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Editorial Results (free)

1. Barry’s memoir is a good read by a flawed politician -

Bill Boner slunk away to Kentucky and into the pallet business after his sexual shenanigans as Nashville’s mayor. Megan Barry stuck around after hers, ran for Congress and wrote a book.

The congressional run, against the Republican incumbent in the 7th District, had predictable results: Barry lost by 20-plus points. The book, published one week after the election, is similarly unsurprising: She is repentant.

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3. Not defining ‘hate’ doesn’t mean it vanishes -

It doesn’t seem like a radical idea: an ordinance to prohibit Metro Police and Fire Department personnel from taking part in criminal hate groups or paramilitary gangs.

Would you trust a police officer or firefighter who had a swastika tattooed on his forearm?

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5. Mercy for a mole? There are limits to catch and release -

At first I thought maybe the landscaping company had laid some curious manner of sod in the front yard. A sort of spongy, randomly furrowed fescue that sinks slightly when walked upon.

Before long it became apparent that something else was going on. Something subterranean and active. Two and two came together: I’d been invaded by moles.

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7. Parental rights? Banning books strips their power -

As you might have heard, Wilson County school officials banned almost 400 books from their school libraries. I don’t blame them.

Don’t get me wrong – it’s an appallingly bad decision, embarrassing not just for Wilson County, but for the entire state by extension. It champions ignorance. Book banners are never the good guys. Check your history.

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9. Democrats are leaning on celebrity star power. Will it matter? -

WASHINGTON (AP) — Kamala Harris has Bruce Springsteen, Taylor Swift and Beyoncé. Donald Trump has Kid Rock, Waka Flocka Flame and Hulk Hogan.

As the 2024 campaign whirls into its final week, Democrats are noticeably leaning on their star power advantage, calling on a diverse range of celebrities to endorse Harris, invigorate audiences and, they hope, spur people to the ballot box.

10. Buses are nearly empty now. Do we need more? -

The scariest part of the Davidson County ballot comes right at the top, the contest for president, but that’s also the easiest choice to make: Rachele Fruit.

Just kidding! Fruit is the unfortunately named Socialist Worker Party nominee for president, one of five candidates listed as independents on the ballot. Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who has actually withdrawn from the race, is another one. The Memphis Grizzlies stand a better chance of winning football’s Super Bowl than any of them have of being elected.

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12. Harris tells computer chip workers in Michigan they are a 'source of my optimism' about the US -

SAGINAW, Mich. (AP) — Kamala Harris on Monday emphasized how government funding for computer chip manufacturers could create factory jobs in the electoral battleground of Michigan, days after Donald Trump criticized the bipartisan 2022 law that provides the money and said he would rather just charge tariffs.

13. Dread replaces joy in deeply divided political climate -

Remember when presidential elections used to be relatively civil affairs? When you felt like the country was still going to be in responsible, adult hands, no matter who won?

Not lately. Not in a while.

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15. Southern Festival of Books is city’s best annual event -

One of the standard questions featured in The New York Times Book Review author interviews is, “What kind of reader were you as a child?”

A frequent response is that they were “voracious,” gobbling up whatever they could get their hands on. Perhaps, even, late at night under the bed covers with the proverbial flashlight to avoid detection for waking-hours curfew violations.

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17. Trump tested the limits on using the military at home. If elected again, he plans to go further -

WASHINGTON (AP) — During his first term as president, Donald Trump tested the limits of how he could use the military to achieve policy goals. If given a second term, the Republican and his allies are preparing to go much further, reimagining the military as an all-powerful tool to deploy on U.S. soil.

18. Contrition might have given Rose his place in Hall of Fame -

The recent death of the baseball legend and pariah Pete Rose offers a timely opportunity to reflect on our culture’s notions of punishment and forgiveness, at least as they relate to sports.

“Pete should go into the Hall of Fame,” the noted baseball writer Jon Heyman tweeted post-mortem. “As a great baseball person reminded me, he was given a lifetime suspension. So he has satisfied the terms of his ban.”

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20. Replace Sevier with Elvis? What a Capitol idea -

All in all, I’d say Arkansas just one-upped Tennessee, which is not something that happens very often, unless you’re talking about poverty rates or Walmart headquarters. Which I’m not.

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22. Trump’s ‘weave’: Pure genius or windy gibberish -

Donald Trump: “I do the weave. I’ll talk about, like, nine different things that they all come back brilliantly together. And it’s like friends of mine that are like English professors, they say: ‘It’s the most brilliant thing I’ve ever seen.’”

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24. Real San Francisco treat? Baseball on cold summer night -

It might well be the most memorable line ever conceived in reference to local weather patterns, usually attributed to the author of quite a lot of memorable lines, Mark Twain.

You’ve probably heard it: “The coldest winter I ever spent was a summer in San Francisco.”

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26. Metro’s mask law has us covered – or does it? -

Face masks are popping up again here and there. I’ve seen a few on people at the airport, in church and even at the grocery store.

Are they breaking the law in Nashville?

The situation is nothing like it was in 2020-22 when COVID made mask-wearing the rule, either explicitly by government mandate or implicitly by example. But it’s a reminder that, despite most attitudes and behaviors to the contrary, COVID hasn’t disappeared.

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28. 50th reunion: Confirmation we were once young -

It’s unnerving to face the prospect of a 50th high school reunion, one of those undeniable signposts of geezerdom, like Medicare, Social Security and hip-replacement surgery. It’s even more unnerving when the reunion is three years late.

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30. The line between free speech and theft, vandalism -

On a hot Saturday morning at the end of June, dozens of gay rights supporters marked the close of Pride Month in Nashville by painting a rainbow crosswalk at the intersection of Woodland and 14th Streets outside the Lipstick Lounge, three blocks from my home.

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32. No taxes for seniors? It just doesn’t add up -

You would think that in a state overwhelmingly run by conservatives, conservatives would feel pretty upbeat. Not necessarily so.

The Tennessee Conservative, a website that purports to speak for the right, seems perpetually aggrieved. Whether it’s complaints about illegal immigration, insufficiently conservative RINOs or gender issues, it delivers unabated criticism of the status quo.

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34. Weird how insult can be turned into something cool -

Of the many disparaging labels applied to Donald Trump – liar, narcissist, draft-dodger, felon and election-denier, among others – one finally appears to be gaining some political traction: weird.

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36. Rogue is coolest thing made in the state? Really? -

The winner of the Coolest Thing Made in Tennessee contest has been announced, and it is (imagine a drumroll here) the Nissan Rogue.

It’s an SUV, made at the Nissan plant in Smyrna. Which leaves me thinking that my definition of “coolest” must be different from some other folks’.

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38. Vance’s focus on reproduction, cats a little weird -

I come to you today in defense of childless cat ladies across this (still) great land, a group that includes my wife. And of childless cat gentlemen, if that’s the word, a group that includes me.

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40. Ledger newspapers honored in state competition -

The Nashville Ledger has won three first-place awards in the annual Tennessee Press Association’s annual statewide competition.

The Ledger’s sports coverage won best overall with entries from Terry McCormick and Tom Wood. Wood also won for investigative reporting (“One more crack in scrambled supply chain”) and, along with Joe Morris and Lucas Hendrickson, for education reporting.

41. Once more into the breach: Brave Dems battle on -

The reminders came in the forms of a knock on the front door and a text message: The Aug. 1 statewide primary election is approaching and fast.

I try not to think about the big election in November. Otherwise, I get depressed and start to speculate about what distant locale might be a good place to spend the next four years. Oaxaca has a certain appeal, and I could brush up on my college Spanish. ¡Que bueno!

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43. ‘Patriots’ hide behind disguises, racist chants -

You no doubt saw that the racist-wingnut group Patriot Front staged a march in downtown Nashville recently. A question: What’s the difference between Patriot Front members and Tennessee Republican legislators?

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45. After reshaping Las Vegas, The Mirage to be reinvented as part of a massive Hard Rock makeover -

LAS VEGAS (AP) — The Mirage is about to vanish from the Las Vegas Strip.

Gambling ends and the doors close Wednesday at the iconic tropical island-themed hotel-casino that opened in 1989 with a fire-spewing volcano outside, and Siegfried & Roy's lions and dolphins inside.

46. Hats off to the national anthem, but that’s all -

I don’t think of myself as a rebel, college alma mater (Hotty toddy!) notwithstanding. But I staged a mini-protest the other night at a Sounds game by refusing to stand and take off my hat as requested.

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48. Homebuying guide needs update for Nashville market -

The National Association of Realtors provides a simple 12-step guide for prospective homebuyers through its HomeLogic.com website. It’s fine, so far as it goes.

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50. Some legislators can’t seem to get anything passed -

The ballots have been counted, and the winner of the award for Best Republican Legislator, 113th Tennessee General Assembly, is Rep. Iris Rudder of Winchester.

Never heard of her? Neither had I. But a low profile is part of her winning formula. That, and the fact that she doesn’t seem to offer much in the way of legislation.

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52. Today’s ‘athletes’ are becoming hard to stomach -

Will the Fourth of July really be the Fourth of July if Joey Chestnut isn’t cramming hot dogs down his gullet for a Coney Island crowd?

Chestnut is a trencherman of the first order: a 16-time winner of the Nathan’s Famous Fourth of July hot dog-eating contest and the world’s No. 1-ranked competitive eater.

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54. Waffle House raises worker pay after strikes and pressure from labor organizers -

Waffle House is increasing pay for its U.S. workers after a year-long push from labor advocates.

In a video message to employees late last month, Waffle House CEO Joe Rogers III said base pay would rise to at least $3 per hour in June and then gradually rise to at least $5.25 per hour by June 2026. Base pay doesn't include workers' tips, and will be higher in some states depending on minimum wage laws, Rogers said.

55. Andrew Johnson: Really the worst US president? -

My store of knowledge about the 17th president, Andrew Johnson, has until just recently consisted mostly of gaps. He took over after Lincoln’s assassination, was later impeached by the House but saved from conviction by one vote in the Senate, and, uh …

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57. ‘Cinderella story’ draws to close for an old friend -

In 2012, I wrote of my high school classmate Truitt Williams, that he had “crossed over, passed on to glory, reached the promised land.” The use of death imagery was a joke. Truitt hadn’t died; he had retired.

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59. How did anyone expect Graceland sale plan to work? -

You’d think it would be pretty hard to steal a house. Especially one as prominent and distinctive as Elvis’s former Memphis digs, Graceland.

For the record, I am not alleging any criminal intent in the recent goings-on involving Graceland. That might be considered libel, in a financially costly sort of way, and I certainly wouldn’t want that. I’m just, you know, raising questions.

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61. Knoxville has a new fan in this Ole Miss alum -

For Kayne, it was a chance to revisit some of her college haunts and to relive days gone by. For me, it was a debt repaid. And a long drive to get some pizza.

That pizza, from a place called Stefanos, was probably Kayne’s primary goal for the trip. I’ve been hearing about its superior merits for decades. Proust had his madeleine; Kayne has her Supreme. Whole wheat crust.

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63. Should 18 be old enough to serve on Metro Council? -

A proposal to let teenagers run Nashville was recently floated at a couple of meetings of the Metro Council Charter Revision Committee.

That might overstate the proposal just a bit. What it actually sought to do was to lower the minimum age for Council membership from the current 25 to 18.

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65. Mental evaluations for legislators? How did that not pass? -

Just as one invading species – state legislators – has departed Nashville, we’re steeling ourselves for the imminent arrival of another: Brood XIX cicadas. Of the two, which is more irksome?

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67. Penny for your restoration? The coin still has value -

My church has launched a fundraising campaign that, as a side effect, restores a measure of dignity and worth to a long-scorned object: the lowly penny.

Beyond that, it also serves as a reminder for me about the spiritual value of things that might hold little or no monetary utility. A sermon in action, if you will.

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69. GOP challengers looking to wash Ogles out of House -

On a recent Monday, as mayhem reigned in Ukraine and the Middle East and the criminal trial of an ex-president displayed our own nation’s political chaos, the Rules Committee of the U.S. House of Representatives scheduled for discussion the following measures:

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71. These questions might make for better poll results -

The latest poll by the Beacon Center of Tennessee, a conservative think tank, is out. Full of surprises it is not. Upon surveying 1,197 registered Tennessee voters online, it reports that:

• Tennesseans favor Donald Trump over Joe Biden for president by 57% to 29%. If Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is tossed into the mix, the margin drops to 48 to 25, with Kennedy attracting 16% – a political choice roughly on a par with supporting Mickey Mouse, but there you have it.

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73. Top Davidson County residential real estate transactions March 2024 -

Top Davidson County residential real estate sales for March 2024, as compiled by the Nashville Ledger.

AddressZipFiling DateBuyersSellersSale Price
836 Glen Leven 37204 3/20 Levin Revocable Trust PNL 23 LLC $6,650,000
6136 Chickering 37215 3/28 Kelley Steven; Kelley Tracy Chesnut Infill GP $6,400,000
4000 Sneed 37215 3/4 Theresa M Cooper And Gary K Cooper Joint Trust Agreement Grisham Home Builders LLC $5,750,000
1204 Belle Meade 37205 3/14 Lazenby George; Lazenby Virginia Belle Meade Land Trust $5,750,000
1703 Sweetbriar 37212 3/26 Reynolds Angela; Reynolds Stephen Perkins Mgmt LLC $4,385,995
4640 Chalmers 37215 3/25 Hilltop Land Trust Colclasure Co LLC $4,050,000
4340 Sneed 37215 3/20 Infinity Rose LLC Blankinship Heather; Blankinship James Michael $3,995,000
3916 Wallace 37215 3/20 Truemper Julia Cammack Griffith Mark A; Griffith Patricia A; Schulhauser Sabrina $3,750,000
1119 Park Ridge 37215 3/18 Fouce Family Trust DLP Revocable Trust $3,625,000
649 Brook Hollow 37205 3/20 Bruce Stephen Becker David Philip; Lehman Trent $3,525,000
720 Southmeade 37204 3/27 Sizemore Adam Forrest; Sizemore Nikki Hashemian 720 Southmeade LLC $3,325,000
105 Gilman 37205 3/4 Klochany George Alan; Klochany Suzanne Marie 105 Gilman LLC $3,265,552
722 Starlit 37205 3/4 Schlaefer Mayling Chavarria; Schlaefer Peter Kendall Volunteer State Dev LLC $3,100,000
1133 Brookmeade 37204 3/14 Paddock Reaghan; Paddock William Montgomery Classic Const LLC $3,090,000
2402 Valley Brook 37215 3/8 Dalba Gregory; Dalba Jennifer Sabalo Dev LLC $3,050,000
5031 Lakeview 37220 3/19 Bell Brent; Griffith Scott Ke Holdings LLC $3,000,000
6240 Bresslyn 37205 3/1 Cartwright Misty Lane Province Builders LLC $2,850,000
4200 Estes 37215 3/7 Grindstaff Edward Douglas II; Grindstaff Tammy Lee Zd Mgmt LLC $2,800,000
1715 Sweetbriar 37212 3/22 Steenburgh Laura Ellen; Steenburgh Thomas Jay Turner Justin H; Werthman Jennifer $2,795,000
3601 Rainbow 37204 3/18 Bartel Genell Anderson 8GCO Revocable Living Trust $2,749,000
401 Sunnyside 37205 3/8 Perry Sara Justus Stephanie Jo; Ryan Carolyn Jane Justus $2,610,000
1616 West End 37203 3/22 Fiona Whelan Prine Trust Eckes Chad; Eckes Deette $2,550,000
213 Lynnwood 37205 3/5 McCraw Anne; McCraw Rhett F Fred M & Martha U Goldner Comm Prop Trust $2,525,000
1005 Paris 37204 3/21 1005 Paris Trust Fisher Rick; Louis Sheryl $2,450,000
3714 West End 37205 3/8 Bass Felicia Suzanne Woods; Bass John McKennon John Patrick $2,325,000
4507 Granny White 37204 3/21 Tijerino Rebecca Rogers; Tijerino Ricardo Emilio Bjornstad Ida Gunhilda Ilona; Ekholm Hans Mattias $2,225,000
1616 West End 37203 3/19 KRH Nashville LLC Aminmadani Desiree Vasquez; Aminmadani Shareef $2,220,000
3912 Caylor 37215 3/22 Compton Janice J Trustee; Janice J Compton Living Trust A&M Prop LLC $2,200,000
428 Glen West Drive 37215 3/28 Bachman Karen; Bachman Robert W Van Doren Denise A; Van Doren Martin S $2,199,000
1212 Laurel 37203 3/14 Waddell David S Repp Tennessee Community Property Trust $2,175,000
945 Travelers 37220 3/27 Eubank Christopher Newsome Jerremy; Newsome Svetlana $2,150,000
903 Pasadena 37204 3/15 Forkin Grady Rains; Hobbs Mary Elizabeth Williams Amzie; Williams Jessica Campbell $2,100,000
2001 Earlington 37215 3/26 Earlington Revocable Trust Shirock Robert J; Shirock Shirley A $2,100,000
5 Castle Rising 37215 3/18 Short Robert R Jr; Short Sarah H Gernert Community Property Trust $2,100,000
6029 Opus 37027 3/21 Moore Chad Allen GP Luxury LLC $2,060,000
2010 Gallatin 37115 3/21 Highway 23 LLC KDI Rivergate Mall LLC $2,050,000
1800 Beechwood 37212 3/15 Lambert Hannah; Stone James Rohosy Adam; Rohosy Anne $2,050,000
2114 Hampton 37215 3/22 Combs Carole Marisa Lee; Smith James A Cdh Holdings LLC $2,000,000
600 12th 37203 3/22 Bryan David Boyle Donna; Boyle Gerard; Means Margaret $2,000,000
3901 West End 37205 3/25 Lehman Ellen Wagy Deborah J; Wagy James W $1,950,000
813 Shadowstone 37220 3/22 Trepka Anthony; Trepka Holly Lisa J Shearer Living Trust $1,950,000
1805 Kimbark 37215 3/12 Hawkins Gregory; Hawkins Stephanie P Carbine & Assoc LLC $1,901,000
3614A West End 37205 3/21 Lamp Mark L; Lamp Pamela Acra Jihan; Acra Sari $1,900,000
4378 Chickering 37215 3/1 Fulwider Benjamin C; Fulwider Valere B Beasley Allison Tidman; Beasley John S II $1,835,000
1835 Green Hills 37215 3/28 Williams Jimmie D II; Williams Melanie Parent BRG LLC $1,800,000
4608 Toddington 37215 3/21 Moore David T; Moore Deborah D Toddington Trust $1,800,000
312 Kelly Glenn 37027 3/7 Carlock Grover Clayborn III White Pines Building Group LLC $1,800,000
1810 Primrose 37212 3/25 Post Atlantic Property LLC Krassow Eric D; Krassow Lauren Harrell $1,785,000
906 Cadillac 37204 3/22 Ryan Elizabeth; Ryan Kevin Trepka Anthony J; Trepka Holly H $1,775,000
4208 Idaho 37209 3/26 Perry Madison Theobald; Tao Andrew Wesley Build Nashville LLC $1,750,000
3609 Meadow 37215 3/20 Jamison Kathryn Hamill; Jamison William Cochrane Steele Mary Jennifer; Steele Paul Rye $1,700,000
6417 Edinburgh 37221 3/6 Rad House LLC Pendleton Franklin D Estate $1,700,000
1913 Ashwood 37212 3/22 Ingram Henry Lebrun Red Apple At Nashville LLC $1,690,000
1343 Burton Valley 37215 3/22 Stringfellow Ryan Lustig Beth; Lustig Justin $1,686,500
929 Battlefield 37204 3/8 Felton Cynthia L; Felton John L Springdale Dev LLC $1,675,000
268 38th 37209 3/8 Martin Allison; Martin Travis Parsa Hamidreza $1,655,000
135 39Th 37209 3/1 Spencer Brandon Rhett Richland Building Partners LLC $1,637,500
1726 Warfield 37215 3/27 Gregory Rosanne E; Gregory Stephen Gardwill LLC $1,620,000
1121 Brick Church 37207 3/6 Karma Duplex LLC Guardian Inv GP $1,600,000
1302 Calvin 37206 3/19 Shultz Matthew Frank Aaron M; Frank Laura R $1,600,000
1727 Linden 37212 3/12 Cramer Anna; Cramer Phillip Cartwright John; Cartwright Misty Lane $1,575,000
107 Chatsworth 37215 3/6 Boyd Tyler Dominic; Braly Rebecca Rose Grindstaff Edward D II; Grindstaff Tammy L; Mallory Tammy L $1,565,000
1616 West End 37203 3/21 Randy W Bernard Revocable Trust PM Halt LLC $1,550,000
80 Brookwood 37205 3/6 Hashmi Saad Hasan; Osmani Bushra Zafar White Goat Holdings LLC $1,525,000
2818 Sugar Tree 37215 3/18 McLaughlin Anderson Thompson; McLaughlin Claire Spaulding Abigail; Spaulding Joel Bruce III $1,500,000
3613 Meadow 37215 3/26 Osullivan James Patrick; Smith Emerson Monteray Simmons Barton; Simmons Hayley $1,475,000
1941 Kimbark 37215 3/5 Lakoff Family Holding LLC Quintana Jordan; Roach Michelle K $1,468,000
304 50th 37209 3/28 Belk Michelle Summers; Belk Samuel Forbes Baker Greg; Bonner Laci Michelle $1,459,900
115 Keyway 37205 3/4 Kilborn Bradley; Kilborn Sarah Reavis Elizabeth D; Reavis Michael C $1,450,000
5420 Trousdale 37220 3/6 Stephenson Daniel; Stephenson Hannah BNA Dev LLC $1,450,000
543 Lttle Channing 37212 3/4 Sara Anne Eskind 2010 Irrevocable Trust Linden Row Residential LLC $1,425,000
528 Harpeth Trace 37221 3/7 Soderholm Jordan; Soderholm Stephen Priest Charles L; Priest Jenna S $1,425,000
1501 16Th Ave S 3 37212 3/15 Simonetti Benjamin James; Simonetti Olivia 1501 16th Ave South LLC $1,400,000
1001 Argyle 37203 3/20 Descendants Separate Trust JML Holdings LLC $1,399,900
900 20th 37212 3/1 Meltzer Shan Friedrichs Lynn A $1,395,000
880 Hillhaven 37220 3/25 Avila Justine; Sharma Aditya Houzel Suzana Herculano; Maldonado Suzana Carvalho Herculano $1,375,000
3606 Wilbur 37204 3/4 Pickens Caroline C; Pickens William Christopher McHaourab Hassane S $1,370,000
3406 Trimble 37215 3/4 James Abigal Bowen Megan King 2020 Trust $1,350,000
222 Vaughns Gap 37205 3/26 Krassow Eric Daniel; Krassow Lauren Harrell Floyd Anne Byrn; Floyd Mark Hazen $1,350,000
6013 Andover 37215 3/27 Ladd Andrew Laurence; Ladd Michelle Ann Bahil Benjamin; Bahil Denise $1,350,000
15 13th 37206 3/21 Tisdale Elizabeth W; Tisdale Patrick D Jr Boykin Elmer M Jr $1,330,000
1401 Ordway 37206 3/25 Hendry Ashlee; Hendry Bryce Snavely Revocable Living Trust $1,325,000
1801 Rosewood 37212 3/5 Underwood Katherine; Underwood Kevin Hawthorne Homes Project $1,300,000
920 Robertson Academy 37220 3/26 Nash Edward; Nash Nicola Busby Audra D; Bynum Icy Lou $1,300,000
427 Prestwick 37205 3/8 Bashian Annette; Bashian Garo Pearre Carolyn D; Pearre Courtney N $1,296,500
1112 5th 37207 3/27 Smith Chad; Smith Christopher Dawson Hurtado Jose $1,289,900
515 Church 37219 3/4 CR3 Properties LLC Bobel James M $1,250,000
635 7Th Ave S 316 37203 3/19 Hyer Christy; Hyer Robert 629 Seventh LP $1,250,000
2670 Morgan 37080 3/26 Carter Karen L; Carter Mike G Real Estate Rentals LLC $1,245,000
834 Kirkwood 37204 3/25 Wesnofske Andrew; Wesnofske Caroline Joseph B Hart Trust; Linda June Hart Trust $1,235,000
945 Woodmont 37204 3/6 Hindy Gabriela; Labrador Geremy Wilson Clayton R; Wilson Jessica $1,225,000
1313 Baptist World Center 37207 3/18 Hinds Lisa M 1311 Bwc Partners LLC $1,215,000
2176 Carson St 5 37211 3/20 Baxley Christopher RSD Carson Street LLC $1,200,000
1231 Pawnee 37115 3/8 1231 Pawnee Trail LLC Pawnee Trail Dev LLC $1,200,000
1302 7th 37208 3/15 Wagner Allison; Wagner Hans K Moore Chad Allen $1,195,000
419 Prestwick 37205 3/22 Nancy Richardson Williams 2022 Childrens Trust Wright Don Mark; Wright Kathy $1,165,000
2808 Westmoreland 37212 3/25 Westmoreland Drive Trust Johnson Andrea Whitney $1,160,000
900 20th 37212 3/4 Detherage Andrew Jay; Detherage Julia Elizabeth Bradbury Devin $1,150,000
1300 Edgehill Ave 10 37212 3/25 Surendran Prashanthan Prestige PMC LLC $1,150,000
2176 Carson 37211 3/28 Nashairbnb 2170-24 LLC Strp 2176 Carson St #24 LLC $1,150,000
1605 Stokes 37215 3/19 Moore Michael Kevin Jr; Moore Rebecca Hasty Joe B Natcher Revocable Trust $1,150,000
3621 Trimble 37215 3/11 Brown Darby Wasabi Studios 2021 Joint Revocable Trust $1,150,000
121 Abbeywood 37215 3/28 West Elizabeth Hart; West Thomas Andrew Chachra Marissa Lynn; Chachra Vishesh $1,145,000
598 Watsonwood 37211 3/8 Bourassa Stephanie Paige; Scott Christopher Thomas; Williams David Greenleaf Real Estate Dev LLC $1,137,000
700 1st 37201 3/22 Aton Charles M; Aton Shannon South Ridgeway LLC $1,130,000
635 7Th Ave S 612 37203 3/12 Nash Partners LLC 629 Seventh LP $1,125,000
1233 Lischey 37207 3/11 Reagan Justin Lischey Avenue Part GP $1,100,000
2610 Barclay 37206 3/4 Hanson Mishthi Grace Perry Allen $1,085,000
1017 A W Grove 37203 3/14 Blackmon Richard Paul; Blackmon Sarah Riley Reddy Megan; Reddy Satish $1,085,000
1905 Warfield 37215 3/18 Azrieli Matthew; Edelman Chloe Neely Chase G; Neely Joy P $1,075,000
1217 8Th 37207 3/14 Weber Lindsey Frances Clothiaux Philip L $1,074,900
139 37th 37209 3/21 Harriss Heather; Stephens Michael Lawrence Todd W; Seymour Katherine $1,070,000
1711 Glen Echo 37215 3/25 Cernoch Ryan; Ezell Bethany Bruno 2013 Family Trust $1,060,000
3502 Wrenwood 37205 3/11 Kim Dana M Hr Properties Of Tn $1,045,000
635 7Th Ave S 614 37203 3/12 Lanza Properties I LLC 629 Seventh LP $1,025,000
635 7Th Ave S 404 37203 3/25 Gambino Joseph III; Gambino Kristina 629 Seventh LP $1,025,000
635 7Th Ave S 615 37203 3/12 Lanza Properties I LLC 629 Seventh LP $1,025,000
4221 Morriswood 37204 3/8 Wesnofske Brett McRainey Lyn $1,025,000
3504 Wrenwood 37205 3/11 Dobel Steven HR Properties of TN $1,025,000
2176 Carson St 12 37211 3/15 Sandalwood LLC RSD Carson Street LLC $1,025,000
1906 Electric 37206 3/27 Locke Terrence Jamaal; Webb Christina Kingen Myriah $1,025,000
6524 Mercomatic 37209 3/12 Battistini Marnie M Hidden Trail Prop LLC $999,900
2123 Elliott 37204 3/12 Le Aimee Indigo Wren SC LLC $995,000
5005 Indiana 37209 3/26 Burke Kathryn; Mayernick Daniel Goddard Const Co LLC $995,000
2182 Golf Club 37215 3/19 Thomas Cooper; Wiles Saxby Farquharson Jill $994,500
1644 Northview 37216 3/20 Decriscio Kayla; Schlesinger Joseph Rock Home LLC $990,000
2928 Glenmeade 37216 3/28 Bennett Audrey Louise Perry Allen $990,000
877 Granada 37206 3/28 Daniel Emily Taylor; George Benjamin Emmett Aguirre James $972,000
2411 Crestmoor 37215 3/20 Lankford Sara McKean Karen D $969,900
1022 14th 37212 3/8 Bils Peter Henry; Izzo Federica Grichnik James Michael; Grichnik Sarah Lynn; Griffin Kevin H; Griffin Sarah G $965,000
5528 Hillview 37027 3/20 Pelland 1996 Trust Marilyn D Blankenship Revocable Living Trust $955,000
1254 McGavock 37216 3/27 Bhupathy-Vijayakumar 2024 Cp Trust Drimmer Robert $950,000
3903 Abbott Martin 37215 3/4 Grebenshchikova Irina; Tan Alan Patterson Gerald G; Rinker Ronda Lea $950,000
926 Boscobel 37206 3/25 Handley Spencer Dawson Rian; Means Margaret $950,000
65 Lindsley 37210 3/12 SS Loomis LLC Shields Joseph John IV $950,000
1212 Laurel 37203 3/20 Brandace Baker Revocable Trust Agreement Pedigo Ivan Dean; Pedigo Michelle Celsor $949,900
2176 Carson St 8 37211 3/27 BLJJ Homes Rsd Carson Street LLC $949,000
2176 Carson St 6 37211 3/26 Carson Holdings LLC Rsd Carson Street LLC $939,900
2176 Carson St 7 37211 3/27 Lischey LLC Rsd Carson Street LLC $939,900
1905 Liberty 37215 3/27 Cawley Mitchell S; Cawley Sharon B Shield Katherine R; Shield Stephen W $921,300
635 7Th Ave S 514 37203 3/14 Guillaume Mitchell; Guillaume Steve 629 Seventh LP $915,000
2900 PRIMROSE CIR 37212 3/8 Kyriakoudis Naihui Natalie Attew Dean; Attew Tara Margaret; Traynor Tara Margaret $912,900
2708 Westwood 37212 3/22 Tsoubanos Aleke Joy Cooper Mary Argentine Adams; Gallisdorfer Scott Davis $910,000
306 Hancock 37207 3/28 Fox Jessica E; Fox Nimrod Seifried Andrew John $899,000
2005 Dunedin 37138 3/20 Terrell George M Griegel Lisa D; Kurylo Peter $890,000
631 Crieve 37220 3/11 Wong Mitchell Daniel; Wong Stephanie Werner Capital Solutions LLC $888,000
5617 Cloverland Park 37027 3/13 Delgado Oscar; Vidal Xiomarexy Halman Ronald W; Halman Rosemary R $875,000
838 Brentview 37220 3/26 McLellan Jennifer Jo Bryan Felix; Bryan Fred D Estate; Fortin Mary Bryan; Hakimian Margaret Bryan $875,000
237 Lauderdale 37205 3/4 Berlinberg-Raim Living Trust Kooi Suzanne Mintz; Mintz Philip G $875,000
620 Watsonwood 37211 3/5 Flynn Jordan Thomas; Flynn Rachel Elizabeth Parker Greenleaf Real Estate Dev LLC $874,999
112 Myrtle 37206 3/20 Melton Rebekah; Melton William Bradley Elizabeth; Bradley Jacob John $870,000
516 Garfield 37208 3/27 Kim Joomahn Lemelle Christopher; Lemelle Christopher Michael; Milkowski Christina R $865,000
7725 Indian Springs 37221 3/18 Combs Joseph D Jr; Combs Mary Mitchell Albert D Estate $860,000
5906 Maxon 37209 3/21 Hood Lauren; Hood Zachary Homeward Custom Homes LLC $854,900
6725 Fleetwood 37205 3/12 Farooq Zerwa; Malik Muhammad Fahd Razaq Drees Premier Homes Inc $854,814
402C 17th 37206 3/13 Newhouse Caitlin; Seitz Kevin Patten Kathleen; Patten Kyle Robert $850,000
4116 Brandywine Pointe 37138 3/19 Anthony Alfred C; Anthony Beauty E Craighead Janice R; Craighead John D $850,000
6604 Ormond 37205 3/15 Guidry Bethann C; Guidry Justin P Homco Amanda; Homco Amanda E; Homco Jonathan H; Homco Jonathan W $840,000
1202 Kirkland 37216 3/13 Teneprop LLC Pointer Prop LLC $840,000
861 Forest Acres 37220 3/6 861 Forest Acres Drive Trust Cervantes Alyssa; McKinnis Sean $840,000
880 Van Leer 37220 3/5 876 Van Leer Drive Trust; Sontag Mike Trustee Kupferer Lesley Anne $840,000
410 17th 37206 3/20 Richardson Doug McClure; Richardson Hoang Anh Estrin Marc; Estrin Maureen; Estrin Natalee H; Estrin Thomas $830,000
533 Wedgewood 37203 3/5 Ganser Steven Gutierrez Viviana; Zebari Amena $815,000
600 12th 37203 3/7 Summers Patricia Ashton Gary $808,000
1014 16th 37206 3/13 LL Investment LLC Harold &Amp; Owen LLC $805,000
507 9th 37206 3/7 Opendoor Property Trust I Beecroft Tamara $802,400
522 Skyview 37206 3/4 Pickrel Elizabeth Solonia; Wagner Victor Thomas Fox Homes LLC $800,000
4012 Indiana 37209 3/14 Mencinger Revocable Living Trust Davis Matthew T; Roberts Mary Carolyn $800,000
1012 Richland Creek 37209 3/8 Elliott Sarah L; Emmerick Jake M Custer Patrick C; Noel Jeremy E $800,000
1113 Glenwood 37204 3/26 Shaffer Homes Services LLC Batson Danny Neal; Leonhardt Charlene Diane Batson; Leonhardt Danielle; Wiegand Charlene Diane $800,000
5606 Tennessee 37209 3/26 Rickman Jarrod L L&S Dev LLC $800,000
1008 Tabitha 37138 3/12 Mellen Jason Joseph; Mellen Kelli Wedekind Catherine; Wedekind Howard W $800,000
5432 Cottonport 37027 3/20 Stejskal Allison; Stejskal Chase Rosser Denise; Rosser Timothy $800,000

...

74. Sure, legislators, let’s OK gun use for citizen’s arrests -

Mention the words “citizen’s arrest,” and any faithful “Andy Griffith Show” fan will immediately flash to the episode of that title. It’s among the classics, of which there are many.

75. -

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76. Logic goes for a spin in debate over guns in cars -

The General Assembly ought to come with a warning label: Watching legislators in action may lead to eye-rolls, head-shakes and muttered oaths of exasperation.

Case in point, last week, when Sen. Jeff Yarbro spoke in support of his bill that would have encouraged the safe storage of guns in vehicles. Not mandated, mind you. Encouraged.

77. -

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78. Opt out of gun ‘education?’ Not in Tennessee schools -

In 2008, Barack Obama, running for the Democratic nomination for president, stepped in a bit of political cow plop when talking about disaffected working-class voters in faded industrial towns.

“[T]hey cling to guns or religion,” he said in comments that provided an easy opening for his chief opponent, Hillary Rodham Clinton. She quickly jumped on the remarks as “elitist and out of touch.”

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80. No mystery why legislators killed reparations study -

Legislation, like people, can die a variety of deaths: fast or slow, public or private, merciful or cruel. But perhaps the most humiliating form – sometimes intentionally so – might be thought of as death by silence.

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82. ‘Fringe’ Birchers have nothing on today’s politicos -

Before Moms for Liberty, before MAGA, before the Tea Party, there was a relatively small but vocal movement whose members were generally recognized – except by themselves – as residents of the loony far right: the John Birch Society.

83. -

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84. Lawmakers fault Defense Secretary Austin for a failure of leadership over his secret hospital stay -

WASHINGTON (AP) — Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin faced pointed bipartisan criticism at a congressional hearing Thursday for his failure to promptly notify President Joe Biden and other U.S. leaders about his hospital stay last month. Republicans demanded to know why no one has been disciplined.

85. Another Ogles in Washington? It could happen -

The question to be resolved by some Tennessee voters this election year: How many Ogleses do we need representing us in Congress?

Thanks to legislative larceny, we already have one. Andy Ogles was elected in the 5th District after a partisan redrawing by the General Assembly’s Red supermajority made it numerically inhospitable for Democrats, ending their run of more than a century.

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87. Nothing funny about losing your fave comic strip -

All things must pass, as George Harrison tunefully observed. So fare thee well, Arlo and Janis. It was fun while it lasted.

Some Tennessean readers might know what I’m talking about. As of a few weeks ago, Arlo and Janis, along with a bunch of other comics, has been booted from the lineup.

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89. Double-dip bill does right thing for wrong reason -

Graciousness is not a quality of aggrieved Republican legislators; payback is their stock in trade. Like their pachyderm symbol, they never forget. And in the partisan street fight that Tennessee politics has become, they’re the ones with brass knuckles and switchblades.

90. -

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91. Senate Republicans block bipartisan border package, then scramble to find support for Ukraine aid -

WASHINGTON (AP) — Wartime aid for Ukraine was left hanging in the Senate Wednesday after Republicans blocked a bipartisan border package that had been tied to the funding, then struggled to coalesce around a plan to salvage the aid for Kyiv.

92. Biden determined to use stunning Trump-backed collapse of border deal as a weapon in 2024 campaign -

WASHINGTON (AP) — How it began: President Joe Biden was urgently seeking more money from Congress to aid Ukraine and Israel. He took a gamble by seizing on GOP demands to simultaneously address one of his biggest political liabilities — illegal migration at the U.S.-Mexico border.

93. Senate Republicans block bipartisan border package, scuttling deal they had demanded from Democrats -

WASHINGTON (AP) — Senate Republicans blocked a bipartisan border package Wednesday, scuttling months of negotiations with Democrats on legislation intended to cut back record numbers of illegal border crossings.

94. No, we can’t let legislators pick our US senators -

Like the proverbial bad penny, bad ideas have a way of turning up again and again in the General Assembly.

A couple of years ago, I mentioned a bill by Sen. Frank Niceley that would have given Tennessee legislators the power to appoint Republican and Democratic candidates to the U.S. Senate. I called it pointless and noted that it would take power away from voters.

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96. ‘The people’ need other ways to be heard in Tennessee -

Abraham Lincoln spoke at Gettysburg of a government “of the people, by the people, and for the people.” Do we have that in Tennessee?

“Of the people,” I guess maybe so. There’s no proof that the legislative pool includes any species other than human, though a few occasionally demonstrate the mental acuity of livestock.

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98. Entrepreneurial spirit or snow job? Maybe bit of both -

Three enterprising young lads presented themselves at our front door recently offering a fee-for-service transaction. They proposed to remove the snow that had accumulated on our walkway, and perhaps also the snow on our front sidewalk, for a mutually acceptable price. To be determined.

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100. Better to honor books, writings than ban them -

Mark these words well, because this is the first – and quite likely last – time you will see them from me: Kudos to State Rep. Gino Bulso.

Bulso, a freshman Republican from Brentwood, has compiled an impressive record of legislative malpractice in his short time in office. More about that coming soon. But for now, the positive: Bulso has introduced a bill to designate Tennessee’s official state book.