Jefferson Avenue. “Obviously, a little bit of nervousness any time there’s a new layout. Kind of like moving to a new house.”

But the new location “allowed us to do some new things,” Hughes says, adding: “The new space allowed us to spread out and bring green space.”

People watched the river go by and enjoyed the breeze, Hughes says. And they got to take advantage of Fourth Bluff Park and River Garden.

The festival also raised a lot of money for Porter-Leath, Hughes says. “It should be right at six figures. It’s still a little early. But signs are pointing in that direction.”

The festival wasn’t held in 2020 because of the pandemic. And Hughes believes they skipped a year in the early ‘90s. 

So, 2023 marked the official 30th anniversary of the Rajun Cajun Crawfish Festival. “We definitely celebrated in style. And everybody came out for the party.”

Brian Litaker, Leior Jones, Mack Robinson, P.J., and Wenshawn Green at the Rajun Cajun Crawfish Festival (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Mariah Anderson and Percy Bullard at the Rajun Cajun Crawfish Festival (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Sarah Straub and Hayden Perez at the Rajun Cajun Crawfish Festival (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Anna Owens and Steven Ash at the Rajun Cajun Crawfish Festival (Credit: Michael Donahue)
We Saw You
Categories
We Recommend We Saw You

Corona Confessions

Lindsey Scott

You’re stuck at home. The high points of your day are breakfast, lunch, and dinner. You have more time on your hands than you need. You’re finding yourself doing things — good and bad — you’ve never done before.

Enter “Corona Confessions.”

Founder Brandon Aguirre, 38, began the Facebook group April 15th. He had 600 members in the first 24 hours. About a week later, he had 1,600 members.

Explaining how the group began, Aguirre, a bartender before he got laid off because of the pandemic, says, “I posted something about how I was blaring and

Brandon Aguirre

singing at the top of my lungs power pop ballads.”

Then he commented, “This is totally not me. Just another Corona confession.”

His friend Tim Wood told him, “You might be on to something with this Corona Confessions thing.”

Aguirre’s opening statement after he began the group: “Everybody’s world has been readjusted and we’re all doing things we wouldn’t necessarily do. Eating things we wouldn’t ordinarily eat, listening to music we would never listen to under ordinary circumstances, enjoying movies or TV shows we would never take time to explore. All under the confines of quarantine. We would normally feel ashamed or hide these things. Secrets. Show it! Tell it! We’re all doing it!”

And people confessed.

Vincent Bruno posted a photo of his foot with blue-painted toenails. He let his girlfriend paint them. Bruno wrote, “My girlfriend got bored with me playing Doom Eternal 4 days straight.”

Vincent Bruno

Lindsay Scott posted a photo of herself in a protective mask on which she painted scary red lips the Joker would envy. She wrote, “Going to visit my young nephews through a window today. Thought I’d make it less scary by painting my face mask. This is a hard nope.”

Other posts:
“Just sitting in the kitchen in our underwear searching for and removing bits of rotted roots from my giant jade, like you do.”
“I’ve eaten Taco Bell five days in a row.”
“All I want to do is drink, snack, and fool around.”
“I’m drinking a Clementine White Claw laying in a bubble bath instead of a La Croix this morning. It’s like my hand just reached for it on its own …”
“Have you ever been this incredibly fucking bored in your entire stupid life?”
“I put on earrings, lip gloss, and a flower crown to day drink by myself.”
“What if ‘getting back to normal’ is the last thing you want?”

There are no restrictions on Corona Confessions, Aguirre says.

As his friend Wood, now a moderator along with Aguirre, Jodie Merryweather, and Alex Martin, recently posted: “Perusing posts from this morning I find excessive alcohol and drug use, loads of masturbation, and disturbing hygiene tales. Everything seems to be in order here. Carry on.”

Why does Aguirre think Corona Confessions is so popular? “‘Anybody can relate to it ’cause everybody’s life has changed.”

Categories
We Recommend We Saw You

Brooks, Juneteenth, Wine Down for BizTown

Michael Donahue

HotHouse Gruv (everybody in the photo except the guy in the black shirt) performed at the opening reception for ‘Bouguereau & America’ at Memphis Brooks Museum of Art.

I get the feeling William-Adolphe Bouguereau would be a fan of HotHouse Gruv.

HotHouse Gruv, a dance company, performed at the members opening reception, which was held June 21st, for “Bouguereau & America.” The exhibit of works by the French academic painter now is on view at Memphis Brooks Museum of Art.

The subjects in Bouguereau’s sensual paintings, which often were set in idyllic glades with cupids and beautiful human beings, showed a lot of skin.

Dressed as satyrs and fauns, the HotHouse Gruv dancers resembled a Bouguereau painting as they portrayed a bacchanal.

Brooks representatives reached out to Cskik Gruv to feature his HotHouse Gruv dancers at the party. “HotHouse Gruv is a collaboration of artists,” Gruv says. “So, we have hip-hop dancers, classically trained dancers. All-style dancers. Bebop dancers, b-boy dancers. There was a deejay there. There are rap artists, vocal artists, and then there are graphic artists. It’s made up of all these people that are loosely connected, but very intertwined. We use each other to create what we do.”

Gruv told the Brooks people that the bodies of the dancers are painted by body paint artists. He told them, “This is very explosive, energetic. Are you sure you want to do this?”

He got the green light, but, Gruv says, “There were a couple of stipulations. We couldn’t have nipples [showing]. Normally, our body paint looks like clothing on top of a natural body. Then I said, ‘Well, we’ll do pasties.’”

The Brooks people weren’t sure about pasties on the dancers, either, Gruv says. Then, he says, “Word came down from the powers that be that they need to have something on top. At least the ladies did.”

For inspiration, Gruv used a Bouguereau painting that shows a drunk Bacchus, the god of wine. “Everybody is dancing and they have tambourines, and wine was there,” he says.

As for the dancers, he says, “I thought we would reach out to artists who are a little bit more acrobatic to be a part of the event, too.”

Music for the performance included Janet Jackson’s “Throb”— “a very erotic tune. And that laid the groundwork for the touchy feely orgy-type performance where they were on the floor.”

Videos of the performance were taken. “Sometimes I look at it and I blush,” Gruv says. “Oh, my God, we did this? It’s funny. When we were rehearsing I was like, ‘OK. Now, guys, we’re going to simulate an orgy.’ Everybody was, ‘OK. OK.’ I placed people and I was like, ‘Let’s just see where you go.’ And they started.”

Finally, Gruv says he told the dancers, “OK. That’s enough.’ I think it even stretched me.”

Describing the final product, Gruv says, “This is a little bit over the top, and I want you to feel this is just at the edge of raunchy and trashy. But it also has a little bit more culture.”

The performance was a hit. From where I stood, the audience appeared to love it. The applause was loud and long.

Michael Donahue

The HotHouse Gruv ‘orgy’ at Brooks.

‘Faun and Bacchante’ by William-Adolphe Bouguereau


Michael Donahue

Memphis Juneteenth Urban Music Festival

The Memphis Juneteenth Urban Music Festival, which was held June 14th through 16th at Robert Church Park, was “a great success,” says Telisa Franklin, Juneteenth president.

And, she says, the event attracted “a lot of out-of-towners this year.”

Temmora Levy (a.k.a. Queen T), who grew up in South Memphis, also attended the festival with her daughter Meisha’s pop group, KARMA. Footage was shot at the festival for Levy’s Lifetime TV Network reality show, Ms. T’s Music Factory, Franklin says.

“Juneteenth is not only celebrated here,” Franklin says. “It’s celebrated all around the world. The slaves in Galveston, Texas, had no idea they were free. It was June 19th, 1865, when the slaves found out they were free.”

This was the sixth year the Memphis festival was held in Robert Church Park. The 27-year-old event formerly was known as the Juneteenth Freedom and Heritage Festival. It began in Memphis at St. Paul Douglas Baptist Church on Brookins and then moved to Douglass Park, Franklin says.

“When it was in North Memphis, I felt like it was a Douglass community festival,” she says. “Moving it downtown, I brought every culture and race together. And it was for Memphis, not one isolated community. It’s important we work together. Memphis isn’t one color. We’re all colors. I want everybody to celebrate Juneteenth. It’s not just one culture and one neighborhood.”

Michael Donahue

Telisa Franklin and DC Franklin at Memphis Juneteenth Urban Music Festival

Michael Donahue

Memphis Juneteenth Urban Music Festival

…………
Michael Donahue

Wine Down for BizTown

To wind down the day, between 150 and 200 people attended Wine Down for BizTown, a Junior Achievement of Memphis and the Mid-South fundraiser. It was held June 14th at the nonprofit’s headquarters at 307 Madison.

The event featured a blind wine tasting and a silent auction. Food was catered by Coletta’s. DJ A. O. provided the music.


Michael Donahue

Wine Down for BizTown

MIchael Donahue

Wine Down for BizTown

Categories
We Recommend We Saw You

Memphis Italian Festival, Carnival Memphis, and Festivals Galore

I was a judge at this year’s Memphis Italian Festival, which was held May 30th through June 1st at Marquette Park. A total of 48 teams participated during the jam-packed event.

I also was a judge at the first Memphis Italian Festival, which was held 30 years ago at Holy Rosary Catholic Church.

There were about six teams that year.

I sat in the “tasting room” in the school’s gym that year with the other three judges and sampled the spaghetti gravy. The teams cooked under a tent on the church grounds.

It was held on only one day — a Saturday.

Michael Vanelli, one of the organizers of that first event, filled me in on the first Memphis Italian Festival.

It initially was held to raise money for Holy Rosary after bingo was outlawed in Tennessee, Vanelli says.

The idea for the festival came from Robert Vanelli, Michael’s brother, who heard about an Italian festival in Nashville that was held to support the Nashville Symphony.

The Vanelli brothers, along with Ernie Vescovo and Mario Bertagna, organized the first Memphis event. “We were all in the men’s club together.”

Bertagna discussed the idea with then Holy Rosary pastor, the late Father Milton Guthrie. “He gave us his blessing. So, that’s how we started,” Vanelli says.

Along with me, the other judges at that first festival were restaurateur Mike Garibaldi; Art Peroni, who owned an Italian restaurant at the time; the late David Hansen with Memphis Light Gas & Water; and the late state Senator Curtis Person.

I asked why I was selected. Vanelli says it was because I “wrote about events” in The Commercial Appeal. “And we wanted you there. We’re Italians. We’re trying to get people to work for us.”

Tom Prestigiacomo volunteered to emcee the festival. “We didn’t have an emcee,” says Vanelli.

Presitgiacomo “came of his own. Got up there and helped us get this going. Talking about us on the radio and all that. He played a big part in getting us started. Mike Garibaldi stepped up and helped us in the kitchen. The spaghetti dinner.”

They had music, but, he says, “We didn’t have the music like we have today. Nothing that grand. We didn’t know what we were doing. Actually, the first couple of years we didn’t know what we were doing. We kind of winged it.”

They also had a “handful of kid’s games and a bocce tournament. That’s been there since day one.”

As for the judging, Vanelli says, “We gave each team a number and they put their number on a Styrofoam cup.”

The judges sampled the gravy without knowing what team cooked what gravy.

The Noodleheads is the only team from that first festival that still competes in the event, Vanelli says.

Michael Donahue

Memphis Italian Festival

………….

Michael Donahue

Carnival Memphis Royal Court members at the Crown & Sceptre Ball.

If you see a motorcade speeding down the street and, making up the rear, a green firetruck carrying people dressed in green, you’re witnessing Carnival Memphis in action.

In one of those cars was Carnival Memphis king Bob Berry and queen Catherine Tabor Owen. They were either going or coming from a day run visit to a hospital or a retirement home. Or, if it’s at night, to a party.

Carnival Week began May 31st with the Crown & Sceptre Ball and will end June 7th with parties, including the University Club of Memphis party.


Michael Donahue

Carnival Memphis king Bob Berry and queen Catherine Tabor Owen.

Michael Donahue

Memphis Flyer’s Margarita Fest

Memphis Flyer’s Margarita Fest, which was held May 11th, was a sell-out.

A total of 1,050 people took part in the event, which featured margaritas from 15 restaurants.

Because of the rain, the location was moved to the Creative Arts Building in Midtown, but guests crowded together, danced, and sipped margaritas.

Don Julio Tequila sponsored the event.

Michael Donahue

Margarita Fest

………….
MIchael Donahue

Brewfest

You could mix your drinks — from margaritas to beer — by going a few hundred feet from the Memphis Flyer’s Margarita Fest at the Creative Arts Building to the Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium concourse for Brewfest 2019, which was also held May 11th.

Eric Bourgeois with Brewfest says, “We estimate 1,500 plus attendees — right around last year — but considering we had to move under the concourse due to weather, I’ll say it was certainly successful. The guests didn’t seem to mind. We had 52 breweries and cideries — the most ever.” A handful of breweries previewed new beers at the event. And VIP guests were treated to food from Aldo’s Pizza Pies, Bardog Tavern, and Slider Inn.

Michael Donahue

Brewfest

Michael Donahue

Brewfest

..

They’re ravin’ about Rajun Cajun over at Porter-Leath. This year’s Porter-Leath Rajun Cajun Crawfish Festival, which was held April 28th in Wagner Place, was a smash success, says Rob Hughes, Porter-Leath vice president of development.

“We had a new record on attendance at 50,000,” he says. “As to mudbugs, we went through 17,500 pounds, cementing our status as the largest one-day crawfish festival outside of Louisiana. Our crawfish purveyor says that we’re even rivaling some of the events in Los Angeles.”

And, he says, “This year’s weather, obviously, was the big winner. Amazing what a year can make. Last year we’re talking about using koozies as gloves. This year, I’m just now getting over my day-of sunburn.”


Michael Donahue

Porter-Leath Rajun Cajun Crawfish Festival

Michael Donahue

Porter-Leath Rajun Cajun Crawfish Festival

Michael Donahue

Joe Birch and some of his ‘TV wives.’

WMC Action News 5 folks were behind the camera April 27th, but the cameras were on people’s phones.

News anchor Joe Birch and his wife, Robyn, held a reunion of people who work or have worked at the TV station.

The event, which was held April 27th at their home, celebrated former WMC Action News 5 reporter Basil Hero and his book, Mission of a Lifetime.

In addition to reporters, Joe says they invited former general managers, news directors, reporters, photographers, and producers.

The party was held, Joe says, “in gratitude for 41 years of steady employment at WMC under four ownership groups. It is not sponsored by WMC or Gray Television, but it is a celebration of our great station by a family that’s been truly blessed to be a part of our story for four-plus decades.”

A great camera moment was when Birch posed with a group of female news anchors he worked with over the years.

Or, as he called them, his “TV wives.”

Michael Donahue

Basil Hero and Nancy Hart at the WMC reunion.



Among other events:

MIchael Donahue

Tennessee Whiskey Trail’s Spirits and Soul was presented by Old Dominick Distillery. It was held April 26th and 27th.

MIchael Donahue

Spirits and Soul

Michael Donahue

Spirits and Soul Fest kickoff party was held April 26th at Old Dominick Distillery.

Michael Donahue

Live music, food and drink — plus a silent auction and a silent disco — were featured at the Beale Street Caravan Blowout, which was held April 27th at the Crosstown Concourse East Atrium.

Michael Donahue

Beale Street Caravan Blowout!

Michael Donahue

The National Kidney Foundation Gala was held April 28th at The Peabody Skyway.

Michael Donahue

Roar and Pour, the Memphis Zoo’s spring culinary/cocktail conservation fundraiser, was held April 20th at Teton Trek.

MIchael Donahue

Ron Olson exhibited his paintings at St. George’s Arcade. Guests got first dibs on buying antiques, plants, and home decor items at the preview party, which was held April 26th at St. George’s Episcopal Church in Germantown.

Michae Donahue

St. George’s Arcade

MIchael Donahue

St. George’s Arcade

Michael Donahue

Edge Motor Fest was held April 27th at Marshall and Monroe.

June West and Robert Hodges at the preview party, which was held May 10th, for the Memphis Mercantile Market, a fundrasier for Memphis Heritage.