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On my FAFO Friday episode of The Clay Edwards Show, I dove into a head-scratching story about the Metrocenter Mall in Jackson, Mississippi, where country music legend Randy Travis and his wife Mary are planning to invest $5 million to transform the former Burlington Coat Factory into a Randy Travis Country Store and Travel Center. Broadcasting from Flora on 103.9 FM WYAB, I couldn’t hide my skepticism about the project’s chances in a high-crime area with demographics that don’t scream country music fans. I jokingly called it a “redneck Buc-ee’s” and predicted it might turn into a troubled gas station within three years, given the area’s rough reputation. Listeners chimed in on the Guns & Gear text line, echoing my doubts, with some pointing out Travis’s health challenges since his 2013 stroke, which left him with aphasia, raising questions about whether he’s being taken advantage of. I also noted the mall’s decline—once Mississippi’s largest when it opened in 1978, now a ghost town since its last store closed in 2022. Recent plans for a film studio there have been plagued by theft, and I questioned the logic of banking on interstate traffic without understanding Jackson’s realities. My callers, like Jason and Miss Lacey, agreed, giving the project a grim over-under of weeks before trouble hits, with one suggesting a mental health facility would be a better fit for the site.
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On my FAFO Friday episode of The Clay Edwards Show, I dove into a head-scratching story about the Metrocenter Mall in Jackson, Mississippi, where country music legend Randy Travis and his wife Mary are planning to invest $5 million to transform the former Burlington Coat Factory into a Randy Travis Country Store and Travel Center. Broadcasting from Flora on 103.9 FM WYAB, I couldn’t hide my skepticism about the project’s chances in a high-crime area with demographics that don’t scream country music fans. I jokingly called it a “redneck Buc-ee’s” and predicted it might turn into a troubled gas station within three years, given the area’s rough reputation. Listeners chimed in on the Guns & Gear text line, echoing my doubts, with some pointing out Travis’s health challenges since his 2013 stroke, which left him with aphasia, raising questions about whether he’s being taken advantage of. I also noted the mall’s decline—once Mississippi’s largest when it opened in 1978, now a ghost town since its last store closed in 2022. Recent plans for a film studio there have been plagued by theft, and I questioned the logic of banking on interstate traffic without understanding Jackson’s realities. My callers, like Jason and Miss Lacey, agreed, giving the project a grim over-under of weeks before trouble hits, with one suggesting a mental health facility would be a better fit for the site.
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