3 minute read
The fiercest female of all
THEN: The George H. W. Bush documentary “41 on 41” features George W. Bush, Bill Clinton, Barack Obama — and Sarah Jackson, a 2011 graduate of the Bush School of Government and Public Service at Texas A&M University. After stints as a press secretary in the U.S. House of Representatives and a public affairs specialist for the U.S. Department of State, she began work for the Dallas Citizens Council in 2014. One of her goals was to visit every continent by the age of 40. She achieved that on New Year’s in Sydney, Australia.
NOW: Since our story, Jackson: n Co-chaired the Texas Lyceum Meeting, focusing on “Are We Taking Our Democracy for Granted?” n Served as Vice President of Policy Fellowships and led the presentation and policy brief of Texas Lyceum Fellow James McKenzie on voter turnout in Texas. n Attended Bush-Cheney Alumni Reunion as a member of the Presidential Leadership Scholar Alumni Committee. n Was appointed to the national board of directors for Power to Decide. n Serves on three Dallas ISD boards and committees.
The for-real housewife of Dallas: Cary Deuber
THEN: Cary Deuber, of the “Real Housewives of Dallas,” showcased her remodeled home on Strait Lane in the April Advocate. Her $300,000 kitchen layout mimics Eleven Madison Park in New York City, a restaurant with three Michelin stars. The room’s centerpiece is a $75,000 Frenchmade blue Molteni stove. But Deuber called her padlocked closet, fashioned after the
Highland Park Fendi store, “my wonderland.”
NOW: Deuber shed the drama of RHOD by becoming a “friend” to the show instead of a regular cast member. She’s also uber buff from eating clean and committing to a consistent exercise routine. (Removing herself from the RHOD crazies probably doesn’t hurt, either.) “If I can, you can,” she wrote on Instagram. “My current fitness routine is pretty simple: Do yoga and [Barry’s Boot Camp], don’t eat ridiculously high calories, and #EmSculpt to boost your results!”
The teenage storyteller who humanizes borderlands
THEN: When we profiled Ekansh Tambe in May, the St. Mark’s School of Texas freshman had used his Nikon D5500 to photograph more than 8,000 images of conflicts on five borders across four continents. In addition to the U.S.-Mexico border, Tambe explored the border between North and South Korea, the borders of Israel and Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, Egypt and Gaza. He watched as Gaza militants fired rockets. He could see charred fields and a tank rolling in the distance, and he could hear gunfire. “My mom was sitting in the car when we heard that. She rolled down the window and said, ‘Get back in!’’’
NOW: Over the summer, Tambe explored Colombia and photographed its borders with Peru, on the Amazon River, and Venezuela. In addition to tackling his sophomore year at St. Mark’s, he spoke at STORY 2019, a national storytelling conference. In the spring, he will be a keynote speaker at the National Youth Leadership Conference and at an entrepreneurial conference in Sydney, Australia.
THEN: Cassie Evans Decker starred in our pets issue as foster mom to two cavalier king Charles rescues, Bucky and Rusty, and bunnies, Thumper Thumperton and Hoppy Hopperton, but we overlooked the true star of the family: Josie, the parrot.
NOW: Decker’s dad is an obstetrician/ gynecologist, and he accepted Josie as a form of payment on a hysterectomy in the early 1980s. Since Decker was born in 1981, she considers the parrot a sister. “I’ve grown up with her, and now she’s aunt to my daughter, Hattie Pearl,” Decker says. Josie prefers women over men, sings backup for “I Could Have Danced All Night” and can mimic a belly laugh. Since our story, the family has moved into a new home and added two members: guinea pigs Sophie and Snowbelle. “My daughter is such a loving little mommy to them.”
He’s a knockout
THEN: When we interviewed Derrick James in January, he trained boxers Errol Spence Jr. and Jermell Charlo, as well as celebrities Ross Perot Jr., Daryl Johnston and Clarice Tinsley. When not at Cooper Fitness Center, James spent 2019 nurturing his two champions at his new gym on the Trinity River. In 2009, James began coaching Spence. In 2019, the boxer became an undisputed champion, and his mentor flew to New York to be honored as the Boxing Writers Association of America’s “Trainer of the Year.”
NOW: James is again a finalist for BWAA “Trainer of the Year.” Spence beat Mikey Garcia in March at AT&T Stadium and Shawn Porter in Los Angeles in September to run his record to 26-0 and strengthen his grip on boxing’s welterweight title and his position as one of boxing’s best pound-for-pound fighters. But at 2:53 a.m. on Oct. 10, Spence’s white Ferrari 488 Spider crashed and flipped in a single-car accident just south of Downtown. The 29-year-old boxer, who wasn’t wearing a seat belt, was ejected but survived, suffering face lacerations. Spence spent six days in the hospital and was recently charged with DWI. He posted –then deleted – a post-accident Instagram that read: “No broken bones. I’m a savage!!”