Texas
Jada Malone provides punch down low for Texas Tech women’s basketball
When asked Saturday what makes this year’s iteration of the Texas Tech women’s basketball team different, coach Krista Gerlich had an understandable response: the players.
Among the newcomers making an impact toward the Lady Raiders’ turnaround is Jada Malone. The 6-foot-3 forward transferred from Texas A&M in the offseason and has proven to be a welcome addition down low.
Malone had one of her best games of the season in the 65-59 loss to Kansas State. She may have earned more opportunities as Tech (19-1, 6-1) enters the heart of Big 12 competition.
Malone scored 15 points on 5-of-8 shooting and went 5-of-5 from the free-throw line. She had one rebound and one assist in 19 minutes, her most playing time since Jan. 3.
“She gave us the inside presence,” Gerlich said. “We knew that we needed more paint touches, just to be able to loosen up the perimeter defenders for us. I thought she did a great job of just being really smart with the basketball, and patient. When she needed to score, she scored. When she needed to pass, she passed. And she defended really well, too.”
Gerlich said that was a revelation after Malone saw two minutes in the first half for fear of how she’d match up with a guard-heavy Wildcats team.
“We were afraid that they might exploit her a little bit,” Gerlich said, “but we found the right matchup that we needed on defense. I thought that she really did a nice job for us offensively and defensively, to be honest.”
Malone is tied for fourth on the team with 8.0 points per game, while adding 3.5 rebounds, 0.8 assists and 0.5 steals in 15.7 minutes. She shoots a team-high 67% from the field and is a 75.9% free-throw shooter. Malone is a scoring option down low not before seen under Gerlich.
“Certainly this offseason we knew that that was something that we needed to address,” Gerlich said Dec. 3. “That and the point guard position. We went after Jada Malone and knew that she could do exactly what she’s doing for us. She made it perfectly clear of what she was looking for as well. She’s been so bought-in from the word ‘go.’”
The comments came after Malone’s season-high 19-point, 10-rebound outing against Wichita State. She went 9 of 9 on free throws and also posted season-bests in assists (3) and blocks (2).
Malone also drew praise from her teammate that night.
“When they can’t stop her inside, just give her the ball,” guard Denae Fritz said. “And then when they start finally stopping her, she’s really good at giving us the ball on the outside and getting us really good looks and getting us the ball in shooters’ pockets. It’s really fun to play with her.”
Beyond scoring, Malone said she prides herself on that aspect of her offensive game. She added how thankful she is that all the players are on the same page.
“I’ve had teams where our chemistry wasn’t that great,” Malone said. “I was very fortunate to come here and have an amazing team, have everybody be on the same mindset, have the same goals. It has a lot to do with our chemistry off the court, and I think you can tell that on the court as well.”
Texas
No injuries reported after vessel catches fire near Texas City Dike, Coast Guard officials say
Monday, May 25, 2026 10:18PM
TEXAS CITY, Texas (KTRK) — An investigation is underway after a vessel caught fire near the Texas City Dike on Tuesday afternoon, according to Coast Guard officials.
The incident happened at 1:15 p.m., when a 38-foot recreational vessel caught fire, Coast Guard officials said. At 2:15 p.m., a good Samaritan took on the 11 people aboard the vessel, including five adults and six children, Coast Guard officials added.
Authorities said the 11 people, who were transferred to a 45-foot Response Boat Medium from Coast Guard Galveston, were later taken to Galveston Yacht Basin.
At this time, it is unclear what caused the fire.
Copyright © 2026 KTRK-TV. All Rights Reserved.
Texas
Diners are staying home, so this restaurant lets patrons pay what they want
A bartender pours a drink at L’Oca d’Oro, an Italian restaurant in Austin, Texas, that offers a weekly promotion where guests can pay what they want.
Sergio Flores for NPR
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Zayed Al-Hamad’s party of four is ready to order. The table plans to share the rosemary sourdough focaccia, fresh mozzarella, polpette, rigatoni alla n’duja and smoked olive carbonara spaghetti.
The bill for all that food? It doesn’t really matter, because tonight restaurantgoers can pay whatever they want at L’Oca d’Oro in Austin, Texas.
“My family in general, we don’t always have the most money to spend. So we don’t always get to go to somewhere nice when they come over,” Al-Hamad said on a Tuesday evening in February. “But I figured this is an opportunity to actually experience something a little better without having to shell out $150 for the four of us.”
Armand Daniels and Robin Wiley heard about the pay-what-you-will promotion on Instagram.
Robin Wiley (left) and Armand Daniels heard about the pay-what-you-will promotion on social media.
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“We didn’t have a really great Valentine’s Day,” Daniels said. “It was OK, but nothing out of the ordinary, nothing spectacular, so this is our Valentine’s date.”
The couple ate a spinach salad with pickled pineapple oranges and candied almonds — “It was awesome,” Wiley said — and ordered more. Daniels said they would make a decision about what to pay when they saw the final bill, but were considering paying less than full price.
“Things are a little bit tight,” said Daniels, who works as an actor and brand ambassador. “Jobs are harder and harder to find.”
L’Oca d’Oro, an Italian restaurant and bar in Austin’s Mueller neighborhood, introduced the pay-what-you-will night in December. In the fall, co-owners Adam Orman and Fiore Tedesco III were grappling with the effects of disruptive tariffs, rising food costs and a labor shortage — as well as their own increasing menu prices.
Fiore Tedesco III (left) and Adam Orman are co-owners of L’Oca d’Oro.
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Orman said the partners wanted to find a way to respond to the dwindling number of people able to afford dining out at restaurants.
“Getting drive-thru is not going out. Sitting down, being treated with hospitality, being a guest is a thing that everybody should be experiencing regularly, because it feels good,” he said. “This is a way of making sure that that is accessible for everyone.”
Tuesday-night diners at L’Oca d’Oro still pay full price for drinks, but they can order whatever they like off the regular food menu and choose how much to pay for it. Patrons are assessed a 20% service charge on their chosen total. (The restaurant charges the 20% pre-tax fee to all patrons to help fund the living wages, benefits and paid time off of staff members, Orman said.)
The partners understand that offering their products and services for free may not seem like a savvy business strategy. But Tedesco, who attributed the restaurant’s drop in volume over the past two years to political and financial instability, said he prefers pushing back on that conventional wisdom.
“There’s a way in which it seems like we should raise prices right now because everything’s more expensive, [that] we should lean that way,” Tedesco said.
Tedesco chops rosemary in the kitchen. He hopes the pay-what-you-will promotion can be a way to meet the current affordability and social challenges facing Americans.
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“I feel really confident and I feel lighter and more loving and more full and more generous in practicing the spirit of leaning that other way,” he said, “of saying, no, the lesson here is this is for everybody. This really is a time to be less inhibited about going out.”
Restaurant food, hold the restaurant
Americans are increasingly passing up on dining out. A YouGov report from October found that 37% of U.S. diners said they were dining out less often than they had a year earlier, while only 8% said they were going out more.
Rising menu prices and a desire to save money were the top reasons why people were staying home, the research group reported.
When they do dine out, most customers are getting their food to-go. According to data released by the National Restaurant Association last year, nearly three out of every four meals served by U.S. restaurants were takeout orders.
Restaurants of course depend on customers for business, but diners also rely on restaurants for the social stimulation and respite from domestic life they provide, says Princeton University anthropology professor Hanna Garth, who has conducted research on food access in Los Angeles.

Two guests sit at a table at L’Oca d’Oro. More than a third of Americans are dining out less often than they did last year, according to report from YouGov.
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“For a lot of people, it’s just about breaking from the routine and the monotony of eating at home. For a lot of women, it’s about alleviating the burden of the work of cooking a meal and cleaning up after the meal,” she said of the L.A. residents she’s spoken to. “And I think for a lot of people it’s also a social activity.”
Restaurants are also what’s known as a “third space,” an area outside of our home or workplace where we interact with others. When restaurants become inaccessible, those incidental social exchanges they offer also disappear, Garth said. Think chatting with the hostess and wait staff, or asking the people at the next table how their food was.
“Those connections, even though they’re teeny-tiny connections that seem like they don’t matter that much, they’re a really really big deal for making us feel like we belong to a community and we’re connected with others around us,” Garth said.
Orman and Tedesco said they hope L’Oca d’Oro’s pay-what-you-will promotion — a concept that’s been around for a while in the food service world — can be used now to meet the current affordability and social challenges facing Americans.
‘It just doesn’t feel like it should be possible’
Erin Weber and Michelle Valencia were at L’Oca d’Oro for a “girls night,” Valencia said. She works for the city’s public health department, and Weber is an editor who also attends graduate school for clinical social work.
Michelle Valencia (left) and Erin Weber visited the restaurant for a “girls night.”
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They had been to the restaurant once before, Valencia said, “but when we saw this we were like, ‘oh that’s a really cool special.’”
Weber, a native Austinite who said she’s enjoyed watching the city’s food scene evolve, praised the restaurant’s pay-what-you-will experiment. “This is a really great way for people from … all walks of life to just be able to enjoy amazing food,” she said.
When their bill came around 8 p.m., Weber and Valencia decided to pay $100 on their $117 tab, splitting it down the middle. “I guess we’re seeing it as like our happy hour total,” Weber said, “you know, a little bit of a discount.”
That night, the restaurant made $70 less than what it would have had it charged full price for food, Orman said later. He estimates that most Tuesday diners typically pay about two-thirds of their actual food bill, while only a couple of customers pay far less and many people fork over around what they owe.
Chris Ortiz and Rickyann Ramos, who were celebrating two years of marriage, said they intended to cover their whole bill. “I think we would just fully take care of it from our end,” Ortiz said, “because we’re in a position to do so and hopefully that can help others out.”
According to Orman, the restaurant typically ends pay-what-you-will nights earning less than the full menu price of the food they served, but once they made $12 more. He said the partners are happy with the math, and the normally slower weekday is seeing an average increase in traffic and revenue since the promotion began. The restaurant is even considering expanding the pay-what-you-will concept over the summer as they introduce new menu items.
Since the pay-what-you-will promotion began, the normally slower weekday is seeing an average increase in traffic at the restaurant.
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As his table prepared to order, Zayed Al-Hamad marveled at the deal they were getting.
“I’ll be honest, there’s a level of guilt, you know? I go to order, and I have to fight through this feeling of, like, ‘am I allowed to do this?’” he said. “I’m not going to write $10 down, but man it just doesn’t feel like it should be possible.”
Al-Hamad, who works as a menu planner connecting businesses with caterers, said he uses rental assistance to afford his apartment in the building adjacent to the restaurant. Tonight at L’Oca d’Oro he’ll pay what he can, but as Al-Hamad gets on better financial footing in the future, he hopes to chip in even more at places like this.
“As I continue to get to live in this city, I hope I’m able to support these businesses more and more, and hopefully I can be part of the reason why they’re actually able to afford to do these things,” he said.
Zayed Al-Hamad was excited to have an affordable and nice restaurant to take his family out to dinner.
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Texas
Twin brother accepts posthumous diploma for Austin Metcalf at Frisco graduation ceremony
Austin Metcalf, the Frisco teen fatally stabbed during a track meet at Kuykendall Stadium in April 2025, was honored posthumously at the Memorial High School graduation on May 21, 2026.
Austin Metcalf’s twin brother, Hunter, accepted the diploma on behalf of his brother shortly after accepting his own, followed by a standing ovation.
The trial for Karmelo Anthony, the teen accused of fatally stabbing fellow student Austin Metcalf during a Frisco ISD track meet, is scheduled to begin Monday, June 1, according to Collin County court records.
Witnesses told police the two 17-year-olds had argued during the meet, that Austin Metcalf pushed Anthony, and that Anthony then stabbed him once in the chest. Anthony immediately complied with the officers, and while being detained, reportedly acknowledged what happened and asked whether Austin Metcalf would survive and whether the incident might be considered self‑defense.
Anthony, who is facing a first-degree murder charge, has been on house arrest since being released on a reduced bond on April 14. If convicted, Anthony could face a possible sentence of 5-99 years or life in prison. In the Texas criminal justice system, 17-year-olds are considered adults. Anthony, a student at Frisco Centennial High School, was not allowed to participate in senior graduation activities; however, Next Generation Action Network said an agreement was reached with the district for him to receive his high school diploma.
The case has drawn widespread public attention, generating intense community reaction, extensive online discussion, and sustained media coverage – factors that led the court to issue a gag order last year and a Collin County judge in April to impose strict rules on media access, security, and courtroom conduct in advance of the trial.
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