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    FPSF Surprises

    Free Press Summer Fest's hottest moments: A star under the freeway, a ragged Iggy Pop & shirtless men

    Whitney Radley
    Jun 2, 2013 | 1:52 am

    The most hardcore of festival-goers queue up at Eleanor Tinsley Park well before 11 a.m. — wearing as few clothing items as possible and crowding under tree shadows like a herd of cattle as respite from the midday sun — and stay until after the last band closes its set.

    I was one such Free Press Summer Festival attendee on Saturday, the first day of the fifth annual festival's sold-out weekend.

    Though there was much to be imbibed, ingested and experienced in the intervening hours, the real highlight was the music. Here were my personal favorites:

    Paul Wall
    It seemed simultaneously fitting and inappropriate for Paul Wall, a Jersey Village High School graduate and former University of Houston student, be relegated to the Mercury Stage, a small one tucked beneath an I-45 underpass. A young crowd poured in throughout his 40-minute set, which evoked high school rebelliousness in the best of ways.

    Quad City DJs
    What I'm foreseeing as one of the more overlooked acts of the weekend, the Quad City DJs played an energized set for a crowd of ravers, bros and generally nostalgic twentysomethings in the mid-afternoon. From the first song ("Space Jam," the title track of the Michael Jordan cartoon movie) to one of the last (the ever-popular line dance song, "C'mon N' Ride It (The Train)"), the audience was predictably pumped — but what wasn't so expected was the "Tootsee Roll" and "Daisy Dukes" and more in between.

    Who knew that Quad City DJs and the 69 Boyz were cut from the same cloth?

    2 Chainz
    Like any artist more known for cameos than personal tracks, rapper 2 Chainz was a definite wild card for Free Press Summer Fest. But his set, which took over the Neptune Stage late on Saturday afternoon, was a series of high-energy snippets that had the sweaty crowd singing along to everyone from Kanye West's "Mercy" to Juicy J's "Bands A Make Her Dance."

    Another highlight? "Duffle Bag Boy," a track from 2 Chainz' Playaz Circle days, when the Georgia-born rapper went by "Tity Boi."

    Iggy and The Stooges
    The 66-year-old Iggy Pop has seen better days, but his appearance at Free Press Summer Fest certainly seemed a sort of vindication. An unworthy audience was taken back in time with "Gimme Danger," "Raw Power," "Fun House" and "Search and Destroy." As one friend put it, Iggy looked like a "ragged piece of leather," his ramshackle band attacking their instruments "with anger and nihilism."

    An unforgettable act, to be sure.

    The Postal Service
    An embarrassingly formative band in my teenage experience, the Postal Service has come to mean much more to me than the sum of its parts — but still, when I recognized that it was Jenny Lewis (of Rilo Kiley fame) playing on stage with 36-year-old indie heartthrob singer-songwriter Ben Gibbard and his project producer and collaborator, Jimmy Tamborello, I had a near nervous breakdown. The ensuing set was similarly striking, featuring favorites from their 2003 album, "Give Up," in addition to newly-released singles.

    Honorable mentions: Buxton, a locally-based Americana-rock band that prompted a group of shirtless men to dance with silk scarves in the middle part of their set; and Passion Pit, an undeniably positive and energetic Boston-based group that left me feeling ready to conquer the world . . . or at least walk to the next stage.

    For a wrap-up of Sunday's activities at the Free Press Summer Festival, check out Reid Schroder's story on CultureMap.

    Quaid City DJ was an underrated surprise at Free Press Summer Fest.

    Photo by Anthony Rathbun
    Quaid City DJ was an underrated surprise at Free Press Summer Fest.
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    coming to a screen near you

    Netflix's award-winning new Selena documentary will debut in November

    Amber Heckler
    Oct 15, 2025 | 9:30 am
    Selena y Los Dinos documentary at SXSW
    Photo courtesy of SXSW
    So who's hosting the Selena y Los Dinos watch party on November 17?

    An award-winning documentary detailing the life and legacy of Tejano music icon Selena Quintanilla has finally received a launch date for its Netflix debut.

    Selena y Los Dinos will be begin streaming on Monday, November 17, the streaming service confirmed in a press release.

    The documentary, directed by Isabel Castro, gives an intimate (yet not invasive) look into the singer's life and delves deeper into the close-knit connections she created with her bandmates, including siblings A.B. III and Suzette, and Chris Pérez, the band's guitarist who eventually became Selena's husband.

    The buzzy film first premiered at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival, had its Texas debut at SXSW earlier this year, and also headlined the 2025 CineFestival in San Antonio in July. It won the US Documentary Special Jury Award for Archival Storytelling at the Sundance Film Festival, and snapped up a SXSW Audience Award in the musical story category, 24 Beats Per Second.

    Castro said in the release that she honored Selena's "extraordinary rise" to fame while showing the unseen side of the singer's life "behind the stage" as a daughter, sister, and wife.

    "Through personal archive and intimate interviews with her family, the film reveals new dimensions of her journey that have never been seen before," Castro said.

    Even three decades after Selena's death, fans around the world still show an unwavering support for the Queen of Tejano Music. Selena's legacy has been displayed in a popular 1997 biopic, a 2020 Netflix series, a Quintanilla family-owned museum in Corpus Christi, and most recently a public photography and fashion exhibit at Texas State University in San Marcos. Selena's music also attracts about 9.47 monthly listeners on Spotify.

    In May, Deadline reported that Netflix's deal to purchase rights to the film was estimated to be between $6 to $7 million.

    selena quintanillanetflixdocumentary
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