Austin, TX
Austin chef cooks up vegan comfort food to reach more communities of color.
AUSTIN, Texas — The most important step Marlon Rison ever took for his health was the day he quit consuming meat products.
“I remember it was an afternoon. I didn’t have much going on,” Rison said.
He remembers the date too. It was 8 years ago on July 3.
Rison had been a personal trainer for several years and always focused on anything regarding health, exercise and eating.
That fateful day, he watched a documentary called ‘What the Health’ on Netflix.
“I had no idea what I was getting into,” Rison said.
Rison grew up with upper respiratory issues, something his father told him was hereditary.
“Quickly you learn that it’s not what’s in your family as far as your bloodline goes that affects your health, it’s the habits that get passed down from generation to generation,” Rison said.
Rison expected to lose weight once he started a plant-based diet. The power lifter says at his heaviest he was around 380 pounds.
“Within the first 30 days I lost about 30 pounds,” Rison said.
But Rison was amazed by how else his body was changing. Lifelong health problems were regressing until he was seemingly healed.
“High blood pressure? Gone. Acid reflux? Gone. Respiratory issues? Non-existent. Asthma medicine? Don’t need it anymore.” Rison said.
The Victoria native started being creative in the kitchen. He dreamed of a cooking show, but the pandemic halted those aspirations. Rison used a lot of the time reflecting, trying to figure out his purpose. Around this time, Rison’s father found slave purchase papers listing his fifth great-grandfather.
“It’s crazy when you see a receipt for a human,” Rison said.
It gave him a realization.
“From there I said, ‘man there’s a lot more I can be doing to really thank them (ancestors) for loving me before they knew me’,” Rison recalled.
Inspired, Rison sought to offer the same love to future generations in his family. He found his answer in opening a business and creating generational wealth.
Rison and his business partner, Ericka Dotson, opened Community Vegan making plant-based soul food accessible to communities of color in East Austin.
“Be able to eat foods that are good tasting, remind them of what they grew up eating at home but also happen to be plant-based,” Rison said.
Rison has no desire to convert meat eaters or make people eat at his business regularly. He just wants a chance to educate people.
“Especially people of color, we just don’t have that education of food,” Rison said. “It’s something we need to do a better job of, and that’s what I’m here to do.”
Austin, TX
National Hockey League seeking expansion in Houston and Austin as potential targets
HOUSTON, Texas — The NHL is looking to start the expansion process in Texas, with Austin and Houston as potential targets, sources told ESPN on Tuesday.
The expansion news is being discussed at the NHL’s board of governors meeting, which is being held on Tuesday in New York.
The NHL went from 30 to 32 clubs when it added the Vegas Golden Knights (began play in 2017-18) and Seattle Kraken (debuted in 2021-22). The expansion fee for Vegas was $500 million and for Seattle was $650 million.
Earlier this month at the Stanley Cup Final, NHL commissioner Gary Bettman reiterated that the league has fielded calls from across North America from prospective cities and owners who are interested in bringing in an NHL franchise.
SEE HERE: It’s official: Aeros hockey team leaving Houston at end of season
Bettman has previously told the board of governors that any potential expansion team would likely come with at least a $2 billion fee for it to make sense.
The league has seen record revenues this season — projected to be between $7.5 billion and $8 billion. The NHL salary cap is set at $104 million for the 2026-27 season, a $8.5 million increase from this past season.
Copyright © 2026 ESPN Internet Ventures. All rights reserved.
Austin, TX
Adobro’s Filipino-Fiesta-meets-Texas-Dancehall “Right Here, Right Now” Album Release Party
Austin, TX
Barton Springs Pool to reopen June 23
AUSTIN, Texas – Barton Springs Pool will reopen to visitors this week.
What they’re saying:
The City of Austin said the pool will reopen on Tuesday, June 23, for the early morning regularly scheduled “swim at your own risk.”
The pool had closed on June 15 due to severe weather.
City staff removed large tree branches, aluminum cans, fishing hooks, and other debris from the water.
The team also cleaned off decks and reinstalled the diving board in preparation for the pool’s reopening.
The Source: Information from the City of Austin
-
News12 minutes agoODNI under Pulte fires 6 staff, sends 45 back to home agencies
-
Los Angeles, Ca2 hours agoAir quality concerns remain as the Boyle Heights warehouse fire continues to burn
-
Detroit, MI2 hours agoWenceel Pérez returns home, but when will he return to Detroit Tigers?
-
San Francisco, CA2 hours agoSan Francisco Supervisor Jackie Fielder to return following mental health leave
-
Dallas, TX2 hours ago
Impact: How Jeffery Simmons’ extension could affect Quinnen Williams
-
Miami, FL2 hours ago
Jaylen Brown bidding war? Haslem drove this? All the fallout from Antetokounmpo trade to Miami
-
Boston, MA2 hours agoYour next Uber ride in Boston could be a taxi
-
Denver, CO2 hours agoNuggets 2026 NBA mock draft tracker 2.0: What national experts predict Denver will do