The county’s decision to open eight locations for round-the-clock early voting drew workers too busy to vote during the day—and others eager to send a message about voter suppression.
In his new teaching role at the University of Houston, the straight-talking music mogul promises students a primer on success and celebrity.
His friends, both Black and white, confront the reality of police brutality in their quiet hometown.
The Dallas salon owner who rose to fame for defying shutdown orders is still campaigning to “reopen” Texas.
As COVID-19 spreads, some Hispanic San Antonians are relying on sage, psychics, and prayer.
Terence O'Rourke has spent a decade warning officials that a storm making landfall directly in Galveston Bay could be much worse than even Harvey.
Six months ago, Nuro was still making a name for itself. Now, thousands of Houstonians rely on the autonomous delivery service to help them avoid getting the coronavirus.
Pressed by Texas Monthly, the department confirmed that Nicholas Gebhart was the officer who fired a beanbag round at the 16-year-old, leaving him with brain damage.
The musicians in Midland, a popular country band, have entered the conversation about gentrification in the worst possible way.
The message arrives at a time when anxious Houston teachers are deciding whether to return to classrooms as COVID-19 surges.
Facing a runoff to become the GOP candidate for a congressional district south of Houston, Wall is putting her personal wealth—but not much shoe leather—into her campaign.
As public health experts warn that ICUs in the city might soon be overwhelmed with coronavirus patients, shops and restaurants remain packed.
Taye Johnson has been demonstrating outside Austin police headquarters with a message informed by his own service.
They thought they’d be treating heat exhaustion this weekend. Then police started firing rubber bullets and beanbag rounds.
A month ago Philip Archibald was a frustrated small business owner locked inside his Dallas home. Now he commands a heavily armed network of anti-lockdown vigilantes, some with extremist leanings.
Karan Janes was trying to keep her mom safe when she placed her inside a Brenham elder care facility, but then it was struck by a major coronavirus outbreak.
After Greg Abbott's executive order deemed the industry essential, workers have been struggling to abide by health protocols.
Two Texas researchers believe they may already have one locked inside a Houston freezer.
A new study suggests that, even in communities with few confirmed cases, the coronavirus could be spreading much more quickly than people realize.
In Houston, officials say people are coming into more and more contact with otters, owls, and other animals.
The device they've designed has piqued the interest of government officials and large manufacturers hoping to address the coronavirus crisis.
In Houston’s adult nightclubs, with cash transactions and close contact, exotic dancers say they’re forced to choose between health and a paycheck.
A single case of COVID-19 was all it took to bring Houston's favorite celebration to its knees.
The newly opened Sesh Coworking arrives as the number of female entrepreneurs in the city is on the rise.
The city, which trained for a flu pandemic as recently as November, is ground zero for military medicine.
One of the Bayou City’s biggest immigrant gateways, southwest Houston, is a dangerous and daunting place for pedestrians.
Coming soon to a Texas highway near you: self-driving semis.
A new report finds that, when transportation costs are factored in, Texas’s biggest metros aren’t the bargain they often claim to be.
What happens when pain relief is turned into YouTube entertainment?