Saturday Finale
Brought In 4,500
To See Concert,
Strongman
Contest
By
TOM YANCEY
Staff Writer
More moderate
temperatures, a cool breeze, a local country-rock band and a strongman contest combined to make
Saturday the best day for the Greene County Fair, with 4,500
attending.
Lanny Love, the fair's president, said overall revenue for the
fair was "off 3 percent" from last year, "which I consider good, with the economy the way it
is."
Treasurer James Thornton said total attendance for the week was
27,941, down about 7 percent from last year. He said fewer passes were given out this year and
workers had a better handle on controlling the gate. "That seems to get better every year," he
said.
Love said Friday's attendance was "almost a record," and helped
offset low attendance on the first three days.
"We're looking forward to
next year, which will be the 60th anniversary," Love said.
New
Barns Next Year
The fair has received an agriculture enhancement grant
from the Tennessee Department of Agriculture, Love said. The grant will be used to replace the
livestock barns, which he thinks were on the property when the fair started in
1949.
The new barns will be larger, with more space to move and display
animals, but about the same number of stalls.
Livestock competitions,
along with produce, canning and preserving, and cooking contests are the lifeblood of the fair, and
attracted particpants from a wide area throughout the week.
Winners were
on display in the air-conditioned expo building and elsewhere, and were still attracting visitors
late Saturday evening.
But many came to see "Bulls Gap," a high-energy
Southern Country-Rock band whose two leaders, Scott Arnold and Jerry Vincent, who went to
first-grade together at St. Clair Elementary and then high school at Bulls
Gap.
Those two, plus bass player Chuck Morrisett, have been entertaining
together since high school, and the current band has been together for about a year, Arnold
said.
"Bulls Gap" seemed to be well-known to many in the audience, who
clapped and at times sang along. A few got up and danced, too, and some wore "Bulls Gap"
T-shirts.
Although the show started in full daylight at 7 p.m., the
audience did not seem to mind. Vincent, the lead singer, has a voice that is always easy to listen
to and at times was impressive, especially late in the show.
The crowd
got into "Country Kind of Cowboy," sung by Vincent, but it also liked the way Arnold covered "Taking
Care of Business."
The current configuration is a very tight band, and
features four guitars: Arnold and Vincent, plus Matt Ward of Harlan, Ky., on lead and Morrisett, who
lives in Bulls Gap, on bass, plus Don Gaylord of Nashville on keyboards and Chip Johnson, the
youngest and another Bulls Gap native, on drums.
Several of the songs
were written by Arnold and Vincent, and drawn from their lives. "She's Walking Away" is a smooth,
striding ballad, and "Keep on Believing," which Vincent said will be "our next single," could become
a country anthem.
"Never give up, never give in, keep on loving like each
day could be the end" is a chorus that just about everybody needs to hear from time to time, and the
crowd loved it.
The band ranged from Amazing Grace to songs about
boy-girl stuff with equal aplomb. When Vincent brought his 9-year-old granddaughter, Hayley Willett,
on stage to help him sing "My Heart Can't Believe My Eyes," she handled it like a trooper, even
though she was later seen enjoying the bumper cars with her elementary school
friends.
When Vincent announced that the band will play on Labor Day at
its namesake town, a lot of people in the audience made mental notes to
attend.
The Greene County Fair is the kind of place where you can see a
big burly dad dancing with his preschool daughter slung over his shoulder, with both of them
laughing and relatives clapping.
A lot of babies were being strolled
through the grounds, to be admired, and a lot of pretty girls and handsome young men were trying
hard not to look too proud of their escorts.
Last Night Is Date
Night
Saturday night was date night, with plenty of young couples double
and triple and single-dating, and seeming to enjoy themselves. It was easy to feel old, watching
groups of high schoolers and middle schoolers swarm through the midway, jostling for
position.
Strongman Contest
The
strongman competition, sponsored by the U.S. Army and Mike's Dynabody, held Saturday evening at the
Jim Saulsbury Arena, attracted an enthusiastic crowd.
It featured stout
young men with muscles they used for a keg toss, 150-pound log press, a "Hummer-pull," and other
lifting events involving objects (including "Atlas stones" weighing up to 500 and 600
pounds.
Contestants accumulated points from all events, and first place
went to Danny Ramsey, of New Tazewell, followed by Mike Nease, of Mike's Dynabody. Jason Carter of
Greeneville was third, and Richard Neely of New Tazewell was fourth. Neely said several of the
contestants also participate in the Highland Games at Grandfather Mountain, N.C.
Talent Contest
Local banjo picker Daniel Norton, 14,
won the WIKQ Youth Talent Contest held Friday night on the main
stage.
Norton received $500 by winning against 12 other contestants who
came from as far away as Bluff City and Knoxville.
Their acts included
clogging, singing and a variety of musical instruments.
The contest was
open to youth ages 13-21.
Second-place winner was vocalist Nicole
Ambrose, of Knoxville, who received $300.
Third-place winner was vocalist
Laura Taliaferro, of Greeneville, who received $200.
All three winners
are eligible to compete in the regional youth talent contest at the Tennessee Valley Fair in
Knoxville.
Contestant Andrew McDonald from Greeneville won $210 in the
Seal The Deal contest, sponsored by WIKQ-WGRV and Heritage Community
Bank.
Contestant Dennis Arnold from Gary won
$450.
The event was hosted by Ronn Metcalfe, with a lot of help from high
school cheerleaders from local schools who imitated Wheel of Fortune's Vanna White. The cheerleaders
each held boxes that hid dollar amounts that contestants tried to use to reach, but not exceed, a
specified total.
Greeneville Sun
Winners
Saturday's winners at The Greeneville Sun booth at the Greene
County Fair were:
Pam Holt, Joe Light, Lynette Hipshire, Teresa
Terwilliger, Allen Britton, Jeremy Workman, Ashlan Hopson, Pauline Adams, Cameron Davis, Bobby
Gueraussio, Nicole Riddle, Autumn Smith, Lynn Harison, Darleen Johnson, Danny Champman, Janet Weems,
Charles Fann, Janice Jones, Linda Dorris, Dick Gunter, Jaclyn Ricker, Linda Williams, Kerry
Ottinger, Dan Vincent and Teresa Laws.
Friday's winners at The
Greeneville Sun booth at the Greene County Fair were:
Teresa Laws, Jamie
Bible, Sonny Brown, Ronnie McAmis, Carolyn Burgess, Kelly Coulston, Monica Shoemaker, Jannie
Pleasant, Nancy Barboza, Marlena Mcdonald, Brandy Styles, Anna Kesterson, Vickie Leonard, Kelly
McCurry, Michael Nance, Ralph Shatto, Daniel Reaves, Gary Cole and Carrie Thompson.