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Build, Baby, Build
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In the early morning hours of Sept. 29, 2021, Benjamin Elliott, then 17 years old, walked into his twin sister Meghan’s bedroom. It was something he had done hundreds of times. But on this morning, he had a knife in his hand and stabbed her in the neck while she was asleep. He would later say he was sleepwalking. When he realized what he had done, he immediately called 911.
“I just killed my sister,” Benjamin told the emergency operator. “Oh my God … I thought it was a dream.”
Benjamin’s parents Kathy and Michael Elliott faced a heartbreaking and unimaginable reality: their beloved daughter, Meghan, was dead, and her adoring twin brother — their son — was accused of intentionally murdering her. They could not imagine why, and neither could investigators. Correspondent Erin Moriarty investigates the extraordinary case of “The Boy Who Killed His Twin,” for the 38th season premiere of “48 Hours,” airing Saturday, Sept. 27 at 10/9c on CBS and streaming on Paramount+.
“What makes you so sure that you stabbed your sister while you were sleepwalking?” Moriarty asked Benjamin Elliott in a jailhouse interview earlier this year.
“I would never have done that,” he replied. “I loved her. … She was my best and closest friend.”
Kathy Elliott
Benjamin’s family, relatives and closest friends agreed. “He and Meghan are so close, you could never picture anything bad happening between them,” Drue Whittecar, a longtime family friend of the Elliotts, told Moriarty.
“And how did she feel about Ben?” Moriarty asked.
“She loved him,” Whittecar replied. “She looked up to him. … You would see her walk up next to him when she would feel uncomfortable and just kinda stand by him.”
Moriarty also interviewed the prosecutors, Megan Long and Maroun Koutani.
“Were you able to find any evidence that there was a problem with … these twins?” Moriarty asked. “No,” Long replied. “We definitely looked into it and tried.”
So how could such a seemingly loving relationship between the twins end in an unfathomable tragedy?
That’s what Benjamin’s parents — Kathy, a senior manager with the Girl Scouts of America, and Michael, a stay-at-home dad — and their eldest daughter, Elizabeth, wanted to know.
The Elliotts initially feared that a mental health crisis was the cause. But it turned out that Benjamin, and some close relatives of the Elliotts, had a history of sleepwalking. In fact, a boyhood friend of the Elliott twins told their parents about a slumber party years earlier, when they found Benjamin eating a donut on a couch — while he was asleep.
Benjamin’s defense attorneys, Cary Hart and Wes Rucker, asked Dr. Jerald Simmons, a neurologist and sleep disorder expert, to examine Benjamin. Simmons was initially skeptical. But after interviewing Benjamin, and hearing about his and his family’s history of sleepwalking, Simmons conducted two sleep studies on him, with the teenager hooked up to devices that monitored his every movement. Simmons went from skeptic to believer.
He determined that Benjamin fell quickly into what is known as slow-wave sleep, or when people can sleepwalk. That’s important because on the night Meghan was killed, Benjamin spent hours scrolling the web on his cell phone, except for a 24-minute period when his phone was inactive. Simmons believes that Benjamin was sleepwalking during that period, and unintentionally stabbed Meghan to death.
“Do you believe Ben killed his sister without even realizing he was doing it in his sleep?” Moriarty asked Simmons.
“Yes,” he replied. “Ben definitely killed his sister. He did it, there’s no question, he’s the one that had the knife and he stabbed her. But … he didn’t do this voluntarily. There was no motivation.”
Surprisingly, sleepwalking has proved to be a successful — albeit rare — criminal defense. For example, a Canadian man, Kenneth Parks, was accused of driving 14 miles to his mother-in-law’s home, where he killed her. He claimed he was sleepwalking the entire time and was acquitted. And North Carolina father Joseph Mitchell, accused of strangling one of his children, said he was sleepwalking during the killing. He was also found not guilty.
The Elliotts were relieved, and frightened, at finally having an explanation. “It’s scary as hell,” Kathy Elliott said, adding, “if that can happen to us, then that could happen to anybody with a sleep problem.”
They hoped Simmons’ findings would end the investigation into Benjamin. After all, prosecutors admitted they could find no reason for the fatal stabbing.
But prosecutors were still not convinced. They questioned Benjamin’s account of that night, his demeanor during an interrogation with a homicide detective and that he said he stabbed his sister once. That was important because the medical examiner determined Meghan had two wounds to her neck — and one was four inches deep and severed key arteries, which prosecutors believed should have left blood spatter at the scene.
Despite receiving Simmons’ findings, prosecutors charged Benjamin with intentionally murdering his twin, and earlier this year, Benjamin stood trial.
The Elliotts had lost their daughter. No one knew why. Now, they faced losing their son.
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A Texas man was executed Thursday for murdering his girlfriend’s 13-month-old daughter in what prosecutors described as a brutal, 30-hour “exorcism.”
Blaine Milam, 35, was convicted of killing 13-month-old Amora Carson in December 2008 after attempting to expel a demon from her body inside his trailer in Rusk County, east of Dallas, according to the Associated Press.
He was pronounced dead by lethal injection at 6:40 p.m. at the state penitentiary in Huntsville.
The Associated Press reported that prison officials said Milam appeared anxious when he arrived at the Huntsville Unit prison early Thursday afternoon, adding he said he had a headache. He was then placed into a small holding cell adjacent to the death chamber.
TEXAS MAN TO BE EXECUTED FOR ‘EXORCISM’ MURDER OF GIRLFRIEND’S TODDLER DAUGHTER
This undated booking photo provided by the Texas Department of Criminal Justice shows Texas death row inmate Blaine Milam. ((Texas Department of Criminal Justice via AP))
When asked if he wished to make a final statement, Milam thanked his supporters and the prison chaplaincy for opening its faith-based programs to death row inmates.
“If any of you would like to see me again, I implore all of you, no matter who you are, to accept Jesus Christ as your Lord and Savior, and we will meet again,” Milam said from the death chamber gurney. “I love you all. Bring me home, Jesus.”
The lethal dose of the sedative pentobarbital started flowing into his right hand and left arm at 6:19 p.m. local time.
The AP reported that Milam grunted and gasped once before snoring quietly. Nearly two minutes later, all movement and sounds stopped and Milam was pronounced dead.
ALABAMA INMATE’S EXECUTION STAYED TO DETERMINE IF HE IS COMPETENT ENOUGH TO BE PUT TO DEATH

Milam, A Texas death row inmate was set to die by lethal injection Tuesday, Jan. 15, 2019 for killing his girlfriend’s 13-month-old daughter during a torturous ordeal the couple had said was part of an “exorcism” to expel a demon from the child’s body. A Texas appeals court granted a stay in his execution Monday, Jan. 14, 2019. ((Texas Department of Criminal Justice via AP))
Prosecutors said Milam beat the toddler with a hammer, then strangled, bit and mutilated her.
“Amora was subjected to unspeakable violence over the course of 30 hours,” prosecutors wrote in court filings, noting the child suffered skull fractures, broken bones and dozens of bite marks.
Milam maintained his innocence over the years, though his appeals were repeatedly denied. He claimed his then-girlfriend, Jesseca Carson, insisted the child was possessed and that he only followed her lead.

An execution chamber in a Texas prison. (AP)
Carson was later convicted of capital murder and sentenced to life without parole.
His attorneys argued he should be spared, citing unreliable bite-mark evidence and questions about his intellectual disability. His execution was scheduled in 2019 and 2021 but delayed as courts reviewed those claims.
The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals ruled the execution should proceed, and the Board of Pardons and Paroles denied his clemency request.
The AP reported that Milam’s trial was moved to Montgomery County, more than 140 miles south, because of intense publicity.
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Texas remains the nation’s leading death-penalty state.
Fox News Digital’s Christina Shaw and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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One day after charges were filed at the state level against two brothers from Texas who are accused of kidnapping and robbing a Minnesota family, federal officials announced their own charges against the duo.
Acting U.S. Attorney Joseph Thompson announced the new charges Thursday. He says 23-year-old Raymond Christian Garcia and 24-year-old Isiah Angelo Garcia each face a charge of kidnapping for an incident last Friday in Grant, Minnesota, where a total of $8 million in cryptocurrency was stolen.
The ordeal lasted about nine hours, starting shortly before 8 a.m. Friday, when the victim was ambushed by the brothers while taking the garbage out. Documents say they were each holding a gun at that time.
During the kidnapping, court documents allege one of the victims was forced to log into his cryptocurrency account at gunpoint by Isiah Garcia and transferred $36,000 to an unknown account. At the same time, federal court documents say the brother was on the phone with someone who alerted him to another account.
That’s when the complaint says that the same victim was forced to drive to the family’s cabin with Isiah Garcia, where another hard drive-style wallet was located. The victim was again forced to log in and transfer additional funds to an unknown account.
While the victim drove to and from the cabin with Isiah Garcia, Raymond Garcia stayed behind with the two other family members. He allegedly held them hostage, zip-tied and lying on the floor, with an AR-15-style rifle. That was after the brothers woke them up at gunpoint.
Authorities say both of the brothers are expected to make their initial appearances in federal court on Thursday. Meanwhile, at the state level, each brother is charged with three counts of using a firearm to kidnap a person, three counts of first-degree assault during a burglary with a firearm and one count of first-degree robbery using a firearm.
Once he was arrested, federal authorities say Isiah Garcia confessed to driving from Texas to Minnesota with his brother, holding the family hostage at gunpoint and forcing the victim to drive them to a cabin. During a search of their home, authorities say phones, computers, gags, clothing and gun cases were found, but no cryptocurrency.
FBI Special Agent in Charge Alvin Winston Sr. called the incident “brazen,” adding his office will work with other law enforcement partners in the state, in Texas and at the federal level.
Activity from law enforcement agencies searching for the brothers last week caused Mahtomedi High School to cancel its homecoming football game. Bloomington’s Kennedy High School on Monday forfeited its scheduled game against Mahtomedi.
“A violent kidnapping that stole $8 million and silenced a homecoming game is not just a crime. It is a blow to the sense of safety of everyone in Minnesota. This is not normal. Minnesotans should not accept wild violence and thievery as normal. Every Minnesotan deserves to live in peace and a life unaffected by rampant crime,” said Thompson.
Note: The above video aired on Sept. 24, 2025.
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Krystal Frasier
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Have dating apps lost their spark? About 80 million people use them, according to an eHarmony survey, but a Forbes Health study found most people feel “emotionally, mentally, or physically exhausted” by them.
Dating apps aren’t bad, but the highs and lows that come with trying to find your perfect match can take a toll on your mental health. A study published in “Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking” found that excessive dating app use is linked to higher anxiety, depression and even lower self-esteem. That’s not how you want to feel before a date!
The causes include decision fatigue when those endless profiles start to blur together and genuine connections feel harder to spot. Also, there’s something that happens called intermittent reinforcement, when those occasional matches trigger dopamine spikes in the brain. It causes you to chase the high of more matches and messages, instead of a deeper connection. It can all be very exhausting and emotionally draining.
There are ways to enjoy a healthier digital dating experience:
Prioritize quality over quantity: Rather than chasing endless matches, focus on building one or two meaningful conversations at a time.
Practice self-compassion: Remember that dating, especially in today’s digital-first world, can be emotionally taxing. Be gentle with yourself through the highs and lows of it.
The healthiest way to date today may not be to swipe faster or smarter but to swipe more mindfully, recognizing that real emotional health and meaningful connections are the priority.
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Nicole Clark, PhD
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Have dating apps lost their spark? About 80 million people use them, according to an eHarmony survey, but a Forbes Health study found most people feel “emotionally, mentally, or physically exhausted” by them.
Dating apps aren’t bad, but the highs and lows that come with trying to find your perfect match can take a toll on your mental health. A study published in “Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking” found that excessive dating app use is linked to higher anxiety, depression and even lower self-esteem. That’s not how you want to feel before a date!
The causes include decision fatigue when those endless profiles start to blur together and genuine connections feel harder to spot. Also, there’s something that happens called intermittent reinforcement, when those occasional matches trigger dopamine spikes in the brain. It causes you to chase the high of more matches and messages, instead of a deeper connection. It can all be very exhausting and emotionally draining.
There are ways to enjoy a healthier digital dating experience:
Prioritize quality over quantity: Rather than chasing endless matches, focus on building one or two meaningful conversations at a time.
Practice self-compassion: Remember that dating, especially in today’s digital-first world, can be emotionally taxing. Be gentle with yourself through the highs and lows of it.
The healthiest way to date today may not be to swipe faster or smarter but to swipe more mindfully, recognizing that real emotional health and meaningful connections are the priority.
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Nicole Clark, PhD
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A Texas man is facing execution on Thursday for murdering his girlfriend’s 13-month-old daughter during what prosecutors called a brutal, 30-hour “exorcism.”
Blaine Milam, 35, was convicted in the murder of Amora Carson in December 2008 when he attempted to expel a demon from the child’s body in his trailer located in Rusk County, east of Dallas, according to The Associated Press.
Prosecutors said Milam savagely beat the toddler with a hammer, and strangled, bit and mutilated her.
ALABAMA INMATE’S EXECUTION STAYED TO DETERMINE IF HE IS COMPETENT ENOUGH TO BE PUT TO DEATH
This undated booking photo provided by the Texas Department of Criminal Justice shows Texas death row inmate Blaine Milam. ((Texas Department of Criminal Justice via AP))
“Amora was subjected to unspeakable violence over the course of 30 hours,” prosecutors wrote in court filings, remarking the child suffered skull fractures, broken bones and dozens of bite marks.
Milam has made claims of innocence throughout the years since his conviction and has had appeals denied.
He has made statements saying that his then-girlfriend, Jesseca Carson, was responsible, alleging she insisted the child was possessed by a demon and that he only followed her lead.
Carson was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to life in prison without parole.

(Texas Department of Criminal Justice via AP)
EX-BOYFRIEND OF MURDERED MINNESOTA MOM MADELINE KINGSBURY SENTENCED TO LIFE IN PRISON
Milam’s attorneys argued that he should be spared, claiming unreliable bite-mark evidence and questions about his intellectual disability.
His execution was previously set for 2019 and 2021, but was delayed while courts reviewed the claims.
The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals concluded that the sentence should proceed, and the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles denied his claim for clemency.

Milam is facing execution on Thursday for murdering his girlfriend’s 13-month-old daughter during what prosecutors called a brutal, 30-hour “exorcism.” (AP/File)
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The Associated Press reported that the trial was moved south to Montgomery County over 140 miles away because of intense publicity surrounding the case.
Texas is currently the nation’s leading death penalty state.
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Camp Mystic, a long-running private Christian girls’ summer camp where 27 girls and counselors died in Texas flooding on the Fourth of July, will reopen next year, according to the camp’s operators.
The reopening will take place in conjunction with the camp’s 100th anniversary and one year after the deadly flash floods that swept through the facility along the Guadalupe River in Kerr County this summer.
The summer camp made the announcement on Monday in an email to families enrolled in the 2025 camp. Some families have criticized the camp over its safety measures and preparedness in the wake of the tragedy.
‘RIVER OF ANGELS’ MEMORIAL RISES IN KERRVILLE AS FLOOD VICTIMS REMEMBERED
Clothes, trunks and personal belongings from Camp Mystic campers are strewn outside a flood-damaged dormitory in the wake of the July 2025 flooding. (REUTERS/Umit Bektas)
Leaders said they will reopen Camp Mystic Cypress Lake, a sister site opened in 2020 that was not destroyed by the flood. The original campus, which is located along the Guadalupe River and suffered “devastating damage,” will remain closed and is not expected to reopen next year, officials added.
“As we work to finalize plans, we will do so in a way that is mindful of those we have lost,” the letter said, according to The Associated Press.
The owners said they will be designing and building a memorial “dedicated to the lives of the campers and counselors lost on July 4th,” according to ABC News.
“We hope this space will serve as a place of reflection and remembrance of these beautiful girls,” the camp’s statement read. “We continue to pray for the grieving families and all those who lost loved ones.”
The letter also said leaders are working with engineers and other experts to determine how the camp will implement safety changes required under newly passed state bills.
Fox News Digital has reached out to Camp Mystic for comment.

Debris litters the entrance of Camp Mystic’s riverfront lodge after devastating flash floods swept through the Texas girls’ summer camp on July 4, 2025. (Ronaldo Schemidt/AFP via Getty Images)
FAITH BRINGS LIGHT TO DEVASTATED TEXAS TOWN AFTER DEADLY FLOODING DISASTER
The news has drawn a mixed reaction: some family members of the deceased strongly oppose the planned reopening, while alumni and the Eastland family, who own the property, have expressed support.
Cici Steward, whose 8-year-old daughter, Cile, remains missing, said, “The truth is, Camp Mystic failed our daughters.”
“For my family, these months have felt like an eternity. For the camp, it seems like nothing more than a brief pause before business as usual,” she said in a statement Tuesday to The New York Times. “Camp Mystic is pressing ahead with reopening, even if it means inviting girls to swim in the same river that may potentially still hold my daughter’s body.”
Other parents said they had received almost no other communication from the camp in the months after the flood, then were suddenly notified by email that Mystic planned to reopen.
Blake Bonner, whose 9-year-old daughter, Lila, died in the flooding, told the Times that the families were not consulted about, and did not approve, the memorial the camp announced.

Rescue crews patrol the Guadalupe River near the heavily damaged Camp Mystic campus in Kerr County, Texas. The river rose more than 15 feet in an hour. (REUTERS/Sergio Flores)
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The campers and counselors were killed when the fast-rising floodwaters roared through a low-lying area of the summer camp before dawn on July 4, 2025.
The destructive flooding killed at least 136 people in the region, prompting widespread criticism of local preparedness.
County leaders were asleep or out of town, the AP reported. The head of Camp Mystic had been tracking the weather beforehand, but it’s unclear whether he saw an urgent warning from the National Weather Service that had triggered an emergency alert to phones in the area, a spokesperson for the camp’s operators said in the immediate aftermath.
The camp, established in 1926, did not evacuate and was hit hard when the river rose from 14 feet to 29.5 feet within 60 minutes.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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National, state and local leaders are condemning the violence and offering prayers after a deadly shooting at a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) field office in Dallas on Wednesday that left at least two people killed, one critically wounded and the shooter dead from a self-inflicted gunshot, according to authorities.
Dallas police said officers responded to an assist officer call at the facility around 6:40 a.m. The suspect fired at the federal government building from an adjacent building, police said.
No law enforcement officers or ICE agents were injured. All three victims shot were detainees of the facility, CBS News confirmed.
The facility is located along I-35E, just southwest of Dallas Love Field Airport.
Vice President JD Vance posted on X:
“The obsessive attack on law enforcement, particularly ICE, must stop. I’m praying for everyone hurt in this attack and for their families.”
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem wrote:
“There was a shooting this morning at the Dallas @ICEgov Detention Facility. Details are still emerging but we can confirm there were multiple injuries and fatalities. The shooter is deceased by a self-inflicted gun shot wound. While we don’t know motive yet, we know that our ICE law enforcement is facing unprecedented violence against them. It must stop.”
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott posted:
“Texas fully supports ICE 100%. Both the Texas Dept. of Public Safety & Texas National Guard work closely with ICE. This assassination will NOT slow our arrest, detention, & deportation of illegal immigrants. We will work with ICE & the Dallas Police Dept. to get to the bottom of the assassin’s motive. We will offer ICE additional support to assist their operations.”
Sen. John Cornyn called the shooting “horrific,” writing:
“While law enforcement investigates, I am keeping everyone impacted in my prayers. My staff have been in touch with federal & local officials in Dallas, and we will make sure all resources are brought to bear in the investigation. Thank you to all first responders who rushed to the scene.”
Sen. Ted Cruz also weighed in, saying:
“My team and I are closely monitoring the situation at the ICE Detention Facility in Dallas. We are praying for the swift recovery of those injured, and we are deeply grateful to the brave first responders who rushed to the scene.”
Rep. Marc Veasey said his office is monitoring developments:
“My office is aware of the developing situation and will continue to monitor the situation. We are keeping the victims in prayer and will update the North Texas community as we get news on their conditions and learn more about the suspect.”
Dallas County Judge Clay Jenkins posted:
“Please join me in prayer for the injured and their families from this morning’s active shooter incident at the ICE facility in Dallas. Violence and terror is never the answer to anything.”
The Fort Worth Police Department also released a statement condemning the attack:
“The violence that occurred in Dallas, TX this morning is uncalled for and moments like this are deeply disturbing as it creates more division in our community at a time when the focus needs to be on how we can come together. We continue to ask our community that if you see something, say something.”
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Sergio Candido
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The Southeastern Conference announced league matchups for the next four years Tuesday, including designating three annual — not permanent — opponents for each of its 16 teams. The nine-game slates retain several traditional rivalries and renew some old ones.
And there are no more lengthy waits to play everyone.
The new format begins next year and runs through 2029, with the SEC having the option to tweak it every four years to maintain competitive balance.
Each team will play three opponents annually and rotate through the remaining 12. The setup ensures that rotating teams square off every other year and every team plays at every SEC venue at least once over a four-year span.
Georgia, for example, will play at Alabama in 2026 and host the Crimson Tide in 2028. The Bulldogs will then host LSU in 2027 and travel to Baton Rouge in 2029.
Fans are sure to gripe about the loss of some traditional series. Alabama-LSU (played every year since 1964) and Florida-LSU (played every year since 1971) will no longer be annual events. But those teams will meet every other year, home and away, under the new format.
Geography and competitive fairness were factored into the decisions, but not as prominently as maintaining long-standing rivalries like the Iron Bowl, the Egg Bowl, the Red River Rivalry, the Magnolia Bowl, the Deep South’s Oldest Rivalry, the Third Saturday in October and the World’s Largest Outdoor Cocktail Party.
The league also renewed rivalries that had been largely on hiatus since conference realignment. But the recent addition of former Big 12 heavyweights Oklahoma and Texas have a few back in the mix.
The Lone Star Shootout featuring Texas and Texas A&M, a game held every year between 1915 and 2011, will now be played annually. So will the Missouri-Oklahoma series. which was played nearly every year between 1910 and 1995. Same for Arkansas-Texas, which ended in 1991 after a 60-year run.
Here are each school’s annual opponents through 2029:
Alabama: Auburn, Mississippi State, Tennessee.
Arkansas: LSU, Missouri, Texas.
Auburn: Alabama, Georgia, Vanderbilt.
Florida: Georgia (neutral site), Kentucky, South Carolina.
Georgia: Auburn, Florida (neutral), South Carolina.
Kentucky: Florida, South Carolina, Tennessee.
LSU: Arkansas, Ole Miss, Texas A&M.
Mississippi State: Alabama, Ole Miss, Vanderbilt.
Missouri: Arkansas, Oklahoma, Texas A&M.
Oklahoma: Missouri, Ole Miss, Texas (neutral).
Ole Miss: LSU, Mississippi State, Oklahoma.
South Carolina: Florida, Georgia, Kentucky.
Tennessee: Alabama, Kentucky, Vanderbilt.
Texas: Arkansas, Oklahoma (neutral), Texas A&M.
Texas A&M: LSU, Missouri, Texas.
Vanderbilt: Auburn, Mississippi State, Tennessee.
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Less than three months after the devastating and deadly flooding in the Texas Hill Country, Camp Mystic plans to reopen part of its camp.
The camp’s owners announced plans to reopen the Cypress Lake location, which is separate from the part of the camp that flooded in July, killing 27 girls and counselors.
In an email sent Monday to the families of the victims and obtained by the Associated Press, the camp said when it reopens, its planning and procedures will follow the “requirements of the camp safety legislation you bravely championed.” About an hour later, the camp sent an email to the rest of the families announcing the decision.
The email states, “We are not only rebuilding the cabins and trails, but also a place where laughter, friendship and spiritual growth will continue to flourish.”
The camp also announced that it will build a memorial to the girls who died in the flooding.
“In the memorial’s design, we will strive to capture the beauty, kindness and grace they all shared, while focusing on the joy they carried and will always inspire in us all,” the email said.
The announcement means that Camp Mystic Cypress Lake, a sister site that opened to campers in 2020, will reopen next summer. But the 99-year-old Camp Mystic Guadalupe was too damaged to open next summer, according to the camp.
The email said leaders are “working with engineers and other experts to determine how we will implement the changes required” under the newly passed bills.
The campers and counselors were swept to their deaths when fast-rising floodwaters of the Guadalupe River roared through the girls’ summer camp in a low-lying area known as flash flood alley. All told, the destructive flooding in Texas on the Fourth of July killed at least 136 people and washed away homes and vehicles.
Camp Mystic parents successfully pushed for Texas to pass bills aimed at preventing similar tragedies. The measures aim to improve the safety of children’s camps by prohibiting cabins in dangerous parts of flood zones and requiring camp operators to develop detailed emergency plans, to train workers and to install and maintain emergency warning systems. One allocates $240 million from the state’s rainy day fund for disaster relief, along with money for warning sirens and improved weather forecasting.
“It will hurt my family forever that, for reasons I still do not know, these protections were not in place nor thought out thoroughly for my daughter and the rest of the girls here,” he said. “Please pass this bill, protect our kids and do not let their deaths be in vain.”
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FORT COLLINS — CSU ranks 99th nationally in passing (197.3 yards per game) and No. 1 in throwing stuff against the wall.
Are the Rams a power run team? An Air Raid team? Pro style? Spread? Multiple? All of the above? None of the above?
Jay Norvell, the head coach, needs to re-assign Jay Norvell, the offensive coordinator, before it’s too late. Close games are turning chaotic at Canvas Stadium — only not in a good way. The Rams are tied for 127th out of 136 FBS programs in penalties per game (8.7) and 121st in penalty yards (76.3).
You wait too long to yank a cold hand (Brayden Fowler-Nicolosi) at quarterback against UTSA. You put in a hot hand (Jackson Brousseau), who slings you back into a tie game, 17-17, with 29 seconds left … only to take that tying point off the board and take said “hot hand” out of the contest.
Then you ask your third-string QB, a runner by trade (Tahj Bullock) who hasn’t completed a throw all year, to come off the bench cold, sprint right and pass you to a victory?
“That was one where I felt like that was our best chance to win, right there and right now,” Norvell explained Monday after watching film of CSU’s 17-16 home loss to the Roadrunners. “And so, I don’t regret it. I don’t. We needed to execute it better.”
I don’t know, man.
To be clear: CSU football is in a far, far better place than at this time four years ago. Daz Ball was a disaster from the jump.
It was also, in hindsight, a hysterically low bar to clear. And instead of consolidating the fan base in Year 4, Norvell has become Fort Fun’s Rorschach test.
True, his Rams are a two-point conversion away from being 2-1. A Bullock completion from rolling into a winnable home matchup against Washington State (2-2), coming off two Houdini escapes.
They’re also an absolute refereeing gift vs. Northern Colorado away from being 0-3 and forcing athletic director John Weber to pass the hat among donors at warp speed.
Either way, Saturday night against the Cougars has turned into must-see TV locally. Largely because it feels as if Wazzu just became a must-win contest.
It’s a too-darn-early referendum on what Norvell has built. And, more to the point, what he hasn’t.
Norvell’s predecessor, Steve Addazio, routinely embarrassed CSU at a time when the administration didn’t need any more help in that department. As soon as the Daz’s buyout dropped, ex-AD Joe Parker dropped the hammer.
Hires are usually reflections of their predecessors, if not stark contrasts by design. Norvell was poached from Nevada to bring normalcy, decency, an exciting offense and success, not necessarily in that order.
Four years in? That’s a yes, another yes, a not really, and a sort of.
Rams faithful aren’t shy about voting with their wallets. And Weber has to keep Canvas Stadium full — or awfully close. When Norvell boat-raced CSU with his Wolf Pack in late November 2021, Canvas sat half-empty. The Daz’s last three home games averaged 62% of capacity. The writing was on the checkbook.
We’re not there yet. CSU sold out four home games in 2024 and set a single-season home attendance record along the way — buoyed by a slate that featured Deion Sanders’ Fort Fun debut and a visit from rival Wyoming. Two games into 2025, the ledger is OK: Northern Colorado sold out on Sept. 6, while UTSA drew a more-than-respectable 88.8% of capacity (32,061).
Norvell sees this as a lifetime job, not a stepping stone. He wants to build it the right way. He’s committed to FoCo. He’s adjusted to the new normal of NCAA free agency, even hiring staff to handle the stuff he doesn’t particularly like. He’s invested in CSU, and vice versa.
But in a results business, the results on the field have been all over the place. Every silver lining has come with at least a little cloud trailing in its wake.
Last fall, Norvell got CSU to a bowl game for the first time since 2017. Once there, the Rams got obliterated by a MAC team. Clay Millen was the man, until he wasn’t. BFN was the man, until he couldn’t.
Norvell was hired with the idea of becoming another Sonny Lubick — a stable, long-term builder. But the transfer portal opened; House vs. NCAA happened; and Coach Prime turned up in Boulder to suck all the oxygen out of the local news cycle.
None of that is Jay’s fault. Yet with a move to the Pac-12 looming next year, some CSU fans talk about pining for a football version of Niko Medved in their new league. Someone who’ll make a big splash at CSU nationally, even if that means using the Rams as leverage toward a sexier job. And if they’re gone after two seasons for greener, richer Big Ten or SEC pastures, McElwain-style, so be it.
So: Lifetime guy (Norvell) or hot up-and-comer? It’s going to be one archetype or the other.
Norvell’s current contract expires Dec. 31, 2026. Per the term sheet the Rams released during his December 2021 hire, he’s making a base salary of $1.9 million this season and is due to make $2 million in 2026.
CSU can buy that out without cause for $1.5 million from now until New Year’s Eve. It can do so anytime in 2026 for “remaining base pay owed.”
With the remaining undecideds, there’s only one way back. And on this one, Norvell needs to not listen to his inner OC. Or to his gut. He should heed the ghost of one of his mentors, the late Al Davis.
Just win, baby.
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Sean Keeler
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Responding to a disturbance call, police officers in Grand Prairie, Texas, mistakenly arrived at the home of Thomas Simpson. They say when they knocked on the door, Simpson confronted them with a gun, and they shot him in the leg. Simpson, meanwhile, says the police did not announce themselves as officers before the shooting, and he believed he was confronting burglars. Police admitted they were at the wrong house but blamed the error on 911 dispatch’s auto-populated address. Officers also referred Simpson’s case to the Dallas County District Attorney’s Office for charges of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon against a peace officer.
The post Brickbat: Who's There? appeared first on Reason.com.
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Charles Oliver
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This is an updated version of a story first published on Nov. 24, 2024. The original video can be viewed here.
These are not soaring times for higher education. Tuition costs rise unchecked. contempt for campus culture — the trigger warnings, safe spaces, microaggressions—helped swing the election. A political win aided, in part, by the work of conservative activist Charlie Kirk. His assassination 11 days ago has prompted a nationwide conversation on free speech, which, as correspondent Jon Wertheim first reported last year, is a founding principle of the University of Austin, a college start-up touting open debate — a shout-nothing- but-say-anything philosophy — and, for now, free tuition. Will this be just another politicized campus swinging right? Or a true disrupter, resetting the marketplace of ideas?
141-years-old, the University of Texas at Austin, ranks among the country’s largest schools. Football games draw more than 100,000 fans… but blocks away, in between a Ruth’s Chris and a Velvet Taco, on a floor of what was once a downtown department store: one of America’s smallest universities. UATX — the University of Austin.
Jon Wertheim: How would you describe members of the founding class?
Olivia Antunes: Very outspoken. You’ll never enter a conversation and leave without something that you didn’t know before talking to someone.
Olivia Antunes, Dylan Wu, Constantin Whitmire, Grace Price and Jacob Hornstein are among the 92 students in the inaugural class. If UT is built around Longhorn football, the focal point of UATX ….
Dylan Wu: Fearless pursuit of truth to me is I have this kind of mentality that the best way that you should go about your life is to always assume that you’re wrong in some capacity.
Jon Wertheim: You’re prepared for that, (Right) to be challenged and stress-tested and–
Dylan Wu: Not so–
Jon Wertheim: –confronted?
60 Minutes
Dylan Wu: It’s not just even prepared. That’s why I’m at this school. I want them to be challenged because I know that I’m wrong in some way.
Jon Wertheim: What are some things that differentiate you guys?
Jacob Hornstein: We’re very intellectually diverse. I’ve met people of every political persuasion here from, like, far-left Democrats who are for Bernie Sanders or to the left of that even, to people who would make Donald Trump look like a liberal.
Roughly half the students come from Texas. A third are female… they share academic strength —averaging in the 92nd percentile on the SAT. Some were accepted at schools like the University of Chicago and Georgetown—but chose UATX for what it is…and is not…
Constantin Whitmire: I remember visiting a college in the northeast of the U.S. and the student guiding me there was like, “Ugh, we have different dorms for different student groups.” I didn’t wanna go to a space that was like that.
Jon Wertheim: Why do you think it’s important to be at a college where differing views aren’t just accepted and tolerated, but– but welcome?
Constantin Whitmire: We’re actually listening to the other side and understanding each other. And still we’re friends with each other. I vehemently disagree with many of the things Jacob says. And I think you do too. I don’t wanna–
Jacob Hornstein: It’s likewise.
Constantin Whitmire: We still get along pretty well, and it’s a beautiful thing.
Not exactly the vibe on so many other campuses…. long before Hamas attacked Israel on Oct. 7, 2023… colleges have been sites of protest and have leaned left… but the atmosphere has intensified over the past decade.
Speakers shouted down.
Professors canceled when students feel unheard.
Then the reckoning this past year …campus chaos led first to congressional hearings..
Then to the resignation of the presidents at Columbia, University of Pennsylvania and Harvard…
Niall Ferguson: From a historian’s point of view, it’s terribly important that the United States improves, reforms, revitalizes its universities.
Scottish-born, Oxford-educated, and recently knighted, Niall Ferguson is one of the founders of UATX. An historian, also known for his conservative views, Ferguson spent more than a decade as a professor at Harvard and is now a senior fellow at Stanford’s Hoover Institution.
60 Minutes
Jon Wertheim: You say something is rotten in the state of academia. What do you mean by that?
Niall Ferguson: Right up until I guess the early 2000s, it still seemed like universities were the places where you could think most freely, and speak most freely, and take the most intellectual risk. And at some point in the last ten years, that changed. And it changed in a way that began to stifle free expression.
Jon Wertheim: We came across some data that less than 3% of the Harvard faculty identifies as conservative. More than 75% identifies as liberal. Wildly out of proportion with the American public.
Niall Ferguson: There’s a huge disconnect now between the academic elite and the average American voter.
Ferguson says: this political imbalance plus social media plus an army of campus administrators monitoring speech… equals a culture where, per one study, nearly 80% of today’s students self-censor on campus for fear of being ostracized. Faculty feels the chill, too…
Niall Ferguson: The president of a university I won’t name once told me that he received, on average, one email a day from a member of the university community calling for somebody else to be fired for something they’d said. That reminds me vividly of the bad old days of Stalin’s Soviet Union, and yet it’s happening on American campuses.
Jon Wertheim: The stakes are that high?
Niall Ferguson: I think if a university system starts to go wrong, then something is bound to go wrong for the society as a whole. The ideas that start on campus pretty quickly spread to corporations, to media organizations. University forms the way you think about the world for the rest of your life. If our universities are screwed up, and I believe they are, then that will screw up America as a whole quite quickly.
In 2021 Ferguson launched UATX with founder of the Free Press Bari Weiss, Joe Lonsdale, co-founder of data analytics company Palantir and Pano Kanelos, the former president of St. Johns College in Maryland. Larry Summers—the former Harvard president and U.S. treasury secretary under Clinton—became an adviser. In this ad, they announced they were, “done waiting for america’s universities to fix themselves.”
UATX received initial approval from the state of Texas; and raised nearly $200 million from private donors—in part to cover tuition.
Kanelos was named president.
Now the school’s chancellor, he says that to the detriment of learning, colleges have become echo chambers..
Jon Wertheim: What is going on on campuses that are leading you to draw this conclusion?
Pano Kanelos: It’s as if people have come to expect that there are just sort of two versions of everything. And therefore, there’s a right version and a wrong version, and depending on which side you stand. But the truth is that one opinion meeting another opinion shouldn’t leave us with two opinions; it should leave us with better opinions.
60 Minutes
To combat fears of saying the wrong things in class, UATX comes armed with a weapon…
Jon Wertheim: Tell an American audience. What do you mean by Chatham House Rule?
Niall Ferguson: The Chatham House Rule is a great British invention. And it says that if you are a participant in a discussion and you hear an interesting thing said, maybe a controversial thing, you can refer to the information that you’ve gleaned, but you can’t attribute it to a person. People fear that the thing they said that was not– not right, was politically incorrect, ends up on X or, for that matter, on Instagram. And tha– that which happens in the classroom should stay in the classroom.
At UATX, classes are small, seminar-style, and based in Western civilization—the bible; Greek classics.
Faculty includes a former Navy captain, a Greek orthodox priest—Father Maximos teaches a class on chaos and civilization—and a tech entrepreneur….
There are no on-campus science labs, but founders chose Austin for its booming start-up culture, linking students with companies like Elon Musk’s Neuralink…
And helping the kids sharpen their tech skills and even fund their own ideas.
To stem the scandalously high costs of higher education, the UATX campus is bare bones.
No dorms (the students live in apartments next to UT undergrads) and no meal plan (cook for yourselves, kids.) The closest thing we found to a college rager? Students learning the Texas two-step….
60 Minutes
Jon Wertheim: When the guys next door are playing beer pong and you’re- you’re reading Aristotle and working with lasers–
Grace Price: Playing chess.
Jon Wertheim: Any envy?
Dylan Wu: That’s not to say that, you know, we’re all prudes and we just spend all– who– all day reading Aristotle. We– we– we have fun, you know?
As for admissions…UATX swaps DEI—diversity, equity, and inclusion—for what some call MEI: merit, excellence and intelligence.
Jon Wertheim: Gender, race, ethnicity, what is the factor of that in your admissions decisions?
Pano Kanelos: We don’t take any of that into consideration in admissions. The primary thing that we’re interested in is the mind.
Jon Wertheim: Meaning what?
Pano Kanelos: A kind of capacity to think deeply, to answer questions to challenge norms.
Jon Wertheim: I gotta tell you, we did not see a particularly diverse student body.
Niall Ferguson: We are putting resources into finding talent of an intellectual variety. And if you’re interested in diversity, I recommend you look at the social backgrounds of our students, at the family circumstances of our students.
High profile UATX donors include Trump-backing billionaire Bill Ackman, a Harvard grad who vocally criticized his school after October 7th… and Harlan Crow, close friend of conservative Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas… critics attack UATX as a right-wing university, simply wearing the cloak of free speech.
Jon Wertheim: UATX has been called the anti-woke university. “Harvard is a liberal university. UATX is gonna be a conservative university.”
Pano Kanelos: Politics should be studied at a university. It shouldn’t be the operating system of the university. Any university that is identifiably political is not fulfilling its highest mission.
Jon Wertheim: Pushback might be, are you gonna be too dependent to donors? We– we’ve seen on other campuses what happens–
Pano Kanelos: Absolutely.
Jon Wertheim: –when the donor class gets dissatisfied. You worried about that?
Pano Kanelos: If donors are ever pushing us in a way that is not aligned with our mission and that, somebody’s gonna call us out on it.
And the backers aren’t solely from the right…. a liberal, legal scholar Nadine Strossen was president of the ACLU for nearly 20 years and, was until recently, a UATX adviser.
Nadine Strossen: The most important topics of public policy debate are not being candidly and frankly discussed on campus, including abortion, immigration, police practices, anything to do with race and gender.
Provided it comes with no serious harm, Strossen argues all speech should be allowed….
Jon Wertheim: You think censorship leads to worse outcomes than allowing even the most objectively hateful speech?
Nadine Strossen: My concern is to try to eliminate the underlying discriminatory attitudes. You don’t do that by punishing expression. You do that through education, through more speech, not less.
Free range free speech…resonated. When UATX announced its founding, thousands sent in job inquiries. some of UATX’s academics were disciplined—canceled, they may say—at their previous schools.
Jon Wertheim: Some of the advisers and faculty came here under some clouds of controversy.
Pano Kanelos: I mean, that’s not what we’re seeking. I mean, we’re not, you know shelter for—
Jon Wertheim: Ha– haven– haven for the canceled–
Pano Kanelos: –for– haven for people who’ve been canceled. But many of the people who– who are pushing the boundaries in academic culture, let’s say, in the public sphere have paid a price for that and still should be heard.
UATX’s national accreditation won’t be decided until the first class has graduated—a standard for new universities….. Meanwhile, new student applications are open —tuition still free, so is the speech.
Produced by Denise Schrier Cetta. Associate producers, Katie Brennan and Elizabeth Germino. Edited by Jorge J. García.
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For those in Houston this week for the city’s first edition of Untitled, a must-see stop is the Asia Society Texas Center, located in the heart of the city’s Museum District. One of Houston’s landmark cultural venues, the Asia Society Texas Center is housed in an architectural masterpiece designed by Japan-born, Harvard-educated Taniguchi & Associates. At the crossroads of East and West aesthetics, it combines the rigor of contemporary international museum design with the elegance and serenity long associated with Asia. It’s the architect’s first free-standing structure in the U.S., a project that followed his celebrated expansion and renovation of MoMA in New York City a decade earlier.
With 40,000 square feet spread across two stories and a basement, the building showcases meticulously chosen materials. Jura limestone blocks, quarried and hand-selected by Taniguchi from Germany’s Black Forest, date back more than 150 million years to the Jurassic period. American cherry wood, over a century old, panels the Fayez Sarofim Grand Hall and the Brown Foundation Performing Arts Theater, chosen for its rich color and fine grain to create a warm, serene environment that greets visitors upon entry. Basaltina, the volcanic Italian stone once used by the Romans for roads and monuments, forms the ground flooring, its gray tone imparting both durability while linking the building to a lineage of monumental architecture. Appalachian white oak flooring extends throughout, adding natural warmth that balances the coolness of stone and glass.


The building’s character lies in its seamless integration with its surroundings—a hallmark of traditional Japanese architecture later embraced by modernists such as Mies van der Rohe and Frank Lloyd Wright. Its low-slung profile establishes harmony with the residential neighborhood, avoiding empty monumentality in favor of openness and accessibility. Expansive glass windows reinforce this effect while functioning as structural elements engineered to meet Houston’s building codes, designed to withstand winds of up to 110 miles per hour. Outdoor spaces extend the architectural dialogue, offering environments of harmony and beauty while hosting both temporary and permanent installations, including Lee Ufan’s sculpture on the upstairs terrace.


Founded in 1979, Asia Society Texas was created to celebrate the vibrant diversity of Asia and to champion art and dialogue as tools to counter bias and foster a more inclusive society. That mission carries particular resonance in Houston, a city that—especially in the post-war era and following the Vietnam War—welcomed a significant wave of immigrants from across the Asian diaspora. Today, Houston is home to large Chinese and Vietnamese communities, alongside growing Korean, Japanese, South Asian and Indian populations.


The idea for a permanent home did not take shape until the mid-1990s, when the Asia Society Texas Board of Directors recognized that if the then-16-year-old organization was to thrive, it needed a space of its own. In 2004, Taniguchi was chosen to design the building, and construction on the $48.4 million building began in January 2010, reaching completion in fall 2011. The resulting structure now supports a multidisciplinary program spanning visual and performing arts, language courses, lectures, culinary classes and other events designed to foster dialogue and appreciation for the cultural richness and diversity of Asia and its diaspora.


“We pursue this mission through four main program areas: performing arts, visual arts, business and policy discussions and educational activities. Together, these platforms allow us to engage audiences in a wide variety of ways—from live events to interactive learning,” Owen Duffy, curator and director of exhibitions, told Observer. As he guides us through the building, he gestures toward six interactive stations that are part of the “Explore Asia” project, where a blend of visual, textual and audio materials invites visitors to immerse themselves in the histories and cultures of five different Asian countries.
Duffy’s exhibition program follows the same principles while embracing a broad scope that spans Turkey and the Middle East through Central, East and South Asia. As he notes in our conversation, Asia Society Texas hosted 46 exhibitions last year alone—an impressive achievement for a regional institution whose program already includes collaborations with other Asia Societies across the U.S. and abroad. “We’re a global network. We’re a family,” Duffy explains.


The current exhibition, devoted to the long-overlooked oeuvre of Chinese-born, Houston-based artist Hung Hsien, was produced in collaboration with Asia Society Hong Kong, where it will travel after the Houston presentation closes at the end of the month. The first U.S. museum survey of her extensive body of work, the show pays overdue tribute to her luminous, transcendent visual language that fuses postwar abstraction with traditional Chinese painting, evoking the mysteries of the cosmos and the unseen forces that shape the flow of all things.
Also on view is “Memory Place,” an exhibition by Japanese artist Umiko Miwa. Conceived as a sculptural scavenger hunt throughout the building, the show prompts visitors to notice and value overlooked corners and details as they search for her hidden works. “She calls them Daphnes,” Duffy says. “These works resemble a kind of radical ikebana—delicate, whimsical flowers designed to wilt and dry. Visitors are given maps to help them locate and experience these pieces as they explore the space.” Inspired by Japanese traditions of animism and ancestral reverence, Miwa’s fragile interventions appear like fleeting epiphanies—ancient in archetypal resonance yet alive and organic, as if drawn directly from the flux of natural events. Rooted in the principles of Japanese aesthetics while speaking across cultures, Miwa’s exhibition engages audiences of all kinds, resonating particularly with children.


The project exemplifies a site-specific approach, with artists invited to respond directly to the space—a principle that has also guided Asia Society Texas’s residency program, which was paused this year after running for five years. “It originally began as a response to COVID, at a time when no one was coming into the building. Now feels like the right moment to recalibrate the program for a different context and set of needs,” Duffy explains, noting that the team is considering evolving it into a more holistic fellowship program, one that better reflects current realities, supports artists in a broader and more sustained way, and deepens connections with the local community.
According to Duffy, the program is always developed in dialogue across teams so the visual art side aligns with other activities. “Before any show goes on the calendar, I discuss it with colleagues. I lead the exhibitions committee, and I also work closely with our president, Bona Poll,” he says. “When it comes to artist selection, the balance is crucial, but the first and most important criteria is mission alignment: will this exhibition enhance our mission? Will it engage Houston audiences? Does it address a region, topic, or theme of strategic importance, especially in light of current events? And is it telling a story that needs to be told?”
Audience diversity is always central. “Our audience is really diverse—it reflects Houston itself. Some attendees are attracted by the cultural specificity of the program, while others simply come because they’re passionate about the art form. We also offer language courses—right now we’re running Korean classes, which have grown in popularity with the rise of Korean culture—and that draws in another segment of Houston’s community at large.”


A few times a year, Asia Society Texas stages large festivals that bring all its strands together. In November, for example, the entire parking lot and front lawn are transformed into a night market. “We close the street, welcome about 10,000 people and spotlight AAPI-owned businesses, vendors and food. Events like that really bring everyone out,” Duffy says.
Its geographic location within the city also plays a role. Positioned on the edge of Houston’s Fifth Ward and Third Ward—both historically Black communities—Asia Society Texas sits at a natural crossroads. “With neighbors like Project Row Houses just down the street, the full diversity of the city naturally finds its way through our doors at some point.”
Yet everything ultimately circles back to the mission: soft power, cultural exchange, education and diplomacy. “Our goal is to create a more interconnected world—one where audiences can better navigate our shared future between Asia and the rest of the world.”
As such, Asia Society Texas occupies a distinctive position compared to organizations that focus on a single country or community, such as the Chinese Community Center or the Japan-America Society of Houston. “We celebrate the full range of Asian cultures. That means cultural partners can reach new audiences.” A Chinese partner, for instance, may find fresh engagement from visitors also drawn to South Asian or Japanese traditions.


The building remains one of Asia Society Texas’s greatest assets. “Walking through it, you immediately sense that it’s a work of art in its own right. It offers potential partners and audiences a sense of a new and inspiring platform.”
As a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, Asia Society Texas receives little government funding, relying instead on private donors, corporations, foundations and earned revenue. “We sell a lot of tickets to events and exhibitions, so it’s a healthy mix—really no different from most museums,” explains Duffy. “We do have good revenue streams, but like any nonprofit, we still depend on donor dollars and partners. Support comes not only through donations but also through our fundraising events—like our annual gala, the Tiger Ball. It’s considered by many the best party in Houston,” he adds, describing how the parking lot is transformed with tents and decorations. “Our staff even hand-tie silk flowers to all the trees, creating a truly spectacular atmosphere.”
Despite the specific mission guiding Asia Society Texas’s programming, the institution remains closely tied to Houston’s broader cultural landscape. “Other institutions often come to us for partnerships—whether performing arts organizations or other cultural groups—because they see us as a platform that can help extend their reach,” Duffy says.
Reflecting on Houston’s art community, Duffy—who recently relocated from New York for this role—describes it as multilayered and spread across different hubs. “Houston is often described as a ‘multi-centered metropolis,’ meaning it doesn’t have a single dense downtown but rather a series of hubs where people live and gather. Its art scene just reflects that.”


A few distinct art districts stand out in the city: the Museum District, where Asia Society Texas sits alongside major institutions, and areas like Silver Street Studios, which support independent local artists. “What I find fascinating is the way artists live and work here. It’s not the stereotypical starving-artist-in-Bushwick model,” Duffy says. “Instead, you might have an artist living with their family in a three-bedroom house in Sugar Land, working out of a garage studio in a suburban development—yet showing internationally. There’s more space here, and the cost of living is lower, so it’s easier to own a home or even maintain a multi-generational household.”
At the same time, Houston’s geography poses challenges for visibility and accessibility. “The city is sprawling, with very few natural barriers, so creating a cohesive art map for visitors can be difficult,” he acknowledges, noting that this sprawl is both an obstacle and an opportunity for institutions seeking to connect across disparate communities. These dynamics—and the difficulty of building a cohesive network—are among the reasons the city’s scene has historically been overlooked, despite its steady growth.
Now, three years into living in Houston, Duffy sees a city in transition. With rapid population growth and new arrivals, the art scene is still finding its identity. “With Untitled launching in Houston, people are optimistic that it could create something like an art week here.”


In that spirit, Asia Society Texas Center is participating in Untitled’s inaugural edition with a booth presenting new and recent paintings by Houston-based artist Gao Hang. His post-digital works, shaped by pop culture and filtered through retro video game aesthetics, resonate especially with younger and millennial collectors. Proceeds from sales will directly support Asia Society Texas’s exhibitions program.
Hang’s work will also appear in the upcoming exhibition “The House of Pikachu: Art, Anime, and Pop Culture,” opening in October. As one of the first institutional exhibitions in the U.S. to examine the long-standing and far-reaching influence of Japanese animation on contemporary art, the show will bring together a diverse group of artists from Japan, Brazil, China, Mexico, Côte d’Ivoire, Texas and beyond—underscoring the truly global reach of anime. Among its highlights will be Yoshitomo Nara’s larger-than-life sculpture Your Dog, which is expected to draw significant crowds.
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Elisa Carollo
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