Laura Beth Davis and Tyler Benitone were at the 20<30 reception. (Credit: Jeffrey Goldberg)

I was one of the judges decades ago of Memphis Press-Scimitarโ€™s Teenager of the Year event. The late Hugh Frank Smith, Mary Allie Taylor, and I would pore over a yearโ€™s worth of Teenager of the Week recipients from the now defunct afternoon newspaper to come up with the winner. No small task.

During the award ceremony/luncheon, our editor, the late Milton Britton, referred to all the Teenagers of the Week assembled, as โ€œthe best and the brightest.โ€

I think of that each year when I look at the 20 young people who comprise Memphis Flyerโ€™s 20<30 Class of 2023. They were featured in the January 25th Flyer and also honored at a reception that night in the Central Station ballroom.

The headline on the story says it all: โ€œMeet the leaders who will be shaping our future.โ€

As Chris McCoy writes, โ€œEvery year, the Memphis Flyer asks our readers to tell us all about the outstanding young people who are doing their best to make the Bluff City a better place. This time, we had a record number of nominees, and narrowing it down to just 20 was more difficult than ever. Speaking to an immensely talented 20 never fails to fill us with hope …โ€

Oakley Weddle, 21, founder of Jubilant Communications, probably spoke for all the recipients when he says, โ€œI am completely honored to be a 20<30. Being born and raised in Memphis, I just really love my city.ย  Iโ€™m proud of its legacy and future, which I hope to be a part of both.โ€

The honor was โ€œparticularly special,โ€ Weddle says, because of the work he has done on a foundation he started in 2020 to honor his brother, Peyton Weddle, who was killed in a car accident in 2016. Recipients of the PEY it forward foundation are people who โ€œresemble the kind of person he was. A very kind person, very helpful to the homeless community of the city.โ€

His foundation raises money for scholarships to the University of Memphis. They prioritize โ€œpeople who are active in their city and canโ€™t afford higher education.โ€

The foundationโ€™s goal is to โ€œspread kindness to strangers and also on digital spaces.โ€

Their job as 20<30 recipients isnโ€™t over after the accolades are given, the shrimp and other appetizers are eaten, and the ballroom is empty. โ€œWhile this award is an incredible honor, I feel the pressure is on to live up to it,โ€ Weddle says. โ€œIt honors achievement, but itโ€™s also a prediction and a bet that these young people will be the future here in Memphis. And itโ€™s time to get to work.โ€

Michael Donahue began his career in 1975 at the now-defunct Memphis Press-Scimitar and moved to The Commercial Appeal in 1984, where he wrote about food and dining, music, and covered social events until...