āPRIDE IS A PROTESTā


In the days since Gov. Bill Lee signed a bill banning public drag performances on March 2, the legislation, the ļ¬rst of its kind signed into law in the nation, has set off a storm of national headlines highlighting the anti-LGBTQ priorities of the Tennessee General Assembly.
The bill bans drag shows ā stated as āadult cabaret performancesā that include exotic dancers and āmale or female impersonatorsā ā on public property in the state and any location where a minor could be present. A ļ¬rst violation of the law is a misdemeanor, but a second violation is a felony that could result in jail time.
The new law has garnered national attention as outlets like Reuters and The New York Times connect it to a larger wave of conservative attempts to target drag shows. The state legislature even became the butt of the joke in Saturday Night Liveās Week-
end Update as co-host Colin Jost poked fun at the premise of the new law.
āA Tennessee state senator said the bill will prevent kids from being āblindsided by a sexualized performance in public,āā Jost said. āWhat are you talking about? Drag shows donāt just pop up like ļ¬ash mobs and sprinkle gay dust on your kids.ā
The drag bill is just one of the pieces of anti-LGBTQ legislation currently proposed in the Tennessee legislature. Along with the anti-drag bill, Lee also signed a bill banning gender-affirming health care for transgender minors.
Members of the Knoxville LGBTQ community and its allies have been vocal in opposing the slate of anti-trans and anti-drag bills since the bill was ļ¬rst introduced. Many have expressed concerns that the bill could jeopardize the ability of transgender individuals to be in public without facing a misdemeanor for āimpersonation.ā
āThe message is that queer people, especially trans people and gender non-conforming people, are not welcome and are not safe in Tennessee,ā said Story VanNess, assistant center director and program di-
rector for trans and non-binary support services at Knox Pride. āThatās what they want us to know.ā
VanNess has performed in local drag shows as The Lady Viktra since 2003, and has seen drag become more mainstream, mainly through the Emmy-winning reality TV series RuPaul Dragās Race. But with the increased visibility of the drag community, she said, has come a change in the understanding of what drag is.
āDrag is art, it is culture, but itās also a political statement. It was counterculture in the truest sense of the word ⦠and now itās become pop culture,ā VanNess said.
Knox Pride, formally known as the East Tennessee Equality Council, is a community resource for LGBTQ individuals, and hosts the annual Knox Pride Festival, the largest public event featuring drag performances in the city and one of the largest in the state.
In February, the group announced it would cancel the festival if the bill was signed into law. VanNess said the festival will not happen as usual this year, but will be replaced by a series of protests and demonstrations. On its website, Knox Pride
offers resources which help community members contact their legislators to ask them to oppose further legislation targeting gender-affirming healthcare and drag performances.
At a rally hosted by Knox Pride downtown on Feb. 13, local activist Kim Spoon delivered a speech about the bill which went viral on TikTok, reaching hundreds of thousands of viewers. VanNess herself has appeared on national television, including CNN, to discuss the law.
āPride is a protest. It began as a protest, it should always be a protest, and it will be a protest again. We are not going to take this lying down,ā VanNess said.
All-ages drag performances have become increasingly rare in the state as the community fears legal repercussions. VanNess said that public shows and even bar performances are held to standards laid out by the stateās Alcoholic Beverage Commission, and the common sense of performers who know children may be around.
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This one example is just beginning. Around the world, women have gained a bigger platform to voice their concerns and have a say in societyās affairs. But despite having the most legal rights than ever before, women still have only three-fourths the amount of rights that men do, on average. This number is signiļ¬cantly lower in regions where women have had greater challenges in the ļ¬ght for equal rights. Although a lot of progress has been made, a fact that should not be overlooked, there are often hidden elements in our society that sustain the system of inequality. This idea is denied by some, but the statistics do not lie.
The desire for change is spearheaded by the feminist movement. Feminism is now a mainstream topic, with around 61% of American women claiming the title of feminist and stating that it ādescribes them wellā. While the word āfeministā is not as taboo as it once was, it still does carry some negative connotations. This is a result of the term becoming politicized, carrying a radical, extremist undertone and encouraging the polarization of groups, rather than the reuniļ¬cation of them.
For those who do not know, March has been celebrated as Womenās History Month since 1995 in the United States. In 1980, President Jimmy Carter, originally declared a week-long celebration of womenās history to affiliate with International Womenās Day, celebrated annually on March 8. The week evolved into a month after Congress passed Public Law 100-9, in 1987, commemorating the month of March for womenās history. The United States continues to be the only country in the world that dedicates an entire month to womenās history. But many countries in the world do celebrate International Womenās Day, a worldwide holiday established in 1910.
Both events commemorate all women in the world from the big and recognizable names to the everyday woman. All have contributed to the strides made concerning womenās rights and gender equality. To quote President Jimmy Carter in his address to the nation after declaring March 2-8, 1980, as National Womenās History Week, he proclaimed:
āToo often the women were unsung and sometimes their contributions went unno-
ticed. But the achievements, leadership, courage, strength and love of the women who built America were as vital as that of the men whose names we know so well.ā
Although a lot of progress has been made, there is still more work that needs to be done. For instance, there are over 5,000 statues spread throughout the United States that serve to honor and memorialize the efforts of the individual. But a disparity exists between the number of statues honoring male ļ¬gures versus female ļ¬gures. The National Endowment of the Humanities, an independent federal agency, recently estimated that less than 400 statues are dedicated to women. This imbalance is especially prevalent in the urban areas of New York City and Washington D.C.
While more statues of female ļ¬gures should not be erected on the sole basis of them being women, it is indicative of us as a society that what we decide to ennoble is implicative of our values.
It is important to remember that representation in the public sphere is crucial. An ampliļ¬cation of this topic in society has been spurred by the publication of scientiļ¬c studies and news articles. In which, they state the associated beneļ¬ts and need for diverse media portrayals because children and adults alike internalize the facets of their surroundings on a subconscious level. So not having adequate depictions of female leaders and pioneers could reinforce gender roles and stereotypes.
The original goal of the feminist movement, when it was ļ¬rst founded in the 19th century, was to provide greater opportunities for women. Since the movementās establishment, it has come and gone in surges (referred to as waves). Today, feminism is often declared to be intersectional, meaning the movement takes into account the relationship that exists between social classiļ¬cations, (such as race and ethnicity, gender identity, socio-economic class, etc. Feminism has become a catch-all term for the push toward equality amongst underrepresented groups.
As you may know, I am the editor-in-chief of Ablaze Magazine, a student-run feminist magazine on campus. This past year, we implemented a rebranding campaign to mark the metamorphosis from Honey to Ablaze Magazine. I am honored to be the leader of such an empowering organization that allows us to spotlight issues that predominantly affect women and accentuate the efforts of inspiring female ļ¬gures in our community. In particular, I would like to highlight the work undertaken by members of the magazine. Without their commitment, Ablaze Magazine would not be possible.
It is promptly ļ¬tting that I publicize the efforts of my team given that the theme for National Womenās History Month is āCelebrating Women Who Tell Our Stories.ā The National Womenās History Alliance proclaims this theme to honor women āwho have been active in all forms of media and storytelling including print, radio, TV, stage, screen, blogs, podcasts, and more.ā I am proud to announce that Ablaze Magazine is expecting to release our ļ¬rst print publication this May.
More details will be released soon, but in the meantime check out our work on our website and social media pages.
Each March, individuals come together to celebrate Womenās History Month. Although there are not as many celebratory events on campus this year as in previous years, there are still some ways that you can get involved. Here are some helpful ideas to help you learn and observe the work of women in the Knoxville area.
UT Outdoor Pursuits will host a mountain biking ride in the Knoxville Urban Wilderness open to those who identify as female on March 8 from 3-7 p.m. The ride is beginner friendly and will cost $5, according to the groupās Instagram page. Riders will meet at the outdoor center at RecSports and drive in vans to the Urban Wilderness. All necessary gear will be provided, though participants may use their own.
On March 9, a symposium on abortion rights sponsored by the Tennessee Journal of Race, Gender, and Social Justice at the UT College of Law will feature panel discussions led by experts in law and medicine. The event will be held from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the College of Law building, room 132. The keynote address from Professor Mary Ziegler will be titled āCanary in a Coal Mine: What Does it Mean to Lose a Constitutional Right?ā
The College of Education, Health and Human Sciences has an updated resource guide on their website, which links many interactive videos and articles, if someone chooses to explore them. One of these resources is this online exhibit titled āNew Beginnings: Immigrant Women and The American Experience.ā This exhibit was created by the National Womenās History Museum and demonstrates the female American experience through photographs. The exhibit explores womenās history from the opening of Ellis Island in 1892 to the work on Dolores Huerta in the 1960s.
This event will take place at the East Tennessee History Center on Gay Street. It will be from 1-3 p.m. on March 25. This workshop, led by Lisa Norwood Oakley, the vice president and curator of education at the East Tennessee Historical Society, will help teach people how to research, document and interpret their genealogy. The workshop will focus on interpreting womenās stories and challenges in womenās histories.
Also from the East Tennessee History Center, there is an online exhibit available that focuses on female political activism in East Tennessee, ranging from the time of the American Revolution to the era of the suffragettes. There are multiple sections available in this exhibit, from a history of womenās suffrage in East Tennessee to individual short biographies of
East Tennessean suffragists. There will also be a postcard gallery highlighting the importance of postcard art in womenās suffrage.
The National Park Service makes a point each year to honor the legacies of women,
contributing to the āTravel Where Women Made Historyā website, which highlights places where women made history. There is both a section for traveling to these spots in national parks and a section for traveling to places where women made history. These explorations can be done in person or online.
International Womenās Day will take place on March 8. Though many events have filled up, such as the International Womenās Day Symposium at the Library of Congress, IWD will be hosting virtual events about the role of women in the workforce of many different industries. These industries include tourism, finance, microscopy, technology and more. While there are not as many events celebrating Womenās History Month as expected this year, there is no better time to celebrate the women in your life. Now is the best time to think about the women in your life and honor them for the many things that they have accomplished, as well as the legacies of women before them.
instructional developer and designer with the Teaching and Learning programs.
The gameās allure is its story, in which a pixelated version of Smokey in an eight-bit video game is tasked to save Knoxville from being digitized. Users save landmarks around the city like the Sunsphere, Tennessee Theatre and Hodges Library.
to refresh their memory before diving into the questions.
There is a space for feedback, and users can suggest other library terms that should be added to the game. Dies stressed that he did his best to make it user friendly. The music can be muted and the pixelated text can be turned to a standard font. He wanted to make sure that as many people as possible could find it accessible.
A villainous alligator is digitizing landmarks in order to take over the world. Only you ā playing as Smokey and correctly answering questions about library jargon ā can save it. This is the storyline that Jargon Blaster, a tutorial and game that was released on the University of Tennessee librariesā website early this year, follows. This game was created specifically for UT libraries by Elijah Dies, an
In order to earn the story, which is shown through cut scenes and dialogue, users must correctly answer questions, largely about library terms such as citations, limiters and abstracts. When users get a certain amount of questions correct, the story continues. The ending can differ based on how well users play. Dies has a background in playing video games, and designed this tutorial with inspiration from old video games. In storyboarding the scenes, Dies created Enpeesee, a side character wizard who helps Smokey through his journey. There are direct allusions to Mario Bros. and Pac-Man, with Atari and Zelda being other inspirations for the design and story.
The game has a bit of everything: a castle, an underwater scene and a twist ending.
UT libraries have vast collections of resources and services available, but they can be difficult to navigate and hard to understand. Library terms can be confusing. Playing the game will help users clarify their knowledge. Users can click through definitions each round
āMost of the people that you are going to be talking to in a library are going to, even if theyāre not intending to, theyāre going to start using some of this jargon so itās important to know some of these basic elements,ā Dies said.
Sara Caoile, a sophomore art major, works at the library as a student library assistant. Outside of her work, she spends about two hours a week at Hodges. Caoile was not aware of Jargon Blaster and played through it for the first time while at work.
āIt is really cute. It is also very informational ⦠I think this is a good way for people to know where stuff is but still have a good time,ā Caoile said.
āItās educational, but itās supposed to be fun. It is created with love,ā Dies said. Dies explained that learning goes both ways ā library workers and students can meet in the middle to best work through learning. Jargon Blaster can be played on UTās libraries website.
āItās definitely a game, but at its heart, itās a tutorial.ā
Elijah Dies
Instructional Developer and DesignerCourtesy of UT Libraries Courtesy of UT Libraries
STORY CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
In Knox Prideās media appearances, the group has emphasized the broader agenda of the state legislature.
āBecause they canāt really attack marriage equality at this point, theyāre going after culture, and theyāre going after trans people, and theyāre going after kids, because those are the things that they still feel they can affect,ā VanNess said.
UT students have also been openly supportive of the drag community, some by attending performances at local venues and some by participating themselves.
Boomer Russell, a fourth year doctoral candidate in biochemistry, has been performing as Fatty Acid for 9 months in the local drag scene. He takes issue with the way the legislation targets shows as āharmful to minors,ā which it describes as shows that contain ānudity, sexual excitement, sexual conduct, excess violence, or sadomasochistic abuse.ā The bill is categorized by the legislature in a group of laws pertaining to obscenity and pornography.
āWe wear a lot of clothes,ā Russell said. āI wear so many clothes when I do drag, like, if
thatās what theyāre worried about, theyāre not gonna see a thing.ā
Jack Johnson, Senate Majority Leader and the billās Republican sponsor, took to Twitter after Lee signed it into law to argue that the legislation was meant to keep minors safe.
āThe bill just overwhelmingly passed by our Tennessee General Assembly will protect vulnerable children from exploitation and mutilation,āhis tweet said. āIām proud to be a part of it.ā
Memes spread across social media have shown drag performers next to waitresses at Hooters, a restaurant known for dressing its female staff in short shorts and low-cut shirts, and have compared the animus towards the LGBTQ community to films like āMrs. Doubtfireā which features cross-dressing but has not faced the same pushback.
After the news broke that Lee planned to sign the bill into law if the senate pushed it through, a 1977 yearbook photo allegedly taken of the governor leaked. The photo is said to be the current governor Bill Lee, dressed in what many consider to be ādrag attire.ā
Lee stated that the conversation surrounding it was āridiculous.ā
Lee neither confirmed nor denied that the photo was of him, but that hasnāt stopped people from calling him hypocritical across social media.
David Gregg, a bartender, member of the LGBTQ community and active audience member of drag shows said the bill targeted a community that was already marginalized.
āThroughout the history of our country, it seems like all minorities and/or marginalized groups have become subject to scrutiny, strict rules and laws and oppression,ā Gregg said. āThis bill follows those precedents and for someone who attended a drag performance less than a week ago, it is a little intimidating knowing that that last show could have been the last time I can enjoy one freely.ā
The idea of freedom is one that activists have focused on in opposing the actions of the state legislature against groups that already enjoy fewer legal protections.
āThis bill is taking away the rights of marginalized groups to freely express themselves,ā Danny Watson, a server and active member in the drag community, said. āThe Tennessee government has passed numerous laws and bills over the recent months that continue to take away freedom from marginalized groups, such as the abortion bill.ā
In October, research conducted by the Human Rights Campaign and Bowling Green State University used census data to project that 1 in 7 voters would identify as LGBTQ by 2030, and perhaps 1 in 5 by 2040.
Andrew Henry, a freelance makeup artist who performs in drag in Knoxville as Harri Scari, said the anti-LGBTQ bills in the Tennessee General Assembly were a direct attempt to threaten the lives and livelihoods of these voters.
āThe point is to get national attention and to score political points for actually a much smaller base, but itās a base that does vote quite passionately. Itās emboldened a much more radical minority to put our lives at risk,ā Henry said.
Though some LGBTQ people, especially performers and trans individuals, have considered leaving the state for fears of their own safety, Henry said such a migration is not financially feasible for many people.
āFrankly, a lot of people donāt have the means to leave,ā Henry said. āA vast majority of queer people in this state are not wealthy ⦠we have to combat these bills from Tennessee, because thereās many people who canāt escape.ā
As a lifelong Tennessee resident, Boomer Russell says he has gone back and forth on whether or not he wants to stay in the state, but the anti-trans and anti-drag bills have made him consider a move. As amended, the law is set to go into effect on April 1.
āWe shouldnāt feel like we should have to leave,ā Russell said. āThis is just as much my home as it is some straight person. I am just as entitled to live here, to perform and express my art, to work, to exist, just as much as anyone else, and these bills are making that very hard to do.ā
āDrag is art, it is culture, but itās also a political statement.āPride Prom featured drag performances by local drag Queens. Michelle Stiletto poses after performing on Friday, Feb. 11, 2022. Ericksen Gomez-Villeda / The Daily Beacon
In the 2022-2023 academic year, Ablaze Magazine was officially established in UTās Knoxvilleās Office of Student Media. Ablaze is a student-led feminist and womenās interest magazine with the goal of empowering women on campus and in the surrounding community. Sound familiar?
Those in their second year or beyond at UT may have come across Honey Magazine since its establishment in 2019. Their ļ¬rst and only print issue āAwakenā was made available to students in Fall 2021 and featured articles relating to fashion, lifestyle, social issues and more. While Honey is no longer active, fans of the magazine need not fear.
Although it has a different name and overall aesthetic, Ablaze is essentially a rebranding of Honey. Like Honey, Ablaze believes in the overarching goal of empowering a collective female voice, but this time around it plans to do so using a more organized and intentional approach.
Editor-in-Chief Sydney Burzynski, a senior advertising major, describes Ablaze as Honeyās older sister ā one that is āmore experienced, more knowledgeable and more professional.ā
āThere were several motivating factors behind the choice to undergo a rebrand, but the primary reason was the need to grow and change,ā Burzynski said. āThis desire corresponded to the transition of power both internally and externally.ā
sign team. In Spring 2022, she decided she wanted to be more involved with the magazine and joined the ad sales team. When the former editor-in-chief resigned, Burzynski applied for the position and was chosen by the Office of Student Media after a series of interviews.
The physical differences between Honey and Ablaze are obvious to outsiders. These include a switch from a warm-toned color palette to a cooler one with more jewel tones, a new logo and, of course, a new name.
However, according to Burzynski, a lot more went into the rebranding process than what meets the eye, such as conducting research regarding the magazineās target audience.
Though Ablaze is now established in the Office of Student Media, the rebranding process remains ongoing. Two main objectives are left on Ablazeās to-do list: establishing the magazine in the community through repeated exposure and brand awareness, as well as producing the ļ¬rst print publication.
Burzynski has high hopes for the impact Ablaze will have on UTās campus and student media in general.
āMost importantly, I want the magazine to function as a community of people with like-minded values and interests who come together for a sole purpose,ā Burzynski said. āSecondly, I want the club to serve a practical purpose ⦠a place for one to develop hands-on skills that will correlate ā whether directly or indirectly ā to their future career.ā
Like Burzynski, Leigh Shields, a junior cinema studies major, was involved with Honey before transitioning to Ablaze. Shields joined the photography department in January 2021 and has held the position of Photo Editor since May 2021.
āI was initially told about the rebrand during my interview for the photography editor position before the fall semester of 2022,ā Shields said. āThe idea of rebranding was intimidating and I felt apprehensive after knowing the extensive work put into Honey.ā
As the sole photographer for Honeyās āAwakenā issue due to a lack of staff, Shields felt the visuals in the print publication were monotonous and limited in creativity as a result of wanting to stick to a certain look that ļ¬t the Honey brand.
āWhile our magazine branding is important, the Ablaze issue will incorporate a variety of aesthetics and photography styles
to create greater visual interest,ā Shields said. āI cannot wait to showcase the work and unique visions of the talented photographers on the team.ā
Shields believes the transition from Honey to Ablaze has led to greater collaboration among different departments that allow them to overlap with each other rather than separate into distinctive bubbles. She described the overall transition as daunting yet rewarding.
āThe rebrand has been difficult in the sense of ļ¬guring out what core characteristics of Honey to maintain and what changes needed to be made for the magazine to adapt to its evolving staff,ā Shields said.
āFor the sake of its longevity and to keep content fresh, I hope to see a continuation of diverse content that reļ¬ects the changing interests of its demographic.ā
Students interested in joining Ablaze are encouraged to apply on their website. Opportunities are available in departments devoted to content creation, graphic design, photo and video, social media and ad sales. No experience is required ā just the desire to learn and grow.
Ablazeās debut print issue is expected to be released in May 2023. To stay updated, follow @ablazeutk on their various social media, including Instagram, TikTok and Facebook.
āThe idea of rebranding was intimidating and I felt apprehensive after knowing the extensive work put into Honey.ā
LEIGH SHIELDS
Photo Editor, Ablaze(From left to right) Ablaze Editor-in-Chief Sydney Burzynski, Content Editor Abby Madan, Graphic Design Editor Holly Sarah Liban, Photo Editor Leigh Shields and Social Media Editor Alison Price. Courtesy of Leigh Shields / Ablaze
notable celebrities including Harry Styles, the Jonas Brothers, Orville Peck, Trixie Mattel and Rhett and Link.
An SEC grad herself, Broski graduated from Texas A&M in 2018 with a bachelorās degree in communications. Prior to becoming an Internet meme, she worked at a bank in her home state where she was promptly fired after her employer found out about her viral video and online success.
From there, she decided to get involved in social media full time, posting anything from āget ready with meā videos to full-blown hysterical meltdowns on TikTok LIVE. Broski has also gained traction on YouTube, surpassing 1.2 million subscribers in the last three years.
Though Broski may not be a household name, her combined 657 million likes on TikTok make her pretty recognizable to anyone who uses the social media site.
Senior public relations student Lindsey Duncan is thrilled about the upcoming show.
āI was so excited when I first heard rumors of Brittany coming here last semester,ā Duncan said. āWhen I found out she was actually coming this spring, I was elated. Sheās always been a social media presence that Iāve kept up with on TikTok, YouTube and her podcast āViolating Community Guidelines.ā Sheās such a breath of fresh air and a light in the world of content creators ā this is an event I wouldnāt miss for the world.ā
After the successful performance of YouTube comedian Noel Miller at last yearās comedy series, the students involved at the Campus Events Board knew they wanted Broski involved this semester.
āIt came from the students ā their idea of who they thought would attract a large crowd based on student interest and the popularity of Brittany,ā Foulke said, the associate director of the Center for Student Engagement.
The Campus Events Board opens its Spring Comedy Series on Wednesday, March 22, with a performance by TikTok personality and comedian Brittany Broski at the Student Union Auditorium. While some people may still refer to her as ākombucha girl,ā referencing her first viral video from 2019, Broski rose to fame on the social media platform and garnered a loyal following of fans who label themselves āsubjectsā of āBroski Nation.ā
With over 7.2 million followers on her main account and 4.2 million followers on her second account @lostmymarblesagain, the 25-year-old Texan has evolved into one of the biggest stars on the app. This year, she is recognized in Forbesās ā30 Under 30ā for her content creation and has starred in Super Bowl commercials, walked and interviewed on red carpets, hosted and guest appeared on several podcasts and more.
Her relatable, witty, unapologetically herself content has granted her the opportunity to meet
āWe try to think about bringing in a diverse group of people and not just bringing in your typical, well known, mainstream comedians, so we try and think outside of the box to really elevate all kinds of comedians,ā Foulke said.
Broski wrapped up her live comedy tour, āViolating Community Guidelinesā with her podcast co-host Sarah Schauer in December of 2022.
āSheās such a breath of fresh air and a light in the world of content creators.ā
LINDSEY DUNCAN SENIOR, PUBLIC RELATIONS
that feels a lot more tender. Itās jumpy, warm, almost soothing. Itās the kind of diversion that makes J.M.ās small yet versatile catalog so inviting. For new listeners, heās chosen a rather intriguing descriptor to get people intrigued in what heās doing.
āEmo R&B is what I usually tell people,ā said the 22-year-old J.M. āItās kind of hard to narrow it down to one specific genre. In general itās kind of got that emo tone to it, but itās rooted in R&B if you break down the musicality of it. The chord progressions, vocal runs and stuff. Thereās also some hyperpop, too, so maybe call it āhyperR&Bā if thatās even a thing.ā
As wildly different as all three of those monikers are from one another, they somehow all seem to take shape throughout what weāve been exposed to of his efforts thus far. J.M.ās single āParalyzed,ā which was released back in January, takes the fervor that comes with alternative and hyperpop trends and slows them down to a more intimate, immediately observable speed. An ode to being lovestruck, the track holds nothing back in its delivery and presentation, yet it does so in a way that doesnāt feel in over its own head. Still, as J.M. would put it, āthereās a heaviness to it.ā
Labrinth will come to mind for others in terms of similarities as it does for him, yet heās not willing to paint himself into that corner entirely.
āI think itād be really hard to listen to what I have out and right now and go, āOh if you like that then youāll like this person and that person,āā J.M. said. āAnd I guess Iām still figuring that out for myself, and figuring out my sound overall.ā
As J.M. continues to navigate and iron out the kinks in his sound, heās also been navigating through his new home in Nashville. Originally from Jamestown, New York, J.M. moved to Music City to attend Belmont University as well as pursue a career in music. While Nashville seems to favor its vocalists that order their BBQ with a side of twang, J.M. still feels that the alternative scene is one that can bloom alongside the cityās country roots. As the cityās grown in recent years, subsequently its reach into different genres has expanded.
definitely here.ā
When it comes to artistry, vulnerability is the name of the game for J.M. A lot of his more recent tracks detail emotion usually pushed to the back of the mind for the sake of sanity, yet here they find room to bloom. Itās a credit to good writing as well as a willingness to be as open as possible for the sake of gravity. Inspiration comes from where itās expected with J.M.
Relationship issues, mental health and the whirlwind of being in your early 20s all play parts in the journey through his psyche. Yet itās not the material here that matters as much as the delivery.
āF**king hate myself to death!ā pronounces self-proclaimed R&B and emo up-and-comer J.M. on his newest single āYou Said.ā The delivery of this rather vexed line sports a demeanor
While stylistically varied, heavy is still the perfect blanket adjective to throw over the songwriter. In regards to his approach to production and delivery, he likes to think that the artist
āI feel like it is harder for the independent artists that do alternative things around here to be as involved in the industry on a professional level. I feel like weāre really gonna have to pave that way for ourselves,ā J.M. said. āBut I mean, if you were to research ātop hyper pop artistsā right now, I think there are like three that came from Belmont. Like we have crazy talent coming from these little pockets. Itās not as talked about, this other half of the industry, and itās hard to compete with places like Los Angeles, but the talent is
āMy main thing is, if Iām showing you an emotion youāre gonna get the full extent of that emotion. āParalyzed,ā for example, itās that paralysis due to too much feeling. I think youāre gonna get a lot of that on this new EP thatās coming out, a lot of intense introspection,ā J.M. said. His newest project and debut EP āSorry, Didnāt Realize You Caredā is expecting its release to come at the end of the month. If this longerform project shares a shred of the sentiment that his few singles have, weāre bound to be in for a journey through emotional extremism, accompanied by a production style and quality that compliments the weight of feeling as much as J.M.ās falsetto does.
The weather has been extra heavenly here on Rocky Top recently. The groundhog may have been lying to us. An extra six weeks of winter? Yeah, right.
The warmth spring brings tends to inspire the desire to step out of the house and go for food and drinks with friends. If you and your friends are the type to spend a good chunk of time trying to pick a spot, look no further ā this is the place for you. To narrow down your search, hereās a list of the best Knoxville restaurants to check out this spring.
The first worthy spot on the list is Knoxvilleās most unique outdoor dining experience Central Filling Station. The filling station is a rustic outdoor venue filled with a variety of food trucks, heaps of available seating, interactive activities like cornhole and a Before-I-Die wall and events including live music and trivia. Itās like multiple restaurants wrapped into one. This interesting spot is located close to campus at 900 N. Central Street.
This is perfect if you and your friends have different tastes or food cravings as there is something for every taste bud. To-go food and drinks
are available if you donāt have time to hang around. Some of their food truck vendors include Just Say Queso, Knox Dough, Penne For Your Thoughts, BUNNZ, CJās Tacos and many more. It is a pet-friendly area which is a huge bonus for animal lovers.
ment says, āCorners, in their very essence, are places of intersection, where streets going in opposite directions cross paths and overlap. Corner 16 is that place of overlap for friends to intersect their busy lives and spend time enjoying good company and good food.ā
Sounds like it aligns with busy college students looking for a place to wind down with good friends and good eats.
Coming in third on the list is Lakeside Tavern, which offers waterfront dining overlooking Fort Loudon Lake. Although it is somewhat far from UT, it is worth it for the views and yummy food.
If you want to start Wine Wednesday early, Lakeside Tavern offers half-priced wine every Monday. They offer a variety of appetizers, salads and entrees. Menu highlights include their stone oven pizzas, fresh seafood and handhelds such as burgers and sandwiches.
āfounded by two brothers who grew up living the surf and punk-rock life of the 1980s in Daytona Beach, Florida.ā
Their creative style influenced their unique selection of hotdogs, sandwiches and nachos. Sauce options are never ending and made-fromscratch. Curious Dog offers a large selection of creatively crafted, funky hotdog builds. Hotdog options are themed after various cultures. The following are examples of culture-filled, tasty dogs: The āBetter Than A Chicago,ā the āN.Y.C,ā the āTennessee Tailgater,ā the āKnoxville,ā the āDaytonaā and the āHawaiian.ā
There are bicycles hanging on the wall and refrigerators filled with all the canned beers you could imagine. There are over 200 options of packaged beer, and they also have a few draft options.
This restaurant, located in Northshore, is known for its large turf-covered outdoor patio with fire pits, cornhole, giant tic-tac-toe, soccer balls and footballs. Nothing beats patio seating on a nice spring day. Corner 16ās mission state-
Delicious desserts worth mentioning are the creme brulee cheesecake, Kahlua fudge brownie and two layer key lime pie. Due to its romantic ambience, this spot is screaming date night ā to watch the sunset over the water of course.
Another must-try is Curious Dog, located on the first floor of the historic JFG building.
According to their website, the restaurant was
Last, but certainly not least, is Scrambled Jakeās Breakfast Company. This breakfast establishment provides the perfect selection of greasy eats after a long night out and quiet patio seating to soak up some sun.
The restaurant came to life during the summer of 2017. Their menu includes all the signature breakfast dishes you can think of ranging from the summershine benny, sin-o-man roll, naan breakfast pizza and a breakfast burrito. Happy eating!
With the overturning of Roe v. Wade, uncertainty has become a common feeling when reading the news. Maintaining the sovereignty of bodies has become a necessity in the face of legal threats, but bodies arenāt the only thing SCOTUS is in the process of overturning.
In the initial SCOTUS decision draft, Justice Alito refers to the small number of children available for adoption as the ādomestic supply of
infantsā while comparing this to the number of women who were interested in adopting children. Alitoās phrasing is appalling to the general public, that those who have birthed children, whether or not of their desire to keep the child postpartum, are but a number in the adoption industry. However, the ādomestic supply of infantsā brings up another unforgivable past transgression to Indigenous peoples. Many children were sent to boarding or residential schools, such as Carlisle Indian Industrial School, to rid themselves of their Indigenous practices, to ākill the Indian, and save the manā within Native Americans. Post-removal of Indigenous children, Native nations were concerned with continuing Indigenous heritage and practices. They sought legal protections for Indigenous children to ensure they would remain within their tribal communities, which sparked the creation of the Indian Child Welfare Act. ICWA was enacted in 1978 to protect children placed for adoption or removed from their homes, typically children who lived on Indigenous reservations with their birth parents. After the movement of Indigenous peoples away from their homelands, these reservations became reluctant homes. Regardless of how poverty enraptured communities, Indigenous peoples sought to thrive and ensure they would continue their cultural and spiritual practices for the new generations. With this reasoning, im-
poverishment and otherwise, foster care tended to favor taking away children from Native homes almost three times more than their white counterparts. Tribal nations introduced ICWA for tribal nations to protect the younger generations of Natives to ensure the continuation of traditions and sovereignty of the land.
In June of 2022, ICWA was presented to the Supreme Court under the guise of āreverse racism,ā that white families are less likely to adopt Native children compared to tribes deciding to place these children within their tribal communities, ensuring the continuation of cultural practices.
ICWA was passed as a protective measure to prevent adoption agencies from removing Indigenous children from their homes, communities and culture and placing them with white families.
Before ICWA, 90% of placements for Native children in foster homes were displaced into non-Native homes, even if other tribal members and relatives were willing and able to care for them.
The overturn of Roe v. Wade guarantees that the wording ādomestic supply of infantsā is intentional ā that those with reproductive capabilities are vessels, particularly Natives, other minority groups and those affected by poverty and income inequality. The discrepancy in the U.S. justice system falls on the shoulders of BI-
POC, who are forced to stagger under the weight of a society that deems them more as bodies than people.
Previously granted protections are being overturned at a staggering rate, leaving the public to wonder what protections will be next on the chopping block.
Indigenous children deserve better. They deserve to be in stable and secure households which encourage their Indigenous culture and heritage, not those that reļ¬ect the values of previous boarding schools by issuing complete removal and separation.
So, what can you do about ICWA and the issues at hand?
Begin with engaging in conversations by listening to Indigenous voices and following organizations, such as the Association on American Indian Affairs, with multiple resources for those wanting to learn.
The solution to gun violence isnāt more guns, but Tennessee Republicans think so and want students involved. A bill submitted by GOP members of the stateās General Assembly in January, HB0977/SB0827, would change the law to allow students to carry guns on a college campus.
While students would still have to get training and a permit, this is a horrendous idea. The fact is: more ļ¬rearms leads to more deaths. An increase of guns on campus will inevitably lead to an increase of gun-related deaths at UT. College campuses in particular are a terrible place for guns, as the majority of gun deaths in the U.S. are suicides. Bringing them to a place where workload, stress and anxiety are high is a recipe for tragedy. Suicides increase when easy suicide methods are available.
The most common argument for students to carry guns on campus is to prevent school shootings ā to be the good guy with the gun. However, this should not be the case. Students shouldnāt have to be responsible for the publicās safety here in America. We should not be forced to become cops, being compelled to keep order. It is the governmentās job to protect our fellow students, not random people.
Yet, Tennessee Republicans want our state to
revert back to the Wild West, where every man openly wears a pistol on his hip in public spaces like the grocery store, wary of confrontation. They are okay with forcing every person to rely on carrying open deadly ļ¬rearms to feel safe. No one in this modern day and our developed country should be forced to rely on guns because of government inaction.
Our Republican legislators act like public shootings, such as school shootings, are unpreventable and that individual self-defense is the only response. Yet these same legislators wonāt even consider banning assault riļ¬es and highcapacity magazines; weapons that are, by design, made to kill a lot of human beings in a short time span. Our state and federal government need to take the proactive charge in being responsible for public safety by banning assault weapons and enforcing stricter regulation.
Additionally, allowing students to carry guns on campus would create two classes of people: those who have the potential to use deadly force and those who do not. The ability to take a life automatically puts one student at a higher position over others. Freedom of speech and expression could become dramatically curtailed. If a noncarrying student gets into a heated disagreement with another student they know has a gun, they are effectively silenced. Why risk it? Even with the permit, not all students are always level-headed and mentally sound. One confrontation about an unintentional shoulder check could lead to a fatal
incident.
At the same time, just the appearance of students carrying ļ¬rearms on campus will be unsettling for much of the student body and facility. Having a gun just feet away from you in class would make the majority of us uncomfortable. It would also be a massive acknowledgement of this countryās failure to proactively protect its students. Arming students when not even beginning to tackle gun control is a gigantic embarrassment of our legislative bodies.
At the end of the day, the want to arm students is the product of conservative Second Amendment purists who put access to guns above the need to regulate and prevent mass shootings. This unhealthy case of identity politics puts personal beliefs and desires over childrenās safety. But all rights must be regulated. You have to register to vote, and you canāt yell ļ¬re in a crowded building. Why are conservatives okay with these, but so many resist even the simplest regulation for guns?
Tennessee Republicans in the General Assembly should stay away from this bill, and we need to speak out against it in public and at its legislative committee meetings. Our legislatureās GOP members should focus their efforts on preventing mass shootings, instead of telling us they are inevitable.
We live in one of the most developed societies in all of history, letās start acting like it and prevent mass shootings before they happen.
wkinsler@vols.utk.edu.
Columns and letters of The Daily Beacon are the views of the individual and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Beacon or the Beaconās editorial staff.
After a season filled with adversity and injuries, the No. 17 Vols will be putting everything to the test as the postseason is officially here. Starting with the SEC Tournament, Tennessee eyes to recapture the triumph it experienced last year when the Vols defeated Texas A&M to claim their first title since 1979.
Tennessee seemed to be a shoe-in for the No. 1 or No. 2 seed after a 7-1 start to SEC action, but injuries to Josiah-Jordan James, Julian Phillips and Tyreke Key led to some unfortunate losses.
With the Vols finally getting all of those guys back, the regular season had one more blow to land: Zakai Zeigler tearing his ACL. While itās not a death sentence moving forward, Zeiglerās injury strikes at the very heart of Tennessee basketball.
Newly honored member of the All-SEC first team Santiago Vescovi has had to take the large part of Zeiglerās role, which means he is going to be the key to the Volsā success moving forward.
āWe definitely miss Z out there. We all feel it,ā Vescovi said. āItās just a different role that I have to play this time especially when I have to play point guard. It just feels different without
him on the court. We just have to adapt and find other ways to win.ā
Rick Barnes has been talking about resiliency for the past month, so can the Vols overcome one last hurdle and make a run back to the conference championship and perhaps a deep run in the NCAA Tournament?
āI think they do know that every game has to be a championship game,ā Barnes said. āIt has to be and the effort and the details and getting ready for a mindset that thatās what it is because a week from now, it is real.ā
From this point forward, a loss means an abrupt end to the season, and a win means that the fight goes on.
āYou can either have two or 10 games. But to do that you have to have everybody. We canāt be talking about inconsistencies. We canāt. This is a new start to the third part of the season that you go into and itās time for everybody to where we canāt be talking about inconsistencies or not understanding roles, whatever. Itās time everybody does exactly what this team needs them to do to help us move on.ā
After falling to the No. 5 seed on Saturday, Tennessee (22-9, 11-7 SEC) lost the doublebye and will play either Ole Miss (11-20, 3-15 SEC) or South Carolina (11-20, 4-14 SEC) at 3 p.m. EST.
Despite their less than appealing record, the Rebels took the Vols down to the wire to open
conference play in Oxford, even leading by 10 points late in the first half. Ultimately, Tennessee came out with a narrow 63-59 victory, and a neutral site should fare better for it.
On the flip side, the Vols have absolutely dominated the Gamecocks with their physicality this season, winning the two matchups by a combined 83 points. While anything can happen in basketball, itās fair to assume that the Vols would rather face South Carolina.
Should the Vols win their first matchup, they will see Missouri (23-8, 11-7 SEC), who snagged the fourth seed from them thanks to their buzzer-beating win over Tennessee, which eventually broke the tie between the two.
From there, Tennessee will have to see how the rest of the tournament plays out. Alabama is the general favorite to win it all, but no team has separated itself on a higher level.
The SEC is extremely deep this year, but it is also wide open. Even without Zeigler, the Vols are the healthiest they have been since the beginning of February in a time where they were considered to be a top seed in the SEC.
If the Vols are able to find a working offense without Zeigler, then the madness could be in their favor.
āI do know that a lot of what we went through in February, with the injuries, kept guys from getting in a rhythm and wondering,ā Barnes said. āBecause they work so hard
and itās hard on them when they want to play, more than you can even imagine. Theyāve faced some adversity and itās tough. But Iāve said these guys have been resilient. You guys were here watching them today, they were working, will continue to work. I do think that we have a confident basketball team.ā
No.5 Zakai Zeigler is helped off the court by Tennessee training staff after injuring his leg in the first half against Arkansas at Thompson-Boling Arena. Tuesday Feb. 28, 2023. Cole Moore / Contributor
Tennessee has filtered out the outside noise.
GREENVILLE, S.C. ā The Lady Vols had a lot of questions to answer heading into the SEC Tournament, and they came away with some answers.
Tennessee (23-11) answered what happens when theyāre at their best, they can compete with the best team on the biggest stage. But Tennessee head coach Kellie Harper said the Lady Vols werenāt at their best in the SEC Championship against South Carolina (32-0) in Bon Secours Wellness Arena.
The undefeated No. 1 Gamecocks took home the SEC Championship 74-58, getting revenge for being upset a year ago. The Lady Vols made a run at the title, tying the game at 21 in the second quarter, but they couldnāt close the gap.
But no one has been able to close the gap against South Carolina. SEC All-Tournament team nominee Rickea Jackson came away from the game with newfound confidence.
āPlaying the number one team in the country, coming within the point margin we did,ā Jackson said. āI feel like it builds our confidence knowing we can compete with them.ā
The Lady Vols have been overlooked this season. Remaining unranked for almost the entirety of the season while finishing third in the SEC,
South Carolina did not overlook the Lady Vols like national polls have. Two time reigning National Player of the Year Aliyah Boston made it clear the mutual respect she shares with Tennessee, particularly with Jackson and Tennessee guard Jordan Horston.
āTough players make great plays and thatās just who they are,ā Boston said of Horston and Jackson. āAs the game went on, we tried to make it more difficult. If they hit a shot, they hit a shot, and we just take the ball out and go down. Itās not like we can stop them, because theyāre great.ā
Jackson and Horston combined for 36 of Tennesseeās 58 points. Both players echoed the same message after Sunday ā they are OK with being overlooked.
āIām not holding my head on this loss,ā Horston said. āThatās the number one team in the country, and we were hanging with them. Once we clean up what we need to clean up, we can beat them, but weāre happy being the underdogs.ā
Tennessee has had close losses and games where the shouldāve triumphed over teams ranked above them. The Lady Vols finally got that ranked win. Taking down No. 4 LSU on Saturday felt like a culmination of the whole season.
Following the win by hanging with South Carolina on Sunday boosts Tennesseeās ahead of the NCAA Tournament.
āAt the end of the day, South Carolina is the number one team,ā Tennessee forward Jillian
Hollingshead said. āKnowing we can run with them, knowing we can compete with them, just trying our hardest. The sky is the limit for our team and weāre just going to keep on going.ā
The Lady Vols got validation for their tough season at the SEC Tournament: a run that will boost their seeding, and a run that has given the team a blueprint on what they need to do to win.
Everyone in the locker room echoed the same
message on Sunday, the best is yet to come for Tennessee.
āI think we have had some really good basketball, and weāve shown a lot of grit,ā Harper said. āI think we have come a long way. Iām excited for the journey to continue, to see what this team can do. I think they really believe in each other, and they believe in this basketball team.ā
Just over a week from the NCAA Tournament, Tennesseeās standing in the bracket is becoming clearer every day.
The Vols are preparing to begin their ļ¬nal push towards getting a higher seed as they begin the SEC Tournament in Nashville this week. A deep run could move them as high as a No. 2 seed, but an early exit could knock them down.
The Lady Vols only did themselves favors in the SEC Tournament, making a run to the championship with a win over LSU on the way.
Here is where major bracket projections put the Vols and Lady Vols.
In ESPNās Bracketology, the Vols are projected as a No. 3 seed, where they have been consistently over the past few weeks following a ļ¬ve-loss February.
Tennessee would play in the East Region, where the No. 1 and No. 2 seeds are Houston and Baylor, respectively. The Vols would take on Louisiana in the ļ¬rst round in Greensboro, North Carolina.
Why this bracket favors the Vols Tennesseeās path to the Elite Eight would be a fairly clear one in this bracket. Tennesseeās defense would have no problems with Louisiana in the ļ¬rst round, and the Vols should be able to handle one of Rutgers, Nevada or Creighton ā all teams who have cooled down over the past month.
Baylor has defeated some good teams this year, but the Vols match up well on paper. The Bears donāt score the ball at an incredibly high mark, so Tennessee could likely outscore them if the Volsā defense shows up.
Why this bracket doesnāt favor the Vols If Tennessee makes the Elite Eight, its run will probably end there.
Assuming it doesnāt get upset in an earlier round, the Vols would have to get through Houston to make it to the Final Four. The Cougars have looked like one of the best teams in basketball this season and boast a highly-athletic, high-scoring roster that also defends at a high mark.
The Cougars have all the makings of a Final Four team, with a top-ļ¬ve offense and defense in KenPom. The only slight against Houston is that it hasnāt faced the same level of competition as its Power 5 counterparts.
The Lady Vols (23-11) made a run in the SEC Tournament, upsetting LSU and ļ¬nishing runner-up to undefeated South Carolina. Their run earned them No. 23 in the AP Poll.
In most projections, Tennessee is hovering between being a four-seed and a ļ¬veseed. A chance to host the ļ¬rst weekend of the tournament comes with earning one of the coveted top-16 seeds, or for the Lady Vols, a four-seed.
Tennessee head coach Kellie Harper was adamant over the weekend that the Lady Vols have done enough to host the ļ¬rst weekend. She cited Tennesseeās NET Ranking, which has consistently been in the top16. Currently, it sits at No. 15.
Charlie Creme of ESPN however has held ļ¬rm in his Bracketology this week. Despite Tennesseeās SEC Tournament run, he has not moved them from being a ļ¬ve-seed in Villanovaās region.
Why this bracket favors the Lady Vols Tennesseeās ļ¬rst-round matchup is 12th-seeded Toledo. Toledo does not pose much of a threat to the Lady Vols. They are a smaller team and dropped games to midmajor opponents
Not to count out the Rockets, they gave
both Duke and Penn State a scare during the regular season, but their lack of size would hurt them against Tennessee.
Fourth-seeded Villanova awaits the Lady Vols in the round of 32. Tennessee would likely outsize the Wildcats, but it would be a tough away matchup.
The one-seed on this side is Virginia Tech. The Lady Vols took the Hoosiers down to the wire in Thompson-Boling before losing by three.
Why this bracket doesnāt favor the Lady Vols
Traveling to Villanova is not ideal for Tennessee. The Wildcats ļ¬nished runnerup to UConn in the Big East and have consistently been one of the better teams in college basketball and ļ¬nished the year 26-8.
If the Lady Vols made it out of the region, they would be forced to travel to Seattle for the Sweet-16 as opposed to Greenville.
The ACC Champions in Virginia Tech also stand in-between Tennessee and a ring. The Hoosiers are hot right now and would be a tough matchup.
Tennessee will ļ¬nd out its seeding on Sunday, March 12, after the menās bracket is released.
When he arrived at Tennessee, he realized quickly the Vols are so much more than the cocky villains of college baseball that he observed from the outside last year.
night. He gave them a lot to cheer for on Saturday when he hit his ļ¬rst home run as a Vol in the bottom of the seventh to give the Vols a commanding 7-2 lead.
Griffin Merritt had an ideal situation heading into his graduate season at Cincinnati.
The outļ¬elder was coming off a year where he picked up 63 hits, 53 RBIs and 19 home runs. He was preparing for one ļ¬nal push at getting his draft stock up while playing for a team poised to have a solid season.
But he didnāt want to have a mediocre, comfortable season. He wanted a challenge. He wanted to win. That desire brought him to Tennessee this offseason.
Merritt knew Tennessee was the right place for him as he watched the 2022 team torch opponents night in and night out while playing with passion and a clear love for the game. While most outsiders frowned upon the Volsā bad-boy attitude led by guys like Drew Gilbert and Jordan Beck, Merritt saw it as something he wanted to get in on.
āI knew the reputation Tennessee had coming in, and honestly, I kind of liked it,ā Merritt said. āItās part of the reason Iām here. Iām kind of a ļ¬ery competitor myself, and I want to win as badly as anyone else. So I kind of wanted to be surrounded by people with the same mindset.ā
Inside the locker room, Tennessee has players that want to get better and want others to get better. There are no draft projections, player ratings or personal awards among the team. Itās just a group of guys trying to win.
āWe have a lot of players that are going to be big leaguers for a long time, but thereās no egos,ā Merritt said. āPeople drop their egos. Weāre here to play to win. Weāre here where thereās no ļ¬nger-pointing. Itās everyone on the same track with the same goal.ā
Having played a few weekends at Lindsey Nelson Stadium now, Merritt has also realized that the passion embodied by the players has also translated to the fanbase, which piled over 3,000 people into the stadium on Saturday.
āLooking up in the stands from right ļ¬eld today and seeing the crowd and how engaged they are and how people are valuing this team ā they should,ā Merritt said. āPeople here work hard and go about things the right way. The coaching staff is special and itās a good place to play baseball, Iāll tell you that.ā
Now Merritt is looking to continue to give those fans something to cheer for every
He is also looking to help a team that was historically good a season ago not take a major drop off in success. The Vols lost a lot of veterans at the end of last season and are now a young, inexperienced team rather than the seasoned one they were a year ago.
Merritt is hoping to combat the drop off in vets with his own college baseball experience. Though he has only played at Tennessee for a fall season and some change, his years at Cincinnati brought him wisdom that he wants to share with the younger guys on his team.
That leadership role isnāt necessarily his ļ¬rst role for Tennessee, but it is one he has learned to love in his short time with the Vols.
āI think itās given me a second role on the team,ā Merritt said. āEverybody probably looks at me and says āOK that kid needs to play good outļ¬eld and drive in runs in the middle of the lineup.ā But what they donāt see is, in that locker room I have a lot of experience that Iāve learned the hard way and the good way thatās kind of piled up that I can dump off on these guys.ā