F May 23 - 29, 2018 FREE
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2018
Summer Guide
Take a Trip North Texas is full of great weekend-getaway options. BY LAURIE JAMES
Campy Unplug the kiddos from their devices ------ while maybe also cashing in on some adult perks. BY EDWARD BROWN
The Boards of Summer Every local theater troupe has something new on tap this season. BY JACKIE HOERMANN-ELLIOTT
Hot Tracks Lots of locals are busting out new recordings. BY PATRICK HIGGINS
FW WEEKLY 5/23
LIVE MUSIC
ON THE PATIO FRIday, may 25 • 6–9:00 PM
MAY 16–29
QUAD BS BLUES BAND Blues & Soul
FRUIT PIES 10 INCH
SATURDAY, may 26 • 5:30–9 PM
Scratch-made pies from our Bakery, ready for you to slice, share, and enjoy! Choose from varieties like Four Season, Bountiful Berries, Traditional Cherry, Strawberry Rhubarb and more.
10% OFF
CALAMITY JANES Texas Country sunDAY, may 27 • 1–4:30 PM
nightlife Rock fort worth
cooking school TWO TEXAS CULINARY ICONS:
paula lambert & stephan pyles saturday, may 26 • 6:30–8:30 PM
We’ve rounded up two of our states’ iconic culinary pioneers for an evening of great storytelling and incredible food. These two native Texans have been friends for years, travel the world together, and of course cook together. Don’t miss their insights into these dishes that feature Texas products with influences from some of their favorite destinations. The menu will be paired with wines from Texas. CLASS PRICES MAY VARY, SEE ALL OFFERINGS AT CENTRALMARKET.COM
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4651 WEST FREEWAY | I-30 @ HULEN | 817-989-4700
SHOPS AT CLEARFORK 5258 MONAHANS AVENUE
SHOP THE HOTTEST BRANDS IN FORT WORTH
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WWW.SNOWANDWATER.COM
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INSIDE
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EDITORIAL Editor Anthony Mariani Associate Editors Eric Griffey, Kristian Lin, Jeff Prince Staff Writer Peter Gorman Contributors Edward Brown, Kathy Cruz, Buck D. Elliott, Jackie Elliott, Leonard Eureka, Susie Geissler, Patrick Higgins, Graeme Hind, Laurie James, Rush Olson, Lauren Phillips, Steve Steward, Teri Webster Proofreader Marilyn Bailey Contributing Photographers Lee Chastain, Vishal Malhotra, Kayla Stigall
Fit Food
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Farmers markets make it easy to gobble good stuff. By Jeff Prince
48 52
Low Lights
Embrace the dark, coolness of summer’s blockbusters and more. By Kristian Lin
retail A dvertising Advertising Director Michael Newquist Account Executives Jennifer Bovee, Sara Kinney, Shay White, Mike Webb Sales, Marketing, and Events Jessi Foster CLASSIFIED
Face Melt
ADVERTISING
Senior Account Executives Jenni Ellis, Stacey Hammons
These drink recipes chase away the sweat (and brain cells). By Susie Geissler
circ u lation Circulation Director Will Turner BUSINESS Publisher Bob Niehoff Receptionist Wyatt Newquist Advertising Accounting Manager Trish Bermejo Owner Lee Newquist
Hot Tunes
Our concert list makes them easy as a breeze to find. By Steve Steward
N ational A dvertising VMG Advertising 1-888-278-9866 New York 212-475-4002 Chicago 312-849-0564 Phoenix 602-238-4800 Los Angeles 310-574-7396 Senior Vice President of Sales Susan Belair Senior Vice President of Sales Operations Joe Larkin
Jeff Prince
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prod u ctio N Production Manager Scott Latham Art Director Louis Dixon Production Designer Bang Nguyen
D istrib u tion
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Feature Night & Day
Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
24 Stage 28 Stuff 33 Film Shorts 35 Eats
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Last Call
Clubland. . . . . . . . . . 50
Music
HearSay . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
Eats List. . . . . . . . . . . 36
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Cover Photo by Walt Burns
bl tch The Fort Worth Weekly Blog
54 Noteworthy 61 Mind. Body. Spirit. 61 Employment
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eat WISELY
Even When Eating Out
When healthy food tastes great, better food choices are irresistible! THAILICIOUS is one of dozens of Blue Zones Project Approved™ restaurants where you’ll find delicious menu items that taste great and are better for you! Visit Thailicious at Chapel Hill Shopping Center, 4601 West Freeway, #206. Download our Blue Zones Project Approved™ Restaurant Guide at go.bluezonesproject.com/guide
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2018
Summer Guide W
elcome to our annual Summer Guide. In these pages you’ll find lots of interesting summertime stories by our team of writers whom you know so well. From camps and getaways to hot-temp cocktail recipes and the hottest new music, our Summer Guide has got you covered. Thanks for your support. Enjoy.
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Trippy
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Need a quick summer getaway? Here are some suggestions for day or weekend jaunts. B Y
L A U R I E
J A M E S
While we have some notable fun stuff to do in the Fort (Panther Island, Burger’s Lake, or the Trinity Trails, anyone?), sometimes you want to get off the asphalt and away from town.
Park It There is an impressive variety of state parks within a 90-mile radius. If you plan to visit more than one this summer, buying a $70 Texas State Parks Pass may save you money on admission.
Cedar Hill State Park (1570 W FM 1382, Cedar Hill) is a source of a lot of geocaching fun, and there’s a little gravel beach if you feel like a dip in Joe Pool Lake. Two fishing jetties and four hikeable, bikeable trails from half a mile to 10 miles around will launch your family members off their cellphones and into nature. If you prefer a grassy beach, nearby Loyd Park (3401 Ragland Rd, Grand Prairie) has one, along with some picnic tables, rustic cabins, and an 18-room lodge with AC, Wi-Fi, and satellite TV if you’re more in to glamping than camping. Fossil Rim Wildlife Park (2299 County Road 2008, Glen Rose, 254897-2960) offers you the chance to get up close and personal with bison, deer, bongos, ostriches, a scimitar-horned oryx or two, and rhinos. The park specializes in breeding exotic, endangered animals in a true-to-life environment. If you’re inclined to spend the night at the lodge or cabins, you’ll be offered a special morning safari tour option –– many of
the animals are active at dawn and dusk, so your chances to commune with the critters improve. If the thought of spending the night in a park where the wild things are creeps you out, Dinosaur Valley State Park (1629 Park Rd 59, Glen Rose) has both traditional and primitive campsites along with geocaching, the Paluxy River for fishing, and equestrian or horsedrawn wagon tours courtesy of Eagle Eye Ranch Carriage Company (1629 Park Rd, Ste 59, 817-382-9855). Map the dinosaur tracks the Acrocanthosaurus and Sauroposeidon made 110 million years ago, during the Cretaceous period. While you’re in the area, a stop at Pie Peddlers is a must. Owned by two former teachers, the little shop is sweet as, well, you know.
of how aviation has shaped North Texas. Exhibits include a rebuilt Douglas DC-3, American’s flagship plane in the years before World War II. The Fort Worth Aviation Museum (3300 Ross Av, FW, 855-733-8627) has two dozen aircraft from 1943 to the present, all tied to Fort Worth either through manufacturing or flight history. The Grapevine Vintage Railroad (707 S Main St, Grapevine, 817-410-3185) will take you back to the ’90s –– the 1890s, with Puffy, the oldest continuously operating steam train in the South, and a 1950s-era diesel engine. The trains run three routes: from the Stockyards to Grapevine, a tour around Grapevine, and a scenic one-hour jaunt around the Trinity River.
Planes and Trains
We have a glorious, perfectly functional botanic garden in Fort Worth –– it’s true. But in the spirit of summer getaways, consider the East Texas Arboretum & Botanical Society (1601 Patterson Rd,
The C.R. Smith Museum (4601 Hwy 360, FW, 817-967-1560), named after the former president of American Airlines, offers a look into the history
Vines and Wine
Lezley Norris
BOOKS • MOVIES • RECORDS • CDS
KID‛S SUMMER READING PROGRAM!
Wetter and Wilder
Eagle Mountain Lake is a mere 15 minutes from downtown Fort Worth, but the lake extends north from the
For more, visit Fwweekly.com. continued on page 8
What? Get rewarded for reading! Read for at least 30 minutes a day, for 4 days, and get a $5 credit for more books! When? June – August How? Take a reading log home and keep track of what you’re reading! Then have a parent/guardian sign it and come turn it in to us to get $5 to spend on more books!*
*$5 credit only applicable toward children/young adult, teen and required school reading books. One log per child, per week. Credits do not have actual cash value.
200 N. Locust St. On the Square – Denton, TX
940-566-5688 recycledbooks.com
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Fort into Wise County, where you can camp in an air-conditioned cabin or on a campground, take a guided fishing trip for catfish or sea bass, or call yourself a captain at one of the five marinas (6500 Wells Burnett Rd, FW) in town. Lake Granbury also offers excellent camping opportunities, from cute houses on VRBO to RV parking to hotels. You have your requisite boat docks and boat rentals at the marina, but there’s also a city beach (623 E Pearl St, Granbury), complete with tiki huts. Possum Kingdom Lake (TX P-33, Strawn) is 19,000 acres of clean water –– as much as I love the Trinity River, it’s not that clean. Rent a boat, fish for five different kinds of bass, or rent a canoe and paddle yourself down one of the most scenic areas of the Brazos River.
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Athens, 903-675-5630), 100 acres of shady trails, trees, flowers, and wildlife set off in the Piney Woods, with familyfriendly events planned into July. There you’ll also find Wofford House, the oldest residence in Henderson County, which is home to a functioning culinary and medicinal garden. There are more wineries and pouring rooms in Grapevine than there are hipstero n Magnolia Avenue, and a four-hour winery tour might be a great way for budding oenophiles to delve into three of the area’s dozens of wineries. If you don’t care for a tour bus, hit the Urban Wine Trail (more info at Grapevinetexasusa.com) on your own. It’s a visit to six wineries and tasting rooms.
Who? Kids up to age 16!
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Mountain bongos (!) are among the ka-razy creatures waiting at Fossil Rim Wildlife Center in Glen Rose.
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Summer Guide 2018 continued from page 7
Fun at Any Age From camps to familyfriendly restaurants and breweries, the Weekly has suggestions for your summer outings.
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that introduces children 6-12 to drawing, printmaking, painting, and sculpture. This year’s camp includes tours of the special exhibit From the Lands of Asia: The Sam and Myrna Myers Collection. Getting dirty is par for the course at Camp BRIT (817-332-4441), which focuses on botany and environmentalism. Arts Fifth Avenue (817-923-9500) offers several summer classes and workshops that focus on art, dance, voice, and instrumental music. Fort Worth has a strong roster of sports camps, including TCU’s Jamie Dixon Basketball Camps (817-257-7968), taught by TCU faculty; Wilson Collegiate Tennis Camp (330-333-2267); Nike Junior Golf Camps (1-800-645-3226); and Game On Arena Sports’ Summer Soccer Camps (817-367-7800).
B R O W N
Fort Worth is chock full of kid-friendly spaces, where Mom and/or Dad can have a drink without feeling like a negligent parent, and fun camps that unglue kiddos from electronic distractions. Aside from introducing Fort Worthians to Hatch chile festivals and the wonders of poblano-feta dip, Central Market (4651 W Fwy, 817-989-4700) has a large outdoor play area where kiddos can climb, crawl, and slide. Nearby, dozens of shaded tables and chairs offer a chance to relax and enjoy coffee, craft beer, wine, or prepared dishes from Central Market’s kitchen. My 10-year-old son is a regular in the gelato line, located near the entrance to the patio. During the summer, there’s usually a good-size group of kids on the playground in the morning and evening. March through October adds an extra incentive to load up the family for an evening out — live bands on weekdays. HopFusion Ale Works (200 E Broadway Av, 817-841-1721) proves that “beer” and “family-friendly” can pair nicely. Made-from-scratch lemonade is always on tap along with a non-alcoholic root beer that’s blended with the same locally sourced honey as HopFusion’s popular Feisty Blonde. Piles of board games in the merchandise area and fun theme nights round out the PG-rated entertainment here. Pee-wee Herman may have influenced the playful design of Panther Island Brewing Company (501 N Main St, 817882-8121). Circular Hobbit-inspired doors, wooden skylines, and an oversized 1960s-style TV cutout are just a few of the quirky, fantastical features of this spacious brewery. Taproom tours (check the website for schedule) bring in food vendors and offer ample tables for board games. Sometimes the kids outnumber the adults at Chimera Brewing Company (1001 W Magnolia Av, 817-923-8000), where an oversized Connect Four game
Edward Brown
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outside, darts indoors (if the youngsters are reasonably old enough), and Chimera’s mouthwatering brie-and-speck pizza, made with a buttery blend of mozzarella and brie that’s topped with strips of spiced prosciutto, are all within reach. The sprawling gravel patio of Woodshed Smokehouse (3201 Riverfront Dr, 817-877-4545), with its giant Jenga games, low rocks for climbing, and fencedin space, is a great place to unleash the kiddos while enjoying smoky, meaty treats. Newcomer Topgolf (2201 E 4th St, 817-349-4002) can get pricey, but no one in your family will be bored lobbing golf balls into large neon targets from futuristically cantilevered platforms while a waitstaff attentively attends to your dining needs. Even helicopter parents agree: Summer camps offer a welcome break
Let the kiddos tire themselves out at Central Market while the adults chill nearby.
from the family routine and are a great way to enrich your child’s education and social skills. Many Fort Worthians have fond, sweaty memories of Pantego-based Camp Thurman (817-274-8441), which has welcomed kids grades K-6 since 1969. Outdoor recreations include capture the flag, dodgeball, swimming, rope courses, ziplining, and more. With an emphasis on science and technology, TCU Summer Camps (817257-7132) offers half- and full-day classes for kids grades 1-12. Courses cover LEGOthemed robotics, science, technology, photography, SAT and ACT preparation, and creative writing. You supply the kid, Rogue Brick Builders’ Lounge Robotics and Architecture Summer Camp (817-7203330) supplies the adventure. LEGO experts are on hand to guide your child from concept to creation, building motorized structures from more than 500 pounds of LEGO bricks and accessories. Kimbell Summer Camp (817-3328451) is a series of half-day classes (1-4pm)
A Kale To Action Farmers markets might help you squeeze into your swimsuit this summer. B Y
J E F F
P R I N C E
Decades of boozing, smoking, and overall gluttony had left me with one foot in the grave and the other swollen and tingly from Type 2 diabetes. I faced a decision. Either say, “I’m too old to change” and continue the slow, painful slide toward a hacking, winded, and waddling death. Or make a change. A year later, I’m lighter, healthier,
and happier. My enchilada dinners, hot dogs, and pancake dinners haven’t been replaced by healthier choices so much as they’ve been supplemented by them. Now, I grill onions, bell peppers, broccoli, and other veggies to top off the hot dogs, and I sprinkle bananas and fresh blueberries onto the pancakes. When I heat up a frozen pizza, I add grilled veggies on top. I’m not going to win any fitness awards, but eating a little better and taking a brisk walk every morning have allowed me to lose 20 pounds in 10 months without feeling like I’m dieting. I’m still 30 pounds too heavy, but what’s the hurry? I’ll get to my perfect weight eventually as long as I keep walking and reaching for fruits and veggies. That’s easier to do when the produce is flavorful. And nobody does flavor like local growers supplying the area’s farmers markets. Tarrant County offers dozens of them. Green Source DFW, a project to align environmental groups, green businesses, and the North Texas community, provides a thorough list of area farmers markets at Greensourcedfw.org. Think of them as frequent gathering places for farmers or sales reps selling locally grown food straight to consumers. The number of markets has increased nationwide every year since the USDA’s Agricultural Marketing Services began tracking them 24 years ago. In 2017, the USDA listed 8,687 farmers markets in its national directory. Tarrant County public health officials say buying from local growers means the goodies will most likely be fresher because they are allowed to ripen before being picked. Freshness means more flavor. Eat a soft, juicy, sweet, tangy Parker County peach, harvested that very morning and hauled to a farmers market, and you will never again want to buy a typical supermarket peach that is hard as an apple and flavorful as caulk. Better flavor keeps you coming back for more healthy stuff and reduces the chances you’ll trash the veggies for the drive-thru instead. There are plenty of other reasons to hit a farmers market rather than a big box retailer. Nutritionists say fresher produce provides more nutrition. And Mother Nature benefits as well. Buying from local growers reduces the impact of transporting the goods. Long transports can mean temperature changes that zap nutritional value. County officials say local produce is more likely GMO free, meaning it hasn’t been genetically modified in a laboratory, and you’ll feel safer having more knowledge about where and how your food was grown. Several times, I’ve been visiting local farmers markets when a pickup truck pulls up hauling fruits and veggies, and the driver turns out to be the same person who grew the produce. I’ve started up conversations
Pedal Points
Our cycling expert takes us through Texas’ major summer rides. B Y
B U C K
E L L I O T T
To every cyclist there is a season to turn! turn! turn! the pedals on bikes that have been hanging in garages through the winter. The reason for the season is the Hotter’N Hell Hundred (HNH) in late August in Wichita Falls. It’s the premier bike rally in Texas
Tour d’Italia Italy, Sat, Jun 16
The Tour d’Italia benefits Italy High School (pronounced it-lee) and the Texas Scottish Rite Hospital for Children. The ride boasts collector-quality t-shirts and post-ride sno cones for pedalers. Five rest stops wait for those riding the longest 63continued on page 10
SPRING into SUMMER
Through Sept. 2: The famous Chickasaw performer and cultural treasure.
EXHIBITS & ADVENTURE Two new exhibits headline a new season
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in these situations and learned about their growing methods. I’ve even had the feeling the farmers would let me tour their fields if I were to ask. Willie Nelson loves farmers. Sure, he is high as hell most of the time and loves most everyone. But he has extra love for farmers because he dislikes corporations snuffing out the little guys who till, seed, and harvest the land and help build their communities. All those E. coli scares we hear so much about? That type of outbreak more typically occurs in vast industrial settings rather than on small farms. As a bonus, farms contribute quite equitably to the tax base since they don’t typically require many municipal services. I visit several markets in the area, but my favorite is probably Ridgmar Farmers Market because it is combined with Cowtown BBQ under the same roof. That way I can get my greasy meats and healthy green stuff in one stop, providing the proper yin and yang to my pseudo-diet.
The Honey Tour is hosted by the Burleson Chamber of Commerce and features locally produced honey everywhere. Participants are given single-serving honey packets before the ride that make for a great natural boost. This ride tends to have cooler weather than June or July rallies. The route is typical of most: smooth, paved roads in the host town leading to farm-to-market, chipseal roads that will jar your bones. The trek is supported with rest stops every 8-10 miles with fruit, water, shade, Gatorade, and, of course, honey. Medical support is available too. Swag generally includes a t-shirt. Elevation is not really a factor, but
there are some long and gradual hills on the I-35 access roads. Showers are available postride in the Burleson Centennial High School Athletic Field House. Route options are 7, 20, 30, 46, and 67 miles. The longest route goes as far south as Grandview. Registration is $35.
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Eating healthy is easy when you’re shopping for groceries at farmers markets.
Burleson Honey Tour Burleson, Sat, May 26
of festivities and activities. Enjoy Stomp Dance demonstrations and Stickball. Tour the Butterfly, Spiral and Village Gardens. Join us!
Sculpting Cultures:
Southeast and Southwest Native Pottery Exhibit through Sept. 2.
C h i c k a s a w C u l t u r a l C e n t e r. c o m S u l p h u r, O K 5 80 - 6 2 2-7130
F O R T WO R T H W E E K LY
Jeff Prince
for which most local spandex warriors train through the summer, and riders have a plethora of options for training rides. With the cycling season already underway, there are still many opportunities for casual cruisers and century-riders alike. Every bike rally or tour has certain amenities, especially rest stops with food, hydration, medical care, and even mechanical support. These events also offer support and gear (SAG) crews for riders who have problems. The SAG wagons are generally pickup trucks with trailers, who peruse each course looking for anyone who has suffered mechanical failures or crashes.
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Glen E. Ellman
Summer Guide 2018
and hot showers upon completion. Route options are 12, 30, 40, 50, and 63 miles. Registration is $30.
mile route. Elevation is more challenging on this jaunt, dipping as far south as Silver City. The Italy High School Field House is available for camping before the ride
Tour de Fort Worth Fort Worth, Sun, Jul 1-22
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continued from page 9
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This event is a little different, just like
Fort Worth. Tour de Fort Worth is a healthy-city initiative supported by several groups in the area and Funkytown’s chief cycling nut Mayor Betsy Price. The series challenges riders to pedal 21 miles or more for 21 consecutive days. Different levels of organized rides happen each day for three weeks. The series kicks off at Joe T.
Garcia’s on Sunday, July 1 and concludes three weeks later at Central Market. Club rides are casually hosted by cycling groups and bike shops. Supported rides are unique in that police motorcycles and escorts will block traffic as riders, including Mayor Price, have unrestricted access to the city free of traffic. The best
part? It’s all free. Check out the calendar for details and times.
Johnson County charities. This course is dotted with rolling hills and rewarding descents. Brutal service-road ascents have caused many a cramp for lovers of The Goatneck. Routes travel out of Cleburne and as far southwest as Glen Rose. The longest option has about 2,000 feet of elevation to torture riders. Route options are 10, 27, 41, and 70 miles. Registration is $30.
Peach Pedal Bike Ride Weatherford, Sat, Jul 14
Peach Pedal supports the United Way of Parker County and the Weatherford Chamber of Commerce. A gem of a midsummer ride, Peach Pedal generally gives colorful t-shirts and water bottles to their riders. The event runs in conjunction with the Parker County Peach Festival. Riders receive a coupon for free admission to the festival. The route is mostly fast and fun, abounding with scenic farms, horses, and livestock. Rest stops are situated every 9-10 miles and are stocked with ripe seasonal fruit, hydration, medical personnel, and mouth-watering peaches. This ride is very popular, traveling from Weatherford west into Brock and Milsap, finishing back at the Weatherford High School’s indoor practice facility. Shower facilities are available for riders to clean up, and shuttles will escort them to the peach festival in charming downtown Weatherford. Route options are 8, 28, 39, and 61 miles. Registration is $35.
As the last serious training rally before HNH, Blazin’ Saddle 75 rolls out of Granbury Middle School and offers the longest distance and typically hottest weather of all the area rallies. Proceeds benefit Texas Emergency Medical Services, and their medical crew staff rest stations every 10-12 miles. The 75-mile course punishes riders with 4,000 feet of elevation gained throughout the ride. T-shirts are available to pre-registered riders, and showers are waiting in the middle school athletic facilities. Routes travel south of Granbury as far as Dinosaur Valley State Park. This endurance ride will tax even the most experienced distance riders, depending on the heat index. Respect is earned by those who complete the longest routes of Goatneck and Blazin’ Saddle in consecutive weekends. The latter’s distance options are 20, 44, 62, and 75 miles. Registration is $35. continued on page 12
3-DAY WEEKEND.
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Goatneck is based out of Cleburne High School. Riders receive a t-shirt and water bottle, and stocked rest stops are available every 8-9 miles. The rally supports various
Kevin Humphrey
The Goatneck Bike Ride Cleburne, Sat, Jul 28
Blazin’ Saddle 75 Granbury, Sat, Aug 4
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Summer Guide 2018 continued from page 11
Hotter’N Hell Hundred Wichita Falls, Sat, Aug 25
Known as the granddaddy of cycling events in Texas to some and a rite of passage to others, the Hotter’N Hell has the biggest reputation and attendance of all the rallies. Attendance hovers around 13,000 riders, and if you haven’t booked accommodations yet, it’s most likely too late. Swag for registered riders includes a t-shirt, water bottle, and finisher medal. Camping is plentiful around the campus of Midwestern State University. The entire weekend is a smorgasbord of cycling with professional races and mountain bike challenges, but the main event is the
resh Local Produc F m r e Fa
Green's Produce & plants Family Owned and Operated - Est. 1969
w. arkansas ln. arlington 76016 817 . 274 .2435 greensproduce.com
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3001
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Richard Cleaver
fresh, local produce herbs - bedding plants garden decor beautiful pottery local honey specialty items and more!
Saturday ride. The trade show on Friday is the opportunity to fawn over new products or score great closeout deals on bikes and accessories. The boogeyman is the heat compounded by the wind on the flat roads of Wichita Falls. The only real elevation on this course lies to the west. The most popular route options are the 100-mile (bragging rights) or the 100K (which is actually the more enjoyable route, culminating with a line of cheering cadets through Sheppard Air Force Base). Be careful on this ride. There are so many eager hellcats at the starting line that danger lurks before riders spread out. Hazards aside, this rolling party is an initiation into cycling that draws participants from all over Texas and the rest of the country. Route options are 10K, 100K, 25, 50, 75, and 100 miles. Registration is $35.
Summer Fashion Do’s
Two independently owned clothing retailers offer wardrobe tips. B Y
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B R O W N
Social media has made the world of fashion a lot smaller. That’s at least according to Alyson Johnson, cofounder of Esther Penn, a boutique fashion retail store located just north of the Cultural District. Poppy reds, pastel pinks, and mint-green will be popular colors this summer, she added as she traipsed through her boutique. Fort Worth is influenced more by clothing trends from the West Coast than the east, she said. Johnson and business partner Kacey Cargile follow retailers in California on Instagram, giving the local co-owners some good ledes. Before social media, it took a year or two for West Coast attire to hit trendy Fort Worth shelves, Johnson said. Now, it takes mere months. The goal for Johnson and Cargile is to provide new items like rompers and jumpsuits — both of which are one-piece garments, with the skimpier rompers being preferred by the under-30 crowd, Johnson said — while offering unique pieces and outerwear that can satisfy a wide swath of tastes. A lot of contemporary designs are “easy and cute,” Johnson said. One-piece outfits are particularly popular for their ease of use. “You get the whole outfit without having to match the top and bottom,” she said. “You can wear that to a casual wedding with the right accessories and shoes.” As a general rule, Johnson said, cotton, cotton blends, and linen provide the most breathability during the triple-digit summers here, while silky materials can show sweat spots and should be avoided during the day until fall returns. Another soon-to-be-popular material to look out for is scrunchy, elastic “smock,” which appears to be making a comeback among young adults as the base material for dresses and one-piece outfits. Smock “used to be popular in the ’90s, and now it’s back,” Johnson said. “People are asking if they can wear this because they used to wear it as kids. It’s a cool, cute, different thing.” Johnson said the Esther Penn ethos is to be trendy without jumping on every trend that pops up. Johnson encourages customers to try on pieces they normally
Terms like “slow fashion” or “sustainable fashion” aren’t commonly used in Fort Worth’s clothing retail industry, a local adherent to the movement said, but that’s slowly changing, thanks to Tribe Alive, which recently opened its first brick-and-mortar store on West Magnolia Avenue. Sustainable fashion, popular in Austin and other progressive cities, is based on the idea that profits don’t have to be made off the backs of underpaid subsistence workers overseas. Tribe Alive founder Carly Burson said that every weaver, sewer, and seamstress who manufactures her store’s clothing and accessories works in safe conditions and is paid a fair wage. “These jobs are helping to change the face of poverty,” Burson said. “The way we describe our business is that there is an important story and human behind our products.” Less is more, said Tribe Alive senior designer Katie Sansom. Indeed, the floorspace holds only a few racks of women’s clothing and a few tables of
Edward Brown
wouldn’t grab off the racks. West Coast fads continue to shape fashion tastes in North Texas, Johnson said, but with an open mind and advice from professionals, anyone can master the Golden Rule of fashion — make it your own. Follow Esther Penn on Instagram @ esther_penn.
Tribe Alive founder Carly Burson (right) and senior designer Katie Sansom are looking to effect social change through fashion. Photo by Edward Brown.
jewelry and accessories. “We integrate our [products] into things customers already have, so they are not constantly having to buy new things,” Sansom said. “Everything is made to last while having a timeless design.” Tribe Alive’s color theme this summer season is marigold, an inspiration, Sansom said, from the popular swimsuit hue of the 1960s. Like Esther Penn, Sansom forecasts
color. (Pantone, a consulting company that many in the fashion industry look to for forecasts, predicted ultraviolet as the leading clothing color of 2018. So far, that hasn’t panned out.) Incorporating timeless design aspects into Tribe Alive’s designs while acknowledging trends is a balancing act, Sansom said. Minimal prints, stripes, and neutral color palettes add longevity, she said,
while boxy crop tops, miniskirts, and long jumpsuit designs satisfy demands from trend followers. “We want people to value the purchases they make while thinking about who made it,” Burson said. “We strive to lift people up and empower everyone, from maker to consumer.” Follow Tribe Alive on Instagram @ tribealive.
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Frenchie Bualé Debuts “What’s The Tea” Sweet Tea Vodka Dallas-based duo launches into untapped market
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o-founders Randy French and Kirk Buale’ are taking the road less traveled by launching their Dallas-based spirits brand Frenchie Bualé in an untapped market. Given the lack of gay presence in mainstream media, the dynamic duo plans on changing the narrative of conventional LGBTQ assumptions, with the launch of a like-minded business that supports equality of gender, race, and sexual orientation. “Kirk and I started Frenchie Bualé with a unique vision and goal in mind,” said French. “Through our quality handcrafted beverages, we want to show the world that love truly conquers all. The best times are those when we all come together to appreciate and celebrate everyone’s individuality, forget the bull, and just have a good time with a delicious drink in-hand.” To accompany the announcement of the new brand, Frenchie Bualé is launching its original spirit – “What’s The Tea” Sweet Tea Vodka – a southerner’s dream. Distilled and bottled in Riviera Beach, Fla., the 60-proof vodka is infused with pineapple and sweet tea. The flavors are perfectly balanced to give you a drink that tastes like a really good glass of sweet tea with a pleasant kick at the end. “We are excited to officially launch our ‘What’s The Tea’ vodka, and look forward to sharing it with everyone in our community and beyond,” said Buale’. “We coined its name from the popular catchphrase that’s used in the LGBTQ community. It’s a fun thing to say when we’ve missed out on the latest gossip and need to be caught up. In addition to supporting the community, it goes along with our vision of giving people a reason to have a good time.”
Kirk Buale’ (left) and Randy French.
As of May, the new vodka is available in all DFW area Total Wine locations. That’s just the beginning. “What’s The Tea” is quickly gaining in popularity, with plans to bring the brand to locations all across the south. For more information, visit frenchiebuale.com.
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which uses theatrical training to help war veterans cope with PTSD. At 3pm, some soldiers from that program will recite short theatrical monologues that they’ve learned at Amphibian Stage Productions, 120 S Main St, FW. Admission is free. Call 817-923-3012.
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NIGHT&DAY
Texas Ballet Theater concludes its season with a run of that old standby, Sunday Swan Lake. The selfprofessed favorite of artistic director and choreographer Ben Stevenson, the ballet about a princess transformed into a swan has been condensed to two acts from four. If you didn’t catch this show when it ran four years ago, now’s your chance. The ballet runs Fri thru today at Bass Performance Hall, 555 Commerce St, FW. Tickets are $20-125. Call 817-212-4280.
Stick Fly starts previews at Jubilee Theatre this week.
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For this one year, the PGA event will be called the Wednesday Fort Worth Invitational, with Dean & Deluca having pulled out of their sponsorship and Charles Schwab’s name not going on the tournament until next year. Kevin Kisner will be on hand to defend his title from last year, and he’ll have to contend with Jon Rahm, Justin Rose, Rickie Fowler, and 2016 champion Jordan Spieth, all currently ranked in the PGA’s Top 10. The tournament goes thru Sun at Colonial Country Club, 3735 Country Club Cir, FW. Tickets are $15-250. Call 817-927-4280.
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The Texas Rangers are shaping up to be the doormats of the AL Thursday West this year, but they can start winning again this week when the even sorrier Kansas City Royals come to town for four games. While many names on their roster are still recognizable from the 2015 World Series
champions, the starting pitching is at replacement level right now. The series runs today thru Sun at Globe Life Park, 1200 Ballpark Way, Arlington. Tickets are $20-225. Call 817-273-5100.
The reviews are wildly mixed about Lydia R. Diamond’s Stick Fly, Friday her 2012 play about a wealthy African-American family reunion on Martha’s Vineyard that seems to owe as much to Tyler Perry as it does to Lillian Hellman. How successfully is this collision of race, class, and gender issues brought off? You can judge when Jubilee Theatre puts it on today thru Jun 24 at 506 Main St, FW. Tickets are $24-30. Call 817-338-4411.
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Besides writing and starring in Cry Havoc!, Stephan Wolfert also runs a program called de-cruit,
There are many ways to spend Memorial Day, and getting up close with Monday America’s official national mammal seems as good as any other. Fort Worth Nature Center and Refuge is holding one of its periodic Bison Feeding Hayrides this morning, so you can see these creatures that once roamed the plains in the numberless millions. The event is at 10am at 9601 Fossil Ridge Rd, FW. Registration is $10-16. Call 817-237-1111.
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Seems like kids are always fascinated with farting and vomiting, Tuesday because Fort Worth Museum of Science and History is bringing back Grossology, their exhibit about bodily functions that includes a 30-foot model of the digestive system and a wall made to look like human skin. The exhibit runs indefinitely after Sat at 1600 Gendy St, FW. Admission is $12-15. Call 817-255-9300.
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By Kristian Lin
Wiener Dog Race
You know how the gourmet hot dog craze has hit Fort Worth, so that now you can get them with crazy toppings like cream cheese, poppy seeds, and Parmesan truffle fries? Yeah, this story has nothing to do with that. Instead, it’s about the qualifying round of Nathan’s Famous Hot Dog Eating Contest. On Saturday afternoon, people who are brave, foolhardy, or simply in possession of iron stomachs will gather at Six Flags to determine which two of them (one man and one woman) will advance to the annual worldwide contest on July 4 in Coney Island, N.Y. If you can call competitive eating a sport, its contestants train with the devotion of athletes, using hypnosis and diets to stretch their stomach, as well as techniques like dunking the hot dog buns in water to facilitate swallowing as well as “chipmunking,” which we could explain in detail, but would you really want us to? If other sports offer up the grace and beauty of LeBron James hitting a contested jumper or Nikita Kucherov deking a goalie off his skates, this one gives you the chance for the most disgusting failures imaginable. In the city that’s home to the Dallas Cowboys and the Texas Rangers, you might be able to see the eater who will dethrone Joey Chestnut on Independence Day. Afterward, you can head straight to the Grossology exhibit at the Fort Worth Museum of Science and History for perspective. The Nathan’s Famous Hot Dog Eating Contest qualifying round is 1:30pm Sat at Six Flags Over Texas, 2201 E Rd to Six Flags, Arlington. Admission is free with price of park entry. Call 817-640-8900.
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C A L L F O R E N T R I E S Lone Star Film Festival Seeking narrative and documentary features and shorts. Regular deadline Jun 27, final deadline Aug 14. 209 W 2nd St, FW. Submission fees $20-80.
V I S UA L
S E R IE S
Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth NY Cat Film Festival. Screenings of 13 short documentary and narrative films about cats. 11am & 2pm Sat. $8-10. • Finding Your Feet. Richard Loncraine’s dramedy about an English
A R T S
A R T M U S E U M S Amon Carter Museum of American Art Plexus No. 34. Site-specific installation by Gabriel Dawe. Thru Sep 2. 3501 Camp Bowie Blvd, FW. Free. 817-738-1933.
“All About Sports & Great Food”
C A L L F O R S U B M I S S I O N S Fort Worth Opera Frontiers. Seeking unproduced stage works by composers from Western Hemisphere. Submit excerpts 15-25 minutes in length. Excerpts should use no more than six singers and be playable with only solo piano accompaniment. Deadline Jul 31. Entry fee $25. 817-288-1214.
DAN CE
Texas Ballet Theater Swan Lake. Production of Ben Stevenson’s setting of the ballet, with music by Tchaikovsky. Fri-Sun. Bass Performance Hall, 555 Commerce St, FW. $20125. 877-828-9200.
We Have A Boxing Ring You Can Dine In!
Arlington Landmark Since 1985
THEAT E R
Amphibian Productions War veterans perform short monologues. 3pm Sat. Free. • Cry Havoc! Stephan Wolfert’s one-man show about a war veteran’s experiences with Shakespeare’s plays about war. Thru Sun. 120 S Main St, FW. $25100. 817-923-3012. Artisan Center Theater Pollyanna. Susan Pargman’s adaptation of Eleanor Porter’s novel. Thru Sat. • Beauty and the Beast. Linda Woolverton’s stage adaptation of the Disney animated musical film. May 25-Jul 7. Belaire Theater, 420 E Pipeline Rd, Hurst. $12-24. 817284-1200. Jubilee Theatre Stick Fly. Lydia R. Diamond’s drama about two brothers who both bring their new girlfriends to meet their parents. May 25-Jun 24. 506 Main St, FW. $24-30. 817-3384411. Stage West Hir. Taylor Mac’s comedy about a soldier who returns home and finds his family completely altered. Thru Jun 17. 821 W Vickery Blvd, FW. $31-35. 817-784-9378. Tarrant Actors Regional Theatre Sunset Boulevard. Andrew Lloyd Webber, Don Black, and Christopher Hampton’s musical adaptation of Billy Wilder’s 1950 film. Thru Sun. Fort Worth Community Arts Center, 1300 Gendy St, FW. $5-15. 682-231-0082. Theatre Arlington Footloose: The Musical. Dean Pitchford, Tom Snow, and Walter Bobbie’s stage adaptation of the 1983 film. Thru Jun 3. 305 W Main St, Arlington. $24.50. 817-275-7661.
COMEDY
America’s Best Coffee Open-mic. 7pm every Sat & Tue. 3751 Matlock Rd, Arlington. Free. 817557-3375.
G A L L E R I E S Artspace 111 Majestic Space. Works by Winter Rusiloski. • Voyage. Works by Ronald Watson. Thru Jun 16. 111 Hampton St, FW. Free. 817-
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Arlington Museum of Art Cut! Costume and the Cinema. Thru Aug 12. 201 W Main St, Arlington. $5-8. 817-275-4600. Kimbell Art Museum From the Lands of Asia: The Sam and Myrna Myers Collection. Works in various media from China, Japan, Mongolia, Korea, and Vietnam. Thru Aug 19. 3333 Camp Bowie Blvd, FW. $14-18. 817-332-8451. Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth Focus. Multimedia installations by Kamrooz Aram. Thru Jun 17. 3200 Darnell St, FW. $4-10. 817738-9215. Sid Richardson Museum Frederic Remington: Altered States. Thru Sep 30. 309 Main St, FW. Free. 817-332-6554.
Homemade Food Happy Hour Monday-Friday 11am-7pm & All Day Wednesday $2.50 Frozen Margaritas (10 oz) $2.25 Domestic Bottle Beer $1 Off All Draft Beers, Mixed Drinks, Shots & Wine Daily Drink Specials Monday $2 Select Domestic Bottled Beer Tuesday $3 Premium Calls Thursday $3 Texas Liquors & $2.75 TX/Mex Bottled Beers Friday $5 Bombs • Saturday $3 Fires Sunday $3 Bloody Mary’s & $3 Tall Domestic Drafts
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housewife (Imelda Staunton) who’s forced to move in with her sister (Celia Imrie) following a divorce. Also with Timothy Spall, Joanna Lumley, David Hayman, Phoebe Nicholls, and John Sessions. Fri-Sun. 3200 Darnell St, FW. $7-9. 817-738-9215.
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4301 S Bowen | 817-467-9922 www.BobbyVsArlington.com
F O R T WO R T H W E E K LY
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Four Day Weekend Theater Improv performances by Four Day Weekend. 7:30pm & 10pm Fri-Sat. 312 Houston St, FW. $20. 817226-4DAY. Hyena’s Comedy Club, FW Tim Gaither. ThuSat. 425 Commerce St, FW. $10-15 + two item minimum purchase. 817-877-LAFF. The Improv Club Bruce Bruce. Thu-Sun. 309 Curtis Mathes Way, Arlington. $30-40. 817-6355555. Panther City Comedy Weekly comedy and karaoke open-mic. 8pm Fri. 395 Purcey St, FW. $10.
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Jeremy Joel used to be a muralist, but now his work is focused more on canvases, using found materials and text to make his paintings and installations that combine elements of Mexican street art with things drawn from his personal story.
A Beatbox Caviar, thru Jun 30. Fort Works Art, 2100 Montgomery St, FW. 817-7597459.
877-4920. Firehouse Pottery & Gallery Pottery by Keith Thomson, Garret Pendergrass, Jaynee Purchase, and Al Hoeksema. On view indefinitely. 4147 Meadowbrook Dr, FW. Free. 682-560-3467. Fort Works Art A Beatbox Caviar. Paintings by Jeremy Joel. Thru Jun 30. 2100 Montgomery St, FW. Free. 817-235-5804. Fort Worth Community Arts Center TCC Northeast Art Faculty and Staff Exhibition. Thru Thu. • Time Perceived. Paintings by Donna Lässker. Thru Thu. • Semblance of Prayer: Daily Reflections. Paintings by Charlotte Seifert and ceramics by Diane Boren. Thru Thu • Mayjoring in Art; Higher Learning. Juried show. Thru Sat. • Girls and Guise. Paintings by Lisa Krannichfeld. Thru Mon. 1300 Gendy St, FW. Free. 817-7381938. Galeria de la Rosa Mujeres Poderosas. Thru Jun 15. 1440 N Main St, FW. Free. 817-624-8333.
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E T C E T E R A Kimbell Art Museum Dreams of Plenty. DVD presentation. 2pm Sun. 3333 Camp Bowie Blvd, FW. Free. 817-332-8451.
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P O E T R Y / S T O R Y T E L L I N G The Dock Bookshop 8pm every Tue. 6637 Meadowbrook Dr, FW. $5. 817-457-5700. Grackle Art Gallery Open-mic. 7pm Wed. 4621 El Campo Av, FW. $5. 817-615-0681.
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Martin House Brewery Tours include tasting, live music, and souvenir pint glass. 2-5pm every Sat. 220 S Sylvania Rd, FW. $10. 817-2220177. Nathan’s Famous Hot Dog Contest Qualifying round of worldwide eating contest. 1:30pm Sat. Six Flags Over Texas, 2201 E Rd to Six Flags, Arlington. Free with park admission. 817-6408900. Pawnee Bill’s Wild West Show 2:30 & 4:30pm Sat. Cowtown Coliseum, 121 E Exchange Av, FW. $8-12. 817-625-1025. Rahr & Sons Brewing Tours include tastings, food, and live music. 5pm every Wed & 1pm every Sat. 701 Galveston Av, FW. $10. 817-8109266. Swing Dance Swing dance lesson. 8pm every Tue. Southside Preservation Hall, 1519 Lipscomb St, FW. $5. 817-926-2800. N A T U R E Botanical Research Institute of Texas (BRIT) The largest independent herbarium in the Southwest, with over 1 million dried plant specimens. Extensive botanical and children’s library. Tours available by appointment. 10am5pm Mon-Fri & 10am-2pm Sat. 1700 University Dr, FW. Free. 817-332-4441. Fort Worth Botanic Garden Conservatory regular hours: 10am-4pm Mon-Sat; 1-4pm Sun. $.50-1 • Japanese Garden regular hours: 9am-5pm Mon-Sun. $3-4.50. • 3220 Botanic Garden Blvd, FW. 817-871-7686. Fort Worth Nature Center and Refuge Snakes of Tarrant County. Sat-Mon. Free. • Bison
Feeding Hayride. 10am Mon. $10-16. • Full Moon Paddle. 8pm Tue. $15-20. • Garden Center hours: 8am-10pm Mon-Fri; 8am-5pm Sat; 1-5pm Sun. • Nature hikes 9am every Sat. Free. • Open 8am-5pm daily. 9601 Fossil Ridge Rd, FW. $2-4. 817-237-1111. Fort Worth Water Gardens Five-acre water park with fountains and pools, designed by Philip Johnson. 10am-10pm daily. 1502 Commerce St, FW. Free. 817-871-5700. Fort Worth Zoo 9am-4pm daily. 1989 Colonial Pkwy, FW. $12-15, admission half price on Wed. 817-759-7360. Fossil Rim Wildlife Center Endangered species conservation center with over 1,100 animals of native and exotic species. 8:30am-3:29pm Sun-Sat. 2299 Country Rd 2008, Glen Rose. $15.95-25.95. 254-897-2960. River Legacy Living Science Center Nature trails and science exhibits. 9am-5pm Tue-Sat. 703 NW Green Oaks Blvd, Arlington. Free, donations accepted. 817-860-6752. Sea Life Grapevine Aquarium 10am-9:30pm MonSat & 11am-7pm Sun. 3000 Grapevine Mills Pkwy, Grapevine. $12.75-19. 469-444-3050. Streams & Valleys Moonlight river trips for kayakers. 7pm Sat. River Park Dr & Bryant Irvin Rd, FW. $50. 817-926-0006. S U P P O R T AIDS Outreach Center SMART (Self Management and Recovery Training) Recovery Group. 10am every Wed. • El Sol. 5:30pm every other Wed. • El Futuro Unidos. 6pm first Mon of month. • Mujeres Unidas. 10am every Tue. • Sista to
Sista. 11:30am every Tue. 1425 Pennsylvania Av, FW. 817-335-1994 or 817-229-4621. Cancer Friendship and Support Group 6pm Wed. Star Café, 111 W Exchange Dr, FW. 817-6248701. Co-Dependents Anonymous 6pm every Fri. Meeting Rm, Unity Church of Fort Worth, 5051 Trail Lake Dr, FW. 817-423-2965. Depression Bipolar Support Association 7:30pm Fri. Community Rm, All Saints Hospital, 1400 8th Av, FW. 817-654-7100. DFW PCOS Cysters 1pm Sat. First Congregational UCC Fort Worth, 4201 Trail Lake Dr, FW. 817899-0745. Eating Disorders Support Group 6pm every Tue. 1521 Cooper St, Arlington. 817-584-5399. Emotions Anonymous 7:30pm every Tue. Smithfield United Methodist Church, 6701 N Smithfield Rd, North Richland Hills. 817-8689404. Families Anonymous 7pm every Wed. Travis Avenue Baptist Church South Complex, 717 W Berry St, FW. 817-332-6329. Fort Worth Cancer Support Group 7pm every Mon. Chaplain’s Office, Harris Methodist Fort Worth, 1301 Pennsylvania Av, FW. 817-8822092. Fort Worth Ovarian and Gynecological Cancer Support Group 6pm Wed. Central Market, 4651 W Fwy, FW. 817-244-4991. Lance-a-Lots Diabetic support group. 7:30pm Thu. Harris Methodist Hospital, 701 5th Av, FW. Free. 817-250-3646. Natural Works Wellness Clinic Cancer Support. 7pm every Wed. • MS Support. 2pm every Sun. 1314 Lake St, Suite 102, FW. 817-332-5570.
Ovarian Cancer Workshop 9am first Sat of month. Baylor Medical Center, Hwy 114 & Hwy 26, Grapevine. 817-244-4991. Overeaters Anonymous Noon Tue. South Hills Christian Church, 3200 Bilglade Rd, FW. 817924-2328. Widowed Persons Service Regular meeting. 2:30pm Sun. Calvary Lutheran Church, 7620 Baker Blvd, Richland Hills. 817-551-2922.
M U S E U M S Big Bear Native American Museum Display of Native American artifacts collected by Leonard J. Beal. 10am-5pm Sat & 1-5pm Sun. 101 Chisholm Tr, Cleburne. $5. 817-648-1486. Cattle Baron Mansion Tours Tours of McFarland House and Thistle Hill historic homes. Wed-Fri & Sun. 1509 Pennsylvania Av, FW & 1110 Penn St, FW. $7.50-15. 817-332-5875. Christian Arts Museum Featuring Judeo-Christianthemed paintings, sculpture, and wax figures. 10am-3pm Wed-Sat. 3205 Hamilton Av, FW. Free. 817-332-7878. Fort Worth Aviation Museum Historic airplanes and history of aviation in North Texas. 9am-4pm Wed; 9am-5pm Sat; 11am-5pm Sun. 3300 Ross Av, FW. $1-5. 855-733-8627. Fort Worth Museum of Science & History Grossology. Exhibit on human and animal body functions. Runs indefinitely. • America’s Musical Journey. IMAX presentation narrated by Aloe Blacc. Runs indefinitely. • Pandas. IMAX presentation. Runs indefinitely. 1600 Gendy St, FW. $12-15. 817-255-9300.
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Granbury Doll House Display of historic dolls, plus doll making and dollhouse furniture making. 10am-4pm Fri-Sat; 1-4pm Sun. 421 Bridge St, Granbury. 817-894-5194. JFK Tribute Exhibit Site of the president’s last public speech, with sculpture and historic display. Open all hours. General Worth Sq, 916 Main St, FW. Free. 817-870-1692. National Multicultural Western Heritage Museum and Hall of Fame 11am-6pm WedSat. 3400 Mount Vernon Dr, FW. $4-6. 817-9229999. Stockyards Museum Artifacts and photographs from the early history of Fort Worth. 10am-5pm daily. 131 E Exchange Av, FW. $2. 817-6255082. Texas Civil War Museum 9am-5pm every Tue-Sat. 760 Jim Wright Fwy, FW. $3-6. 817-246-2323. Veterans Memorial Air Park Historical military airplanes. 9am-noon Mon-Wed and 9am-5pm Sat and 11am-5pm Sun. 3300 Ross Av, FW. $1-5. 800-575-0535. Vintage Flying Museum Display of historical airplanes, artifacts, and memorabilia. 9am-5pm Fri, 10am-5pm Sat, noon-5pm Sun. 505 NW 38th St, FW. $3-8. 817-624-1935.
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S P O R T S Fort Worth Invitational PGA tour event. Thru Sun. Colonial Country Club, 3735 Country Club Cir, FW. $15-250. 817-927-4280. Stockyards Championship Rodeo 8pm Fri-Sat. Cowtown Coliseum, 121 E Exchange Av, FW. $10-20. 888-269-7969. Texas Rangers vs. New York Yankees. Thru Wed. • vs. Kansas City Royals. Thu-Sun. Globe Life Park, 1901 Rd to Six Flags, Arlington. $20-225. 817-273-5100.
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Bedford Public Library Preschool Storytime. 10am every Tue. • Storybook Club. 11am every Tue. 1805 L. Don Dodson Dr, Bedford. Free. 817952-2372. Fort Worth Public Library branches: Central Storytime. 10:30am every Wed & 3pm every Sun. 500 W 3rd St, FW. Free. 817-8717701. Diamond Hill/Jarvis Storytime. 4pm every WedThu. 1300 NE 35th St, FW. Free. 817-624-7331. East Berry Storytime. 6pm every Wed & 10:30am every Tue. 4300 E Berry, FW. Free. 817-5361945. East Regional Storytime. 6pm every Wed & 10:30am every Sat & 10:30am every Tue. 6301 Bridge St, FW. Free. 817-871-6436. Northside Storytime. 7pm every Wed & 4pm every Mon. 601 Park St, FW. Free. 817-626-8241. Northwest Storytime. 7pm every Thu & 10:30am every Sat & Tue. 6228 Crystal Lake Dr, FW. Free. 817-392-5420. Ridglea Storytime. 10:30am every Fri & 7pm every Mon. 3628 Bernie Anderson Rd, FW. Free. 817737-6619. Riverside Storytime. 10:30am every Wed & 4pm every Mon. 2913 Yucca Av, FW. Free. 817-8386931. Seminary South Storytime. 4pm every Wed & 10:30am every Sat. 501 E Bolt St, FW. Free. 817-926-0215. Shamblee Branch Storytime. 4pm every Mon. 1062 Evans Av, FW. Free. 817-871-6621. Southwest Storytime. 10:30am every Wed & Sat. 4001 Library Ln, FW. Free. 817-782-9853. Summerglen Storytime. 4pm every Wed & 7pm Mon & 10:30am every Tue. 4205 Basswood Blvd, FW. Free. 817-232-0478. Wedgwood Storytime. 10:30am every Wed & 4pm every Tue. 3816 Kimberly Ln, FW. Free. 817 292-3368.
JUN 8-9
It’s a concert , a festival–everything a jazz lover could want. Feat. Dana Harper, Mali Music, Geno Young & more! #jazzontrinity USS FORT WORTH
JUN 22
WHATEVER FLOATS YOUR BOAT REGATTA Build and race a recycled boat or come cheer on your team as you help promote clean rivers, parks & green living! THE RETURN OF FORT WORTH’S
JUN 24
SUNDAY FUNDAY Come enjoy a chill, fun-in-the-sun, laidback day of tubing, food, yoga, games & local craft beer. #SundayFundayFW
CODY JOHNSON THROWDOWN JUNE 30
The outdoor country music festival returns. Featuring Cody Johnson and fellow artists Joe Nichols, Jon Wolfe and Randall King. #cojo18 FREE GENERAL ADMISSION
JUL 04
FORT WORTH’S FOURTH FREE family activities and live music. Tubing, kid’s activities, food & North Texas’ largest fireworks show. Come get red, white and BLOWN AWAY! #fw4
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Summer Playbill
It’s getting pretty dramatic here in the Fort this summer, thanks to a fuller-than-usual slate of theatrical productions. B Y J A C K I E E L L I O T T
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Whether you want to cackle with the kings (and queens) of comedy or weep with wunderkind actors, here’s how to take summertime in Cowtown play-by-play. Running for one final weekend at Amphibian Stage Productions is Cry
Music • Cocktails • Food
THURSDAYS MAY 24 AND 31, 2018, 6–8 P.M.
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PERFORMANCE AND COCKTAIL SCHEDULE (subject to change)
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Cour tesy of Amphibian Stage Productions
STAGE
Havoc! (thru May 27), a one-man act performed by the author, Army veteran Stephan Wolfert. Six years in the military followed by post-traumatic suffering sent Wolfert in search of creative purpose, which he found in a Montana theater’s production of Richard III. Wolfert’s script gives voice to the Shakespearean soldiers that society hasn’t shown much interest in — until now. Then on Fri., July 13, we’ll meet the more feminine though no less ballsy queen of basketball in King Liz (thru Aug 5). That is, sports agent Liz Rico, who dribbles in the drama as she wagers big on one challenging prospect. Two more playwrights will be seen onstage at Circle Theatre, where Every Brilliant Thing (Jun 14-Jul 14) will sparkle with humor and wit via Duncan Macmillan and Jonny Donahoe. The dramatic duo surrenders itself to childlike wondering for the sake of adult amusement. Pucker up for a big, juicy Stage Kiss (Aug 16-Sep 15), which explores the intimacy between lip-locking thespians. Having had the opportunity to sit next to several spouses of local actors involved in romantic scenes, color me intrigued. For unconventionally uproarious amusement, Hip Pocket Theatre hosts a triptych of world premieres this season, beginning with a befuddled ol’ Samuel Clemens impersonation in The Great Mark
At Amphibian Stage Productions, Cry Havoc! -- a one-man act performed by the author, Army veteran Stephan Wolfert -- will run thru Sun.
Twain Shenanigan & Bewhiskered Ballet (Jun 1-17). Here, Hip Pocket cofounder and Artistic Director Johnny Simons shares his “mustachioed ode in music, dance, and pantomimic Tom Foolery,” in which he aims to please historians and literati alike. Simons debuts a second new script at the end of June. A Fragile Dance of Elders into the Deep Beyond (Jun 29-Jul
22) sashays onto the open outdoor stage, as a “poetic peek into the souls of ancient ones traveling towards their journey’s end.” In the third premiere, theatergoers may be thrown for a Loop the Loop (Aug 3-26) of emotions, bringing into focus the scene of a carnival as a metaphor for the mind. Stick Fly (May 25-Jun 24) is a meeting-the-parents tale rife with racial
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March 4–August 19
The exhibition is produced by Pointe-à-Callière, Montréal Archaeology and History Complex, in partnership
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Nagaraja, Tibet, 15th c., gilt bronze. The Sam and Myrna Myers Collection. Photo by Thierry Ollivier
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Leo Potishman Foundation, JP Morgan Chase, Trustee.
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with Sam Myers. It is supported by a major grant from the
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29th Annual Celebration of National Tap Dance Day
Friday, May 25 - FREE - All Ages Welcome Festivities begin at 7 pm, Performance at 8 pm on our RED Outdoor Stage SPECIAL GUEST:
Justin Boccitto from NYC
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"Over the Top Day"
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MASTER CLASS WITH JUSTIN BOCCITTO Saturday, May 26 1:00-2:15 pm - $35 per person "Basic Tap Justin Style" for Tap dancers with Experience Call 817-923-9500 to reserve a place in class
SUMMER CLASSES & WORKSHOP
Please visit our website for a schedule of classes & workshops available.Art for Kids 8 & Up, Ballroom Dance, SUMMER PLAYHOUSE for Children, Burlesque, Yoga Creative Drama for Ages 3-12 years, and TAP NOW WORKSHOPS! 1628 5th Ave. Fort Worth, 76104 • 817-923-9500 • artsfifthavenue.org ARTS FIFTH AVENUE is a 501c3 nonprofit corporation. Partial funding provided by the Arts Council of Fort Worth, The City of Fort Worth, Texas Commission on the Arts, National Endowment for the Arts, and the North Texas Giving Day Fund of Communities Foundation.
tension and set in Martha’s Vineyard. Opening weekend tickets are available for a discount (starting at $20) and well worth every penny for those interested in tracing the intersections of race, gender, and class as they collide on the progressive platform that Jubilee Theatre continues to provide. At the end of July, the long-awaited return of Blues in the Night (Jul 27-Aug 26) brings together the iconic sounds of Duke Ellington, Bessie Smith, Johnny Mercer, and more, all set to the plot of three women burned by one man. Fancy yourself a feminist? Set your patriarchy-smashing sights on Hir (thru Jun 17) at Stage West Theatre. With a title inspired by a gender-neutral pronoun, this Taylor Mac script is likely to rip open the metaphorical envelope cocooning misogyny and gender norms. For more on the irony of traditional marriages, Don’t Dress for Dinner (Jul 12-Aug 12) invites viewers to peek in on an affair about to backfire directly into the home of two betrothed cheaters. Pop your collar for Stolen Shakespeare Guild’s production of The Wedding Singer (Jul 13-29), a Broadway adaptation sure to entertain the ’80s-music obsessed or just fans of a good yarn with a happy ending. If you’re feeling more Happy, Sleepy, Grumpy, or Sneezy, then Snow White and The Seven Dwarfs (Jul 14-28) may be more to your liking. Children are welcome, and youth admission is only $5. Another well-loved musical, Footloose, is moving and shaking at Theatre Arlington until June 3, just before the littlest of thespians swarm in for showings of Stellaluna (Jul 1323), ideally suited for children 4-12 — although adult hosts may still take advantage of the $13 admission rate. The Sweetest Swing in Baseball (Aug 10-26) brings audiences to bat in a mental ward, of all places, where a troubled artist feigns mental illness to remain in asylum as she claims she’s a famous baseball player. Little does this female protagonist know that her pretending may, in fact, be ending her own life. Curse words have been forecasted. Keep the little sluggers at home for this one. Fort Worth’s summer of theater lies not only in the modern but also in the familiar pentameter of Billy Shakes — soon to be heard onstage at TCU. The Trinity Shakespeare Festival’s 10th season commences with offenses from the Montagues and Capulets in Romeo and Juliet (Jun 19-Jul 8), followed by the comedy considered to be Shakespeare’s greatest work, Twelfth Night, or What You Will (Jun 20-Jul 8). Better to attend a double showing of each two-star tryst than to show oneself to be doubly devoid of either.●
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@ s t en
General Admission $15 • Student / Senior Tickets $10 Special Post-Performance Meet & Great $5 Extra
Artes de la Rosa | Rose Marine Theatre 1440 N. Main Street, FWTX | (817) 624-8333
Dining Out in the Stockyards on the Day of the Show? Bring in Your Receipt & This Ad for 25% Off Tickets.
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Enjoy the swinging, Latino rhythm sounds of one of the Top 5 Latin Bands in DFW. Hear the hot, tropical sounds that make up this rich tapestry of music with a band that is taking the Metroplex by storm. (Box Office opens at 6pm.)
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STUFF
Summer Movie Guide Find a nice, cool auditorium to relax in while these films play. B y
K R I S T I A N
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I could be using this space to write about the efficient mediocrity of Solo: A Star Wars Story, but this issue is the summer guide, so I’m writing about the season’s upcoming films instead. Because summer is prime documentary season, you’ll be lining up for docs about Fred Rogers (Won’t You Be My Neighbor?), André Leon Talley (The Gospel According to André), and Whitney Houston (Whitney). Yeah, right. You’re here for the summer blockbusters, aren’t you? Nothing wrong with that — the fun starts in two weeks with
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Ant-Man and the Wasp flies into movie theaters this summer.
the star-studded Ocean’s 8, in which Sandra Bullock, Cate Blanchett, Mindy Kaling, and Rihanna team up to steal a diamond necklace from the neck of Anne Hathaway’s spoiled Hollywood star. Pixar’s sequel to The Incredibles drops the following week, with the super-family returning to a world where superheroes may become legal again. Then Jurassic World gets its sequel with new director Juan Antonio Bayona (from A Monster Calls) at the helm. Possibly the most anticipated one will be Ant-Man and the Wasp, if only because fans of Avengers: Infinity War want to know whether it will advance the overall plot of the Marvel universe. Oddly enough, this season looks to have a number of prominent religious-themed films such as the Pope Francis documentary that I reviewed last week. Non-Catholic Christians may be more interested by Paul Schrader’s jagged First Reformed, starring Ethan Hawke as a pastor at a Dutch Presbyterian church undergoing an existential crisis. For the Jews, there’s Sebastián Lelio’s Disobedience, starring
Instagramworthy Locales Go urban or hit the road to capture these photogenic spots. B Y
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Abandoned movie theaters, looming bridges, and natural prairies in and around Fort Worth present tantalizing subjects for summer photography outings. Local photographer Walt Burns (@waltdizzy) described his favorite areas to shoot, and I’ve included a few suggestions of my own. Burns has two tips for the burgeoning photographer: Invest in a tripod ($25-$100) and go out in groups. Tripods are indispensable for long-exposure shots, while having a group of friends discourages would-be thieves from targeting you. The visual possibilities near Panther Island seem endless. To the south, pristine glass high-rises and pink marble government buildings define much of downtown Fort Worth’s skyline. North Main and North Henderson streets
Rachel Weisz and Rachel McAdams as two women trying to deal with their love for each other in a strict Orthodox community. This careful and restrained film is playing at the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth on the fourth weekend of June and may also slide into regular theaters. That film could also fall under the heading of LGBT movies along with A Kid Like Jake, starring Claire Danes and Jim Parsons as parents of a child who identifies as gender fluid. If Love, Simon didn’t do it for you on the teen gay movie front, Alex Strangelove might suit you better. Then there’s The Miseducation of Cameron Post, starring Chloë Grace Moretz as a gay teenager in Montana in the early 1990s who gets sent to a Christian camp to be degayed. For those who prefer to combat the summer heat with horror films and violent thrillers, there’s Leigh Whannell’s bleakly funny Upgrade, starring the underappreciated Logan Marshall-Green as a quadriplegic whose experimental computer chip implant
provide great bridge shots as they cross the Clear Fork of the Trinity River. If winds are calm, a well-placed photo can capture the bridges’ reflections on the water. Then there’s the possibility of focusing your lens on the convergence of the West and Clear forks of the Trinity. A carefully timed shot during the golden hour (shortly after sunrise or before sunset) has the welcome benefit of bathing your camera’s target in warm golden hues. Located a few blocks northeast of Crockett Row in the West 7th corridor, The Foundry District is packed with murals. Notable mentions include Inspiration Alley (a collection of several murals on the north wall of Doc’s Records & Vintage), 28 Mantras (by Brennan Bechtol and located on curbs and walls throughout the district), and the sculpture “Spread Your Wings and Fly” (yarn bomb by artist London Kaye located near The Cowtown Marathon). It takes a bit of walking to find them all, but West Magnolia Avenue is full of pieces of eye candy. Instagram runneth over with images of murals like the purple “Who Wah Wah Who” (near Heim Barbecue), the black-and-white “Follow Your Dreams” (near Great Harvest Bread Co.), and the cowboyapproved “Love the Fort Worth the Love” painting on the east wall of Brewed. Several abandoned movie theaters are great sources of inspiration for photographers with the talent to pull what traditional beauty remains from these once-magnificent buildings. Grand Theater (1110 Fabons St) was built in 1938 and is a short drive from Magnolia Avenue.
makes him walk again but also has really bad side effects. Ari Aster’s Hereditary has picked up adulatory buzz on the festival circuit, with its story about a family concealing a twisted history. The same goes for Blindspotting, whose story about Daveed Diggs as a felon on parole who witnesses a white cop shoot an unarmed black man is embellished with rap verses and commentary on a gentrifying Oakland. On a more fanciful note, The Darkest Minds is a YA novel adaptation where children who survived a devastating plague have emerged with superpowers and been outlawed by the government. And if you want to see the toorare sight of an Asian-American actor carrying a movie, John Cho stars in Searching as a man looking for his missing teenage daughter via her online history. Of course, if your taste runs to lighter fare, the Asian-Americans are there, too, in the globe-trotting romantic comedy Crazy Rich Asians. Standup comic Bo Burnham turns filmmaker with Eighth Grade, about a girl making her way through the last weeks of middle school. The star-laden Tag features Jeremy Renner, Jon Hamm, Ed Helms, and Hannibal Buress as a bunch of guys who’ve been playing the same game of tag for 30 years. It’s based on a true story, as is Spike Lee’s BlacKkKlansman, about a black police officer who not only infiltrated a local KKK chapter but became its head, for which Lee is picking up some of the best reviews of his career. And we haven’t even counted all the movies that I haven’t mentioned that I’ll feel stupid for excluding come September. If you want to berate me for it, you can find me at the multiplexes.l
Repurposed years ago as a live music venue, Ridglea Theater (6025 Camp Bowie Blvd) –– with its prominent marquee, cobbled brick facade, and smokestack-like tower –– has a rich palette of colors, textures, and angles. Other popular urban recommendations include the stark Blackhouse (1105 Peach St), the Fort Worth Water Gardens (1502 Commerce St), Fort Worth Botanic Garden (3220 Botanic Garden Blvd), Scat Jazz Lounge (111 W 4th St), and the best (and only) place to capture twice-daily cattle drives — the Stockyards (130 E Exchange Av). For unobstructed views of downtown, Burns recommends going to the top floor of a publicly accessible parking garage. Local parks, prairies, and trails serve up unobstructed views of one of photography’s oldest subjects — nature. Tandy Hills Natural Area (3400 View St) is ideal for portraits this time of year, as the rolling fields blossom into flowery bursts of yellow, purple, and red. Hidden Falls is a popular waterfall located within Sansom Park. The falls are just a short walk from the Marion Sansom Park Trail. Burns’ last piece of advice is to seek out and follow Instagram “influencers,” individuals who have both a deep knowledge of a certain field and a large following. Many of them organize meet-ups regularly to teach photography skills. Local retailers like Fort Worth Camera also host workshops throughout the year. Photography is not only fun and challenging. It’s also a great way to get out and explore this vast and historically rich city.l
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FILM Shorts The following reviews were written by Kristian Lin.
OPENING
TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS AND PARTIES:
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Motiva Enterprises LLC has applied to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) for renewal of Air Quality Permit No. 37200, which would authorize continued operation of the Motiva Fort Worth Terminal located at 3200 North Sylvania Avenue, Fort Worth, Tarrant County, Texas 76111. Additional information concerning this application is contained in the public notice section of this newspaper.
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TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS AND PARTIES: Isomedix Operations, Inc. has applied to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) for renewal of Air Quality Permit No. 38690, which would authorize continued operation of a Sterilization Facility located at 1175 Isuzu Parkway, Grand Prairie, Tarrant County, Texas 75050. Additional information concerning this application is contained in the public notice section of this newspaper.
Future World (R) James Franco co-stars in and co-directs this postapocalyptic thriller about a boy (Jeffrey Wahlberg) who wanders a hostile wilderness searching for a cure for his dying mother (Lucy Liu). Also with Milla Jovovich, Suki Waterhouse, Margarita Levieva, Brandon Stewart, Snoop Dogg, and Method Man. (Opens Friday in Dallas) How Long Will I Love U (NR) Lun Su’s Chinese romantic film is about a woman from the present day (Tong Liya) and a man from 1999 (Lei Jiayin) who discover that they can travel to each other’s time period through a door in their bedroom. Also with Xu Zheng. (Opens Friday in Plano) On Chesil Beach (R) Ian McEwan writes this adaptation of his own novelette about an English couple in the 1960s (Saoirse Ronan and Billy Howle) whose relationship comes to a head on their wedding day. Also with Emily Watson, Anne-Marie Duff, Bebe Cave, and Samuel West. (Opens Friday in Dallas) RBG (PG) Julie Cohen and Betsy West’s documentary profile of Supreme Court justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. (Opens Friday at AMC Grapevine Mills) The Seagull (PG-13) This adaptation of Chekhov’s play about an aging stage actress visiting her family stars Annette Bening, Elisabeth Moss, Saoirse Ronan, Billy Howle, Mare Winningham, Jon Tenney, Corey Stoll, and Brian Dennehy. (Opens Friday in Dallas) That Summer (NR) Göran Olsson’s documentary unearths footage of Edith Bouvier Beale before she was filmed for Grey Gardens. (Opens Friday in Dallas)
NOW PL AYING Avengers: Infinity War (PG-13) A mess, but perhaps inevitably given how many characters are stuffed in here. Unlike its predecessors, this omnibus superhero movie takes the necessary step of creating a single villain (Josh Brolin) so powerful that it takes everyone’s combined might to fight him. Not only do we get 22 superheroes, but also various members of their supporting casts, so this story gets even more gridlocked. It’s something of a miracle that the film works as well as it does, with most of the individual scenes accomplishing what they set out to do. Almost half the cast dies at the end, but we can expect at least some of it to be undone in next year’s Avengers movie. How it changes the game won’t be known until then. Also with Robert Downey Jr., Chris Evans, Chris Hemsworth, Chris Pratt, Scarlett Johansson, Mark Ruffalo, Benedict Cumberbatch, Chadwick Boseman, Tom Holland, Don Cheadle, Elizabeth Olsen, Paul Bettany, Anthony Mackie, Tom Hiddleston, Sebastian Stan, Zoe Saldana, Karen Gillan, Dave Bautista, Pom Klementieff, Benedict Wong, Idris Elba, Danai Gurira, Letitia Wright, Winston Duke, Benicio Del Toro, William Hurt, Carrie Coon, Terry Notary, Tom Vaughan-Lawlor, Michael Shaw, Gwyneth Paltrow, Peter Dinklage, and uncredited cameos by Cobie Smulders and Samuel L. Jackson. Voices by Bradley Cooper and Vin Diesel. Beirut (PG-13) This sluggish political thriller stars Jon Hamm as an alcoholic, burned-out diplomat who’s brought into war-torn Lebanon in 1982 to negotiate the release of his kidnapped former friend (Mark Pellegrino) who works for the CIA, only to discover that both the Americans and the Israelis are happy to let the hostage die for shady reasons. There’s a neat script by Tony Gilroy (Michael Clayton), but Brad Anderson’s direction is lacking in distinction, and Hamm only comes to life when his character snaps to and turns back into the ace negotiator that he once was. Better casting and more
flair behind the camera could have turned this into something special. Also with Rosamund Pike, Dean Norris, Idir Chender, Kate Fleetwood, Leila Bekhti, Douglas Hodge, Jonny Coyne, and Larry Pine. Black Panther (PG-13) Not just a movie about a black superhero, but a superhero movie whose blackness is central to all its accomplishments. Chadwick Boseman stars as the king of a fictitious African nation that is secretly the richest and most technologically advanced in the world, though he faces a challenge in an AfricanAmerican (Michael B. Jordan) who thinks the country has failed oppressed black people around the world. Purely from a design standpoint, this is miraculous to look at, as the architecture, production design, and costumes all reflect an Afrofuturism that we haven’t seen on such a scale. In addition, the movie has more and higher-quality female representation than all of Marvel’s other superhero movies combined, as well as the best villain, a sumptuous cast, a soundtrack curated by Kendrick Lamar, and thoughtful ideas about what a powerful country owes the rest of the world. Simply by shifting from a white male point of view, this opens up the superhero genre in radical and exhilarating new directions. Also with Lupita Nyong’o, Danai Gurira, Daniel Kaluuya, Martin Freeman, Andy Serkis, Winston Duke, John Kani, Sterling K. Brown, Denzel Whitaker, Angela Bassett, Forest Whitaker, and an uncredited Sebastian Stan. Blockers (R) The movie that Neighbors 2 was trying to be. This raunchy sex comedy stars John Cena and Leslie Mann as parents who freak the hell out when they discover that their teenage daughters have a pact to lose their virginities on prom night and resolve to stop them, while Ike Barinholtz is a fellow parent whose daughter is in on the pact who tags along on the quest trying to convince the others that they’re acting like crazy people. Thankfully, director Kay Cannon (Pitch Perfect 3) is with that guy and projects a healthy attitude toward the girls’ sexuality while getting terribly funny performances out of her leads and Geraldine Viswanathan, who’s the funniest of the girls here. Watch for Gary Cole and Gina Gershon as a married couple playing weird sex games with each other. Also with Kathryn Newton, Gideon Adlon, Miles Robbins, Graham Phillips, Colton Dunn, and Ramona Young. Book Club (PG-13) The elderly crowd deserves better than this toothless comedy about four college friends (Candice Bergen, Jane Fonda, Diane Keaton, and Mary Steenburgen) who have held a monthly book club for 40 years and are inspired to change their lives by Fifty Shades of Grey. The casting throws up some intriguing romantic pairings (Andy Garcia with Keaton, Don Johnson with Fonda), but the script by director Bill Holderman and his writing partner Erin Simms isn’t funny enough to give this affair something worthy of the star-studded cast here. This movie takes place in the same cocoon of wealthy straight white people that better, funnier films have already mined. Also with Richard Dreyfuss, Craig T. Nelson, Ed Begley Jr., Wallace Shawn, Katie Aselton, Mircea Monroe, and Alicia Silverstone. Breaking In (PG-13) No reason we can’t have a black Panic Room, and this one isn’t too bad until the last 15 minutes or so. Gabrielle Union plays a mother who takes her two children (Ajiona Alexus and Seth Carr) with her to her late father’s heavily fortified home in the country, only to have a gang of armed burglars take the kids hostage inside the house while she’s trapped outside. Director James McTeigue (V for Vendetta) manages all the mechanics of the plot reasonably well, but the plausibility of the setup falls apart near the end in a most gruesome way. Also with Billy Burke, Jason George, Richard Cabral, Levi Meaden, Mark Furze, and Christa Miller. Champion (NR) This Korean arm-wrestling movie acknowledges the other arm-wrestling movie in the room by having its protagonist be a big fan of Over the Top. Ma Dong-seok stars as an American adoptee who travels to South Korea for a tournament and discovers a biological family that he never knew existed. Ma makes a funny impression as a big, muscular dude reacting stoically to the chaos of this foreign culture and his own struggles with the Korean language. (He tells a roomful of fans to “eat plenty of money.”) Still, this is a sports movie so conventional that our hero, losing a big match, actually looks in the crowd to find his family and then come back to win. This is best for fans of the sport. Also with Yul Kwon, Han Ye-ri, Choi Seung-hoon, Ok Ye-rin, Yang Hyunmin, Kang Shin-hyo, and Kim Dong-hyun. Deadpool 2 (R) Still funny, but not as good as the original. Ryan Reynolds returns as the fourth-wall-breaking Canadian for the sequel to his 2016 hit, this time trying to protect an angry
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superpowered teen (Julian Dennison) from a time traveler (Josh Brolin) seeking to kill the boy before he grows up to kill his family. This sequel goes overboard on the self-aware asides and pop culture references, and new director David Leitch (or, as the James Bond-parodying opening credits identifies him, “one of the guys who kills the dog in John Wick”) doesn’t do as good a job balancing the action with the comedy, nor does he come up with an action sequence as memorable as the stairway fight from Atomic Blonde. The movie gets a boost from Zazie Beetz as a girl whose superpower is incredible good luck, and the post-credits sequence alone is worth the admission price. Also with Morena Baccarin, Brianna Hildebrand, T.J. Miller, Karan Soni, Leslie Uggams, Terry Crews, Bill Skarsgård, Rob Delaney, Lewis Tan, and uncredited cameos by Nicholas Hoult, Matt Damon, and Brad Pitt. I Can Only Imagine (PG) I’m torn on this one: Would a biography of a better Christian band have made a better movie, or would this still have been dull and thus unworthy of a better band? There’s a workable story in here about how MercyMe lead singer Bart Millard (J. Michael Finley) stood up to his abusive dad (Dennis Quaid) to become a successful musician, but newcomer Finley has the liveliness of a damp sponge in the role, and the scenes with him playing a teenage Bart do him no favors. This might have worked better as a jukebox stage musical that could have covered MercyMe’s changing sound over time. There is a good performance by Trace Adkins as the band’s manager. Also with Cloris Leachman, Madeline Carroll, Jake B. Miller, and Nicole DuPort. I Feel Pretty (PG-13) It may be disappointingly light on subversive material, but this comedy is still pretty funny. Amy Schumer plays a woman with body-image issues who hits her head in exercise class and wakes up thinking that she’s a supermodel. This movie tells us nothing that other body-positive comedies (going back to the 1996 The Nutty Professor) haven’t already told us, and it’s hard to ignore the fact that Schumer has done sharper-edged work on her own TV show. Yet the laughs come from numerous sources in the movie, and Schumer shows her strengths with both verbal and physical humor, especially in an early and painful mishap with her bike at SoulCycle. Michelle Williams gives a baby-voiced performance that needs to be seen as a cosmetics company heiress, CEO, and modeling face. It’s worth it just to hear her mispronounce “Kohl’s.” Also with Rory Scovel, Aidy Bryant, Busy Philipps, Tom Hopper, Adrian Martinez, Sasheer Zamata, Emily Ratajkowski, Naomi Campbell, and Lauren Hutton. Overboard (PG-13) Some expert performances by Eugenio Derbez and Anna Faris carry this thing for a while. This gender-flipped remake of the 1978 Goldie Hawn-Kurt Russell comedy stars Faris as an overburdened single mom who gets mistreated by a spoiled Mexican playboy (Derbez) and then gets back at him by claiming to be his wife after he falls off his yacht and loses his memory. These actors’ skills are impossible not to admire, but throwing a rich guy into the life of a construction worker doesn’t yield as much comic material as it should, and the plot gets sticky with the machinations of his family back in Mexico. Derbez’ ongoing attempt to make himself a star on our side of the border needs better material. Also with Eva Longoria, John Hannah, Emily Maddison, Cecilia Suárez, Mariana Treviño, Omar
Chaparro, Mel Rodriguez, and Swoosie Kurtz. Pope Francis: A Man of His Word (PG) If this is a Sunday sermon disguised as a movie, it should be said that this pope knows how to give a good one. Wim Wenders directs this documentary profile of the pontiff, who gives extensive interviews in his heavily Argentinian-accented Spanish. Francis speaks powerfully on the Christian need to do things about climate change and the refugee crisis as well as connect with adherents of other religions, but the film’s narrow scope limits its power. It would be nice to see his words translated into tangible benefits for the people he ministers to, who need it the most. Still, the man’s eloquence and wisdom are more than enough to get even a nonbeliever to buy into his message of humility and charity. A Quiet Place (PG-13) Other films need to be seen on the big screen, but this one needs to be heard on a theater’s speakers to get the full effect. John Krasinski directs, co-writes, and co-stars in this horror film as a parent along with real-life wife Emily Blunt, who live in complete silence with their two children on their corn farm after the world’s population is decimated by aliens with sharp teeth and hypersensitive hearing. Were there more dialogue than just a few lines, the domestic drama here might drown in sentimentality like it did in Krasinski’s insufferable The Hollars. Instead, the lack of speech forces the director to be economical and keep the action flowing. Maybe this thing is a bit literal-minded, and the music could be better, but Krasinski manages some hellacious silent action sequences and turns this into a piece of entertainment that rattles along well. Also with Millicent Simmonds and Noah Jupe. Ready Player One (PG-13) Better than the book, I’ll say that. Steven Spielberg’s adaptation of Ernest Cline’s 1980s geek explosion stars Tye Sheridan as a future teenager who has to team up with some gaming buddies to prevent a corporate behemoth from taking control of the virtual-reality cyberuniverse that most people escape into. This movie practically begs you to wind the DVD back and forth so you can catch all the 1980s references in the background, but for a film that wants to tell us to look up from our screens every once in a while, this makes virtual reality look way cooler than real life. Every fan of The Shining needs to see Spielberg’s extended homage to it in the middle of the film. Also with Olivia Cooke, Ben Mendelsohn, Lena Waithe, Philip Zhao, Win Morisaki, T.J. Miller, Simon Pegg, and Mark Rylance. Tully (R) Jason Reitman reunites with Diablo Cody and gets back in form with this comedy starring Charlize Theron as a mother of three suffering from severe postpartum depression until she hires a “night nanny” (Mackenzie Davis) who not only takes impeccable care of her new baby so she can get some rest but also brings some sunshine into her life. Reitman’s direction is enviably sharp in some harrowing early montages of the mother’s lonely, sleep-deprived life before Tully comes along, and Cody pens one of the best defenses of boring suburban domestic life you’ll ever hear with Tully’s late monologue. Theron, weighing about 50 pounds more than usual, is customarily excellent as a mother on the brink, and she’s well-matched by the dazzling Davis. Even if you sniff out the climactic plot twist, its implications are still terrifying enough to make it effective. Also with Ron Livingston, Mark Duplass, Lia Frankland, Asher Miles Fallica, and Elaine Tan.
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E R I C
G R I F F E Y
With so many online and televised resources for home cooking available these days, you really don’t have a good excuse to serve b-grade dad grub anymore. Still, dudes in flipflops and jorts are ruining perfectly good cuts of meat in backyards all over the world. Local chef and restaurateur Lou Lambert has built his reputation by merging the worlds of fine dining and the colorful cuisine of West Texas. He is an undisputed master of the grill, and his fame has grown out of the kitchens of his restaurants, catering events, and his Hunt and Fish Social Club on the Near Southside, where he hosts occasional supper club dinners and special events. Lambert shared some tips for home grillers, in the hopes that party guests everywhere won’t have to suffer the ills of bad grilling anymore. What a saint.
Fort Worth Weekly: What is the most common mistake home grillers make? Chef Lou Lambert: Most home grillers don’t cook over a hot enough fire, and they [should] have two heat zones on their grill –– high and low heat. In a restaurant, we start grilling over a very hot fire to sear and caramelize the meat and then, if it is a thicker cut, move it onto the low-heat side of the grill to finish cooking to the desired temperature. A lot of home grillers shy away from fish. What can they do to make cooking fish easier and better? Fish can be tricky, even for experienced grillers. Here are a couple of tricks. Make sure your grates are cleaned and well seasoned with oil. When seasoning the fish, start by rubbing both sides with a good olive oil and then add the seasoning. Cook the fish over a hot fire. This will ensure that the fish forms a crust when it hits the heat and doesn’t stick to the
My first preference for a fuel source is hard wood burned to charcoal, then charcoal, and then propane. It’s all about imparting flavor while grilling. All of these fuel sources will provide heat, but live wood and charcoal provide flavor to the grilled item. Explain the differences between grilling, barbecuing, and smoking. Grilling is lighting a fire under some type of grates and cooking your meat over direct hightemperature heat, one side at a time –– the best method to sear and caramelize a small tender cut of meat. Barbecuing is cooking using indirect heat from wood or charcoal at a low temperature in an enclosed pit. This is best method for larger and tougher pieces of meat that need long cooking times in which you add moisture. Smoking is also cooking using indirect heat using live wood or charcoal. There are basically two types of smoking: 1.) cold smoking, done over very low heat –– usually 90 degrees or lower –– where you are just trying to impart flavor and/or dry the product you’re smoking; and 2.) hot smoking –– usually 120 degrees or higher; proteins coagulate at 120 or higher –– in which you are trying to impart flavor and cook the meat.
Is there a particular combination of chips, wood, that you prefer when smoking or grilling? Whether smoking, wood roasting, barbecuing, or grilling, I prefer hard wood. For grilling, we burn down wood to charcoal. When we are roasting large pieces of meat over charcoal, we will use fire barrels to burn wood to charcoal and then shovel the coals into the roasting pit. Is there one piece of equipment that every would-be grill master should own and use frequently? Invest in a large, well-built grill with cast iron grates. Cast iron grates are the only thing I will grill over. They get hot and hold the heat, ensuring you get great grill marks and the meat won’t stick to the grates. I would also get a rotisserie attachment for your grill. I love slow-roasting chickens, prime ribs of beef, and baskets
Where do you get your inspiration for your unique barbecue recipes? Most of my inspiration comes from memories growing up in West Texas watching my father grill steaks and going to big barbecues where they would slow roast cabrito and large primal cuts of beef. It was about the technique, fire, rubs, wet mops, and carving. Everyone had their own little secret of how they did it and philosophy of what made a good barbecue. Will you share on of your favorite grilling recipes with our readers? This has been our best-selling pork dish at the restaurant for years. The brine is a great way to add flavor and moisture to pork. The combination of the citrus brine with the sweetness of the brown sugar dry rub –– which develops a crust when grilled over an open fire –– gives these pork chops a unique, full flavor.
Grilled Porterhouse Pork Chops 6 servings 6 brined porterhouse pork chops, 12 oz each (brine recipe below) ½ cup of brown sugar pork rub (recipe below) Start a hot fire in your grill. Bring the brined pork chops out of the refrigerator and brush off any herbs and spices from the brine, pat dry. Lightly coat each side with the brown sugar pork rub. Grill the pork chops on each side for about 5 minutes over a medium-hot fire until the internal temperature reaches 165 degrees. Because the chops have a brown sugar rub, watch that your fire does not flare up or that the coals are not too close to the grill grates. Remove the cooked pork chops to a plate and allow them to rest for at least five minutes. Serve the pork chops with fruited herb-grain mustard and apple-walnut slaw.
Citrus Brine 4 cups water, divided ½ cup kosher salt 1 bay leaf 1 tsp coriander, toasted 1 tsp fennel seed, toasted 1 tsp whole black pepper corns ¼ cup brown sugar ½ cup onion, roughly chopped
2 cloves garlic, crushed 1 orange, quartered 2 sprigs of fresh thyme Bring 1 cup of water to a simmer and add the salt, bay leaf, coriander, fennel seed, black pepper, sugar, onion, and garlic. Whisk and simmer for about 1 minute until salt has dissolved. Add the water and spice mixture to the remaining water. Juice the orange into the brine mixture and add the orange segments and fresh thyme. Let the brine cool in the refrigerator. To brine chops: Place pork chops in a plastic tub or large sealable plastic bag and pour brine over the chops. Place the container in the refrigerator and allow the chops to brine for 8 to 12 hours. Remove the chops from the brine and scrape off any of the spices and pat dry. Hold in the refrigerator until you are ready to grill.
Brown Sugar Pork Dry Rub ½ cup water ¼ cup brown sugar 2 tsp kosher salt 1 tsp medium ground black pepper 1 tsp paprika 1 tsp chile powder 1 tsp coriander, toasted and ground 1 tsp fennel seed, toasted and ground Mix together all of the spices and store in an airtight container.
Fruited Herb-Grain Mustard Makes 2 cups ¾ cup grain mustard ½ cup Dijon mustard ¾ cup fruit chutney 1 tsp fresh chives, finely chopped 1 tsp flat leaf parsley, finely chopped ¼ tsp kosher salt ½ tsp black pepper, fine grind Combine all ingredients in a small mixing bowl. Store in the refrigerator in an airtight container.
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Do you prefer charcoal or propane?
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Here are some tips on how to ratchet up your backyard cooking game.
What is the most underrated cut/ protein for grilling? A thick center-cut pork loin chop. This is a fairly reasonably priced cut of meat, and you can really add a lot of flavor and moisture with brining and a good dry rub.
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Grillin’ with Lou
of vegetables and potatoes over a fire. It’s a great alternative to grilled steaks.
Cour tesy of Lou Lamber t
EATS
grates. When you place the fish on the hot fire, give it time to form a crust before trying to move or turn it. If it seems to be stuck to the grates, allow it to cook a little while longer, and most of the time it will release. [And] if you’re cooking fish with the skin on –– I love crispy charred fish skin –– score the skin with a sharp knife several times to keep the fish from cupping when it hits the heat.
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Price Guide $
Most entrées under $10
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Most entrées under $20
$$$
Many entrées $20 and over
FW
Bird Café 155 E 4th St, FW. 817-332-2473. Tightly run, delightful new restaurant and bar from the people who brought you The Flying Saucer. $$ Del Frisco’s Grille 154 E 3rd St, FW. 817-887-9900. This casual offshoot of the Double Eagle Steak House serves up contemporary classics in the heart of downtown. $$ Little Germany, 703 N Henderson St. 682-224-2601. Charming hole-in-the-wall serves up authentic German staples and has personable service. A lot of great food for a reasonable price. $ Piranha Killer Sushi 335 W 3rd St., FW. Pretty much the same delicious menu and prices as the Arlington location, in a new, hip, cool, happening downtown setting. Fort Worth Weekly 2006 Best Sushi. $$ Razzoo’s Cajun Café 318 Main Street (817) 4297009 Serving Cajun favorites such as gumbo, etoufee, jambalaya and fat po’ boy sandwiches. 2006 Readers Choice Best Cajun. $$
Reata Restaurant 310 Houston St. 817-336-1009. Reata elevates ranch cuisine to gastronomic highs with pear-stuffed pork chops, goat cheese enchiladas, tenderloin tamales, and red meat from the CF ranch near Alpine. The menu is all hits, no misses but getting a seat without a reservation is a game of chance. Fort Worth Weekly 2006 Readers’ Choice Best Restaurant, View. $$ Six 10 Grille 610 Main St, FW. 817-332-0100 Leisurely breakfast and lunch dining in one of Fort Worth’s only boutique hotels. $$ Thai Tina’s 600 Commerce St. 817-332-0088. Marvelous, authentic Thai food comes to downtown Fort Worth. $ Woodshed Smokehouse, 3201 Riverfront Dr. 817877-4545. There’s a distinctly Austin feel to this fancy, spendy ’shed. $$ Yolk 305 Main St, FW. 817-730-4000. Some of the dishes are eggcellent, and some are mediocre at this Chicago-based chain’s location in Sundance Square. $$
Serving traditional Mexican food since 1999!
E a st Bangkok Cuisine 4613 Denton Hwy #35, Haltom City. 817-498-3316. Casual and small, with wonderful, authentic Thai food. $ Dan’s Seafood & Chicken 6719 Bridge St. 817-4510001. Fried fish, fried chicken, fried shrimp, fried oysters, fried okra, et cetera. Fast, hot, and tasty. $ Enchiladas Olé 901 N Sylvania Av, FW. 817-9841360. This small, friendly Mexican eatery specializes in simple, healthy, and delicious enchilada plates with various flavorful homemade sauces, including mole and ancho chile. $ Kip’z BBQ 1509 Evans St. 817-877-5479. Outstanding barbecue ribs and brisket, but don’t miss the soul-food half of the menu. $ Mama E’s Bar-B-Q & Home Cooking 818 E Rosedale St, FW. 817-877-3322. Ultra-casual yet confident and satisfying, this family-owned operation serves up reliably tasty beef, pork, ribs, and sides available by the sandwich, the plate, and the pound. Make sure and try the turkey leg. $ Oscar’s 3400 Denton Hwy, Haltom City. 817-2229020. Good Tex-Mex fare includes low-fat and vegetarian. Try squash enchiladas and strawberry sopaipillas. $$ Smoke Pit 2401 E Belknap St. 817-222-0455. The beef, sausage, and ribs are first-rate. Fort Worth Weekly 2006 Best Lunch Bargain. $ Tres Betos Taqueria 2418 NE 28th St. 817-6241250. Tiny taqueria has a full breakfast and lunch menu and excellent tacos.$ Tributary Café 2813 Race St, FW 817-744-8255. Chef Cindy Crowder-Wheeler provides a remedy with her Tributary Café, an affaire de coeur featuring New Orleans Creole classics and fresh Gulf seafood prepared expertly enough to make the tiny spot a destination favorite. $$
N e a r W e s t S i de / C u l t u r a l D i s t r i ct
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1106 US 377, ROANOKE
817-491-4600
4320 WESTERN CENTER, FW
817-306-9000
960 HWY. 287 NORTH, MANSFIELD w w w. l o s m o l c a j e t e s . c o m
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Angelo’s Barbecue 2533 White Settlement Rd. 817-332-0357. This restaurant used to have sawdust on the floor. Now, it just has Fort Worth’s most famous barbecue. $ The Buffet at the Kimbell Art Museum 3333 Camp Bowie Blvd. 817-332-8451. Eat among the masters at the lunch buffet of specialty soups and salads. $ Café Modern 3200 Darnell St. 817-840-2157. Delightful luncheon spot in the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth is the perfect place to gaze at Tadao Ando’s inspired building while noshing on nouvelle cuisine. $$ Cancun Restaurant, 7419 Camp Bowie West, FW. 817-696-8810. Casual Mexican food with upscale atmosphere and service. Carne asada dinner is scrumptious. $ Eddie V’s Prime Seafood, 3120 West 7th St, FW. 817-336-8000. You get what you pay for, and at Eddie V’s, you’re paying for some of the best seafood and service in town. $$$ J&J Oyster Bar 612 N University Dr. 817-335-2756. Sure to please oysters, catfish, and gumbo. Do not miss the fries. Great patio seating available. $ Little Lilly Sushi 6100 Camp Bowie Blvd, Ste 12, FW. 817-989-8886. More awesome sushi on the West Side. $$ Max’s Wine Dive 2421 W 7th St, Ste 109, FW. 817870-1100. Champagne and fried chicken? Max’s says why the hell not. $$ M&O Station Grill 200 Carroll St. 817-882-8020. The former owners of 7th Street Station have relocated to the Leonard’s Department Store Museum building — same great diner food, prettier surroundings. Fort Worth Weekly 2008 Readers’ Choice Best Hamburger. $ Montgomery Street Café 2000 Montgomery St. 817-731-8033. Consistently good, down-home cooking. Breakfasts are filling. Fort Worth Weekly 2006 Staff Choice Best Greasy Spoon. $ Piola 3700 Mattison Av. 817-989-0007. After closing Ciao and Fizzi, Bobby Albanese returns with this homey, predictably masterful Italian venture that includes stellar lasagna, risotto, and chicken and
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— Awarded — “Best Catfish”
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SUMMER STARTS ON THE PATIO Outside Patio Dinning Available at Each Location
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OVER YEARS IN BUSINESS Thank you to our customers and staff. We appreciate you. -The Pulido Family
Lunch
STARTING AT $6
5051 Hwy. 377 South Fort Worth, Texas 76116 (817) 732-7871
1224 Precinct Line Road Hurst, Texas 76053 (817) 282-9005
1029 N. Saginaw Blvd. Saginaw, Texas 76179 (817) 847-9517
302 So. Main St. Weatherford, Texas 76086 (817) 594-0361
3330 Matlock Rd. Ste 128 Arlington, Texas 76015 (817) 472-6535
809 East Road Stephenville, Texas 76401 (254) 965-4702
100 N.E. 22nd Ave. Mineral Wells, Texas 76067 (940) 325-8664
812 N. Main Cleburne, Texas 76031 (817) 641-9421 I-20 East Eastland, Texas 76448 (254) 629-3211
F O R T WO R T H W E E K LY
2900 Pulido St. Fort Worth, Texas 76107 (817) 732-7571
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A TASTE OF MEXICO Locations to Serve You!
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SPECIALS
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SNO-BIZ SNO-CONES Official Snowcone Of El Fuerte Taco Fest Now Booking Summer 2018
817.729.6472
real texas pit bbq Dine-in /Take-Out /CATERING
fest
co #fwta
Fort Work?
See our Employment Section starting on page 61 of this issue.
P 817.592.0202 • 8120 Rendon Bloodworth Rd. • Mansfield, Texas 76063
smokeymaesbbq.com Thursday Night Buffet 6pm - 9:30pm All You Can Eat & Kids 12 & Under Eat FREE
Happy Hour Mon - Fri 5 - 7pm
F O R T WO R T H W E E K LY
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Hookah Lounge
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Mon-Thurs Until 11pm Friday and Saturday Until 2am
Live Belly Dancing Shows
05/29/2018
05/29/2018
Friday & Saturday Nights @8pm
1406 N. Main (817)625-9667
Book your table online at www.byblostx.com
beef dishes with sides like asparagus and polenta. $$ Pop’s Safari 2929 Morton St. 817-334-0559. While specializing in cigars and wines for the connoisseur, Fort Worth Weekly 2005 Readers’ Choice Best Wine List. $$ Tuk Tuk Thai, 3431 W 7th St, FW. 817-332-3339. Enjoy Thai classics delivered, carried out, or in the casual comfort of the dining room at this family-run shop on West 7th. $ World of Beer 3252 W 7th St, FW. 682-708-7021. Gastropub with 50 beers on tap, 500 bottled varieties, and a vast, brew-inspired menu. $
N o r t h we s t
Anthony’s Place 2400 Meacham Blvd. 817-3789005. South of the racetrack, west of a kitschy liquor store, Anthony’s is a Tex-Mex pit stop. $ Eagle Grill 8545 Boat Club Rd, FW. 817-236-2210. Simple yet excellent Italian fare that would make Nonna proud. $ El Paseo 5436 Jacksboro Hwy, Sansom Park. 817625-9755. Lunch specials on Tuesday through Friday attract crowds. El Paseo offers the standard Mexican fare done extremely well. $$ Ginger Brown’s Old Tyme Restaurant & Bakery 6312 Lake Worth Blvd, Lake Worth. 817-2372114. The name says it all: kitschy homecooking, but not annoyingly so. $ Moe’s Café 4705 River Oaks Blvd. 817-378-9262. Plain-Jane to look at, Moe’s still serves up hearty and tasty American fare, from the Philly steak sandwich to good ol’ fashioned burgers. $ O I Shii 6302 Lake Worth Blvd, Lake Worth. 817238-6788. In a Lake Worth strip mall, unexpectedly wonderful sushi and hibachi. $$ Picosos Mexican Restaurant, 1950 Menefee Ave, FW. 817-420-9300. Comfort food that ranges from traditional Mexican to Tex-Mex in an eclectic, charming family environment. $ Rise no. 3 5135 Monahans Ave. 817-737-7473. Discover the art of the soufflé at this Frenchinspired bistro with an exceptional wine list. $$$
innovative twist at this casual chef-driven eatery in West Fort Worth. $$ Zeke’s Fish and Chips 5920 Curzon Av. 817-7313321. Camp Bowie fixture for fried stuff. Huge portions, great desserts. $
T C U / Fo r e s t Pa r k
Billadelphia’s, 2110 W. Berry St., 817-921-3000 7601 Mid-Cities Blvd, North Richland Hills, 817-788-8060. $ Buffalo Bros, 3015 South University Dr. 817-3869601. Great wings, exotic sandwiches from the far East – well, from Buffalo, N.Y., anyway – and good drink specials make this one of the best hangouts in the TCU neighborhood. $ Carshon’s Delicatessen 3133 Cleburne Rd. 817923-1907. Deli dishes up big servings of comfort food and desserts. Fort Worth Weekly 2005 and 2006 Readers’ Choice Best Deli. $ The Gardens Restaurant 3220 Rock Springs Rd (in the Fort Worth Botanic Garden). 817-731-2547.
Fresh, good, fragrant food at affordable prices. $ Gia Phu, 913 E Berry St, Ste 101. 817-923-9898. Fresh, traditional Vietnamese food and a few Chinese offerings in a friendly, ma-and-pa atmosphere. $ Ol’ South Pancake House 1509 S University Dr. 817336-0311. A popular late-night and breakfast hangout. Fort Worth Weekly 2005 and 2006 Readers’ Choice Best Breakfast, Late Night Dining .$ Silver Fox Steakhouse 1651 S University Dr. 817332-9060. A qualified rave for the Fox. Expensive, fantastic, prime aged beef, expertly served in a clubby, comfortable restaurant. If the in-laws are paying, splurge on a New York strip steak. $$$
ne a r So u t h S i de / s o u t h fw Cat City Grill, 1208 W Magnolia Av, FW. 817-9165333. Readers’ choice for “Best Restaurant” in our 2011 Best Of Fort Worth issue, Cat City Grill
is a homey but classy joint for superb American standards, including a fancy-but-hearty chickenfried steak. $$ Drew’s Burgers 5012 E. Rosedale St., 817-5363739. This spin-off of Drew’s Place offers tasty burgers at value prices and daily soul food specials. $ HG Sply Co 1621 River Run Dr, FW, 817-7306070. Healthy, filling, and flavorful, this West Bend eatery serves stellar, upscale paleoinspired cuisine in a bºuoyant atmosphere with a great view of an attractive stretch of the Trinity River. $$ Lili’s Bistro on Magnolia 1310 W Magnolia Av, FW. 817-877-0700. This small eatery near Spiral Diner and Nonna Tata serves fresh burgers and sandwiches for lunch, along with excellent sides like the gorgonzola fries and bulgur with cranberries. $$ Old Neighborhood Grill 1633 Park Place Av. 817923-2282. A perfectly spiced chicken-fried, salads, catfish, and burgers. The parking lot’s
W est
Dinner Nightly from 5pm
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Lunch Monday-Friday 11am-2pm
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Brunch Saturday-Sunday 11am-2pm Happy Hour Daily 2pm-7pm
5282 MARATHON AVE • 682 . 707.3965 www.fixesouthernhouse.com
F O R T WO R T H W E E K LY
Aventino’s Italian Restaurant 5800 Lovell Av, FW. 817-570-7940. Everything old-school is new again at this family-owned eatery. $$ Buttons 4701 W. Freeway FW (corner of I-30 & Hulen): 817-735-4900 A glorious menu, the greatest hits from Chef Keith’s creations over the years at his previous stints at local restaurants. Yes, Keith’s famous chicken and waffles are there, still with those great sweet-potato fries. There is lot’s more: seafood, pasta, and steaks, each given Chef Keith’s old-school, modern, downhome, global-fusion magic touch. $$ Café West 6530 W Fwy. 817-210-0129. Excellent multi-ethnic cuisine at a good price in a hotel lobby? You bet, if it’s Café West. $$ Drew’s Place 5701 Curzon Av. 817-735-4408. On the edge of Como, a slice of heaven disguised as sweet potato pie. But start with the smothered pork chops. Fort Worth Weekly 2006 Readers’ Choice Best Soul Food. $ El Ranchito 9016 White Settlement Rd, White Settlement. 817-246-1411. Well-prepared enchilada platters, lunch specials, and more. $ Kincaid’s 4901 Camp Bowie Blvd. 817-732-2881. There’s a big noon-time crowd at the picnic tables in this landmark grocery and burger joint. Fort Worth Weekly 2005, 2006 Best Hamburger. $ Lucile’s 4700 Camp Bowie Blvd. 817-738-4761. Bistro fare includes wood-roasted pizzas, pasta, seafood, weekend breakfasts of cheese grits, beignets. Fort Worth Weekly 2005 Staff Choice Best Brunch. $$ Press Café 4801 Edwards Ranch Rd Ste105. Beautiful and tasty food with a few service glitches and long wait times. $$ Rocco’s Wood Fired Pizza 5716 Locke Av. 817-7314466. Astounding gourmet pizzas cooked in a 7,000-pound wood-fired oven. Fort Worth Weekly 2006 Staff Choice Best Pizza. $$ Thailicious, 4601 W Fwy, Ste 206, FW. 817-7378111. This Westside eatery has everything you could want in authentic Thai cuisine. $ The Dive Oyster Bar 3520 Alta Mere Dr, FW. 817480-4623. Gulf coast seafood classics get an
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FAMILY OWNED CE
SIN
1
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El Fuerte Taco Fest Winners Best in Show 2018 People's Choice 2018, 2017
Your family will love it!
Stop In On
Your Way to the R iver
Open hours Sun - Thur .7am - 9pm Fri & Sat.7am - 10pm BYOB
101 E Highway 171 Godley, Texas, TX 76044 (817) 389-2451 | DelNorteTacos.com CATERING AVAILable | (817) 521-3067
LUNCH SPECIALS under $8.00! MON-THU 10:30-4:00 FRI 10:30-3
826 Taylor St • Downtown FW • 817-335-7469
Mama's Pizza Is Turning 50! Come Celebrate With Us A’ S P I Z Z
A
F O R T WO R T H W E E K LY
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M
AM
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Find A Location Near You At FWPIZZA.COM Monday June 11th
$5 Medium 1 topping pizzas. All day
Wed June 13th
$10 16” Lg 1 topping pizzas. All day
Thurs June 14th
50% off your order, DOES NOT INCLUDE LUNCH BUFFET
Friday June 15th
Tuesday June 12th
50 cents for an order of breadsticks...all day
Saturday June 16
$5 Lunch buffet includes drink, + tax 11am - 2pm
$15 Mamas 20” 2 topping pizzas. All day
Sun June 17th
2 LG 16” 1 topping pizzas for $19.68- All day
NOSEWRVING TACOS
Weekly
Specials
for Lunch & Dinner
VER 46 YEAR SERVING FETX FOR81O7-731-3321 5920 Curzon | chips.net zekesfishand
NEW LOCATION
NOW OPEN IN EVERMAN
Daily Lunch Specials! 1809 everman pkwy | 817.708.2878 cancunMEXICANrestaurantfw.com
rf
5733 crowley rd
817.551.3713 817
TIME FOR A NEW GRILL! With summer on deck and Father’s Day around the corner, it might be time for that new grill. Coffee rubs, coffee wood and a fine selection of sauces and other grilling supplies are also available for the ultimate gift experience.
& BBQ Grill s
HAPPY HOUR M-F 4P-7P
1/2 PRICE APPETIZERS AND DRINK SPECIALS (BAR & PATIO ONLY)
BRUNCH SATURDAY AND SUNDAY
$2 BLOODY MARYS, MIMOSAS, BELLINIS, SCREWDRIVERS, AND CHAMPAGNE
WINE WEDNESDAY
SELECT BOTTLES HALF PRICE
AUTHORIZED DEALER
2520 W. Pafford, FWTX 817.924.6821 RodaksCoffeeAndGrills.com
1208 W Magnolia Ave | 817-916-5333 www.catcitygrill.com
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food, fro m ou
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li a n
Nightly Dinner Specials
Come se&e Pappa Mamma i! Giovann
F O R T WO R T H W E E K LY
ic
Ita
am
A u th ent
i l y to y o u r s !
Italian Kitchen
Lunch Specials Starting at $7.99
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BEER
WINE
GO A C I S CH DOG
w Y o rk Ne Pizza
ITA BE LIAN EF
and
Gyros
Eat Local!
Lunch Specials Mon-Fri 10am-3pm Mon-Wed $8.99 Thur-Sun $9.99 $
9.99 Ribeye
St le y
Open During Construction (parking in rear) Lunch Special:
$5.99 Two HUGE 1-topping slices & drink $7.99 Gyro Sandwich, fries & drink M-F 11-2
703 N. Henderson St.
FW 76107 • 682-224-2601
www.littlegermanyrestaurant.com
Seafood & Tex-Mex Favorites
2707 Race St. 817-222-2433 Part of Dino’s Live
Stay cool on our patio this summer!
usually so full there’s no place to park. Now serving breakfast. Fort Worth Weekly 2005 Staff r w Yo eChoice BestkBreakfast. $ NShaw’s Patio Bar & Grill 1057 W Magnolia Av, FW. 817-926-2116. Fantastic burgers including the Pizza mushroom burger which was absolutely perfect, dripping with provolone cheese and crowned Gyros with perfectly sautéed mushrooms. Save room for the walnut cake. $ Spice Select Thai Kitchen and Bar 411 W S tby Thai Magnolia y l eAv. 817-984-1800. Part of a familyowned chain of Thai Restaurants, this Spice is a little mild but still does a lot of traditional goodies well. $
and
So u t h we s t
Beto’s American and Caribbean Cuisine 3000 S Fwy. 817-923-1177. The namesake owner and his wife serve up rustic, carnivorous delights from Jamaica with plenty of heat. Live reggae on Friday nights and salsa music on Saturdays. $ Bonnell’s 4259 Bryant Irvin Rd. 817-738-5489. Upscale setting where fine Texas cuisine, including wild game specialties, gets a Southwestern-Creole make-over. $$ Charley’s Old-Fashioned Hamburgers 4616 Granbury Rd. 817-924-8611. You should see the list of unusual concoctions that are also on the menu, involving avocados, jalapeños, and more. $ Dixie Café 4902 US 377 S. 817-244-4421. Not your basic home-cooking (the menu includes pasta and stir-fry) although slow-simmered chicken & dumplings is a winner. $ Edelweiss 3801-A Southwest Blvd. 817-738-5934. There are singing musicians in lederhosen, but the German food is excellent. The selection of German beers is one of the best in town. $$ Sausage Shoppe 1302 E. Seminary Dr. (817) 9219960. Heavenly house-made sausage, in beef, pork, and breakfast varieties, plus smoked chicken and barbecue. $ Taste N See Chicken & Waffles 3329 Altamesa Blvd, FW. 682-708-7115. Taste and see that the chicken and waffles (and pretty much everything else) is good at this family-owned restaurant. $$ Ume Sushi & Korean BBQ 4750 Bryant Irvin Rd, Ste 842, FW. 817-370-0685. Ume offers the best of both Japanese and Korean cuisine from the humble confines of a Cityview strip mall. $
Stoc k y a r d s / No r t h
3520 ALTA MERE DR, FORT WORTH, TEXAS | 817-560-DIVE
F O R T WO R T H W E E K LY
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CHECK OUT OUR TAKE-OUT MENU • BEER & WINE TO GO
44
1001 S. Main Ste. 151 FourSistersFW.com
Acapulco Beach 3112 N. Main 817-625-5992. Fresh-as-the-ocean Mexican seafood. Also 2612 Ephriham Av., 817-740-9464. Fort Worth Weekly 2006 Staff Choice Best Mariscos. $ Byblos Lebanese Restaurant 1406 N Main St. 817625-9667. Middle Eastern specialties plus belly dancers for entertainment. The lunch buffet is a winner. Fort Worth Weekly 2005 Best Greek/ Mediterranean/Middle Eastern, 2006 Best Middle Eastern. $$ Cattlemen’s Steak House 2458 N Main St. 817624-3945. Rustic meat-and-greet place in the heart of the Stockyards. $$ Giovanni’s 5733 Crowley Rd. 817-551-3713 Giovanni’s offers solid, hearty pasta, pizza, subs, and salads. BYOB. $ Mercado Juarez 1651 E Northside Dr. 817-8388285. Big servings of Tex-Mex in a big place. Fort Worth Weekly 2005 Staff Choice Best Red Salsa. $$ Posados Café Fossil Bluff Dr. 817-232-2966. Upscale Texican cuisine without upscale prices. Friendly wait-staffers make you feel like royalty. $$ Riscky’s Sirloin Inn 120 E Exchange Av. 817-6244800. Mountain oysters are among the delicacies served at this barbecue legend’s offshoot. $$$ Texas Pit Bar-B-Q 324 S Saginaw Blvd, Saginaw. 817-847-0400. Leon Adams learned ‘cuing at Angelos’s and Railhead and has added a few juicy tricks of his own. Fort Worth Weekly 2006 Staff Choice Best Barbecue. $ Texas Pit Oyster Bar, 3349 Western Center Blvd, FW. 817-306-0700. From the folks behind Texas Pit BBQ comes a seafood joint that serves up some mighty fine raw oysters along with serviceable seafood-joint staples. $
Zio’s Italian Kitchen 6631 Fossil Bluff Dr. 817-2323632. Freshly prepared Italian recipes served in an airy, comfortable environment. $$
N or th ea st
Bronson Rock Burgers and Beer, 250 S Main St, Keller. 817-431-5543. The sandwiches aren’t greasy or sloppy but are still mighty tasty at this gourmet biker joint. $ Chef Blythe’s Southern Bistro 9160 N Tarrant Pkwy, NRH. 817-770-4905. This scratch kitchen in North Richland Hills serves Southern classics in a casual, family-friendly setting. $$ DeVivo Bros. Eatery 750 S Main St, Ste 165, Keller. 817-431-6890. Family-owned, familyfriendly, DeVivo offers homemade comfort cooking. $ El Paisa 2801 Harwood Ave., Bedford. 817-4811111. The best authentic Mexican taqueria in Bedford.And the only one. But it’s still very good. $ Great Scott 1701 Cross Roads Dr, Grapevine. 817717-7701. Grapevine’s newest charcuterie restaurant puts the pig on a pedastal. $$ Los Molcajetes 4320 Western Center Blvd. 817306-9000. A wide variety of tantalizing Mexican items, like red snapper in ranchero sauce, pollo con broccoli, and chile con queso over rice. $$ Mi Dia From Scratch 1295 S Main St, Grapevine. 817-421-4747. The menu at Grapevine gem Mi Dia offers traditional Mexican, Tex-Mex, and New Mexico as well. $$ Next Wood Fired Bistro & Vino Bar, 5003 Colleyville Blvd, Colleyville. 682-325-4046. Tremendous Italian fusion served in a repurposed fast-food joint. $$ Tributary Café 2813 Race St, FW. 817-744-8255. Chef Cindy Crowder-Wheeler brings her handson technique to the River East neighborhood, with a lively menu of fresh gulf seafood and Creole classics. $$ Twelve Stones 1221 Flower Mound Rd, Ste 100, Flower Mound. Casual elegance in southern Denton County. $$$
N ort h A r l i n g ton
Airways Hamburgers 1106 N Collins St. 817-4611601. A wide variety of burgers and sandwiches plus breakfast. $ Catfish Sam’s, 2735 W Division St, Arlington. 817275-9631. What this 60-year-old institution lacks in variety more than makes up for in quality. $ Chop House Burgers, 1700 W Park Row Dr, Ste 116, Arlington. 817-459-3700. Good oldfashioned burgers, nothing fancy, in an Arlington strip mall. Don’t pass on the cheeseburger: a patty served not between two buns but two grilled cheese sandwiches. $ Eddie Deen’s Crossroads, 1010 N Collins St, Arlington. Simple, Southern comfort food in the shadow of Cowboys Stadium. $$ Fork in the Road 1821 S Fielder Rd, Arl. 214-8832685. Small sandwich shop serving up delicious sandwiches and craft sodas. $ No Frills Grill 1550 Eastchase Pkwy, Ste 1200. 817-274-5433. Bar food that’s much better than average, plus 25 tv sets. $ Old School Pizza and Suds, 603 W Abram St, Arlington. 682-323-4441. Exceptional pizza and subs. If you’re picky about customer service, consider ordering to go. $ Pantego Bay 2233 W Park Row Dr, Pantego. 817303-4853. Texas Gulf Coast seafood finds its suburban home in this relaxed, family-friendly eatery. $$ Prince Lebanese Grill 502 W. Randol Mill Rd., Arlington, 817-469-1811. In a former Sonic, delicious and cheap Lebanese standards. The thyme pie is a taste worth acquiring. $ Tandoor 532 Fielder Plaza. 817-261-6604. Outstanding Indian breads to accompany fiery vindaloos and creamy curries. Fort Worth Weekly Best Indian three years in a row. $$ Tom’s Burgers & Grill, 1530 N Cooper St, Arlington. 817-459-9000. This burger joint and soda shop offers satisfying and original takes on the usual Americana fare: chicken fried steak, sandwiches, burgers, omelettes, and deep-fried appetizers. $
NEW LOCATION NEW PATIO
$12.99
Lunch Special
EAGLE MOUNTAIN LAKE
• Calamari • Crab cakes • Arancini • Mussels • Salads • Lasagna
9120 Boat Club Rd. Ft. Worth, TX 76179
4 Tarrant Co Locations! Haltom City | River Oaks | richland hills Also visit Chuyito’s on N. Main
Join us for our new 2 course lunch menu Items will include many of our popular dishes including
Chuy’s
• Chicken Parmesan • Chicken Piccata • Eggplant Parmesan • Lobster Ravioli • Salmon Primavera and more…..
Indoor and Patio seating always available…. 3700 MATTISON AVE IN THE FORT WORTH CULTURAL DISTRICT 817-989-0007 | WWW.FWPIOLA.COM
Mexican Restaurant
LOVE THE OLD SAMMIE’S? WE’D LOVE TO MEET YOU! STOP IN SOON!
SMOKE PIT DONT YOU WISH YOU WERE HERE!
CHECK OUT OUR DAILY
SPECIALS 2401 E. Belknap 817-222-0455
WE CATER TheSmokePitCatering.com
THE BEST BBQ
& THE BEST VIEW!
FIRST BLUEZONES APPROVED THAI RESTUARANTS IN FW!
SPICE Thai Kitchen & Bar
411 W. Magnolia Ave Fort Worth • 817-984-1800
new! order online for pickup! www.spicedfw.com “Best Thai Food” – FW Weekly Critics Choice 2016 – FW Weekly readers Choice 2017
4601 W. Fwy, Ste 206 Fort Worth • 817-737-8111 new! order online for pickup! www.lovethailicious.com
4630 SW Loop 820 Fort Worth• 817-731-0455 new! order online for pickup! www.thaiselectrestaurant.com
3529 Heritage Trace Parkway, Suite#147, Fort Worth • 817-741-3993 new! order online for pickup or order online for delivery! www.thebangkokdfw.com
“Best Thai Food” – FW Weekly Readers Choice 2014
“Best Thai Food” – FW Weekly Critics Choice 2015 & 2017
“The Bangkok has everything north Fort Worth wants.” – Bud Kennedy, Star Telegram
F O R T WO R T H W E E K LY
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THE BEST THAI IN FORT WORTH
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s Ou T h a r li N gT O N/ u Ta
Best patio in the Fort #cometothesouthside
817.720.5483 | 212 LIPSCOMB STREET | THETWILITELOUNGE.COM
Ahi Poke Bowl 3701 Cooper St, Ste 139, Arlington. 817-200-6418. Traditional Hawaiian poke served from a strip mall in south Arlington. $ Andalous Mediterranean Grill 457 I-20 East, Ste 100, Arlington. 972-401-8900. More than enough Lebanese Greek food to stuff you like dolmas. $$ BFF Bistro 6501 S Cooper St, Ste 101. 817-6173450. Eclectic pan-Asian food in the Arlington ’burbs. $ El Gabacho (2408 W. Abram St., Arlington, 817276-8160. Upscale Tex-Mex. $$ Iraqi Restaurant 520 W. Park Row Dr.., Arlington, 817-262-1175. Simple, homestyle dishes from northern Iraq. $ Ninja Sushi & Grill, 4638 S Cooper St, Ste 190, Arlington. 817-472-5600. Pretty though not very adventurous sushi buffet and bar. $ No Frills Grill 4914 Little Rd. 817-478-1766. Chicken-fried shrimp, burgers, etc. in a sports bar with a big screen tv. $ Stay C’s Jamaican Cuisine & BBQ 6204 S Cooper St, Arl. 844-690-8852. Spacious Caribbean restaurant offering a delightful mix of traditional, tasty Jamaican dishes and desserts. $
TJ’s Catfish and Wings 4261 W Green Oaks Blvd, FW. 817-572-1600. Sports bar has several large-screen televisions and a vast selection of fried goodies, ranging from catfish to various flavors of chicken wings and entrées. $
Yafa Mediterranean Grill 4004 Little Rd, Ste 112, Arl. 817-969-5404. 11am-8pm Sun, 10am–9pm Mon-Sat. This independently owned gem brings a spin on Middle Eastern cuisine to a little corner of Arlington. $$
N E a r By
Baker’s Ribs and the Original Fried Pie Shop 921 S Main St, Weatherford. 817-599-4229. Exceptional barbecue and succulent fried pies make for a mouthwatering experience. $ Creekside Grill 10400 FM 730 S, Azle. 817-2703222. 5-9pm Thu-Fri, 12-9pm Sat, 12-8pm Sun. Azle’s premier steakhouse delivers on food, price, service, and atmosphere. $$-$$$ Dalton’s Corner 200 Main St, Burleson. 817-2955456. Named after the popular ’80s-era club where the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Billy Idol, and other big names performed, this bar and grill specializes in non-fussy but tasty chef-inspired creations. $
fwweekly.com
IDC Burger 401 S FM 1187, Aledo. 817-600-6189. Located inside a Shell station, this homey joint offers some nontraditional and tasty takes on burgers, including the Sweet Heat (beef, peaches, and jalapeños). $
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Now Hiring
catfish dinner
612 UNIVERSITY, FORT WORTH
Jade Café 1508-C S Bowen Rd, Pantego. 817-3030068. Sit-down Chinese in a bright, neat setting. Delivery available; no alcohol. $$ La Media Naranja 1809 Everman Pkwy, Everman Tx, 817-882-6160. Don’t overlook this small traditional Mexican eatery specializing in delicious tortas. $ Los Molcajetes 960 US 287 Frontage Rd, Mansfield. 817-473-1882. Substance wins over style at this Mansfield Tex-Mex/Mex-Mex restaurant. $ Madea’s Down-Home Cooking 1019 W. Enon Av., Everman. (817) 551-9295.Cafeteria service makes for difficult choices: the homecooked entrees and soulful sides all look too delicious. Fort Worth Weekly 2006 Staff Choice Best Soul Food. $ Off the Bone BBQ, 5144 Mansfield Hwy, Forest Hill. 817-563-7000. Eastside barbecue flavor that errs on the side of sweet. $ Old Town Smokehouse 114 S Main St, Burleson. 817447-6366. Beef, turkey, ham, hot links, and ribs. $ Smokey Mae’s Pit BBQ 8120 Rendon Bloodworth Rd, Mansfield. 817-592-0202. 10:30am-9pm SunThu, 10:30am-10pm Fri-Sat. Don’t let the kitsch fool you. There’s some real expertise at play in Mansfield’s newest barbecue joint. $$
Servers & Delivery Drivers Competitive Pay Based On Experience Apply In Person Today At 401 University Dr Fort Worth, TX
PRESENTS
BAR BeQUE open ‘til we run out!
Beef Brisket Pulled Pork Ribs sausage Turkey chicken Potatoes Veggies Desserts catering Dine InTo Go
true to texas bbq for Real Texas Parties finest beef
ON SALE THURSDAY!
ON SALE THURSDAY!
NOV 23 & 24
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GET TICKETS ONLINE AT AXS.COM • BY PHONE 888-929-7849 AT VERIZON THEATRE BOX OFFICE MON-SAT 11AM-3PM
1446 N. MAIN • 817-625-TACO (8226) Mon-Thur 9a-10p, Fri 8a-12a, Sat 8a-4a, Sun 8a-10p
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Homemade Corn & Flour Tortillas Award-Winning Salsa & Daily Lunch Specials Open Late Weekends
F O R T WO R T H W E E K LY
Authentic Mexican Food In The Stockyards.
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open Tuesday - sunday smokeysbbqtx.com | 5300 e lancaster, fw | 817-451-8222
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LAST CALL Slingin’ the Summertime Sauce Most people threaten to move to Canada only in election years, but not me. Like clockwork, each spring I watch the mercury rise and start sprinkling my conversations with how I could get used to hockey and round vowel sounds up in the land of Molson Golden. But reality dictates that I must ride out the summer of 2018 in Fort Worth, which is shaping up to be so hot my face might melt off like I opened the ark of the covenant Indiana Jones-style. The upside to the swelter is no one will begrudge you serving and drinking ice-cold cocktails with wild abandon –– bonus points if they are cued up poolside. Here are some summer drink recipes with a Cowtown twist.
Hell’s Half & Half Acre This boozy riff on an Arnold Palmer is made with Fort Worth’s own Acre Distilling-flavored vodka. 1 ½ oz of Acre Distilling Miss Addie’s Blackberry Sage Tea Vodka 2 oz cold English breakfast tea 2 oz Lorina Sparkling Lemonade 1 lemon wheel and a sprig of sage (for garnish) Stir together vodka and English breakfast tea in a tall glass. Fill glass with ice cubes and top with sparkling lemonade. Garnish with the lemon wheel and sage.
Rosé Sour Obviously rosé is having a moment, which is a good thing if you are interested in an easy-drinking, economical wine with a bright and summery flavor. But sometimes it feels good to not cheat on the ol’ standby whiskey either. TX Whiskey’s butterscotch-like notes play really well with a dry, not-so-sweet rosé in this refreshing riff on a classic.
Namaste, Y’all This is as close as you can get to a healthy drink and still get your daily recommended dose of hootch.
2 oz TX Whiskey 1 oz fresh lemon juice .75 oz simple syrup (1:1 water to sugar) .5 oz dry rosé Shake whiskey, lemon juice, and simple syrup vigorously over ice and strain into a rocks glass. Pour the dry rosé delicately over the back of a bar spoon, to layer the drink. Garnish with a lemon twist.
3 clementine segments 1 lemon wedge 1 oz pineapple juice 2 oz BLK EYE vodka 1 oz coconut water 1 oz grapefruit juice 1 grapefruit segment (for garnish) Muddle the clementine segments, lemon wedge, and pineapple juice in a cocktail shaker. Add the vodka, coconut water, and grapefruit juice. Shake to combine and serve straight up in martini glass or on the rocks, garnished with a grapefruit segment.
Now, I don’t want to forget to mention my favorite new bar tool for the summer. The Hyperchiller (Hyperchiller.com) will make wine, cocktails, and even freshly brewed coffee ice cold in 90 seconds. For a disco nap in a glass, just brew your favorite java directly into the cylinder and then pour into a glass spiked to taste with Frangelico hazelnut liqueur and simple syrup. Trust me, it will keep the summer buzzy and bright, no matter how hot it gets. –– Susie Geissler
Contact Susie at LC@fwweekly.com.
Club listings must be submitted on Wednesday two weeks prior to publication. Entries may be submitted to Clubland via fax 817-335-9575, phone 817-3219722, or e-mail lastcall@fwweekly.com. No cover charge, casual dress unless otherwise indicated.
Ba r
Dat Fish Cray and The ChatRoom Pub present
Easily The 8th Best 3rd Annual Memorial Weekend Crawfish Boil
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Saturday May 26th 12-6 or until they are gone
Ye Olde Bull & Bush
Ba r s
1912 Club 1912 Hemphill St, FW. 817-921-0411. Cash only, live music. A Great Notion 2024 Ridgmar Blvd, FW. 817-731-8521. Superb getaway. Karaoke often. Bogart’s 6409 E Lancaster Av, FW. 817-888-3050. Happy hour 4-7pm Mon-Fri, drink specials daily, karaoke Fri, Sat. Billiards, jukebox, Golden Tee. The Basement Bar 105 W Exchange Av, FW. 817-7400100. Open daily. Happy hour ’til 8pm nightly. Live music often. The Boiled Owl Tavern 909 W Magnolia Av, Ste 8, FW. 817920-9616. Billiards, patio. Best Of 2015 readers’ choice Bar Bar, critic’s choice Karaoke, Bar Décor. Happy Armadillo 1701 Everman Pkwy, FW. 817-293-1402. $4 super-premiums, $3 bombs, $2.50 everything else daily. Poker Mon, Wed. Karaoke Thu. Live music Fri-Sat. Lynn’s Saloon 1037 SE Pkwy, Azle. 817-238-1111. A Jacksboro Highway institution. The Moon Tower 2811 S Cherry Ln, FW. 682-708-8398. Acoustic open-mic Thu. No cover. Best Of 2015 critic’s choice Open-Mic Night (Music). The Office 12977 Trinity Blvd, Euless. 817-510-6012. A great escape. Happy hour 4-7pm Mon-Fri. Sarah’s Place 5223 Camp Bowie Blvd, FW. 817-731-7337. Karaoke Mon, Wed, Sat. Big-screen TV, jukebox. Best Of 2015 reader’s choice Karaoke. Showdown Saloon 4907 Camp Bowie Blvd, FW. 817-7384051. Free internet access. Billiards, foosball. Stockyard Saloon 2409 N Main St, FW. 817-624-3811. Happy hour 2-8pm Mon-Fri. Billiards, darts, Golden Tee. V.I.P. Lounge 3237 White Settlement Rd, FW. 817-3351647. Billiards, darts, classic country jukebox, shuffleboard.
y tail T he onl ing! has worth c
1263 W. Magnolia Ave. FW TX
@thechatroompub @Datfishcrayfw
Live Music on Fridays and Sundays
A Pub in the British Tradition
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Monday:Discount Discount Import Bottles Sunday: Single Malts New Hours: Tuesday: $2.25 Wells Monday: Discount Import Bottles Wednesday: Discount Drafts Thurs & Fri: 4-10pm Sat & Sun: Noon-10pm Tuesday: $2.25Shelf Wells Thursday: $3.25 Middle Liquors Thursday Happy Hour Five Dollar Friday Wednesday: Discount Drafts Golden Tee • Jukebox • Darts 4pm - 7pm All Drafts $5 Thursday: Middle Shelf Liquors Open 365$3.25 days a year • Happy Hour 4pm-8pm Golden Tee • Jukebox • Darts 2300 Montgomery • 817/731-9206 www.yeoldbullandbush.com Open 365 days a year • Happy Hour 4pm-8pm
$3 Tailgaters & $10 Flights
2300 Montgomery • 817/731-9206 • www.yeoldbullandbush.com 501 N. 48
Fort Worth’s Oldest British Pub
$5 Snacks
Main, Fort Worth TX 76164 • (817) 882-8121
3019 S University Dr Fort Worth, Tx
(817) 345-7633
Pool Tournament st
May 31 8pm Signup
9pm first break
Happy 3pm-8pm
Hour monday-friday
9PM
THIS SATURDAY BREWERY TOUR W/ LIVE MUSIC FROM
dirty pool
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June 8th 7PM
BEACH DJ PARTYXL Tiki Coctail Specials Until 11pm
Limbo Contest Bikini Contest
Take The Elevator Home! VIP Room Rates Start At $89 A Night! 2540 MEACHAM BLVD | WWW.CASSIDYSFORTWORTH.COM
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@REVOLVERBREWING
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FACEBOOK.COM/REVOLVERBREWING
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5650 MATLOCK RD. GRANBURY, TX 76049 817-736-8034 REVOLVERBREWING.COM
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MANSFIELD location
LIVE MUSIC JUNE
FRI 1
DEREK ANTHONY & THE RESTLESS KIND
SAT 2
HAYWIRE
THU 7
GARTH BROOKS TRIBUTE
FRI 8
M-80’S
SAT 9
BACK IN BLACK W/ SWAN SONG
THU 14 AARON COPELAND BIRTHDAY SHOW/THE HIGHWAY SISTERS FRI 15 VELCRO PYGMIES SAT 16 WINDBREAKERS THU 21 THAT 70’S BAND FRI 22 PROFESSOR D SAT 23 DAVID WHITEMAN BAND THU 28 TRIO GRANDE
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FRI 29 PARTY MACHINE
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SAT 30 LOOKOUT
MONDAY NIGHTS! POKER NIGHT
TUESDAY NIGHTS! GAME NIGHT
WEDNESDAY NIGHTS! LIVE BAND KARAOKE W/ OVERDRIVE
*Scheduled bands are subject to change.
FatDaddyslive.com 781 W. DEBBIE LANE, MANSFIELD
Lo u nges Cassidy’s at the Radisson Hotel 2540 Meacham Blvd, FW. 817-625-9910. Happy hour specials, DJ Sat. Keys Lounge 5677-H Westcreek Dr, FW. 817-292-8627. Live music nightly except Mon. Billiards. Ozzie Rabbit Lodge 6463 E Lancaster Av, FW. 817-4469010. Billiards, jukebox. Patio. Classic country DJ Wed. Proper 409 W Magnolia Av, FW. 817-984-1133. Small, classy space away from the hustle and bustle. Specials often. Scat Jazz Lounge 111 W 4th St, Ste 11, FW. 817-8709100. Live jazz Wed-Sat. Table Service. Closed Mon. Thompson’s 900 Houston St, FW. 817-882-8003. Best Of 2015 critic’s choice Bartender (Megan McClinton), Martini, Cocktail Lounge, Place to Get Sidetracked. The Basement Lounge 6323 Camp Bowie Blvd, Ste 125, FW. 817-732-9877. A modern rustic lounge, serving up inspired craft cocktails with down-home hospitality and nightclub ambiance. The Usual 1408 W Magnolia Av, FW. 817-810-0114. Specializing in Prohibition-Era cocktails. Best Of 2015 readers’ choice Cocktail Lounge, critic’s choice Place to Have a Conversation.
P u b s The Abbey Pub 2710 W 7th St, FW. 817-810-9930. Happy hour 3-8pm Mon-Fri, all day Sun. Drink specials daily. Great service. The Bearded Lady 1229 7th Av, FW. 817-349-9832. Excellent gastropub. Best Of 2014 readers’ choice Pub, Bar Snacks/Bar Food. The Chat Room Pub 1263 W Magnolia Av, FW. 817-9228319. Free internet-capable computers. Best Of 2015 critic’s choice Pub. Conlon’s Pub 2528 White Settlement Rd, FW. 817-6989777. Happy hour 2-7pm Mon-Fri, 3-6pm Sat-Sun. $1.75 Texas beers Sun. Karaoke Sat. Danny’s Celtic Pub 2828 Central Dr, Bedford. 817-5219999. Happy hour 12-8pm daily. All day happy hour Tue. Durty Crow 2801 Crockett St, FW. 817-878-2882. Sexy watering hole, live DJ Fri-Sat . Finn MacCool’s 1700 8th Av, FW. 817-923-2121. Solid Irish-themed retreat in the Hospital District. The Flying Saucer 111 E 3rd St, FW. 817-336-PINT. $2.75 “Pint Night” Mon. Live music Thu, Fri, Sat. Full menu. The Ginger Man 3716 Camp Bowie Blvd, FW. 817-8862327. 70 beer taps, 160 kinds of bottled beer. Beer list updated daily. The Mad Hatter 706 Carroll St, FW. 682-703-2148. Happy hour 3-9pm Mon-Fri, all day Sun. Malone’s Pub 1303 Calhoun St, FW. 817-332-5330. Service-industry friendly. Billiards. Oscar’s Pub 6323 Camp Bowie Blvd, FW. 817-732-3883. Happy hour all day Mon. Poag Mahone’s 700 Carroll St, FW. 817-332-9544. Happy hour 3-8pm Mon-Sat. Big Buck Hunter, billiards, darts, Golden Tee. Republic Street Bar 201 E Hattie St, FW. 817-615-9360. Large watering hole. Daily specials. Royal Falcon Pub 3803 Southwest Blvd, FW. 817-7325999. British pub open every day of the year. Happy hour 4-8pm daily, $2 well-drinks all day Wed. T&P Tavern 221 W Lancaster Av, FW. 817-675-3757. Located inside the historic T&P Railway Station. Happy hour 4-7pm Mon-Fri and, if you ride a bicycle, 6-10pm Sun. 24 beers on tap. University Pub 3019 S University Dr, FW. 817-345-7633. This longstanding, charming neighborhood pub was recently remodeled. The vibe is laidback, and the bar offers daily drink specials. Whiskey & Rye 1400 Houston St, FW. 817-350-4105. Fancy bar in the Omni Hotel Fort Worth. Best of 2015 critic’s choice Hotel Bar. The Winchester 903 Throckmorton St, FW. 817-332-4747. More than 100 different beers. Billiards, darts, shuffleboard. Wired Willy’s 710 Carroll St, FW. 817-820-0049. 20 beers on tap, half from Texas. Free WiFi, darts. Ye Olde Bull & Bush 2300 Montgomery St, FW. 817-7319206. Varied assortment of premium beers and liquor. Darts, jukebox, patio. Best Of 2015 readers’ choice Pub.
Sp o r t s B a r s E v e ry t hin g El s e
515 Bar 515 S Jennings Av, FW. 817-338-0515. Full bar, patio, jukebox, billilards, and daily specials. Live mostly indie music on weekends. Barcadia 816 Matisse Dr, FW 817-348-8606. Fort Worth
location of the popular Dallas chain. Vintage arcade games and pinball, giant Jenga, and skeeball. Great beer selection, good bar food. Best Of 2015 critic’s choice Bar Games. Bar Louie 2973 W 7th St, FW. 817-566-9933. Fort Worth location of the national “neighborhood bar” chain. Huge space, with additional bar upstairs. Full menu. Best Of 2015 readers’ choice Happy Hour, Martini, Local Music Show of Last 12 Months (Polyphonic Spree), critic’s choice Place to Start Your Evening. Billy Bob’s Texas 2520 Rodeo Plaza, FW. 817-6247117. Concerts, bull riding, group parties, events. Ladies’ night Wed. Blue Sushi Sake Grill 3131 W 7th St, FW 817-3322583. Happy hour 4-7pm Mon-Fri and all day Sun. Best Of 2014 readers’ choice Happy Hour, Martini. The Bottom 3468 Bluebonnet Cir, FW. 817-923-7625. Everything Crown and down is only $4. Café Modern Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, 3200 Darnell St, FW. Best Of 2015 critic’s choice Place to Take a First Date, Place to Drink Alone. Chimera Brewing Company 1001 W Magnolia Av, FW. Best Of 2015 readers’ choice Bartender (Les Bennett). Great food, superb craft beer. Kid-friendly. Chimy’s Cerveceria 1053 Foch St, FW. 817-348-8888. Full menu. Patio. TCU-friendly. Fairmount Music Hall Sky Bar & Kitchen 1311 Lipscomb Dr, FW. 817-360-5642. Live music venue with an upscale menu, two patios, and craft cocktails. Open for lunch. Fixture 401 W Magnolia Av, FW. Best Of 2015 critic’s choice Patio. Great atmosphere. Fred’s Texas Café 915 Currie St, FW. 817-332-0083. Live music (progressive singer-songwriter, some oldschool R&B/funk, occasional indie-rock) nightly. Patio. Full menu. Fred’s North 2730 Western Center Blvd, FW. 817-2320111. Another Fred’s, this one in the Great White North (of Fort Worth). Fred’s TCU 3509 Bluebonnet Cir, FW. 817-916-4650. Yet another one, this one in the heart of TCU-land. Houston St Bar and Patio 902 Houston St, FW. 817877-4727. Rooftop patio, live music Tue and Thu, DJ Fri and Sat, Karaoke Sun and Wed. Kitchen open until 1am. Kent and Co. Wines 1101 W Magnolia Av, FW. Also features seasonal beers, bar food, and desserts. Best Of 2015 critic’s choice Wine Bar, Bar Bathroom, Place to Day Drink. Landmark Bar + Kitchen 3008 Bledsoe St, FW. 817984-1166. Huge space, party atmosphere. Best Of 2015 readers’ choice Patio. The Local 2800 Bledsoe St, FW. 817-882-8536. Beer, booze, and babes. Lola’s Saloon 2736 W 6th St, FW. 817-877-0666. Best live indie music venue in town. $3 wells and domestic bottles 12-8pm daily. Lola’s Trailer Park 2737 W 5th St, FW, 817-759-9100. Outdoor venue behind Lola’s with open space, free shows, and games for the entire family. Indoor bar as well if you need some AC. Luther’s Saloon 2513 Rodeo Plaza, FW. 817-800-1037. Stockyards nightclub with live music and DJs throughout the week. Cheap drink specials nightly. Magnolia Motor Lounge 3005 Morton St, FW. 817-3323344. Happy hour 3-8pm Mon-Fri includes $2 domestic pints, $2.75 import pints, $2.75 domestic bottles, $2 Pearl Light, $3 import bottles, $2.75 wells. $1.50 PBR pints all day every day. Full menu. Max’s Wine Dive 2421 W 7th St, Ste 109, FW. 817-8701100. Gourmet food and wine. Brunch 11am-3pm Mon, 10am-3pm Sat-Sun. People’s Republic 3717 McCart Ave, FW. Specials include $2.50 Margarita Mondays, 25% off all Texas products on Tue, half-off beer Thu, happy hour weekdays Pouring Glory Growler Fill Station & Grill 1001 Bryan Ave, FW 682-707-5441. Fresh craft beer and wine, craft food, and craft sodas. Reservoir Bar Patio Kitchen 1001 Foch St, FW. 817-3340560. TCU-friendly hangout. Best Of 2015 readers’ choice Place to Meet Someone of the Opposite Sex. Rodeo Goat 2836 Bledsoe St, FW. 817-877-4628. Happy hour 4-7pm Mon-Fri. Amazing gourmet burgers. Shipping & Receiving Bar 201 S Calhoun St, FW. 817887-9313. Live music weekends. Best Of 2015 critic’s choice DIY Venue, Local Music Show of Last 12 months (Summerthon).
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HAPPY HOUR WEEKDAYS 4-8 $2.50 WELL & DOMESTICS 2620 E. Lancaster Ave
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JUNE
FRI 1 SAT 2
EMERALD CITY THE DOLAN BAND
WED 6 JESSE JENNINGS THU 7 KZPS BIKE NIGHT W/ROCKAHOLICS FRI 8 OVERDRIVE SAT 9 THE DICK BELDINGS SUN 10 JACKYL WED 13 THU 14 FRI 15 SAT 16
DERIC MERRILL KING GEORGE LE FREAK VELCRO PYGMIES
WED 20 VELVET LOVE BOX THU 21 16 STONE FRI 22 UNGLUED & MATCHBOOK 20 SAT 23 LOOKOUT WED 27 THU 28 FRI 29 SAT 30
57 SAUCE TEXAS FLOYD LIMELIGHT POO LIVE CREW
SUNDAY NIGHTS!
682.707.5663 Happy hour 7 days a week 2-7pm
LIVE MUSIC
WHEN TEMPS RISE WE KEEP THE THERMOSTAT AT 68˚
weeknight specials 909 W. Magnolia Ave. Ste. 8
“STORYTELLERS” TEXAS ACOUSTIC
MONDAY NIGHTS! POKER NIGHT
TUESDAY NIGHTS!
LIVE BAND KARAOKE W/ OVERDRIVE
*Scheduled bands are subject to change.
FatDaddyslive.com 6730 FOSSIL BLUFF DR, FT WORTH
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A Pub in the British Tradition
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Summer is Upon Us – Lease Your Ice Machine Today!
FORT WORTH location
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A Pub in the British Tradition
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MUSIC New Albums Droppin’ Like They Hot Fort Worth has some cool local music to help you beat the heat. B Y
P A T R I C K
H I G G I N S
If the date on your iPhone screen has been too subtle a reminder, the winged dollar signs flying out of your A.C. vent lately should serve to drive this point home: The blistering Texas summer is upon us. But local music fans can at least take comfort that The Scene© won’t let the coming 100 days of hell slow down its output. Here’s some local summer tunage you can enjoy
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HearSay
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Summer Concerts
Technically, summer is about four weeks away, but the heat is already here, so we might as well act as if we’re kicking off the season now. Moreover, this week’s HearSay falls under the rubric of “Fort Worth Weekly’s Summer Guide,” so put on a tank top, burn a hotdog, and get ready to Sharpie up your calendar with the following recommended concerts. Earthless w/Here Lies Man at the Ridglea Room (6025 Camp Bowie Blvd, 817-941-0086), Thu, Jun 14 I think the most apt description of San Diego’s Earthless is “heavy jam band,” because they take a riff and build on it for what seems like forever to be able to initiate what they describe as the “cosmic nod,” a band-and-audience symbiosis that harnesses the possibilities of a single chord to access the secrets of the universe.
without the risk of dehydration or losing 14 minutes of slack-punk perfection. For those looking for more of a lazy, a flip-flop. Tilly and the Flowers is the name hazy vibe, interstellar dub devotees Neptune of the brand new solo project of veteran Locals have just put out a trio of new singles. chanteuse Stephanie Buchanan (Crystal These extraterrestrial musical symbionts Furs, Missing Sibling), who released her have been using the human suits of local debut album last week. Titled Girl in rastas to make their brand of chilled-out the Background, its songs slyly disguise space-rock reggae for more than a decade, unselfconscious confessionals about and with the tranquil trilogy of “Flight List,” anxiety and misanthropy as danceable “La Familia,” and “The Now (Together),” piano-driven pop. Armed with the these alien musos are offering an intergalactic same musical spoonful-of-sugar to help journey for anyone willing to take the trip. Not to be outdone by guitar-driven tear-jerking lyrics go down a la Karen Carpenter, Buchanan’s solo career is off music, local hip-hoppers also have new offerings to blast to an impressive out of your open start. windows. Fresh R o b o t from his set at the Therapy, also a Fortress Festival, pseudonymous erudite rapper solo venture, this Juma Spears has one of local garagefinally dropped the punk everywhereFlashback EP. Well man Jesse Gage more than a year (War Party, Movie in the making, the the Band, Big six songs represent Heaven, Sur Duda) Spears’ first material ,recently snuck in since he’s been freed the release of an from a nasty dispute EP. Life Is Weird is with his former the follow-up to his label. The title debut of late last Veteran frontman/guitarist Ryan Higgs has track alone, which year and combines finally released the debut album of his longfeatures verses from the “Butter” and awaited project, The Daybreak Hits. Lil’ Flip and Tweety “Jelly” singles he released over the spring with a reworking Bird, make it worth the wait. California transplant Nice Major has of “Terror Error” and a playful love letter to War Party frontman Cameron Smith. Full of delivered the second installment of his Gage’s signature fuzzed-out pawnshop guitar soundtrack-to-weed-smoking opus 15 Minute tone and his sardonic vocal delivery, Life is High. As the subtitle Sativa/Indica suggests, While all that verbiage might sound like the rhetorical equivalent of a bong gurgle, Earthless really does distill rock music to its most primal, atavistic power. Experienced live –– they complement their music with trippy visual projections –– they’ll make your hair stand on end, especially if you’re blazed as hell. Summerthon 3: Return of Summer w/ Bun B at Shipping and Receiving (201 S Calhoun St, 817-887-9313), Sat, Jun 23. As part of the team that puts on Summerthon every year, I have a personal stake in this, but don’t let that keep you from seeing a rap legend from the hilarious comfort of an aboveground pool. Besides Bun B (and his pal Billy Staccs), the lineup includes North Texas locals DJ Sober, War Party, Juma Spears (featuring Wrex), Duell, Sub-Sahara, Steve Gnash, Loafers, the Bralettes, J/O/E, and Darth Vato. The all-day event comes packed with smaller pools, a giant slide, food trucks, vendors, sunburns, and other tacky fun. The tickets are a mere $20.
Outlaw Music Festival w/Willie Nelson, Sturgill Simpson, and Ryan Bingham at the Starplex (3839 S Fitzhugh Av, Dallas, 214-421-1111), Sat, Jun 30 I guess Starplex is officially called Dos Equis pavilion, but whatever. This concert is probably the best way to reenact one of those huge country festivals from the ’80s, and you don’t have to endure any dipshit Nashville bro-bros rapping about tailgating or whatever it is that Jason Aldean and Luke Bryan sing about. Willie’s picnic is but a few days later, but a lawn seat (under $30) at this show sounds like a better deal and way more fun to me. Float Fest 2018, Cool River Ranch in San Marcos, July 21-22 Though the individual day tickets are sold out, you can buy a weekend pass for $149. The annual event combines live music, camping, and river floating. From experience, I can say that it’s a much more enjoyable and tolerable summer festival vibe than driving all the way to
15 Minute High .2 is a baker’s dozen of tracks intent on sonically recreating the contrasting upbeat and mellow buzzes of the two cannabinoid varietals. Local cosmic multi-instrumentalist iNcelta joins Nice for the on-the-nose-titled “High,” and the album closes with the seasonally appropriate “Summer,” a track that brings a whiff of the palm trees and salt-scented air of his West Coast origins to Texas on a heady cloud of smoke. As the season is just getting started, so is the oncoming tsunamic wave of local music set to crash upon our shores. Most notably, there’s the debut record from Ryan Higgs’ new project, The Daybreak Hits. Higgs, the former Yellabelly and High School Assembly frontman, began work on the material back in 2015. This long-awaited album finally sees daylight on Friday. Next month will see the release of art-rock singer-songwriter Clint Niosi’s fourth studio album, which he’s been working on between time spent in the producer’s chair. Last year, he helmed the recording of his wife Claire Hecko’s morose and beautiful project, Frosty, and he just finished the debut of brooding Spaghetti Western crooners Mañana Cowboy, which is also due out in June. Add these to upcoming first releases from the hard-rocking Royal Sons, quirky math-rockers Pax Romana, and noisy blues duo Jack Thunder & The Road Soda –– along with sophomore efforts from swampy blues twosome Washed Up Rookie, garage punks Same Brain, and the Americana genre-bending Cut Throat Finches — and we have plenty to keep our ears ringing over the summer.l Bonnaroo. It’s hot, beery, and delirious, and each year the lineup gets bigger and better. This year’s acts include Snoop Dogg, Modest Mouse, Lil Wayne, Tame Impala, Bassnectar, Run the Jewels, Bun B, White Denim, Com Truise, and like 10 other mid-to-top-tier festival-level acts. If you pack light, do not skimp on sunscreen and water. Anthrax and Testament at Gas Monkey Live! (10110 Technology Blvd E, Dallas, 214-350-5483), Tue, Aug 14 Obviously, the Slayer final tour show at the Bomb Factory on June 19 is an essential concert, but even before it sold out, the tickets were prohibitively expensive for a lot of fans. Anthrax and Testament will both be on that bill, but they’re also coming through North Texas again in August, and the GA price is under $40. That’s kind of a steal to see two of thrash metal’s mightiest bands. –– Steve Steward Contact Hearsay at hearsay@fwweekly.com.
Summer @ Shipping Fri 5/25
Sat 5/26 Scott Copeland's 7th Annual Bob Dylan Birthday Bash
War Party
Featuring
Fatt Chedder, Tom Flynn, Jake Robison, Nick Tittle, Zack Pack, Tommy Luke, Rob Redwine, Jerry Elmore, Joe Savage Band, Derek Larson $10
w/ William Trouble Of Sea & Stone, Rascal Martinez
Fri 6/1
Thu 6/7
Sat 6/9
Fri 6/5 JiM MILAN'S Bucket List Jazz Band Sat 6/23
Fri 6/29
Thur 7/27
Bob
Afallon Presents
Schneider
Corb Lund
w/ Salim Nourallah
Afallon Presents
201 S. Calhoun St • Fort Worth 76104 • 817-887-9313 tickets available @www.shippingandreceiving.bar
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w/ Speedealer & The Dangits
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Fri 6/15
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MUSIC
Noteworthy
Noteworthy music listings must be submitted on Wednesday two weeks prior to publication. Entries may be submitted to Noteworthy: Music listings via fax 817-335-9575; phone 817-321-9722; or e-mail kristian.lin@fwweekly.com.
T H IS
W E EK
Rodney Carrington 8pm Fri-Sat. $35-75. WinStar World Casino & Resort, 777 Casino Av, Thackerville. 800622-6317. Kirk Franklin, Tye Tribbett, Marvin Sapp, Tamela Mann, Erica Campbell, Myron Butler, Koryn Hawthorne, Gaye Arbuckle, Michael Bethany, Jabari Johnson 5:30pm Sat. $35-125. Toyota Music Factory, 316 W Las Colinas Blvd, Irving. 972-810-1499. Luis Miguel 8:30pm Fri. $39.95-895. American Airlines Center, 2500 Victory Av, Dallas. 800-745-3000. Steely Dan, The Doobie Brothers 7:30pm Fri. $35199.50. Toyota Music Factory, 316 W Las Colinas Blvd, Irving. 972-810-1499. Justin Timberlake, The Shadowboxers 7:30pm SunMon. $90-475. American Airlines Center, 2500 Victory Av, Dallas. 800-745-3000.
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Alison Wonderland 8pm Sat, Aug 11. $35.50-45. Southside Ballroom, 1135 S Lamar St, Dallas. 800745-3000. Backstreet Boys, 98° 8pm Sat, Aug 18. WinStar World Casino & Resort, 777 Casino Av, Thackerville. 800622-6317. Jeff Beck, Paul Rodgers, Ann Wilson 7pm Wed, Jul 25. $29.50-375. Toyota Music Factory, 316 W Las Colinas Blvd, Irving. 972-810-1499. Big3 6pm Fri, Aug 17. $18-650. American Airlines Center, 2500 Victory Av, Dallas. 800-745-3000. Suzy Bogguss 7:30pm Thu, Jul 12. $44. McDavid Rehearsal Studio, 301 E 5th St, FW. 817-212-4280. Leon Bridges, Jon Batiste, Stay Human 7:30pm Sat, Jun 9. $42-96.50. Toyota Music Factory, 316 W Las Colinas Blvd, Irving. 972-810-1499. Camp Nowhere, The Child, Troyboi, Big Wild 8pm Thu, Jul 5. $39.50-100. Southside Ballroom, 1135 S Lamar St, Dallas. 800-745-3000. Coheed and Cambria, Taking Back Sunday 6:30pm Sat, Aug 4. $29.50-59.50. Toyota Music Factory, 316 W Las Colinas Blvd, Irving. 972-810-1499. Counting Crows, Live 6:30pm Tue, Jul 24. $35-139.50. Toyota Music Factory, 316 W Las Colinas Blvd, Irving. 972-810-1499. Dispatch, Nahko, Medicine for the People, Scatter Their Own 7pm Fri, Aug 10. $25-65. Toyota Music Factory, 316 W Las Colinas Blvd, Irving. 972-810-1499. Eagles, Chris Stapleton 7pm Sat, Jun 23. $99.50-750. AT&T Stadium, 1 Legends Way, Arlington. 800-7453000. Brett Eldredge 8pm Sat, Jun 16. $65-150. American Airlines Center, 2500 Victory Av, Dallas. 800-745-3000. ELO, Dawes 8pm Mon, Aug 13. $49.50-587.92. American Airlines Center, 2500 Victory Av, Dallas. 800-745-3000. Enanitos Verdes, Hombres G 7:30pm Sat, Jun 16. $55350. Toyota Music Factory, 316 W Las Colinas Blvd, Irving. 972-810-1499. Erasure, Reed & Caroline 8pm Fri, Aug 3. $25-84.50. Toyota Music Factory, 316 W Las Colinas Blvd, Irving. 972-810-1499. Florida Georgia Line 8pm Fri, Aug 17. $55-150. WinStar World Casino & Resort, 777 Casino Av, Thackerville. 800-622-6317. Foreigner, Whitesnake, Jason Bonham’s Led Zeppelin Evening 7pm Sat, Jul 21. $29.50-350. Toyota Music
Factory, 316 W Las Colinas Blvd, Irving. 972-810-1499. Daryl Hall & John Oates, Train, Kandace Springs 7pm Tue, Jul 24. $40-695. American Airlines Center, 2500 Victory Av, Dallas. 800-745-3000. Index Festival w/Dawes, Johnnyswim, Shinyribs, Oil Boom, DJ Sober Noon Sun, Jun 3. $23.91-99.10. Panther Island Pavilion, 395 Purcey St, FW. 888-4544353. Journey, Def Leppard 7pm Wed, Aug 29. $49-435. American Airlines Center, 2500 Victory Av, Dallas. 800-745-3000. Salman Khan 7:30pm Fri, Jun 29. $39-399. American Airlines Center, 2500 Victory Av, Dallas. 800-745-3000. Gladys Knight, The O’Jays 7:30pm Wed, Aug 8. $29.95179.50. Toyota Music Factory, 316 W Las Colinas Blvd, Irving. 972-810-1499. Dave Koz & friends 7:30pm Sat, Aug 4. $65-135. Meyerson Symphony Center, 2301 Flora St, Dallas. 800-734-3000. Alison Krauss 8pm Sat, Jul 7. $55-125. WinStar World Casino & Resort, 777 Casino Av, Thackerville. 800622-6317. Ray LaMontagne, Neko Case 7:30pm Fri, Jun 8. $3079.50. Toyota Music Factory, 316 W Las Colinas Blvd, Irving. 972-810-1499. Dua Lipa, Clairo 8pm Wed-Thu, Jun 6-7. $35. Southside Ballroom, 1135 S Lamar St, Dallas. 800-745-3000. Lyle Lovett & His Large Band 7:30pm Sat, Aug 18. Bass Hall, 555 Commerce St, FW. 817-212-4280. Maroon 5, Julia Michaels 8pm Sat, Jun 9. $80-457.28. American Airlines Center, 2500 Victory Av, Dallas. 800-745-3000. Modest Mouse 9pm Fri, Jul 20. $35-250. WinStar World Casino & Resort, 777 Casino Av, Thackerville. 800622-6317. O.A.R., Matt Nathanson 7pm Fri, Jul 27. $39.50-69.50. Toyota Music Factory, 316 W Las Colinas Blvd, Irving. 972-810-1499. Gerardo Ortiz, Pancho Barraza, Kevin Ortiz 8pm Fri, Aug 31. $42-152. Toyota Music Factory, 316 W Las Colinas Blvd, Irving. 972-810-1499. Panic! At the Disco, Hayley Kiyoko 7pm Sat, Aug 4. $40.75-384.11. American Airlines Center, 2500 Victory Av, Dallas. 800-745-3000. Paramore, Foster the People, Jay Som 7pm Sat, Jul 14. $35-79.50. Toyota Music Factory, 316 W Las Colinas Blvd, Irving. 972-810-1499. Plaza-Palooza w/The Hip Abduction, Caleb Hawley, Luke Wade, Prophets & Outlaws, The Roosevelts, Winston Ramble, Lawrence, The Soul Rebels. Fri-Sat, Jun 1-2. Free. Sundance Square, 4th & Main sts, FW. P.O.D., Lit, Alien Ant Farm 7pm Fri, Aug 24. $25-35. Toyota Music Factory, 316 W Las Colinas Blvd, Irving. 972-810-1499. Poison, Cheap Trick 7pm Sat, Jun 2. $29.50-144. Toyota Music Factory, 316 W Las Colinas Blvd, Irving. 972810-1499. Post Malone, 21 Savage, SOB x RBE 7:30pm Thu, Jun 14. $89.50-149.50. Toyota Music Factory, 316 W Las Colinas Blvd, Irving. 972-810-1499. Charlie Puth, Hailee Steinfeld 7:30pm Thu, Aug 23. $29.50-79.50. Toyota Music Factory, 316 W Las Colinas Blvd, Irving. 972-810-1499. Shakira 7:30pm Tue, Aug 21. $50-650. American Airlines Center, 2500 Victory Av, Dallas. 800-745-3000. Paul Simon 8pm Fri, Jun 1. $50-505. American Airlines Center, 2500 Victory Av, Dallas. 800-745-3000. The Smashing Pumpkins 7pm Wed, Jul 18. $34-518.25. American Airlines Center, 2500 Victory Av, Dallas. 800-745-3000. Sam Smith 8pm Fri, Jul 20. $35-750. American Airlines Center, 2500 Victory Av, Dallas. 800-745-3000. Harry Styles, Kacey Musgraves 8pm Tue, Jun 5. $29.50525. American Airlines Center, 2500 Victory Av, Dallas. 800-745-3000. Styx, Joan Jett & The Blackhearts, Tesla 7pm Sun, Jun 10. $29.50-350. Toyota Music Factory, 316 W Las Colinas Blvd, Irving. 972-810-1499. 3 Doors Down, Collective Soul, Soul Asylum 7pm Tue, Jul 17. $29.50-79.50. Toyota Music Factory, 316 W Las Colinas Blvd, Irving. 972-810-1499. Shania Twain 7:30pm Wed, Jun 6. $69.95-600. American Airlines Center, 2500 Victory Av, Dallas. 800-745-3000. Violent Femmes, Echo & The Bunnymen 8pm Sun, Jul 15. $25-69.50. Toyota Music Factory, 316 W Las Colinas Blvd, Irving. 972-810-1499. Yuridia 8:30pm Thu, Aug 30. $55-110. Southside Ballroom, 1135 S Lamar St, Dallas. 800-745-3000.
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Q W E R T I O P A S SAT 5/26 • 8P
Kevin Aldridge & The Appraisers Ting Tang Tina
1002 S. Main St
MON 5/28
Open Mic w/ Joshua Ryan Jones TUES 5/29
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MEN I TRUST
PAUL CAUTHEN waVes of chaos redefine tory soUnd
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FRI, JULY 6 TUE • 9/18 SAT • 11/5 SLAYER 12/16 SOLD GAMEOUT! GRUMPSZHU LIVE! PHANTOGRAM FRI • 9/28 FRI • SOLD 7/27 OUT! WED • 11/16 LORD HURON KILLER QUEEN 12/31 NEW YEAR’S EVE WITH ANIMAL COLLECTIVE • 10/1 MON MOLOTOV • 7/30 MON DEATH FOR CUTIE BEACH HOUSE SATCAB • 11/26 1/21/17 SUN • 8/12 BLUE OCTOBER NINJA SEX PARTY SUN • 9/16 SCANDAL
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6/8 6/9 6/11 6/14 6/15 6/16 6/18 6/19 6/20 6/21 6/22 6/23 6/24 6/25 6/26 6/28
psychedelic spaceship dallas Metal scene showcase insoMniUM the get Up kids Urizen lynch MoB haMMerfall gUided By Voices shek wes & Valee U.s. BoMBs roBB Bank$ cold caVe Motograter stars jojo sold oUt eric naM sold oUt
6/29 6/30 7/1 7/14 7/15 7/17 7/20
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day 26 8/4 sales 8/8 powergloVe 8/15 faster pUssycat 8/18 trees’ 9th anniVersary 8/22 orgy 8/23 cky 8/25 papadosio 9/7 the dead daisies 9/13 hyUkoh 9/15 Vinnie Moore 9/17 sUperorganisM 9/21 andrew wk 10/1 aMorphis / dark tranqUility 10/8 angra 10/15 honne 10/16 (hed) p.e. 10/26 doyle (of the Misfits)
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Jazz lounge 111 West 4th, Suite 11 • 817-870-9100 Downstairs Sundance Square
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2736 W. Sixth St. Fort Worth, Texas
Fri 5/25
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2737 W 5th St,Ft W, TX 76107 facebook.com/trailerparklolas/
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FRIDAY HAPPY HOUR (2-7PM) $4 DRAFTS & COCKTAIL MENU SUNDAY $3.50 WELLS & $25 COCKTAIL PITCHERS
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Will bannistEr saturday 6/9
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saturday 6/30
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saturday 7/28
tExas grEat Johnny rodriguEZ saturday 8/18
bobby florEs
saturday 8/25
country grEat gEnE Watson
saturday 9/8
country icon mickEy gillEy saturday 9/15
kElly spinks
saturday 9/22
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THE COACHMEN FRI: 6-1AM, SAT: 7-2, SUN 4-10
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LIVE MUSIC COLD DRINKS HOT FOOD
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250 S. Main St. Keller, TX BronsonRockTX.com
Augie’s MEMORY TRIP WED. 5/23 THU. 5/24
ASHMORE FRI. 5/25
Augie’s is Located Lakeside @ Eagle Mountain Lake 6172 Park Road, FWTX Augies.Sunset.Cafe.Tripod.com (817) 237-5868 | Daily 11am-2am
CHASING RENT DOWNTOWN FEVER SAT. 5/26
THE TRIALS MON. 5/28
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TJ BROSCOFF
m ay 2 3 - 2 9, 2 0 1 8
JESSICA MCVEY BAND WALTON STOUT BAND SUN, 5/27
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Cross town Sounds
58
R O C K Club Dada, 2720 Elm St, Dallas. Wed: Preoccupations, Nervous Curtains. Sat: Iceage, Temple of Angels. Sun: Forever in Your Mind. Tue: Shilpa Ray, Party Static, Dim Locator. Curtain Club, 2800 Main St, Dallas. 214-320-2030. Wed: The Wild Frontiers, Sophmore, Wee Beasties, Feeves, All I Hear Is Static. Thu: DJ JRudd. Fri: The Augurist Complex, Mona Borland, The Maria Singer, Deceived by the Fallen. Sat: Sandoval, Kid Fight, Austin, Starside R&D. Gas Monkey Bar N’ Grill, 10261 Technology Blvd E, Dallas. 214-350-1904. Wed: Innavision, Idoljob, Project 432. Thu: Tyr, Orphaned Land, Ghost Ship Octavius, Aeternam, Under a Spell. Fri: Primal Concrete Cowboys, Gawdsmak, Chains Addiction. Sat: Northern National, Clover the Girl, The Ivy, The New Offenders. Sun: The Doors Hotel, The Zeppelin Project. Mon: Satyricon, Goatwhore, Sparrows, A Devil’s Daydream. Tue: Shawn James & The Shapeshifters, Black Dog Friday. Gas Monkey Live, 10110 Technology Blvd E, Dallas. 214-350-5483. Sat: Reverend Horton Heat, Fear. Sun: Young Dolph, Key Glock, Li’l Man, Rickadon, Pat Ron, Sailor. Granada Theater, 3524 Greenville Av, Dallas. 214824-9933. Wed: Mojo. Thu: Joshua Ingram. Fri: Heart Byrne. Lola’s Saloon, 2736 W 6th St, FW. 817-877-0666. Mon: Jeremy Norvelle. Magnolia Motor Lounge, 3005 Morton St, FW. 817332-3344. Wed: The Squeezebox Bandits, Van Darien. Thu: The Reed Brothers, D. Anson Brody album release. Fri: Wayne “The Train” Hancock, Tommy Luke. Sat: Kirk Thurmond & The Millenials, Remy Reilly. Sun: Jackie Darlene, Heather Little, Meredith Crawford. Mon: Chet Stevens. Tue: Sherilyn Segrest, Daniel Markham, Tony Ferraro. The Prophet Bar, 2548 Elm St, Dallas. 214-742-3667. Wed: RC & The Gritz. Thu: SayWeCanFly, Braden Barrie. Fri: Dakota Ritter, Borderline Grimes, Casey Shockes, Summer Franklin. Mon: The Air in May, 1967, The Color You, Max Hill Band, Brave Crusade. Tue: Souvenirs. Shipping and Receiving, 201 S Calhoun St, FW. 817887-9313. Thu: open-mic. Fri: War Party, William Trouble, Of Sea & Stone, Rascal Martinez. Sat: Fatt Chedder, Tom Flynn, Jake Robison, Nick Tittle, Zack Pack, Tommy Luke, Rob Redwine, Jerry Elmore, Joe Savage Band, Derek Larson. Three Links, 2704 Elm St, Dallas. 214-653-8228. Wed: The Killer Hearts, The Cops, The ExMembers, DJ Joey Scandalous. Thu: Culture Wars, Recent Rumors. Fri: Shaka, The Big News, Stinky Gringos, The Brokes. Sat: David Michael George album release, Sugarfoote, Kirk Holloway. Sun: Gringopalooza w/Hickoids, Deadbolt, Loco Gringos, The Me-Thinks, Harvey McLaughlin, Duell. Mon: Funky Knuckles. Tue: CoLab, Friday’s Foolery. Trailer Park DFW, 2737 W 5th St, FW. 817759-9100. Thu: Ansley Dougherty. Fri: Adrian Johnston, Madeleine Enna. Sat: Wayne Toups. Tue: open-mic. Trees, 2709 Elm St, Dallas. 214-741-1122. Fri: DDG. Sat: Ron Bultongez, Harper Grace, The Wild Frontiers, Blue Apollo. Sun: Michael Angelo Batio, Adam Nañez, Legacy. Tue: Joyner Lucas. 2513 Main St, Dallas. 214-742-3667. Mon: Sianvar, Doggo, Vita Versus, Goliath TX, Prefontaine.
E C L E C T I C The Bomb Factory, 2713 Canton St, Dallas. 214932-6501. Thu: Underoath, Dance Gavin Dance, Veil of Maya, Limbs. Dan’s Silverleaf, 103 Industrial St, Denton. 940320-2000. Wed: A Taste of Herb. Thu: For Now album release, Trusko, Q&A. Fri: The King Bucks, Chris & Katie. Sat: Petty Theft, The Sutcliffes. Mon: Tex Zimmerman & His All-Stars. Deep Ellum Art Co., 3200 Commerce St, Dallas.
C O U N T R Y Adair’s Saloon, 2624 Commerce St, Dallas. 214939-9900. Wed: Red, Billy Law. Thu: Vance Bruce, Tyler Stokes. Fri: Justin Pickard & The Thunderbird Winos, The Reed Brothers. Sat: Michael O’Neal, Ned Hill. Sun: Dakota Ritter, Keefe Auber. Mon: Jamie Lynn Vessels, Brian Lambert. Tue: Charlie Barrale, open-mic. Billy Bob’s Texas, 2520 Rodeo Plaza, FW. 817-6248118. Fri: Flatland Cavalry. Sat: William Clark Green. Sun: TXRDR, Justin Frizzell. Li’l Red’s Longhorn Saloon, 121 W Exchange Av, FW. 817-740-0078. Thu: Raised Right Men. Fri: Weldon Henson. Sat: Kelly Spinks. Stagecoach Ballroom, 2516 E Belknap St, FW. 817-831-2261. Fri: Dr. Honky Tonk. Sat: Larry Light & Pure Country. White Elephant Saloon, 106 E Exchange Av, FW. 817-624-8273. Wed: Skip Pullig. Thu: Keefe Auber Band. Fri: Micah Cheatham, Steve Carrasco. Sat: Jason Lee McKinney, Steve Carrasco. Sun: Bodie Powell. Mon: Rachel Stacy. Tue: Texas Music showcase.
B L U E S Keys Lounge, 5677 Westcreek Dr, FW. 817-292-8627. Thu: Big Mike Richardson. Fri: Fender Benders. Sat: Swan Song. Sun: Jerry’s blues jam.
Cross town Sounds
Sat 8/11
drowning pool
bury your dead & more
Fri 5/25
Midnight Opera sat 5/26
David Galloway Band
Fri 5/25 sat 6/9 fri 6/15 fri 6/29 sat 6/30
Fri 6/1
The Herald thu 6/7
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Hall Johnson, Last Night Crushpoint Cosmic Creeps, Limerick, Ashes ellen & dean, autumn’s amber kompulsive child
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CLUBS
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continued from page 54 ZZ Top 8pm Fri, Jun 8. $55-400. WinStar World Casino & Resort, 777 Casino Av, Thackerville. 800-622-6317.
214-697-8086. Thu: Shaun Martin & Dynamo. Fri: Heart Byrne, Depeshi. Sun: Where It’s At. Mon: Jamey Geston. The Double Wide, 3510 Commerce St, Dallas. 214887-6510. Fri: Lace. Sun: Primadonnas, Christy Ray, Blake Ward. Fort Worth Live, 306 N Houston St, FW. Thu: Greg Dewhirst Quartet. Fri: Rodney Parker, Charlie Shafter, Izzy Jeffery. Sun: Drew Kennedy, Jed Zimmerman. Fred’s Texas Café, 915 Currie St, FW. 817-3320083. Thu: LD & Slotzy. Fri: Zach Nytomt. Sat: Cody Wayne, Robbie Saunders & Courtney Elane, Devin Leigh. Sun: Kayla Ray & Erin Enderlin, Guthrie Kennard, Will Hobbs. Kessler Theater, 1230 W Davis St, Dallas. 214-272-8346. Thu: Okkervil River, Matt the Electrician. Sat: Kelly Willis album release, Pedigo’s Magic Pilsner. Sun: David Bromberg, AJ Legrand. Levitt Pavilion, 100 W Abram St, Arlington. 817543-4301. Fri: Lee Rocker. Sat: Hayes Carll. Sun: Jay Perez & The Band. The Lizard Lounge, 2422 Swiss Av, Dallas. 214826-4768. Fri: Cold Blue. Sat: Orjan Nilsen, Khomha. Sun: Amanda Jones. Main at South Side, 1002 S Main St, FW. Wed: Heater, Wartoad. Thu: Luna Luna, The Polarity, Life After Youth. Fri: The Daybreak Hits record release, Kevin Aldridge & The Appraisers, Ting Tang Tina. Sat: The Nightowls. The Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, 3200 Darnell St, FW. 817-332-8451. Wed: Montopolis. Omni Fort Worth, 1300 Houston St, FW. 817-53536664. Sun: Radney Foster, Matraca Berg, Grady Spencer. Opening Bell Coffee, 1409 S Lamar St, Dallas. 214-565-0383. Wed: Rascal Martinez, Will Clark & friends. Thu: Of Sea & Stone, Brian & Chanel Duo. Fri: Fallon Franklin, Brian Pounds. Sat: Jackson Eli. Mon: songwriters in the round. Tue: open-mic. Poor David’s Pub, 1313 S Lamar St, Dallas. 214565-1295. Fri: Possum Posse. Sat: Tempting Disaster. Rose Marine Theater, 1440 N Main St, FW. 817624-8333. Sat: Canta. The Rustic, 3656 Howell St, Dallas. 214-730-0596. Wed: Cameron Matthew Ray. Thu: Chuck Ligon. Fri: Jonathan Terrell. Sat: Leighton Fields. Sun: Jackopierce, Dan Rocha Jr. Tue: Wild Rivers. Scat Jazz Lounge, 111 W 4th St, FW. 817-8709100. Wed: Alcedrick Todd Group. Thu: Johnny Reno. Fri: Ricki Derek. Sat: Larry Braggs. Sun: Black Dog jam. Tue: Straight Ahead. Sundance Square, 4th & Main sts, FW. Fri: Quaker City Night Hawks. Willhoite’s Restaurant, 432 S Main St, Grapevine. 817-481-7511. Wed: Tristan Bugenis. Thu: Super Kilo Duo. Fri: Treble Hook.
F O R T WO R T H W E E K LY
Noteworthy
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Business Analytics Analyst University of Texas at Arlington seeks a Business Analytics Analyst. Apply at www. uta.edu. University of Texas at Arlington is an equal opportunity and affirmative action employer. 145 Sales
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Texas Commission on Environmental Quality
public notices
Texas Commission on Environmental Quality NOTICE OF RECEIPT OF APPLICATION AND INTENT TO OBTAIN
NOTICE OF RECEIPT OF APPLICATION AND INTENT TO OBTAIN AIR PERMIT RENEWAL
The executive director has determined the application is administratively complete and will conduct a technical review of the application. Information in the application indicates that this permit renewal would not result in an increase in allowable emissions and would not result in the emission of an air contaminant not previously emitted. The TCEQ may act on this application without seeking further public comment or providing an opportunity for a contested case hearing if certain criteria are met. PUBLIC COMMENT You may submit public comments, or a request for a contested case hearing to the Office of the Chief Clerk at the address below. The TCEQ will consider all public comments in developing a final decision on the application. The deadline to submit public comments is 15 days after newspaper notice is published. After the deadline for public comments, the executive director will prepare a response to all relevant and material, or significant public comments. Issues such as property values, noise, traffic safety, and zoning are outside of the TCEQ’s jurisdiction to address in the permit process. After the technical review is complete the executive director will consider the comments and prepare a response to all relevant and material, or significant public comments. If only comments are received, the response to comments, along with the executive director’s decision on the application, will then be mailed to everyone who submitted public comments or who is on the mailing list for this application, unless the application is directly referred to a contested case hearing. OPPORTUNITY FOR A CONTESTED CASE HEARING You may request a contested case hearing. The applicant or the executive director may also request that the application be directly referred to a contested case hearing after technical review of the application. A contested case hearing is a legal proceeding similar to a civil trial in state district court. Unless a written request for a contested case hearing is filed within 15 days from this notice, the executive director may act on the application. If no hearing request is received within this 15 day period, no further opportunity for hearing will be provided. According to the Texas Clean Air Act § 382.056(o) a contested case hearing may only be granted if the applicant’s compliance history is in the lowest classification under applicable compliance history requirements and if the hearing request is based on disputed issues of fact that are relevant and material to the Commission’s decision on the application. Further, the Commission may only grant a hearing on those issues submitted during the public comment period and not withdrawn. A person who may be affected by emissions of air contaminants from the facility is entitled to request a hearing. If requesting a contested case hearing, you must submit the following: (1) your name (or for a group or association, an official representative), mailing address, daytime phone number; (2) applicant’s name and permit number; (3) the statement “[I/we] request a contested case hearing;” (4) a specific description of how you would be adversely affected by the application and air emissions from the facility in a way not common to the general public; (5) the location and distance of your property relative to the facility; (6) a description of how you use the property which may be impacted by the facility; and (7) a list of all disputed issues of fact that you submit during the comment period. If the request is made by a group or association, one or more members who have standing to request a hearing must be identified by name and physical address. The interests the group or association seeks to protect must also be identified. You may also submit your proposed adjustments to the application/permit which would satisfy your concerns. Requests for a contested case hearing must be submitted in writing within 15 days following this notice to the Office of the Chief Clerk at the address below. If any requests for a contested case hearing are timely filed, the Executive Director will forward the application and any requests for a contested case hearing to the Commissioners for their consideration at a scheduled Commission meeting. Unless the application is directly referred to a contested case hearing, the executive director will mail the response to comments along with notification of Commission meeting to everyone who submitted comments or is on the mailing list for this application. The Commission may only grant a request for a contested case hearing on issues the requestor submitted in their timely comments that were not subsequently withdrawn. If a hearing is granted, the subject of a hearing will be limited to disputed issues of fact or mixed questions of fact and law relating to relevant and material air quality concerns submitted during the comment period. Issues such as property values, noise, traffic safety, and zoning are outside of the Commission’s jurisdiction to address in this proceeding. MAILING LIST In addition to submitting public comments, you may ask to be placed on a mailing list for this application by sending a request to the Office of the Chief Clerk at the address below. Those on the mailing list will receive copies of future public notices (if any) mailed by the Office of the Chief Clerk for this application. AGENCY CONTACTS AND INFORMATION Public comments and requests must be submitted either electronically at www. tceq.texas.gov/about/comments.html, or in writing to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, Office of the Chief Clerk, MC-105, P.O. Box 13087, Austin, Texas 78711-3087. Please be aware that any contact information you provide, including your name, phone number, email address and physical address will become part of the agency’s public record. For more information about this permit application or the permitting process, please call the Public Education Program toll free at 1-800-687-4040. Si desea información en Español, puede llamar al 1-800-687-4040. Further information may also be obtained from Isomedix Operations, Inc., 1175 Isuzu Parkway, Grand Prairie, Texas 75050-7870 or by calling Mr. Raymond Doerr, Steris Corporation at (847) 367-5275. Notice Issuance Date: May 02, 2018
This application was submitted to the TCEQ on April 23, 2018. The application will be available for viewing and copying at the TCEQ central office, TCEQ Dallas/Fort Worth regional office, and the Fort Worth Central Library, 500 West 3rd Street, Fort Worth, Tarrant County, Texas beginning the first day of publication of this notice. The facility’s compliance file, if any exists, is available for public review in the Dallas/Fort Worth regional office of the TCEQ. The executive director has determined the application is administratively complete and will conduct a technical review of the application. An amendment application that is not subject to public notice or an opportunity for a contested case hearing is also being reviewed. Information in the application indicates that this permit renewal would not result in an increase in allowable emissions and would not result in the emission of an air contaminant not previously emitted. The TCEQ may act on this application without seeking further public comment or providing an opportunity for a contested case hearing if certain criteria are met. PUBLIC COMMENT You may submit public comments, or a request for a contested case hearing to the Office of the Chief Clerk at the address below. The TCEQ will consider all public comments in developing a final decision on the application. The deadline to submit public comments is 15 days after newspaper notice is published. After the deadline for public comments, the executive director will prepare a response to all relevant and material, or significant public comments. Issues such as property values, noise, traffic safety, and zoning are outside of the TCEQ’s jurisdiction to address in the permit process. After the technical review is complete the executive director will consider the comments and prepare a response to all relevant and material, or significant public comments. If only comments are received, the response to comments, along with the executive director’s decision on the application, will then be mailed to everyone who submitted public comments or who is on the mailing list for this application, unless the application is directly referred to a contested case hearing. OPPORTUNITY FOR A CONTESTED CASE HEARING You may request a contested case hearing. The applicant or the executive director may also request that the application be directly referred to a contested case hearing after technical review of the application. A contested case hearing is a legal proceeding similar to a civil trial in state district court. Unless a written request for a contested case hearing is filed within 15 days from this notice, the executive director may act on the application. If no hearing request is received within this 15 day period, no further opportunity for hearing will be provided. According to the Texas Clean Air Act § 382.056(o) a contested case hearing may only be granted if the applicant’s compliance history is in the lowest classification under applicable compliance history requirements and if the hearing request is based on disputed issues of fact that are relevant and material to the Commission’s decision on the application. Further, the Commission may only grant a hearing on those issues submitted during the public comment period and not withdrawn. A person who may be affected by emissions of air contaminants from the facility is entitled to request a hearing. If requesting a contested case hearing, you must submit the following: (1) your name (or for a group or association, an official representative), mailing address, daytime phone number; (2) applicant’s name and permit number; (3) the statement “[I/we] request a contested case hearing;” (4) a specific description of how you would be adversely affected by the application and air emissions from the facility in a way not common to the general public; (5) the location and distance of your property relative to the facility; (6) a description of how you use the property which may be impacted by the facility; and (7) a list of all disputed issues of fact that you submit during the comment period. If the request is made by a group or association, one or more members who have standing to request a hearing must be identified by name and physical address. The interests the group or association seeks to protect must also be identified. You may also submit your proposed adjustments to the application/permit which would satisfy your concerns. Requests for a contested case hearing must be submitted in writing within 15 days following this notice to the Office of the Chief Clerk at the address below. If any requests for a contested case hearing are timely filed, the Executive Director will forward the application and any requests for a contested case hearing to the Commissioners for their consideration at a scheduled Commission meeting. Unless the application is directly referred to a contested case hearing, the executive director will mail the response to comments along with notification of Commission meeting to everyone who submitted comments or is on the mailing list for this application. The Commission may only grant a request for a contested case hearing on issues the requestor submitted in their timely comments that were not subsequently withdrawn. If a hearing is granted, the subject of a hearing will be limited to disputed issues of fact or mixed questions of fact and law relating to relevant and material air quality concerns submitted during the comment period. Issues such as property values, noise, traffic safety, and zoning are outside of the Commission’s jurisdiction to address in this proceeding. MAILING LIST In addition to submitting public comments, you may ask to be placed on a mailing list for this application by sending a request to the Office of the Chief Clerk at the address below. Those on the mailing list will receive copies of future public notices (if any) mailed by the Office of the Chief Clerk for this application. AGENCY CONTACTS AND INFORMATION Public comments and requests must be submitted either electronically at www.tceq.texas.gov/about/comments.html, or in writing to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, Office of the Chief Clerk, MC-105, P.O. Box 13087, Austin, Texas 78711-3087. Please be aware that any contact information you provide, including your name, phone number, email address and physical address will become part of the agency’s public record. For more information about this permit application or the permitting process, please call the Public Education Program toll free at 1-800-687-4040. Si desea información en Español, puede llamar al 1-800-687-4040. Further information may also be obtained from Motiva Enterprises LLC, P.O. Box 4540, Houston, TX 77210-4540 or by calling Mrs. Naomi McElroy, Environmental Coordinator at (713) 427-3609. Notice Issuance Date: May 7, 2018
fwweekly.com
This application was submitted to the TCEQ on April 27, 2018. The application will be available for viewing and copying at the TCEQ central office, TCEQ Dallas/Fort Worth regional office, and the Grand Prairie Library, 901 Conover Street, Grand Prairie, Tarrant County, Texas beginning the first day of publication of this notice. The facility’s compliance file, if any exists, is available for public review in the Dallas/Fort Worth regional office of the TCEQ.
APPLICATION Motiva Enterprises LLC has applied to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) for renewal of Air Quality Permit Number 37200, which would authorize continued operation of the Motiva Fort Worth Terminal located at 3200 North Sylvania Avenue, Fort Worth, Tarrant County, Texas 76111. This link to an electronic map of the site or facility's general location is provided as a public courtesy and not part of the application or notice. For exact location, refer to application. http://www.tceq.texas.gov/assets/public/hb610/index.html?lat=32.80058&lng=97.30633&zoom=13&type=r. The existing facility is authorized to emit the following air contaminants: carbon monoxide, hazardous air pollutants, nitrogen oxides and organic compounds.
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APPLICATION Isomedix Operations, Inc., has applied to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) for renewal of Air Quality Permit Number 38690, which would authorize continued operation of a Sterilization Facility located at 1175 Isuzu Parkway, Grand Prairie, Tarrant County, Texas 75050. This link to an electronic map of the site or facility’s general location is provided as a public courtesy and not part of the application or notice. For exact location, refer to application. http:// www.tceq.texas.gov/assets/public/hb610/index.html?lat=32.799166&lng=-97.047222&zoom=13&type=r. The existing facility is authorized to emit the following air contaminants: carbon monoxide, hazardous air pollutants, nitrogen oxides, organic compounds, particulate matter including particulate matter with diameters of 10 microns or less and 2.5 microns or less and sulfur dioxide.
PERMIT NUMBER 37200
F O R T WO R T H W E E K LY
PERMIT NUMBER 38690
AIR PERMIT RENEWAL
63
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Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
The owners or lien holders are hereby notified that the vehicles listed below are being stored at AA Wrecker Service:
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*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.
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