Texas
Kristin Chenoweth marries Josh Bryant in pink Texas wedding
Kristin Chenoweth channeled Glinda the Good Witch when she and Josh Bryant tied the knot on Saturday.
The “Wicked” star stayed true to herself with a “pink-oriented” wedding in Dallas, Texas.
“I have been a self-proclaimed bachelorette my whole life,” the bride, 55, told People ahead of the ceremony.
“I was never going to get married. I even got engaged before and couldn’t do it,” the actress went on, referencing her first engagement to actor Marc Kudisch from 1998 to 2001.
“Until I met Josh,” she clarified. “Then I was like, ‘Why would I ever let this guy go?’ I’m so blessed.”
Her musician husband, 41, said he predicted the nuptials would be inspired by Chenoweth’s bubbly personality.
“Without having to even ask Kristin, I knew that the theme would probably be pink-oriented in some way,” Bryant said.
Chenoweth chimed in, “On that day, I want to look and feel like Kristin, and I want Josh to see the girl that he has been with for five years.
“I’m going to look glamorous and all that, but my hair isn’t going to be up to heaven, even though we’ll be in Texas,” she continued. “It’s going to look like me.”
However, Bryant added, “Don’t let her fool you. Normal to Kristin is like 110 per cent.”
Chenoweth walked down the aisle in a Pamella Roland gown with a sheer pink overlay and bow detailing on the back.
“I didn’t want to wear white,” she said of the “simple and elegant” dress, which also featured tiny pearl flower detailing on the bodice.
“I never thought I’d get married, so I went very nontraditional with the gown,” she explained. “I love it.”
Décor for the nuptials was also on theme, featuring a romantic mix of white, pink and champagne tones, while calla lilies, garden roses, spray roses and hydrangeas filled the venue.
The couple’s wedding weekend began with a rehearsal dinner at Capital Grille Friday, where guests enjoyed a custom Baskin-Robbins cake.
The following day, 140 guests — including Kathy Najimy, David Foster, Katharine McPhee and Kenny Ortega — gathered at a private residence where the pair said “I do.”
During the ceremony, which was officiated by one of their pals, Chenoweth and Bryant exchanged “a form of traditional vows.”
However, the Broadway star joked that she would not “say ‘obey.’”
After the emotional ceremony, their friends and family sipped on custom cocktails, including the “Wicked Margarita” and the “Bryant Old Fashioned.”
Additionally, the Tony winner served some of her favorite snacks — Dunkin Donuts and slurpees from 7-11 — as late-night nibbles.
The newlyweds met in 2016 at Chenoweth’s niece’s wedding where Bryant’s band, Backroad Anthem, performed.
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The pair reconnected two years later when Bryant’s band provided the entertainment at another wedding she attended.
“We had become friends by this time, and that’s when he came on strong,” Chenoweth recalled.
“Josh asked me where I was going to be playing next, and it was North Carolina,” she added. “I said, ‘I’m busy. I don’t have time, da, da, da.’ And he shows up to the concert and that was it for me.”
After pointing out their “ridiculous” 14-year age difference, she gushed, “He’s made me feel very confident and beautiful and loved at any age.”
Bryant popped the question in October 2021 after three years of dating.
Texas
Sunny weekend ahead for North Texas, rain expected early next week
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Texas
Freezing start forecast in North Texas for the first day of winter before rain on Christmas Eve
NORTH TEXAS — It was another cold start to the day with temperatures near or below the freezing line; however, the cold didn’t last long: highs in the afternoon topped out in the 60s.
Another freezing morning will also be expected Saturday morning due to a dry front moving across the area. It’s important to remember to bring indoors pets and plants as well as to protect your pipes.
A beautiful weekend is in store for North Texas, with plenty of sunshine and highs in the 50s. Saturday is the official start of Winter Solstice, which is the shortest day and longest night of the year. The high will be 56, which is where DFW normally sits.
The upper-level high-pressure system retreats to the west and a low takes power at the start of the next week. This will cause a big pattern shift, meaning rain will be back in the forecast for Monday and Tuesday.
Conditions look to significantly improve during the afternoon on Wednesday.
Chances for rain return at the end of the next week thanks to another front.
Enjoy Mother Nature’s gift of a beautiful weekend.
Texas
5 things to know about Texas border policy
Texas has the longest border with Mexico of any U.S. state, sharing 1,254 miles with its southern neighbor – making it ground zero in the international fight over undocumented immigration.
The numbers of immigrants crossing the border that stretches from Brownsville to El Paso has dipped in recent months but broke records in 2023. The Republican-dominated state waged its own war — overseen by Gov. Greg Abbott — on illegal immigration and in opposition to the Democrat-backed policies of President Joe Biden.
Now, Abbott will announce a new border strategy at an event in Eagle Pass on Thursday.
Here are five key things to know about immigration in the state:
Texas spends billions on border security
Texas has funneled dollars into its own border security initiatives for nearly 20 years, starting with Operation Linebacker in 2005, Operation Rio Grande in 2006, and Operation Wrangler in 2007 – all funded with tens of millions in federal grants awarded through then-Gov. Rick Perry’s office.
In 2007, lawmakers allocated $110 million in state tax dollars to create Operation Border Star, which uses information sharing between federal, state and local law enforcement to bolster efforts along the border. By 2013, Texas had spent nearly half a billion in taxpayer money to supplement federal border programs.
Over the next decade, as Republicans tightened their grip on state leadership and undocumented immigration launched into the political spotlight, funding for border projects soared.
State lawmakers in 2023 allocated $4.6 billion for border security programs in local communities and across Texas.
Operation Lone Star has cost taxpayers $11 billion
Abbott launched Operation Lone Star in March 2021, deploying National Guard soldiers and state troopers to the border with Mexico to deter undocumented immigration.
The initiative included erecting barriers, stationing law enforcement along the border, busing migrants to other states and creating migrant-processing centers.
Operation Lone Star encompasses many of the aspects of its early predecessors and now serves as an umbrella strategy for efforts across several state agencies. Abbott now wants $2.9 billion to keep the program going through at least 2027.
Texas wants its money back from the feds
A proposal filed earlier this year by U.S. Rep. Roger Williams, R-Willow Park, would require the federal government to reimburse the state for its losses and expenses incurred during any border operations since 2020.
The federal government bears the responsibility of enforcing its international borders, mainly through the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and U.S. Department of Justice. The U.S. constitution authorizes the government to require citizenship to participate in its systems of democracy, which makes the feds the primary stewards of immigration into the country.
Williams and other state leaders argue, then, that the federal government owes Texas because it has failed to secure the Texas-Mexico border and cost state taxpayers money. Reimbursement should include expenses incurred by Operation Lone Star as well as potentially billions allocated to agencies such as the Texas Department of Public Safety and the Texas National Guard, according to the congressman’s proposal.
Texas is buying border land, bracing for proposed mass deportations
In November, officials unveiled a ranch in Rio Grande City that the state purchased on the Texas-Mexico border.
Texas officials offered it as a site for detention facilities to help the incoming administration of President-elect Donald Trump with proposed mass deportations. Portions of a border wall have already been built at the site.
Meanwhile, Texas Land Commissioner Dawn Buckingham has said the state is searching for additional land to aid the federal effort.
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton sued the Biden Administration over immigration
Paxton has gone to court to protect Abbott’s efforts to build a border wall and install buoys and razor wire in the Rio Grande River.
He challenged policies that conservatives say contribute to illegal immigration. He has successfully used the courts to halt immigration policies that included the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, which allowed some undocumented immigrants who got to the U.S. while younger than 16 to work in the country, delaying deportation.
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