The outlaw country all-star is finally embracing the genre of his dreams—and bluegrass seems to be embracing him back.
A pro-drilling website purports that the Russian government is behind a push to ban fracking in Texas.
But, really, how many dudes are there who look like Paul Rudd?
The Cowboys fell to 6-2 in a loss that, to a lot of UT fans watching the game, still felt a little bit like a win.
Dallas is on track to see a record low number of murders this year.
Did the Texas native have major plastic surgery to completely change her appearance or is she just 18 years older than we remember her being in Jerry Maguire? Does it matter?
How else do you react to a 59-0 thumping?
It provides such a meager amount of funding that it's hardly worth the effort of putting it on the ballot at all.
How the unlikely use of a barbecue pit creates the best artisanal chocolate in Texas.
If you've got an eight-figure house-hunting budget and a need for a place with goalposts in the backyard, give it a look.
A night with the company that recycles the thousands and thousands of gallons of oil used during the fair.
The area along Greenville Avenue and Skillman street, parallel north-south arteries through the city, has become an Ebola corridor.
Nothing says "finger on the pulse of America's youth" like "video arcades," right?
And now, thanks to the establishment of the National Amputee Boxing Association, civilian amputees—who have very few opportunities for athletic competition—can.
Davis's latest ad has caused a lot of controversy. Is she wrong in bringing up Abbott's accident?
A federal judge in Corpus Christi called the state's voter ID law "an unconstitutional poll tax"
Concerns over ISIS fighters crossing the border are more than misplaced
The state's top offerings, from digging in to the facts and fiction surrounding history's real-life Dracula to witnessing Texas's fiercest basketball rivalry.
Most of Texas may be privately owned, but that doesn't mean it's tame. From McKittrick Ridge and the Guadalupe River to Maravillas Canyon and Lake Crockett, here are eighteen places where you can revel in the most natural, untouched—and, yes, savage—aspects of our state.
Max Soffar is dying on death row, where he sits for a crime I'm certain he didn't commit. Maybe this letter will convince you to let him spend his last days at home with his family.
Find out which selections were considered liquid gold.
The final debate in the 2014 governor's race is over, and the winner was clear-cut.
Lee Ann Womack became a star the old-fashioned Nashville way. Now she’s ready to be an artist on her own terms.
What to hear, read, watch, and look at this month to achieve maximum Texas cultural literacy.
Dusty Burke, now a partner at the prestigious firm Vinson & Elkins, talks about graduating from law school during an era when women were not expected to use their degrees.
How the small East Texas town of Marshall became a personal hell for some of the country’s biggest high-tech companies.
The photographer from Big Bend known for stunning landscapes gets out of his comfort zone. Here, a first look at several images from his latest collection.
Eight-year-old Giovanni and six-year-old Victor can ride the Globe of Death, spin plates, and transfix large audiences. As the eighth generation of the Flores Family Thrill Show, it’s their birthright.
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Rooted in Business: C. T. Bauer College of Business
The area in and around Anzalduas Park, on the Rio Grande, has become an epicenter of the latest border crisis, a place where residents confront promise and peril as they deal with a reality as old as the river itself.
An exclusive excerpt from Domingo Martinez’s new memoir, “My Heart Is a Drunken Compass,” in which a drink is always close at hand and the battle against the bottle is never fully won.
For more than a decade, Michelle Lyons’s job required her to watch condemned criminals be put to death. After 278 executions, she won't ever be the same.
A perfect send off to the hot summer days.
Say what you want about their crumbling $60 million high school stadium. The people of Allen would build it all over again.
Read this National Magazine Award-winning story about how the Legislature slashed funding for women’s health programs in 2011 and launched an all-out war on Planned Parenthood that has dramatically changed the state’s priorities. The battle continues raging, and the stakes could not be higher.
It was just last year—amid spectacular losses and dramatic resignations—that the University of Texas saw its sports program go up in flames. As the new athletics director knows, a return to glory now rides on one person: him.
How a team of blind men and women from Austin became the champions of beep baseball.