In We Were the Universe, Parsons builds a world that feels deeply rooted in Texas culture, but mercifully devoid of any old-school, clichéd depictions of the state.
The rising country singer melds the likes of Elvis and Vicente Fernández for a style that's all his own.
After a preseason win over Caitlin Clark and the Indiana Fever, the Dallas Wings see enthusiasm and attendance rise at games.
The director-screenwriter’s love letter to Flannery O’Connor attempts to invigorate the biopic, to mixed results.
Christine and Tim Hood, owners of perhaps the largest private pinball collection in Texas, are planning a new museum devoted to the game.
Behind the scenes with the Dallas Jackals as the third-year franchise establishes its niche in a crowded pro sports landscape.
The Conroe-born musician is "in a rut 90 percent of the time," but you'd never know it by the many milestones he has on the horizon.
The Netflix documentary Rather revisits the storied career of the former CBS Evening News anchor and the ungluing of television news.
The celebrated Compton rapper made a curious mix-up in his Drake diss track.
The towering Huntsville statue of the first president of the Republic of Texas was dressed in an NFL jersey, and some locals are upset.
Happy ninety-first to the Red Headed Stranger.
After a few decades in the purgatory of corniness, fans of artists such as Beyoncé and Dasha are embracing the separate-but-together choreography.
Writer Sarah Hepola spent eighteen months on this story and discusses how Navarro cheer coach Monica Aldama has been “tested beyond reason.”
A new show in Fort Worth features the unclassifiable San Antonio–born artist, who connects deep space and the ancient fossil record.
Another dark comedy from Richard Linklater, a report on the ideological battles plaguing public schools, and an exhibition of modern collages by Black artists.
Inside the Netflix star and competitive cheerleading coach’s fight against the fallout of instant stardom.
Dallas won the NHL Western Conference regular-season crown with balanced scoring and time on ice. How will the Stars fare in the playoffs?
After last weekend’s NASCAR Cup Series race, the Fort Worth venue won’t host top-flight auto racing again until next year.
Yuji Kikuchi, a gearbox specialist with the Honda LCR team, brings us inside the engineers’ paddock before the Grand Prix of the Americas, in Austin.
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.
How the San Antonio native and ’Somebody Somewhere’ star became a middle-aged ingenue.
‘A La Sala,’ the fourth studio album by Houston’s psychedelic-soul-rock trio, is as globally inspired as it is intimate.
‘Texas, Being: A State of Poems’ has something for everyone.
Baylor students will sing alongside Broadway actors in the first public concert performance of ‘American Eclipse.’
Ahead of the new record ‘American Primitive,’ the front man gets brutally honest about the band’s discography.
The beloved singer-songwriter, once a scrappy unknown living in a run-down apartment Willie owned, describes the wonder of later duetting with him on a song she wrote.
*The winner will not shock you. It’s Willie Nelson.
The Dallas-born star of the shows ‘Supernatural’ and ‘The Boys’ has a rabid online fandom. Why? “He’s a very positive person,” my mom says. “He looks at life with the cup half full. Kind of like your dad.”
The two icons have cast a long shadow over the Lone Star State for more than six decades.
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.
Fortune’s new collection, ‘Hardtack,’ showcases a stripped-down approach that brings audiences closer to his subjects’ emotions.
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.
The unofficial family historian talks about listening to her dad sing “Red Headed Stranger” back before he’d ever even made it to Nashville.
From her greatness on the court to the hardships she has overcome away from basketball, Brittney Griner has earned every bit of her fame.
Tim Duncan’s still got it, Kacey takes on her pal Willie, and we say an early farewell to Elon.
The Houston rapper is number one in our hearts for being Texas-proud and cool as hell.
The centerpiece of the San Antonio Spurs dynasty brought five NBA championships to the Alamo City and always let his game speak for itself.
What makes someone a Texan?
We’ve been learning from the man from Uvalde’s shirtlessly Zen approach to life for decades.
Which of these 64 celebs is the most beloved in the Lone Star State? This March Madness, we’re asking you to tell us.
The Texas country artist long ago broke through the boundaries of the genre—all the way into my Brooklyn heart.
The quarterback led the Houston Texans to the NFL playoffs in his rookie season—and his work off the field is even more impressive.
Born in Austin, the star didn’t spend a ton of time in the Lone Star State. But we’re claiming her anyway.
In the Spy Kids trilogy, the robots have thumbs for heads, the chewing gum is high-tech, and the kids are respected. Which scenario feels least realistic to you?
Through his wrestling career and beyond, Austin’s renegade spirit shone through, whether he was stomping opponents or cooking lima beans.