The towering Huntsville statue of the first president of the Republic of Texas was dressed in an NFL jersey, and some locals are upset.
A bizarre social media fabrication goes viral.
Happy ninety-first to the Red Headed Stranger.
The Houston Rockets backup center waved to the crowd and said “Chicken’s on me!” before clanking the shot that guaranteed fans Chick-fil-A.
After the Magnolia star spent Wednesday in a holy war with University of Kentucky basketball fans, Baylor’s coach decided to stay put.
Everyone hates dealing with airport security. Ted Cruz has a solution that would benefit Ted Cruz and very few others.
Ahead of the new record ‘American Primitive,’ the front man gets brutally honest about the band’s discography.
*The winner will not shock you. It’s Willie Nelson.
The two icons have cast a long shadow over the Lone Star State for more than six decades.
Texas’s junior senator and senior podcaster enjoys an unconventional sort of remuneration for his “unpaid” work.
From the nods to outlaw country tradition to the rapturous ode to denim-covered butts, this is the H-Town hero’s most Texan album yet.
The secret is impeccable planning and organizational skills. Luckily, control is Team Beyoncé's forte.
Here they are: the showdowns you demanded.
It includes Simone Biles, Kelly Clarkson, Tommy Lee Jones, Matthew McConaughey, Nolan Ryan, George Strait, and an underdog run from Kinky Friedman.
A successful “country crossover” requires buy-in from industry players in Nashville. But Beyoncé isn’t interested in their approval.
We’ve got Willie, Beyoncé, McConaughey, Biles, and Duncan—plus Cinderella runs by Carol Burnett and Kinky Friedman.
Tim Duncan’s still got it, Kacey takes on her pal Willie, and we say an early farewell to Elon.
Which of these 64 celebs is the most beloved in the Lone Star State? This March Madness, we’re asking you to tell us.
Alex Garland’s film, which premiered in Austin during SXSW, accomplishes something few movies have.
Many bands are boycotting, more of the brands are square, and attitudes have soured toward big tech. Where is the festival going?
The Plano-based chain has opened at least nine “Pizza Hut Classic” locations in towns such as Gonzalez and Bastrop, hoping nostalgia and community will help bring people back to the brand.
Amazon’s remake, which premiered at SXSW, swaps Patrick Swayze’s soulfulness for a more coherent script—but is that a good thing?
Beyoncé, Kacey Musgraves, and Khruangbin headline a packed season.
Donald Trump and Joe Biden cruised to victory, the Democrats chose Colin Allred to challenge Ted Cruz, and Dade Phelan is heading to a runoff.
The attorney general and the senator have beef. For now, it’s confined to social media.
Turns out, everyone from former Texas A&M coach Kevin Sumlin to the ghost of Mickey Mantle helped cause Johnny Football’s downfall.
A Houston company’s vessel returns America to the most remote portion of our state for the first time since 1972.
According to medical experts, the beat of Beyoncé’s new single is just right for performing CPR (and perhaps dancing).
The beleaguered attorney general has announced a lawsuit targeting El Paso’s Annunciation House, claiming—without evidence—that it and other NGOs “facilitate astonishing horrors.”
The concept of “selling out” at the heart of the film feels like an artifact from another time. But it may be that we’ve just stopped talking about it.
With two new singles, Bey is planting a flag squarely in country music—and we have a feeling she’s about to school us on the genre.
The attorney general, who has spent eight years delaying his securities fraud trial, is arguing that those delays make his prosecution unconstitutional.
For ‘Willie and Me,’ Eva Hassmann enlisted an Elvis impersonator, Peter Bogdanovich, and Willie himself to tell a story of how Willie’s music crosses cultures.
Ms. Musgraves, the beloved Texan country star, teased her long-awaited new album . . . at the worst possible time.
It’s unlikely Texas will depart from the union. But with Governor Greg Abbott spouting secessionist rhetoric over border security, talk of a “Texit” is getting a fresh look.
The law, which would have required booksellers to rate every book they sold to school libraries, was overturned by the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals.
Agriculture commissioner Sid Miller said he would duel state rep Glenn Rogers—with words. Technically, the real thing isn’t off the table.
Judging by the fest lineups, Texans such as BigXthaPlug, Charley Crockett, Khruangbin, and more are about to enter music’s A-list.
The Longhorns and the Cowboys got thumped after receiving Cruz’s endorsement. Some say the junior senator is to blame.
The beleaguered attorney general blamed House Speaker Dade Phelan for “doxxing” him, but he failed to mention that the address contained in the impeachment materials Phelan released was for Paxton’s residence in another city.
Having survived one big legal fight, the attorney general is eagerly picking new ones with Media Matters for America, Pfizer, the U.S. State Department, and a Texan with a nonviable pregnancy.
The Arlington a capella group stood before the lord of song, declaring “Hallelujah” to be holiday music.
It fetched $705,000, topping the list of about 165 items from Ted Lusher's Texana collection.
The think tank, founded by a conservative billionaire who supports Greg Abbott, ranks Texas 39 places behind California.
An original broadsheet announcing the fall of the Alamo, the first book published in Texas, and other stuff that Phil Collins will probably buy.
Traditionally, the capitol building has housed a gigantic tree. This year's is much more meager.
With Waxahatchee’s Katie Crutchfield singing harmonies, to boot.
Money can buy anything, but it can’t make you look like any less of a dork.
The $77 million the university will pay Jimbo Fisher to not coach football could fund 1,666 full-tuition scholarships—or buy 17 billion Goldfish crackers.