Austin, TX
Austin GP Promoter Confirms Ticket Surge As Headline Artists Revealed
Organizers of the United States Grand Prix at the Circuit of the Americas in Austin have revealed the plan for the upcoming race weekend, with Eminem’s concert on Saturday and a football match between popular college football teams Texas Longhorns and the Georgia Bulldogs. The event, followed by the increase in the sport’s competitiveness, is expected to attract a huge audience for the race weekend.
Race promoter Bobby Epstein has revealed that ticket sales shot up significantly after Max Verstappen stopped winning races this season. The end of his winning streak marked the conclusion of Red Bull’s dominance in the ground effect era that began in 2022. His last win was towards the end of June in Spain. Epstein told the media:
“I think it would have been our weakest year in four, since the pandemic.
“Our ticket sales really took off when Max stopped winning and it got more competitive. So, I give a lot of credit to our fan base and the audience, they’re paying attention and I think it’s exciting to see the season shape up the way it is.
“We’re expecting another big crowd, probably somewhere around where it’s been the last couple years. I would think whatever the record is for a Saturday sprint race, we should shatter that record, because Eminem has outsold Taylor Swift [who performed at the 2016 edition], and we’ve increased the size of the infield lawn to get to near 100,000 for the concert. So, I think 130,000 to 150,000 people will be there for the Saturday sprint race.”
The addition of a Saturday night showdown between the Texas Longhorns and Georgia Bulldogs, two top-ranked college football teams is expected to attract another 100,000 fans to DKR Texas Memorial Stadium, which presents a unique opportunity for COTA. As a result, Epstein has introduced a Friday-Sunday combo ticket tailored for football fans attending the game. He added:
“We have wound up on the same weekend as college football games before, which makes for a fun downtown late night, but I don’t think we’ve had it where the Longhorns have been ranked as high,” Epstein said. “There are going to be a lot of people in town for that.
“I think it’s a chance, two-fold. One for the college football fan who likes sports and likes big events. If that’s your vernacular, then you’re going to like to make your weekend even bigger by adding on F1 on Sunday.
“It’s a great opportunity for those fans, and then also for our fans who come for F1. I know the Europeans are particularly fond of college football, and in particular the halftime show. It’s surprising, but we have groups from Europe that come when there is a college football game, because it adds to their weekend and just elevates the experience overall.
“The football package is just something fun. We came up with it a couple weeks ago because Saturday was selling out, largely because of Eminem, and we still have capacity on Sunday and Friday. So, we just said, let’s throw it out there for people that just [attend the football game]. I think most of the hotels are three or four night minimums, so if you’re a Georgia fan coming in for it and you say : ‘What else am I gonna do the rest of the weekend?’ Well, you can buy Friday and Sunday and come out to the track.”
He also shared an adventurous plan from some fans who were aiming to attend both the game and the concert, even though the game’s timing has yet to be announced. Epstein said:
“If the game time kick-off is in the evening, then you can go to Eminem for an hour and something and then make the second half of the football game, which we know some people are planning on doing.
“The shuttle stop for our downtown bus route is very near the stadium, so I know there’s plenty of people planning to go to the concert and go to the second half of the football game.”
Austin, TX
Austin leaders debate future of I-35 Cap & Stitch projects as new proposal cuts back spending
AUSTIN, Texas (KXAN) – The future of long-planned Cap and Stitch projects over I-35 is under discussion in Austin, after a new proposal from Mayor Kirk Watson suggested reducing how much money the city spends on the projects.
City leaders originally approved $104 million to help fund future caps, deck plazas built over I-35 designed to reconnect east and west Austin with parks, green space and community areas.
Now, Watson’s proposal would focus on completing one fully built project sooner while lowering the city’s financial commitment.
Under Watson’s plan, the city would build a finished cap extending from Palm Park across I-35 to the east side. Unlike earlier concepts that focused mainly on preparing infrastructure for future projects, the mayor said this approach would allow residents to see a completed public space when the highway reconstruction wraps up.
“This is significant both because of its tie to park amenities and because of its tie to the history of Palm Park. Using this cap to reconnect this spot of Austin would be great. The estimated cost for this portion would be $41.3 million. This full project will be covered by the SIB loan,” said Watson.
Austin City Council Member Mike Siegel finds the proposal beneficial.
“I really support the mayor’s direction to reduce the city’s existing commitment, which is over $100 million, and basically cut that in half, and also to prioritize our investment to make sure we’re actually fully building out an entire Cap project instead of just building foundational elements that may or may not result in caps in some distant future,” said Siegel.
“From my point of view, we should be prioritizing our investments in things that help people right now,” said Siegel.
Not all city leaders agree with the revised approach.
In a joint response, council members including Ryan Alter, Natasha Harper-Madison, Zo Qadri, José Velásquez and Mayor Pro Tem Chito Vela raised concerns about whether the smaller project would deliver enough community benefit.
The group argued the proposed stitch may be too small to meaningfully shield nearby neighborhoods from highway noise and pollution — one of the core goals of the larger cap vision.
“We appreciate the Mayor’s proposal, but feel it does not deliver enough benefits to justify the cost. The proposed stitch is too small to shield someone from the noise and negative effects of the highway underneath, a key element for a successful highway cap.. While we acknowledge the proposed stitch is cheaper than a cap, it is still $41 million dollars for a project with very few benefits,” they said in the response.
The proposal also calls for “future-proofing” possible caps near 11th and 12th streets.
Some East Austin businesses say reconnecting both sides of the city would be welcome but worry about the impacts construction could bring.
“35 is already kind of a lot to handle. So adding construction, I feel like that would be a deterrent initially for businesses. That makes me a little bit nervous,” said Elisabeth Miranda-Wagstaff, shop ambassador at Kindred Spirits.
“I’m sure it would be amazing, but I’m just a little nervous about, like, the whole process of execution,” said Miranda-Wagstaff.
Mayor Watson says he plans to bring this proposal up for discussion during the May 28th council meeting.
Austin, TX
Texas softball handles Wagner; set for matchup with Wisconsin
AUSTIN (KXAN) – Texas softball entered the NCAA Tournament ranked fourth in RPI. Their first opponent in the Austin regional was Wagner, sitting a bit lower at 274th in RPI.
The Longhorns handled business Friday afternoon, taking down the Seahawks 9-1 by run rule in five innings.
Wagner actually got on the board first and was extremely energized in their NCAA Tournament debut. The Longhorns settled down to the tie game in the bottom half of the first before taking the lead in the third and never looked back.
The first game of the day in Austin went to extra innings and pushed back the start time between the Longhorns and Seahawks. Wisconsin made it past Baylor in extra innings with a 2-1 walk-off victory.
Now, the Badgers earn a date with the Longhorns on the winner’s side of the bracket. The two will duel Saturday at noon with the winner advancing to the regional final.
Wagner and Baylor will play an elimination game Saturday after Texas and Wisconsin. The winner of the Seahawks and Bears game will face the loser of the Longhorns and Badgers battle.
Austin, TX
Texas Metro Areas Are Coming for Chicago
The nickname “Second City” wasn’t bestowed upon Chicago as a title of distinction. When author A. J. Liebling bestowed that sobriquet in writings that were later published in his 1952 book, Chicago: The Second City, he didn’t mean “second only to New York.” He meant “secondary,” or maybe “second-class.” He lived in Chicago, and he hated it. Chicagoans eventually embraced being the Second City, especially after they fell to third, when Los Angeles surpassed the metro in the early eighties.
Chicago is still the nation’s third-largest metropolitan area, according to U.S. census data released this week that estimate population totals for the year 2025—but, looking at the trends since 2020, it’s likely that Dallas–Fort Worth will supplant Chicagoland before too long. Let’s explore the takeaways from the newly released data.
Dallas–Fort Worth Is Poised To Surpass Chicago
According to the census data, as of 2025, 9,434,123 residents are spread across the Chicago region. The Metroplex, meanwhile, is home to 8,477,157.
While that million-person difference is a lot, Chicago’s population has been stagnant for years; the area has actually lost a couple thousand residents since 2020, with fluctuations year over year. DFW, meanwhile, has a rocket strapped to its proverbial back; in 2020, only 7,667,416 folks lived in the region, which means the Metroplex has added an average of just over 160,000 people each year. If Chicago remains anemic and DFW continues to boom at the same rate, that means Dallas–Fort Worth would be the nation’s third-largest metro area around 2031 (at which point, presumably, Chicagoans will cling even tighter to the “Second City” moniker).
And DFW isn’t the only metro on Chicago’s heels. The Houston–Pasadena–The Woodlands metropolitan area added nearly as many residents as DFW over that same five-year period. There are half a million fewer Houston-area residents than DFW ones, but if current trends hold, by around 2036, Houston should slide into fourth place. (As some consolation to depressed Chicagoans, they should hold on to fifth place for a while after that, as the metro areas currently behind Houston are quite a bit further back, and they aren’t growing at nearly the same rate as the Texas cities.)
We Hit Peak Austin a Few Years Back
Austin has been heralded as a tech-utopian dream city by some folks in the capital, and while it remains a growing area, it’s not the juggernaut it once was. For years, Austin and San Jose, California, ran neck and neck for the spot of the nation’s tenth-largest city, but they’re now at numbers twelve and thirteen, respectively—and it’s Fort Worth that rounds out the top ten, with Jacksonville, Florida, behind it.
That’s because Fort Worth, which grew by nearly 2 percent between 2024 and 2025, is the fastest-growing of Texas’s big cities, and by a considerable margin. Austin, meanwhile, grew by just 0.4 percent—which isn’t nothing, but the era of constant, accelerating growth in the state’s capital appears to have ended, perhaps putting slightly less strain on the city’s infrastructure.
The rapid rise of Fort Worth isn’t a new story—the trend got noticed back in 2022—but the fact that Austin is growing more slowly than Houston and San Antonio might change the narrative of the city as an ever-growing hub of creative- and tech-minded talent that emerged over the past decade.
What the Heck Is Going On in New Braunfels?
In addition to being outgrown by the other big cities in Texas, Austin is also being outpaced by a much smaller city nearby, and not just statistically. New Braunfels has a gaudy year-over-year growth rate of 5.1 percent, but it also added more total residents between 2024 and 2025 than Austin did—and by a lot. The year saw 4,025 newly minted Austinites, while New Braunfels exceeded that number by nearly 50 percent, adding 5,969 newcomers. There are now 122,492 New Braunfellas. That is more than six times what the city’s population was back in 1970.
It makes sense: New Braunfels is between San Antonio and Austin, relatively affordable, and charming as heck.
The Boom Among New Suburbs Is Bonkers
The fastest-growing city in the United States? That’s Celina, Texas, a spot on the map north of U.S. 380 at the tip-top of the Metroplex. (To get to a Cowboys game from Celina, you’re facing a hundred-mile round trip.) Celina grew by 24.6 percent between 2024 and 2025, which means that statistically, one out of every four people you see shopping for groceries at the Brookshire’s moved there last year.
What accounts for Celina’s boom? Mostly, it’s that the city basically didn’t exist fifteen years ago; Celina, currently home to 64,427 Texans, was a town of just 6,028 in 2010. According to The Texas Tribune, the city’s 36-year-old mayor moved there with his wife from Allen in 2017, “seeking a quieter, family-oriented neighborhood with good schools and a slower pace.” Celina: For when a bedroom community like Allen is too much of a bustling metropolis!
Celina’s neighboring towns aren’t far behind it. There are five other DFW suburbs—Princeton, Melissa, Anna, Forney, and Greenville—among the ten fastest-growing cities in the country. (All but Forney are similarly situated on or above U.S. 380.) The Houston suburb of Fulshear (which grew by a similarly enormous 21 percent) and the Austin suburb of Hutto (a more modest 7.9 percent) are among the top ten too.
Texas remains booming, in other words, even if the distribution of that boom has shifted somewhat—that looks like a slower Austin, steady growth in San Antonio and Houston, an even more massive Metroplex, and suburbs that envelop small towns.
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