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#Chef Aid: The South Park Album
iamtryingtobelieve · 13 days
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California sun has sunk behind Anaheim hills Here comes the night I was high on junk And the warm winds of Santa Ana feel alright
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rastronomicals · 3 months
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4:36 AM EDT June 24, 2024:
Primus - "South Park Theme (Explicit)" From the album Chef Aid: The South Park Album (November 24, 1998)
Last song scrobbled from iTunes at Last.fm
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funnynamedottxt · 5 months
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parents
The fact that my parents own the South Park album Chef Aid while also owning TWO copies of Mindy McCreedy’s country album If You Don’t Stay the Night is worryingly enough the funniest thing my parents have ever done.
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kernblanskis · 1 year
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"Feel Like Makin' Love" is a song sung by Ned Gerblanski on Chef Aid: The South Park Album. Much of the humor of the song comes from the emotional, sensual lyrics being delivered in Ned's monotonous, raspy robotic voice.
there is no human way that this song is not dedicated to jimbo. Ned was dedicating it to jimbo. 😁😁😁
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samurairobotics · 2 years
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South Park-ers Direct Ween, Donkeys Expected Ween are a funny people. Similarly, South Park is a damn funny piece of cable TV. Put the two together and we are bound to get a real barrel of laughs. Yesterday, in Venice Beach, CA, the Weens shot a video for their upcoming single, "Even If You Don't" (the second from their latest album, White Pepper. Sources close to the band tell us there was a donkey and a crack pipe involved. But guess who directed it? Ah yes, Matt Stone and Trey Parker, creators of the aforementioned South Park. We're told the premise of the video is adultery (the Ween women cheating on their men), and it is really f**cking funny. That's all we know. But here's the downside: the video was commissioned and paid for by the band's UK label, Mushroom Records, which means that unless their U.S. label, Elektra, get their act together, we will never see this funny video here in the states.
In related news, this crew has indeed worked together before, as Dean and Gene Ween penned a song ("Love") for Parker's film masterpiece, Orgasmo, and also provided voice-overs on the very funny Chef Aid South Park episode. Ween are currently prepping to take on their first string of UK dates in two full year, kicking off at the Reading Festival Aug. 25.
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spoonhead · 5 months
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mephesto and kevin from the South Park chef aid album goes crazy like yes queen 👏👏 get em gopher boy‼️‼️‼️🗣️🗣️🗣️🔥🔥🔥
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shpadoinkle-day · 2 years
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From TV Guide (26/10/1999):
<<<<A funny thing happened on South Park's way to the pop-culture scrap heap.
Two years after the gleefully sophomoric show about bratty, foulmouthed
Colorado third graders debuted on Comedy Central to record-setting ratings,
and a year after the season frequent reruns and a slumping viewer ship, there
seems to be new life for Stan, Kyle, Cartman, Kenny and the whole proudly
obnoxious little crew.
It started perhaps, with last summer’s "South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut,"
a feature film version of the show that turned out to be smarter slyer and
funnier than it’s critics had expected, earning to date more than $71 million
worldwide. It may have been minute-for-minute the most obscenity-ridden movie
ever made, but it was also sharply satiric, and a pretty good musical to boot.
The movie provided a measure of vindication for the two overworked Colorado
malcontents who write, produce and voice South Park - which has 17 new
episodes coming up, starting this week. In the past two years, Trey Parker,
who turned 30 this month, and Matt Stone, 28, have helped put Comedy Central
on the map, offended parents and moral watchdogs, alienated a long list of
Hollywood luminaries and watched their stock rise and fall. The two talked
about their strange career in the spacious office they share in South Park’s
West Los Angeles headquarters, a wharehouselike building whose two prime
parking spots out front are labeled Mao Tsetung and Patrick Duffy. (The late
Chinese Communist leader apparently now drives a silver Lexus SC400, while
the former Dallas star gets around in a dented blue Geo Metro.) Pinned to the
door of their office is a scene-by-scene rundown of an upcoming episode, one
that features actress Sally Struthers (no doubt without her cooperation or
permission), the character Starvin’ Marvin, and lots of space travel.
Outspoken, casual and blatant in their disregard for the usual showbiz
niceties, Parker and Stone are also as profane as you’d expect for the guys who put the words in Cartman’s mouth. This is a PG version; the unedited
transcript would merit at least a hard R.
TV GUIDE: Since you started working on South Park Two years ago you’ve made a
couple of albums, finished the movie "Orgazmo," starred in BASEketball" and
made the "South Park" feature film. But now you’re back working on the TV show
full time.
Trey Parker: Well, we promised ourselves that we were going to come back and
just do the show for a year. Because in July, I started getting grey hairs.
And I know it’s from the movie.
Matt Stone: The "Chef Aid" album [a faux benefit album spoofing the Live Aid
concert] was a lot of work, but the movie was the king monster of them all.
Trey Parker: We felt like, this better be good, or we’re in trouble.
TV GUIDE: Why so much pressure?
Matt Stone: We just felt that people were thinking. South Park isn’t new
anymore, the honeymoon is over, it’s passé. All the summer movie previews
were saying stuff like Austin Powers: It’s shagadelic!, Starwars: Here comes the force, South Park: It may be passé. So we knew the movie had to be good.
But also we felt that the movie was a swan song. We just felt like, we’re gonna
go out in a big blaze of flame. And somehow that backfired, and it was a
critical success and an economic success.
Trey Parker: And people treat us differently now. After BASEketball and
Orgazmo they were starting to go "Oh, those guys are over" But now things are
different. I got a letter from Stephen Sondheim saying that he thought South
Park was the best musical of the last five years.
Matt Stone: So all of a sudden we got a little bit of credibility back. Be we
exchanged it for years off our life.
TV Guide: You went whole hog with the movie. You offended the ratings board,
really annoyed the MPAA president Jack Valenti, fought with Paramount
Trey Parker: Oh, yeah. What I’m most proud of us for, we always said "If we’re
gonna get kicked out of this down, we’re gonna get kicked out flipping everyone
off" And what’s cool is that we haven’t gotten kicked out yet.
TV Guide: Not that some executives probably haven’t tried.
Trey Parker: It’s funny, because everyone was saying "You guys are ticking
off Paramount. You really better be careful. Don’t you worry about your
careers?" And we were like "No". All that matters is that the movie does well.
If the movie does well, we’re fine. If it doesn’t, we’re out. And if we’re
out, we wanna go out with our heads up high.
TV Guide: Do you think the quality of the show suffered when you were off
doing movies?
Trey Parker: No, quite the contrary. I know how we work. I won’t be creative
unless I’ve got a deadline. So it’s not like, wow, if I don’t do this, I could
write a book. It would never happen. I’d sit there and play video games. I can
be the biggest loser in the world, unless I have a very solid deadline: You’ve
got to hand this in or your going to get sued for $6 million. Then I can be creative.
Matt Stone: If we didn’t do the movie we could have done more shows. But I
don’t think they would have been and better. It’s stupid the way we work.
Trey Parker: We suck. We have no work ethic. No self-discipline. We’re just
total losers at heart, that’s the problem.
TV Guide: So why not delegate some of the responsibility
Trey Parker: The easiest thing to do would be to get a writing staff. Hire five
people and have them do it. Matt and I could be executive producers and do the
voices and watch the shows and make notes.
Matt Stone: And we’d get paid the same.
Trey Parker: We’d get paid the same and we’d add years to our lives. But once
the show took off we promised we’d never do that. We’ve done really bizarre
stuff this year in these new shows because as we said from the beginning we
would rather have the show completely inaccessible than just sort of peter out.
We did a show about Jew Scouts, and it was insane. It made no sense. But we loved it.
TV Guide: So even after offending much of Hollywood, you have no plans to
calm down?
Trey Parker: We’re gonna get older just like anyone else, and our values are
probably going to change, but when that happens, I want us to not be doing
this anymore. I just hate watching people in music or whatever, going through
that phase, becoming tame, sitting there on a stool playing "Tears in Heaven".
I feel like, just shut up. You did your thing now go away.>>
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factsofsouthpark · 2 years
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Fact #14
There are two official music albums based on South Park. The first is "Chef Aid", and the second is "Mr. Hankey's Christmas Classics"
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lippedgloss · 3 years
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@flamejob tagged me to post some albums i'm really into lately :}
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Teaches Of Peaches - Peaches
South Park: Chef Aid - Various Artists
Check Your Head - Beastie Boys
Who’s Got The 10 1/2 - Black Flag
World Extermination - Insect Warfare
Self Titled - The Psychedelic Furs
I tag - @screenietv @ladyofs0rrowz @lunachix @s0re-loser @raremikey
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13 years ago today, Musician and actor Isaac Hayes passed at the age of 66.
Most famously remembered for his role as Chef on Comedy Central’s “South Park” (1997-2006), Hayes was a gifted performer whose musical work led him to the heights of fame and success. At one point in the mid-70′s, he had an Oscar for his hit song, “Shaft,”  accompanying the film of the same name, a gold-platted car and ownership of a basketball team.
This piece, the 16-minute “Moonlight Lovin’ (Ménage à Trois), appeared in his 1977 album, “New Horizon.” It was also the forefather of his later song, “Simultaneous” that appeared in the 2nd season “South Park” episode, “Summer Sucks” and was later part of the “Chef Aid” concert and album release, performed by Hayes himself in 1998.
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rastronomicals · 2 years
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4:11 PM EDT September 27, 2022:
Primus - "South Park Theme (Explicit)" From the album Chef Aid: The South Park Album (November 24, 1998)
Last song scrobbled from iTunes at Last.fm
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simpsonsnight · 5 years
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Episode #248
WHAT THIS?
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Behind the Laughter Season 11 - Episode 22 | May 21, 2000 Yeah okay, this one is pretty undeniable. I thought I would find holes to poke in this one but it’s honestly pretty great. I laughed! So this one is the fake/in-universe behind-the-scenes story of the Simpsons TV show, which in that The Simpsons is a real family who made a demo of a sitcom based on their lives and wound up getting it made at Fox. There is a long tradition in this approach: Bugs Bunny, Mickey Mouse, Space Ghost, etc. have all been portrayed as actors staring in a series of cartoons. If you’re one of those people who is autistic for the idea of needing to reconcile cartoonish inconsistencies within actual cartoons to create a cohesive in-universe canon, then this is the best way to do that, I guess. My favorite scene where Homer makes his own pilot episode for the Simpsons, an intentionally ham-fisted sitcom full of contrived cliches, dumb catch phrases, and pandering humor. I remember trying unsuccessfully to explain this scene to my dad, for some reason. I know people who think this should’ve been the series finale. If it were, it would’ve prevented the one single-most flagrant double-dipping of a joke they ever did. At the end of this episode they show a clip from a future episode, where “the Simpsons are going to Delaware!” Lisa exclaims she wants to see Wilmington. Bart says he wants to visit a screen-door factory. Indeed, this joke was repeated verbatim in a future episode, but in a slightly different context than what’s shown here, during Simpsons Tall Tales in season 12. Maybe the idea is that the joke really WAS in a future episode was supposed to be a hilarious pay-off. To me it just seems like sincere laziness. This is also the episode where they casually reveal what state the Simpsons live in, but the gag was they recorded a bunch of different ones so that when the show repeated it would be a different line each time. Makes me wish the DVD could somehow randomize the line. Instead they include all the reads as a special feature, sticking with Northern Kentucky as the default line. So I guess that’s where they live. You happy, canon heads?
THE B-SODE:
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Chef: Behind the Menu South Park TV Special | December 8, 1998 Irredeemable shit. This is basically just a promo for the Chef Aid album South Park put out. Clearly Matt and Trey of Matt and Trey fame had nothing to do with this special, and it was probably written by the promo department or some shit. If you’re interested in seeing musicians riff out stories about chef then you’ll be in for a shit.
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rudiecantfail98 · 7 years
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I didn’t buy anything today, but I did take some pictures of records and CDs that I thought were interesting. Vinyls are so expensive at times. There was an interview/music vinyl of Lindsey Buckingham from 1982 to promote his album, Law and Order (1981), awesome guitarists poster, South Park - Chef Aid - (song that I like: “It’s a Rockin’ World” by Joe Strummer of The Clash), Scarface soundtrack (did not buy because no opening titles track), music by Pittsburgh Steelers legend Terry Bradshaw, and Walter Egan’s Not Shy.
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supermegamusicdude · 7 years
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Artists - Ween Title - The Rainbow Album - Chef Aid: The South Park Album Genre - Alternative Rock Country - USA Year of Release - 1998
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used music cds (2425 Cromwell Circle building 5) $1
Some discs have scratches or may need cleaning. I will refund any disc(s) you have problems with. disc only ($1): Ashlee Simpson - I Am Me Basia - The Sweetest Illusion Chef Aid - The South Park Album Chris Gaines - Greatest Hits DR DOG - we al ... from Craigslist https://austin.craigslist.org/emd/d/austin-used-music-cds/6880556780.html Fraud Bloggs made possible by: http://circuitgenie.wix.com/techsupport
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We’re closing out April with the biggest, busiest, most ridiculous weekend in Memphis ever. I know I’ve said that about a couple of weekends in the past – even ones recently – but this one truly takes the cake. In five years of making weekend guides, this may be the busiest one I have ever seen. Stay hydrated, wear sunscreen, take Lyfts, and post photos with #ilovememphis. It’s going to be awesome. This post has the five things you won’t want to miss, plus plenty of extras. But first, be sure you didn’t miss anything on the blog this week: Food Truck Festival this weekend, Memphis Movie Series in May, Dining Out For Life continues through Sunday, an interview with Beverly Roberston, new Chamber of Commerce CEO, plus we discuss what should go in the old Brooks/MCA building on last week’s Think Tank. Stay tuned: The Levitt Shell’s summer lineup will go live on this here blog at 9 a.m. on Friday (subscribe here so you don’t miss it). Here’s the monster list: 1. Overton Park Field Day, Overton Park, Saturday, 10 a.m. – 2 p.m., free, all ages/kid-friendly Overton Park Conservancy invites you to a day of sun, fun, and games on the Greensward. This event is free to enter and includes field day games, beer, food trucks including MEMPopS, Let’s Be Frank, and Firecracker Grille Foodtruck, live music, Overton Park merch for sale, and a raffle with prizes from local businesses. Plus, guided nature walks every hour on the hour ($10, kids under 12 are free). 2. East Buntyn Art Walk, Midland Avenue, Saturday, 11 a.m. – 5 p.m., free, all ages Head to Midland Ave between Prescott Street and Reese Street for the 9th annual East Buntyn Art Walk, where residents will turn their front yards into galleries for local and regional artists. Mingle with the neighbors at this kid, people, and pet-friendly event. (Rain date is April 28 from 2 p.m. – 7 p.m.) 3. Mid-South Food Truck Festival, Liberty Bowl Stadium,Saturday, 11 a.m. – 5:30 p.m. $8 adults/$3 kids at the gate, all ages/kid-friendly  The Food Truck Festival at Tiger Lane features dozens of regional trucks (each are serving one $5 item plus their regular menu) and DeAngelo Williams Foundation’s ‘Throw-in for a Cure’” Cornhole Tournament. Tickets are just to get in/parking. You have to buy your food and drink. 4. Edge Motor Fest, 645 Marshall Avenue, Saturday, noon – 6 p.m, free, all ages/kid-friendly The new Edge Motor Museum opens on April 27 with a festival celebrating the neighborhood’s automotive history with tons of classic cars, live music, vendors, food trucks, and more. 5. 27th Annual Rajun Cajun Crawfish Festival, Wagner Place, Sunday, 11 a.m. – 7 p.m., free, all ages The Rajun Cajun Crawfish Festival is the city’s largest, at least by amount of crawfish: during the single day festival, they’ll serve 15,000 pounds. There will also be live music, a gumbo cooking contest, and all manner of crawfish-related activities. Bring a lawn chair and set up camp along the trolley tracks while you eat. Proceeds from the festival benefit Porter-Leath.   View this post on Instagram   A post shared by Edge Motor Fest (@edgemotorfest) on Apr 22, 2019 at 12:27pm PDT Plus many, many extras…it’s worth reading these! Lots of big events and too many to fit into the five. – Evolution (A Burlesque Story), Dru’s Place, Sunday, 6 p.m. – 9 p.m., $12 general/$20 VIP, 21 and up Burlesque performer and producer Coco Rosie celebrates three years of burlesque shows in Memphis with a reunion show featuring some of her favorite performers, including Gidget Bardot, Stormy Knight, Maxie Fauna, and Flux Inqueeror. Support our city’s most diverse burlesque show and have a blast at Dru Place this Sunday night. – Riko’s Kickin Chicken Trap Brunch, 1329 Madison, Saturday, 11 a.m. – 3 p.m., prices vary, all ages Riko’s Kickin Chicken is open for the first ever Trap Brunch this Saturday, so you can enjoy their out-of-this-world chicken for brunch. They’ll have chicken and waffles, fish and grits, and other specials, and you can bring your own champagne for OJ they’ll have on hand. – Spirits & Soul Fest, South Main/Old Dominick, Friday – Saturday, $100, 21 and up Thirty distilleries from across Tennessee are heading to the South Main Historic Arts District in downtown Memphis for two days of rare spirits tastings, food, live music, and more. Friday night gets you liquor samples at Trolley Night and access to rare bottles for sale. Saturday is a Block Party at Old Dominick with cocktails, music, and food truck food for sale. Read more here. – Walk The Line Screening, Orpheum Theatre, Friday, 7 p.m., $8 adults, all ages (parental discretion advised) No summer movies this year. Instead, the Orpheum is doing random movies throughout the year and this week it’s time for Walk The Line starring Joaquin Phoenix and Reese Witherspoon. – Roar and Pour, Memphis Zoo, Friday, 7 p.m. – 10 p.m., $125, 21+ This is an exclusive night of dining and drinking with Memphis’ best chefs and mixologists, plus live music. There’s a VIP option that includes hand-rolled Cuban cigars and select bourbons. – Dining Out For Life Week, Various Locations, through Sunday, Prices Vary, all ages Support Friends for Life by dining out at different local restaurants, when 25 percent of proceeds will be donated to their mission of supporting those affected by AIDS/HIV.  There are 15 restaurants (and counting) including Beauty Shop, Gray Canary, Dru’s Place, Hog and Hominy, Iris, and more. You must check the schedule, though, it’s not every place very day. Fratelli’s Cafe inside the Botanic Gardens will donate 75 percent of proceeds every day, all week! – Grind City Flow Festival Showcase, Memphis Botanic Garden, Saturday, 6 p.m. – midnight., $10 adv./ $15 gate, all ages The Grind City Flow Festival Showcase is selection of performances with hula hoopers, acrobats, aerialists, jugglers, fire twirlers, dancing, and more, with food trucks, vendors, and live music for the whole family.  After 10 p.m., the event becomes 18+. So take the kids home at 10 p.m. Earlier that day, Grind City Flow Fest will host workshops for 18+ in flow aerial, yoga, dance, and more. Those tickets are $75 and that starts at 9 a.m. – Down To Earth Festival, Shelby Farms Park,Saturday, 10 a.m. – 5 p.m., $5 parking, all ages/kid-friendly Celebrate Earth Day at one of the country’s largest urban parks on Saturday, April 27. They’ll have live music, kids’ activities, crafts, eco-friendly vendors, artisans, and more. Rain date is April 28. – Epping Way Wolf River Greenway Opening, 2630 Epping Way Drive, 9 a.m. – noon, free, all ages/kid-friendly Another section of the Wolf River Greenway officially opens this weekend with a 5K (8 a.m.), ribbon cutting with the mayors (9 a.m.) and festivities including free food from 10 a.m. – noon. The Greenway is a paved walk/bike path along the Wolf River that will stretch across the city, it’s being completed section by section, and it’s wonderful. If you haven’t checked it out, you should. Parking is at Jamesbridge Apartments. – Arlington In April, Depot Square in Arlington,Saturday, 10 a.m. – 4 p.m., free, all ages/kid-friendly Vendors from around the Mid-South will display and sell handmade crafts and boutique items. They’ll have lots of activities, great music, and entertainment. – Cooper Young Saturday Shop Hop, Saturday, 10 a.m.  – 5 p.m., free to attend, all ages/kid-friendly Local restaurants and shops in the neighborhood will offer discounts, giveaways, and refreshments all day in honor of Independent Bookstore Day. – Taste the Rarity, Wiseacre Brewing, Saturday, 3 p.m. – 7 p.m., $65 + fees, 21 and up Taste rare craft beers from breweries around the country and celebrate the release of the annual Unicornicopia 2019, with music from the Mighty Souls Brass Band, Griz Line, circus acts, food, games, commemorative taster glass and more. Expect this one to sell out, so get your tix asap. Rain or shine, no dogs. – Lord T & Eloise Live Album Recording, Railgarten, Saturday, 8 p.m., $10, 21 and up  Lord T & Eloise are landing their space ship in a giant bubble bath and recording their first and only live album at Railgarten on Saturday night. It’s gonna get weird. – Spillit Story Slam, Earnestine & Hazel’s, Saturday, 7 p.m. – 10 p.m., $10 entry + there’s a cash bar, 21 and up Gather your courage and stand up in front of strangers to tell your five minute story. You can just watch if you want, too, but I bet you’ll be tempted to talk after a Soul Burger and a beer. The theme is “South Main Stories”, and the best storyteller wins. Spillit remains one of the most unique, compelling experiences in the city and I can’t recommend it enough. – Spring Maker’s Market, Muddy’s Midtown, Saturday, 11 a.m. – 5 p.m., free to enter, all ages/kid-friendly A dozen local makers and vendors pop-up on the lovely lawn of Muddy’s Midtown to shop for gifts (Mother’s Day anyone?), enjoy food trucks, and plenty of coffee and cupcakes from Muddy’s. – Breakfast For Dinner, First Congo, Saturday, 5:30 p.m. – 8 p.m., $20 adults/$10 kids, all ages/kid-friendly  Enjoy a brenner feast at First Congo in Cooper Young – think pancakes, casseroles, cinnamon rolls, grits, pastries, and more – all while benefitting the Room In The Inn program. You can get brunchy cocktails and Memphis Made beer for an additional donation. Room In The Inn is a city-wide program where people experiencing homelessness can stay the night in local churches. It’s a very important cause, and a great way to feed the whole family on Saturday night! – Beale Street Caravan Blowout, Crosstown Arts (East Atrium), Saturday, 7 p.m. – 10 p.m., $75, 21 and up Support Beale Street Caravan’s public radio show – bringing Memphis music to the world – at this huge party with an open buffet provided by local chefs, silent DJ, live music (Black Cream with special guests Rev. John Wilkins) plus a silent auction full of incredible Memphis music memorabilia, private tours, house concerts, and more. Be sure to tag all your fun with #ilovememphis! Are you a home owner in Memphis, with a broken garage door? Call ASAP garage door today at 901-461-0385 or checkout http://bit.ly/1B5z3Pc
http://ilovememphisblog.com/2019/04/5-things-to-do-this-weekend-4-26-4-28/
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