‘Gus Plus Us’ Offers a Glimpse of Texas Filmmaking’s Conservative Future
The blue puppet on a wholesome kids’ show seems quite at home in a red state. Welcome to the anti-Hollywood.
The blue puppet on a wholesome kids’ show seems quite at home in a red state. Welcome to the anti-Hollywood.
Sixties-era student activism on the campus of Texas State University “snatched” the beloved preacher into the civil rights movement.
A half century of chronicling Texas.
I’ve long dreamed of driving every highway in Texas. This year I’m doing it—all 32,000 miles worth.
W. A. Criswell has spent forty years convincing his huge flock at Dallas’ First Baptist Church that the end of the world is near. He hopes you’ll believe it too.
The Austin filmmaker knows you’ll probably wait for his twenty-third feature to show up on Netflix a couple weeks after it hits the big screen. Still, he can dream.
It may be because of the processed pork product topping or the mesquite grilling, but these handheld delights are endlessly customizable.
She was pressured into convicting a man she believed was innocent—and was haunted by remorse. Three decades later, she did something about it.
Read StoryTexas Attitude, National Acclaim. From unlimited digital access to monthly print issues delivered to your door, choose your subscription to Texas Monthly today.