Dallas, TX
‘America’s Sweethearts: Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders’ documents pay win for the group

DALLAS — The Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders have scored a salary touchdown.
The new season of the Netflix docuseries “America’s Sweethearts: Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders” includes the women getting a pay raise.
“‘Happy’ isn’t even the right word for it. It kind of felt like a relief, like everything had paid off,” former cheerleader Jada McLean said. “And finally, we were done fighting.”
Netflix bills the series as viewers get to “Follow the Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders from auditions to training camp and the NFL season as they chase their dreams and a coveted spot on the squad.”
During the first season, the audience learned that because of the low pay many of cheerleaders had to work second jobs. The women have advocated for more money for years.
“Our efforts were heard, and they wanted to give us a raise,” Megan McElaney, a four-year veteran of the team, said. “And we ended up getting a 400% increase, which is, like, life-changing.”
The Dallas Cowboys have long been called America’s team, and according to Forbes magazine, the franchise has “been the most valuable pro sports team in the world for almost a decade,” as reported by Associated Press.
Season 2 of “America’s Sweethearts: Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders” is currently streaming on Netflix.

Dallas, TX
New York Giants at Dallas Cowboys: Predictions, picks and odds for NFL Week 2 game

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Sports Seriously’s Mackenzie Salmon overreacts to some of the best games of NFL Week 1.
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The New York Giants (0-1) visit the Dallas Cowboys (0-1) at AT&T Stadium in Arlington for a Week 2 showdown, and USA TODAY’s panel of NFL experts have locked in their picks and predictions for the action. Here’s everything you need to know before kickoff on Sunday, September 14, including live updated odds and injury report news.
Cowboys vs. Giants live odds, moneyline, over/under
Get the edge with our exclusive NFL betting picks
Cowboys vs. Giants picks against the spread
Name | Week 1 Record ATS |
---|---|
Christopher Bumbaca | 7-7-2 |
Lorenzo Reyes | 7-7-2 |
Blake Schuster | 7-7-2 |
Jordan Mendoza | 6-8-2 |
Jon Hoefling | 6-8-2 |
Tyler Dragon | 5-9-2 |
Tyler Dragon: Dallas Cowboys (-6)
The Cowboys played better than I expected versus Philly. The Giants, as expected, aren’t that good.
Christopher Bumbaca: Dallas Cowboys (-6)
Cowboys and the under. As long as Russell Wilson is the quarterback for the Giants, this is the play.
Jon Hoefling: Dallas Cowboys (-6)
After a solid outing against Philadelphia, the Cowboys should find their groove in the passing game and have more success through the air against New York’s weak secondary.
Jordan Mendoza: New York Giants (+6)
Dallas actually has an offense that looks promising, yet the same can’t be said for New York. Still, the Giants are able to keep this competitive.
Lorenzo Reyes: Dallas Cowboys (-6)
Dallas proved against the Eagles that it can field a competitive roster, though the question in this matchup will be about neutralizing New York’s pass rush. Still, the Giants offense looks to lack continuity, so I’m comfortable backing the Cowboys here.
Blake Schuster: Dallas Cowboys (-6)
If the Giants were capable of scoring touchdowns this season, I’d be intrigued by this line. Alas, CeeDee Lamb has to make up for some big drops last week and New York’s corners will be nearly powerless to stop him.
Cowboys vs. Giants updated injury report
NFL Week 2 picks, predictions odds
Dallas, TX
Mission creep at Dallas City Hall must stop

We are deep into budget season at Dallas City Hall, and you know what that means. Special interests are lining up to protect and expand every dollar that gets spent on their projects.
So it seems like a good time to get a quick reset on how Dallas stacks up when it comes to cost to taxpayers. Houston’s tax rate is 51.9 cents per $100 in valuation. Austin’s is 57.4 cents. San Antonio’s is 54.15. Fort Worth’s is 67.25.
And Dallas? Dallas’ current tax rate is 70.47 cents. We won’t even get into the rates of suburbs the city competes with.
So please, council members, resist the urge to add costs back into City Manager Kimberly Bizor Tolbert’s proposed budget.
Sadly, we aren’t confident that is going to happen. The council already looks like it will buckle under, once again, on the closure of the Skillman Southwestern Branch Library. The story of this branch is an anecdote of why it is so hard to cut costs at City Hall, and why taxpayers continue to get saddled with ever-higher costs.
The branch is underutilized and doesn’t conform with a necessary consolidation strategy that reflects the reality of how libraries are used today. But it’s been all but impossible to close because council members won’t do it. Instead the branch will limp along another year on reduced hours. Next year, we are promised.
The council needs to recognize that special constituencies are not the voice of most Dallasites. People who choose to live in our city are paying a premium for the privilege. Tolbert has weighted her budget to add funds for public safety while reducing head count in other areas. That’s what most Dallasites want right now.
We were disappointed that more council members did not focus proposed budget amendments on savings. Council member Bill Roth, from North Dallas, did recommend $13 million in savings. He framed it in a politically unpalatable way by singling out programs that might run afoul of the Trump administration.
But Roth’s effort is the right one, combing the budget for costs that serve very small constituencies at the expense of all taxpayers. His proposal didn’t make it to the budget amendment process. It’s too bad since the discussion could have been fruitful. Whatever one thinks of some of the programs he highlighted, he is likely right that they could draw federal scrutiny.
Instead, if one looks at the council amendments listed on last week’s meeting agenda, the words “add” and “increase” most commonly precede “funding.”
Mission creep has been the standard of business at City Hall for generations. The costs of that creep are creating burdens that make Dallas less competitive.
It needs to stop. It will take a willingness to say enough is enough to get us there.
We welcome your thoughts in a letter to the editor. See the guidelines and submit your letter here.
If you have problems with the form, you can submit via email at letters@dallasnews.com
Dallas, TX
Letters to the Editor — North Texas growth, Dallas County jail, agency cuts, mental health

Embrace density, efficiency
Re: “Promise or Peril? Initiative tracks key indicators as area transforms,” Sunday news story.
Metrics tell us a lot about what North Texas must do to thrive in the future. But culture drives a lot of those numbers. Sufficient energy, water and transportation resources are critical.
The predominant culture in North Texas embraces a 1950s aesthetic: single-family houses with lawns and cars as the primary mode of transportation.
When we moved from North Dallas to Uptown, we adopted a more energy- and water-efficient lifestyle. Because I walk and take public transit, I drive many fewer miles than I used to.
The quality of life in this densely populated neighborhood is fantastic. Density can be added without damaging existing neighborhoods, but it must be served by transit and have ground-level retail and services that encourage walking.
Too many people resist that type of change. Low-density, car-centric Plano is trying to cripple, if not destroy, our public transit system. Planning for the future should mean more resources for DART, not fewer.
Resource supply is only half of the story. A culture change that embraces density and its efficiencies to conserve limited resources, including the money needed for infrastructure, would be the truly conservative pro-growth strategy.
Ann Drumm, Dallas/Uptown
Stop wasting water
Texas needs to conserve water. I can’t imagine how many thousands of gallons of water are wasted in restaurants. All restaurants should be forced to ask customers if they want water. The only reason a glass of water should be on a table is if the patron requested it.
Many people over-water their yards. They don’t pay attention to the rainfall or if it is going to rain within a few days. Most people who have sprinkler systems think that their yard will not get watered if it has rained. This is not true. The only time a system won’t water (unless the system is turned off) is if it is raining while the system is watering. The system doesn’t know if it rained 15 minutes ago or is going to rain in a half hour.
Building reservoirs is not necessarily the answer if we don’t conserve.
Deborah Greenlee, Arlington
One reason jail is full
Re: “Jail hits capacity again — Tech issues in urgent need of addressing in crisis, DA says,” Thursday news story.
One of the reasons that the Dallas County jail is full is the Texas law that makes it a felony when a person in a mental hospital or any hospital intentionally or knowingly causes physical contact with another when the person knows or should reasonably believe that the other will regard the contact as offensive or provocative. The hospital staff does not have to be injured at all. They just have to say that the patient touched them.
When people with a mental illness are a danger to self or others, where do they go? They usually go to a hospital to be safe. If the hospital changes or reduces their medication that they need to be stable, an unstable person may touch a staff member while walking away or if the staff member is blocking them in and yelling.
One hospital in the Dallas area is known for charging people who are very unstable in a behavioral health hospital with a crime. Some spend a year or more in Dallas County jail since the jail may not give medication for a week or more after arrival. Then, the inmate can be declared incompetent to stand trial. It is a long process to be declared competent again. It is hard to get medical help in jail.
Joy Bergmann, Plano
Are troops coming?
Considering the high occupancy of Dallas jails, will we see National Guard troops being stationed in Dallas?
James J. Horn, Carrollton
Turn to clean energy
My home insurance premium has skyrocketed partially due to the rising cost of natural disasters. We have in recent years also personally suffered from severe storms, flooding and tornadoes.
Many types of natural disasters are made worse by climate change. People and governments around the world understand this, and therefore the world is decarbonizing and moving toward clean energy.
Now is not the time for us to roll back funding for research on clean energy, weather prediction and adaptation. We need to preserve critical science and research around our changing climate.
Robust funding for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, NASA and the Department of Energy is essential to strengthen U.S. energy leadership and competitiveness. We do not want to lose our energy dominance to, for example, China.
I am asking my U.S. representative, Beth Van Duyne, and Sens. John Cornyn and Ted Cruz to reject the recently proposed cuts to these agencies.
Thomas Wikman, Dallas
Evaluate mental health
Every time another mass shooting makes the headlines, we hear the same tired refrain: “thoughts and prayers,” followed by little to no action.
One commonsense step we continue to ignore is implementing mental health screenings and social media checks as part of the gun purchasing process. We require vision tests to drive a car, background checks to work with children and even credit checks for renting an apartment. Yet, purchasing a firearm often involves less scrutiny than getting a driver’s license.
Mental health evaluations could help identify individuals who are struggling and should not have access to lethal weapons. Social media checks could reveal red flags — violent threats, extremist ideologies or signs of radicalization — that too often are ignored until it’s too late.
This isn’t about taking away rights. It’s about using the tools we already have to keep our communities safe. Responsible gun owners should support measures that prevent firearms from falling into dangerous hands.
If we can agree that not everyone should own a gun, then we must be willing to identify who shouldn’t, and act accordingly.
Eric Stengel, Richardson
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