Dallas, TX
Here's Who Is Coming to Dallas This Weekend: January 4-7
Edgar Cello Concerto
January 4-7| Meyerson Symphony Center
The Dallas Symphony Orchestra will showcase Elgar’s Cello Concerto in performances this weekend. Elgar’s concerto is considered to be an introspective work that is meant to convey his feelings of despair about the Great War. Selections will also include Schmidt’s Intermezzo from Notre Dame and Beethoven’s Symphony No. 4. Marie Jaquot will conduct, with Maximilian Hornung on cello. Come early for pre-concert talks with assistant conductor Maurice Cohn each day.
Josh Abbott Band
January 5-6| Billy Bob’s Texas, Fort Worth
The Josh Abbott Band will hit Cowtown for two nights, taking up residence at Billy Bob’s Texas. Expect the Lubbock-born Red Dirt Country band to play your favorites from 2020’s The Highway Kind, but also a bit of good news: The band will also be celebrating the upcoming release of its latest album, Somewhere Down the Road, due out January 26. (You can hear the first single, “What Were You Thinking,” here.
Jay Pharoah
January 5-7| Arlington Improv, Arlington
Saturday Night Live alumn Jay Pharoah will spend three nights performing at the Arlington Improv. Known for his impressions, Pharoah says he can imitate at least 200 people, including former President Barack Obama, Eddie Murphy, and Denzel Washington. He’s also spent a lot of time doing voice work for animated characters, including the upcoming cartoon reboot of the 70s sitcom Good Times.
Kraig Parker
January 6, 7:30 p.m.| Irving Arts Center, Irving
Kraig Parker has been performing as an Elvis Presley tribute act for almost two decades, which includes a full Las Vegas-style show with each performance. He’s been joined on stage by some of Presley’s original backups singers and gotten the stamp of approval from several who worked with the legendary singer before he died in 1977. Parker is known as one of the best Elvis tribute acts in the business, and has toured around the world.
Also check out:
Matt Braunger, January 4-7, Addison Improv. Get tickets.
Lamented Fest, January 4, 6 p.m., Haltom Theater, Haltom City. Get tickets.
Hazelwart, King Turtle, and Divine Calypso, January 4, 7 p.m., Andy’s Bar, Denton. Get tickets.
Moonage Daydream and Bowie-Oke with Mr. Rid, January 5, 7:15 p.m., Texas Theatre. Get tickets.
Josh Weathers, January 5, 8 p.m., Dan’s Silverleaf, Denton. Get tickets.
Orchestra of New Spain’s Pastorela at Epiphany, January 6, 6:30 p.m., St. Philip the Apostle Church. Get tickets.
Mile End Beach, Little Express, Tzion’s Lagoon, January 6, 7:45 p.m., Dada. Get tickets.
Fugitive, January 6, 8 p.m., Trees. Get tickets.
Gene Farris, January 6, 9 p.m., It’ll Do Club. Get tickets.
Dirtysnatcha, January 6, 10 p.m., Stereo Live. Get tickets.
Slaughter Beach, Dog, January 7, 8 p.m., Tulips, Fort Worth. Get tickets.
Listen to the playlist below to hear songs by artists performing in North Texas this weekend.
Author
Bethany Erickson
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Bethany Erickson is the senior digital editor for D Magazine. She’s written about real estate, education policy, the stock market, and crime throughout her career, and sometimes all at the same time. She hates lima beans and 5 a.m. and takes SAT practice tests for fun.
Dallas, TX
Dallas Weather: Thunderstorms in the forecast for Friday & Mother’s Day
DALLAS – Thunderstorms will roll through parts of North Texas on Friday. Thankfully, none should be severe. Mother’s Day could be a different story.
Friday Forecast
According to FOX 4 Weather Meteorologist Berkeley Taylor, a cluster of thunderstorms will work their way east across the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex on Friday morning.
Everything is well below severe limits, just with lots of lightning!
Scattered showers and thunderstorms will move in and out through the day on Friday. Coverage is about 20%.
An isolated strong storm or two can’t be ruled out, but the overall threat is low.
Temperatures will be in the 50s and 60s for the morning, before climbing into the 80s by the afternoon.
Weekend Forecast
Saturday will look similar, with even lower coverage expected.
Sunday presents the best chance to find rain and storms – about 50% as a cold front moves through North Texas.
North Texas is under a Level 2 out of 5 risk for severe weather. The biggest concerns will be with wind and hail.
Timing-wise, the front looks to move through in the afternoon/evening.
7-Day Forecast
Once the front is south of North Texas on Mother’s Day, the rain should come to an end, and it will stay dry into next week.
Temperatures will start to warm into the upper 80s and low 90s by midweek next week.
The Source: The information in this story is from the FOX 4 Weather team and National Weather Service.
Dallas, TX
Dallas deck park set to reconnect Oak Cliff after decades of division
Dallas, TX
Cowboys’ Stephen Jones says what NFL won’t admit about the Micah Parsons trade
It hasn’t even been a year since the blockbuster Micah Parsons trade, but the Dallas Cowboys have officially and completely moved on.
Although in many ways, the 2025 season feels like it was wasted with how good the Cowboys’ offense was, the decision to trade Parsons to the Green Bay Packers was pretty simple in principle: Dallas did not believe one great player was worth four or five good players. And that is a sentiment that has been repeated to an almost political degree from the Cowboys’ brain trust.
Cowboys EVP and CEO Stephen Jones recently reiterated the Dallas’ internal pleasure over how the Parsons trade has played out, and he essentially said what everyone in the NFL refuses to say: The Cowboys might have actually made the right call.
Stephen Jones likes how Dallas Cowboys have reloaded the defense after Micah Parsons trade
Here’s what Jones had to say (via NFL.com) regarding his thoughts on the trade now that the pieces are pretty much all in place:
“We feel really good about it. Obviously, much respect for Micah and what he stands for and how he plays and the caliber of player he is, but at the same time we feel good about what we’ve added via that trade.
You look at a guy like Quinnen Williams and Kenny Clark, they’re alpha players who not only are great players on the field, but they’re leaders in the meeting room. How they go about their business in the offseason, [they] just bring great leadership to this team. As we mentioned, we add a guy like Caleb Downs, who is obviously the same type of character…
I just feel very optimistic that we have the right pieces in place to go out there. Ultimately, the decision we made was that one player was not worth four or five good ones.”
There is really a lot going on with what Jones says right here that will perk up a lot of ears and eyebrows.
Of course, the general sentiment seems to be that the Cowboys are pleased with the way they’ve utilized the assets they got in that trade from the Packers. The acquisition of defensive lineman Quinnen Williams gives Dallas an absolute stud in the middle, but having Kenny Clark next to him is a really underrated piece as well.
The trade back in the first round of this year’s draft with Green Bay’s selection landed the Cowboys Malachi Lawrence, Devin Moore, and LT Overton. There’s still the matter of which pick will go to the Jets next year from the Williams trade, but it will be whichever of Dallas’ and Green Bay’s pick is higher.
You can also tell that the personal makeup of the players they’ve added was important for Dallas in this process, and while Jones stops short of taking a dig at Parsons in that regard, you can hear what he’s saying pretty loud and clear when he talks about guys being “alpha” players on the field as well as leaders in the meeting room. Message sent.
The thing nobody in the NFL really wants to admit is that the Cowboys did the right thing by trading Parsons when and how they did. And while you can debate whether they truly got great value, it’s hard to argue with the idea that one player is worth four or five, especially when that one player would be taking up the same slice of the pie as most quarterbacks around the NFL.
It’s not that you can’t make it work, but in Dallas’ context, they felt like that investment in Parsons was a signal that they were “one player away”, and it’s hard to argue with their self-awareness that they simply weren’t in that position a year ago.
Although the cost was moving on from a true superstar off the edge like Micah Parsons, it’s a trade that has helped Dallas reload a huge portion of their starting defense, including adding three quality players on the defensive front, maybe more.
Most people hated the Parsons trade just on principle. How can you trade a defensive superstar still with his prime years ahead of him? Doesn’t it send a bad message to other players who earn big-money contracts? Ultimately, the Cowboys drew a proverbial line in the sand, and that’s part of the business of the NFL.
They still have to hope that all of the new additions work out, but on paper, it’s hard to argue with what the Cowboys were able to assemble rather quickly because of this trade.
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