Table Talk: Umami Amora, a night to remember
Umami Amora was a seven-course dinner, each course created by a local Black chef who chose an emotion to inspire their dish.
There are 38 article(s) tagged Juneteenth:
Umami Amora was a seven-course dinner, each course created by a local Black chef who chose an emotion to inspire their dish.
The festival included local food from Robinson Smokehouse (a local BBQ food truck), health education from Baptist Health Sciences University, Baptist Memorial Health Care and Vitalant with the Sickle Cell Foundation and live music from local artists like Ekpe and the African Jazz Ensemble.
“Millions of Americans across racial and geographic lines are working harder and falling further behind. The basic infrastructure of a stable life is out of reach for far too many families. This is not a partisan talking point. It is the lived arithmetic of American households.”
This year’s Memphis Juneteenth events include concerts, festivals, parades, film screenings, dance, theater and spoken word.
To celebrate Juneteenth, the federal holiday commemorating the end of slavery, a Memphis college is launching a concert series.
Each year, the two-day Memphis festival celebrates June 19, 1865, when enslaved Texans learned of the Emancipation Proclamation.
Juneteenth has also been called Freedom Day, Emancipation Day, Black Fourth of July and second Independence Day, among others. Here’s the history of the holiday.Related content:
Here’s a look at closings for Juneteenth as well as local events being held for the holiday.Related content:
Horseback rides and the chance to hear live music were some of the ways attendees enjoyed themselves during the Tone Juneteenth Festival.
The Juneteenth Festival at Health Sciences Park June 15 brought the community together for a fun run, education, a car show and more.
Tone’s “largest event of the year” will return for the fourth consecutive year.
One event, Tone’s music festival, features Memphis rap legend Juicy J and Memphis producer HitKidd.
With eyes on the future while nodding to the past, the Black arts organization Tone gets glamorous before Sunday’s ‘Family Reunion’ in Orange Mound.
More than 100 vendors were stationed at Health Sciences Park in the Medical District as Memphians took part in the City of Memphis’ Juneteenth fest.
“Douglass is exactly 40 acres and was given to a freed slave by his former slaveowner and that family still lives in Douglass,” said organizer Kathy Yancy-Temple. “My family were freed from this very land, and we have families that go back six, seven, even eight generations here.
MLGW customers received a text Sunday that said, “due to the number of outages, outage-update texts are disabled.”
This week, cult classic “Halloween III” is set to music, the Memphis Botanic Garden celebrates 70 years and Zora Neale Hurston’s life story takes center stage.
Memphis Juneteenth events include concerts, a poetry slam, cultural conversations, a bike ride, a run, a “B.A.P.S.”-themed black tie gala, chamber music and a festival featuring Project Pat.
The festival at the Pipkin Building celebrates Black-owned businesses.
Juneteenth Douglass Freedom & Heritage Festival kicked off Friday in Douglass Park with yoga, face painting, book giveaways, a petting zoo and more.
This week, Juneteenth celebrations are planned across the city, ’90s alt-rockers Collective Soul and Everclear will play (but not together) and an “ooky” musical opens at The Harrell Performing Arts Theatre.
The research mobile exhibit, led by the National Institutes of Health, stops in Memphis this week.
A variety of events will celebrate Juneteenth in Memphis, many returning to live events this year for the first time since the pandemic began.
In other City Council actions Tuesday, Juneteenth was added as a paid holiday for city employees and the Soulsville TIF District was up for a vote.
Douglass’ Juneteenth art auction has been postponed due to COVID-19. However, the festival is still set for Father’s Day weekend.
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