How to Embroider Your Denim
We can’t promise it’ll look perfect, but it will be one of a kind.
Emily McCullar was hired as Texas Monthly’s front desk receptionist in 2014.She worked her way through the fact department before becoming a staff writer in 2019. She has written about celebrities, literature, music, film, politics, and history, and she likes to think of herself as a Matthew McConnoisseur. Her writing has also appeared in the New York Times, and New York and was longlisted in The Best American Sports Writing.
We can’t promise it’ll look perfect, but it will be one of a kind.
All the remaining Texans on the reality show lost last night…or did they?
The Uvalde native and patron saint of "alright" just keeps makin' videos.
Only one Texan remains on the show: Rudi, a pop singer from San Antonio, who gave a compelling performance of ‘Shallow.’
This week, we try our hand at window art—with a few stops and starts.
Don’t worry: there are only two Texans left.
Out this week, the actor's first album, ‘The Mother Stone,' is not unlike background music at a haunted circus.
In week three, the rules of the game change dramatically—and half the Texans left on the show go home.
Play with clay and learn about an important figure from Texas history.
In its second week, the spin-off reality show introduced new Texan musicians vying for love and fame.
These Lone Star lures catch the eye as much as they catch fish.
By Emily McCullar and Pete Robbins
The spinoff reality show features plenty of musicians from the Lone Star State who are intent on finding love.
My up and down encounters with the brilliant, beloved, and very grouchy western novelist.
The actor's sincerity and tendency to ramble on about “livin’” brings joy during a trying moment.
Brighten up your living room with a homemade Texas floral arrangement.
During these strange and difficult times, crafting can perhaps help assuage anxiety.
The beloved band released a song and an accompanying video this week.
By Dan Solomon, Cat Cardenas and Emily McCullar
The presidential candidate thinks ”as scared as a cat at a dog pound” is a thing that Texans say. So we’ve got a few more for him.
The internet was once again confounded by the Katy native’s Texas accent, with some thinking it wasn’t sincere. The internet is wrong.
'Briarpatch,' a new show on USA Network, portrays a West Texas rarely seen on TV.
I spent some quality time with those decorated cedar trees along Loop 360 to see if I could get in the holiday spirit.
The country star's Christmas show premieres later this week.
’The Immortal Alamo’ says much about the silent film era, and how San Antonio could have been Hollywood.
Rick Perry says Trump is ”chosen by God.” But what if Perry were chosen to write the newest book of the Bible?
’21 Bridges’ won’t be the film to get him there.
The stories, the traditions, and the deeper meanings of the boots in their lives.
Our hero’s odyssey ends where it started: with him.
Vampires and private investigators loom large in the Houston rapper's spooky new show.
In her third book, ‘The Weil Conjectures,’ the Austin author revisits the equations of her youth.
The band’s guitarist discusses how his Wimberley roots informed the band’s latest release ’Two Hands.’
Hundreds of Whataburger meals, tons of tacos, and other staples to consider before this astronomically expensive meal.
Katy native Renée Zellweger is getting rave reviews for her portrayal of Judy Garland, but biopics are tricky to nail.
Featuring Selena, a Golden Girls gospel remix, and more.
A debate about the last episode of the newly-revived series, which left many fans unhappy.
By Dan Solomon and Emily McCullar
Bienvenidos de Miami.
The film, which premiered at SXSW, shares a nuanced perspective of the man behind the leopard-print thong.
The actor (and Elkhart native) and the director discuss physicality, small-town masculinity, and how a lobotomy is a metaphor for going to the movies.
The film, directed by Longview native John Lee Hancock, focuses on the legend of Texas’s most famous bank robbers—and our collective fascination with them.
Director Riley Stearns, a Pflugerville native, talks about pairing silliness with a violent vision of what it means to be a man.
Our hero returns to his old stomping grounds in anticipation of the big Oprah interview.
And no, he has has no idea what will happen in season four, either.
Plus reflections on the world's largest hairball, in Garden City.
Our hero reflects on hot dogs, ‘The Odyssey,’ and a killer Replacements track.
A brief primer so the next time you get an invite to your buddy’s deer stand, you won’t booger things up.
"We both watch the blood and steam spill out into the winter air. At this point, it is not unusual for at least one of us to cry."
Hairdresser and local celebrity Karlos Anzoategui, known as Karlos With a K, on throwing the most memorable parties in town.
To some of our writers, Wes Anderson is in the doghouse.
In this exclusive premiere, Jackie Venson agreed to indulge us.
Tye Sheridan's emotional vulnerability anchors the film, which premiered at SXSW.
At his SXSW panel, the journalist discussed how Texas has changed—and how he sees its future.