Plus: A new survey shows Trump’s most controversial policy proposals have support in Texas, a fiery train crash outside Amarillo, and a fight over plastic bags in Laredo could have statewide implications.
Airbnb and HomeAway get sucked into the latest battle of Austin v. the sharing economy.
Plus: The DMV makes controversial changes to its registration fees, two Houston law schools scuffle over their similar names, and Fort Hood soldiers finally have the right to bare their arms.
Three years after Wendy Davis’s filibuster, Texas’s anti-abortion law is struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court.
Plus: Texit talk heats up, Johnny Manziel’s downward spiral continues, and a Texan faces billions of dollars in fines over a pile of wood.
Plus: No charges for the cop who body-slammed a girl at a McKinney pool party, and new census data shows the next generation of Texans is incredibly diverse.
Plus: The Big 12 turns its eye on Baylor, Dez Bryant gets sued by a Texas senator, and the biggest Medicare fraud crackdown in history takes down a whole bunch of Texans.
The Freedom From Religion Foundation demands their removal citing the First Amendment, but do the signs really make non-believers feel unwelcome?
Plus: Dallas throws shade at Cleveland , a Texas-based company allegedly swindled top athletes, and Willie Nelson’s weed company is now hiring.
Plus: Senator Cornyn’s gun bill flops, deer breeder drama, and a new study says Texas stinks for kids.
Gloves INTL might take no prisoners, but it seems that they've become prisoners themselves.
Plus: State Democrats gather in San Antonio, Texas braces for an oil well cleanup crisis, and Art Briles settles with Baylor.
You’re either with Trump or you’re against him. Unless you’re pretending to be with or against him.
Plus: Your daily Trumpdate, a win for refugee resettlement in Texas, and police think they’ve caught the infamous Austin Rock-Thrower.
Plus: Mark Cuban does a good thing, more lawsuits for Baylor, and the gag order is finally lifted from the Twin Peaks shootout case.
Plus: A scary shooting at an Amarillo Walmart, Kerry Max Cook fires his lawyers, and gnomes invade a North Texas town.
Powerful people at Baylor reportedly want Art Briles back, Trump’s Texas itinerary becomes a little clearer, and tiny houses are tearing apart a small West Texas town.
It can be yours for a cool $6 million.
The lawyer-turned-country singer tells her story in a jaunty fashion.
Dan Patrick’s loose Twitter fingers land him in hot water, the state scraps tainted STAAR test results, and Baylor begins to move forward.
Austinites take to Facebook to find rides in the absence of Uber and Lyft, Texas takes on Delaware, and a man says he was choked for smiling during his mugshot.
Uber and Lyft take their fight to the state legislature, a fired police officer won’t face criminal charges after fatally shooting an unarmed African-American teen and Rick Perry is officially ruled out of the Trump veepstakes.
You know, when they actually get around to it.
According to this leaked email, the linguistic purity of our newscasts is at stake.
Ted Cruz actually does something in the Senate, the Travis County Republicans prepare for their controversial new chairman, and Austin gets serious about rock throwers.
Austin-based B. Mitchell Cator seems to have lifted material from other writers, including Texas Monthly's Skip Hollandsworth.
The last 9-11 rescue dog passes away in Houston, Trump makes plans for a Texas trip, and the smallest school district in the state hopes to stay that way.
More than twenty years after she was convicted, Cacy is totally cleared of her uncle’s murder.
The drummers for the Old 97’s, the Polyphonic Spree, and the Deathray Davies unite—on different instruments—for a new album.
Kerry Max Cook, a subject of The Exonerated, is finally exonerated.
Johnny Football gets sued for a destructive party, Texas's inappropriate teacher-student relationship epidemic gets worse and police make an arrest in the tragic murder of an 11-year old boy.
Has a selfie ever been more contentious?
The aftermath of the recent rape scandal at Baylor is shocking, but the fallout isn't a first for the Waco school.
Flooding claims the lives of at least five soldiers following a tragic accident at Fort Hood, Greg Abbott has a Trump University scandal on his hands, and National Gun Violence Awareness Day sparks a familiar debate.
It’s possible to be both a hero and a liar.
Abbott deals a blow to state agencies who like to keep former employees on the payroll, the disturbing details of another improper teacher-student relationship are revealed in Houston, and ex-Baylor president Ken Starr resigns as chancellor.
After Heard filed for divorce—and a restraining order—Depp’s friends have declared that she’s 'blackmailing' him.
Dan Patrick plunges deeper into the bathroom battle, a baby switched at birth finally returns home to Texas, and more details emerge after a deadly shooting in Houston.
The country bros release 19 songs recorded during the ”Hold My Beer And Watch This” tour.
The trail ends for a Texas baseball legend, deadly floods sweep through the state, and a rare gorilla born and bred in Texas is shot and killed.
An organized walk through Houston helps spark a conversation about making the city more pedestrian-friendly.
Big changes at Baylor amid a sexual assault scandal, a Texan takes home the spelling bee championship, and the state’s mental health hospitals need a $1 billion upgrade.
The 171-year-old university fired its football coach and demoted its famous President today. Will that be enough?
Texas officially begins its battle against transgender friendly restrooms in schools, rock-throwers plague a stretch of interstate in Austin, and a young Texan steals the show at the national spelling bee.
A church-state battle over a cross in a park has come to a close, but both sides are claiming victory.
By default, is UNT America’s college? No, but this is still a big deal.
Ken Starr isn't going anywhere (for now), the State Board of Education dodges a bullet, and a water crisis nears its end in Corpus Christi.
As the Democratic primary winds down, speculation on who frontrunner Hillary Clinton might select as a running mate ramps up—and there are some surprising names on the list.
A new steer starts his reign as UT celebrates 100 years of Bevo, Texas’s voter ID law has a big day in court, and a proposed Mexican-American heritage textbook is more than a little racist.
That’s one way to do outreach to voters who may feel alienated by the presumptive Republican nominee for President.