February 9-15, 2022 FREE fwweekly.com
In his latest book, Fort Worth’s Mark Nobles brings faces to the infamous characters of early Cowtown. B Y
STATIC Dave Hickey and Patricia Highsmith were good enough for the world, so why aren’t they good enough for Fort Worth? BY JAMES RUSSELL
B R E T
M C C O R M I C K
EATS & DRINKS A cheeseburger taco? All that and more are waiting at SoCal’s Jimboy’s on the West Side. BY EDWARD BROWN
STUFF MUSIC The blue-collar Bengals take The Grackle Art Gallery will on the flashy Rams Sunday be crackling with avantin Super Bowl LVI — and Tom jazz and collaborative art Brady won’t be playing! this weekend. BY PAT R I C K H I G G I N S
BY EDWARD BROWN
2
FO R T WO R T H W E E K LY
F E B RUA RY 9 - 1 5 , 2 0 2 2
fwweekly.com
Vo lum e 17
Number 45
Febr uar y 9-1 5, 2022
INSIDE 50-Page Apology?
By Static
Outlaws and outliers occupy Mark Nobles’ new novel about early Fort Worth.
4
By Bret McCormick
Bob Niehoff, General Manager Ryan Burger, Art Director Jim Erickson, Circulation Director
8
By Patrick Higgins
11
Cour tesy TCU Press
A Brady-less Bonanza No Hot Sauce? No matter who wins Super Bowl LVI, every non-Bucs/ Pats fan can go home happy.
It’s weird, but you’ll get over it at Jimboy’s Tacos. By Edward Brown
Anthony Mariani, Editor Lee Newquist, Publisher
Take Hold, Thunder Road
In response to a judge’s needlessly spiteful decision, we have a few topic suggestions.
STAFF
CONTRIBUTORS
Edward Brown, Staff Writer
Megan Ables, Christina Berger, E.R. Bills, Jason Brimmer, Sue Chefington, Buck D. Elliott, Juan R. Govea, Patrick Higgins, Bo Jacksboro, Laurie James, Kristian Lin, Vishal Malhotra, Cody Neathery, Wyatt Newquist, Linda Blackwell Simmons, Madison Simmons, Teri Webster, Ken WheatcroftPardue, Cole Williams
Emmy Smith, Proofreader
EDITORIAL
Michael Newquist, Regional Sales Director Jennifer Bovee, Marketing Director Stacey Hammons, Senior Account Executive Julie Strehl, Account Executive Tony Diaz, Account Executive Wyatt Newquist, Digital Coordinator Clintastic, Brand Ambassador
BOARD
Anthony Mariani, Edward Brown,
19
Emmy Smith
Cover image by Ryan Burger DISTRIBUTION Fort Worth Weekly is available free of charge in the Metroplex, limited to one copy per reader. Additional copies of Fort Worth Weekly may be purchased for $1.00 each, payable at the Fort Worth Weekly office in advance. Fort Worth Weekly may be distributed only by Fort Worth Weekly’s authorized independent contractors or Fort Worth Weekly’s authorized distributors. No person may, without prior written permission of Fort Worth Weekly, take more than one copy of any Fort Worth Weekly issue. If you’re interested in being a distribution point for Fort Worth Weekly, please contact Will Turner at 817-321-9788.
COPYRIGHT The entire contents of Fort Worth Weekly are Copyright 2020 by Ft. Worth Weekly, LP.
No portion may be reproduced in whole or in
part by any means, including electronic retrieval
systems, without the express written permission of the publisher. Please call the Fort Worth Weekly office for back-issue information.
Fort Worth Weekly mailing address: 300 Bailey, Ste 205, Fort Worth TX 76107
Street address: 300 Bailey, Ste 205, Fort Worth TX 76107 For general information: 817-321-9700 For retail advertising: 817-321-9719 For classifieds: 817-987-7689
For national advertising: 817-243-2250 website: www.fwweekly.com
email: question@fwweekly.com
4 8 11 13 19 23
Metro Static . . . . . . . . . . 6 Static 2 . . . . . . . . 7
Books Stuff Night & Day Eats & Drinks Music
Hearsay . . . . . .25
26 Classifieds
Backpage . . . . .28
CLASSIC...$10.99/EA. SCARLET...$14.99/EA. NEW ZEALAND GRASS-FED WAGYU
FILET MIGNON $
29.99/LB. SAVE $10.00
PRICES VALID 2/9/22-2/15/22
FORT WORTH 4651 WEST FREEWAY | 817-989-4700
SOUTHLAKE 1425 E. SOUTHLAKE BLVD. | 817-310-5600
FO R T WO R T H W E E K LY
CHOCOLATE-DIPPED STRAWBERRIES 6 CT.
F E B RUA RY 9 - 1 5 , 2 0 2 2
fwweekly.com
LOVE TO COOK, OR JUST EAT?
3
Though shamelessly in bed with racist conspiracy nuts, local Republican judges have no problem moralizing from the bench.
FO R T WO R T H W E E K LY 4
S T A T I C
It’s election season in Tarrant County, which can only mean one thing — a surge of shameless fear-mongering and baseless assumptions of moral superiority by Republican candidates. Forget the fact that Tarrant’s powers that be are crumbling under the weight of unprecedented lawsuits, federal investigations, waning public trust, and endless blunders on the part of conservative leaders like Sheriff Bill Waybourn, DA Sharen Wilson, and longtime commissioner J.D. Johnson. What matters to Tarrant’s conservative leadership is that the wealthy elite and bigoted voters unite against perceived boogeymen like CRT and books that dare to teach kids that it’s OK not to be white, Protestant, or cisgender. We say this because last week’s bogus trial of a former justice of the peace is yet another example of a criminal justice system that undermines its credibility by putting the self-serving aims of Tarrant’s good ol’ boy club over public interests. Jacquelyn Wright has powerful enemies who include current Precinct 4 commissioner J.D. Johnson. In 2018, after she lost her Republican primary reelection bid to Christopher Gregory, Johnson allegedly made it known that he wanted Wright out of office before her term ended at the end of 2018. Tarrant County’s public integrity unit went snooping, as they did recently at the Carroll school distinct, and found that Wright had made a mistake when filing her
F E B RUA RY 9 - 1 5 , 2 0 2 2
fwweekly.com
B Y
homestead exemption — something that is never prosecuted as a criminal matter in Tarrant County. In early 2021, a county report that cited findings from three companies that specialize in locating fraudulent homestead exemptions estimated that, at any given time, upwards of 37,000 homeowners live in a home with an improper homestead exemption in Tarrant County. Homestead exemptions allow homeowners to claim a special property tax deduction on their primary residence. The DA put the full force of its taxpayer-funded resources behind indicting and prosecuting an elderly woman with a chronically sick husband. Last week, an 11-member jury that was not allowed to hear testimony or see evidence about the political nature of the persecution, er, prosecution of Wright found her guilty on three counts of tampering with a government document. The former JP didn’t tamper with anything. She simply forgot to update her homestead exemption when she moved. Wright is appealing the conviction and requesting to move her case out of Tarrant County and away from further meddling by DA Wilson. When setting punishment, Judge Daryl Coffey ordered Wright to pen a 50-page apology letter to Coffey within 90 days in addition to serving four years of probation, 10 days of county jail time, and paying a $2,500 fine. She doesn’t have to pay back any money to the county because she paid back what she owed for the outdated homestead exemption — a cool $10,000 — before she knew she was under investigation by the DA. Given the reasons Wright was unjustly targeted by the DA and our first-hand understanding of the cesspool that is Tarrant County politics, we offer the following writing topics for Wright’s consideration.
50 Pages on the Rampant Corruption and Racism of Local Republican Judges We’re not saying that Judge Coffey voted for Donald Trump, but, like a lot of white male Republicans, he almost certainly wants to lick his boots. Tarrant County residents should be horrified that Republican judges who oversee important criminal and civil cases also worship a certifiable nonsense-spewing idiot who has been credibly accused of rape by nearly 30
Cour tesy of Facebook
50 Shades of Public Corruption
METROPOLIS
By going all-in on Trump’s white supremacist movement, Tarrant County judges have forfeited judicial legitimacy in the eyes of many.
women, refused to rent properties to Black tenants, and continues to use his time and resources to further the cause of white supremacy. To anyone who pays attention, the idea that conservative judges would go all-in for the Cult of Trump makes perfect sense. Take Republican Judge Patricia Bennett of Tarrant’s 360th Judicial District Court. In 2018, she wrote on Facebook that a Hispanic state representative who had just lost his primary should be able to find a job in the hotel and food service industry, implying that that’s all Hispanics are good for. Bennett was publicly admonished by the State Commission on Judicial Conduct. That’s it. They said, “Bad girl” and let her go about her business. She’s still holding court today. Hmm … maybe Bennett should repeatedly write “I’m a racist piece of shit” for 50 pages. Or take Fort Worth Municipal Judge Danny Rodgers, who, according to one 2019 human resources complaint, pines for the good old days when Blacks could be burned alive or hanged in public while hundreds of white Southerners laugh and enjoy picnics while viewing the spectacle. Rodgers, according to the complaint, told a female Black colleague how great life was back in the good old days when white
people could own Black men and women. “Judge Rodgers chose to share with me that his family owned a plantation and owned slaves,” the Black colleague wrote in her complaint. “He went on to say that he really loved plantations. His tone and conduct were very condescending, intimidating, and demeaning.” Nothing was ever done about the complaint, as far as we could tell, and a city spokesperson declined to comment on the matter. Rodgers’ abhorrent behavior is currently under review by the State Commission on Judicial Conduct, according to Isaiah X. Smith, a Black activist who filed the complaint on behalf of Rodgers’ Black colleague, who still works alongside the judge. Judges aren’t the only elected officials who have no problem tying our criminal justice system to known racists. On Monday, DA Sharen Wilson dispelled any doubt that our local criminal justice system serves the interests of racist bigots. Tim O’Hare, the county commissioner candidate who turned Southlake into a dumpster fire of right-wing paranoia over “Marxist” CRT programs, announced that DA Wilson has officially endorsed him. “Tim O’Hare would make an outstanding County Judge for Tarrant Coun-
an investigation into Carlton and Moore, when typically most cases that DAs accept come from local police. Government documents that we received via open records requests show that the DA launched its own investigation into Carroll school district without the aid or consent of a local law enforcement agency. Weird, no? l This column reflects the opinions of the editorial board and not necessarily the Fort Worth Weekly. To submit a column, please email Editor Anthony Mariani at Anthony@FWWeekly.com. Submissions will be edited for factuality and clarity.
02.17.22 THURSDAY • 7:30-9AM
FORT WORTH CONVENTION CENTER K E Y N O T E B Y FA M E D H O T E L I E R
KEYNOTE SPONSOR
FORTWORTH.COM/ANNUAL PRESENTING SPONSOR
TICKETS ON SALE NOW
fwweekly.com
It would be fitting for Wright to put Coffey’s bullshit writing assignment to good use by researching and documenting the rampant corruption that has characterized Precinct 4 dealings since J.D. Johnson took over nearly 40 years ago (“Betting on the Good Ol’ Boys” Dec 2021). When you’re on the inside of the good ol’ boy club, things look great. To his supporters and admirers, J.D. could do no wrong, and it’s a safe bet that J.D. thinks his favors and generous spirit make everything all right in the end. It doesn’t. Every time he awarded a contract or did a favor for a political donor, he betrayed the public trust. The county employees who witnessed those acts and did nothing — and there are many of them — are equally culpable. It is not without irony that, of all places in Tarrant County, Precinct 4 was where government officials allegedly schemed against Wright. J.D. may have shown favoritism when a longtime donor’s business recently benefited from a brand-new road that cost county taxpayers $377,520.87, according to county records we reviewed and conversations with former county employees. Our research is ongoing but suggests that J.D. made a career out of awarding government contracts to political donors and personal friends. And yet the DA’s public integrity unit is celebrating the conviction of an elderly woman who paid back $10,000 to the county after noticing she misfiled her homestead exemption form. When the hell is J.D. going to pay back the county funds that he misused?
The unprecedented indictment and prosecution of Wright for not updating her homestead exemption, a crime that leaves her with two misdemeanors and one felony on her once-clean record, bears stark similarities to another unprecedented indictment and prosecution — that of Carroll school board members Todd Carlton and Michelle Moore. Both cases were investigated by the DA’s public integrity unit that is head-
ed by assistant district attorney Lloyd Whelchel. Wright’s time would be well spent educating Judge Coffey about the other bogus prosecution that served the aims of political allies of DA Wilson. On Sep 23, Whelchel authorized a DA investigation into the allegations against the two school board members, and his decision suggests a coordinated effort to serve the aims of Southlake Families, a powerful and well-funded PAC that supports far right-wing candidates, and its alleged founder and current county judge candidate, Tim O’Hare. A Southlake police spokesperson told us they did not request
F E B RUA RY 9 - 1 5 , 2 0 2 2
50 Pages on Insider Dealings at Precinct 4
50 Pages on How the Public Integrity Unit Served the Racist Interests of Tim O’Hare
FO R T WO R T H W E E K LY
ty,” Wilson said publicly. “I’ve known Tim for years and can attest to his solid work ethic and commitment to servant leadership. He is honest, respectful, and the best choice for conservative fiscal management. I wholeheartedly endorse Tim for County Judge.” For Wilson to call O’Hare “honest” is a public admission that our DA has gone all-in for a Republican party that has become untethered to reality. O’Hare’s press releases are packed with bullshit, mostly about his opponent, former Fort Worth mayor Betsy Price, whom O’Hare regularly paints as a card-carrying communist who performs abortions in her spare time. The company Republican judges keep speaks volumes about the character and values of elected officials who seem to care more about furthering the cause of white supremacy and clinging to power than serving the ethnically and politically diverse community that is Tarrant County.
5
Static Memo to the Texas Taliban
I received a message a couple of days ago from a local critic, and it made me smile. it’s a shame no one has not run over you with a truck yet. for being a Texan you sure have a pernicious attitude towards the state. I’ll say what everybody else is thinking MOVE This catchy “Love it or leave it” redux was originally in vogue around the time I was born, and this iteration no doubt emanates from a white man nostalgic for the days when “colored” people, women, and young folks knew their place and when unfortunate young men, in particular — with very little wherewithal or wisdom — “did their duty” without question. And if they didn’t do “their duty,” and they and their sisters, brothers, and mothers took to the streets and protested, mouth-breathing goons cracked their skulls or gunned them down in the streets. Ergo, what’s new is old, and what’s old is new. Again. And chatty contrarians continue to rumple Rip Van Winkles. I’m sorry, neighbor, but even with conservative cable news and talk radio girding you for menacing prattle, the good ol’ days are never coming back again (because they weren’t that good), and the good ol’ boys — i.e., the abhorrent golem-esque kakistocracy that you surely helped elect to dominate the Texas state legislature — is eventually going the way of the Dodo. In the meanwhile, annoying folks like me will remain in Texas and jaywalk every time we get the chance — especially across the asinine byways that you and your ilk created to define and confine the rest of us. All this, of course, is to say I won’t be leaving Texas or you or “it” alone.
As long as narrow-minded, self-important white men still try to 1.) disenfranchise persons of color, 2.) treat women as their inferiors, 3.) knowingly and willfully squander our natural resources and poison our landand seascapes for profit, and 4.) treat the rest of nature in this state as if it were expendable, sentient Texans will continue to stand up and speak out. So, if, perchance, you get to feeling like you want to fire up that gas-guzzling King Ranch edition (yes, we know … the one with the dubiously defiant “Come and Take It” decal on the back window) after placing a pinch of Fox News between the ol’ hypothalamus cheek and cerebellum gum, and drive around looking for rational folks to mow down, we won’t be hard to find. We will continue to challenge the powers that be (and the pawns they manipulate), because if they or you were ever on the side of truly equal opportunities for life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness or justice for all, you certainly aren’t now. In the last two election cycles, you knowingly and willfully aligned yourself with a voting bloc that included neo-Nazis, Proud Boys, fascists, white supremacists, chauvinists, science deniers, Russian sympathizers, and treasonous insurrectionists, but instead of being ashamed or feeling aghast, it’s an alignment you’re surprisingly comfortable with. Your conservative inclinations and associations are obviously your right and, even more so, your privilege, but being comfortable with the state’s diversity, trusting women with their own reproductive decisions, and generally advocating for the rights and privileges of folks who don’t look like you and me, who don’t love like you and me, and who aren’t represented in our government as fairly and beneficially as you and me is my right. And it’s my privilege. And it should be our privilege. And our mission. So cling to your ignorance, your prejudice, and your
fwweekly.com
GET YOUR TAXES DONE FOR FREE! United Way of Tarrant County’s Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA) program provides FREE tax preparation services for families and individuals whose household income is $60,000 or less.
F E B RUA RY 9 - 1 5 , 2 0 2 2
Our IRS-certified volunteers help taxpayers claim valuable tax credits to ensure they are maximizing their full refund potential—including the Child Tax Credit (CTC).
FO R T WO R T H W E E K LY
With multiple locations to choose from, our program continues to help Tarrant County residents save and secure money this tax season!
6
FIND A TAX CENTER NEAR YOU!
VOLUNTEER INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE
tendency toward white male exclusivity while you still can, because, to borrow a metaphor (that you’ll probably only half understand) from the good book (that you definitely only half understand), the “Red Sea” in Texas will be parted. It may not be tomorrow, next month, or later this year. But it’s coming. l Fort Worth native E.R. Bills is the author of Fear and Loathing in the Lone Star State (2021), Texas Oblivion: Mysterious Disappearances, Escapes and Cover-Ups (2021), and The 1910 Slocum Massacre: An Act of Genocide in East Texas (2014). This column reflects the opinions of the author and not the Fort Worth Weekly. To submit a column, please email Editor Anthony Mariani at Anthony@FWWeekly.com. Columns will be gently edited for factuality and clarity.
J A M E S
R U S S E L L
C o u r te s y o f W. W. N o r to n
Recently deceased art and culture critic Dave Hickey had a thing or two to say about the art world. Run by a class of people dubbed the “therapeutic institution,” the donors, curators, academics, collectors, and others who infringed on the democratic process defined beauty, he argued in his acclaimed set of essays, The Invisible Dragon. Beauty should instead rest solely in the viewer’s perspective, and everybody should get out of the way. By leaving the interaction solely to the viewer, opinions form, and democracy is indeed in action. Hickey could have easily described Fort Worth’s therapeutic institution, which decides what is beautiful
was as central to her identity as anger, smoking, bigotry, and Fort Worth. Highsmith, like Hickey, was messy. Messy does not please the therapeutic institution who willingly forget messiness and flaws are part of the human experience. They are clear examples that we are a breeding ground for some of the most creative, most intelligent people who were also angry and depressed critics. Those people, however, do not qualify for the Acceptable Certificate because, like Hickey and Highsmith, their flaws were so public that they made the Trinity River look bad. So, who is acceptable, and what is beautiful? It’s those who also have access to status and class. They include the late twin painters Scott and Stuart Gentling, whose first retrospective recently ended at the Amon Carter Museum of American Art. The exhibition was fine — the museum is dedicated to this kind of art — but at the behest of Ed Bass, the Gentlings will also be forever memorialized at the Philip Johnson-designed building. A new research center there bears their name. While they contributed to our cultural fabric, most notably with their Bass Hall murals, and were popular in social circles, they’re not getting recognized primarily for their art but for being the West Side’s acceptable oddballs. Their works are rendered museum-worthy and beautiful mostly because of their status, not necessarily their talent. Yet the Gentlings, Hickey, and Highsmith can coexist. They liked Fort Worth. The question is if the ruling class will get out of the way and allow them all to be recognized. l This column reflects the opinions of the author and not the Fort Worth Weekly. To submit a column, please email Editor Anthony Mariani at Anthony@FWWeekly.com. Columns will be gently edited for factuality and clarity.
fwweekly.com
B Y
F E B RUA RY 9 - 1 5 , 2 0 2 2
Dave Hickey and Patricia Highsmith were wildly successful Fort Worthians but messy people — do they deserve to be laid in cultural state?
and, by extension, our collective memory. This smalltown façade is nice. What’s not nice and is messy is the combination of alcohol, drugs, divergent opinions, and, perhaps, intellect. What’s nice is revisionist, such as the fantasies of Sundance Square and the Stockyards, and that’s all too evident in two new books, including one about Hickey and a recent art exhibition about very different Fort Worthians. Hickey was born and raised here. He went to TCU, a source of hometown pride, yet he was conflicted about his relationship with Fort Worth and, by extension, Texas, according to the newly released Far from Respectable: Dave Hickey and His Art by Austin writer Daniel Oppenheimer. In this loving biography of the late critic, we see why he did not meet Nice’s standards. One, Hickey was complicated and messy. He took drugs, was crusty, and was an intellectual flamethrower whose views pissed off all sorts of people, including many women artists, curators, and historians. He is also one of the city’s two known recipients of a MacArthur Fellowship or “Genius Grant,” with its coveted financial gift of $625,000 given to individuals with extraordinary talent in their fields. The other is Texas A&M School of Law Professor Thomas Mitchell, who received it last year. Hickey described the city as “a very strange and private place, indeed — where the modalities of social interaction are virtually nonexistent, and the populace at large is segregated not only according to the traditional race, color, creed, and national origin but also according to age, sex, income, education, neighborhood, mode of transportation, and line of endeavor.” In Fort Worth, he added, “being an asshole is optional — although it remains a very popular elective.” Fear not, civic boosters: He also trashed Dallas. Patricia Highsmith exemplified Hickey’s belief that an asshole is a standard option. The acclaimed fiction writer of books such as Strangers on the Train, The Price of Salt, which became the movie Carol, and The Talented Mr. Ripley was born and raised in Fort Worth and was an asshole. At any point during her life, including in Richard Bradford’s biography Devils, Lusts and Strange Desires released last year, she told her editor that she didn’t “like anyone.” That included at any point Arabs, Blacks, Catholics, Jews, her mother, and her partners’ husbands. The city is not in the new book Patricia Highsmith: Her Diaries and Notebooks 1941-1995, but as the late writer Don Graham noted in Texas Monthly in 2004, the misanthropic and macabre Highsmith believed “her essential character was formed by age 6, and those first six years were spent in Fort Worth.” Indeed, in Andrew Wilson’s 2003 biography Beautiful Shadow: A Life of Patricia Highsmith, she loved the feeling of living in a frontier town, among nature and ranches. She also loved women. She also fell in love here with a woman. In a 2016 Harper’s Bazaar article, British writer Jill Dawson learned then 6-year-old Highsmith, who hung out at Barber’s Bookstore downtown, also fell in love for the first time with a young woman named Rachel Barber. Highsmith’s sexuality
FO R T WO R T H W E E K LY
Immortalizing the Not-So-Nice
c o u r t e s y o f t h e U n i v e r s i t y o f Te x a s P r e s s
Static
7
We’re for Smoke
In his latest book, Fort Worth’s Mark Nobles brings faces to the infamous characters of early Cowtown. B R E T
M C C O R M I C K
Though the title may conjure images of ’60s-era stoners a la Cheech and Chong, nothing could be further from the reality depicted in this novel. Would you believe the first official Fort Worth city flag, circa 1912, featured a skyline practically obscured by smoke and the words “We’re for Smoke. All Roads Lead to Fort Worth”? Cowtown, a.k.a. Panther City, was trying to shake off its rough-and-tumble image as a Western frontier town, courting an influx of factories with their jobs and belching smokestacks. The city fathers wanted Fort Worth to join the growing ranks of affluent cities like Detroit, Chicago, and Philadelphia. Drawn from actual newspaper articles beginning in 1904 and spanning the years to 1920, Nobles’ novel presents some poignant, vicious, pathetic, and tenacious characters. These are all the more appealing because they are not fictional, though the author may have exercised his imagination in providing additional details of their harrowing lives.
FO R T WO R T H W E E K LY
F E B RUA RY 9 - 1 5 , 2 0 2 2
fwweekly.com
B Y
8
Consider Bessie. Abandoned by her parents as a girl in Hell’s Half Acre, she was quickly forced into a life of theft and prostitution. Bessie was a survivor and eventually became something of a local celebrity for breaking out of the county prison twice and the Fort Worth City Jail so many times that both she and her captors lost count. Lawman Kid Yates arrived in Fort Worth trying to make a fresh start after killing a man in Desoto, Texas. Yates was acquitted in the killing but shooed away from the town just the same, his wife dead and his two daughters almost more than he could manage. As the years rolled by, Yates’ body count grew, forcing his superiors to reevaluate his position on the police force. Poor Tom Lee was downtrodden all his life but finally snapped when two of his companions cheated him out of $10 in a game of craps. Vowing revenge, he kicked off a string of events that resulted in a stand-off between law officials and a murderous mob and the most destructive race riot in Fort Worth history. “The book started with Bessie Williams, the jailbreaker,” Nobles said. “I fell in love with her when an archivist from the Fort Worth Public Library showed me a folder with a bunch of her newspaper clippings. Not long after, I was looking at an exhibit at the downtown library and ran across the We’re for Smoke flag featured on the cover of the book. At that time (1912), if your city was obliterated with smog, it meant you were a thriving, industrial city.” We’re for Smoke details the struggles of the poorest of Fort Worth’s citizens during the transition from cattle town to modern city. Local authorities often seemed to be more concerned with appearances than with justice, dispensing frontier-style retribution while trying to maintain a
Cour tesy TCU Press
BOOKS
We’re for Smoke: Outliers and Outlaws of Panther City By Mark A. Nobles TCU Press 168 pps. $15.95-24.95
façade of civilized sophistication. This book entertains, educates, and enlightens the modern reader as to just how far we have come in the last hundred years. Mark Nobles was born on Fort Worth’s infamous Jacksboro Highway.
A sixth-generation Texan, he proudly claims kinship with Thunder Road’s gamblers, outlaws, and wastrels. He is also the author of Fort Worth’s Rock and Roll Roots and has produced three feature documentaries. l
Vacations or Staycations Vaporfi Delta 8, CBD and Vape
ARLINGTON
DOGGIE DAYCARE for Small Breeds
Day & 24 Hour Boarding for All Sizes Grooming For Small & Medium Sizes
“We’ll take great care of your furry friends!”
221 E Broadway Ave 817-332-4364 Heart of Fort Worth’s South Main Village!
www.DoggieDiggsFortWorth.com
2150 E Lamar Blvd #118 817-795-3285
FO R T WO R T H W E E K LY
F E B RUA RY 9 - 1 5 , 2 0 2 2
fwweekly.com
Thank You
great show for a
9
FO R T WO R T H W E E K LY
F E B RUA RY 9 - 1 5 , 2 0 2 2
fwweekly.com
FEBRUARY IS NATIONAL HEART MONTH.
HOW’S YOURS?
10
P A T R I C K
H I G G I N S
Let me start by saying that I completely recognize his greatness. I willingly acknowledge that he is likely the single most accomplished athlete in the history of professional sports. But. All the same, I just can’t stand Tom Brady. From his perfect, gleaming-white teeth and unfairly drum-tight, wrinklefree middle-aged skin, to his frostedtip, cool youth minister haircut that practically shouts, “You know who was a really rad dude? My man Jesus!” from a megaphone atop his head, to the fact that he says he’s never had caffeine in his entire life (and that ridiculous claim is totally believable), the man elicits the same boiling rage within me that a big brother does by grabbing your hand and repeatedly slapping you with it while taunting, “Stop hitting yourself! Stop hitting yourself!” I know it’s petty, but as a football fan, his recent retirement announcement is a relief on par with positive biopsy
which proves to be the better approach. One the one hand, you have the Rams, who come with all the stereotypical glitz and glamor of Southern California. Based mainly on the way Los Angeles built their team through sacrificing long-term stability for immediate gains by dumping draft capital for top-name talent, including QB Matthew Stafford, who somehow retains a calf-roper’s drawl despite an elite Highland Park education, the Rams couldn’t be more L.A. if they were rostered with self-important celebrities making movies about the perils of climate change. There’s also the bileforming sci-fi look of their highlighteryellow and beryl laser-blue unis and SoFi Stadium, itself a monument to otherworldly technology and excess. Across from L.A. on the field will be the embodiment of the blue-collar Midwest, a young team built the way good teams are traditionally built, i.e., through the draft. Beginning with native Buckeye Joe Burrow at quarterback, barely a year removed from a seasonending knee injury, the Bengals are made up of plucky upstarts, perpetual underdogs who seem to win through sheer grit and determination as much or more than talent — but they don’t lack much in that regard either. Ja’marr Chase and Joe Mixon are as electric as any on the offensive side of the ball. Even their uniforms scream made-up-teamfrom-a- small-budget- sports-comedy. It’s certainly easy to find yourself with pom-poms in hand for Burrow as
Cincinnati’s own Shane Falco. Sure, the former national champion/Heisman Trophy winner hasn’t necessarily been following a washed-up, down-and-out redemption arc, but in facing the Rams’ nightmarish defensive front, it’s easy to imagine him as Aragorn in Return of the King, leading the final charge to certain death into the sea of Uruk-hai legions. Sadly, unlike Aragorn, I don’t predict a stunning against-all-odds victory. The Bengals’ offensive line is a sieve, allowing a record nine sacks in their AFC Divisional game alone. And that was against a fairly mediocre Raiders D-line. Imagine the torment Burrow will be under when going up against Aaron Donald, Von Miller, and Leonard Floyd, not to mention that trio being bolstered by the time afforded them to get home by All-Pro corner Jalen Ramsey shutting down routes in the secondary. It could definitely be a very long day for Joe Cool 2.0. I think Chase will help him keep the Bengals hanging around and make it interesting, but I don’t think more of Cincy’s signature cigars will be in order after the game. I ultimately look for the Rams’ multiple high-dollar lottery tickets to cash. Give me L.A. 33-27. Either way, it should be an enjoyable game and for more than just that. I’m guaranteed not to have to endure Tommy Boy’s punchable smile at the end of it. l
fwweekly.com
B Y
results. Though I know there’s always the chance that after six months he decides to get off the couch or whatever weird, rigid, bespoke bamboo posturebenefitting apparatus he sits on at home to unretire and take another team to postseason glory, I never have to worry about Tom Brady being in another Super Bowl again. As a Cowboy fan, I am naturally bereft of the luxury of cheering for my own favorite team late in the postseason, so the lack of Brady admittedly removes perhaps the largest portion of my perennial rooting interest in the NFL’s championship game. With the exception of the Eagles versus the Pats in SB LII, when I was simply rooting for a giant chasm to open midfield and swallow the entire stadium into an agonizing, flesh-searing, hellish eternity, my Super Bowl cheering has pretty much been locked to the default of whatever team was without TB12. This year, as the Los Angeles Rams host the Cincinnati Bengals — the second year in a row the host city’s team has made it to the championship — I have a new level of excitement entering the game. It’s not just the lack of the haunting natural-wellness-supplementstore-clerk specter of Tommy Boy. It’s also that these two teams have intriguing storylines in their own right. Setting aside the already compelling thread of two premier quarterbacks who happen to be on opposite ends of their respective careers squaring off, the entire milieu of each team highlights the severe contrast between them. It’ll be fascinating to see
F E B RUA RY 9 - 1 5 , 2 0 2 2
After two decades of television’s mostwatched spectacle basically being Tom Brady versus whomever, it’s nice to see some unfamiliar faces in the Big Game®.
FO R T WO R T H W E E K LY
Super Bowl LVI: A Breath of Fresh Air
Cour tesy NFL.com
STUFF
11
12
FO R T WO R T H W E E K LY
F E B RUA RY 9 - 1 5 , 2 0 2 2
fwweekly.com
Cour tesy Stolen Shakespeare Guild
What happens when you send two respectably married women the same love letter? Shakespeare knows. See The Merry Wives of Windsor at the Stolen Shakespeare Festival thru Sat, Mar 4.
11
Let’s talk about sex, baby. This is the opening Friday weekend for The Pleasure Trials at Amphibian Stage (120 S Main St, 817-923-3012). “When Rachel and Callie start clinical trials on their new female libido enhancement drug, willing participants come out of the woodwork looking for an internal revolution. Quickly after the first dose, the effectiveness of the medicine is undeniable, but the overwhelming pressure for its success may corrupt the experiment and everyone involved. The Pleasure Trials is an insightful and entertaining examination of women, sexual desire, and the burden of meeting expectations.” The production starts at 8pm Thu and runs at various dates/times thru Sun, Feb 27. Tickets are $60-100 at AmphibianStage.com.
12
Why buy a bouquet when you can create one of your own? Lovely Extras Saturday Co. is hosting a special build-your-own floral arrangement class at Lucky Lou’s (1207 W Hickory St, Denton, 940-484-5550) at 3pm. Don’t feel intimidated if you’ve never done this before because they’ll teach you all the tips and tricks of the trade you’ll need to achieve a showstopping design. And if you don’t have anyone to give flowers to, keep the bouquet for yourself — we wouldn’t blame you! Price of tickets includes flowers and materials. Bring a date or a friend to receive a discounted ticket. Tickets are $50-85 at LovelyExtras.com.
13
It’s time for the annual Stolen Shakespeare Festival. For 2022, the Sunday Stolen Shakespeare Guild presents two plays in the Sanders Theater (1300 Gendy St, Fort Worth Community Arts Center, 817-738-1938). Hamlet runs 8pm Sat, then various dates/times thru Sat, Mar 5. The Merry Wives of Windsor runs 8pm Fri, Feb 18; 2pm Sat, Feb 19; and 2pm Sun, Feb 20, then various dates/times thru Sun, Mar 6. Tickets are $24-26 at StolenShakespeareGuild.org.
14 Monday
Look, Valentine’s Day isn’t everyone’s bag, and that’s OK! The Anti-Valentine’s
15
Grab a gal-pal or two and your favorite yoga mat for the Galentine’s Yoga Tuesday and Tea event at Leaves Book and Tea Shop (120 Saint Louis Av, 682-233-4832) at 6:30pm. Led by Brooke Blankenship (Yogi Squad), this 45-minute class will leave you relaxed and rejuvenated. After class, stay for one of Leaves’ many delicious teas and treats from Three Danes Baking Co. Tickets are $15 at Leaves-Bookand-Tea-Shop.square.site.
16
“Brinner” is the official term for brunch-fordinner, and if you haven’t Wednesday heard of it, you aren’t properly #yolo-ing. Party with The Queens at the new Latin-flavored hotspot La Chingona (2800 Bledsoe St, 817-8709997) is here to help. This reverse brunch features not just bottomless mimosas but performances by some fabulous drag queens hosted by Adecia Lush and music by DJ OROD. (Is “breakfast and a show” a thing now?) Enjoy brunch starting at 8:30pm followed by the drag show at 10pm. Tickets are $40 at LaChingonaFW.com.
By Julie Strehl
fwweekly.com
The theme of this Second Thursdays at the Carter is Sips & Stories. At Thursday 5pm, join the Amon Carter Museum of American Art (3501 Camp Bowie Blvd, 817-738-1933) for an evening of storytelling, cocktails, and live music. Chris Curtis & Ed Rogers host an open-mic with locals sharing their own stories and music. Don’t feel like going up onstage? Pick up a pen and write your own tales inspired by works in the Carter’s collection. And if you’re feeling bold, cruise through the collection with a choose-yourown-adventure tour. RSVP for free at CarterMuseum.com.
F E B RUA RY 9 - 1 5 , 2 0 2 2
10
FO R T WO R T H W E E K LY
NIGHT&DAY
Day Party at Sugarman’s (1165 8th Av, Hotel Revel, 817-886-4141) is your perfect escape from the lovey-dovey holiday. The fun starts at 3pm with craft cocktails and food pairings provided by Funky Calavera. Don’t stress if you’re unaccompanied or not in love — some holidays are best celebrated with drinks and tacos. There is no cost to attend.
13
GIVE THE GIFT OF
RELAXATION!
Valentines at Crockett Row
1 HOUR
90 MINUTE
His & Hers Massage for $160.00
Massage with a complimentary Glass of Wine!
Valid From February 1, 2022 through February 28, 2022
gift cards available for valentine’s day Special Price on Friday!
cc accepted
469-661-4786
fwweekly.com 16
MT106812
Located in Better Salon Spa
207 S Jennings Ave Fort Worth, Texas (817) 885-7848 www.SovereignJewelryCo.com
From coffee to spa treatments, the shops at Crockett Row at West 7th (816 Foch St, 817-810-9076) have a variety of choices for Valentine’s Day. Here are just a few of the specials for Valentine’s Day 2022 Cinnaholics (817 Currie St, 817)-2032421) will be announcing its Valentines’s Days Specials soon.
Call for details!
F E B RUA RY 9 - 1 5 , 2 0 2 2 FO R T WO R T H W E E K LY
Va l e n t i n e ’ s Day 2 0 2 2
682-301-1115
Promotional Feature
Keep an eye on CinnaholicCrockettRow. com.. Hiatus Spa (2859 Crockett St, 817-9842200) has two Valentine’s Day specials, plus receive a $250 gift card for $200. The Greatest Love of All includes signature massage and custom facial for $179 (regularly $200). The Unforgettable includes a sparkler facial, mani/pedi, and massage for $349 (regularly $420). All specials are available in spa and online thru Tue, Feb 25. For more info, visit HiatussSpa.com/Locations/FortWorth. Insomnia Cookies (825 Currie St) is offering Heart Cookie Cakes, Classic Red
iStock
Swedish Massage for $80.00
LIVING LOCAL
Velvet Cookie (AKA the o.g. V-Day fave), and Red Velvet Loaded Brownies, Red Velvet Big Dippers + Chocolate Lovers Dippers Social House (840 Currie St, 817-8201510) hosts a Valentine’s Day Brunch and Dinner. Brunch is 11am-3pm Mon, Feb 14. Dinner is 5pm-9:30pm Mon, Feb 14 and includes a 3-course meal and a special Valentine’s Cocktail Menu. The price is $45 per person by reservation only. For reservations, call or go to SocialHouseFortWorth.com. Toasted Coffee + Kitchen (2972 Crockett St, 682-703-5000) is offering 1/2 Price Rose Mimosas. Purchase a Mimosa Carafe which serves 3-4 for $6.50 or a single Mimosa for $2.25. Offer will be valid from Sat, Feb 12 thru Mon, Feb 14. For more info, visit Toasted.Coffee.
FREE NIGHT & WEEKEND PARKING
www.dfwi.org | #DowntownFortWorth
17
F E B RUA RY 9 - 1 5 , 2 0 2 2
fwweekly.com
Va l e n t i n e ’ s Day 2 0 2 2
FO R T WO R T H W E E K LY
VISIT FORTWORTHPARKING.COM
fwweekly.com F E B RUA RY 9 - 1 5 , 2 0 2 2 FO R T WO R T H W E E K LY
Va l e n t i n e ’ s Day 2 0 2 2
Snuggle up with your favorite spirit this Valentine's Day
18
GIFT SETS AVAILABLE DOUBLED HUMIDOR SIZE, EXCELLENT SUPPLY OF FINE CIGARS. 3 MILES EAST OF DOWNTOWN,
COME CHECK US OUT!
3725 E Belknap St, FW, TX 76111 • (817) 831-2472
B Y
E D W A R D
B R O W N
The western edge of Fort Worth, with its ubiquitous chain restaurants and blocks upon blocks of cookie-cutter homes, shares more in common with suburbia
continued on page 20
“Best Thai Food”
FIRST BLUE ZONES
– FW Weekly Critics Choice 2015, 2017 & 2019
APPROVED THAI RESTAURANTS IN FW!
$
10
Parmesan-dusted tacos are the main draw at Jimboy’s Tacos.
4630 SW Loop 820 | Fort Worth• 817-731-0455 order online for pickup Thaiselectrestaurant.com
SPICE
“Best Thai Food”
– FW Weekly Critics Choice 2016 – FW Weekly 411 W. Magnolia Ave readers Choice Fort Worth • 817-984-1800 2017, 2019, order online for pickup at Spicedfw.com 2020 & 2021
Thai Kitchen & Bar
THE BEST THAI IN FORT WORTH
Lunch Special
FORT WORTH
M–F 11am–2pm
ARLINGTON
Hot Deals At Cool Prices
Tuk Tuk Thai
Thai Street Food Food to go & Catering
BYOB
Free Delivery Limited Area & Minimum $20 3431 W 7th St • Fort Worth, TX 76107
817.332.3339
Stock your Kitchen at Mission! Small wares, pots & pans, and all kitchen essentials available to the public. Come see our showrooms! MON-FRI 8am-5:30pm
2524 White Settlement Road Fort Worth • 817-265-3973
BEST RAMEN WINNER - Fort Worth Weekly Best Of 2021
K I N T A R O R A M E N . C O M
fwweekly.com
Jimboy’s Tacos, 9316 Clifford St, FW. 817-3910511. 11am-9pm Sun, 11am-9pm Mon-Thu, 11am-10pm Fri-Sat.
F E B RUA RY 9 - 1 5 , 2 0 2 2
The Jimboy’s Taco craze hits Fort Worth with impressive results.
FO R T WO R T H W E E K LY
Cal-Mex Meets Cowtown
Cour tesy of Facebook
EATS & drinks
than the large urban city to which it belongs. Having lived in the stretch of Cowtown nestled between White Settlement and Aledo for several years before moving to the urban core, I can personally attest to that characterization. So imagine my surprise when I googled Jimboy’s Tacos, the highly Instagrammable and popular taco-centric restaurant from California, and found its first Fort Worth location is just miles from my old home. The restaurant has a simple layout with just under a dozen large tables and a walk-up register that’s backed by a brightly lit menu offering tacos, burritos, bowls, appetizers, and desserts, all with a California twist. Cal-Tex cuisine is understood to be less spicy and less meat-centric than its Texified competition. Other than the use of black olives and the absence of hot sauce, I didn’t notice too many differences between the Cal-Tex/Tex-Mex divide. Three tacos arrived with crispy shells that had an initial crunch followed by a hearty, chewy texture. The slightly oily corn casings, which had a pungent ground-masa flavor, were no mere afterthought and added to the overall delicious profile. Topping off the three starters was a dusting of parmesan that added a bit of saltiness but not much else.
19
Cour tesy of Facebook
The layout of the new taco joint is simple and spacious.
Eats & Drinks
FO R T WO R T H W E E K LY
F E B RUA RY 9 - 1 5 , 2 0 2 2
fwweekly.com
continued from page 19
20
The ground beef taco was straightforward with a dense mix of seasoned meat and cheddar cheese. The only light-ish ingredient was the lettuce, fresh and freshly cut. True to its name, the Taco Burger held all the goodies you’d expect from a burger — ground beef, diced tomatoes, lettuce, pickles, shredded cheese — and a “special sauce” that tasted like extra-tangy mayonnaise. The experience of eating a taco with the occasional pickle took some getting used to, but I dug it. The carnitas taco offered flavorful strings of pork that could have benefited from hot sauce. Served as it was, the delicacy was a bit dry. Jimboy’s isn’t known for health food, but they do have a delicious keto option. The carb-free taco came served on a thick leaf of Romaine lettuce. Juicy chunks of chicken seasoned with paprika and other spices were the center attraction. Drizzles of a pimento cheese sauce added heat to the handheld treat topped with a large avocado wedge. Up next was the Tahoe Burrito, a behemoth of an entree that requires two hands to maneuver. The charred grill marks on the flour tortilla showed that some real Jimboy’s Tacos Keto chicken taco ....................................$3.95 Tahoe Burrito ............................................$8.65 Carnitas burrito bowl ...............................$7.10 Ground beef taco .....................................$2.32 Carnitas taco ............................................$3.35 Taco Burger ..............................................$3.65 TaquitO-M-G ..............................................$7.35
TLC went into making the belt-busting wrap. Seasoned and perfectly cooked strips of steak made each bite delectable. The Spanish rice was fluffy and not too oily, and the dense sour cream added a lovely creamy mouthfeel to the perfectly balanced burrito that also featured pinto beans and a mild red sauce. Jimboy’s bowls come with several protein options. I sprung for the carnitas and found the morsels of pork to be every bit as tender and juicy as what I experienced with the tacos. Don’t expect the mix of meat and vegetables to be the lighter, veggie-centric option that other restaurants and fast-food joints peddle. Here, it’s all about densely cramming everything Americans love about Mexican food into one container. The dish was a mashup of rice, pinto beans, black olives, diced tomatoes, cilantro, and sour cream. The bits of lettuce seemed like an afterthought. The overall effect was filling but, disappointedly, only mimicked what I already ate that day without adding anything new. I rounded out my Jimboy’s Taco experience by indulging in the TaquitO-MG, which could have been a meal in itself. Four dense and perfectly fried bad boys came topped with a fresh pico de gallo and lots (and lots) of creamy queso. Two generous scoops of sour cream and guacamole made the selection from the “munchies” section of the menu one of my favorite dishes. When I left the West Side, hoping to land a more drivable hop to the Near Southside, I did so thinking that I was escaping a stretch of town that was devoid of fun dining options. My recent trip to Jimboy’s Tacos left me wishing I lived a bit closer to my old haunts. l
GIOVANNI’S I TA L I A N K I T C H E N
Come Jo i n U s Valentine ’s We e ke nd Complimentary roses on sunday the 13th Closed Monday the 14th
5733 crowley rd • fort worth tx 76134
2929 Race Street | Fort Worth, TX 76111
Mention you saw this ad for $1 OFF W W W. N G B C . B E E R
F E B RUA RY 9 - 1 5 , 2 0 2 2
River East Fort Worth
FO R T WO R T H W E E K LY
OPEN Thu 4-9pm | Fri 4-10pm | Sat 2-10pm
fwweekly.com
817.551.3713 | GIOVANNISFW.COM
21
February 1 - 28
FO R T WO R T H W E E K LY
F E B RUA RY 9 - 1 5 , 2 0 2 2
fwweekly.com
With your help, we can provide 25,000 pet meals.
22
D R I NeK of th Month
ry Tues $2 oFF eve
Happy Hour Mon - Fri
Dollar Off Beers | $8 Drink of the Day
THE BIKINI BOTTOM
10%Mondays oFF To-G o CoCkTails! and Tuesdays eekniGHT speCials WMonday - Thursday
117 S Main St • Fort Worth
MUSIC
Nights Enter the Grackle
A performance by esteemed Dallas jazzbo Dennis González and art by him and his 8-year-old granddaughter will fill the Westside space this weekend. B Y
E D W A R D
B R O W N
continued on page 24
FO R T WO R T H W E E K LY
With his new collaborative series, González explores past works through the eyes of his 8-yearold granddaughter.
Cour tesy of the ar tist
F E B RUA RY 9 - 1 5 , 2 0 2 2
fwweekly.com
After a nearly 50-year career, Dennis González has turned his attention toward cataloging his 70 past exhibits that have spanned the globe and his output as a performer and recording artist. “I think that life has been pretty good,” he told me. “I wake up in the morning and think, ‘Wow, what a life. I’m still here, and it’s an amazing thing.’ ” The acclaimed jazz trumpeter will perform his most recent release, the album Nights Enter, on Saturday at the Grackle Art Gallery. The show that will be up through February at the multidisciplinary space includes
new art by González and his 8-year-old granddaughter, Isabella Anais SiskGonzález. The start of the series Five Years of Collaborative Works began after González’ 2007 decision to pause his busy touring and recording schedule. He shifted his focus to a new series of large-scale works on paper and cardboard, The Doctrine of Hieromancy, that is characterized by images of insects that fascinated the artist as a child and iconography from Egyptian hieroglyphs. After booking a show at Mighty Fine Arts in his hometown of Dallas in late 2015, González was finishing up what he thought was his “masterpiece” when his toddler granddaughter grabbed a gold marker and started scribbling over the near-completed work. “I thought, ‘What am I going to do?’ ” González recalled. Isabella, whom González affectionately calls “Issy,” had picked up on her grandfather’s love of drawing, and the veteran artist realized that he needed to trust her artistic instincts. “She knew what she was doing,” he said, “so I used her work and incorporated it. When we opened the show in October, it was the first piece that sold.” The popularity of the collaborative works and the joy of working together prompted González to start Five Years of Collaborative Works. About a third of the 25 pieces in the series have sold so far, he said, and the remaining works that capture Issy’s artistic development from ages 3 through 8 will be on display Saturday. González said he donates a portion of sales to the gallery and puts the remainder in a college fund for Issy. González modeled the early works in the series after the first spontaneous scribblings. He would create a largely
23
Music
finished work that featured collages of his previous work, and then his granddaughter would use pens or pencils to add her own signature lines. “She would do her own stuff,” González said. “It looked like Jackson Pollock.” As Issy grew older, she would begin new works, and her grandfather would follow her lead. Many of the most popular pieces in the collection, González said, were initiated by Issy. “The pieces that she begins are the ones that people gravitate toward,” he said. “We are still children inside. I think the child in us connects to the childlike and innocent” way she conveys things. When González shared images of some of the works on Facebook, the owner of Ayler Records in France
Cour tesy of the ar tist
continued from page 23
González said Issy’s early scribbles reminded him of Jackson Pollock.
responded that he “dug the cover art” but wondered where the music was. That led
ramping up the 2022 season to the recording of Nights Dennis González with art shows on the Enter at Klearlight Studio 7pm Sat at the Grackle second Saturday of every in Dallas throughout 2020. Art Gallery, 4621 El Campo Av, FW. Free. month. The artworks can The eight-track album 817-615-0681. be viewed by appointment features Jess Garland in the days and weeks (harp), Jagath Lakpriya following each opening. (tabla), Drew Phelps (bass), and Derek Rogers (keys) in addition to The gallery, he added, also serves as an alternative performance space for nonGonzález on trumpet and percussion. In the liner notes, former Weekly mainstream music through the monthly writer Ken Shimamoto says the music “is Grackle Live! house concert series. González has shown work in several unlike anything else in Dennis González’ substantial discography. The confluence dozen galleries and art spaces here and of organic and electronic elements is overseas, but he said the Grackle, a seamless, and the swirling blend of repurposed house, offers something textures has a dreamlike quality. Dennis special. “It’s more like hanging stuff up proves himself once again to be a master of melody — a trait he shares with the in my own home,” he said. “It’s a very greatest jazz musicians. On Nights Enter, giving and warm space. It has this spirit [González] and friends provide a healing of having absorbed a lot of positivity over the years. They have been very balm for troubled times.” Grackle music director Kavin supportive” of my career. l Allenson said the alternative art space is
RIDGLE A THE ATER
FO R T WO R T H W E E K LY
F E B RUA RY 9 - 1 5 , 2 0 2 2
fwweekly.com
U LC H SAT 3/19 G & MORE
24
O R G Y: FRI 3/25 REVIVAL TOUR FRI 4/1
Z E LO
PRO WRESTLING
KNOCKED LOOSE SAT 4/16 & MORE
RIDGLE A ROOM NIGHTS 2 NIGHTS 2 STAGES
FRI 2/11 & SAT 2/12
RIDGLEA GOES POP PUNK
SAT 2/26
DFW DEATHMATCH
FRI 3/4
TOPLINE ADDICTS, CLOVER GROVE & MORE!
RIDGLE A LOUNGE
GOES POP PUNK FRI 2/11 & SAT 2/12 RIDGLEA 2 NIGHTS 2 STAGES SAT 2/19 REX ROMANUM, SEER, THE ENDS & MORE! UP AND AT ‘EM TOUR FEAT.: FRI 2/25 THE THE MYSTICAL HOT CHOCOLATE ENDEAVORS & MORE!
Noteworthy
Or How ’Bout One of these Shows?
Cour tesy Facebook
Contact HearSay at Anthony@FWWeekly.com.
Also on Wed, Feb 9, MASS (1002 S Main, 817-707-7774) hosts another edition of
fwweekly.com
Besides Agent Orange, this is probably the other “big” show in town this week. Randy Rogers has been doing the Texas Music thing since Tony Hawk Pro Skater 4 debuted, and in the intervening 20 years, the San Marcos-by-way-of-Cleburne
singer-songwriter Wayne Floyd’s Weird and Wild Waynesday. Not sure which of Wayne’s buddies will be joining in the festivities, but he always makes it a fun night. Twilite Lounge (212 Lipscomb St, 817-720-5483) has a jazz show on Friday, featuring Dallas saxophonist Daniel Henson’s quartet. Also on Friday, Lola’s Trailer Park (2735 W 5th St, 817-759-9100) hosts veteran country troubadour Guthrie Kennard with prolific songwriter (and words writer) The Matthew Show opening. — S.S.
F E B RUA RY 9 - 1 5 , 2 0 2 2
Randy Rogers Band at Billy Bob’s Saturday
singer-songwriter has etched his mark on thousands of hearts with his tales of love and heartbreak, tequila, and all the other topics that make country music relevant, no matter where your politics tend to fall. A good song is a good song, and Rogers has a ton of them. He and his band also put on an entertaining show, and catching him at Billy Bob’s Texas (2520 Rodeo Plaza, 817-624-7117) is basically the quintessential Randy Rogers Band experience. — S.S.
FO R T WO R T H W E E K LY
out 20 years ago. How about that? Haltom City’s long-running fuzz-rock outfit the Me-Thinks opens the show at Tulips (112 St. Louis St, 817-367-9798), and if I had to guess, I’d say that at least one, if not most, of their members probably bought Agent Orange’s first few albums when they were new. — Steve Steward
Cour tesy Facebook
I turn 44 this June, and I’m really only bringing this up because seminal SoCal surf-punk band Agent Orange has been around almost as long as I have, having formed in Orange County in 1979. The band’s longevity is astounding, especially given the nihilistic lifestyle endemic to the SoCal punk scene (probably best encapsulated by “Live Fast Die Young,” off Group Sex, the 1980 debut album by Agent Orange contemporaries the Circle Jerks), though the only original Agent Orange member is frontman Mike Palm. Yet for all the years and the lineup changes, Agent Orange still rips, and any punk band that slathered their songs with reverb and double-picking over the past four decades owes Palm and his various collaborators a big thanks. But also, since I’m on this “Goddamn, I’m fucking old” conversational tack, I’d like to point out that if your exposure to this band came from the inclusion of their hit “Bloodstains” on the Tony Hawk Pro Skater 4 soundtrack, you are probably also kind of old, because that game came
Cour tesy Facebook
Agent Orange at Tulips FTW Wed, Feb 9
25
CLASSIFIEDS
bulletin board
LEGAL NOTICE
The owners or lien holders are hereby notified that the vehicles listed below are being stored at AA Wrecker Service: 5709-B Denton Hwy. Haltom City, TX 76148 (817)656-3100 TDLR VSF Lic. No. 0536827VSF | www.license.state.tx.us
YR
MAKE
2003 Mallard
MODEL Travel Trailer
VIN
PRICE
1EF1J252222801007
CLASSIFIEDS
$1706.19
*Storage charges accrue daily until the vehicle is claimed *Failure of the owner or lien holder to claim the above vehicles within 30 days is a waiver of all right, title, and interest in the vehicles and a consent to the sale of the vehicle at a public sale.
ADVERTISE WITH US
EMPLOYMENT Eagles Point Bar & Grill 1029 N Saginaw Blvd Looking for a fun place to make that coin? We are searching for fun, energetic cooks for full or parttime positions that always put their best food forward. Experience is a plus! More info at: Facebook.com/ EaglesPointBarGrill Ol’ South Pancake House New Year, New Career! We are now hiring at all both locations for all shifts! To apply for Burleson (817-989-9090) and Fort Worth (817-336-0311), go to: OlSouthPancakeHouse.com/JoinOur-Team
FO R T WO R T H W E E K LY
F E B RUA RY 9 - 1 5 , 2 0 2 2
fwweekly.com
HEALTH & WELLNESS Aloe Care Health Medical Alert System The most advanced medical alert product on the market. Voiceactivated! No wi-fi needed! Mention offer code CARE20 for $20 off Mobile Companion. Call today. 1-888-385-0891
26
Cardiovascular Disease & Stroke These are leading causes of death, according to the American Heart Association. Screenings can provide peace of mind or early detection! Contact Life Line Screening to schedule your screening. Special offer - 5 screenings for just $149. Call today: 1-833-636-1757 DENTAL INSURANCE 1-888-361-7095 Physicians Mutual Insurance Company covers 350 plus procedures. Real dental insurance - NOT just a discount plan. Do not wait! Call now! Get your FREE Dental Information Kit with all the details! Call or visit Dental50plus. com/fortworth (#6258). Green Roads’ Pain Relief Cream Great for backaches, arthritis, muscle aches & more. Get pain relief exactly where you need it most. Use code: PAIN to get three FREE gifts! Visit: GreenCBDToday.com/Fort Inogen One Portable Oxygen Concentrator 866-970-7551 May Be Covered by Medicare! Reclaim independence and mobility with the compact design and long-lasting battery of Inogen One. Call for free information kit!
Planned Parenthood Available Via Chat! Along with advice, eligible patients are also able to receive birth control, UTI treatments, and other healthcare appointments via the smartphone app and telehealth appointments. To chat, you can text PPNOW to 774-636.
MIND / BODY / SPIRIT Gateway Church Church time is the BEST time! Join us for online church each weekend. Online services start at 4 pm on Saturdays and are available to watch any time after at https:// gway.ch/GatewayPeople. Hannah in Hurst 817-590-2257 MasseuseToTheStars.com Alternative Health Sessions available immediately by remote with SKYPE, Zoom online or by cell phone. Services include Hypnosis for Health, Reiki, Engergetic Healing Techniques, Guided Medication. Call for a consultation. MT#004747 MUSIC XCHANGE Music Junkie Studios 1617 Park Place #106, FWTX www.MusicJunkieStudios.com We offer lessons on voice, piano, guitar, bass, ukulele, violin, viola, drums, recording, and music for littles! PUBLIC NOTICES TDLR Complaints Any Texans who may be concerned that an unlicensed massage business may be in operation near them, or believe nail salon employees may be human trafficking victims, may now report those concerns directly to the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR) by emailing ReportHT@TDLR.Texas.gov. RENTALS / REAL ESTATE Cyndy Reep, Realtor Berkshire Hathaway HA Alexander Chandler Realty 2900 S Hulen, FWTX 817-806-4100 Critic’s Choice for Best Realtor in Best Of 2021: “Here in North Texas, ladies — and gentleman, for that matter — tend to do what they want. Realtor Cyndi Reep is no exception. While she does have listings and can certainly help you sell your property, her true love is being a buyer’s agent. Whether it’s buying or leasing a commercial or residential space, she has a flair for helping clients find exactly what they want and need... (Read more at FWWeekly.com.)
Find us online at FWWeekly.com/Classifieds
bulletin board
Trojan Commercial Real Estate Services TrojanCRE.com Full-service company specializing in consulting, leasing, property management, real estate, and sales. Call today! 817-632-6252 PRODUCTS & SERVICES AT&T Wireless 1-877-384-1025 Two great new offers! Ask how to get the new iPhone 11 or Next Generation Samsung Galaxy S10e ON US with AT&T’s Buy one, Give One offer. While supplies last! Become A Published Author 1-866-256-0940 DorranceInfo.com/FtWorth Dorrance Publishing - trusted by authors since 1920 - wants to read your book. Manuscript submissions are currently being reviewed. Comprehensive Services: Consultation, Production, Promotion, and Distribution. Call or go online for your FREE Author’s Guide. DIRECTV NOW 817-730-9132 No Satellite Needed. $40/month. 65 Channels. Stream Breaking News, Live Events, Sports & On Demand Titles. No Annual Contract. No Commitment. Earthlink High-Speed Internet 1-866-827-5075 As Low As $49.95/month (for the first 3 months.) Reliable High Speed Fiber Optic Technology. Stream Videos, Music and More! Call Earthlink Today. Eliminate Gutter Cleaning Forever! 1-877-689-1687 LeafFilter, the most advanced debris-blocking gutter protection. Schedule a FREE LeafFilter estimate today. 15% off Entire Purchase. 10% Senior & Military Discounts. Call today. GENERAC Standby Generators 1-844-887-3143 Providing backup power during utility power outages, so your home and family stay safe and comfortable. Prepare now. Free 7-year extended warranty ($695 value!). Request a free quote today! Call for additional terms and conditions. SUBMISSIONS We’d Like To Hear From You! Do you have thoughts and feelings, or questions, comments or concerns about something you read in the Weekly? Please email Question@fwweekly.com. Do you have an upcoming event? For potential coverage in Night & Day, Big Ticket, Ate Day8 A Week, or CrosstownSounds, email the details to Jennifer@fwweekly.com.
27
FO R T WO R T H W E E K LY
F E B RUA RY 9 - 1 5 , 2 0 2 2
fwweekly.com
The Gas Pipe, The GAS PIPE, THE GAS PIPE, your Peace Love & Smoke Headquarters since 4/20/1970! SCORE a FREE GIFT on YOUR Birthday, FREE Scale Tuning and Lighter Refills on GAS PIPE goods, FREE Layaway, and all the safe, helpful service you expect from a 51 Years Young Joint. Plus, SCORE A FREE CBD HOLIDAZE GIFT With-A-Buy thru 12/31! Be Safe, Party Clean, Keep On Truckin’. More at thegaspipe.net
HISTORIC RIDGLEA THEATER EMPLOYMENT
Director, Engineering & Construction (Fort Worth, TX): Manage prep’n of engg reports, oversee strategic engg support to business regarding conceptualization, dsgn & implmtn of current & future operation of gathering & processing plants infrastructure. Resumes to Midcoast Employee Services, LLC at recruiting@ midcoastenergy.com.
COWTOWN ROVER
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
Property sale to satisfy landlord’s lien. Sale to be held at Mansfield Boat and RV at 1945 FM 157, Mansfield TX 76063 on February 22 at 12:00 PM. Cleanup deposit is required. Seller reserves the right to withdraw the property at any time before the sale. Unit items sold asis to highest bidder. Property includes the contents of spaces of the following tenant – Kayla Connors: Storage totes, Misc household items, storage racks
HANNAH IN HURST
Inspection Almost Due? Are You Road-Trip Ready?
With our handy pick-up and drop-off services, having your car checked out could not be easier. Get ready for the holidays. Call today!
3958 Vickery | 817.731.3223 www.CowtownRover.com
For updates and to check out my services, visit me online at MasseuseToTheStars.com today. Be Safe, Be Well. (MT#004747)
817.590.2257
THE RIDGLEA is three great venues within one historic Fort Worth landmark. RIDGLEA THEATER has been restored to its authentic allure, recovering unique Spanish-Mediterranean elements. It is ideal for large audiences and special events. RIDGLEA ROOM and RIDGLEA LOUNGE have been making some of their own history, as connected adjuncts to RIDGLEA THEATER, or hosting their own smaller shows and gatherings. More at theRidglea.com
FREE VALENTINE GIFT Fort Worth
EMPLOYMENT
Manager of Quality Assurance (ANDRITZ Separation Inc.; Arlington, Texas): Perform quality eng reviews of design documentationn for compliance w/ stated req’s, incl. vendor qual manuals and cmpny qual records; Min travel req’d to vndrs & fcilties. Min Reqs: Bach deg in Mech Eng, Indust Eng, Quality Eng, or rel field + 2 yrs in QC, manufact supervis or rel exp. + add’l req’s. To apply, send resume & include ref number in subject line: Suzanne Fulton, ANDRITZ Inc. 5405 Windward Pkwy, Ste. 100W, Alpharetta, Georgia 30004. Ref: OP00032135. An EOE.
Drag Brunch and Drag Bingo every Sat & Sun Nightly drag shows every Friday, Saturday and Sunday night myohmytheshow.com or 817-946-2295 for tickets
Gentlemen, trim your bon bons!
Valentine’s manscaping special! Https://bit. ly/3lMbFRW
817.442.3685
NEED A FRIEND? Ronnie D. Long Bail Bonds
C PEA
Immediate Jail Release 24 Hour Service City, County, State and Federal Bonds Located Minutes from Courts 6004 Airport Freeway
817-834-9894
RonnieDLongBailBonds.com
fwweekly.com
Notice is given that original Letters Testamentary for the Estate of Robert Donald Hammonds were issued on February 8, 2022, in docket number 2021-PR04118-1, pending in the Statutory Probate Court Number One of Tarrant County, Texas, to William Calvin Orville Harris III. All persons having claims against the estate, which is presently being administered, are required to submit them, within the time and manner prescribed by law, and before the estate is closed, addressed as follows: Representative Estate of Robert Donald Hammonds c/o Matthew Hancock 1908 Sutter Street Fort Worth TX 76107
ADVERTISE HERE!
F E B RUA RY 9 - 1 5 , 2 0 2 2
If you need to hire staff or promote your business, let us help you online and/or in print. For more info, call 817-987-7689 or email stacey@fwweekly.com today.
ORIGINAL FORT WORTH GUN SHOW
FO R T WO R T H W E E K LY
Dallas Plano Lewisville
Notice to Creditors
28
Garland
1000 Houston Street
limits apply
GEODynamics, Inc. in Millsap, Texas seeks Perforation Simulation & Technology Engineer for modeling, simulation, and fracture diagnostics related to perforation product development life circles including technical direction, analysis, and sales support. Bachelor’s degree and experience required. Please, send resume to ATTN: HR to Marji. Hutchinson@Perf.com
817-763-8622
Spin-to-Win FEB 9-14
Fort Worth’s #1 Drag Show Comes Downtown to the Sleeping Panther
EMPLOYMENT
MINERAL RIGHTS WANTED
Wants to purchase minerals and other oil and gas interests. Send details P.O. Box 13557, Denver CO 80201
50TH ANNIVERSARY SHOW FEATURING THE
12 GUN GIVEAWAY! Will Rogers Center FEBRUARY 12 & 13 817.732.1194 • FWGUNSHOW.COM Every paid admission gets a chance to win. Winners must complete required paperwork and pass a background check.
Couples that Play together Stay together ROMANCE STORE 6900 SOUTH FREEWAY FORT WORTH 76134
OPPOSITE MILLER DISTRIBUTION
817-551-3770
F F O 25% coupon
when you
is ad
mention th
HOURS: Monday - Sat 10am till Midnight Sunday - Noon to 10 pm
E LOV
E & SMOKE SINCE 4/20/
thegaspipe.net
1 97
0