Author Archives: Red from Texas

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About Red from Texas

I'm proud to be Red. I have lived most of my life in Texas and I love this place. Here are a few things you should know about me. 1. I am happily married and intend to stay so. 2. I live in a house that is older than you, unless you are really old. 3. I own 2 rifles and a shotgun. I think handguns are just trouble. 4. I have never killed a man, but have taken out some deer and hogs. 5. I was a good student, but never close to being valedictorian. 6. In no particular order I like the Houston Texans, San Antonio Spurs, Houston Astros, FC Barcelona, Tottenham Hotspur, Texas Longhorns and Houston Dynamo. 7. I hate Dallas but always have a good time when I go there. 8. I was a Dallas Cowboys fan for 26 years but declared that I was no longer a fan during the 1987 strike. 9. I don't own any pets. I like cats, and a good dog and I have met at least 3 of them in my lifetime. 10. I think the best part of Texas is west of I-35. 11. I own two pairs of cowboy boots, but don't wear them very often. 12. I don't have a pronounced Texas accent, but can affect one when needed. 13. My last meal would be fried shrimp with tartar sauce, a baked potato with all the fixins', a dinner salad with 1000 Island dressing, yeast rolls and chocolate fudge pie for dessert. 14. I'm an old Dad, but my children are none of your business. 15. I have two degrees from UT-Austin and somehow managed to fall in love with and marry an Aggie. 16. Most of my family are right-wing nut jobs but I love them anyway. 17. When I get to play golf on a regular basis, I shoot in the low 80's. 18. I don't get to play golf on a regular basis. 19. I think Fort Worth is the best town in Texas by a long shot. 20. I have a mean herb garden. Regards, Red P.S. Remember it's not a color, it's a state of mind.

Faster Than a Speeding Bullet

TCR Board - Alternatives Considered Octber 20 2014

The last time I took a train in Texas was when I was 5 years old and my Mother and I travelled from Austin to San Antonio to meet my Dad while my sisters were at summer camp in Kerrville.  I loved it and it never occurred to me that I would not ride on another train until I was in college on the east coast.  Incredibly, there has been no direct passenger rail service between Dallas and Houston for almost 20 years.  And if you want to travel that route by rail, it might seem like it takes 20 years.  In reality, it only takes 20 hours with an overnight stop in San Antonio.  Which is fine if you haven’t already been to the Alamo 63 times and you really like the split pea soup at Schilo’s.  For anyone who actually wants to get from one city to another it is a complete non-starter.  The average European must think that it is insane that two major urban centers that are only 250 miles apart are not connected by  a reasonably fast and reliable rail link.  Well, that may change.  Yet another company is attempting to get into the high-speed rail business in Texas.  And in only a decade or so, we might have the first high speed rail line connecting H-Town to Big D.  Make it so.

http://www.khou.com/story/news/local/texas/2014/10/30/texas-bullet-train-gaining-traction/18160333/

Map released by Federal Railroad Administration (who knew there was such an animal) and the Texas Department of Transportation (formerly and more appropriately called the Texas Highway Department)

Today in Texas History – October 30

Austin’s first newspaper, the City Gazette, was first published in 1839.  The inaugural edition contained four pages and was published every Wednesday.  The subscription price was $5.00 per year. During the Texas Congressional sessions from 1840 until 1842, the Gazette was the official publisher of the Texas Congress.  Therefore, much of the newsprint contained the proceedings of Congress, laws, presidential decrees, and other governmental matters.  The paper carried local, national  and foreign news, which would have included news from the United States.  It also contained non-news items such as editorials, letters to the editor, fiction, poetry, essays, and reprints from other papers.  The editorial stance of the paper vacillated – at first being in favor of Mirabeau B. Lamar and then switching allegiance to Sam Houston. Publication was suspended in March 1842 because of the threatened Mexican invasion of Austin.  Additional issues were published until August 17, 1842.  Copies of the Gazette are available for research at the Texas State Library.

The Boz Just Won’t Fucking Go Away

Okay, I know there has been a bit too much football on the site lately, but damn it this is a site about Texas and you just can’t get away from some football talk, no matter what you think of the sport.  So we must report that tonight ESPN will air “Brian and the Boz” a documentary by Austin filmmaker Thaddeus Matula on Brian Bosworth – a decent football player who created an outsized presence as “The Boz” and pretty much bullshitted his way into being named an All-American and a first round draft choice of the Seattle Seahawks before flaming out.  Even then, he again bullshitted his way into a minor film career as an action hero.  If you haven’t seen “Stone Cold”  then you haven’t seen the one of the worst movie of the 80’s.

In his last Texas-OU game, I trained my binoculars on “The Boz” for much of the game and watched him get knocked on his ass repeatedly by the Longhorns.  He did not make a play the entire game.   I realized at that point that he was so much hype.  When his college career ended in a steroid scandal, my suspicions  were confirmed.  His pathetic pro career was icing on the failure cake.  And yet we can’t get rid of this guy and I have just wasted 10 minutes writing this.

NFL Picks – Week 9

This week’s NFL Prediction Six-Pack

FRANK ZAPPA

“You can’t be a real country unless you have a beer and an airline. It helps if you have some kind of a football team, or some nuclear weapons, but at the very least you need a beer.”

Frank Zappa

Many a war could have been won by simply dropping beer on the enemy’s troops.

Last week 2-4. For the season 13-17.  This is my week, for sure.

Your Budweiser Sucks and So Does the Local Team Pick of the Week

49ers over Rams. 49ers will be tough at home coming off of the bye week.  Meanwhile, the Rams are coming off a tour of duty as punching bag for the Chiefs who drubbed them 34-7.  So much for my short-lived Austin Davis mancrush.  Jeff Fischer (notorious for having an enormous stick up his butt) has a knack for getting the least amount possible out of his available talent pool. San Francisco 35 St. Louis.10.

Your Beer Pong Pick of the Week.

Cardinals over Cowboys. The two best teams in the NFC line up this week.  This would be the game of the week but for the Broncos-Patriots game. The Cowboys really need to take advantage of this week at home.  After Sunday, they play just 2 more games in the friendly confines of the PissDome.  But if you haven’t noticed, the Cardinals are matching the Boys win for win.  Last week I wondered if this season was worth the price of Jerry Jones’ soul – because that was the only explanation for what was going on in North Texas.  But the Colt McCoy and the OTNA’s came to town.  I suppose even the Devil gets his due once in a while. The Devil doubles down in the desert this week. Arizona 25 Arlington, TX 21.

Your Nuclear Bomb Pick of the Week.

Eagles over Texans. Okay the Texans staggered back to life against the undead Titans on Sunday.  If only they could play such cannon fodder every week they might have a chance.  So far the Texans are playing to form – beating the NFL equivalent of the walking dead and losing close games to any team with an actual pulse.  Yet, the remarkably mediocre Giants are the only team to have put a true ass-whippin’ on the Texans.  The Eagles are having a similar experience having only beaten one good team in the Colts and feasting on the little sisters of the poor.  They are licking their chops when looking at the Texans.  Since I will be in attendance at this one, I really hope I am wrong, but I don’t see the Texans defense containing the Eagles multi-faceted attack or being able to score the 36 necessary to beat the Eagles. Philadelphia 35 Houston 25.

Your In Heaven There is no Beer Pick of the Week.

Stealers over Ravens.  All of a sudden this looks like a remarkably watchable matchup of 5-3 teams fighting for the division lead over the struggling Bengals.  Big Ben was beyond marvelous last week.  Flacco Joe is having his moments too under Kubiak’s offense.  Justin Forsette is playing better than Ray Rice would have.  And Le’Veon Bell looks like the real deal.  Why am I picking so many hard games to call this week?  Perhaps because I suck at the easy ones. Pittsburgh 29 Baltimore 27.

Your Sam Adams Was A Lousy Coach Pick of the Week.

Broncos over Patriots. A clear favorite for game of the week – which typically means it will suck.  Not this time.  Patriots are fresh off of dropping 51 points on the Bears’ defense.  Broncos were clearly slackers in only whipping the Chargers by 14.  This might be the last regular season meeting of the two future Hall of Fame QB’s who have defined football for the last 15 years.  Who has the bigger legacy – Tom with his 3 rings and 2 defeats in the SB or Peyton with his individual record setting but only 1 ring and 1 loss in the big one.  That’s as tough a call as this game.   I might even try to watch this one.  Lucky viewers on the west coast will get the Raider-Seahawks debacle instead. It’s a big number at 55, but I still think the bet of the week is to take the over here. Denver 42 New England 33.

Your Beer Shits Pick of the Week.

Vikings over OTNA’s. I like Teddy Bridgewater.  I wish he was a Texan.  I also like RG3, but I don’t wish he was a Texan.  Bridgewater’s Vikings are operating under the “Score 14 Points and Beat the Vikings” Rule. Meanwhile, the OTNA’s are suddenly not desperate at QB with Colt McCoy having a fairly remarkable turn as the spot starter.  Anyhow, RG3 can’t stay on the field and he isn’t that good when he does.  I seem to have been very wrong about him.  Am I also wrong about Teddy?  With the presence of Colt and Teddy – this week is the all-too-rare actually watchable Shit Bowl game of the year.  Nonetheless, standard protocol requires me to warn viewers to put away their handguns lest there be an “incident” while watching this turgid turd tussle. Minnesota 17 Landover, Md. 13.

Today in Texas History – October 29

Father of Conjunto, Narciso Martínez was born in Reynosa, Mexico in 1911.  Shortly after his birth, his family moved across the Rio Grande to the town of La Paloma near Brownsville.  Martínez took up the accordion only at the age of 17 when he moved to Bishop and was influenced by the local Czech and German musicians. Martinez incorporated the accordion into Mexican music and along with his partner, bajo sexto player Santiago Almeida, established the accordion and bajo sexto as the basic instruments of Conjunto music.  Martínez made his first recording in 1936 on the Bluebird Records label.  In 1946 he switched to the Ideal label.   Known as “El Huracán del Valle”  because of his rapid keywork, Martinez played throughout the 1950s.  His career declined after a new wave Conjunto artists established themselves in the 1960s.  He had later success, however, after being  featured in a 1976 documentary about Tex-Mex music Chulas Fronteras.  He was inducted into the Conjunto Music Hall of Fame in 1982 and received a National Heritage Award from the National Endowment for the Arts in 1983.

The State Of The Race In Texas, Ctd

Get Ready – The Invasion is Coming. And by that I mean the right-wing crazies led by the inimitable soon to be Lt. Governor Dan Patrick are taking over the state.

Andrew Sullivan's avatarThe Dish

A reader flags the awful ad seen above:

After reading my fellow Texan’s rundown of this year’s elections, I thought you might be interested to know that Republican candidate for Lieutenant Governor, Dan Patrick, has been using ISIS as a weapon against his Democratic opponent, Leticia Van de Putte, in an attack ad this month. If I hadn’t already voted for Wendy Davis and Van de Putte, this ad, which I first saw this morning, would have surely energized me to vote AGAINST Dan Patrick. It’s almost comical how ridiculous the fear mongering is here. Almost. The Republicans in this state have zero shits to give anymore and, thanks to SCOTUS’s lack of a ruling on our new voter ID laws, that will likely continue through 2016.

Another Texan looks at the horizon:

There is some possible good news in this article.

What the rest of the country doesn’t…

View original post 256 more words

Today in Texas History – October 28

Texian militia and Mexican regular army troops under the command of Gen. Domingo Ugartechea skirmished at the battle of Concepción on the grounds of Mission Conception near San Antonio de Bexar.  The skirmish was the opening engagement in the siege of Bexar and is considered by historians to be the first major conflict of the Texas Revolution. The Texians were commanded by James Bowie and James W. Fannin, Jr.  When Ugartechea’s forces approached, the Texians took cover in a horseshoe shaped gully which provided an excellent defensive position.  The Texian long rifles proved to be effective military weapons because of their longer range and accuracy.  Reported losses (which are frequently exaggerated) included 14 Mexican killed and 39 wounded.  The Texans claimed only one killed and one wounded.

Today in Texas History – October 27

From the annals of corporate ambition –  In 1892, the Pan American Railway company was chartered. Boston investors dreamed up a plan to connect Victoria, Texas with Rio de Janeiro in Brazil.  Citizens of Victoria – anxious to expand their railroad opportunities – offered a $150,000 bonus.  The dream died quickly as only 10 miles of track extending south from Victoria were ever constructed.  The company could not raise funds to construct a bridge over the Guadalupe River.  One wonders how they imagined conquering the swamps of southern Panama.  No trains ever ran on the line and it was ultimately abandoned.  Interestingly, there is still not a direct land link between North and South America today.

Texas Steak Cookoff – Hico, Texas

Texas Steak Cookoff in Hico TX

Team Carne Knowledge has signed up for the 13th annual Texas Steak Cookoff to be held in beautiful downtown Hico, Texas on May 16, 2015.   After finishing in 7th place (out of 108 entries) in 2013, last year’s effort was not up to par.  The team is committed to a better finish this year and is already working on a new entry for the appetizer contest.  Come by and see us.  Check out the website for details.

http://www.texassteakcookoff.com/