-
The video was laden with violence and obscenities shouted by the pro-Trump mob that stormed the Capitol building on Jan. 6.
-
A professor at SMU outlines some strategies for having difficult conversations with children.
-
Dallas community leaders have tried to recruit a corporate grocery store to south Oak Cliff for years, to no avail. Now they're looking to replicate one-of-a-kind nonprofit store in Waco in their own backyard.
-
Throughout the pandemic, rural communities in the Panhandle have struggled to keep up in the fight against the coronavirus. At first they faced limited testing supplies and personal protective equipment. In the fall, they didn’t have enough hospital beds for patients. Now they can’t seem to get vaccines into arms fast enough.
-
President Biden suspended "Remain in Mexico" on Inauguration Day. But what will happen to the thousands of asylum seekers already in the program, waiting in Mexican border cities for their day in U.S. immigration court?
-
The P-EBT program was "the best program" to help poor children through the pandemic. But a series of delays have seen no assistance arrive more than halfway through the school year.
-
The impact of the Keystone XL's cancellation in Texas is more complicated than many headlines would have you believe.
-
Texas is home to more immigrant detention centers than any other state, making it ground zero for any changes President Joe Biden will make to the system.
-
With COVID-19 vaccines in short supply, Dallas County is trying to forestall an unequal distribution of doses. The county's partnering with local healthcare providers in Southern Dallas and providing large vaccination hubs near Black and brown communities.
-
As small businesses across North Texas have been forced to close or adapt during the pandemic, one tamale shop has found solid ground without really changing a thing.
-
SMU presidential historian Sharron Conrad joined Think host Krys Boyd to talk about the unprecedented nature of the attack and the role of President Trump in American history.
-
While the industry as a whole did well, many funeral homes had more work than they would like due to the pandemic.