Articles for January, 2010

Good Ole’ Dallas Homes: Which is Better, New or Old?

Better craftsmanship from the Greatest Generation or solidly sustainable homes coming off the assembly line now? Get into the discussion at DallasDirt.

Southwest Airlines Posts Surprising Profit for 2009

Remember when we called Gary Kelly of Southwest Airlines the CEO of the Year? Despite a bleak year for the airline business, Kelly told us he hadn’t given up on turning an annual profit for 2009.

Well, it looks like he was right to keep his hopes up, as today Southwest reported a net income of $99 million for the year, thanks largely to a $116 million net income for the fourth quarter. (Compared to a $56 million loss in the fourth quarter of 2008). It’s the company’s 37th straight year of profitability, unmatched in its industry.

Gary C. Kelly, CEO, stated: “In what has been, perhaps, the most difficult revenue environment the airline industry has ever faced, we are extremely proud to report our 2009 earnings, which represents our 37th consecutive year of profitability. To report any profit in these times is a major accomplishment, and I could not be more proud of our Employees who worked so hard to finish the year strong with a fourth quarter and full year profit. Our People responded swiftly and successfully to the dramatic fall-off in demand for business travel precipitated by the recession”

Morning Playlist: Dallas Chamber Music Commissions SMU’s Thomas Schwan

If you weren’t in the Meadows Museum’s Smith Auditorium on December 3rd, then you’ve probably never heard SMU graduate student Thomas Schwan’s Trio for Piano, Violin, and Cello, a new work that was commissioned by the Dallas Chamber Music Society. Schwan is a young, award-winning composer who comes to SMU’s masters program via his hometown of Milan, Italy. Lucky for your there’s this thing called YouTube, and video of the entire performance has been posted here. Enjoy.

What Would Mr. Stanley Do?

cover_JAN.inddHave big luxury retailers like Neiman Marcus lost their focus? Former Neiman’s exec Tony Briggle thinks so. In an in-depth look at Dallas’ battered Neiman Marcus Group in the latest D CEO magazine, Briggle says: “You walk into the second floor of Neiman’s and see racks and racks of $10,000 dresses marked down to $5,000–and pretty soon they begin to look like the $500 dresses you’d find at Dillard’s. By compromising the way they display to customers, they’re turning the customers off.”

In the main D CEO story by Diana Kunde, a former business reporter at The Dallas Morning News, Neiman’s current management style is compared to management under the late, great Stanley Marcus. (For much more on the legendary Mr. Stanley and Neiman’s, BTW, check out a fascinating new book by Thomas E. Alexander, a former Neiman’s executive VP. Alexander will talk with author/journalist Rena Peterson about his book, Stanley Marcus: The Relentless Reign of a Merchant Prince, on Jan. 31 at Fair Park.)

As Alexander, Briggle, and others have pointed out, Mr. Stanley was a tough taskmaster who pushed his staff to be creative, insisted on consistency, truly listened to customers, and worked tirelessly to make shopping at Neiman’s a unique experience. Crazy thought: maybe the current regime should re-dedicate itself to his example.

D Magazine: Best Barbecue Issue is Live

D0210_Cover_web-223x300The March issue of D Magazine is on the newsstands. Pick it up and check out the cover story on the barbecue. Yep, we list the top 16 spots in and around Dallas. On SideDish, we’re talking about the top spot. And, it isn’t in Dallas.

Feds Have Another Go in Midlothian to Investigate Cement Kilns

The Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, the investigative arm of the Centers for Disease Control, will hold a meeting at the Midlothian Community Center tonight to explain what it plans to do in the “Cement Capitol of Texas.” Why should you care? As the press release from Downwinders at Risk says: “According to state industrial inventories, Midlothian’s cement plants account for half of all industrial pollution in North Texas.” (Full release after the jump.) Not only are the cement kilns there endangering children’s lives in Midlothian, but they’re choking us up here, too. For more on this, I point you to Julie and Tom Boyle’s fine story about their experience living in Midlothian.

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Leading Off (1/21/10)

1. You know how things were really bad last year? Yeah, well, not so for top execs at Parkland Hospital. Twenty-seven of their top people increased their salary by 12 percent. But unlike some other execs in some other companies who maybe didn’t deserve their bonuses, these Parkland employees deserved their bonuses, er, incentives.

“We kind of stay away from the word bonus,” says Dr. Lauren McDonald, president of Parkland’s board of managers. “It’s really earned incentives. We have certain goals that we set forth as a board. Working with a consultant, we made sure these were earned, instead of just given.”

I want to meet this consultant.

2. As Zac mentioned yesterday, a robber left her purse behind. But there’s more to it. She had a sick baby in the getaway car. The child is supposed to be on oxygen 24 hours a day. Instead of saying she’s a horrible parent, I’m going to take the “maybe she doesn’t have insurance and was going to use the money to take care of her child” approach. Glass half-full, right?

3. Irving’s about to get greener. A new middle school is being built to be “net-zero.”(I’ve tried being net-zero before for three whole days. It’s hard. I had to recycle, ride a bike, plant trees, and turn off lights and stuff to reduce or negate my carbon footprint.) Although the school will cost about an extra $3 to $4 million to build, administrators think perhaps the school’s electricity bills could drop from $250,000 to $50,000. So that’s worth it. Also, kids will take field trips to the school, there will be hands-on activities focused on geothermal science, and all sorts of cool, hip, green-related things. Coolest. School. Ever.

America’s “Worst Commutes”

I’m disappointed. The Daily Beast concocts a collection of the nation’s  75 worst commutes, and Dallas doesn’t make the list. True, #15 says Dallas-Fort Worth, but Loop 820 in Fort Worth doesn’t come close to Dallas. Austin made the list. Houston made the list. Fort Worth made the list. But no Dallas. Is DART that good or did they measure the traffic during the broadcast of a Cowboys game?

Massachusetts Senate Election a Victory For Frisco

That what’s Frisco City Councilman Scott Johnson told the Frisco Enterprise about Scott Brown’s election to the U.S. Senate:

“The victory in Massachusetts was a victory for the country and for all freedom-loving citizens of Frisco,” Johnson said.

Johnson wasn’t alone in expressing his joy. City Councilman Pat Fallon said the Brown win demonstrated “voter disgruntlement.”

But, more importantly, Enterprise staff writer Jan Bellamy now has a great clip to show when applying for a job with Fox News.

Court Tells Southlake’s Kwame Kilpatrick to Pay Up

Southlake’s favorite disgraced former Detroit mayor, Kwame Kilpatrick, was back in court today. The judge called him a liar, and said his behavior had been reprehensible. He transferred Kilpatrick’s probation from Texas back to Michigan. Looks like he can keep living in North Texas though, since he can report for probation by phone.

Because Kilpatrick has “not been responsible” in taking care of the $1 million in restitution he owes the city of Detroit, the judge gave him one less year in which to pay. He now has three years to turn over about $900,000, or he could go back to jail.

Earlier Kilpatrick told the court that his living expenses left him with only $6 each month with which to make restitution. This despite the fact that he rents a $1.1 million home in Southlake.

This local Detroit television report from September shows his luxurious lifestyle. They make a pretty good case, but still — does TV news have to be this over-the-top? My favorite part comes when the voice-over for Mrs. Kilpatrick’s trip to “world-renowned Southlake Town Square” touts its “high-end shopping and fabulous food,” while she’s shown ordering a sandwich at Which ‘Wich.

Exxon CEO Rex Tillerson on Fracking Natural Gas

The CEO of oil giant Exxon Mobil  told a House subcommittee today that fracking (hydraulic fracturing) is necessary to help America capture as much natural gas as we can from the ground. Rex Tillerson cares about the issue because of his company’s merger with XTO Energy.

Opponents have some concerns about the practice, which involves pumping chemicals into the ground to aid the extraction of natural gas.

Kate Sheerin to Head Centraltrak

By this weekend, the February print edition will be hitting newsstands, and you can read all about the University of Texas at Dallas’ artist residency program, Centraltrak. You will learn in the piece that Kate Sheerin has stepped in to replace former director Charissa Terranova, who left the organization just before Joan Arbery’s piece shipped (whew!). Today Centraltrak sends the official word about Sheerin, an NYU grad who has worked at SMU’s Meadows Museum and curated about town, including a show at David Quadrini’s now-shut-down Angstrom Gallery. A full release is after the jump.

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A Look at One Side of a Conversation That Happened All the Time at Bill’s Records

This gem was passed along by a former employee who says: “This happened daily at Bill’s.” Not sure if it still does at the new location, but I can vouch for its regular occurrence at the old spot on Spring Valley.

The Arts District’s Future: Focus on Festivals

For all the hoopla surrounding the AT&T PAC opening, there are a few things the Arts District doesn’t do well yet: fostering organic use, serving as a common urban space/park, interacting with the surrounding neighbourhoods (or lack thereof). But the district’s opening did prove that it is very good at playing the role of gathering place — a festival ground.

A month or so ago, TITAS executive director Charles Santos spoke to an audience at the DMA about his hope that the Dallas Arts District would foster more coordination and cooperation among Dallas’ arts groups and institutions, such as organizing multi-disciplinary festivals. Now, indirect encouragement comes from Down Under, where The Australian reports that that country’s love of arts festivals has helped foster the kind of innovation and risk taking that would distinguish Dallas as a cultural center.

The big-city arts festivals are invitations for local patrons to try new and different tastes, and audiences take up the offer with enthusiasm. People attend shows they might never otherwise think of seeing, and strike up lively debates with strangers afterwards.

Festivals are where local and international companies get to flaunt their ambitions. Large-scale events or pushing-the-boundaries art are often called “festival shows,” because with the legitimising stamp of a festival they can attract audiences eager for the new, the controversial and the different.

Arts District boosters should take note and begin work on a potential niche for Dallas in the international arts scene.

Brandon Day’s Survival Story to Air on I Shouldn’t Be Alive

Loyal readers of the “print product” will remember Brandon Day as the cover boy for our December 2006 issue. He and his then girlfriend, Gina Allen, after dating for only about a month, took a trip together to Palm Springs. Then they rode a tram to the top of Mount San Jacinto to get some drinks at a bar — and wound up lost, spending three nights in the wilderness without shelter. Read their story. It’s truly amazing. And when they told it in the pages of D, I figured it would only be a matter of time before it became the subject of a made-for-TV movie. (Do they still make made-for-TV movies?) Well, that hasn’t happened yet. But this Friday, the story will be told from Day’s perspective on the Discovery Channel show I Shouldn’t Be Alive. The episode is titled “Date From Hell” and will air at 8 p.m. Set your TIVOs now. (Seriously. This cable TV thing is here to stay?)