50.5 F
Oxford

Oxford Film Fest 2014 Lineup Announced

Teddy Bears, starring David Krumholz and Jason Ritter, has been selected for the 2014 Oxford Film Festival
Teddy Bears, starring David Krumholz and Jason Ritter, has been selected for the 2014 Oxford Film Festival

The Oxford Film Festival will be held February 6 through 9, 2014. This year’s festival includes 78 films ranging from animation, experimental, documentary, narrative, features and shorts and a wide range of Mississippi films. Additional films will be announced as they become available. All films are listed with their director.

All films are in competition for the Spirit of the Hoka award except for the special screenings category which are out of competition films. The Hoka is presented on the Saturday night of the festival at a public awards ceremony and celebration.

The community film, Killer Kudzu, will have its world premiere on Thursday, Feb. 6 and will play several other times throughout the festival. Directed by Oxford filmmaker Meaghin Burke, the film tells the story of how a town must come together when a mutant vine tries to take over. The community film is out of competition and is produced by the Oxford Film Festival each year to allow locals the chance to be part of the filmmaking experience. A schedule of events will be posted in January.

Tickets for the festival are currently on sale at www.oxfordfilmfest.com.

Documentary Feature Competition

Bending Steel        

Dave Carroll

Bending Steel follows Chris Schoeck, an endearing yet unassuming man as he trains to become a professional oldetime strongman.  While preparing to perform amazing and unique feats of strength publicly, Chris also struggles to overcome crippling fears and inhibitions. For the first time in his life he is compelled to confront social awkwardness, unsupportive parents, and an overwhelming fear of failure. What unfolds is one man’s remarkable journey to find his place in the world.

Bible Quiz

Nicole Teeny

Seventeen-year-old Mikayla memorizes books of the Bible on her quest to win the National Bible Quiz Championship and the heart of JP, her quiz team captain. The film explores coming of age in the face of faith, doubt, fierce competition and teen love.

Breaking Through

Cindy L. Abel

Openly LGBT elected officials at all levels – including the first gay US Senator, Tammy Baldwin – share their stories of self-doubt and triumph over multiple barriers ranging from race and poverty to gender and sexual orientation. Tho’ featuring politicians, it isn’t about politics: it’s about people revealing a deeply personal, rarely-seen side of politicians and gay people.

Web

Michael Kleiman

Web mixes a deeply personal story about people in the most remote parts of the world using digital technologies for the first time and interviews with some of the leading figures in the tech world. For 10 months, the director lived with families in small villages in Peru’s Andes Mountains and Amazon Jungle as children there experienced laptops and the Internet for the first time via the One Laptop per Child program. In addition to documenting how the children and their families used the new technologies, he documented their lives and the deep bonds of friendship that formed between him and the people.

Zipper: Coney Island’s Last Wild Ride

Amy Nicholson

A small-time ride operator and his beloved carnival contraption are driven out of Coney Island when the City of New York and an opportunistic developer lock horns over the future of the world famous amusement park. ZIPPER examines the high cost of economic development on an American cultural icon.

Narrative Feature

45RPM

Juli Jackson

Charlie, an artist who seeks a connection between her work and her deceased father’s music, teams up with Louie, an obsessive record collector. Together they scour the South in search of the elusive 45 that hails from the heyday of ’60s garage rock.

Being Awesome

Allen C. Gardner

Ten years after graduating, Teddy and Lloyd are both hopelessly depressed. At their high school reunion, the pair strike up a friendship and later decide that they have to turn things around. Believing that they’ve overcomplicated their lives, they decide to break things down to basics and set a very clear, ‘simple’ goal for themselves: to be awesome.

Bob Birdnow’s Remarkable Tale of Human Survival and the Transcendence of Self

Eric Steele

When invited by an old friend (Robert Longstreet, Take Shelter) to speak to a struggling sales team at a conference, Bob Birdnow (played by Barry Nash, Dallas-based stage veteran and on-air talent coach for CNN, ESPN, and NBC) reluctantly agrees. Bob’s attempt to say something motivational takes an unexpected turn when, forced off script and desperate, he begins the one story he’d hoped he’d never have to tell.

Father-Like Son

Mac Alsfeld 

After the sudden death of Clark’s father, his mother quickly remarries a man of the same age as her 24-year-old son…who is hell-bent on raising Clark as his own child.

Lighter

Ronnie Gunter

In this dark comedy, redneck comedian Roman Clower decides to walk away from his successful stand-up career and return to his hometown in South Carolina to take on the part of Hamlet in a community theatre.

Teddy Bears

Thomas Beatty and Rebecca Fishman

Teddy Bears is a dark comedy about three couples who head to the desert to help their friend Andrew heal from the loss of his mother. The friends plan a week of laughter and rejuvenation. Andrew plans a therapeutic orgy.

Documentary Short Competition

Dance Like No One’s Watching

Jenn Garrison

A short documentary that explores the world of competitive Country/Western dancing within the gay community.

Die Like An Egyptian

Matt Mamula

After a lifelong infatuation of Egyptian culture, 90 year old Fred Guentert tells the story of how he built his own Egyptian coffin, a dream he’s had since he was 8 years old.

The Ghost Pepper Eating Contest of Jefferson County

Sam Frazier, Jr.

A documentary of an annual benefit in Birmingham, Ala. for the Sidewalk Film Festival where contestants eat increasing spicy peppers up to and including the ‘ghost pepper’–the hottest pepper known to mankind.

Herd In Iceland

Lindsay Blatt & Paul Taggart

Herd in Iceland is a documentary about the annual round-up of the Icelandic horse, isolated for centuries by the country’s oceanic borders.  During the summer months, the horses live a wild existence, grazing in the highlands and raising their young. Each fall, they are rounded up by local farmers and directed across the stunning landscape. The horse holds a precious place in Icelandic culture, art and tradition; for over 1,000 years Icelandic law has prohibited the importation of horses onto the island.

A Man Without Words

Zack Godshall

Made in collaboration with writer and teacher Susan Schaller, A Man Without Words tells the shocking and inspiring story of how a deaf and languageless man came to discover language and connect with larger human community.

Phil Collins and the Wild Frontier

Ben Powell

Phil Collins and The Wild Frontier follows pop music legend Phil Collins on a 5-day book tour promoting a new book that catalogues his obscure collection of artifacts from the Battle of the Alamo. As he answers questions about his collection and his retirement from music, we observe the impact his public persona has had on his life and the more painful realities of being a celebrity. What emerges is an examination of mankind’s obsession with artifacts.

Narrative Short

Alaska is a Drag

Shaz Bennett

Leo stands out in a crowd. That’s not always a good thing working in a fish cannery in Alaska. His dreams of leaving this small town are hard fought, until a new boy moves to town and sees him for who he really is: an international superstar.

Cupcake

E. J. Carter

There’s nothing sweet about it.

Diagnostic

Fabrice Bracq

Dr. Semyc is a specialist of a widespread disease for which there is no cure to date. Announce the diagnosis is a difficult exercise, however, that mastery to perfection.

The Discontentment of Ed Telfair

Daniel Campbell

Ed Telfair is a mundane middle aged man who’s dealing with insecurities in his life until taking matters into his own hands.

The Horrible Life of Dr. Ghoul

Don Swaynos

A local TV horror host is having a bad day. 

Last Call

Stephen Kinigopoulos

In the wake of the zombie apocalypse, a rag-tag documentary crew follows the lives of an elderly couple; the only two that did not abandon their homes, or each other.  Is love really the key to survival when hope is not enough?

Pets

Michael Harring 

It’s the future, and humans have been kicked out of the cities by a new perfect race of clones. Now living on the outskirts, doing anything he can to survive, a man driven by desperation ventures into the city where he is abducted and adopted as a pet. He must decide whether the relatively posh life of a subservient pet is worth the cost of his freedom.

Picture Show

J. Michael Hicks & Robyn Rebecca Young 

In a small, southern town, an elderly couple that has been confined to their home for years venture  out for one last date at the soon-to-close movie theater. While recreating their first date, the couple faces the reality of their fading health and their impending mortality.

Safety

Rory Uphold 

Andy tries to get over her ex by getting under Morgan.  The results are awkward and unexpected.

Side Effects of Barry

Amy French

For many* women, Barry can make a difference in just one week! *Side effects of Barry include weakness in the knees, impaired judgment, lying, cheating, trips to Vegas, missing work, and missing money…

The Sidekick

Michael J Weithorn

As career “sidekick” Max McCabe pushes 40 and his job performance starts to lose its youthful zip, he is unceremoniously fired by his superhero boss and cast adrift in a world that seems to have no use for an aging professional buddy.

Six Letter Word

Lisanne Sartor

An unlikely mother is forced to confront her son’s autism after an unexpected encounter with one of her johns.

Songs in the Key of Death

Edward Valibus 

FJ Ackerman is one of the most sought after professional piano tuners in the world. His unorthodox use of “Piano Tuning Zombies” is all the rage amongst the rich and famous.

The Spy Who Fleeced Me

Ed Griffith & Rodney Rastall

Secret Agent Paco Suave saves puppetkind from destruction by the evil Madame Overee

Tryouts

Susana Casares

After being rejected from cheerleading tryouts because of her headscarf, Nayla, a teenage Muslim American girl, will have to find her own way to follow her dream without compromising her beliefs.

Mississippi Documentary Competition

Landscapes of the Heart: The Elizabeth Spencer Story

Rebecca Cerese

Landscapes of the Heart is a documentary about southern novelist Elizabeth Spencer who is still writing in her 90s. Spencer recounts her life story and the many decades she lived abroad in Rome and Montreal, away from her home state of Mississippi, a life spent in exile from the discontent of family and a literary community indifferent to her non-traditional writings about the South. Her story is filled with memories and reflections about race, class, and the changing roles of women during a defining mid-century in American history.

West of Elvis

Louis Bourgeois

The film documents a few visits to Graceland Too in Holly Springs, Mississippi.  The point of the film is to capture the essence of the place and the curator.

From Cotton Fields to Movie Premieres

Geoffrey Brent Shrewsbury

In the depression-era Mississippi delta, a young boy named Luster Bayless frequented the picture show to escape the hardships of poverty and isolation; his hero was John Wayne. Little did young Luster know, he would not only meet John Wayne one day, but would eventually become the Duke’s main costumer. This film follows Mr. Bayless’s unique journey from picking cotton to working with some of Hollywood’s biggest names.

Jimbo Mathus: Finding Your Roots

Geoffrey Brent Shrewsbury

This film is a brief glimpse into the life of Mississippi musician, Jimbo Mathus.  Hang out with Jimbo as takes the stage at the Hill Country Picnic and talks about his musical background: from picking guitar on camping trips with his family, through appearances on David Letterman with his former band, The Squirrel Nut Zippers.

Jot ‘Em Down

Tyler Keith and Camilla Ann Aikin

A brief glimpse into the unique horse-racing culture found at the Jot ‘Em Down Store in Lexington, Kentucky, on Derby Day 2013.

Nick’s

Camilla Ann Aikin & Tyler Keith

Nick’s is a beloved seafood institution on the Choctawhatchee Bay in Freeport, Florida, that has been run by the Nick family since 1963. At the heart of the Nicks’ story is family- of which their longtime employees and regular customers are a part of- old Florida traditions, and the freshest, most expertly cooked fish around.

A Quiet Strength

Bobbie Baird, Hannah Caggiano, Deborah Hammond, Tommaso Spinelli

A single, working mother in the heart of the Mississippi Delta sees hard work, education and faith as the foundation for raising her three high school daughters. She is neither a hero nor a victim of society, but rather a simple, hardworking woman who puts one foot in front of the other each day with quiet strength.

Mississippi Narrative

Kitties: A Short Film

Greg Hanks

A hunter and zombie struggle to gain the upper hand until they are both confronted by a new threat.

Evergreen

Jackson Segars

On a Mississippi farm, two brothers clash over their responsibilities to the farm, their father, and each other.

Last Fall

Glenn Payne

A story about living life while you have the chance. 

Lifted

Jordan Henry

Rob struggles to reconcile his upbringing with the recent news that he was adopted. On Halloween night, he finds himself drawn into another town member’s trick-or-treating masquerade.

The Surface

Jordan Berger 

Maintain consistency, that is key …

Bellringer

James V. Bulian

One Helluva Drink

Echoes

Greg Earnest

After a terrible fall in the woods, Joel climbs to safety only to be confronted by two old friends. When he realizes they intend to harm him, he must convince them to spare his life.

Mississippi Music Video

Poor Lost Souls

Shannon Cohn, Pato Cohn

Music by Jimbo Mathus

Rattle My Faith

Derek Pearson

Music by the Wineskins

Seasons

Dane Moreton

Music by Damein Wash

Tennessee Walker Mare

Jennifer Pierce Mathus

Music by Jimbo Mathus

Twisted Ways of YOU

Daniel Guaqueta

Music by Daniel Guaqueta

WhiteGold

Jason Thornton, Jason Evans

Music by Wolf Ruffin 

Animation Category 

Alfred Jarry & ‘Pataphysics

Skizz Cyzyk

In this 2 minute animated documentary, an oral report on French writer, Alfred Jarry, is given stop-motion treatment with the help of talking t-shirts, flip book pages, and time-lapse lino-cut printing. Jarry is best known for his play, Ubu Roi, and his pseudo-science, ‘Pataphysics. This short film is an excerpt from a feature length documentary, Icepick to The Moon.

Baby Chicken         

Azod Abedikich

The story of a wooden man who befriends his breakfast and is then called upon to become a hero.

Balloon Cat           

Michael Cermin

Balloon Cat, at its heart, is a film about reflection. While focused on the cat floating through space, the meat of the film takes place within the cat’s mind. As his physical journey progresses, the cat reflects on his life, ultimately revealing how he got into his predicament in the first place.

The Little Blond Boy with a White Sheep

Eloi Henriod

It’s school time again. During a writing test, Pierre escapes his grey school by recalling the happy memories of his holidays spent with his sheep.

The Missing Scarf    

Eoin Duffy

A black comedy exploring some of life’s common fears: fear of the unknown, of failure, rejection and finally the fear of death. Narrated by George Takei.

Oasis                

Sacha Goedegeb

George is on his way home after a stint in the mines. In his possession is his reward for his hard work: a rare and precious blue diamond. While seeking respite from the mid-day heat, he chances upon a strange creature which turns out to be much more than just a petty thief.

Sausage           

Robert Grieves

Topical issues of food ethics are played out in the simple but compelling tale of two artisan stallholders. Their idyllic market square is invaded by a slick fast-food vendor, set to steal all their customers. What new methods must these traditional providores invent to battle for their livelihoods?

Snowdysseus          

Evan Curtis

Snowdysseus explores the vulnerability in nostalgia for one’s home.

A Tangled Tale       

Corrie Francis

In this unusual romance, hand-tinted sand becomes a metaphor for two souls as they join and separate. A lonely fish, hooked by an angler’s line, encounters another in the same dire situation. As the two struggle, the physical connection moves deeper. Is it love or merely a will to survive?

Transmission         

Jared D. WeissIn

In a post-apocalyptic wasteland, a creature and his dog find a radio with a signal that may lead them to the first sign of other life they’ve encountered in ages. But is the chance to find new life worth leaving the only home they have?

Zweibettzimmer       

Fabian Giessle

Two elderly men share a hospital room, in which the window is the only connection to the outside world and thus becomes a highly demanded resource.

Experimental Short

Ghost of Yesterday

Tony Gault

Ghost of Yesterday – a collage of rotoscoped home movies – is inspired by childhood memories of religion and altered consciousness. The film explores our collective abandonment of analog imagery and is a personal attempt to reconcile with digital imagery.

My Sweet

Kate McCabe

The second in McCabe’s love letter series. A woman’s missive to her lover archly attempts to patch up an argument.

Rage Against Symphony

Elcid Asaei

An experimental short film shot via the iPhone 8mm app, focusing on a mysterious woman who lays in a bath, surrounded by the symphony of candles, incense and classical music, as all is seemingly calm and peaceful around her, yet the serenity of the environment belies the tumultuous rage burning inside of her, as she tries to hold back the tears.

Tokyo = Fukushima

Jordan Baseman

Tokyo = Fukushima is a time-lapse, stop-frame animation  film of the city of Tokyo, six months after the nuclear meltdown at Fukushima. The film depicts Tokyo as throbbing with life and (nuclear) electricity despite the crisis and constant radioactive threat. Recorded over a two-month period, using a Bolex Super 16mm wind-up camera on the streets of Tokyo, the film acts as a love letter to an anxious friend. The city is trying to return to normal, although paranoia and anxiety are found everywhere due to minor earthquakes, aftershocks and government untruths. This beautiful and dark film is propelled by electronic music recorded by the filmmaker in Tokyo.

The Travelers

Andres Gonzalez

Ships going out to sea.

Virtuos Virtuell

Thomas Stellmach & Maja Oschmann

Synchronizing to the music, abstract ink drawings grow in an interplay of curiosity, timid encounters, dynamic pursuits and confrontation, stimulating many emotions, which carry us off on a poetical journey to a musical world of pictures.

Walking Inland

Chris Boniello

Memories are a common experience that humans share. Hand painted film mixes with VHS video and static recorded on magnetic VHS tape to expand these moments and provide a reflection on the past and the present. How do these memories differ from the original, the recorded, and the recreated?

Special Screenings

Cook School

D.L. Anderson

Nancy Gould’s food service course is one of the most popular within the North Carolina State Prison system, but will her class be able to pull off a fine dinning experience for 60 volunteer patrons behind the gates of Orange Correctional Center? The five-month course is administered by Piedmont Community College and graduating inmates earn 16 credits toward a degree if they can stand the heat.

The Crosby Arboretum Project

Jordan Berger, Jennifer Mizenko & Alan Arrivee.

Dancers explore movement within nature at the Crosby Arboretum in Starkville, Miss.

Long Black Limo

James V. Bulian

This is a film about a limousine driver and what he does in his spare time.

Meanwhile in Memphis: The Sound Of A Revolution

Robert Allen Parker & Nan Hackman

A Memphis music documentary featuring maverick bluff city DIY musicians from 1978 to present day. The film documents the fact that Memphis music never stopped; even after Stax Records closed, Elvis died, and the music industry left town.

Mile High Pie

Melanie Lynn Addington and Daniel Lee Perea

A short documentary film on the mile-high pies at Ed & Kay’s Restaurant in Benton, Arkansas.

π2 (Pi Squared)

Melanie Lynn Addington and Daniel Lee Perea

Tate Moore, owner of Square Pizza in Oxford, Mississippi accidentally stumbles onto a new marketing concept while thwarting store theft with security cameras and social media.

Pusharatas

Meaghin Burke

A short documentary about pusharatas (Croatian donuts) and the women who make them at Christmas in Biloxi, Mississippi.

Other special screenings to be announced at a later date.

The Oxford Film Festival is a 501c3 non-profit festival and would not be possible without the help of our generous sponsors. Visit Oxford presents this year’s Oxford Film Festival with support from Donna Ruth Roberts, Yoknapatawpha Arts Council, Mississippi Film Office, Mississippi Development Authority, Mississippi Arts Commission and many more.

Most Popular

Recent Comments

scamasdscamith on News Watch Ole Miss
Frances Phillips on A Bigger, Better Student Union
Grace Hudditon on A Bigger, Better Student Union
Millie Johnston on A Bigger, Better Student Union
Binary options + Bitcoin = $ 1643 per week: https://8000-usd-per-day.blogspot.com.tr?b=46 on Beta Upsilon Chi: A Christian Brotherhood
Jay Mitchell on Reflections: The Square
Terry Wilcox SFCV USA RET on Oxford's Five Guys Announces Opening Date
Stephanie on Throwback Summer
organized religion is mans downfall on VP of Palmer Home Devotes Life to Finding Homes for Children
Paige Williams on Boyer: Best 10 Books of 2018
Keith mansel on Cleveland On Medgar Evans
Debbie Nader McManus on Cofield on Oxford — Lest We Forget
Bettye H. Galloway on Galloway: The Last of His Kind
Richard Burns on A William Faulkner Sighting
Bettye H. Galloway on Galloway: Faulkner's Small World
Bettye H Galloway on Galloway: Faulkner's Small World
Bettye H Galloway on Galloway: Faulkner's Small World
Bettye H. Galloway on Galloway: Faulkner's Small World
Ruby Begonia on Family Catching Rebel Fever
Greg Millar on The Hoka
Greg Millar on The Hoka
Greg Millar on The Hoka
Greg Millar on The Hoka
jeff the busy eater on Cooking With Kimme: Baked Brie
Travis Yarborough on Reflections: The Square
BAD TASTE IN MY MOUTH on Oxford is About to Receive a Sweet Treat
baby travel systems australia on Heaton: 8 Southern Ways to Heckle in SEC Baseball
Rajka Radenkovich on Eating Oxford: Restaurant Watch
Richard Burns on Reflections: The Square
Guillermo Perez Arguello on Mississippi Quote Of The Day
A Friend with a Heavy Heart on Remembering Dr. Stacy Davidson
Harold M. "Hal" Frost, Ph.D. on UM Physical Acoustics Research Center Turns 30
Educated Citizen on Buzzed Driving is Drunk Driving
Debbie Crenshaw on Trump’s Tough Road Ahead
Treadway Strickland on Wicker Looks Ahead to New Congress
Tony Ryals on parking
Heather Lee Hitchcock on ‘Pray for Oxford’ by Shane Brown
Heather Lee Hitchcock on ‘Pray for Oxford’ by Shane Brown
Dr Donald and Priscilla Powell on Deadly Plane Crash Leaves Eleven Children Behind
Dr Donald and Priscilla Powell on Deadly Plane Crash Leaves Eleven Children Behind
C. Scott Fischer on I Stand With Coach Hugh Freeze
Sylvia Williams on I Stand With Coach Hugh Freeze
Will Patterson on I Stand With Coach Hugh Freeze
Rick Henderson on I Stand With Coach Hugh Freeze
George L Price on I Stand With Coach Hugh Freeze
on
Morgan Shands on Cleveland: On Ed Reed
Richard McGraw on Cleveland: On Cissye Gallagher
Branan Southerland on Gameday RV Parking at HottyToddy.com
Tom and Randa Baddley on Vassallo: Ole Miss Alum Finds His Niche
26 years and continuously learning on Ole Miss Puts History In Context With Plaque
a Paterson on Beyond Barton v. Barnett
Phil Higginbotham on ‘Unpublished’ by Shane Brown
Bettina Willie@www.yahoo.com.102Martinez St.Batesville,Ms.38606 on Bomb Threat: South Panola High School Evacuated This Morning
Anita M Fellenz, (Emilly Hoffman's CA grandmother on Ole Miss Spirit Groups Rank High in National Finals
Marilyn Moore Hughes on Vassallo: Ole Miss Alum Finds His Niche
Jaqundacotten@gmail williams on HottyToddy Hometown: Hollandale, Mississippi
Finney moore on Can Ole Miss Grow Too Big?
diane faulkner cawlley on Oxford’s Olden Days: Miss Annie’s Yard
Phil Higginbotham on ‘November 24’ by Shane Brown
Maralyn Bullion on Neely-Dorsey: Hog Killing Time
Beth Carr on A Letter To Mom
Becky on A Letter To Mom
Marilyn Tinnnin on A Letter To Mom
Roger ulmer on UM Takes Down State Flag
Chris Pool on UM Takes Down State Flag
TampaRebel on UM Takes Down State Flag
david smith on UM Takes Down State Flag
Boyd Harris on UM Takes Down State Flag
Jim (Herc @ UM) on Cleveland: Fall Vacations
Robert Hollingsworth on Rebels on the Road: Memphis Eateries
David McCullough on Shepard Leaves Ole Miss Football
Gayle G. Henry on Meet Your 2015 Miss Ole Miss
Guillermo F. Perez-Argüello on Neely-Dorsey: Elvis Presley’s Big Homecoming
Jennifer Mooneyham on ESPN: Ole Miss No. 1 in Nation
Wes McIngvale on Ole Miss Defeats Alabama
BARRY MCCAMMON on Ole Miss Defeats Alabama
Laughing out Loud on ESPN: Ole Miss No. 1 in Nation
Dr.Bill Priester on Cleveland: On Bob Priester
A woman who has no WHITE PRIVILEGE on Oxford Removes Mississippi Flag from City Property
A woman who has no WHITE PRIVILEGE on Oxford Removes Mississippi Flag from City Property
paulette holmes langbecker on Cofield on Oxford – Rising Ole Miss Rookie
Ruth Shipp Yarbrough on Cofield on Oxford — Lest We Forget
Karllen Smith on ‘Rilee’ by Shane Brown
Jean Baker Pinion on ‘The Cool Pad’ by Shane Brown
Janet Hollingsworth (Cavanaugh) on John Cofield on Oxford: A Beacon
Proud Mississippi Voter on Gunn Calls for Change in Mississippi Flag
Deloris Brown-Thompson on Bebe’s Letters: A WWII Love Story
Sue Ellen Parker Stubbs on Bebe’s Letters: A WWII Love Story
Tim Heaton on Heaton: Who is Southern?
Tim Heaton on Heaton: Who is Southern?
Karen fowler on Heaton: Who is Southern?
Don't Go to Law School on Four Legal Rebels Rising in the Real World
bernadette on Feeding the Blues
bernadette on Feeding the Blues
Joanne and Mark Wilkinson on Ron Vernon: a Fellowship of Music
Mary Ellen (Dring) Gamble on Ron Vernon: a Fellowship of Music
Cyndy Carroll on Filming it Up in Mississippi
Dottie Dewberry on Top 10 Secret Southern Sayings
Brother Everett Childers on ‘The Shack’ by Shane Brown
Mark McElreath on ‘The Shack’ by Shane Brown
Bill Wilkes, UM '57, '58, '63 on A Letter from Chancellor Dan Jones
Sandra Caffey Neal on Mississippi Has Proud Irish Heritage
Teresa Enyeart, and Terry Enyeat on Death of Ole Miss Grad, U.S. Vet Stuns Rebel Nation
P. D. Fyke on Wells: Steelhead Run
Johnny Neumann on Freeze Staying with Rebels
Maralyn Bullion on On Cooking Southern: Chess Pie
Kaye Bryant on Henry: E. for Congress
charles Eichorn on Hotty Tamales, Gosh Almighty
Jack of All Trades on Roll Over Bear Bryant
w nadler on Roll Over Bear Bryant
Stacey Berryhill on Oxford Man Dies in Crash
John Appleton on Grovin' Gameday Memories
Charlotte Lamb on Grovin' Gameday Memories
Guillermo F. Perez-Argüello on Two True Mississippi Icons
Morgan Williamson on A College Education is a MUST
Morgan Williamson on A College Education is a MUST
Jeanette Berryhill Wells on HottyToddy Hometown: Senatobia, Mississippi
Tire of the same ole news on 3 "Must Eat" Breakfast Spots in Oxford
gonna be a rebelution on Walking Rebel Fans Back Off the Ledge
Nora Jaccaud on Rickshaws in Oxford
Martha Marshall on Educating the Delta — Or Not
Nita McVeigh on 'I'm So Oxford' Goes Viral
Guillermo F. Perez-Argüello on How a Visit to the Magnolia State Can Inspire You
Charlie Fowler Jr. on Prawns? In the Mississippi Delta?
Martha Marshall on A Salute to 37 Years of Sparky
Sylvia Hartness Williams on Oxford Approves Diversity Resolution
Jerry Greenfield on Wine Tip: Problem Corks
Cheryl Obrentz on I Won the Lottery! Now What?
Bnogas on Food for the Soul
Barbeque Memphis on History of Tennessee Barbecue
Josephine Bass on The Delta and the Civil War
Nicolas Morrison on The Walking Man
Pete Williams on Blog: MPACT’s Future
Laurie Triplette on On Cooking Southern: Fall Veggies
Harvey Faust on The Kream Kup of the Krop
StarReb on The Hoka
Scott Whodatty Keetereaux Keet on Hip Hop — Yo or No, What’s Your Call
Johnathan Doeman on Oxford Man Dies in Crash
Andy McWilliams on The Warden & The Chief
Kathryn McElroy on Think Like A Writer
Claire Duff Sullivan on Alert Dogs Give Diabetics Peace of Mind
Jesse Yancy on The Hoka
Jennifer Thompson Walker on Ole Miss, Gameday From The Eyes of a Freshman
HottyToddy.com