Fox4 deserves a Thumbs Up for taking 5:39 minutes on Tuesday — a huge amount of time in a nightly newscast — to examine the Willingham case. Although he provides no new information. Ray obviously tilts to the seemingly unanimous opinion in Corsicana that Willingham was guilty, and so I found his report informative. I remain sceptical of the jury verdict and deeply suspicious of the reasons Rick Perry panicked at the idea of an honest airing of the evidence pro and con. Be that as it may, in devoting so much valuable airtime to the story, Fox4 did a public service. Here’s the segment:
1. June Jones is bringing in real mustangs to inspire his Mustangs. Some of the SMU faithful fear that the Shetland ponies that have served as the team’s mascots since 1932 will be crowded out. When it comes to the image of a fearsome football team, size matters, sure. But which dimensions should we be measuring? “The two mustangs that SMU has embraced may be larger, Peruna supporters admit, but they are geldings. Just how powerful can they be? Unlike them, Peruna remains a rollicking rogue with an eye for the full-sized mares.”
2. Time to pick tomorrow’s really big game. I expect my alma mater, Trinity University, to put a beatdown on Sewanee: University of the South, 42-10. (You likely remember my Tigers from this astounding play.) As for that little contest out in Fair Park? Sorry, Krista, I’ll take the Longhorns, 30-20.
3. Highland Park High School alumnus Clayton Kershaw got the Game 1 start for the Los Angeles Dodgers in the National League Championship Series last night. He started strong, but fell apart in the fifth inning. The Dodgers lost, 8-6. I blame the 21-year-old southpaw’s lackluster playoff beard.
We were remiss in not mentioning Nicholai Ourroussoff’s interesting and detailed critique today, so here it is. Bottom line:
The no-nonsense approach of these buildings — one cautiously experimental, the other more backward looking — should fit nicely in our new era of cautious restraint, even if they were designed when the excesses were still not over.
Cautious restraint? The description may be accurate, but did you ever think those words would be applied to Dallas?
Here’s the chance you’ve been waiting for, gents: to “Be a Wahl Man.” That’s the slogan of shaver-maker Wahl Home Products, which is bringing its Let It Grow tour to the State Fair of Texas through Sunday. The tour’s purpose: to help men “get a handle on their facial hair” with free trims–and to find the best beard, mustache, and goatee in America in the Wahl Man of the Year photo contest. These people aren’t just about celebrating facial hair, though. For every Man of the Year contest entry, the company’s donating $1 (up to $5,000) for the fight against prostate and testicular cancer. Back to you, Zac. Don’t let us down!
We’ve returned to the office, where I can post a little easier. Here are some more photos from today’s media day at the AT&T Performing Arts Center. I’d say more than half of the 150 or so TV, radio, and print people in attendance hailed from beyond our burg’s borders. It was a good group. You can check out Zac’s Flickr page for his pics. You’ll see that we covered some of the same ground. That said, jump for the pretties.
One Arts Plaza has that big white square on the side, and the Hunt Oil Tower bulges out like a, well, like a giant H. So I guess it makes sense that downtown’s new Dee and Charles Wyly Theatre has a big rectangular hole at the top on its west side (at far left in this pic). At first I thought they just hadn’t finished the building yet. But I’ve learned since that it’s actually an important architectural feature. On the big media tour this morning, I asked the architect Rem Koolhaas–a tall, gaunt Dutchman who kept checking his cellphone–about the thinking behind the big hole. “You have to have some things where your interest can dwell for awhile,” he explained. Then he went back to checking his phone.
Wondering who attended last night’s AT&T Performing Arts Center’s Act III Gala at the Wyly Theatre? Find out here.
Landscape architect Michel Desvigne demonstrates his ability to walk on water in the Sammons Park.
Joshua Prince-Ramus is my new man crush. Most ruggedly handsome architect in the world?
We’ve now broken into groups for tours. Best tour leader? Clearly Red Team leader.
You know who ISN’T here? Skip Hollandsworth of Texas Monthly fame. You had to RSVP to get a lanyard like this one. Because Zac didn’t RSVP, they gave Skip’s plastic holder to Zac. That’s a burn!
Bob Dylan released a Christmas album yesterday. It includes a cover of an arrangement of “Must Be Santa” by Denton music icons Brave Combo. You can hear their version by clicking on the title on this page. They didn’t write the song, but they improved it.
This takes me back to the middle of the ’90s, jumping up and down in a crowd of people on the floor of Rick’s, on Fry Street. Before it caught fire, or was set on fire. I can’t remember which.
About 150 journalists (give or take) are at the Wyly right now to get the lowdown on the AT&T Performing Arts Center. Rem Koolhaas is in the house. So are Spencer de Grey, Norman Foster, and Joshua Prince-Ramus (who looks like he knows karate). Currently at the mic is Mayor Tom Leppert. Summary of his remarks: Dallas is totally awesome.