All these are very true about the old town of
Memphis, TN.
1. Downtown Memphis is composed entirely of one-way streets. The only way to get out
of downtown Memphis is to turn around and start over when you reach Arkansas or
Mississippi.
2. All directions start with, "Go down I-240..."
3. I-240 has no beginning and no end.
4. Coca-Cola is bottled in Memphis. That's all we drink here, so don't ask for any other
soft drink. And, by the way, it's pronounced "Co'Cola"
5. Memphians only know their way home and their way to work.
6. Gate One at the Airport is 32 miles away from the Main Concourse.
7. It's impossible to go around a block and wind up on the street you started on. The
Chamber of Commerce calls it a "scenic drive."
8. The 8 a.m. rush hour is from 6:30 a.m. to 9:30 a.m. The 5:00 p.m. rush hour is
from 3:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. Friday's rush hour starts Thursday morning.
9. Reversible Lanes (for example, Union Avenue) are not understood by anybody.
10. "Sir" and "Ma'am" are used by the person speaking to you if
there's a remote possibility that you're at least 30 minutes older than they are.
11. "Sugar" is a more common form of address than "Miss." So is
"Honey."
12. "Presley" can only be properly pronounced by a native Memphian, so do not
attempt the pronunciation. People will
simply tilt their heads to the right and stare at you with their mouths open.
13. The falling of one raindrop causes all traffic to immediately come to a screeching
halt. So will Daylight Savings Time,
a girl applying eye shadow across the street, or a flat tire three lanes over. Should (God
forbid) one snowflake fall in
Memphis, all drivers on the roads immediately lose any ability to control a car. Or, if in
a pickup truck or SUV, they will
drive as though the roads are dry.
14. If you're standing on a corner and a Metro Bus stops, you're expected to get on and go
somewhere...although no one actually knows where the buses go.
15. Memphis is pronounced "MEM'-fus."
16. Construction on I-240 is perpetual, a way of life, and a permanent form of
entertainment for the road construction companies.
17. Construction crews aren't doing their job properly unless they close down all lanes
except one during rush hour.
18. Memphis' traffic is the friendliest around. The commuters spend hours mingling with
each other twice a day. In fact, Memphis' traffic is rated number 1 in the country. You
will often see people parked beside the road and engaged in lively discussions.
19. I-240 is the southern equivalent of the Autobahn. You will rarely see a semi-truck on
I-240, because the truck drivers
are intimidated by the oversized SUV-wielding housewives racing home after a grueling day
at the salon or the tennis match
to meet their children at the school bus.
20. The 95 pound woman driving the Ford Excursion (the largest vehicle ever produced in
the world) absolutely MUST
come to a complete stop, then proceed at 2.5 mph over any railroad track. Let's face it,
this vehicle was built to invade
small countries, and she's worried about the darn railroad tracks!!!
21. Hard and fast rule of the road in Memphis: Never use your turn indicator when changing
lanes on any freeway. Use it randomly on surface streets.
22. Pedestrians in Memphis have the right-of-way....but it is a driver's duty to take out
the pedestrian when crossing the
street.
23. The parking lots at all the malls rotate once every hour, ensuring that visitors will
be unable to find their cars.
24. Most native Memphians do not know how to get around downtown.
25. Even though I-240 is known as a "loop," you cannot drive the entire
circumference of the loop without taking several
exits.
26. Even though it is the largest indoor arena in the region, there is no easy way to
reach The Pyramid. You must drive
under a series of interstate off-ramps and through the back of a concrete company in
order to park. Once you reach the building, you must climb up dozens of steps, even if
your seats are at floor level, which means you will be climbing back
DOWN dozens of steps after entering the arena.
27. A typical set of Midtown directions may include, "take North Parkway east until
you reach East Parkway, then take
East Parkway south until you reach South Parkway, then take South Parkway west until you
reach..."
28 . If you drive south from Shady Grove Road, you will end up on Ridgeway Road without
taking any turns. If you
continue south, you will eventually be on Hickory Hill Blvd., again without taking any
turns. However, Ridgeway Road
will be parallel to you about a mile to the East. Memphis' street names change without
warning. It is common knowledge
that Memphis was laid out by a drunk Indian on a crippled horse. Just go to Winchester
Road out east, and try to
distinguish between the intersections of Germantown Road, Old Germantown Road, and
Germantown Road Extended/Riverdale.
29. There is an intersection of two streets near Midtown. The "two" streets are
Summer Avenue, North Parkway,
Trezevant Blvd., and East Parkway. Again, names change at random. (two intersecting
streets with four names is
not atypical.)
30. Native Memphians cannot distinguish between the Mississippi River bridges named
"Memphis-Arkansas Bridge" and "Hernando DeSoto Bridge," Nor can they
distinguish between the "I-55 Bridge" and the "I-40 Bridge," They are
ONLY known locally as the "Old Bridge" and the "New Bridge" (even
though the "New Bridge" is almost thirty years old).
And of course...the rules of Memphis driving, as it was taught to me by a
lifelong Memphian:
Rule #1: Use the size and speed of your vehicle to intimidate the other
drivers.
Rule #2: Never be intimidated.