#Marketing in Fort-Worth Texas
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320 Mesquite Hill Drive Arlington, Texas 76002
320 Mesquite Hill Drive
Arlington, Texas 76002
RENT:$2,225 Available NOW
3 beds•2.5 baths•2,377 sqft.
Apply Now:https://is.gd/4I9drD
Fantastic Home with a Move-In Special!
Welcome to this fantastic home in Arlington, TX! This charming house features 3 bedrooms and 2.5 bathrooms, with all bedrooms conveniently located upstairs. The spacious living room boasts a cozy gas log fireplace, perfect for relaxing evenings. Enjoy entertaining in the game room, or unwind in the luxurious jetted tub in the primary bathroom. The primary bathroom also includes separate tub and shower, as well as double sinks for added convenience. With lots of windows throughout, this home is filled with natural light, creating a warm and inviting atmosphere. Call today for your private viewing!
Contact Classic Property Management at (817) 477-6831 or email [email protected] for inquiries.
#dallas fort worth real estate market#dfw#houseforrent#dfwrealestate#dfwhomes#arlington homes#Arlington#Arlington Texas
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Digital Marketing Agency in Texas
Curved Sphere is a leading digital marketing agency in Texas. We curate tailored strategies that strike the right balance between the goals and end results. Our branch of services includes SEO, SMM, PPC, etc. Contact us today and create a powerful growth-driven online presence.
#digital marketing agency in Dallas#digital marketing company in Dallas#digital marketing company in Fort Worth#digital marketing agency in Texas
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Major Update: Life...is a changing for me/us (and a sneak peek of Vault-Tec Rises!
Good afternoon!
I wanted to give you all an update on Vault-Tec Rises as well as an update on myself and some major life changes happening this year that may impact our season while the dust settles. Firstly, I'm more than halfway done with our next major feature length episode, "Vault-Tec Rises"...which is technically episode 16, set BEFORE Little Sanctuary of Horrors. It essentially is the story of how everyone came to be there in the first place, what Vault-Tec and the Enclave are really up to, and is the start of our last 4 episodes of the season as the Battle for Appalachia begins.
Secondly, I've shared quite a bit about the journey of these past 10 years with my husband Travis and his struggle with mental health. Many of you were kind of enough to support or share our GoFundMe to help take the pressure off the crushing debt we were under with mounting medical bills and his bills, none of which was covered by insurance fully. Trying to keep us afloat financially has been a long-term struggle of mine and here's in New Hampshire we just haven't been able to get ahead. After having to cancel some of his services last week as we couldn't afford them, we made some major decisions.
The next few months I'll be doing a lot of painting, landscaping, plastering and prepping to list our home on the market. Financially we can't afford to buy again for a while, so we're stuck renting. Based on what things are selling for in the area, I'm not too worried about getting out of it fairly quickly. We'll be moving to Texas, in between Dallas and Fort Worth in a really beautiful, new planned community where leasing and the overall lower cost of living will save us $20k a year which will allow us to not only fix our debt issue permanently, but also they have one of the leading centers in the country for C-PTSD. Once settled, I'd be able to get him more direct help he's needed that we just don't have access to out here.
Texas is going to be a big, big change for us...a huge move, but one I'm eager to make. Our backup editor is continuing to plug away at stories as well as I've had my hands full with work trying to keep the lights on (literally). I wanted to explain all of this with clear honesty so you know what I've been doing, what I'll be doing this year and why it often takes us so long to ship episodes to you. Your patient and support of me really, really means the world to me. The other benefit of this move is that once I'm not strangled hustling for work 7 days a week, I'll have more free time to actually create. Something I really want to do...as there are still two more seasons of Chad and some other projects I really want to share with you all.
I hope to have our 3-hour feature length Vault-Tec Rises completed in the next few weeks, so stay tuned. :) And if you can please excuse how hectic this year will be between selling and moving halfway across the country I'd appreciate it.
Much love to you all,
Ken
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Welcome to Fort Worth.
Spending a week here!!!
The city of Fort Worth was established in 1849 as an army outpost on a bluff overlooking the Trinity River. Fort Worth has historically been a center of the Texas Longhorn cattle trade. It still embraces its Western heritage and traditional architecture and design.
As a stop on the legendary Chisholm Trail, Fort Worth was stimulated by the business of the cattle drives and became a brawling, bustling town. Millions of head of cattle were driven north to market along this trail. Fort Worth became the center of the cattle drives, and later, the ranching industry. It was given the nickname of Cowtown.
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Forbes article: "How Struggling College Bookstores Found A Way To Beat Amazon"
Oct 20, 2023,06:30am EDT
A new sales model adopted by hundreds of universities limits students’ ability to shop around for textbooks.
By Lauren Debter, Forbes Staff
As fall semester dawned at Texas Christian University in Fort Worth, senior Olivia McFall turned to Amazon to shop for books — not only because its prices were better for certain titles, but so she could get her course materials quickly. The campus bookstore could sometimes take a week or two. Unacceptable.
“Teachers will start assigning reading on the first day,” McFall, a 22-year-old fashion-merchandising major, told Forbes. “You get behind if you don’t have that textbook. If I buy it on [Amazon], it’s usually because I can get it faster than the bookstore.”
For decades, Amazon’s lower prices and speedier delivery have blown a crater in the college bookstore business. Given the option to shop around, students only buy about one-third of their course materials at the campus store.
Now the bookstores are fighting back. They say they’ve hit on a plan that would, almost magically, quash competition from online rivals like Amazon. T.C.U. is among the colleges considering a model that would automatically charge students for textbooks on their tuition bills, which can be covered by financial aid, and get them to students by the time classes begin. Books are typically discounted 30% or more, said the bookstores, who negotiate volume discounts. Students must return materials at the end of the semester.
Despite reservations from education advocates who worry it limits purchasing options for students, the plan, dubbed Inclusive Access, is spreading like kudzu. It rose out of a 2015 rule from the U.S. Department of Education that permitted universities to include the cost of textbooks with tuition, as long as prices were under competitive market rates and students could opt out.
Bookstores latched onto the idea during the pandemic. They were looking to boost sales at a time when they were hamstrung by closures, declining enrollment numbers and the seismic shift to digital textbooks — and still are.
In the 2022-23 academic year, Inclusive Access already captured the business of 44% of students, worth an estimated $1.4 billion annually, according to the National Association of College Stores.
Illinois-based Follett Corp., a privately held company (annual sales: $1.6 billion) that operates roughly one-third of college bookstores, said the number of its campuses that have adopted the Inclusive Access model has tripled to 450 since 2019. New Jersey-based Barnes & Noble Education (annual sales: $1.5 billion), which spun out of the bookseller chain in 2015 and also runs a third of campus bookstores, said it has over 150 schools signed up for Inclusive Access, up from just four in 2019. (The colleges themselves operate the other one-third of campus bookstores.)
Overnight, schools that switched to Inclusive Access brought guaranteed revenue to booksellers. Sell-through rates, which measure the percentage of course materials students purchase at the campus bookstore, skyrocketed from about 30% before Inclusive Access to north of 80 or 90%, according to Follett and Barnes & Noble Education. Few students opt out, the companies said, because they like the prices and convenience.
It’s a clever way to beat Amazon. Unable to compete, Follett and Barnes & Noble Education separated their customers from the open marketplace and bundled their products with something Amazon couldn’t sell — college tuition. The bookstore gets the customer without ever having to go up against the online behemoth, which is currently being sued by the Federal Trade Commission for its own alleged anti-competitive practices. (Amazon has said it disagrees with the allegations, and will contest the lawsuit.)
“It’s a significant volume increase because you’re capturing all of the course material market share in an institution,” Jonathan Shar, who oversees campus stores operated by Barnes & Noble Education, told Forbes. “Plus, it’s much more predictable.”
Amazon Prices
An Amazon spokesperson declined to comment on the impact Inclusive Access is having on its textbook sales. Amazon said it may offer discounts to schools that buy books in bulk, but it’s been winding down certain aspects of its textbook business. In April, it stopped renting physical textbooks to students and in 2020 it stopped buying textbooks back from students.
Last year, 37% of students purchased books from Amazon. That’s down from 46% in 2019, according to the National Association of College Stores.
Selling textbooks isn’t the business it used to be. A decade ago, students spent $4.8 billion a year on textbooks, according to research firm Words Rated. Today, it’s about $3.2 billion. During the 2022-23 school year, students spent an average of $285 on course materials, the lowest figure since the National Association of College Stores began tracking spending 16 years ago.
That’s partly the result of a rapid shift to lower-cost digital textbooks, with 55% of course materials now digital, up sharply from 15% prior to the pandemic, according to Emmanuel Kolady, Follett’s CEO. More textbooks are being made available online for free from sites like OpenStax, too. Nearly three-quarters of students say they were assigned at least one free course material in the latest academic year, according to the National Association of College Stores.
Company’s ‘Cornerstone’
Barnes & Noble Education, a publicly traded company that runs 800 campus bookstores, has described Inclusive Access to investors as a “cornerstone” of its plan to return to profitable growth, noting that course-material revenue rises more than 80% and gross profit nearly doubles after schools switch to the new model.
The company has lost a cumulative $600 million since 2018. Last year’s sales were 23% below pre-pandemic levels. This summer, it had to negotiate an extension on its loan payments because it couldn’t come up with enough cash. As part of the deal, it gave up two board seats and said it would explore selling the company. Its stock price has lost 90% of its value in the last two years, tumbling to less than $1 a share.
“It feels like this is their first, second and third priority,” said Ryan MacDonald, an analyst at Needham who covers Barnes & Noble Education, referring to Inclusive Access, which the company calls “First Day Complete.”
Benefits For Students
The booksellers claim the program saves students money. Follett said that students spend an average of 30% less than if they were to buy new books and are better equipped for classes as Inclusive Access gets them their materials before the semester begins.
At New York University, for instance, where Follett runs bookselling, students are automatically billed for books unless they opt out. Most are digital rentals. A textbook for an introductory biology class is priced at $36.75, which gives students access to a digital copy for the semester. That’s 20% less than if they went directly to the publisher’s website and rented it for the term. It’s 40% less than on Amazon, which only offers the option to buy the digital version, not rent it.
The math, however, is not always transparent. According to a report from the U.S. PIRG Education Fund, which analyzed 52 book-buying contracts, it’s “hard, if not impossible” to figure out how deep the discounts are because schools don’t make it clear what the discount is based on.
Savings can be less meaningful for students who would have otherwise bought used books or borrowed books, said Nicole Allen, director of open education at SPARC, a nonprofit that advocates for more course materials to be free. The one-quarter of students who intentionally skip buying certain books each semester, usually because they don’t think they need it, are also charged, she said. As more schools migrate to Inclusive Access, Allen questions whether discounts will disappear since publishers have a long history of raising prices.
“This is already a captive market because students are told what to buy,” Allen told Forbes. “Inclusive Access makes it an even more captive market by telling students how they’re going to buy it.”
Even without Inclusive Access, students can be limited in their comparison shopping. More and more professors are assigning books with single-use access codes, available for an additional fee, which students use to access quizzes, homework and other materials online. Promoted by publishers who benefit from the new revenue stream, they’re often sold exclusively by the campus bookstore and cannot be resold.
Follett’s president Ryan Petersen predicts that a newer variant of the model called Equitable Access, where students pay a flat fee for their materials regardless of the courses they’re taking, will be adopted by most schools in the next five years.
“We’re having this conversation with every campus we can,” Petersen told Forbes, “potentially even to campuses who are sick of hearing about it.”
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30 Covers, 30 Days 2023: Day 2
And it's day 2 of NaNoWriMo! Today, we have Stick Insect and Sea Monkeys by Kate Jackson, a fun Children's Fiction novel. This novel cover was designed by the amazing returning artist, Holly Aguilar!
(For those of you who don’t know, 30C30D stands for 30 Covers, 30 Days in which 17 Wrimos and 5 YWP Participants get the chance to win a professionally designed cover! The rest of the days are being filled by community features. We’ll be posting a cover a day throughout November, so make sure to check them out!)
Stick Insect and Sea Monkeys
Bella is devastated she can’t own any pets but suddenly finds herself petmother to a gigantic stick insect and pack of sea monkeys. Pet ownership turns into a bigger adventure than she could ever have imagine as she and her pet family find themselves faced with a mystery that could change their world forever.
About the Author
Kate Jackson is a lifelong writer, but recently only of shopping and to do lists. She is interested to see how juggling work, parenting two energetic boys, and trying to write a novel will go. Stick Insects & Sea Monkeys is Kate’s first foray into fantasy writing for elementary school age kids, but nothing like having a captive audience at bedtime! When not writing, Kate is setting up a new house in Boston after recently relocating from London, and trying not to eat too much leftover Halloween candy.
About the Designer
Holly Aguilar is an award-winning designer and illustrator, so if anyone does judge your book by its cover, she’s got you…covered. By day, Holly is a Design Director at Balcom Agency, the largest marketing firm in Fort Worth, Texas. Learn more about her at her company’s website!
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KINGSTON, Okla. — This article was originally published by our content partners at the Dallas Business Journal. You can read the original article here.
A massive $2 billion master-planned community is making headway along the Texas-Oklahoma border with the start of construction on a hotel resort.
Spanning 2,700 acres and featuring 19 miles of Lake Texoma shoreline, Pointe Vista is expected to eventually feature 2,100 homes, multiple hotels, an 11-acre bay, a casino, a golf course, an enclosed waterpark, a family entertainment center, an amphitheater and a mix of shops and restaurants. It's being constructed on the north side of the lake in Oklahoma, west of Durant.
Infrastructure construction began Nov. 21 on Hard Rock Hotel Lake Texoma, which was announced last month as the first of three resorts planned for the property. The hotel is slated to have 189 rooms, an 18,000-square-foot conference center and event lawn.
The development will also feature the Hard Rock Residences, which an Oct. 17 announcement framed as the first hospitality-branded real estate offering in Oklahoma. The community will consist of rental homes ranging in size from 667 to 3,000 square feet. Rent prices are still being finalized.
Both projects are expected to open in the Summer of 2027.
The project was founded by Mark Fisher, who more than a decade ago bought land that used to be a state park. That park had fallen into disrepair, and Fisher "saw an area that he could help make better and develop," said Grant Speaks, president of Pointe Vista. Fisher continued to buy land around the former park and, as "Dallas continues to stretch north," the community's backers see boundless potential, according to Speaks.
The development of Pointe Vista exemplifies the change sweeping over the Texoma border region north of the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex. Huge neighborhoods are rising, including the $6B Preston Harbor community on the south side of the lake that will include a Margaritaville resort, and a nascent semiconductor production industry is taking shape in Sherman.
Pointe Vista will feature two unique lakefront neighborhoods: Reflection Pointe and Bridge Pointe, both of which are under construction.
Reflection Pointe will feature 84 single-family lakeside homes ranging from 2,800 to 4,600 square feet, with seven homes set to be completed by early 2025. Bridge Pointe includes 32 lakeside villas and 26 hilltop townhomes with lake views, with construction already underway on four homes. Homes at both communities are currently available for sale and range in price from $225,000 to $1.3 million. Infrastructure construction was completed in early November.
Future developments will include a lakeside hotel with 350-plus rooms, a convention center and a 72-room boutique hotel near the Chickasaw Pointe Golf Club. Hotel flags for those projects have not yet been determined.
Overall, Pointe Vista is anticipated to finish within 10 to 15 years. The project has been in the works since 2008 but faced delays because of the Great Recession and the COVID-19 pandemic.
A market study by the developer estimates Pointe Vista could create more than 7,000 jobs during construction and at least 200 permanent positions once completed. In the end, the project could generate more than $241 million in direct spending, Speaks said.
"Fourth of July 2027, I'd love to have between 5,000 to 10,000 people at our development," he said.
The development will be easily accessible thanks to planned infrastructure improvements, including the Roosevelt Bridge expansion and the extension of the Dallas North Tollway. It's located about two hours from Dallas and Oklahoma City.
Lake Texoma is already home to the Chickasaw Nation West Bay Casino & Resort, Chickasaw Pointe Golf Club and the Catfish Bay Marina. There are also efforts to bring a professional soccer team to Texoma.
"We think that Lake Texoma is the best-kept secret out there," Speaks said. "We want to be good neighbors to other developments that are out there and wish everybody the best. We met the football club folks a few years ago at a hunting event, thought they were tremendous [and are] excited to have them nearby."
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Reporting out of Texas & allred's limp pffft of a deflated balloon he called a campaign is a microcosm for the dem/harris strategy writ large.
Borrowing Cruz’s flawed, bullying takes on transgender people – don’t forget Allred repeating Cruz’s “boys in girls sports” trope, allowed the incumbent senator to correctly paint his challenger as a flip-flopper when compared to the legislative record he tried to hide. As of 2022, 64% of the country believes trans people deserve increased legal protection. Allred didn’t close the gap, he just pissed off his most hopeful, vulnerable constituents, and his party’s hope is that a betrayed voting bloc is just as motivated or more to get out the vote next cycle. Likewise, Allred had an opportunity to burnish his reputation as one of the few voices in Congress to question America’s unfettered military aid to Israel as the American ally functionally bankrolls what the United Nations describes as “indiscriminate and disproportionate” bombing of Palestinians. Beyond leaning into a very popular policy ask that hardly any politician in this country has taken on, I believe it would have been an extremely popular political play to Colin Allred constituents sick of forever wars and unmoved by, say, a Liz Cheney endorsement. I am more certain standing his ground would have meant the world to the Arab and Muslim voters disturbed by how little the ruling party appears to value their lives. But, in almost every follow-up comment on Israel’s conduct throughout the Middle East, Allred, like Harris, continued insisting that Israel had the right to defend itself, with no strings attached.
Colin Allred’s failure should remind Dems that plenty of Americans aren’t Republicans (Fort Worth Star Telegram)
Texas Democrats perennially claim to be on the brink of turning the state blue, but this latest beatdown ought to be the first that yields a true reckoning with why the party continually disappoints in elections in a state which, the party sages tell us, demographically ought to be shifting to their advantage. But given the recent tenor from the party’s centrist wing, from Hinojosa down to his Gen Z heirs apparent, the lesson of Allred’s loss—that no amount of money or online clout can paper over a candidate’s weaknesses—could just as easily fall on deaf ears. [...] The Democratic Party prefers candidates—particularly in red states—who can raise a lot of money quickly. Allred visited just 34 of Texas’s 254 counties, signaling an aversion to public confrontation, but spent a mind-boggling $57.75 million on advertising and marketing to make up for it. How? He relied heavily on donation centers in other states, particularly the suburbs of Washington, D.C., receiving far fewer small-dollar donations in-state and leaning on political action committees to make up the difference. When journalists and friendly critics pointed out the obvious risks to this strategy, Monique Alcala, the executive director of the Texas Democratic Party, said on X that they were “spreading misinformation” and should “please—sit down.”* As Brandon Rottinghaus told Texas Monthly, “Beto worked from the bottom up, and Allred worked from the top down.” As early as the primary, fellow Texas Democrats were ringing alarm bells about a wayward campaign. But online, Allred’s team seemed more interested in squashing intraparty dissent than winning in November. After Jen Ramos, a member of the Texas Democratic Party’s executive committee, told The Texas Tribune in August that Allred was taking the party’s liberal base for granted, “a group of influencers and organizers went out of their way to discredit me,” Ramos told me, adding that she was accused of “aiding and abetting Ted Cruz.” [...] Mother Jones’s Serena Linhad asked the Allred campaign in October why they’d avoided larger rallies, but was directed to Julianna, who claimed it was “a more strategic, targeted way of reaching people.” Allred was focusing more on “identity-focused coalition groups,” wrote Lin, including “Republicans for Allred,” chaired by former Representative Adam Kinzinger, a prominent anti-Trump Republican who also endorsed Harris. The more likely reason Allred wasn’t more regularly found out on the hustings was because he was a snooze on the podium. The Texas Observer pointed out that his stage presence was “underwhelming,” that he lacked even “basic charisma.” Meanwhile, Allred’s outreach to farmers, who make up 14 percent of the state’s workforce—and more than 12 percent of the U.S. total, by far the most of any state—was sporadic at best. Clayton Tucker, a rancher and chair of the Lampasas Democratic Party (based in a 712-square-mile county with a population of fewer than 24,000), said between the crowded Democratic primary and Election Day, there was “quite a dry spell” in communication. Tucker lobbied hard for Allred to appear before farmers and lay out his vision. Finally, in October, weeks away from the election, Allred joined Tucker in Lubbock, a college town just below the Panhandle, for a small roundtable to address their concerns. “That’s important work,” Tucker ceded, “but it needed to be more at scale.” [...] “The conservative wing of the party is what fucked this up,” said one Democratic insider in Texas, who spoke freely on condition of anonymity. These candidates chase political majorities based on the imagined centrist ideal, a votership that exists, however amorphously, within the data. But real political majorities are constructed through deliberate movement work, neighborhood by neighborhood, with a clear directive—not simply happened upon through a couple of well-timed ads. “Allred’s campaign, and the people involved with it, was a fucking disaster,” they continued, “and they need to suffer the consequences of their failure.”
The Real Reason Texas Isn’t Turning Blue (TNR)
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Texas Housing Shortage Deepens Despite Record Construction
Despite leading the nation in homebuilding, Texas faces a worsening housing shortage that is inflating housing costs statewide. Let’s dive into the data and explore what this means for real estate developers and investors.
The Numbers: An Escalating Crisis
The Texas housing shortage grew to 320,000 homes in 2022, up from 306,000 in 2021, despite Texas building more homes than any other U.S. state. This gap underscores the fact that even with a surge in new homes, primarily in suburban areas, population growth continues to outstrip supply. The nonprofit housing policy group Up For Growth reports these figures, highlighting the significant demand-supply imbalance.
Drivers of the Shortage
Rapid population growth, particularly in cities like Dallas, Houston, and Austin, has driven up housing prices and rents. Many new Texans are moving from states with higher costs of living, adding to the strain on housing availability and affordability. Historically, Texas has managed housing demand by building detached, single-family homes in the suburbs, keeping housing costs relatively affordable. However, this approach is no longer sufficient to meet the current demand.
Need for Denser Housing Types
Experts, including David Garcia of Up For Growth, suggest that outward expansion can no longer address Texas’ housing needs on its own. In urban centers, limited land availability and strict zoning rules hinder the development of denser, lower-cost housing types like townhomes, duplexes, and smaller apartment complexes. Loosening these restrictions could ease the strain by making it easier to build multi-family homes and other affordable options.
Regional Differences
The housing shortages vary by region across Texas, with some cities making progress in expanding their housing stock:
- Austin-Round Rock: Reduced its housing shortfall by a third, leading to a 16-month decline in rent, though the area remains short by nearly 24,000 homes.
- Houston and Dallas-Fort Worth: Saw their housing shortages grow despite greenlighting more construction projects than before the COVID-19 pandemic.
- El Paso: Has seen a minor easing of its housing shortage, a unique trend within the state.
Zoning Reforms: A Path Forward
Many housing advocates argue that restrictive zoning laws contribute significantly to the Texas housing crisis. While permissive toward single-family homes, Texas cities often restrict land for denser housing types, limiting the construction of affordable housing options. By adjusting these restrictions, cities could increase the housing supply and provide more affordable options for residents. However, zoning reforms face resistance from neighborhood groups and existing homeowners who often oppose denser housing developments.
Upcoming Policy Efforts
The Texas Legislature is expected to address the housing crisis when it reconvenes in Austin next year. A major topic will likely be the extent of state intervention versus local control in setting zoning laws. Some advocates propose state-level mandates to ensure all cities contribute to solving the housing shortage, while others emphasize the need for flexibility at the local level to tailor solutions to community needs.
“While every community should be accountable, the state can set expectations to ensure all cities are helping meet the housing demand,” Garcia said. Balancing state and city powers will be central to any meaningful progress in addressing Texas’ housing issues.
For real estate developers and investors, understanding the dynamics of Texas' housing market is crucial. The state's rapid population growth and significant housing shortages present both challenges and opportunities. Addressing zoning laws and supporting affordable housing initiatives will be key to managing this demand and capitalizing on the burgeoning market.
Join the Conversation: What are your thoughts on the Texas housing shortage and potential solutions? How do you plan to navigate these trends in your investments? Share your insights and engage with our community!
#RealEstateTrends #HousingShortage #InvestmentOpportunities #TexasRealEstate
What are your views on the Texas housing market and its challenges? Let’s discuss below! 💬🏡
#texas#real estate#dallas texas#austin texas#san antonio#fort worth#houston#investment#danielkaufmanrealestate#economy#real estate investing#housing#daniel kaufman#construction#homes#housing forecast
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LEON BRIDGES RELEASES FOURTH STUDIO ALBUM LEON
GRAMMY® Award-winning Texas recording artist, songwriter, and performer Leon Bridges shares his fourth studio album Leon via Columbia Records.
Starting the week with an intimate underplay three-night residency at Austin’s legendary Continental Club, Leon treated the audiences to brand new songs from the Leon album as well as beloved favorites.
Says Leon on the album, “Leon is the genre.”
The album’s release follows the first single “Peaceful Place,” fan track “Laredo” and the Fallon-debuted “That’s What I Love.” Recorded and produced by Ian Fitchuk (Kacey Musgraves, Maggie Rogers) at El Desierto on the outskirts of Mexico City with co-production from Daniel Tashian (Kacey Musgraves) in Nashville, Leon features 13 handcrafted tracks spotlighting Leon’s signature storytelling and organic genre alchemy. Leon unfolds as his most poignant, powerful, and personal body of work to date as the man himself takes you through the streets he knows best, the things he holds dearest, and the memories of the people and place that shaped him. Six years in the making, this record is unmistakably Leon. Check out the full tracklisting below. Leon builds on the legacy of Leon Bridges' three previous albums, Gold-Diggers Sound, Good Thing, and Coming Home, all of which received GRAMMY nominations for Best R&B Album.
Bookended appropriately with Texas dates, Leon launches Leon Bridges: The Leon Tour this weekend at ACL Festival in Austin. The tour will then make stops in less traveled markets in Texas before heading across North America to cities such as Chicago, Toronto, New York, Nashville and more before wrapping with a special SOLD OUT homecoming show at the Dickies Arena in Fort Worth, Leon’s biggest headline show to date. Leon is excited to share that $1 from every ticket sold will go directly to his charity, The Big Good. Hermanos Gutiérrez will support Leon on all dates, with Charley Crockett serving as direct support in Fort Worth. All shows are on sale now with many shows already sold out. For more information on Leon Bridges: The Leon Tour, please visit www.leonbridges.com/tour. Full routing below.
#leon#leon bridges#rnb#90s rnb#spotify#youtube#music#artist#musician#soundcloud#culture#art#columbia#r&b music#r&b#r&b/soul#r&b pop#r&b artist#soul#pop#pop music#indie#indie music#pop culture#indie pop#pop art#neo soul#Spotify
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Holidays 8.30
Holidays
Archivist Day (Kyrgyzstan)
AVID Day
Barberry Day (French Republic)
Commemoration Day for the Fatalities in Pre-Deportation Detention (Germany)
Frankenstein Day
Fred Hampton Day (Illinois)
Freeman-Moss Day
Huey P. Long Day (Louisiana)
International Day of the Disappeared
International Day of the Victims of Enforced Disappearances (UN)
International Missy Barratt Day (Aenopia)
International Puma Day
International Whale Shark Day
Jimmy Buffet Day
Manu Ginobili Day (Texas)
Marcelo H. Del Pilar Day (Bulacan, Philippines)
Motel Day (Colombia)
National Ass Clapping Day
National Beach Day
National Bite People Who Annoy You Day
National Black Beauty Founders Day
National Grief Awareness Day
National Harper Day
National Holistic Pet Day
National Homecare Day of Action
National Press Freedom Day (Philippines)
National Screen Time Awareness Day
National Small Industry Day (India)
Pinaglabanan Day (Philippines)
Retrospection Day
Rowboat Day
Saint Rose of Lima’s Day (Peru)
Slinky Day
Talk Intelligently Day
Victory Day (Turkey)
Food & Drink Celebrations
International Cabernet Sauvignon Day
National Mai Tai Day (a.k.a. Real Mai Tai)
National Toasted Marshmallow Day
New England Apple Day
Independence & Related Days
Ashoka (Declared; 2010) [unrecognized]
Constitution Day (Kazakhstan)
Constitution Day (Turks and Caicos Islands)
Kohlandia (Declared; 2019) [unrecognized]
Leylandiistan & Gurvata (Declared; 2014) [unrecognized]
Liberation Day (Hong Kong; from Japanese Occupation; 1945)
National Liberation Day (Gabon; 2023)
Tatarstan (from Russia, 1990) [unrecognized]
5th & Last Friday in August
Burning of Zozobra (Old Man Gloom effigy) [Friday before 9.1]
College Colors Day [Friday nearest 9.1]
Comfort Food Friday [Every Friday]
Daffodil Day (New Zealand) [Last Friday]
Five For Friday [Every Friday]
Flashback Friday [Every Friday]
Forgive Your Foe Friday [Friday of Be Kind to Humankind Week]
Friday Finds [Every Friday]
Fry Day (Pastafarian; Fritism) [Every Friday]
Peruvian Coffee Day (Peru) [Last Friday]
Positive Twitter Day [Last Friday]
TGIF (Thank God It's Friday) [Every Friday]
Tracky Dack Day (Australia) [Last Friday]
Wear It Purple Day (Australia) [Last Friday]
Sheep Market Fair begins (Denmark) [Last Friday through Sunday]
Weekly Holidays beginning August 31 (4th Full Week of August)
Labor Day Weekend (U.S. & Canada) [Begins Friday before 1st Monday in September]
Benton Neighbor Day (Benton, Missouri)
Britt Draft Horse Show (Britt, Iowa)
Bumbershoot (Seattle, Washington)
Central City Rock 'n' Roll Cruise-in & Concert (Central City, Kentucky)
Cleveland National Air Show (Cleveland, Ohio)
Clothesline Fair (Prairie Grove, Arkansas)
Colombia River Cross Channel Swim (Hood River, Oregon)
Colorado Balloon Classic (Colorado Springs, Colorado)
Commonwheel Labor Day Weekend Arts and Crafts Festival (Manitou Springs, Colorado)
Daniel Boone Pioneer Days (Winchester, Kentucky)
Fort Bridger Rendezvous (Fort Bridger, Wyoming)
Great Bathtub Race (Nome, Alaska)
Great Grove Bed Race (Coconut Grove, Florida)
Harvest Wine Celebration (Livermore, California)
Hog Capital of the World Festival (Kewanee, Illinois)
Hopkinton State Fair (Contoocook, New Hampshire)
Iroquois Arts Festival (Howes Cave, New York)
Johnson City Field Days (Johnson City, New York)
Jubilee Days Festival (Zion, Illinois)
Lifelight Outdoor Music Festival (Worthing, South Dakota)
Mackinac Bridge Walk (St. Ignace, Michigan)
National Championship Chuckwagon Races (Clinton, Arkansas)
National Hard Crab Derby and Fair (Crisfield, Maryland)
National Sweetcorn Festival (Hoopeston, Illinois)
Oatmeal Festival (Bertram/Oatmeal, Texas)
Odyssey Greek Festival (Orange, Connecticut)
On the Waterfront (Rockford, Illinois)
Old Threshers Reunion (Mount Pleasant, Iowa)
Oregon Trail Rodeo (Hastings, Nebraska)
Payson Golden Onion Days (Payson, Utah)
Pennsylvania Arts & Crafts Colonial Festival (Greensburg, Pennsylvania)
Popeye Picnic (Chester, Illinois)
Santa-Cali-Gon Days Festival (Independence, Missouri)
Scandinavian Fest (Budd Lake, New Jersey)
Sta-Bil Nationals Championship Lawn Mower Race (Delaware, Ohio)
Snake River Duck Race (Nome, Alaska)
Taste of Colorado (Denver, Colorado)
Taste of Madison (Madison, Wisconsin)
Totah Festival (Farmington, New Mexico)
Waikiki Roughwater Swim (Honolulu, Hawaii)
Westfest Czech Heritage Festival (West, Texas)
West Virginia Italian Heritage Festival (Clarksburg, West Virginia)
Wisconsin State Cow-Chip Throw (Prairie du Sac, Wisconsin)
Woodstock Fair (Woodstock, Connecticut)
World Championship Barbecue Goat Cook-Off (Brady, Texas)
Festivals Beginning August 30, 2024
Battle of Flowers (Laredo, Spain) [thru 8.30]
Brisbane Festival (Brisbane, Australia) [thru 9.21]
California Garlic Festival (Los Banos, California) [thru 9.1]
Calumet County Fair (Chilton, Wisconsin) [thru 9.2]
Casey Popcorn Festival (Casey, Illinois) [thru 9.2]
Coconino County Fair (Fort Tuthill County Park, Arizona) [thru 9.2]
Dice Con (Lviv, Ukraine) [thru 9.1]
Eastern Idaho State Fair (Blackfoot, Idaho) [thru 9.7]
European Medieval Festival (Horsens, Denmark) [thru 8.31]
Fall Fest 2024 (Schweitzer Mountain Resort, Idaho) [thru 9.2]
Galveston Island Wine Festival (Galveston, Texas) [thru 9.1]
Giant Cabbage Weigh-Off (Palmer, Alaska)
Great Pershing Balloon Derby (Brookfield, Missouri) [thru 9.2]
Harmony Fair (Harmony, Maine) [thru 9.2]
Marshall County Blueberry Festival (Plymouth, Indiana) [thru 9.2]
Michigan Bean Festival (Fairgrove, Michigan) [thru 8.31]
Midway Swiss Days (Midway, Utah)
National Hard Crab Derby (Crisfield, Maryland) [thru 9.1]
Nauvoo Grape Festival (Nauvoo, Illinois) [thru 9.1]
North Carolina Apple Festival (Hendersonville, North Carolina) [thru 9.2]
Obetz Zucchinifest (Obetz, Ohio) [thru 9.2]
Oktoberfest (Beaver Creek, Colorado) [thru 9.1]
PAX West, a.k.a. PAX Prime (Seattle, Washington) [thru 9.2]
Payson City Golden Onion Days (Payson, Utah) [thru 9.2]
Red Rooster Days (Dassel, Minnesota) [thru 9.2]
St. William Seafood Festival (Guntersville, Alabama) [thru 8.31]
Washington State Fair (Puyallup, Washington) [thru 9.22]
Wilhelm Tell Festival (New Glarus, Wisconsin) [thru 9.1]
Wisconsin State Cow Chip Throw & Festival (Prairie du Sac, Wisconsin) [thru 8.31]
Woodstock Fair (Woodstock, Connecticut) [thru 9.2]
Feast Days
Agilus (a.k.a. Aile; Christian; Saint)
Alexander of Constantinople (Eastern Orthodox)
Alfredo Ildefonso Schuster (Christian; Blessed)
Anne Line, Margaret Ward & Margaret Clitherow (Christian; Saints)
Black (Positivist; Saint)
Camilla Läckberg (Writerism)
Candle in a Wine Bottle Day (Pastafarian)
Charisteria (Charis, Goddess of Mercy; Old Roman Thanksgiving)
Chatter Champion Announcement Day (Shamanism)
Day of Satisfying the Hearts of the Ennead (Nine Major Gods; Ancient Egypt)
Eustáquio van Lieshout (Christian; Blessed)
Evelyn De Morgan (Artology)
Charles Chapman Grafton (Episcopal Church)
Fantinus (Christian; Saint)
Felix and Adauctus (Christian; Martyrs)
Festival of Charisteria (Day to Give Thanks; Ancient Rome)
Fiacre (Christian; Saint)
Guy de Lussigny (Artology)
Habetrot’s Eve Day (Northern Britain; Starza Pagan Book of Days)
Isaac Levitan (Artology)
Jacques Louis David (Artology)
J. Alden Weir (Artology)
Jeanne Jugan (Christian; Saint)
Leonor Fini (Artology)
Mary Shelley (Writerism)
Narcisa de Jesús (Christian; Saint)
Pammachius (Christian; Saint)
The Pullover Sweater (Muppetism)
Robert Crumb (Artology)
Rose of Lima (Christian; Saint)
Rumon (a.k.a. Ruan; Christian; Saint)
Sacrifice to Tari Pennu Day (Indian Earth-Goddess; Everyday Wicca)
Santa Rosa de Lima Day (Peru)
Stephen Nehmé (Maronite Church, Catholic Church; Blessed)
Theo van Doesburg (Artology)
Third Onam (Rice Harvest Festival, Day 3; Kerala, India)
Thor Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
The Three Arts Day (Celtic Book of Days)
Virginia Lee Burton (Artology)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Dismal Day (Unlucky or Evil Day; Medieval Europe; 16 of 24)
Egyptian Day (Unlucky Day; Middle Ages Europe) [16 of 24]
Sakimake (先負 Japan) [Bad luck in the morning, good luck in the afternoon.]
Unlucky Day (Grafton’s Manual of 1565) [39 of 60]
Premieres
Alice Chops the Suey (Ub Iwerks Disney Cartoon; 1925)
Anna Karenina (Film; 1935)
Bad Girl, by The Miracles (Song; 1959)
Beer (Film; 1985)
The Big Snooze (Chilly Willy Cartoon; 1957)
A Bird in a Guilty Cage (WB LT Cartoon; 1952)
Carnival Row (TV Series; 2019)
Dance, Girl, Dance (Film; 1940)
The Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance (TV Series; 2019)
Emma (Film; 1996)
Flesh + Blood (Film; 1985)
The Funny World of Fred and Barney (Live Action/Animated TV Variety Show; 1978)
The Good Girl (Film; 2002)
Heart-Shaped Box, by Nirvana (Song; 1993)
Hey Jude, by The Beatles (Song; 1968) [1st Apple Records release]
Highway 61 Revisited, by Bob Dylan (Album; 1965)
Kravn the Hunter (Film; 2023)
The Late Show with David Letterman (Talk Show; 1993)
Little Cesario (MGM Cartoon; 1941)
Medúlla, by Björk (Album; 2004)
A Mouse in the House (Tom & Jerry Cartoon; 1947)
Music of the Sun, by Rihanna (Album; 2005)
Never Kick a Woman (Fleischer Popeye Cartoon; 1936)
Otello (Opera Film by Franco Zeffirelli; 1986)
Putting on the Act (Fleischer Popeye Cartoon; 1940)
Santana, by Carlos Santana (Album; 1969)
The School for Scandal, by Samuel Barber (Overture; 1933)
Short in the Saddle (Woody Woodpecker Cartoon; 1963)
Side to Side, by Ariana Grande (Song; 2016)
Slow Days, Fast Company, by Eve Babitz (Short Stories; 1977)
State Fair (Film; 1945)
Surf’s Up, by The Beach Boys (Song; 1971)
Terror on the Midway (Fleischer Cartoon; 1942) [#9]
The Three Bears (Ub Iwerks ComiColor Cartoon; 1935)
Top Hat (Film; 1935)
What Happened to Monday (Film; 2017)
Today’s Name Days
Felix, Herbert, Rebekka (Austria)
Aleksandar, Aleksandra (Bulgaria)
Didak, Margarita, Petar (Croatia)
Vladěna (Czech Republic)
Albert, Benjamin (Denmark)
Emil, Meljo, Mello, Miljo (Estonia)
Eemeli, Eemi, Eemil (Finland)
Fiacre (France)
Alma, Felix, Heribert, Rebekka (Germany)
Alexandra, Alexandros, Evlalios, Filakas (Greece)
Rózsa (Hungary)
Donato, Fantino (Italy)
Alija, Alvis, Jolanta (Latvia)
Adauktas, Augūna, Gaudencija, Kintenis (Lithuania)
Ben, Benjamin (Norway)
Adaukt, Częstowoj, Gaudencja, Miron, Rebeka, Róża, Szczęsna, Szczęsny, Tekla (Poland)
Ružena (Slovakia)
Íngrid, Pedro (Spain)
Albert, Albertina (Sweden)
Raisa, Rhoda, Rosa, Rosabelle, Rosalie, Rosalind, Rosalinda, Roseanne, Rose, Rosemary, Rosetta, Rosie (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 243 of 2024; 123 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 5 of Week 35 of 2024
Celtic Tree Calendar: Coll (Hazel) [Day 28 of 28]
Chinese: Month 7 (Ren-Shen), Day 27 (Bing-Yin)
Chinese Year of the: Dragon 4722 (until January 29, 2025) [Wu-Chen]
Hebrew: 26 Av 5784
Islamic: 24 Safar 1446
J Cal: 3 Gold; Threesday [3 of 30]
Julian: 17 August 2024
Moon: 11%: Waning Crescent
Positivist: 19 Gutenberg (9th Month) [Fulton]
Runic Half Month: Rad (Motion) [Day 8 of 15]
Season: Summer (Day 72 of 94)
Week: 4th Full Week of August
Zodiac: Virgo (Day 9 of 32)
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808 Mirabell Court
Arlington, Texas 76015
RENT:$1,495
Available 11/15/2024
2 beds/2 baths/1,146 sqft.
Apply Now:https://is.gd/vdAFCX
Updated 2 Bed, 2 Bath Duplex in Quiet Cul-de-Sac
Please excuse our mess while our make-ready is still in progress.
Welcome to 808 Mirabell Ct, a charming 2 bed, 2 bath duplex nestled in a quiet cul-de-sac in Arlington, TX. Experience peaceful suburban living while being just minutes from the city's vibrant shopping, dining, and entertainment options. This home is undergoing updates, including fresh paint throughout, new vinyl plank flooring, and a fully painted exterior, making it move-in ready. Enjoy a spacious open living area, a full kitchen, and a fenced backyard perfect for relaxation or pets. Lawn service is included, offering both convenience and a carefree lifestyle. Don't miss this opportunity for comfort and quality in a prime location!
Schedule a Tour Today! Call us at (972) 299-3190 or email [email protected]
Main Office: 817-640-2064
"Discover The Classic Difference"
#Arlington#Arlington Texas#dallas fort worth real estate market#dallas/fort worth metroplex#dfw#rental property#rental house#real estate#classic property management#Duplex#Duplex For Lease#For Rent#Home#Multiple listing service#mls#Zillow Rentals#Hotpads Rentals#properties for lease#house for rent#homes for rent#homes#home sweet home#home#Arlington Home
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Importance of Digital Marketing in Growth of Your Business
You cannot be an entrepreneur without hearing about digital marketing in this digital world. It helps businesses in selling niche products and services and reach wider audiences. Also, a prominent digital marketing company in Dallas can help you keep track of your website traffic, conversions, and other important metrics to see how your digital marketing efforts are performing.
#digital marketing agency in Dallas#digital marketing company in Dallas#digital marketing company in Fort Worth#digital marketing agency in Texas
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Does it feel like Texas is suddenly taking over the national entertainment industry?
Megaproducer Taylor Sheridan – Wind River, Hell or High Water, and now the blockbuster Yellowstone– raised in Fort Worth, is making Western culture popular again and filling rodeo arenas with city folks.
A new force in streaming and cable
Another Texas-based player may be an even more disruptive force in the U.S. entertainment industry.
Great American Media (GAM) is suddenly an overnight contender in the U.S. streaming and cable television space, winning regular coverage in industry flagships like Variety and The Hollywood Reporter, and it has the entertainment industry sitting up and taking notice for its success attracting audiences to faith and family content.
“We’re on our way to being America’s most uplifting and inspiring network,” says CEO Bill Abbott, who founded Great American Media in 2021.
Abbott follows a familiar playbook – his own — perfected over 35 years in family entertainment.
Abbott’s resume includes senior leadership roles at Fox Kids, Fox Family Channel, and ABC Family, plus more than 20 years as the architect of the Hallmark television brands. Now he has launched another TV brand in the burgeoning Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex, a big community with small-town sensibilities and a dedicated and talented populace, he says.
As the engineer of the next big thing, Abbott pulled on both experience and his friends, instantly creating a crew of iconic TV stars, including Mario Lopez, Danica McKellar, Cameron Mathison, Alexa and Carlos PenaVega, and, of course, Candace Cameron Bure.
These stars are making an appearance at iconic venues across the nation for spotlight events and movie production. Carlos and Alexa PenaVega spent the day at AT&T Stadium in Dallas – right down the road from the headquarters of Great America Media – filming their upcoming holiday premiere movie. Not only is the AT&T Stadium recognizable by many, but this production further solidifies Abbott’s dedication to creating uplifting, quality content.
Today, his startup boasts over 70 million viewers and subscribers to its cable television channels and streaming service, a remarkable feat in any environment. The last three years have been some of the most tumultuous in television and entertainment history, with a record decline in cable subscribers and increasing competition among streaming services. Yet Great American Media is on the rise.
The success is a testament to early mornings, continual conference calls, coast-to-coast travel, and non-stop team building. Every Friday, Abbott hosts a company-wide review of the market and a company performance where he answers employees’ questions nationwide. One staffer describes it as a master class in cable and streaming television.
Great American Media’s Fort Worth headquarters includes production and administrative offices, while its sales and executive offices are in New York. Its member services center, a call center supporting a committed fan base, is in Phoenix.
“One of the most rewarding parts of my jobs is to read viewer emails,” says Abbott, who regularly corresponds with a group of over 25,000 loyal Great American Media Insiders. “Our viewers know what they want and it’s our job to give them a great uplifting experience free of the stress and contentiousness of their already overly complex world.”
Great American Media’s portfolio of brands now includes Great American Family, Great American Pure Flix, Great American Faith & Living, Great American Adventures, and Pure Flix TV.
As the company’s flagship cable TV network, Great American Family, features quality original movies and classic series that are inspiring and emotionally connecting. The business strategy is to align the content and convert cable viewers to streaming subscribers, a riddle many in Hollywood are attempting to solve.
Great American Pure Flix is GAM’s leading subscription on-demand streaming service and the most successful faith-based content provider of its size. A recent Financial Times story described GAM as the Netflix of faith-based content, to which Abbott responds, “Not bad company to be in after only three years.”
Great American Faith & Living features mostly unscripted lifestyle programming that celebrates family-friendly traditions every day and every season.
Great American Media is also home to a FAST (free ad-supporting streaming TV) channel with Great American Adventures, which offers both scripted and unscripted content, including cooking and do-it-yourself programs, and Great American Community, a free direct-to-consumer streaming app featuring short-form original series hosted by well-known lifestyle experts and TV stars. There is also a Pure Flix FAST channel.
“We are creating an oasis in a cultural desert,” says Candace Cameron Bure, star of many Great American Media original programs, including hit My Christmas Hero. She joined Abbott at the film’s screening on Joint Base Lewis-McChord in Tacoma, Washington.
Abbott agrees, saying, “I think that the culture overall needs what we’re offering. And there is just so little content out there that serves family and faith and yet is done in a quality way. It is a very big part of what our mission is and what we do, and the demand is huge.”
Not His First Rodeo
Abbott founded Great American Media in June 2021 with backing from Dallas-based investors, including Dallas businessman Doug Deason. Abbott credits Deason with the company’s steady focus on strategy.
“After running companies that possess varying levels of leadership and judgment exercised at the board and ownership level, I know first-hand that these qualities can make or break a business, and Great American Media’s success starts with Doug in his role as Chairman of the Board,” says Abbott.
Deason, who most recently demonstrated political acumen by leading an initiative to get Texans to set aside $1 billion to expand Texas state parks and co-chaired the expansion of Dallas’ Centennial Parks.
“Without Doug’s unwavering support, vision, and courage, Great American Media would lack the ability to stand firmly behind the values conveyed in our faith and family content,” says Abbott, “and in fact, it’s quite likely the business would never have gotten off the ground.”
Deason credits Abbott, who he points out is unique among broadcasting executives, who more typically are finance types or lawyers and rarely schooled in stories, let alone moral tales. Abbott is an English and Literature graduate of the College of the Holy Cross, a private Jesuit liberal arts college in Worcester, Massachusetts, a foundation he puts to good use by reading every script and participating in creative development with his producers and stars.
GAM’s CEO is deeply respected in the industry and serves on the boards of the Parents Television & Media Council and the International Radio & Television Society Foundation. He was inducted into Broadcasting & Cable’s Hall of Fame in 2017.
Previously, Abbott served for two decades as a senior executive and then CEO of Crown Media Family Networks, the parent company of Hallmark Channel, Hallmark Mystery, Hallmark Drama, and Hallmark Movies Now.
“We had tremendous success with creating a destination that was family-friendly and themed around the holidays,” explains Abbott. He is credited with creating the Christmas television genre, expanding the network’s romantic comedies, and launching its mysteries channel.
After 20 years, Abbott left Hallmark and looked to Texas to build a new network: Great American Family.
“We’re proud to say we celebrate faith, family, and country,” explains Abbott, “and we have an investor group where we all believe in the mission of family-friendly and faith-based content.”
Equipped with funding and a vision, Abbott acquired Fort Worth’s independently owned equestrian and western channel Ride TV and a music video channel called Great American Country from Discovery. This gave his fledgling dream two traditional cable television linear channels. As the company sorted through its inherited programs and shows, Great American Media was quickly rebranded.
“Now we had something to work with, and we went to work,” he explained.
The entertainment world suddenly noticed when the new GAM network acquired Michael Landon Jr.’s When Calls the Heart spin-off, When Hope Calls,” and began hiring the most well-known talent in the genre to appear in its own slate of made-for-TV movies.
GAM also quickly established Great American Christmas premieres and seasonal rotation around Christmas, including 12 original movies in its first year. Now, they’re producing more than 20 original Christmas movies per year.
Dream Streaming
While building a traditional cable offering, Abbott heard from Sony Pictures Entertainment, one of the world’s largest entertainment conglomerates. They owned Pure Flix, a niche faith-based streaming video-on-demand service with a loyal fan base.
“Pure Flix had been sort of under the radar,” explained Abbott. Sony had only recently acquired the streaming service and began looking for a means of growing it. Sony executives saw the synergies between Abbott’s startup, the Great American Family channel, and their streamer and proposed a merger.
The merger enhanced both platforms’ content library and created synergies between cable and streaming services, meeting customer expectations for a fulfilling, uplifting, and inspiring entertainment experience. Since the merger, SVOD subscriptions have increased, and the customer experience has been enhanced through several platform upgrades, making the streaming service intuitive and user-friendly.
“Our brands and diversified content distribution capabilities have helped us reach substantially larger and broader audiences on each platform, creating a family- and faith-friendly streaming service unlike any other,” he added. “Our business strategy is becoming more and more clear to the industry.”
And they’re noticing. Great American Media ncluded 2023 as the fastest-growing channel on cable television, and its ad sales were up 25 percent. Under Abbott’s watchful eye, the economy balances with creative excellence, allowing the GAM channels to increasingly share the same programming vision, creating the brand synergies critical to growth.
Great American Media’s programming and development team steers all original scripts from concept through production with an eye toward brand integrity. Abbott and the leadership team ensure every frame it controls is on brand as promised.
Great American Media has made headlines for the stars it has drawn in its first few years, including Candace Cameron Bure, Danica McKellar, Trevor Donovan, Jill Wagner, Jen Lilley, Cameron Mathison, and Jen Lilley.
In February, Great American Media announced it signed Emmy Award–winning host and actor Mario Lopez to a multi-picture, multi-year deal to star in content across the company’s vast media portfolio. Lopez will be a major part of Great American Christmas 2024. His first film in the partnership will include a holiday film starring alongside his wife and Broadway star Courtney Lopez. Lopez will continue hosting NBC’s Access Hollywood and Access Daily.
Abbott cites the dedicated Fort Worth team and the talent across Texas as a critical aspect of GAM’s success, noting that programmers and production crews work around the clock and maintain a high commitment to the brand and its viewers.
As conglomerates continue to obliterate brands, Abbott is on a mission to maintain his company’s commitment to bringing high-quality family content with a faith focus to a new heyday.
“We are not replicating the past; we are creating a new bright future, diverse in genre and format, but all wrapped in high-quality family programming that features romantic comedies, Christmas, drama, faith-inspired lifestyles, and even drama series,” says Abbott. Mysteries are now a cornerstone of the broad programming, with Great American Mysteries’ inaugural launch, The Ainsley McGregor Mysteries: A Case for the Winemaker, starring Cameron Bure, premiering on July 25.
“We’re about faith, family, and country,” said Abbott, “and those values can be reflected in uplifting and inspiring ways across all genres, including mysteries.”
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A quick visit to Fort Worth Stock Yards.
Fort Worth is where the West begins, and nothing embodies Western heritage better than the Fort Worth Stockyards National Historic District. From the original brick walkways to the wooden corrals, the Stockyards tells the true history of Texas
A 98-acre (40 ha) portion encompassing much of the district was listed on the National Register of Historic Places as Fort Worth Stockyards Historic District in 1976. It holds a former livestock market which operated under various owners from 1866.
The gateway to the Fort Worth Stock Yards was completed in 1910. It was a significant feat of concrete work for that era. The columns are 22 feet high and 13 feet in circumference. The sign is 36 feet long and 4 feet high. The entrance is a significant landmark in this historic area of Fort Worth.
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The new 118,000-square-foot H-E-B store in McKinney, Texas was built by EMJ Construction and designed by RSP Architects.
It officially opened on July 19, 2023 and joins the new Frisco and Plano locations, as well as six Central Market locations that have been serving DFW shoppers for more than two decades. The store features True Texas BBQ, a full-service pharmacy with a drive-thru, a fuel station and car wash, and Home by H-E-B decor.
EMJ Construction has been serving as a general contractor for H-E-B since 2018 and has future projects including H-E-B Alliance in Fort Worth that plans to open in Spring of 2024.
© Wade Griffith Photography 2023
#architecture#retail#grocery store#H-E-B#mckinney texas#Construction#general contractor#DFW#architectural photography
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