Austin, TX
ESPN’s College GameDay Built by The Home Depot Travels to the Lone Star State for Showdown Between New SEC Rivals No. 1 Texas and No. 5 Georgia
ESPN Images selects from previous GameDay trips to Texas
- College football’s premier pregame show heads to Austin, Texas, for a full ‘ESPN Texas Takeover’ weekend and top-5 SEC matchup
- Week 7 Special Guests: Texas head coach Steve Sarkisian, Longhorns legend Vince Young, Olympic gold medalist Gabby Thomas and comedian Tony Hinchcliffe; World No. 1 golfer and Texas Ex Scottie Scheffler joins as the Week 8 guest picker
- Fans arriving early will have the chance to win prizes including exclusive t-shirts, free breakfast, photo opportunities with a custom Texas-wrapped Formula 1 car and the chance to enter to be picked for Pat McAfee’s kicking contest for the opportunity to win $90,000 of Pat’s money
ESPN’s College GameDay Built by The Home Depot will be live from Austin, Texas, ahead of one of the most anticipated matchups of the season as No. 1 Texas hosts new SEC rival, No. 5 Georgia. The premier college football pregame show will be at its third AP Top-5 matchup this season and will originate from South Mall on campus from 9 a.m. – noon ET on ESPN & ESPNU.
The GameDay visit adds to a full ‘ESPN Texas Takeover’ weekend along with the top-5 college football showdown on Saturday evening and the Formula 1 United States Grand Prix at Circuit of the Americas (COTA) on Sunday. Additional ESPN and ABC programming, as well as event activations, will be in Austin throughout the action-packed weekend.
Host Rece Davis, at the helm for his 10th season, is joined at the desk by GameDay analysts Lee Corso, Kirk Herbstreit, Desmond Howard, Pat McAfee and Nick Saban. College football insider Pete Thamel, college football betting analyst ‘Stanford Steve’ Coughlin and reporters Jen Lada and Jess Sims round out the GameDay cast.
Following the pregame show, the lead game team of Chris Fowler, Herbstreit and Holly Rowe, joined by Katie George, will be on the call on ABC Saturday Night Football Presented by Capital One (7:30 p.m. ET, ABC, ESPN+).
At the midway point of the college football regular season, College GameDay remains on pace for its best season ever averaging 2.2 million viewers, a 9% increase over the 2023 season. Week 7’s trip to Oregon marked the best October episode since the show expanded to three hours and the second-best October episode of all time.
On Site in Austin
Additional offerings this week include an opportunity to take photos with a custom Texas-wrapped Formula 1 car and play ‘Pitch-a-Fit’ for additional prizes.
Pat McAfee’s Kicking Contest – Returning for its second season, GameDay will offer an exclusive contest during the live show, Pat McAfee’s Kicking Contest. Fans who arrive early will have a chance to be chosen from the ‘pit’ onsite with the opportunity to attempt a 33-yard field goal. If the contestant successfully completes the kick, they will be awarded $90,000 from McAfee. Full details, including official rules, can be found here.
The show and offerings are free for fans and early arrival is encouraged for these exclusive offers.
For onsite information, please visit College GameDay’s Hub HERE.
Show Highlights & Guests
- Coaches & Players on GameDay – Texas head coach Steve Sarkisian will visit the GameDay set during the show ahead of the Longhorns’ game. The show will feature a look into Indiana’s prep ahead of their matchup with Nebraska with Hoosier’s linebacker Aiden Fisher wired for sound earlier this week.
- Coach’s Film Room – Saban takes fans inside his film room to break down the new-look offense for undefeated Navy.
- Texas Takeover Crossover – Sims chats with F1 drivers ahead of the show and tests their knowledge of American college football, while Saban takes a hot lap at the Circuit of the Americas where Sunday’s Formula 1 race will be held.
- Special Guests – Texas football legend Vince Young makes a stop at GameDay this week. The former quarterback is one of the most decorated QBs in Longhorn history and was the third overall pick in the NFL Draft following his collegiate career. Highly decorated Olympic track and field medalist Gabby Thomas also joins the pregame show this week. The Austin local earned three gold medals this summer at the Paris Olympics. Comedian Tony Hinchcliffe will make an appearance on the show, joining McAfee for his Kicking Contest this week.
- Guest picker – World No. 1 golfer and Texas Ex Scottie Scheffler returns to Austin to join College GameDay as the Week 8 celebrity guest picker. Scheffler is coming off an historic seven-win season on the PGA TOUR which included a successful title defense at THE PLAYERS Championship and a season-capping TOUR Championship victory which secured the title as the PGA TOUR’s 2024 FedExCup Champion. Other career-defining wins this season include his second title at the Masters Tournament, a gold medal at the 2024 Olympics in Paris and was on the victorious U.S. Team at the Presidents Cup.
Additional guests will be announced ahead of Saturday’s show on ESPN PR’s Twitter and College GameDay’s Twitter.
Corso’s Count
- Coach Corso will be making his 419th mascot headgear selection this week at Texas. So far this season, his picks have gone a perfect 5-0.
- This will be the Longhorns’ 10th time hosting GameDay, and the 24th time Texas will appear on the show. Corso is 9-6 in the previous 15 times he’s chosen Texas, including a win earlier this season in Week 2 against Michigan.
- The Bulldogs will be making their 37th appearance on the pregame show, with Corso picking Georgia headgear 13 times for an 8-5 record in those games.
Features:
- Texas Fight – Since his freshman year, Texas left tackle Kelvin Banks has started every game for the Longhorns, but for most of those games, his mother wasn’t in the stands. For two years, Monica Banks was plagued with health issues that baffled doctors and robbed her of the ability to walk and talk. Thanks to her husband’s determination and a chance conversation, Monica is on the road to recovery – in a burnt orange jersey and cheering for her son. Jen Lada reports.
- Tennessee Tradition – “Papaw Carroll” was as big a Tennessee football fan as they come and there was nothing he took more seriously than the Volunteers’ rivalry with the Alabama Crimson Tide. After his passing, his grandson Josh began a tradition to keep their bond over the Vols alive with a special tribute at Papaw’s gravesite that continues to this day— and especially on the Third Saturday in October.
- Fall Wedding 101 – There are only so many Saturdays in the fall when the rest of the world falls away and it’s just you and the day of college football ahead. But what happens when one of those Saturdays is suddenly no longer yours because…“you’ve been cordially invited.” Marty Smith and Ryan McGee weigh in on how to survive Fall Wedding Season when the couple’s special day is in your football watching way.
- Hope At the Half – As we approach the halfway point of an already unbelievable college football season, fans have experienced all-time memorable moments, enormous upsets and weekly displays of greatness. But there is one thing that many teams are experiencing that is unfamiliar this far into the season…hope. Ryan McGee reports.
ESPN’s Expansive Digital Coverage
ESPN’s social and digital pre-pregame show, Countdown to GameDay Presented by Dr Pepper, will be live from Austin with hosts Christine Williamson, Harry Douglas and Harry Lyles Jr. for the Week 8 show. Lifetime Longhorn linebacker Brian Orakpo will join the show as a special guest at the start of the show, Douglas will do a film breakdown on Georgia’s offense and ‘Stanford Steve’ will join the trio to discuss the top college football matchups of the week. The show is available across ESPN on YouTube, Facebook and the ESPN App at 8:20 a.m. weekly.
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Media Contact:
Julie McKay, ESPN Communications – [email protected], @McKay_Julie
Austin, TX
Austin excels as one of America’s top 3 cities to start a career
After ranking as the third-best large U.S. city for starting a business last year, Austin took a surprising tumble into the 24th spot nationally for 2026.
WalletHub’s annual report, “Best Large Cities to Start a Business (2026)” compared 100 U.S. cities based on 19 relevant metrics across three key dimensions: business environment, access to resources, and costs. Factors that were analyzed include five-year business survival rates, job growth comparisons from 2020 and 2024, population growth of working-age individuals aged 16-64, office space affordability, and more.
Florida cities locked other states out of the top five best places in America for starting a new business: Tampa, Orlando, Jacksonville, Hialeah, and St. Petersburg.
Austin’s business environment ranked 11th best in the country, and the city ranked ninth in the “access to resources” category. The city also tied with Boise, Idaho, and Fresno, California, for the highest average growth in the number of small businesses nationally.
Austin lagged behind in the “business costs” ranking, coming in at No. 80 overall. This category examined metrics such as the city’s working-age population growth, the share of college-educated individuals, financing accessibility, the prevalence of investors, venture investment amounts per capita, and more.
Earlier this year, WalletHub declared Texas the third-best state for starting a business in 2026, and several Houston-area cities have seen robust growth after being recognized among the best career hotspots in the U.S. WalletHub also ranked Austin on its top-10 list of the best U.S. cities to find a job. Entrepreneurial praise has also been extended to 15 Austin-based innovators that made Inc Magazine’s 2026 Female Founders 500 list.
Texas cities with strong environments for new businesses
Multiple cities in the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex can claim bragging rights as the best Texas locales for starting a new business. Dallas ranked highest overall — appearing 11th nationally — and Irving landed a few spots behind in the 16th spot. Arlington (No. 23), Fort Worth (No. 30), Plano, (No. 35), and Garland (No. 65) followed behind.
Only six other Texas cities earned spots in the report: Houston (No. 26), Lubbock (No. 36), Corpus Christi (No. 39), San Antonio (No. 64), El Paso (No. 67), and Laredo (No. 76). Corpus Christi and Laredo also topped WalletHub’s list of the U.S. cities with the most accessible financing.
“From the Gold Rush and the Industrial Revolution to the Internet Age, periods of innovation have shaped our economy and driven major societal progress,” the report’s author wrote. “However, the past few years have been particularly challenging for business owners in the U.S., due to factors such as the COVID-19 pandemic, the Great Resignation and high inflation.”
Austin, TX
‘I want to be louder’: Austin Drag King Bobby Pudrido refuses to be deterred by Texas ban
Jay Thomas grew up like any kid, laughing at silly things and making up funny names.
So in the ’90s, when Tejano superstar Bobby Pulido’s songs played on the radio, young Jay and his peers couldn’t help but rhyme his last name with the Spanish word pudrido (which means rotten in English).
“We grew up calling him that just because it was funny,” he told Austin Signal host Jerry Quijano.
When he was thinking of a name for his drag persona, Thomas created a list.
“I was thinking of some queer icons and some not queer icons,” he said. “This one just resonated because he is a Tejano star. And in the ’90s he was this really big heartthrob that everybody wanted to be or be with.”
And three years ago, Thomas became Drag King Bobby Pudrido.
He thought it would be fun to impersonate a masculine figure from the Latino community and perform for an audience attracted to that type of energy. He also wanted to bring his culture into his drag.
Pudrido’s name has new recognition these days: Tejano singer Pulido decided to retire from music and go into politics. He’s running for Congress in South Texas’ District 15 against incumbent Republican Monica De La Cruz.
Both in an out of drag, Pudrido is also politically vocal. He advocates for trans rights and against the drag ban that went into effect statewide in March. The law prohibits drag performances in public properties or in front of children. Venues that host these performances can be fined up to $10,000.
“As a drag artist, one of the things we need to do is get booked so we can pay our bills,” Pudrido said.
Even though it’s unclear whether the ban affects some venues, he said, he thinks certain business owners won’t book drag performers because of the risk of being fined.
But as a working-class artist, he doesn’t have the luxury to dwell on it.
“You have to go to work, because you need to pay your bills,” he said.
The law has taken an emotional toll on him, too.
“The way it chips away at a queer person to hear any type of anti-queer legislation pass is something that is really big for me,“ he said. “We are constantly — just as human beings — trying to maintain our mental health. “
But that doesn’t mean his love for performing has been diminished. In fact, quite the opposite is true.
“It has fueled me,” Pudrido said. “Right now I’m in the angry phase where I want to be louder.”
As a performer and producer, the drag king has put on shows in the Austin area and recently traveled back to his hometown in Laredo for a show.
“It’s hard for drag kings to get booked sometimes, so we are still far away from the perfect ideal world for [them],” he said. “But the fact that I have a platform at all is huge.”
Pudrido’s passion for performing comes from his drag ancestors, “who started the art form as a way of being political and of being against the systems that were oppressing queer people.”
Drag King Bobby Prudido is currently producing his second queer quinceañera, “Con Mucho Amor,” with an anticipated show date in the fall.
Austin, TX
Men wrongly accused of grisly yogurt shop murders in Texas reach $35 million settlement with city
The city of Austin will pay $35 million to three men and the family of a fourth who were wrongly accused of the 1991 rape and murder of four teenage girls at a yogurt shop, a case that initially sent one of the men to death row and another to life in prison, under a tentative settlement reached Tuesday.
Robert Springsteen, Michael Scott, Forrest Welborn and Maurice Pierce had all insisted they were innocent of one of the city’s most notorious crimes. They were finally declared innocent by a judge in February after investigators determined the crime was committed by a suspect who died in 1999.
The settlement must still be approved by the city council at a later date. Details of the payments to the men and their families were not released.
“This settlement closes the final chapter of a devastating story in Austin’s history,” Austin City Manager T.C. Broadnax said in a statement. “We are pleased to have reached an agreement with those who were wrongly accused and wrongly convicted in this case and hope that this settlement brings a sense of closure to everyone affected by this horrific event.”
Scott and his attorney Tony Diaz said in a joint statement they are hopeful the settlement will help improve investigation practices and safeguards against wrongful convictions.
“Discussions and negotiations are ongoing regarding police reforms that would help ensure that nothing like what occurred in this case ever happens again,” they said.
Amy Ayers, 13; Eliza Thomas, 17; and sisters Jennifer and Sarah Harbison, ages 17 and 15, were bound, gagged and shot in the head at the “I Can’t Believe It’s Yogurt” store where two of them worked. The building was set on fire.
Investigators chased thousands of leads and several false confessions before the four men, who were teenagers when the girls were killed, were arrested in late 1999.
Springsteen and Scott were convicted based largely on confessions they insisted were coerced by police. Both convictions were overturned in the mid-2000s.
Welborn was charged but never tried after two grand juries refused to indict him. Pierce spent three years in jail before the charges were dismissed. He died in 2010 in a confrontation with police after a traffic stop.
Prosecutors wanted to try Springsteen and Scott again, but a judge ordered the charges dismissed in 2009 when new DNA tests that were unavailable in 1991 and the previous trials revealed another male suspect.
Investigators determined in 2025 that new DNA science and reviews of old ballistics evidence pointed to Robert Eugene Brashers as the sole killer.
Since 2018, authorities had used advanced DNA evidence to link Brashers to the strangulation death of a South Carolina woman in 1990, the 1997 rape of a 14-year-old girl in Tennessee and the shooting of a mother and daughter in Missouri in 1998.
The link to the Austin case came when a DNA sample taken from under Ayers’ fingernail came back as a match to Brashers from the 1990 killing.
Brashers died in 1999 when he shot himself during an hourslong standoff with police at a motel in Kennett, Missouri.
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