Articles for September, 2011

Al Hill III Buys $9 Million House in Atlanta

Wait, wait, wait. Hang on a second. A couple months ago, Al Hill III and his wife, Erin, were indicted on multiple felony counts of mortgage fraud. He didn’t have a lawyer at the time, and he was wrangling with his father, Al Hill Jr., over what part of the family trust he was owed. In short, things did not look flush for Al III. But now comes word that he just bought a $9 million house in Atlanta? Hightailing it out of Dallas I can understand. But landing in such luxe digs? [scratches head]

The Worst Job in Dallas

StatlerWhile having lunch at Main Street Garden today, I espied workers carrying old mattresses out of the Statler Hotel. Looks like the new owners are getting busy. Here’s the thing: that has to be the worst job ever. First, it’s warm today. No AC in the old building. Second, we’re talking hotel mattresses. Think about the last time you stayed in a hotel. What did you do atop your mattress? Multiply that by the number of guests the room has accommodated. Shine a black light on it, and that mattress would look like Jackson Pollock painting, if you catch my drift. Now imagine leaving that mattress in an abandoned building for a few years, with pigeons and homeless people roosting on the mattresses.

The men loading those mattresses onto that trailer? American heroes.

Deadspin Continues Its Investigation Into Former Ranger Oddibe McDowell’s Water Bill

It started in February, when a Deadspin reader sent in a tip that journeyman baseball player Oddibe McDowell’s water bill was $88.61. Why did Deadspin publish this information? Because it could. There was a follow up in March. Then another in April. Then May, June, July, and August. In the latest installment, we learn that McDowell’s bill is 21 bucks higher this month on account of Hurricane Irene. Way to be, Oddibe.

R.I.P., Jerry Haynes aka Mr. Peppermint

If you grew up near Dallas, you grew up with Jerry Haynes’ Mr. Peppermint. The beloved children’s show host — and father of the Butthole Surfers’ Gibby Haynes — passed on this morning, due to complications from Parkinson’s.

Things To Do In Dallas Tonight: Sep. 26

I’m sure many people are excited to actually dine at Private Social when it opens publicly (couldn’t resist) on Thursday. But I’m way more thrilled about the lack of giant trucks clogging my admittedly very short route to work now that the restaurant has finally, finally started letting people in the door. However, as a small PSA for the fledgling enterprise, this is not how you spell “apologies.” Unless the writer of the page is an Appaloosa, and in which case, I understand the mistake and I’ll be impressed enough by his or her horsey intelligence to overlook it. Yeah, I know. Nitpicking a restaurant website about spelling. I’m obnoxious. It’s also a Monday.

Which means football, for some of you. It’s a home game for the Cowboys, and their one and only appearance on Monday Night Football. So you can watch this at home or at basically any bar in town for free, or you could haul yourself to Arlington. There’s standing room only seats for $29, and then there are real seats still available from $75 and up.

And with all the ado about Lowest Greenville these days, you can at least count on Good Records for a pre-witching hour good time, though I wonder how the talented Funky Knuckles will fare through all this. They played well after midnight at the less-than-wonderful Pussycat Lounge. Anyway, Good Records has Denton songstress Sarah Jaffe tonight for an acoustic session and the release of her new EP, The Way the Sound Leaves the Room. As a happy coincidence, SideDish’s Sarah Reiss reviewed the new Korean grill, Rohst, for D’s October issue. I want everything she talks about. It’s just a little ways up the street, and I’ve been pretty curious about it. Plus, this nice weather demands patio time, and Rohst has a rooftop deck.

For more to do tonight, go here.

Debbie Denmon Sues Channel 8

An alert FrontBurnervian points out that Uncle Barky’s story about Debbie Denmon suing her employer hasn’t gotten much play. So let’s give it some play. Denmon claims that station management bypassed her for a weekday anchor position because she’s too, er, full figured. Apparently Dale Hansen has been deposed, because, you know, come on! Hansen’s not exactly slim himself.

Listen, people who work in the TV news business know what they’re getting into. Pulchritude is a prerequisite. People are hired based on their looks and how they come across on camera — especially anchors. And, yes, there is a double standard. It’s easier for a man to put on 15 pounds and keep his job than it is for a woman. (Oh, God, how I wish I could read a transcript of Hansen’s deposition.)

Personally, I like Denmon. I think she’s easy to look at and I think she reads a teleprompter well. But if management asked her drop a few, a lawsuit seems the wrong response.

Leading Off (09/26/11)

Art West, Inventor of Doritos, Dies: Art West was a marketing executive at Frito-Lay when he invented Doritos, the first national tortilla chip brand. He died this weekend at 97. A statement from West’s family says that they plan on “tossing Doritos chips in before they put the dirt over the urn.”

Is AMR Going Bankrupt? American Airlines’ parent company has only posted two profitable years in the last decade, its stock is at a one-year low, and Moody’s has just downgraded AMR’s stock outlook to “negative,” according to this report in the Star-Telegram. Some industry watchers believe the company is running out of cash, and when the “b-word” was raised during an investor conference, AMR’s treasurer “didn’t completely dismiss the possibility.”

Finally It’s Official: A&M Joins S.E.C: Yesterday, Texas A&M University announced that it will join NCAA’s Southeastern Conference beginning on July 1, 2012. Teams like Alabama, Auburn, LSU, Arkansas and others will begin massacring the Aggies on the football field beginning in the 2012-2013 season.

Dallas GOP Chairman Reviews Last Night’s Debate

If you’re like me, you missed last night’s bajillionth Republican presidential debate, this one airing on Fox News, because you had a lot of stuff on  your DVR and it was flashing at you and stuff. Or you just didn’t want to watch it at all.

Well, in case you missed it, and are curious, Dallas GOP Chairman Wade Emmert reviewed the debate, and took a – shall we say – very honest approach.

Note: As Jack E. Jett points out in the comments, it’s been moved or something. Never you fear. Google caches everything.

TCU to the Big 12?

Maybe. It kind of makes sense.

AT&T CEO Lauds Dallas’s Resilience

Last night’s World Affairs Council-Dallas/Fort Worth dinner at the Hyatt Regency DFW was like a CEOs’ homecoming fete, with everyone from Rex Tillerson (Exxon Mobil) and mega-Realtor Ebby Halliday to Comerica’s Ralph Babb showing up to see AT&T’s Randall Stephenson accept the WAC’s 28th H. Neil Mallon Award. Former CEO-turned-Senate-candidate Tom Leppert also turned up and drew a shout-out from Stephenson, whose company relocated to Dallas from San Antonio in 2008: “Tom was the first guy who started recruiting me. He came to see me even before I was CEO. … I said, ‘Tom, can we just wait!?’ ”

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Death Row Inmates Never Got Fancy Meals

Texas is making international news today for ending the practice of giving those about to be executed whatever they’d like for their last meal. The end of a tradition like that made me sad. But now Bruce Tomaso over at the DMN explains that the whole “last meal” thing has always been bunk. And that makes me even sadder.

Back on My Feet Gets Our Intern Running With the Homeless

Summer intern Kelsy McCraw attended a Back on My Feet run one morning in July. She thought she’d go out, do one run with them, and then do a quick report. But after that initial run, McCraw, a former soccer player at Washington and Lee University, was hooked. She spent five weeks running with the BoMF group. Below is her report.

Sheretta Bodem is shy—not bashfully shy like a child, but hesitantly shy like somebody who’s never been able to depend on anyone. This tough-skinned 25-year-old is about 5 feet 2 inches tall with a curvy figure that is usually hidden in t-shirts, pants, and sneakers. A baseball hat sits atop her braided black hair, slung so low that it just shades her dark brown eyes, as if to reiterate her don’t-mind-me timidity. She sits across the table from me in a back storage room at Dallas LIFE, as she tells me why she walked into the shelter’s doors last November.

She’s a woman of few words, most of Bodem’s answers to my questions are succinct and to the point, but the tall wall she’s built was how she learned to survive.

Bodem says she was spoiled growing up—she always did and got what she wanted. Her mother was a truck driver, so circumstance may have edited the scope of those desires. Nevertheless, her mostly absent parent gave her little in the form of life direction. When her mom would go on her three-month driving stints, Bodem and her younger brother would stay at their less-than-attentive aunt’s home in Richland.

With no discipline, Bodem dropped out of high school at 17 because, as she explains it, it just didn’t seem that important. So, she settled at her aunt’s house with no job, no schooling, and no desire for either. Bodem describes this time in her life as “nothing,” just doing nothing and no plans to change it. At 21, she had her daughter, and at 23, her son. Bodem ruled out living with either of her children’s fathers. “I didn’t want my children to grow up in that kind of environment,” she says. Her “nothing” life at her aunt’s lingered on for a few years until her aunt began clearly favoring one of her children. Bodem wouldn’t elaborate about what happened other than “some other stuff happened…just bad stuff.” She says she really had no choice but to move out. At this point, she had lost contact with her mother and brother. So, with no other place to turn, she sought out Dallas LIFE.

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Neerman Running for State House Seat

With Republican Will Hartnett, who represents most of North Dallas (District 14), considering retirement, former County GOP Chairman Jonathon Neerman is making it known he’s going for the seat. Old rule: the earlier you announce for a primary, the less opposition you get. New rule: there is no such thing as a Republican primary without opposition.

Perry’s Bubble Bursts As GOP Gets to Know Him

Surprisingly, the most devastating critique of Perry’s performance comes from neocon chieftain Bill Kristol. I would have expected Kristol to have supported Perry’s embrace of the most extreme elements of Israel’s government.

But Kristol isn’t buying what the Texas governor is selling:

… no front-runner in a presidential field has ever, we imagine, had as weak a showing as Rick Perry. It was close to a disqualifying two hours for him.

The problem for Perry is that he just can’t handle questions outside of his pre-set talking points. And when he gets unnerved by that, he doesn’t even handle his talking points.

Kristol’s entire article is worth reading. I don’t agree with him about Christie (potential candidates always look like saviors before they actually announce), but his critique of the Republican debates is spot on. The words “wacky” and “crazy” seem almost judicious. They will, of course, be forgotten in 12 months when the presidential campaign is really underway, but for now they are about as cringe-producing as any political events I have ever watched. Perry still has time, but the bloom is definitely off his rose.

Things To Do In Dallas This Weekend: Sep 23-25

Yesterday morning, I woke up giggling around 3 am. Why? According to the fuzzy note I made on my phone, I was dreaming about “lobster cakes.” I hate lobster, so if anyone needs me this weekend, I’ll be busy trying to figure out exactly what that means.

Friday

We Are 1976, this year’s best gift shop, regularly devotes a section of the store to work from local artists. And now that it’s fall, things can officially get underway. Not only is the store having a sale on vinyl toys and collectibles this weekend, they’re hosting a party tonight for the four artists on display in their Fallout Gallery space. You’ll find the work of Leah Duncan, a print artist and illustrator from Austin, Roger Peters, a photographer from Dallas, Kyle Steed, a graphic designer and illustrator from Dallas, and Brandon Thibodeaux, also a photographer from Dallas. There will also be plenty of booze. Eat dinner at Louie’s. Obviously. Bring cash or American Express.

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