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'Moving to Texas is over': Podcasters who followed Joe Rogan to Austin rail against state

In 2020, podcaster Joe Rogan announced he was moving from Los Angeles to Austin with loud fanfare, according to Chron. His big appeal at a time of mandatory masks was Austin’s lax mask requirement, along with lower taxes.

Plenty of Rogan’s comedian friends announced they were following in his footsteps, seeking relief from “anti-cancel culture” and California’s significant homeless population.

Now Chron says they hate the place, according to recent interviews.

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"Texas f—————— blows," said comedian Shane Gillis, one of Rogan’s “canceled” friends who moved from New York to Austin after getting fired from Saturday Night Live for using an anti-Asian slur. “It's hot as f————. The second we ran out of power [after a storm], the house was 90 degrees and bugs came in immediately."

Chron reports Gillis also criticized Austin's homeless population, which he calls "screaming runners," and complained about Texas’ high number of emergency alerts.

"I just wanted to move to a place where you can do standup during the week," Gillis told Theon Von in 2024. "Forever it was just New York and LA, now you can do it in Nashville."

"[Austin] is a soulless city that should be burned to the ground and everyone that lives here should be summarily executed," joked ‘Tim Dillon Show’ host Tim Dillon, another of Rogan’s compadres. "It is not the 'live music capital of America,' it's three heroin addicts busking with guitars. There is zero talent here in any capacity. There's three restaurants that are good and I've been to all of them twice."

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"Yes, the taxes are better,” Dillon said on his podcast, “And yes, there are benefits to not being in LA. And yes, LA has a host of problems … But I moved here because … I said, something new will be good. I was wrong."

Another of Rogan’s friends, New Orleans-native comedian Mark Normand, recently called Austin's comedy scene "a punchline" and dragged the city’s oppressively hot weather and homeless population.

"That city is a boiling pot of evil goo, just circling a dish," Normand said last year. Chron reports he also declared "moving to Texas is over.”

Texas’ population continues to grow, but new surveys suggest that growth is beginning to slow.

Read the full Chron report at this link.

50 years after death, Jimi Hendrix continues shaping Seattle music -- as same racial inequities persist

SEATTLE — He’s not onstage, but Jabrille “Jimmy James” Williams is busting out the deep cuts. It doesn’t take much prodding to get one of Seattle’s premier guitar players — a certified Jimi Hendrix aficionado — on a roll, recounting with love tales of lost jam sessions and other Hendrixian legends that burn as brightly as a flaming Stratocaster.Even his stage name, a pseudonym Hendrix himself once used, is partly an homage to the Seattle-reared music icon. “Jimi Hendrix represented everything that has to do with the word ‘freedom,’” James says in a phone interview. “People want to put him in a...

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Battle Over 'Sanctuary Cities' in Texas Suggests a Larger National Conflict Lies Ahead

In his first week in office, Donald Trump signed an executive order threatening the funding of any municipality deemed a “sanctuary city,” an umbrella term for any local government that prioritizes enforcing local criminal law over using its resources to enforce federal immigration law.

While the policies vary widely from jurisdiction to jurisdiction, the basic idea is that local police largely ignore someone’s immigration status when dealing with them. For instance, if an undocumented person is pulled over for drunk driving, he is charged with that, and isn’t automatically handed over to immigration authorities for deportation. In some places, if people call the police to report a crime, they are protected from inquiries about their immigration status.

The battle between sanctuary cities and anti-immigration forces that despise them is just starting to heat up on the federal level. But in Texas, perhaps predictably, things are swiftly reaching a crisis point.

In January, Sally Hernandez, the newly elected sheriff of Travis County — which encompasses most of the city of Austin — announced that the sheriff’s office would be drastically reducing the amount of work it was doing on behalf of immigration officials and would instead devote its resources to enforcing criminal law.

“Under the previous detainer policy, an [undocumented] inmate who was charged with a crime was deported as soon as he posted bond, or before his court date,” Hernandez said in an online video to explain the new policy. “As such, the inmate never went before a court, the victim and their family would never have their day in court, and the inmate’s criminal record would grow. This system does not foster public safety.”

In addition, the sheriff’s office will leave undocumented people who are not charged with a crime alone.

“The Travis County sheriff’s office must enact policies that build public trust,” Hernandez continued, “including policies that make it clear that, as local law enforcement officers, we will not interrogate or arrest someone over an unrelated federal immigration matter, if they are trying to report a crime.”

Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican who has embraced a broad range of far-right views, retaliated against Hernandez on Wednesday by terminating more than $1 million in state grants to Travis County. He is also threatening to look for ways to remove Hernandez from office.

Abbott’s vindictive attempts at payback are “more like Russian President Putin’s authoritarian regime than our democracy,” Rep. Lloyd Doggett, a Democrat who represents the Austin area, said on Wednesday. “His anti-immigrant hysteria damages local law enforcement and our entire community.”

Gov. Abbott’s office did not respond to a request for comment.

Abbott and his fellow anti-immigrant politicians, including President Trump, like to frame their actions on immigration as entirely an issue of public safety. But the grants that Abbott took away from Travis County were earmarked for criminal justice efforts. Given a choice between harassing immigrants and fighting crime, Abbott is clearly choosing the former.

While human rights activists make moral arguments in favor of sanctuary city policies, for law enforcement it’s more of a practical issue. As Hernandez made clear in her video statement, the more resources that local law enforcement must devote to enforcing immigration law, the fewer they have for fighting crime. If undocumented people are afraid of reporting crimes or giving testimony because they are under threat of deportation, they simply won’t do it.

To make things worse, the GOP-dominated Texas Senate has now stepped in. On Thursday, the state affairs committee met for a hearing on a proposed law, S.B. 4, that would block Texas cities and universities from having sanctuary policies like the ones in Travis County.

Pro-immigration protesters descended on the Texas capitol in response, with police dragging out people out from the Senate gallery for causing a disturbance. Hundreds of people lined up to testify in favor of leaving immigrants alone.

Good morning #txlege I'm @ the Senate State Affairs committee this AM covering testimony for SB 4: sanctuary cities. https://t.co/XdIdBmOrxZ

— Madlin Mekelburg (@madlinbmek) February 2, 2017
“It’s clear to us that the momentum behind protecting immigrants and their families is growing by the day,” said Greisa Martinez, a Dallas resident who is the advocacy director for United We Dream. Martinez immigrated from Hidalgo, Mexico, when she was a minor and is living legally in the U.S. under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, known as DACA. 
In a phone interview, Martinez described the fight in Texas as “emblematic of the fight that is happening nationwide” and suggested that anger at reactionary forces and at Trump in particular was driving more people to rally for the cause of immigrants’ rights. 

“I do know that this moment feels different for us, in the way that we are no longer this marginalized community of immigrant youth,” Martinez said. “We are coming into this fight with supporters from all walks of life.” 

“We saw that in the mass mobilization of people all across the country saying they would have our backs,” she added, referring to the nationwide outburst of protests at airports, a reaction to Trump’s executive order aimed at restricting the travel rights of people from seven Muslim-majority nations. (That order is now on hold, thanks to a Friday court order by a federal judge in Seattle.)

Texas politics tend to be a harbinger of whatever mischief right-wing forces are about to inflict on the rest of country, so the fight over immigrant rights in the Lone Star State is certain to have national ramifications. As the Texas governor’s actions suggest, anti-immigration forces don’t care if victims are denied justice, families are separated and cops are denied the resources they need to do their jobs. These right-wing activists want to stigmatize and persecute immigrants, and they are willing to sacrifice public safety to do so.

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How Huge Corporations Are Sneakily Taking Over Charming Little Hotels and Restaurants

Near my home in Austin, Texas, there is a great, old refurbished motel that I recommend to people when they come to visit our fair city. It not only is right on the famed Congress Avenue but also has a keep-it-real attitude that is expressed right on its iconic marquee: "No additives, no preservatives, corporate-free since 1938."
        The good news is that more and more businesses across the country are adopting this attitude, providing a buy-local, un-corporate, anti-chain alternative for customers. Food shoppers and restaurant goers, for example, have made a huge shift in recent years away from the likes of McDonald's, Pepsi and Taco Bell, preferring upstart, independent outfits with names like "The Corner," "Caleb's Kola," and "US Taco Co."
        But uh-oh, guess who owns those little local alternatives. Right -- McDonald's, PepsiCo and Taco Bell. Leave it to ethically challenged, profiteering monopolists to grab such value-laden terms as "genuine," "local" and "honest," empty them of any authenticity, then hurl them back at consumers as shamefully deceptive marketing scams.
        In Huntington Beach, California, US Taco Co. poses as a hip surfer haunt, with a colorful "Day of the Dead" Mexican skull as its logo. The airy place peddles lobster tacos and other fare at $3 or $4 each -- very un-fast-foody. Nowhere is it whispered that this is a big-chain outlet, created by a group of Taco Bell insiders. They even usurped the enterprising word "entrepreneur," stripped it of its outsider connotation, and twisted it into an ugly corporate vanity, calling themselves "intrapreneurs."
        Fast-food restaurants are not the only ones that play this profitable imitation game. As everyone who travels a lot soon learns, when you stay in the hotels of the big chains, it's easy to forget where you are, since they are all so alike, offering all the charm of Noplace, USA.
        This disorienting sameness has become even more dizzying in recent years as the chains have merged and conglomerated. Weary travelers might choose to stay overnight in one of the Residence Inn hotels, a Courtyard, the TownePlace Suites or even splurge for a night in a ritzy Ritz-Carlton. In fact, though, whichever one you choose, you're in a Marriott -- the $14 billion-a-year combine that owns all of the above chains, along with 15 others. Marriott is among the world's 10 largest hoteliers that have a combined 113 different chains in their crowded stable of brand names.
        Naturally, as uniformity and conglomeration have taken over the industry, a consumer rebellion has erupted, with more and more travelers -- especially younger ones -- seeking out independent hotels, unique inns and local B&Bs. They prefer the un-corporate places that have cool names like the Moxy, Canopy and Vib. But oh, crud, guess what. All three of those are chains of "hip" hotels that opened in the past year and are owned respectively by Marriott, Hilton and Best Western.
        Known in the industry as "lifestyle hotels," these fake-independent lodgings are the hot new niche for mega-conglomerates trying to nab travelers in search of authenticity. "The big hotel chains are in the business of pretending they aren't big chains," says Pauline Frommer, editor of the well-regarded Frommer's travel guides. "They want you to think they are boutiques."
        Sneaky, sneaky! But the real problem with these fabricators of corporatized authenticity is that reality will win out in the end. Small and local has a genuine feel and flavor that the imitators can't sustain as they sprawl out into 1,000 and then 10,000 stores. And as they do that, it becomes obvious to customers that they've been duped -- and that's not a good marketing strategy. We dupes will not only quickly see that we're being sold plastic "authenticity" but also be ticked off about it.

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