The former News editor and publisher has served on the Southern California chain’s board since 2004, although he still lives in Dallas. So it’s no surprise the owner of the Orange County Register would turn to Osborne as its CEO heads to Playboy (which uncharitable souls might regard as jumping from the frying pan into the fire). Osborne spent 21 years building the News into the dominant news and information company in the Southwest, and he’s made no secret of his dismay/anger/disgust at how management has handled the company since he left in 2001. Now he’ll get to match his wits against the same disruptive economy the News has faced and see how he does.
Today our own beloved Glenn Hunter, editor of D CEO, turns 60. As a special gift to him, I am turning on comments so that you, dear FrontBurnervian, may wish him a happy birthday.
Our good friends at Park Cities People have the scoop on the Abbott cops.
I’m fairly certain — like 99.9 percent — that what Mary witnessed was a training exercise. I saw firefighters being put through their paces at the same complex yesterday morning.
The Foundation Center ranking says Top 50 but it lists Southwestern Medical and Southwestern Medical Foundation as separate entities (which, of course, they are, but the money goes to the same place) and the Center for Performing Arts twice. The report is from 2006, the last year available, and is compiled from “a sample of the 1,263 larger foundations” in the U.S.
The number 4 biggest recipient is the “Thomas Foundation,” which got one grant for $10 million. I’ve never heard of it. I cannot find it on the intertubes. There is one telephone listing but the number connects to a fax line. Anyone know about it?
1. Oh, this is too rich. Judge Barbara Lynn issues a gag order in the City Hall corruption trial. But defendent Darren Reagan goes ahead and faxes a letter to the DMN in which he accuses lawyer Don Templin of having staked out his DeSoto house back in 2005. Oh, also, Reagan thinks Templin was involved with a home invasion robbery at his pad. That would be Don Templin, D Magazine’s attorney at Haynes and Boone. For anyone who knows Don, the idea of him running a stakeout is a gas. That’s really good stuff, man. Now, the home invasion? That totally sounds like Don.
2. Mary Poe, our marketing director, just called to say there are about a half dozen cops at an apartment complex down the street from D HQ, on Abbott Avenue, on the edge of Highland Park, with their guns drawn. So there’s that.
3. Do you drive on any of the North Texas Tollway Authority’s roads? Get ready to pay a lot more for the privilege. (Note to my buddy who hosted our poker game at his new house in Frisco a couple weeks ago: I’m not ever going to see you again. Sorry.)
You know who deserves a raise? The good people who create the Bachelorette promos. You know why? Every single week, we’re promised the most dramatic episode ever. And we believe it because the previews look that good. Guess what we get instead? A knife in the eye. I am convinced that the producers know they have a loser season on their hands. There haven’t been any promises of an engagement–they haven’t even shown us the requisite footage of a dude on his knee. After last night’s episode, I was done. I swore I was never going to watch again. And then those evil geniuses showed a preview of what looked like the most embarrassing thing that could go down in the boudoir, and now I’m back in. More about that and the ugliness that ensued last night after the jump.
The operating company was carrying an “unsustainable amount of debt,” and the losers in its bankruptcy will be its unsecured creditors. But the bankruptcy won’t have any impact on the original Six Flags in Arlington, according not only to the operating company but also to Dallas investor Jack Knox, the general partner of the group that actually owns the park and who says he’s being “nibbled to death” with questions. To answer them, he happily sent along this memo to his limited partners.
I’ll call him Bonathan. He’s a strapping lad. Wears Polo. Pretty sure he could take me in a fight. He seems diligent. He completes his work quickly and almost flawlessly. (Note to Bonathan on your fact-checking assignment today: nice catch on the misspelled “Trac Man.” But it’s “TrackMan,” not “Track Man.”)
Anyway, here’s why he’s my new favorite intern: today in an edit meeting, I asked Bonathan to introduce himself to the group, tell us a little something about himself. He said he’s studying journalism — at which point, everyone in the room groaned a mock groan.
“You having any second thoughts about that course of study, Bonathan?” I asked.
“I’m not worried about trying to make money,” he said, meaning that he thinks there are more important things in life than making money.
“Do you come from wealth?” I asked. The line got a few laughs.
Bonathan paused. I could be exaggerating here, but I don’t think I am. He leaned back a bit in his chair. Then he said, “I’m comfortable.” I don’t think he was kidding. Nonetheless, his line got way more laughs than mine did.
Here’s to our summer together, Comfortable Bonathan. Let’s hope we teach each other something.
Dr. Peter Venkman, Dr. Raymond Stantz, Dr. Egon Spengler, Winston Zeddemore, and Stay Puft are back! Thanks to North Texas’ game developer Terminal Reality, who today released Ghostbusters: The Video Game.
Not exactly a scoop. It’s been reported by the Burnt Orange Report, the News editorial blog, and even our Park Cities People Overheard blog. I don’t know Raggio, but the family has been a local Democratic powerhouse for years. However, I do know Sessions’ scorched-earth campaign tactics, so I imagine his opposition research with start with this.
The co-founder (with his wife, Helen) of Greenhill School died Sunday. He was just shy of his 100th birthday. The email from Headmaster Scott Griggs is below the jump.
Calling it the gravest threat to the university in 50 years, distinguished Texas A&M graduate Jon Hagler — for whom the Texas A&M Foundation’s offices are named — describes how one of the state’s great assets is being destroyed. Key quote:
“…this crisis is about whether the faculty, staff, students, former students and the broad and diverse community that make up Texas A&M University will allow a handful of politically motivated persons who do not understand their fiduciary duty either to the institution or to the citizens of the state to take over this wonderful, heavy-duty public university – this sacred public trust.”
An alert FrontBurnervian points us to this “study” that claims we have the second-worst road rage problem in the country (after New York City). I’d like to make three points about that. 1) The methodology sucks. The effing researchers called about 2,000 people and just asked them which was the worst city. Why not gather some actual traffic-accident statistics? 2) The idiotic asshatters refer to Dallas and Fort Worth as one city. C’mon! Pay attention, you clowns!! 3) I’ve been driving in North Texas for 24 years. I’ve driven all over this ever-loving country. There’s just no WAY that I believe these imbecilic d-bag research monkeys and their STUPID study, which needs to GET OFF THE INTERNET because it’s so LAME that I ought to get a gun and shoot it!!!! Southern civility. That’s all I see on the road.
Longtime Republican political observer Royal Masset is not impressed what he saw with Texas government in this Legislative session. In the op-ed republished below the jump courtesy of the always-illustrious Quorum Report, he has many keen insights and a few words of sharp advice for his GOP colleagues. I’ll highlight two:
Suburban voters used to be the backbone of the Republican party. They now expect us to govern and help them with things like education, health care and employment.
Talk about substantive ideas of governing. Stop chanting the word “conservative” like a village idiot. The word has lost its meaning.
Read the whole thing: