
The East Coast Media Conspiracy loves them some Cowtown. Now, all I ask is this: how long did they have to wait to get a guy to walk a horse past the Paris Coffee Shop? For those too lazy to click through, here the Cliff's Notes: If you visit Dallas, and don't go to Fort Worth, you're an idiot. Kimbell, Amon Carter, Modern, Worthington, Paris Coffee Shop, Billy Bob's, The End. See how much time I just saved you?
Friday, April 06, 2007
Feeling the Love from the NYT
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Labels: Fort Worth, media, newspapers, Paris Coffee Shop
GOOOO-ALLLLL!!!
Great news today: Proud parents Ernie and Rebecca welcomed Diego Ernesto Thursday night at 8:18 p.m.. Diego weighs 7 pounds, 7 ounces and is 21 inches. Mom and baby are resting while Dad is busy creating a training schedule for the next great midfielder for the U.S. National team. Ernie's got a great band called Rosedale that I'm betting you won't be able to see for a while because E's going to be on diaper duty.
Congratulations!
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Labels: Ernie Moran, Fort Worth, Rosedale
Think of It as Retro Weather

If you loved the Dust Bowl, you're in luck! Scientists say that Texas is headed toward Dust Bowl-like drought in the next 15 years. The best news: it's permanent. Sez the D(a)MN:
Texas almost certainly faces a future of perpetual drought as bad as the record dry years of the 1950s because of global warming, climate scientists said in a study published Thursday.
The trend toward a drier, hotter southwestern U.S., including all of Texas, probably has already begun and could become strikingly noticeable within about 15 years, according to a study led by Richard Seager of Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory.
Drought conditions are expected to resemble the Dust Bowl years of the 1930s and Texas' worst-ever drought of the 1950s, Dr. Seager said. Unlike those droughts, however, the new conditions won't be temporary, the study found. "This time, once it's in, it's in for good," Dr. Seager said.
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Labels: Dust Bowl, Fort Worth, global warming
Saturday Morning on Magnolia

We finished up at Paris Coffee Shop on Saturday morning and stumbled into a car show in the parking lot next door. I snapped a few photos and will post a few here. This one is a 1968 Ford Mustang fastback.
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Thursday, April 05, 2007
Renzo Piano Chosen for Kimbell Annex

The great Italian architect Renzo Piano will be designing the annex to the Kimbell Art Museum, the museum annouced yesterday.
It's a rough neighborhood for an architect. Sure, he's the 1998 Pritzker Prize winner, but the museum district already has a couple of those with 1979 winner Philip Johnson's Amon Carter Museum across the lawn and 1995 winner Tadao Ando's Modern Art Museum across the street. Not to mention that the annex will need to compliment Louis Kahn's design. Piano worked with Kahn from 1965 to 1970.
Sez the Startlegram:
But Piano will likely be seen as a safe choice for anyone who is worried about the new building detracting from or competing with the late Kahn's design. Piano worked in Kahn's Philadelphia offices in the late 1960s and was as close as anyone to Kahn's thinking and working methods. Since then, he has shown a special affinity for designing museums with great sensitivity to their location and special lighting needs.
"It's an awesome challenge, but an attractive one," Piano said in a prepared statement. "It is all the more satisfying as an undertaking given my association with Lou Kahn and my deep respect for his work."
Piano is well known for his museum designs: the Centre Pompidou in Paris, the Menil Collection in Houston, the Beyeler Foundation museum in Basel, Switzerland, a museum dedicated to Swiss painter Paul Klee in Bern, Switzerland, as well as Dallas' Nasher Sculpture Center and Atlanta's High Museum of Art.
I'm familiar with Piano's two other Texas works -- the Menil and the Nasher -- from personal experience, so one thing to expect from the Kimbell annex is exquisite quality of light. I'm excited to see the design and proud that Cowtown will bring the work of another world-class architect to the museum district.
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Labels: Amon Carter Museum, architecture, art, Fort Worth, Kimbell Art Museum, Renzo Piano, The Modern
Monsieur Gainsbourg Revisited

I wasn't aware of the Serge Gainsbourg tribute album, at least until now (thanks for the tip from Dreams of Horses).
If you aren't familiar with Gainsbourg's work, check out Couleur Cafe. He's got this kitschy mid-century cool thing down. Even though I don't understand French, it's quite entertaining.
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The Return of Max Fischer

Jason Schwartzman -- better known as Max Fischer in the greatest movie of all time, Rushmore has a new solo project called Coconut Records. Sez Blogs are for Dogs:
Schwartzman’s latest musical venture immediately recalls his previous percussion duties in Phantom Planet, crafting delicate pop melodies in his own unquely winsome way. In a sense, Schwartzman imbues his music with the same sensibility as his various onscreen personas, a melancholy mix of Max Fischer and Albert Markovski.
Follow the linky to get the rest and a free download of Coconut Records - West Coast.
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Labels: Blogs are for Dogs, Coconut Records, Jason Schwartzman, music, Wes Anderson
Check Out CultureFeast
I discovered a cool blog called Culture Feast today. I knew I would like it because it called out Dale Hansen for pretty much being Dale Hansen. OK, so maybe Dale ain't father of the year material, but he did get fired for throwing Clarice Tinsley in a swimming pool, and that's got to be worth some points, right?[Nope, that was Kevin McCarthy who threw Clarice in the pool. Guess that makes Dale pretty much irredeemable.]
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Labels: blogging, Clarice Tinsley, Dale Hansen, Dallas, media
A Little Schadenfreude
Back in my newspaper days, we would console ourselves after a really bad night by saying, "Well, it wasn't like the paper didn't go out." Well, evidently yesterday at the Dallas Morning News, the paper almost didn't go out.
Heh.
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Tuesday, April 03, 2007
Good Friday with the Hacienda Brothers

If I had known it was going to rain like that on Friday, I would have never gone out. And as I tromped across Sundance Square in a torrential rain, I thought, 'I must want to see the Hacienda Brothers really bad.'
By the time I got to the McDavid Theater to pick up my tickets, I ran into a friend and talked for a minute and I started to feel glad I made it out. We talked about the McDavid Theater, which I had never been to. "They're trying to be like the Caravan of Dreams," he said. "But it's not quite working."
On my way out the door, I was behind these really cool looking Mexican guys, including this one vato with a porkpie hat, Fu Manchu goatee and an untucked plaid shirt. They were goofing around talking to this one guy with glasses. They were funny and I smiled but didn't want to appear to be listening in.
I had dinner with my family at Uno's (not my choice) and by the time we were done it was really raining. So I went back to the garage to get the truck, picked up my girls, dropped them off at the theater and parked the car again. Not great planning, and by the time my travels were over, I was fairly drenched.
But I didn't really mind. The McDavid space is nice. It's small, only a room for a couple of hundred and you sit at table rather than stand. Unfortunately, all of this really kills the energy. There's nothing for the band to feed off of because everyone is spread out and no one is moving around. And it didn't help that the crowd was, ahem, a little geezerly. I still haven't figured out what that was about. It's not like this was Lawrence Welk. And it's not like this is the Caravan.
But even though half the Hacienda Brothers were suffering from the death cold that's going around and Chris Gaffney was hobbled by a bad ankle, they did right by the crowd. These guys are billed as the first Western soul band, but they are really a jazz combo with a country-blues addiction. Everyone gets to take a solo and make a variation on a theme.
They opened with "Midnight Dream" and they seemed to be finding their bearings. Then for their second song, they played "If Daddy Don't Sing Danny Boy" which led to the coolest part of the night. "It was really important for us to play this date in Fort Worth because although this song is about Barry McGuigan, the guy who won the fight is sitting on the front row." Turns out the Mexican guy in the glasses that I saw earlier was Little Stevie Cruz, the Fort Worth boxing legend.
The set built up steam from there. Dave Gonzalez was absolutely blistering and Dave Berzansky is easily the best steel guitar player I have ever seen and he reminded me very much of Speedy West.
At the intermission, I got to talk to Dale Daniel briefly, and although I hadn't seen the guy in nearly 20 years, he remembered me and we had a nice talk. My daughter was very impressed. "Gee, Dad," she said. "You know all kinds of famous people." Well, not really, but Chris Gaffney did sign her hat.
Thanks for a great show and a great evening, guys. Even if we didn't see Steve Ray.
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Labels: Barry McGuigan, boxing, Chris Gaffney, Dale Daniel, Fort Worth, Hacienda Brothers, McDavid Theater, music, Steve Cruz
Tea Bagging
Sam Machkovech at Big D little d calls out the DMN's Thor Christiansen for his recent Gypsy Tea Room column and his general suckitude. Funny Thor story: once when he was interviewing Liam Gallagher from Oasis, Liam asked him, "What kind of name is Thor? That's a stupid name." Not sure how Thor responded to that, but it made me like that prick Liam a little better.
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Labels: Big D little d, blogging, Dallas, Gypsy Tea Room, music, Sam Machkovech, Thor Christiansen
Billy Joe Shaver Caps a Guy
Billy Joe Shaver shoots a guy in Lorena. I always knew that town was bad news.
Sounds like a self-defense situation. Stupid guy should know better than this. Billy Joe once drove himself to the hospital in Temple when he was having a heart attack -- in Hillsboro. He's one tough bastard. In fact, I think the only thing that can stop Billy Joe Shaver is another Billy Joe Shaver. Or perhaps Dick Cheney. Or maybe Voltron.
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Labels: Billy Joe Shaver, Dick Cheney, music, Voltron
Sunday, April 01, 2007
Dominick Mastrangelo Photography

On my way to see The Hacienda Brothers on Friday night, I ran into an old friend, Dominick Mastrangelo, a local photographer. He's just launched his new Web site, which I encourage all of you to check out. I absolutely love his picture above -- he's quite a talented guy.
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Bernie Gets Hitched
Bernie Scheffler jumps the broom. Thanks to Pete for the tip. Best wishes to you and your wife, Bernie! And good luck on Election Day.
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Labels: Bernie Scheffler, bicycles, Cowtown Chronicles, Fort Worth
Friday, March 30, 2007
I Hate Atmos Energy
What we paid on our gas bill DOUBLED last year. But that's not enough for Atmos Energy. Instead of the recommended rate cut, looks like bills will actually be GOING UP AGAIN! Except for industrial users, who get a hefty cut. Welcome to Dick Cheney's America. Hey, those $800 and $900 hotel rooms, limousine rides, cases of expensive wine and meals at high-dollar restaurants don't pay for themselves!
More than $20 million in recommended savings for customers of Atmos Energy turned into a residential rate increase of $10 million because of action taken Thursday by the Texas Railroad Commission.
As a result, home-heating bills will go up by about 70 cents beginning in April, according to estimates.
The elected railroad commission also shifted much of the burden for paying gas bills onto residential customers and off the shoulders of big industrial users. That means that although home customers will pay more, industrial customers should see steep rate cuts.
The commission's decision Thursday marks the end of a long-running rate case. It also marks a departure from recommendations by the railroad commissioners' own hearing examiners, who reviewed the company's books and then recommended a $23 million rate cut.
A coalition of cities had called for rate cuts of $30 million. The company sought to increase them by about $60 million annually, or $4 on a typical monthly bill. ...
Discounting the fluctuating cost of natural gas, the changes mean that typical monthly residential bills will go up by about 4 percent from the same time last year, while industrial customers will see savings of 22 percent.
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Hacienda Brothers To-nite!

The Hacienda Brothers come rolling in to the McDavid Studio at Bass Hall tonight. I saw these guys with Dave Alvin last September and they are a hell of a lot of fun. For those playing Six Degrees of Steve, HB drummer Dale Daniel used to work at the old Fantasia Record in Arlington, where I bought many an LP back in the day. The only question remains: will Steve Ray be there?
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Labels: Dale Daniel, Dave Alvin, Fort Worth, Hacienda Brothers, music, Steve Ray
Thursday, March 29, 2007
Trash Can on Bluebonnet Circle
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Joe Ely Coming Back to Cowtown

He'll be at the Borders Books on Hulen at 5 p.m. on Saturday, April 14 promoting doing an instore performance and (I'm willing to bet) promoting his new book, Bonfire of Roadmaps. See you there. If not, you can find tour stop near you.
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Labels: books, Fort Worth, Joe Ely
Wednesday, March 28, 2007
Bill Paxton's Brush With History

Bill Paxton isn't just a famous actor from Fort Worth. Turns out he's got his own JFK assassination story (thanks to Robert Wilonsky at Unfair Park for the scoop.) But, hey, who doesn't have an assassination story.
Turns out the Paxton saw JFK as he left the Texas Hotel downtown on the morning of that fateful trip to Dallas. And, not only does he have a story, he's got the photo above to prove it (Photo courtesy of Roy Cooper Collection, KTVT-TV/Courtesy The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza). He's the kid sitting on the guy's shoulders.
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Labels: Bill Paxton, Fort Worth, John F. Kennedy assassination
Prairie Fest Rocking the East Side

If you hear the sound of granola crunching on the horizon, that just the Second Annual Fort Worth Prairie Fest bringing a little bit of green to Funkytown. The Fest is scheduled for Saturday, April 28 from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. at Tandy Hills Nature Area. Brave Combo, The Theater Fire, The Ackermans and some other bands will be playing. And there will be lots of earth-friendly products for you to consume. Huzzah!
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Labels: Brave Combo, Fort Worth, music, Prairie Fest, Theater Fire
Darkness on the Edge of Town

If you want to know what's going on in this picture, visit The Haven of Contentment, also known as the Moose Lodge. It's kind of like what the Andy Griffith Show would be like if directed by David Lynch. Courtesy of Swapatorium.
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Ignore This Man at Your Peril
My old friend Jeff Siegel once told me that you never need to spend more than 10 bucks to get a nice bottle of wine. I thought he was full of it. However, I came to find out through sweet experience that he was right. Damn him.
In today's Star-Telegram, Jeff turns takes his knowledge of wine on the road in a tour of North Texas wineries. Now, I've always been of the opinion that Texas wine is ... how to delicately put this ... oh, yeah, horse piss. But, says Jeff, not true. With a caveat:
Don't expect California-style or California-quality wine. North Texas doesn't have the climate or the soil to produce those kinds of wine, and many of the winemakers here are relative newcomers to the trade. Nor do most of them have Napa-level budgets. This doesn't mean it's not worth your while to check out what they have to offer, though. Each of our capsules includes the winery's most popular wine -- under the "house wine" category -- and in some cases, when we've found a wine we think is worth a special recommendation, we've added a "critic's pick" suggestion.
To make it simple, here are his critic's picks:
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It's Hard To Fathom This Darkness
There has been an unfortunate series of murder-suicides around Fort Worth in the past month, including one in Fairmount involving a couple from my church. Today, UCC pastor Tim Carson addresses this tragedy in his Wednesday e-mail to the congregation.
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Monday, March 26, 2007
Fighting Words
Have you ever been offended by a comment you read on the Internet? If not, do you know of this thing called the Internet?
Pretty much, if you read, you've been offended. Here an interesting column from Howard Kurtz on racist comments on the Washington Post Web site and how their paper is struggling with it:
Washingtonpost.com Executive Editor Jim Brady says he does not have the resources to screen the roughly 2,000 daily comments in advance. He has one staffer deleting offensive comments after the fact, and banning the authors from further feedback, based on complaints from readers. Brady plans to devote more staff to the process and to use new filtering technology. ...
Post reporter Darryl Fears is among those in the newsroom who believe the comments should be junked if offensive postings can't be filtered out in advance. "If you're an African American and you read about someone being called a porch monkey, that overrides any positive thing that you would read in the comments," he says. "You're starting to see some of the language you see on neo-Nazi sites, and that's not good for The Washington Post or for the subjects in those stories."
I bring this up because of a conversation I had several weeks ago with a reporter friend discussing this very thing. She had written an article about an education initiative at Carter-Riverside High School, a school that is 73 percent Hispanic. What she found when she looked online at the comments shocked her. Most of the comments didn't have anything to do with the specific education initiative. Most of the comments were the vile, racist comments that you'd expect from the people who believe that building a wall at the border will solve American immigration problems.
"If I am a young Hispanic kid," she asked. "Do I look at this newspaper and think it has anything for me? No I don't. I'm thinking that this is for white people." That's a pretty powerful argument. Newspapers need all the reader they can get.
Kurtz's solution: "What is spreading this Web pollution is the widespread practice of allowing posters to spew their venom anonymously. If people's full names were required -- even though some might resort to aliases -- it would go a long way toward cleaning up the neighborhood."
That's right on target. People are bound to say anything anonymously. If you make them back it up with even an e-mail address, that's something.
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Labels: Fort Worth, media, ramblings
The Scarlett Letter

There's not a lot of need for me to link to Vogue, but when it has to do with Scarlett Johansson's album of Tom Waits covers, well, then link away. And run a gratuitous cheesecake photo, too. Thanks to The Eyeball Kid for the tip.
But why Tom Waits? She sez:
Some fans may have been surprised by her first appearance on Saturday Night Live in 2006, when she sang in several skits and more than held her own. Not surprisingly, her voice is a velvety alto. Less predictably, her first CD is a collection of her favorite Tom Waits songs. I assumed her parents might have introduced her to his music—Waits has had a cult following since the seventies—but she said that musician friends in high school brought his music to her attention, and she remains an avid fan. She had originally planned to record an album of standards, then changed her mind after adding "I Never Talk to Strangers" to her repertoire. "I've always considered Tom Waits to be kind of a composer of modern standards; he has a lot of beautiful ballads and really heartbreaking songs."
RELATED TW NOTE: RIP Joel Brodsky. He took the cover photo for Tom Waits' Small Change and another photo of Jim Morrison that you might have seen.
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Labels: music, Scarlett Johansson, Tom Waits
SXSW Wrap-up
A pretty nice quick wrap-up of the annual Austin music-gasm, with a nice nod to some local acts. For those too lazy to link, here's the money graf:
Though you're unlikely to see them on MTV anytime soon (and thank god for that), a few local acts did North Texas proud, with the Theater Fire playing five shows in four days and Hogpig delivering a crushing set of Denton hard-core at a cheesy joint called Bourbon Rocks (test tube shooters, anyone?). Fort Worth's Bosque Brown fared best of all, though, playing perhaps their finest set ever and silencing a large crowd in the 18th-floor ballroom of the Hilton Garden, where Mara Lee Miller's ghostly country-folk tunes floated softly over the sparkling Austin skyline. Tellingly, in the sea of noise that was SXSW 2007, it was often these quiet moments that proved the most profound.
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Thank You, Stash Dauber
Mucho thanks for the kind words from The Stash Dauber, a fellow lover of Fort Worth and Stooges fan numero uno.
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Labels: blogging, Fort Worth, Stash Dauber, Stooges
Bonfire of Roadmaps

A nice read from Malcolm Mayhew on Joe Ely. Joe has two new albums and a book coming out, as well as an exhibit of drawings at the University of Texas HRC that ends on April 2. I guess I have something to do after I attend the Spring Football Game on Saturday.
Above is one of my favorite Joe Ely pics -- him with the Clash in Lubbock in 1980. Photo by my old S-T colleague Milton Adams.
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Labels: Clash, Joe Ely, Malcolm Mayhew, music
Benbrook Soldier Killed in Iraq
Lance C. Springer II was home just two weeks ago. The Western Hills High School graduate liked to play Santa Claus with the Iraqi kids and gave out candy, crayons and stuffed animals.
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Tuesday, March 20, 2007
Herding Cats
Found this on Stash Dauber. It makes me laugh.
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Labels: movies
Lest We Forget
A great post by Pete at Cowtown Chronicles on yet another local soldier killed in Iraq, Spc. Marieo Guerrero. His mom is a waitress at Ol' South Pancake House. Next time you're there, drop a buck or two in the till to help her out.
RELATED: Bob Ray Sanders on the local cost of four years of war -- only five other U.S. cities have lost more soldiers in Iraq than Fort Worth. A closer look at local Iraq casualties.
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Bluebonnet Circle Park To Get A Facelift
I'm trying to be more involved in the community, and I'm failing miserably. For instance, I planned to attend this community meeting on the Bluebonnet Circle Park. And I whiffed it. The city was presenting the proposed designs. Every design presented had the standard needed elements/criteria within (ex: shade, benches, lighting, paths, etc.). The difference between the designs was the overall feel and style portrayed. See what you think.
Concepts 1a and 1b honor the traditional, formal style of the park. It restores and updates the historical nature of the park and pays tribute to the original designers, Hare & Hare. 

Concept 2 breaks from the traditional lines of the park and takes on a more free form style. The park flows back and forth with grade changes and open space.
Concept 3 concentrates on massing of vegetative styles; trees, grasses, open lawn. The massings break the parks uniformity slightly for interest.
Which do I prefer? Number 2, I guess. I like the asymetrical aspect to the design. But honestly, I'd probably be OK with any of them.
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Labels: architecture, Bluebonnet Circle Park, Fort Worth
Dust in the Wind

I want to tell you a story about this house. It's not true -- I have a vivid imagination. But here it is.
It's a bit much, isn't it? The guy who designed made a bundle in sanitation, not in a Tony Soprano kind of way, but on the up and up, as far as I know. Then he took his bundle and built this Beverly Hillbillies looking thing. The dogs have their own bedroom. Seven chimneys. Lots of class, in the Tony Soprano sense.
But this story isn't really about the house as it is my friend, let's call him Phil. It's not his real name, and this story isn't true, remember? In fact, it probably didn't happen.
Anyway, Phil was a great guy. His wife, Leslie (not her real name), worked with my wife (or not). Anyway, Phil and I became friends. He wanted to come to work at this dot-com I was at (or not) back in the late 1990s. He'd just finished his MBA, and was looking for something new and I tried to hook him up. We had lunch and some great talks. Really great guy. He restored a Porsche 356 by hand. He was very mechanical that way.
So Phil was fascinated with this house. He lived close by, so he walked down every day while it was under construction. He was there so much that the crew actually thought he was the architect. So he'd just bop on down there with a clipboard and he had his run of the place. He wanted to know how everything worked. He LOVED this place.
Well, Phil didn't get the job at the dot-com, which turned out to be a great thing when the whole thing went in the tank. I found a new job, Phil and I had lunch a couple of more times, then we just sort of lost touch.
Anyway, Leslie called my wife one day and said Phil dropped dead of a heart attack while he was on a business trip. He was only 50 and it was completely unexpected. Leslie, needless to say, was devastated. It rained torrentially at Phil's funeral. I ruined a pair of shoes.
Leslie was kind of lost for a while. My wife and I would see her from time to time, have a few drinks, tell a few jokes, just make sure she was feeling OK. She did as well as she could under the circumstances.
One day she told us this story. Or maybe she didn't, because this isn't a true story. It seems Phil was cremated and Leslie didn't know what to do with Phil's ashes.
You see where I'm going with this, don't you?
So Leslie had a couple too many martinis with some other friends of ours (NOT me or my wife and NOT anyone I know) one night and decided she knew where Phil's ashes needed to go: on the lawn of this house. So Leslie had her friend drive her down to the house, drop her off and circle the block. I don't know how she got over the fence, but she entered the grounds and dumps Phil's ashes ALL OVER THE FRONT YARD. Then she ran like hell. You know you have a good friend when they'll act as a getaway driver.
So if your ever driving down Cheek-Sparger Road in Colleyville and pass by this house, say hi to Phil. Just remember that's not his real name. And this story is absolutely, positively not true. But it'd be a hell of a story if it was.
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Labels: Colleyville, obituaries, ramblings
Thursday, March 01, 2007
Low Country Audio at Tipitina's

If you don't know about the Low Country Audio yet, take time to check out their Webcast tonight from the legendary New Orleans club Tipitina's. Their set will be web cast LIVE from 9:30 to 11:15 Central Time. I had a chance to check these guys out at the Wreck Room a couple of weeks back and they are powerful good, like a more bluesy version of Wilco.
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Labels: Low Country Audio, music, New Orleans, Wreck Room
Friday, February 23, 2007
It Ain't About the West Side
Last call for Cowtown? Not so fast, sez Bud Kennedy in a Thursday column:
In the first place, any city with a daily cattle drive, a hall of fame for cowgirls and a Top 20 college football team named for a lizard is not in imminent danger of falling off the personality meter.
In the second place, the west side has never been what made Fort Worth funky.
If you want personality, go look on the south side. Look on West Magnolia Avenue or Blue Bonnet Circle, or over in Riverside or in one of the great north side restaurants on North Main Street.
Most of Fort Worth still has the same old spirit. Meanwhile, the west side has some very lucrative real estate deals.
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Labels: architecture, Bud Kennedy, Fort Worth
Thursday, February 22, 2007
Bernie Scheffler Hearts FW

Bernie Scheffler, the owner of Panther City Bicycles, is running for Fort Worth City Council in District 9. Other than having a cool bike shop, what do I like about Bernie? Let me count the ways:
You can check out Bernie's blog to see how the campaign is going.
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Labels: Bernie Scheffler, bicycles, Fort Worth, politics
Bob Ray Sanders on Calvin Littlejohn
Bob Ray Sanders reminded us of an interesting, neglected piece of local history in his column yesterday.
Bob Ray Sanders wrote a fine remembrance of the late local photographer Calvin Littlejohn, who chronicled African-American life in Fort Worth from the 1930s to the 1990s. Littlejohn, who died in 1993, “captured much of the social, religious, educational and family life of African-Americans in Tarrant County. In addition to his studio portrait work, he had a contract with most of the black schools in town to record their activities, and he was always on hand for celebrity concerts, debutante balls, weddings, church dedications and, of course, funerals.” Check out the column and gallery of Littlejohn’s work on the Startlegram’s Web site. For a more extensive look at Littlejohn’s work, visit his online archive at the University of Texas Center for American History.
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Tuesday, February 20, 2007
More Thoughts on "Last Call"

Will the development along the 7th Street corridor chip away at those things that many of us love about Fort Worth? That's the question the Startlegram asked on Sunday. Some folks seemed to think the article was a little off the mark, a little bit chicken little.
I disagree. I think the article asks an important question.
Fort Worth is a big city that still functions on a human scale. It’s much more egalitarian than Dallas – I go to the grocery store and see Jim Wright, I go to a restaurant and see Ed Bass or Van Cliburn. I spend a lot of time in Dallas, and you just don’t see the movers and the shakers out and about. Why? Because they aren’t going to the same places you are. Everything is much more stratified.
I like going to places like Fred’s where the yuppies and the freaks and the regular people can all get together and have a burger and cold one. That’s what I worry about Fort Worth losing. I’m not one of those people who thinks new equals bad. I think Fort Worth needs this. But I am a little skeptical because I know what happens when good intentions collide with the profit motive.
Look at the development that’s happened in Dallas over the past 20 years: is there any “there” there anymore? There are lots of new, shiny places, but a lot of the development has been at the expense of the buildings and neighborhoods that make Dallas authentic. Is there anything left of State-Thomas in the Uptown neighborhood? Is the new Knox-Henderson an improvement over the old one? Will there be anything left of turn of the (last) century Deep Ellum after the neighborhood gets yet another makeover?
Maybe I’m looking at it the wrong way. I like a little grit. As Tom Waits once said about his beatnik poem “Ninth and Hennepin” about life on the other side of the tracks in America, when you ask someone about Ninth and Hennepin now, they say, “Oh, yeah, my wife bought some sandals there.” Like Tom, I’m not sure this is a good thing.
Does 7th Street need a facelift? Yes. Is it going to happen? Yes. Will it be done thoughtfully and without sacrificing the things that make the city authentic? That remains to be seen. I’m glad people are talking about it. But will it matter?
Photo by Tim Cummins
For another take on this: See Kevin's blog FortWorthology.
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Support Our Troops

Sgt. Bryan Anderson is sort of the rock star of disabled Iraq war vets. One of the war's five triple amputees, he displays a sense of humor, determination and gratitude for being alive that we all could learn from. And in a weird way, he's been luckier than most. "Amputees are the first to receive celebrity visitors, job offers and extravagant trips, but Bryan is in a league of his own," the Washington Post writes. "Johnny Depp's people want to hook up in London or Paris. The actor Gary Sinise, who played an angry Vietnam amputee in "Forrest Gump," sends his regards. And Esquire magazine is setting up a photo shoot."
But how do most disabled Iraq war veterans fare according to the same WaPo article? Not so great. We talk a good game about supporting our troops, but we don't do so well with the followthrough.
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Monday, February 19, 2007
A Wonderful Life with a Mysterious Hole of Loneliness in the Middle
Sometimes you'll stumble across something you've forgotten about and a lot of things kind of fall in to place. I was surfing the Times and ran into this article on siblings of autistic children and it reminded me of so may things that I have not wanted to think about:
It wasn’t until the 1980s that many people actually began to analyze sibling relationships, and relationships between disabled and typically developing siblings in particular. With the drive toward deinstitutionalization, more kids with disabilities stayed home, and researchers started investigating what influence that really had on brothers and sisters. At first, they sought to test for the expected negative impacts, interviewing parents and their typically developing children to measure those children’s levels of depression and behavior problems. For the most part, those studies failed to uncover the sorts of difficulties that had been hypothesized. Researchers concluded that although growing up with a developmentally disabled sibling may be challenging, it doesn’t cause any sort of pathology.
Subsequent research suggested that when one child has a disability, siblings may in fact benefit. After all, they receive what amounts to an intensive training in tolerance and empathy. In various studies, parents in such families have characterized their typically developing kids as more caring and mature than average, while college-age siblings have described growing up with someone with a disability in favorable terms. Children with a disabled sister or brother have reported more positive interactions and less conflict with their sibling than kids whose siblings aren’t disabled, though “less conflict” cuts both ways, since sibling fights aren’t necessarily bad. In conversation, researchers will refer to “supersiblings” — children who are especially sensitive and responsible as a result of growing up with someone with a disability. But such children haven’t been studied extensively, and it now seems too simplistic to categorize the experience of having a sibling with a disability as strictly positive or negative. The supersibling notion may have provided a useful corrective to earlier views, says Tamar Heller, head of the department on disability and human development at the University of Illinois-Chicago, but researchers have moved on to address more practical questions: Are support groups useful? How can families best plan for the future? “We’re just starting to have some research that’s really looking at what are the variables that make things better for families,” Heller says.
I think that having an autistic brother has made me more empathetic person. I think that's why I tend to vote Democratic -- I know some people need more help than others and I think the government needs to help keep people from falling between the cracks. I also think I tended toward being a supersibling. I wanted to do well, succeed and not be a problem for my parents. Basically, I wanted to be invisible.
I always knew that someday I would need to take care of my brother. Maybe this is because my parents kept telling me, "When we're gone, you'll need to take care of your brother." But of course, one of the variables in all this is the fact that my mother is batshit crazy and spent a lot of time reminding me how I was reliable and I couldn't be counted on at all. A lot of this was the result of me trying to have a real life -- college, work, friends and now a family of my own.
I really felt for the little girl in the article, Terah. I've been in that place. A lot of times, the needs of your disabled siblings don't leave a lot of room for your needs. At least in my case, I tried to compensate for all this by making my own life. And I think I succeeded. I am blessed with a wife who is far more understanding of me than I deserve, a daughter who is the most delightful child I have ever known, and more wonderful friends than a person can reasonably expect to have in one lifetime.
So where does that leave me at 37 years old?
I have a wonderful life with a mysterious hole of loneliness in the middle that I somehow can never quite fill up. My brother, thankfully, has an alright life of his own. He works at the same job he's had for years, he has his own apartment, he goes to church, he's able to make his own way in the world. He has a hard time making friends and dating is tough. He'd like to be married and have children, but I can't see that really happening. He's doing better than anyone ever thought he would. But we don't talk that much, maybe a phone call every now and then. Conversation with him isn't easy--subtlety and nuance are beyond him so we don't bare our souls too much. It's sports, weather and vacation plans. My father's gone and I don't speak to my mother at all so there's not much left. Unfortunately, I don't really feel like I have much family at all. My wife and my daughter are the only family I have.
How will my brother get along in the world? OK, I guess. My parents planned well to take care of him financially, so he should be OK. If he needs me, I'm here to help. But otherwise our lives are apart.
Sometimes I wonder what my life would be like I my brother were quote-normal-unquote. But I also wonder what my life would be like if my dad wasn't dead or my mom wasn't so hateful. It's sort of a fool's errand. Anyone can play what-if and imagine their life would somehow be better. But you can't do that. Your life is what you make of it. I've made my own life. That's all there is and that will have to be enough.
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S-T Odds and Ends
Catching up on a pretty readable weekend in the Startlegram.
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Labels: architecture, Fort Worth, Fred's, HPV, music, politics, Wreck Room
Wednesday, February 14, 2007
The Battlefield Between The Head and The Heart
When Tim Carson took over at University Christian Church, I have to say I was disappointed – greatly disappointed. Replacing the beloved Scott Colglazier in the pulpit wouldn’t be easy for anyone. Scott’s sermons were lyrical and poetic and his words touched my heart by helping me know the unknowable and embrace the mystery of God. Tim sermons left me cold more often than not.
I really miss Scott on Wednesdays when he used to send his mid-week e-mails. They were concise and poetic. Tim’s are a little more rambling. However, today Tim had some interesting thoughts on Valentine’s Day, beginning with the nutty astronaut Lisa Nowak and segueing into the spiritual journey and where God lives in everyone, somewhere between reason and emotion.
Here’s the money section:
In Carson McCullers's first novel, The Heart is a Lonely Hunter (1940), she took her readers to the depths of where the unbridled heart might lead, a place that’s not all roses. The deep seat of longing includes depravity as well as beauty. The inner places are often just as lonely as comforting. And her characters bear out a difficult truth: people left to emotion alone are capable of the best and the worst at the same time.
In fact, the Christian tradition has said a lot about this through the centuries. But the answers are not framed in the same kinds of ways that are popularized today: “The struggle of life takes place on a battlefield somewhere between head and heart.” No, the wisdom of the tradition goes way past this.
In the same way that the spiritual journey cannot be content with self-knowledge alone, but rather by transcending the self, so the train station of our hearts can never be seen as our final destination. In fact, the Abbas and Ammas of the Christian tradition have insisted that the answer to God lies beneath both rationality and emotion. These are upper layers of consciousness and the ultimate destination is understood to lie beneath or above these.
This is why, for instance, John of the Cross and Teresa of Avilla both insist that emotion is only an ante-chamber through which one passes to a deeper spiritual apprehension. One is not to stay there or trust it too much precisely because it is ephemeral. They also know that thinking something about God is not the same as being in communion with God. The answer is neither head nor heart, but beneath both. This is why our prayer or worship or spiritual lives cannot be limited or directed by the temporary stirrings of the heart. What matters most is that which lies beneath both our thinking and feeling. My decision to pray or worship or go on a spiritual retreat or to act lovingly should never be limited by my temporary inclination to either want to do it or to avoid it.
Finding the place where God lives in my own life is a difficult and painful thing. I’m a very feeling person with the empathy and compassion I feel for people almost a crushing thing. For me the inner places are as much lonely as they are comforting. Some days I can feel that connection to God, but other days, most days, it’s all too much.
The rational part of my mind wonders if God’s even there are all. Look around the world today and it’s easy to feel a little existential. What’s the point of existence except right now, and we’re doing a pretty good job of screwing that one up, too.
Achieving that transcendent state is harder and harder for me. I think about God a lot, but we don’t talk so much anymore. “The answer is neither head nor heart, but beneath both. This is why our prayer or worship or spiritual lives cannot be limited or directed by the temporary stirrings of the heart.”
Let me think on that one.
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A Perch Besmirched
Will the real sniper’s perch from the Texas School Book Depository please stand up? It seems the current sniper's perch being sold on eBay may not be the real one. Something to think about before parting with $3 million.
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Tuesday, February 13, 2007
Am I An AlternaDad?
Am I an an alternadad? Preliminary testing indicates maybe not. However, I’m still anxious.
Consider the evidence. I have worked to cultivate my daughter’s taste in:
I have bought my daughter a Waterloo Records t-shirt. We watched Bottle Rocket together so she can begin to have an appreciation of Wes Anderson movies. And, of course, I have “nurtured” her love of Texas Longhorns football has been described as “brainwashing.” While I think it doesn’t reach Manchurian Candidate levels, she knows beyond a doubt, that Vince Young is the greatest football player ever and OU does, indeed, suck.
So, what does this say about me?
The anger surrounding alternadad and hipster parenting derives from the idea that these new parents don't want to "grow up" and act like parents.
Um, guilty. But I've always thought that growing up is overrated anyway.
Instead, they give their kids fauxhawks and inculcate them with a precious taste in music and "film." I agree that this can be irritating, but find me the set of parents who haven't, consciously or not, indoctrinated their kids into a little family cult. And who's more annoying: the 3-year-old who knows Mandarin or the one who loves Devo?
I've always though an appreciation of 80s music is a greater priority than a second language. Guess that let's me off the hook. I think I’ll go pick up a Wilco t-shirt for my daughter to celebrate.
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Labels: Dad stuff, football, Godzilla, Longhorns, movies, music, Ramones, Speed Racer, Vince Young, Wes Anderson, Wilco
Theater Fire at The Grenada
Above is a cool video shot by justinlloyd2 at the Theater Fire’s gig last week at the Grenada. The Theater Fire plays this Saturday at the Chat Room Pub down on Magnolia. See you there.
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Telling Stories

Jessica Peters is a 27-year-old single mom from Hurst who makes her living as a data entry clerk for an oil and gas company. But in her spare time she’s making a documentary about the late great Dallas singer-songwriter Elliott Smith (above) -- and she’s close to finishing. The project is titled Strange Butterflies and there’s a cool story about her efforts on the Big D Little d blog.
“Peters' goal is to tell Smith's story through the people he impacted in the cities he lived; to that end, she put out a call for musicians from Smith's various home cities--Portland, NYC, Dallas and LA--to record Elliott Smith covers that would fit each city's footage,” writes Sam Machkovech on Big D Little d. Fort Worth’s own The Theater Fire has put together a cut for the project, “Say Yes” from Smith’s Either/Or. You can visit the Strange Butterflies MySpace page and find out more or make a contribution if you are so inclined.
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Slick Rick: Show Him The Money
"If Rick Perry is for something, and there's a lot of money involved, it's a cinch that one (or more) of Perry's pals is involved up to his neck," writes Paul Burka on his Texas Monthly blog. True dat. As he goes on to quote from the Houston Chronicle:
Former U.S. Sen. Phil Gramm, a friend of Perry's, is handling discussions for the proposed lottery sale, a spokesman for Gramm's company acknowledged.
Gramm is vice chairman of UBS Investment Bank, which has been advising the governor on the proposed privatization of the state lottery. Gramm was a federally registered lobbyist for UBS last year.
Ray Sullivan, a lobbyist registered with the investment firm in Texas, worked as a spokesman for Perry several years ago. Sullivan is now in business with Michael Toomey, Perry's former chief of staff.
Toomey said he does not represent clients with lottery-related interests, and he added that Sullivan does not work on lottery-related issues for UBS.
And it just gets better. Seems that Perry's own son is working for UBS too, the DMN reports. "You have to give Perry credit," Burka writes. "Nothing embarrasses him."
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I Need To Get One of These

A cool Toadies poster from one of the upcoming reunion shows.
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Could Godzilla Really Exist?

A surprising amount of serious scientific thought has gone into the biology of my favorite movie monster, Godzilla. “Godzilla is meant to be something like 100 m tall and between 20,000 and 60,000 tons in weight (his size fluctuates in the various films). Of course lots of people who like doing sums and talking about cubes and so on have used the mathematics of scaling to show why - duh - Godzilla couldn't really walk, stand, or even exist,” writes Darren Naish on the Tetrapod Zoology blog. But it gets better from here:
How does Godzilla generate radioactivity? Apparently its stomach has mutated into a new organ: the plasma gland. Radioactive particles rise from here to be expelled via the mouth during combat, and excess radioactivity is also passed into the dorsal scutes at the same time 'not unlike the overflow guard in your ordinary bathtub', apparently (according to here: this is where the adjacent image comes from). Thanks to its plasma gland, Godzilla continually generates new radioactivity as a source of power, discharging the excess via the scutes and a duct leading to the mouth. This also means that Godzilla doesn't need to eat, and that must be a good thing when you weigh over 24,000 tons. There are other speculations on Godzilla's biology, including on cell structure, and on the mysterious substance known as Regenerator G-1 and allowing him unparalleled regenerative abilities.
Plasma gland. That’s what I’m talking about!
But, a more disturbing piece from this blog is Giant Vampire Bats: Bane of the Pleistocene Megafauna.” Yipes! El Chupacabra!
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Romo Rocks Out
Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo sings Journey's "Don't Stop Believin'" with Mr. Belding from Saved by the Bell and the Heavy Metal comedy act Metal Skool. Yes, really. Thanks, Unfair Park.
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Monday, February 12, 2007
Old 97s Notes

First, Murry’s a dad. Second, Calvin, my friend Russ’ dog, almost bit off the man parts of one Philip Peeples (left), Old 97s drummer. Seems Philip showed up early for a party at Russ’ and when little Calvin decided on an extra friendly greeting. Bad dog!
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What's The Worst That Could Happen?

A great read from Slate on Kevin Durant’s NBA future and how many ways there are for NBA teams get it wrong with players whose talent transcends one position.
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Two Design Greats Check Out

A couple of interesting obits today:
Edmund C. Arnold (pictured above), a journalist who in the 1950s revolutionized the layout of the American newspaper, died on Feb. 2. Sez the NYT:
When Mr. Arnold took his first fresh look at newspapers, many had long rejected the vigorous graphic displays common in the turn-of-the-century papers. He believed that the prevalent designs, which often featured monotonous narrow vertical columns of type and large horizontal headlines, had been foisted on papers largely because trained typographers and designers were not usually involved in the layout decisions, which were made by editors working directly with printers and compositors. He pushed publishers to give designers and typographers more influence, to move design out of the typesetting room and onto the drawing board. He also developed ideas like horizontal (and modular) layouts and encouraged the use of varied graphic elements to draw the reader’s eyes.
Thanks, mon frer. I have a career thanks to you.
Also, the great Hans Wegner (pictured below), the great Mid-Century furniture designer, went to the big workshop in the sky on Jan. 26.
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East Dallas Showdown
Kind of a funny little pissing match between the Observer’s Jim Schutze and the DMN’s Rod Dreher over gentrification in the old East Dallas.
Personally, I think Schutze is the best thing in Dallas journalism – an attack dog that goes after the sacred cows in Dallas government and isn’t afraid to say the emperor has no clothes. Dreher, on the other hand, is a self-described “crunchy conservative” – I mean, what the fuck is that anyway? That's a term that makes about as much sense as “compassionate conservative” or “extraordinary rendition.” Dreher loves pillorying Schutze as some knee-jerk liberal hippie wacko who stands again anything new because it’s not “cool.” Sez Dreher:
Sneer at yuppie gentrifiers if you like, but come on, was it better when these beautiful old Craftsman bungalows were falling down, and anybody who could afford to leave was lighting out for the suburbs because of the crime and disorder?
But is that really what Schutze is saying? Is he really pissed off because he hates the thought of people renovating crack houses and turning them into a proper place to live?
What kills everything, bleaches away the soul of the city and sends the children away behind pied pipers, is sterility. And Dallas has a huge sterility problem. Scrubby-scrubby-scrubby!
Dreher quotes from a column I wrote a long time ago as saying the city needs a solid middle class. I still believe that. His point seems to be that I have contradicted myself. I say consistency is the mind of small hobgoblins.
About this much I have never strayed: What we do not need is the kind of cleanliness, neatness, safety and security that reproduce the vibe of the gated communities to the north of us.
Dreher’s pretty proud of himself for being a gentrifying yuppie (and I really, REALLY, don't mean anything pejorative by that) who is bringing a neighborhood back from the dead, to which I say good on ya. Dallas and Fort Worth need more of this. Gentrifying yuppies aren’t necessarily a bad thing. We need more people not giving up on urban America. Except when they buy two 1,500 sf houses, tear them down and build a 10,000 sf Tuscan villa monstrosity. Or worse, buying a whole block for a gated enclave that is more Plano than East Dallas. That’s sort of an anti-neighborhood thing to do – a big middle-finger to all the neighbors. That is what they are fighting against in Little Forest Hills and other neighborhoods around Dallas and Fort Worth.
I love Mid-Century Architecture. I love the Ranch House. Drive down Preston Road between Forest and Royal in Dallas you see 2000sf beautiful ranches being bulldozed to put up 10,000sf faux chateaus. I look at those and I feel like the crying Indian in the Keep America beautiful commercial. But I know no one will cry for people who sell their houses for $400,000 to tear down. However, it is a symptom of a problem: Dallas has no problem razing its architectural heritage (like, um, here) in the name of what's new and now, and quite frankly, antiseptic. Scrubby scrub.
But why jump all over Schutze's ass for pointing out that some of us don't want to live in Disneyland? Why wage another "culture war" battle over this? Fact: Dallas has a sterility problem. Deal with it.
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Thursday, February 08, 2007
Gov. Goodhair and HPV
Did Slick Rick Perry create a constitutional crisis with his executive order on HPV? Texas Monthly's Paul Burka thinks so."If a governor can legally do what Perry is attempting--establish a program that spends money--the balance of power between the executive and legislative branches will be forever altered."
And you thought he just wanted to give a nice little kickback to Merck (sixth item).
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More on the W Library
The Observer's Jim Schutze really nailed a forgotten (by me at least) aspect of the W Library flap -- Presidential Order 13233:
The first, most difficult piece of this is Presidential Order 13233, which effectively reverses the presumption underlying the 1978 Presidential Records Act of a basic public right of access. In asserting a contrary right of permanent privilege, George W. Bush pointedly expanded the reach of this new privilege to include the entire Bush dynasty—his father's papers not only as president, for example, but as vice president.
It's an outrageous reach. Scholars and archivists around the country are beginning to suggest that SMU makes a whore of itself if it accepts the presidential center without first insisting that 13233 be vacated.
Imagine future scholars trying to write the history of Iraq War and not even being able to have unfettered access to the President's papers? For a look at the right way to do it, look at the LBJ Library in Austin. Would Robert Caro have been able to produce his work without the type of access he was allowed to Johnson's archive? Now try to imagine a scholar who may have a less than deferential approach to W's legacy trying to access the archive of this current adminsitration? Keep moving, buster. Nothing to see here.
Still, I'm an optimist. This administration prefers to work in the shadows. They believe they can avoid unwanted scrutiny forever. History judges these men cruelly, and undoubtedly will again.
Gone But Not Forgotten
Jeff Liles wrote a moving and accurate obituary for Bill's Records. The bottom line: in the old days before the Interweb and the mainstreaming of alternative music, you had to work your ass off to find something different. Bill's made that easier for lots of us. Thanks, Bill.
Also, there was this cool story about Stanley Marcus:
These days, tears come to Bill Wisener’s eyes rather easily. He hopes that people like Jerry Haynes and Trini Lopez – regular customers, no kidding — will find him in the new location. He misses folks like former Longhorn Ballroom and Yellow Belly Drag Strip owner O.L. Nelms, former airline exec Clyde Skeen, legendary architect Albert Frey and his dear friend Stanley Marcus.
Before Marcus passed away, he called Bill one afternoon and asked him to come to his home the next morning. Stanley Marcus then gave him his entire lifetime collection of old 78 rpm records. Bill gets emotional when he thinks of the gesture.
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Friday, February 02, 2007
W Goes To College. Or Not
Slate has an interesting overview on the George W. Bush Presidential Library flap at SMU. One thing that I think is lost in the article is the real issue: the think tank. This is where most of the opposition comes from -- why should a denomination that takes strong stands on social justice issues like, well, just take a look here -- why should this denomination have its flagship university affiliated with a think tank that will support positions in direct opposition to the tenets of the church?
Tom Waits, Live from Orphans Tour

Spinner.com has a whole boatload of live Tom Waits songs from last year's Orphans Tour here and here. One of my favorite Waits song from the tour was "Falling Down". Enjoy!
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More on Molly
Mi amigo Mike Blackman (left) had a very nice rememberance of Molly Ivins in the Startlegram this morning. Mike's a talented writer, an even better editor and an even better human being. I remember when he hired Molly back in 1992, she said something to the effect of how could I say no to Mike when he came riding in to Austin on his Harley with his long hair and black leather jacket. How indeed, Molly.
Ken Bunting recalls that in Mike's piece this morning: "She was one of a kind, with a Texas-sized presence about her that was totally devoid of pretense. I'll never forget our trip to Austin to convince her she wanted to come to work for the Star-Telegram. We practiced our sales spiel over and over, trying our best to perfect it. But she told me many times she was sold the moment you walked into the Oasis restaurant wearing a leather jacket and no tie. She knew right away you were the kind of newspaper editor she wanted to work for." Mike was, and still is, a cool breeze.
Anyway, Mike made me laugh this morning when he described the challenge of editing Molly:
I finally got Molly on the phone, hemmed and hawed and cajoled and groveled and finally, after all the agonizing and sputtering, knowing how proud she was of her word choices and their impact, said something like: "Molly, I just want to be sure we want to say 'dildo' in the lead. I'm a little worried ..."
Mike also remembered how he introduced Molly to one of Tarrant County's most eminent Republicans, Richard Greene.
After picking her up at the airport, I swung by the auto dealership where then-Arlington Mayor Richard Greene worked. Mr. Republican himself -- think really tight underwear. As conservative as the political assembly line ever produced. But a straight shooter and good guy.
What the heck, I thought -- what poetry for Molly's first introduction to be to one of the Star-Telegram's most prominent detractors.
"I wouldn't say I was stunned," Greene recalled last night. "Let's just say I was surprised in the extreme."
The meeting lasted about 20 minutes. After each got over a mite of unease, they carried on like, if not long-long friends, cordial acquaintances. Both were gracious and good-humored and genuinely appreciated the incongruence of their encounter.
I remember thinking: Molly and Star-Telegram readers might just do all right together.
"Even conservative Republicans have to admit that with her use of words, her use of the language and her commentary and criticism, she gave Texas an identity," Greene said. "She helped the whole country understand Texans.
"I will always carry the memory of that meeting with me."
Nice words from Richard, who is a man as gracious as his comments. Nice work, Mike. Molly would have been proud.
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Labels: Austin, Fort Worth, Ken Bunting, Mike Blackman, Molly Ivins, newspapers, obituaries, Richard Greene
Thursday, February 01, 2007
Gopher vs. Longhorns?
New Minnesota football coach Tim Brewster wants to schedule my Longhorns. I say bring it. I'm always read for a trip to the Twin Cities.
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Kevin Durant = Beast
BON hit the nail on the head about Longhorn hoops phnom Kevin Durant "The NBA rule has essentially forced an NBA pro to play college basketball for a year, and we, as fans, couldn't be happier. Durant does it with such ease and with such passion, it's impossible not to fall in love with him." Wish he could stay another year, but that ain't happenin'.
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Not a News Flash
Won't suprise anyone, but Deep Ellum is dead. But when it comes back -- as it inevitably will -- what will it look like? Go to State-Thomas and Mockingbird Station and you'll get your answer. I was sort of partial to the seedy, underground 1980s Deep Ellum that housed the Theater Gallery. The 1990s Disneyfied Deep Ellum kind of sucked. But I have no doubt that the new 2000s-2010 Deep Ellum will be even worse. Nothing authentic, rather just like anyplace else.
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Bill's Update
Bill's Records will open ... when Bill damn well feels like it according to Unfair Park. “It’ll be open when I’m there,” Bill tells Unfair Park. “And I’ll be there at the end of the week.”
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Steve-O
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7:24 AM
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Labels: Bill Wisener, Dallas, music
Molly Ivins, R.I.P.

First, Ann Richards, now Molly Ivins, gone. One of the great old Texas liberals from when Texas liberal didn't sound like an oxymoron. Funny line from the NYT obit: she once said that Dallas was "the kind of town that would root for Goliath against David." So true.
My one Molly story: When we both worked at the Star-Telegram, I once rode in an elevator up to the newsroom with her. She didn't come to Fort Worth much, she usually worked out of her house in Austin, but she was in for some meeting. I remember being surprised to see her and how rumpled she look. She was a large woman wearing a blue dress with pantyhose that had a tear in them. You wouldn't think that this was a big-time national columnist, but if you have ever worked in a newsroom, you know there are lots of people who look like they assemble their wardrobe at Goodwill. But, no matter how disheveled she may have looked, she had a warm, friendly smile. We chatted for a half a minute on the elevator then went our separate ways. Thanks to my good friend, Mike Blackman, for hiring her. Cheers to another friend, Carolyn Bauman, for the beautiful photo above.
You can't ever get to know anyone by reading 20 column inches a couple of times a week, but you can get glimpse of their soul. Molly was a Texas original in the tradition of William Cowper Brann, smart as a whip and funny as hell, not afraid to try and hold the powerbrokers accountable (yes, that you we're talking about W) with her mix of reason and wit.
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6:43 AM
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Labels: Fort Worth, Molly Ivins, newspapers, obituaries

