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    Tattered Jeans

    Why Galveston's seaweed is anything but gross: It's time to embrace this beach gold

    Katie Oxford
    Apr 15, 2015 | 10:00 am

    Seaweed is “gross” to some people. Others go, “Pee-U.” But, in my mind, it conjures up sweet visions of summers spent along Bolivar Peninsula . . . with salt on top.

    When I was a kid, seaweed on the beach was as common as seeing clouds in the sky. After a storm, it blanketed the beach like wet draperies. Heavy and thick. But, to my siblings and me, Sargasso goo was a good thing. Seaweed was something we played in, around and with.

    We’d draw a face in the sand and use clumps of seaweed to give it hair. About every sand castle we built started with a pile of seaweed. But, I’ll get to the foundation stuff later.

    Seaweed was our Seine. Woven by Mother Nature herself. If you looked through it carefully, you could always find treasure. For my brothers, that was fish. For me, sea beans — more precious than sand dollars. Over the summers, I found hundreds of em.' Mostly, the ones called Sea Heart (my favorite), and Coral Bean.

    To my brothers and their friends, seaweed was good ammo. They’d sling it at one another or, wad it up and throw it like a baseball.

    Once, our family of six combed the beach looking through masses of seaweed but not for either. My oldest brother had lost his glasses for the umpteenth time so we spread out like we were hunting Easter eggs. Around sunset, everyone gave up except Mama. Sure enough, a little later we heard her squealing — saw her jumping up and down lifting Tommy’s glasses in the air like a lit torch.

    Daddy, who’d made a bet with her, was shaking his head and smiling even though realizing he’d just lost. “I’ll be damn,” he said.

    To my brothers and their friends, seaweed was good ammo. They’d sling it at one another or, wad it up and throw it like a baseball. Our dogs went ape over the stuff. If they weren’t rootin’ around in it for something to eat, they rolled in it like a cat in catnip.

    On some mornings, I swear the beach glowed. The light made the seaweed glitter — like stars I thought. When it twinkled like this, I’d remember Rumpelstiltskin, turning straw into gold. If it was mysterious to me then, it seems straight out of mythology now. How cool that a dark floating mass one day rolls into a soft golden bed the next — offering up a smorgasbord of surprise to some. Food, to others.

    Seaweed helps beaches grow. Duh. Sand latches on to it, providing a natural foundation for dunes. But, try explaining this to the scrappers and you might get scrapped yourself. Thankfully though, it seems like some Galveston officials finally get it.

    The other thing about seaweed is — it helps make the beach, well, smell like one. Salty. I can think of a lot of things that smell a hell of a lot worse sometimes. The air we breathe — our rivers and bays.

    Today, researchers at NASA and Texas A&M Galveston have launched a new website that provides a satellite view showing where seaweed is drifting and how much is out there. It even offers predictions of where it will come ashore. (They say Galveston should experience fewer problems with seaweed this summer as currents steer it toward the Caribbean islands and Mexicans Yucatán instead.)

    High tech stuff and all good, but, if you’re an ole beachcomber from way back, you’ll go to the beach anyway. Find pleasure in the gold.

    Seaweed builds beaches.

    3 Katie Oxford seaweed April 2015 Seaweed builds beaches.
    Photo by Katie Oxford
    Seaweed builds beaches.
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    TribFest 2025

    Politicians and John Mulaney headline Texas publication's 2025 festival

    Brianna Caleri
    Oct 9, 2025 | 5:00 pm
    John Mulaney
    Photo courtesy of John Mulaney
    Comedian John Mulaney will tour in fall 2025.

    The Texas Tribune, a statewide publication tracking politics and policy, has announced the full lineup for its annual TribFest, held November 13-15 in downtown Austin.

    Despite wide ideological gaps between the United States' two main political parties, the Texas Tribune maintains a non-partisan approach to festival programming, including political figures ranging from the lesser-known to the widely celebrated and controversial. Some entertainers, culinary professionals, and other less explicitly political guests are on the lineup, too.

    The festival does not present headliners, but it does provide a selection of guests it deems notable in a press release announcing the finalized lineup:

    • Tim Walz, Minnesota governor and 2024 Democratic nominee for Vice President
    • Bill Kristol, Editor-at-Large at The Bulwark
    • Vicente Fox, former President of Mexico
    • State Sen. Carol Alvarado, D-Houston
    • Ruth Simmons, Distinguished Presidential Fellow at Rice University
    • Christine Brennan, Columnist for USA Today
    • Pete Buttigieg, Former U.S. Secretary of Transportation
    • Vanessa Fuentes, Austin Mayor Pro Tem
    • Alberto R. Gonzales, Former U.S. Attorney General
    • Ro Khana, D-California, U.S. Representative
    • Paula Kerger, President and CEO of PBS
    • State Rep. Caroline Fairly, R-Amarillo
    • Eric Holder, former United States Attorney General
    • Aaron Reitz, 2026 Republican candidate for Texas Attorney General
    • U.S. Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minnesota
    • John Mulaney, comedian, actor and writer

    Speakers at the festival will appear on panels and in one-on-one conversations addressing a range of topics. The Tribune calls these "the issues that matter most to Texans."

    Attendees will listen in at various venues around the downtown area. There will also be a day of programming on Congress Avenue on November 15 that anyone can attend for free.

    The festival-within-a-festival, called "Open Congress," will be held between 7th and 11th Streets, and will tackle topics including "arts and culture, faith, education, food, how Gen Z is shaping the future, and more." There will also be live performances, interactive showcases, and other two-way activations that allow attendees to directly participate.

    TribFest has more than 80 sponsors and media partners. The presenting, premiere, and major sponsors are as follows: JPMorganChase, BlackRock, bp America, Builders | TX, Chevron, Methodist Healthcare Ministries, PMI, Raise Your Hand Texas, Visit Fort Worth, Airbnb, Amazon, American Airlines, Baylor Line, Beyond Petrochemicals, Capital Factory, Central Texas Regional Mobility Authority, Dallas College, Educate Texas, HCA Healthcare, Houston Endowment, Intersect, Robert Woods Johnson Foundation, Sixth Street, Texas Monthly, Texas Woman's University, The Commit Partnership, The Sumners Foundation, and Western Governors University. A full list of sponsors is available toward the bottom of the festival's home page.

    Tickets (starting at $269 for general admission and $65 for students and educators) are available at festival.texastribune.org.

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