Dallas, TX
Tyler Booker Reacts to Dallas Cowboys Draft Selection
GREEN BAY, Wis. — Tyler Booker’s reaction to being drafted was undeniably the most unique of the night. It was a parade only he could put together.
He started by turning to hug his parents.
“I’m just so thankful for both of them,” Booker said of his parents to reporters Thursday night. “Just believing in my dream and getting me to this point. I love them.”
For his father William, Tyler getting drafted was a moment he expected to happen since before the guard was even born.
When William and Tyler’s mother, Tashona, we’re looking to decide the name of their first son, William was influenced by a coworker who had named his newborn Tyler.
When William thought of the name “Tyler Booker,” he thought it sounded like the name of a successful football player.
“My dad manifested this day,” Booker said.
William was all in on the name. Tashona wasn’t nearly as concerned about what profession the name may imply.
“He called my mom,” Booker explained, “She was like, ‘Yeah. Whatever. I like it. It’s cool.’ And then he took it and ran with it.”
After hugging his parents, he turned to forklift his former quarterback, Jalen Milroe through the green room underneath the NFL draft stage. Booker laughed like a little kid through it all.
Milroe might’ve not expected to be carried through like Booker ended up doing, but Jalen has certainly learned Booker is capable of mauling human bodies like that. The first-team All-American protects his quarterback and creates running lanes through sheer force. He plays a brutal brand of football.
“What you see on play one is what you’re going to see on play eight,” Booker said to reporters at the NFL Scouting Combine. I’m always trying to finish you. I’m always trying to put you on your back. I’m always trying to take a little bit of your soul away.”
Once Booker displaced Milroe, he went on a joyride to the draft stage, dancing, saying hi to Texas A&M’s Shemar Stewart, slapping the Cowboys logo on the wall before bear hugging NFL commissioner Roger Goodell.
Tyler Booker was HYPED UP after getting drafted by the Cowboys 😂 pic.twitter.com/KRj0EOlQXz
— SportsCenter (@SportsCenter) April 25, 2025
Though Swiss Army Knife Travis Hunter also involved some dancing in his celebration, Booker’ rampage was one of a kind.
In Dallas, Booker is looking to celebrate his uniqueness in a similar way.
Booker is set to be the replacement for Zack Martin as the Cowboy’s right guard. It will be big shoes for Booker to fill as Martin announced his retirement in February after 11 seasons with the team, seven of which he won first-team All-Pro recognition in.
The pressure of being asked to immediately take over for one of the greatest of all time at the position could be a burden.
But Booker’s goal isn’t to be Zack Martin. It’s to be himself as a player and person.
“I would be doing me and the Cowboys a disservice if I come in and try to be those guys,” Booker said.
Booker felt that individuality embraced in the Cowboys’ culture. When he walked into his visit with the team, new head coach Brian Schottenheimer was dancing to Whitney Houston’s “I Wanna Dance with Somebody.” In that moment, Booker decided he was a fan of Schottenheimer.
Booker recognizes the trust he first has to earn amongst the locker room, and develop as a player. In that process, he doesn’t plan to pretend to be somebody else. Or to aspire to a playing style that doesn’t fit him.
He’s only looking to be his authentic self that shined in the moment his dreams came true.
“I’m gonna bring Tyler Booker.
Me being me has got me to where I’ve been this far.”
Alabama Crimson Tide 2025 NFL Draft Tracker
Dallas, TX
Packers star Micah Parsons heads to Dallas while awaiting ACL surgery
Packers coach Matt LaFleur updates on injuries ahead of Bears rematch
The Green Bay Packers had a number on injuries in the Broncos game, including Micah Parsons’ season-ending ACL injury. Matt LaFleur has latest on them.
GREEN BAY – Packers edge rusher Micah Parsons won’t be with the team as he awaits surgery on his torn left ACL.
But it’s for a good reason.
“He’s about to have another child here pretty quick,” Packers coach Matt LaFleur said Dec. 16 in his press conference.
Parsons has a home in the Dallas area and has returned there for the birth of his third child. He has not had surgery on his knee and LaFleur said he did not have a timeline on when that might occur.
Typically, doctors allow swelling to go down before they operate to repair the ligament, and so it’s possible surgery hasn’t been scheduled.
Parsons tore his ACL late in the third quarter of the Packers’ 34-26 loss to the Broncos on Dec. 14. Tests confirmed the injury Dec. 15.
LaFleur said he didn’t know if Parsons would have the surgery in Dallas.
As for the rest of the season, LaFleur said he thought Parsons would be around to support his teammates once his child is born and his medical situation is settled.
“He’ll be around, for sure,” LaFleur said.
Dallas, TX
City Hall’s future is an opportunity for its leadership
Recent activities reminded me of a simple roadmap I laid out in these pages (Aug. 31, 2025, “Lessons from George W. Bush, his institution”) for effective leadership: providing safety, security, solvency and sanity.
In short, great leadership should provide physical safety for those being led and the security that they can trust the institutions to govern intelligently and with their best interests at heart, while ensuring both the financial solvency of the enterprise and the sanity to keep the place focused optimistically on the future.
Good leadership should do what it is strong at and be intellectually honest to own up to what it does not do well. Then, it should simply stop wasting time on those things outside its core competency. As my former boss was prone to pointing out — a government should do fewer things, but do them well!
As it relates to the current debate over the future of Dallas City Hall, applying these basic principles is instructive as the issue touches each of these priorities.
Our city government should exit the real estate business, since it is clearly not its core competency, especially given its record of mismanagement of City Hall over the years as well as other well-documented and costly recent real estate dalliances. It is time to own that track record and begin to be better stewards of taxpayer money. Plus, given the large vacancies in existing downtown buildings, relocating city functions as a renter will be much more economical.
The definition of insanity is to do the same thing and expect different results. Thinking that the city will be able to remediate City Hall’s issues in a permanent and economically feasible way is naïve. It is time for sanity to prevail — for the city to move on from an anachronistic building that is beyond repair, returning that land to the tax rolls while saving both tenancy costs and reducing downtown office vacancies at the same time.
I appreciate that the iconic architect’s name on the building is a city asset and demolition would toss that aside. But our neglect up to this point is evidence that it was already being tossed, just one unaddressed issue at a time. While punting is not ideal, neither is being in the predicament we are in. Leaders must constantly weigh costs and benefits as part of the job and make sound decisions going forward.
We now have an opportunity to demonstrate leadership and apply all of our energy and careful thought to execute on a dynamic plan to activate that part of downtown for the benefit of the next generation. Engaging Linda McMahon, who is CEO of the Dallas Economic Development Corporation, is heartening on this issue given her experience and leadership in real estate.
This is a commercial decision and ignoring economic realities is foolhardy. We have the chance to do something special that future citizens will look back upon and see that today’s leaders were visionary.
I’d like to see the city exercise its common sense and pursue the win-win strategy. By doing so, all Dallas citizens will be more secure knowing that its leadership is capable of making smart decisions, even if it means admitting past mistakes. The first rule when you’ve dug yourself into a hole: “Stop digging!”
It is time for our leaders to lead.
Ken Hersh is the co-founder and former CEO of NGP Energy Capital Management and former CEO of the George W. Bush Presidential Center.
Dallas, TX
81-year-old North Texas trailblazer to graduate from UNT Dallas
DALLAS – History will be made this week when the University of North Texas at Dallas holds its commencement. Among the graduates is an 81-year-old woman with an incredible story.
Cheryl Hurdle Wyatt’s Story
The backstory:
Cheryl Hurdle Wyatt first made history back in 1955 when, as a 10-year-old girl, she and her sister were part of a historic Dallas NAACP lawsuit to desegregate Dallas public schools.
“When my parents moved us to South Dallas from Oak Cliff, and we were five doors from the school at the end of the corner that was all white, and we were not allowed to attend,” she said. “I do remember the principal saying you can’t come to this school.”
While Wyatt never got to attend Brown Elementary School, the lawsuit opened the doors for others. Her younger brother did go to the school.
“The year we went to high school is the year they opened up John Henry Brown for Blacks,” she said.
After graduating from high school, Wyatt went to Texas Southern University. But instead of graduating, she came home to help her older sister open a beauty school.
“Velma B’s Beauty Academy in Dallas. Everybody who was in Dallas during that time knew of Velma Brooks,” she said.
Along life’s journey, Wyatt blazed her own professional path.
“At the Lancaster-Kiest shopping center, I was there for maybe 10 years then moved up to Camp Wisdom. Had a salon there and then I’ve had about maybe two or three other locations,” she said.
81-year-old College Graduate
What’s next:
On Tuesday, Wyatt will finally complete her 60-year journey to her college degree.
She credits her father as her inspiration. Although he had seven children at home, he went to night school to earn his high school diploma.
“So, that taught us that it’s never too late. You can always go back and make something that you wanted to happen, happen,” she said.
Her father’s perseverance during the desegregation lawsuit also taught her not to give up.
“Well, it taught me that we should always preserve, don’t give up. If it doesn’t happen this way, just keep on. It will happen. The only way you cannot win is if you stop,” she said.
All of Wyatt’s children and grandchildren are expected to be in the crowd cheering for her as she walks across the stage.
The Source: FOX 4’s Shaun Rabb gathered information for this story by interviewing Cheryl Hurdle Wyatt.
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