Good Ol’ J.R.

Had a few beers at the Saucer tonight – Elvis night pic coming in the next post. Tonight’s drunk food after wandering home is beef jerky from J.R.’s BBQ.

Good Ol’ J.R. (Jim Ross) is the lead announcer on pro wrestling’s WWE Monday Night Raw, along with a color commentator Memphians may have heard of, Jerry “The King” Lawler. When I was a teenager growing up in Little Rock in the 1980s, Jim Ross was the lead announcer for Mid-South Wrestling featuring up-and-coming names like The Junkyard Dog, “Hacksaw” Jim Duggan, Nikolai Volkoff, Ted DiBiase, as well as a 19-year-old kid named Shawn Michaels who lost every week.

So J.R. hit the big time, has been the WWE’s top announcer for years and years, and recently opened a BBQ restaurant in Norman, OK. He has a few to-go items, and I ordered a six-pack of his beef jerky. They arrived today and I tried all four varieties tonight – Original, Peppered, Chipotle, and Slobberknocker Heat. I would like to pronounce the Chipotle my favorite. Glad I ordered two packs of that one.

Center for Southern Folklore’s Memphis Music & Heritage Festival needs volunteers

Last night, someone with whom I worked in the past on Mpact Memphis projects approached me, and asked if I could help recruit volunteers for one of the best outdoor festivals of the year. The Center for Southern Folklore’s Memphis Music & Heritage Festival will be held Saturday-Sunday, September 1-2 and, only 2 weeks away, they are badly in need of volunteers. This festival is a lot of fun, you’ll get to hear some great local music, and you’ll be working with some wonderful people, including Judy who runs the Center and Memphis poet IQ who serves as the MC for the event. Festival will be Downtown on the Main Street Mall between Gayoso and Peabody Place. Details below. Please consider signing up as a volunteer.

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Founded in 1972, the Center for Southern Folklore is a private, nonprofit organization whose mission is to preserve, defend, protect and promote the music, culture, arts, and rhythms of the South. The Center also offers music events and educational programs, maintains its multimedia archives, Folklore Store, and website.

For over two decades, the Center has produced its signature event, the Memphis Music & Heritage Festival. This free event presents the best of our region to visitors and locals, celebrating the changing face of Memphis and the Mid-South:

* Artists whose music has defined our region to the world
* Traditional and contemporary folk artists and craftspeople
* Southern & ethnic cooks
* Dancers, storytellers and representatives of their cultural communities

The Memphis Music & Heritage Festival is held Labor Day Weekend in downtown Memphis.

We request volunteer assistance from your organization in producing these events. We need to fill, in all, about 350 four-hour volunteer shifts. We are grateful for any volunteers that your organization can provide. Volunteers will perform a variety of tasks including the following:

* Assist with musicians, artists, craftspeople, & talkers
* Providing festivalgoers with information
* Festival t-shirt and merchandise sales
* Set-up, maintenance and tear-down of site
* Security and trolley guard
* Beer & beverage sales
* Serve and prepare Southern dinners
* Hospitality

A strong volunteer base is the key to making the Memphis Music & Heritage Festival a success. This success is measured in a tangible way by the smooth operations during the event and the financial gains realized in merchandise, food & beverage sales and donations. The intangible is in the feelings elicited from the spectators and the participants, who are excited about sharing their talents, stories, and culture.

For more information, please contact:

Melanie Miller, Festival Volunteer Coordinator.

Center for Southern Folklore

119 S. Main St., Memphis, TN 38103

(901) 525-3655 or (901) 544-9965 fax

volunteers@southernfolklore.org

or melmiller930@gmail.com

Artery-clogging food

Thinking a little bit more about the Bill Saba sandwich I had for breakfast last week at Elliott’s – sausage, bacon, ham, egg and cheese on Texas toast.

Here’s what I’m thinking – you know what would be really good on that sandwich? Horsey Sauce from Arby’s. Yummmm.

Unfortunately I don’t have any Horsey Sauce in the apartment, and I doubt it’s a good idea to eat more than about one of those sandwiches a month, anyway, so I guess I won’t head over to Elliott’s this morning.

Congrats to the Rapscallions, who took another second-place finish in trivia tonight to score another $25 gift certificate. We had about 12 people playing. Yoko didn’t make it this week though. There was a 21-point bonus question: Name the seven countries that border Poland. I love Eastern Europe questions almost as much as I love Eastern European girls! The answer: Germany, Russia, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Lithuania, Belarus, and the Ukraine.

Congrats also to the Nuh-Uh Girl, who finished her 199th beer last night, made the Saucer erase the leader board and put her name on it (because it’s all about the Nuh-Uh Girl), and then finished her 200th beer. So she’ll be in the Ring of Honor soon. Beers number 199 and 200 were extremely high-alcohol beers. I have a feeling the Nuh-Uh Girl is having a rough day at work today.

Don’t forget Elvis glass night at the Saucer, 7 PM (but you better get there early). Preview flyers they’ve put out indicate that they’re going with a G.I. Elvis theme this year.

Garry Goin & G3 at Court Square tonight

Tonight is the first installment of Bands, Beer, and Bums: The Court Square Concert Series that will continue every Wednesday night until October 17. Garry Goin and G3 will kick it off tonight. They, of course, are EP Delta Kitchen’s house band, on a one-week hiatus while the club brings in an Elvis impersonator for the week.

Who knows, maybe the CCC’s Lee Warren will be out at the park interviewing people for his Definitely Downtown! TV show:

“So, what is it about the concert series that you like the most – the bands, the beer, or the bums?”

“Well, Lee, there’s some fantastic music here, and it’s always nice to enjoy a frosty beverage. But for me, the bums are the element that really makes the Court Square series what it is. They keep it real, you know what I mean? You can just feel their presence here… and you can certainly smell their presence, too.”

(Lee approaches another concertgoer) “So, what is it about the concert series that you like the most – the bands, the beer, or the bums?”

“Oh, most definitely the bums, Lee. They provide so many opportunities for people who come to these concerts to express their generosity. I’ve only been here 20 minutes, and already I’ve had five opportunities to give people ’bout fitty-three cent – see, there’s one of them over there, drinking something out of that paper bag.”

Event runs from 5:30 to 8:30 PM. Picnics, lawn chairs, and blankets welcome. Complete lineup for the 10-week concert series available here.