At least one alert FBvian has remarked in the comments that we haven’t heard from Eric Celeste and Elizabeth “Spider Monkey” Lavin today. I know. Odd. They’re both equipped with iPhones. Yet nary an update post. Well, nary an update from them. Over on the DMN’s Trail Blazers blog, however, we learn what they’ve been up to. Thank you, Emily Ramshaw.
Holy smokes. From the NYT story:
His hiring came as a blow to the smaller and less prestigious Dallas Opera, where he had just started as general director in October.
You think so, doctor?
One thousand years ago, Peter Salaverry ran a company that helped our company’s Web site. That’s how I first met him and about the last time I saw him. He now runs Skinz Wraps, a company in Deep Ellum that wraps cars—you know, for a radio station’s promotional van or to put wicked flames on your IROC-Z’s hood or whatever. Peter called the other day with a story that he wanted to send our way before he went national with it. The big, official announcement is tomorrow at 10:00am, unless you count this here blog item. The story has to do with car wraps, Olympic swimmers, fuel efficiency, and female motorcyclists setting land speed records at the salt flats. Read on.
The great Jeff Whittington — producer of KERA’s Think and host of Anything You Ever Wanted to Know — will join us tomorrow at 3 p.m. on FrontBurner For Your Ears to talk about how he’s trying to make the Dallas Press Club a hipper, more happening organization. Also, we’ll talk about how many chin-ups he can do. Normally the show runs 15 minutes. We’re thinking that Jeff’s appearance might warrant going a bit longer. Share your thoughts. And feel free to suggest discussion topics; I’ll turn the comments on.
If you haven’t seen it yet, Eric recently did a turn with Ticket host George Dunham on The Gordon Keith Show. The video was just put online. My observations:
1. I thought it very odd that Eric decided to bring luggage with him onto the show. And neither one of those bags would have fit in overhead storage.
2. Eric should hire George Dunham to sit next to him everywhere he goes. Church. Dinner out with his wife. Thursday card game. And then Eric should wear a colorful silk shirt and goggles. Because next to George, Eric looks like a horse jockey.
3. Finally, at the 5:00 mark of the show, Eric says something that might interest the HR Department here at D Magazine. VERY inappropriate.
Simmons once told D CEO editor Glenn Hunter that if he landed the right permits, one of his companies could easily net another $200 million a year profit. Well, today, after 14 years of trying to get the state to allow him to bury radioactive waste in West Texas (shown left), it’s finally happened. February’s issue of D CEO (on newsstands soon, if not now) describes how Simmons and his company, Waste Control Specialists, worked the State Legislature and the people of Andrews County, Texas, to grease the skids. (more…)
If you saw the end of last night’s Mavs-Nuggets game, you are no doubt frustrated by the result, which wasted an outstanding 44 point, 14 rebound game from Dirk Nowitzki. Nothing will change that. But voting on whether the late, controversial foul that sent Nuggets guard Chauncey Billups to the line with 2.2 seconds should have been called (or, perhaps, should have been called the other way) might salve your wounds a bit.
Also, Mark Cuban was involved in a bit of drama last night.
Over on Light Reading, they’re reporting that Verizon has plans to pit its FiOS fiber against AT&T’s U-verse in parts of North Texas. While many parts of the country are still waiting for DSL, some folks around here have more fiber than they can handle.
Candy is shy. Really, she’s not much of a self-promoter. So I’ll do it for her. Wade Goodwyn did a piece this morning on George W. Bush’s return to Dallas. Candy was interviewed because she broke the story about which house the Bushes bought.
I missed this item yesterday, but a co-working Richardsonian just sent it along: The City Council passed an ordinance 5-2 to limit parking on residential streets. Only people who live in or are visiting a home may park on the street between 2 and 8 a.m. From Ian McCann’ article:
Mayor Steve Mitchell said the ordinance should solve many of the problems that council members hear about, primarily that neighbors’ cars make it impossible for residents and their guests to find on-street parking.
There’s some tasty irony there: “My guests can’t find parking on the street because my neighbor’s guests have parked on the street.” Also, how many people are visiting Richardson?
1. If things go as planned, Rick’s Cabaret International will open the largest topless-and-bottomless joint in the state, right here in our fair town. The 25,000-square-foot XTC Cabaret will open on Stemmons, in the old Penthouse Key Club spot. On the record, City Manager Mary Suhm said, “It is not a distinction we have been pursuing.” Off the record, she said, “If it would bring in tax revenue, hell, I’d welcome a 25,000-square-foot Ikea-style Ron Jeremy super center.”
2. Three things I find highly suspect about the Playmaker’s tale that someone drew down on him: 1) that when Michael Irvin sees another car pull up to his at a stoplight at 9:30 in the p.m., Irvin will roll down his window if he thinks the guy in the other car wants to talk to him; 2) that Irvin can tell the difference, on sight, between a fully automatic weapon and a semi-automatic one; and 3) that when the alleged gun-toter recognized Irvin, he actually said, “Oh, that’s Michael Irvin, with the Dallas Cowboys.” (Like, you know: “Oh, that’s Barack Obama, with the United States government.”)
3. Bushgate.