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    Tattered Jeans

    Stirring the pot: Kitchen cookware conjures up magical memories fresh as the smell of gumbo

    Katie Oxford
    Dec 21, 2014 | 3:00 pm

    These last few years, I’ve takin’ to cookin'. My current weight is a sign of this but never mind food. Something else draws me to my kitchen too. Chi. A heat that doesn’t come from fire.

    Our kitchen is chock full of it. It’s in the pots, bowls, a butcher block that bows in the middle, a pitcher full of wooden spoons — in the spoons themselves.
    The pots are more than iron works. They are steeped in history and in spirit. If you don’t believe this, just come on over. It’s something you feel in your hand the second you pick one up.
    My favorite pot is one I brew gumbo in. It’s a deep iron pot with a blue rubber cover over the handle the color of a sky I saw a million times growing up in Beaumont, Texas.
    I didn’t collect these pots. They belonged to kinfolk, now dead. Sorta magically and one by one, they settled in my kitchen on a rack underneath an old butcher’s block. Some sit stacked, others, like a row of old shoes. They are easy to reach, on the ready and to my eyes — sittin’ pretty — in dulled, worn out glory.
    My favorite pot is one I brew gumbo in. It’s a deep iron pot with a blue rubber cover over the handle the color of a sky I saw a million times growing up in Beaumont, Texas. It used to belong to my pop-in-law, my favorite on my husband’s side of the family.
    Pop and I enjoyed doing the same stuff — rootin’ around in his garden, admiring the sweet peas on the chicken wire, planting okra every Lent and fiddlin’ around with his bird dogs. One called Sally I can still smell today. When I’m stirring the pot, these things wash over me like a wave — as fresh as the smell of the gumbo rising. Strong. Sweet.
    Next to Pop’s pot sits an orange metal colander that, to anyone else — looks like a colander with rusted handles. When I’m washing lettuce in it, I think of Mama making “sink salad,” she called it. I see her standing over the kitchen sink, digging down deep, tossing lettuce like a child playing in sand — hear her sing.
    No telling how old the pitcher is – now holding wooden spoons, some burned from fire. I was told that it belonged to my great grandparents in Tennessee. When they packed up and moved to Texas, they brought it with them. Clearly, with a heap of care. On the bottom, there’s something handwritten. I’m not sure but best I can tell it says Orlena Vines. Wondering about Orlena conjures up a whole other world to think about.
    Christmas Eve I’ll be in the kitchen. I’ll stir pots and sling salad for the folks coming for dinner. Mostly, though — for all the folks who brung me. Pots and all.

    Sittin' pretty in dulled, worn-out glory.

    2 Katie Oxford Chi December 2014 \u201cSittin\u2019 pretty in dulled, worn out glory.\u201d.
      
    Photo by Katie Oxford
    Sittin' pretty in dulled, worn-out glory.
    unspecified
    news/city-life

    landing scuttled

    Nonprofit Houston news outlet will shutter after only 2 years

    John Egan
    Apr 15, 2025 | 2:15 pm
    Houston skyline
    Houston skyline
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    Amid financial challenges, the nonprofit Houston Landing online news outlet plans to shut down by mid-May.

    In an April 15 announcement posted on its website, Houston Landing says that although it launched in 2023 with more than $20 million in seed funding, the outlet failed to attract enough revenue to continue operating. The announcement followed a vote by the organization’s board of directors to close the nonprofit newsroom. All 43 employees will be laid off, the Columbia Journalism Reviewreports.

    “We are proud of the Landing’s coverage of Greater Houston and continue to believe deeply in the need for more free, independent journalism in our region,” Ann B. Stern, board chair of Houston Landing as well as president and CEO of the Houston Endowment, says in the announcement. “This decision was difficult but necessary. Houston Landing’s reporting has made a meaningful impact in the community, but it struggled to find its long-term financial footing.”

    According to the announcement, the Landing’s board is exploring a partnership with the Austin-based Texas Tribune, a pioneer in nonprofit journalism, to potentially establish a local news initiative in Houston. Later this year, the Texas Tribune plans to open a locally focused newsroom in Waco. A similar newsroom is in the works in Austin.

    “We have great respect for Houston Landing’s work in delivering high-quality, nonpartisan journalism to its readers,” says Sonal Shah, CEO of the Texas Tribune. “We also understand the profound challenges facing local newsrooms today — journalism is a public service and needs a strong ecosystem to thrive. We look forward to exploring how we can learn from what the Landing started and create a sustainable model that serves the Houston community. We will take time to explore the right path forward to ensure sustainability.”

    Houston Landing was launched after a two-year study led by the American Journalism Project found many Houstonians were disappointed about a lack of trustworthy, deeply reported local news. Financial backers of the Landing include the American Journalism Project, the Houston Endowment, Arnold Ventures, the Kinder Foundation, and the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation.

    Despite the high-profile support, the site struggled to find an audience. CJR notes that the Landing had approximately 13,000 newsletter subscribers and only generated about $80,000 in subscription revenue. In the article, executive editor Sewell Chan identifies a number of other issues, including a lack of editorial focus and changes in leadership. “But in the end, the gap between board and staff, between management and labor, and between runway and revenue was just too large to bridge,” he writes.

    “While it’s with a heavy heart that we announce the closure of our newsroom, I want to express my deepest gratitude to the dedicated journalists and staff members who poured their passion into our mission every single day,” Houston Landing CEO Peter Bhatia says.

    “Houston Landing demonstrates how a commitment to truth and accountability can transform communities and improve lives,” he adds. “I’m thankful to those who believed in us, supported us, and stood with us as we connected with each other through stories that inspired positive change.”

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