Loyal readers of the “print product” will recognize the name Gretel C. Kovach from her byline in the magazine. Gretel was a contributing editor for us for two years, during which stint she wrote about the nasty Hunt vs. Hunt battle, the rise and fall of Eleanor Mowry Sheets, and, most recently, some unsavory goings-on within Dallas Fire-Rescue. Her last story for us will appear in the March issue, as Gretel has accepted a new post that will take her to beautiful San Diego. It is with some sadness that I tell you she’s taken a job as a military affairs correspondent for the Union-Tribune. She hopes to travel to Afghanistan this summer to report on the Marine Corps surge of troops from Camp Pendleton.
Gretel is a fine writer, a dogged reporter, and a joy to have a beer with. We’ll miss her, and we wish her safe travels.
Yesterday, I pointed folks to the Russ Martin Show Listeners Foundation, if they cared to contribute. The foundation gives money to the families of police officers killed in the line of duty. As you know, Arlington motorcycle officer Craig Story died Wednesday in a crash. Martin e-mails to say:
Today I’ll be driving to Arlington to drop off a check on behalf of my listeners/supporters for $35,000 for Danielle Story. Ain’t meeting the chief, family, nobody — just dropping off an envelope at the front desk. I don’t like meeting people.
Good on Russ Martin and the folks who gave the money. Our thoughts are with the Storys.
By all accounts American Red Cross president and CEO Gail McGovern (pictured) has done a stellar job buffing the group’s image and whittling its deficit from $209 million to $35 million. But the former Harvard Business School marketing prof, in town this week to hobnob with a former president and some of the area’s biggest corporate chieftans, seemed to miss some opportunities for leadership as the Haiti crisis broke late Tuesday afternoon. (more…)
It has been my long-held belief that one of Dallas’ draws for conventioneers is its upscale topless bars. Don’t believe me. Educate yourself. So I asked Michael Precker, PR man for the Lodge, whether anyone from the recently concluded Professional Convention Management Association’s convention made it out for a lap dance or three. He wasn’t in town this past weekend and can’t say for certain whether anyone from the PCMA dropped by, but he did say this:
We actually had a very strong weekend and first part of this week. If it’s conventioneers, we’re delighted to have them. Whether or not the city acknowledges us, we’re proud of Dallas and the part we play in bringing people here. Too bad we couldn’t be part of that video. Our favorite convention, by the way, is the Promisekeepers. When they’re in town, this place is packed.
He assured me that he was not making up that last part, which makes me happy.
Evan Grant, who, as you know, now works for the Dallas Morning News (again), has been named the Texas Sportswriter of the Year. Again. The award is given out by the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association. If memory serves, he has won the honor two of the past three years. The body of work under consideration for the award was InsideCorner, our short-lived and dearly departed sports blog. Congrats to Evan. And again to the Morning News: you’re welcome.
1. You know what’s unfortunate—being bad at your job. Especially when that job is being a robber. Watch Mr. Robber in this video. You’ll see him get reprimanded repeatedly by Marian Chadwick, feisty store owner. A man is standing in front of her, aiming a gun at her, and she squares up her shoulders and tells him, “In the name of Jesus, I command you to get out of my store right now.” She looks like a mom scolding her child. And unlike Mr. Robber, she’s good at what she does.
2. Holly Bridier is thankful for Doc David Genecov, who is very good at his job. He’s giving Holly an ear (she was born with one and with a condition that caused half her face to grow at a different pace than the other half of her face). And the best part? Dr. Genecov is even piercing her ears, so for the first time in her 10 years, she can wear earrings.
3. While some are frantically trying to get loved ones out of Haiti, others are trying to get back in. One family from Southlake heard from their son in Haiti, who’s fine. When Gail McGovern from the Red Cross in Dallas promised $1 million Wednesday to help those in Haiti, she had no idea that that number would be exceeded in the same day because of oh-so-handy technology. This is one of those examples of everybody doing the best job possible in order to help others.
Only 34 players in the NBA have ever done it. I hope it happens tonight, as I will be in attendance, up in the rafters, screaming, “I see you, big German!” Oh, you want to know how he got here? Allow me.

In the wake of yesterday’s Environment Texas presser — the one where they announced that the Trinity ranked in the top third of Texas’ most polluted waters — I decided to take the pulse of the Dallas kayaker.
Why? Because the Dallas City Council awarded a $3,376,359 contract to Ark Contracting Services of Kennedale for the Trinity Standing Wave project on Nov. 9 as a part of the consent agenda. Among other things, like creation of an access point, the contract calls for an in-channel standing wave feature where the Trinity River meets 1900 East Eighth Street or what amounts to artificial white-water features on the river. It’s designed to attract kayakers.
So, I asked Bryan Jackson, kayaker and president of the Dallas Downriver Club, what he thought of the Trinity’s pollution concerns and if the standing wave is something local kayakers would use. (more…)
Today the Star-Telegram shared some news that we wrote about last month: the North Texas Super Bowl XLV Host Committee has secured two more corporate $1 million sponsors but won’t reveal their secret identities yet. You’ll likely hear the (big) names later this month.
But what about the difference between the numbers in our headlines: I told you there are 12, while the Star-T is trumpeting the undisclosed sponsors as the ninth and the 10th?
Well, they’re talking about “founding” sponsors. I was initially told that Corporate Magic (which is providing in-kind services) and Jerry and Gene Jones (who gave $1 million for the NFL’s Youth Education Town project and were strangely not mentioned at all in the Star-T article) would count towards the 15 million-dollar (founding) sponsorships that the Host Committee had hoped to (and failed) to secure by the end of 2009.
Today, when I called to ask, I was told differently. So there are 12 million-dollar sponsorships pledged to the Host Committee, but only 10 of those are considered “founding sponsorships.” But all of them count towards reaching the committee’s $30 million budget goal.
Now, about Tom Hicks. (more…)
This Gilded Shopper “statue” was one of several Dallas icons on display outside the city’s booth this week at the Professional Convention Management Association annual meeting, which ends today at the Dallas Convention Center. (Other statues, which were actually live people who looked to have been spray-painted gold, included an artist in a beret and a couple of cowboys.) Relaxing on a couch near the Gilded Shopper this morning, the Dallas Convention & Visitors Bureau’s Phillip Jones called the PCMA meeting “our Super Bowl” and said “I never expected it to be as successful as it was.”
Total attendance could top the previous record set by Seattle, Jones said, and, as of this morning, local tourism types had already hosted 180 “site visits” by meeting planners during the confab. Seattle, by contrast, hosted just 80 site visits during its meeting in 2008, Jones said. Joseph Perkins, a manager with the Sheraton Dallas, said the Sheraton alone hosted 52 of this week’s visits. And, something else came out of the PCMA convention, Perkins said: a signed contract calling for Dallas to host a gathering of the International Trademark Association, bringing some 7,000 people to North Texas in 2013.
Must have been the Gilded Shopper that cinched it.
There will be a meeting today at 4 to explain in detail to employees what’s happening, but I’m told that 28 people will be cut — none from the newsroom.
The newest Beige Book from the Federal Reserve is out. “Slow but steady” seems to sum up where the Dallas District of the Fed sits now. Most other regions of the country were characterized similarly.
The “historically low” levels in commercial real estate continue for now: “Office and industrial leasing activity remained feeble. Contacts said, ‘nothing is going on and business is very slow.’”
High-tech manufacturing was a bright spot, with growth in demand. Some of that was attributed to the release of Windows 7 driving PC sales: “The outlook is for continued moderate to strong growth over the next six months.”
Retailers said they had a “reasonable” holiday season: up over 2008, but not back to 2007 levels. They’re “cautiously optimistic.”
And home sales are up over the last six months. But “Several contacts said smaller builders were still unable to access credit to finance new construction. Outlooks were guarded but optimistic.”
The Beige Book features the findings of a Federal Reserve survey of contacts in various industries. It’s conducted and released the first and last month of each quarter.
Last fall Roy Disney Jr.’s Shamrock Holdings, which owns about 10 percent of Dallas-based cement producer TXI Industries, made some demands of the company, which it claimed was suffering from poor management.
Last October, TXI agreed to bring Shamrock’s three nominees onto its board of directors. And though Disney died last month, today TXI says it will change its bylaws to meet three demands made by Shamrock, including: all board directors will be up for election every year, and directors will require a majority (not plurality) of votes from shareholders.
The city of Irving has announced doomsday for the Dallas Cowboys’ long-time home: April 11. Kraft Macaroni and Cheese will do the honors of razing the stadium, as part of a Project Cheddar Explosion promotion.
Shouldn’t it be a cheddar implosion? Full release after the jump:
Rarely have so many hands been wrung over a promotional video for a city. With its goofy dancing by everyone from Dean Fearing to Marty B. and appearances by the likes of Pat Green and Vanilla Ice, the “One More Thing” piece shown to meeting planners in town this week for their annual convention admittedly was pretty corny. But it was also sort of fun and, folks, we’re not talking cancer research here.
According to Phillip Jones, head of the Dallas Convention & Visitors Bureau, the “industrial video” was produced by the Freeman Co. (its Donald Freeman Jr. is the current DCVB chair), and was targeted strictly toward members of the meetings profession. “We’re known as a business destination, but who wants to come to a boring business town?” Jones says. “The video shows we’re fun, that we can make fun of ourselves. It shows the city has a sense of humor.”
Jones added that at least a dozen attendees had told him the goofy-dancing video was “the best” they’d seen. So we buttonholed one, Danielle L. Urbina, meetings manager for the American Society of Plastic Surgeons in Arlington Heights, Ill., and asked her opinion. “I thought it was great, very creative,” Urbina said. “It’s great when you can get people to step outside their comfort zone and do something.”