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    Cliff Notes

    Predictions for 2010 are so next year. Let's look to 2019, when these things will happen......

    Clifford Pugh
    Dec 31, 2009 | 2:45 pm
    Prediction: The Texans won't win a Super Bowl. Or will they?

    This time 10 years ago, we were all worried that computer systems around the world would crash as the millennium approached. People stayed at home because they were scared of flying (sound familiar?), convinced the world was coming to an end.

    We dodged that bullet, but then all hell broke loose, with terrorist attacks (2001), Enron’s collapse (2001-02), never-ending wars in Iraq and Afghanistan (2001- present), the disintegration of the Space Shuttle Columbia over Texas (2003), Hurricane Katrina (2005) and Ike (2008), the near-collapse of the world’s financial system (2008), bankruptcies at Chrysler and General Motors (2009), and the revelation of gigantic frauds perpetuated by Allen Stanford and Bernie Madoff (2009).

    No one could have foreseen these calamities on Dec. 31, 1999. But neither could we have predicted that over the next decade we would elect the nation’s first African-American president (2008) and Houston’s first openly lesbian mayor (2009). We had yet to hear of Wikipedia (2001), iPods and iTunes (2001), My Space (2002), BlackBerry (2002), Facebook (2004), YouTube (2005), Twitter (2006) or reality TV (Survivor debuted on May 31, 2000).

    So who knows what will happen over the next decade?

    I’m going to go out on a limb and take a guess. I've steered away from things I really have no clue about (global warming and what additional article of clothing we'll have to remove to go through airport security—will underwear be next?) to concentrate on seven things I'm convinced will happen over the next decade, like:

    1. Houston will have an Hispanic mayor
    Parker will likely be in office until 2016. Once elected, Houston mayors tend to stay in office for six years (three two-year terms) until they are term-limited out. It’s a no-brainer to predict that by then, Houston will be past due to elect a Hispanic mayor. Look at the demographics.

    About 43 percent of Houston’s population is Hispanic now. Rice University sociologist Stephen Klineberg, director of the Houston Annual Survey, notes that the figure will increase because Houston’s white population is growing older while most younger adults are black or Hispanic.

    “No force in the world will stop Houston (and America) from becoming more Hispanic and less Anglo as the 21st-century unfolds,” the survey concludes.

    2. Houston will have zoning
    Or some form of it. The fight over the Ashby high rise shows that neighborhoods aren’t going to accept loosely regulated development without a nasty fight. Such protests will only increase as the city becomes more densely populated and neighborhood groups organize to fight city hall on the issue. I’m betting that some sort of compromise will be reached that allows high-rise development in certain sectors of Houston while prohibiting it in others.

    3. Houston won’t have a daily newspaper
    Already Detroit has stopped home newspaper delivery on Mondays through Wednesdays, and one of the Seattle newspapers has gone to Internet-only publication. On weekdays, the Chronicle is often so thin that if it didn’t show up on the front lawn a resident could suspect a sparrow flew away with it. While community newspapers and niche publications will likely continue because a certain segment of the audience likes something to hold onto, the mass market dailies' days are numbered.

    4. Your TV will disappear
    Your favorite TV shows will be available any time you want to see them -- only they won’t be on TV. Many experts believe that shows will be streamed on the Web and available for viewing on your computer screen whenever you want to download them—for a small fee, of course. We’re inching closer to that now with DVRs, YouTube and Hulu. While it may seem a little farfetched, remember that not so long ago, so did iTunes.

    5. Gay marriage will be legal
    Once again, look at the demographics. While older people are adamantly opposed to gay marriage, younger people favor it. Many have gay friends and to them it’s no big deal. A recent paper published in the American Political Science Review by Columbia University political scientists Jeffrey Lax and Justin Phillips analyzed support across age groups and concluded that if policy were set by people 65 or older, no states would allow same-sex marriage. But if policy were set by those under 30, 38 states would favor it. So it’s just a matter of time.

    6. Tiger Woods will play more golf
    The world’s greatest golfer will go to rehab for sex addition, make a tearful confession on Oprah, return to the PGA tour, break Jack Nichlaus's record of winning 19 major championships and earn a measure of redemption. We all love second chances. (I actually wrote this column a few days ago before Woods confessed he's a sex addict. So I'm already 1 for 7 in my predictions. Las Vegas here I come!)

    7. The Texans will win the Super Bowl
    OK, who really believes it’s possible that Houston’s team will be Super Bowl-bound? Even though the Texans have a mathematical chance of making the playoffs this season, I don’t foresee them taking part in the Super frenzy—ever.

    But it’s nice to dream.

    Prediction: Obsolete in 2019, the television set.

    unspecified
    news/city-life

    SUDDEN SHUTTERS

    GameStop to close 11 Houston-area stores amid nationwide cuts

    Brandon Watson
    Jan 26, 2026 | 4:30 pm
    GameStop
    GameStop/ Facebook
    Long lines for video game releases are a rarity these days.

    For GameStop, it’s a blood bath right out of Mortal Kombat. The Grapevine-based video game chain is expected to shed 470 locations nationwide, including 11 in the greater Houston area.

    The closures were revealed in the company's newest filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission that said it would close "a significant number of additional stores in fiscal 2025" ending on January 31. In its last fiscal year, GameStop shuttered 590 locations.

    In addition to braving the overall “retail apocalypse,” the retailer faces the same conditions that largely decimated CD and video stores. Video games are now available for digital download in seconds and no longer require a trip to a physical store.

    “As a part of our profitability initiative, we are reducing our global store base, which includes closing stores that are not meeting performance standards or stores at the end of their lease terms with the intent of transferring sales to other nearby locations,” the company wrote in its annual report. “ If we are unsuccessful in marketing to customers of the stores that we plan to close or in transferring sales to nearby stores, our results of operations could be negatively impacted.”

    The current digital squeeze isn’t the first time GameStop has been thrown for a loop by contemporary internet culture. In 2021, the retailer famously became a meme stock, buoyed by users of Reddit's r/wallstreetbets. The skyrocketing increase in its stock price, followed by short selling, caused major financial consequences for hedge funds and other investors.

    Since then, the stock price has been more stable but has decreased approximately 21 percent over the last year. After CEO Ryan Cohen bought 500,000 shares in the company on January 21, the price has slightly rebounded.

    GameStop has not issued a formal list of the closures, and a request for more information was not returned at press time. But Ohio’s WKYC Studios put together a list of all the U.S. stores that are on the chopping block, verified through GameStop’s online store locator. The Texas closings are as follows:

    • Allen – The Village at Allen, 170 E. Stacy Rd
    • Arlington – Little School Road Shops, 1245 N. Little School Rd
    • Austin – Ben White Payload Center, 500 E. Ben White Blvd
    • Balch Springs – Lake June Plaza, 12209 Lake June Rd
    • Boerne – Menger Crossing, 1375 S. Main St
    • Cedar Park – Lakeline Plaza, 11066 Pecan Park Blvd
    • Conroe – Conroe Center, 1231 N. Loop 336 W
    • Corpus Christi – Padre Island Drive, 1805 S. Padre Island Dr
    • Corsicana – Corsicana Marketplace, 3811 W. Highway 31
    • Dallas – Glen Oaks Crossing, 4787 Vista Wood Blvd
    • El Paso – Alameda Town Center, 9411 Alameda Ave
    • El Paso – Fountains at Farah, 8889 Gateway West Blvd
    • Fort Worth – Clifford Retail, 301 Clifford Center Dr
    • Garland – Ridgewood Village, 2930 S. First St
    • Houston – Beechnut Street Houston, 10100 Beechnut St
    • Houston – Bellaire Gessner Center, 8880 Bellaire Blvd
    • Houston – Market at Uvalde, 13706 East Fwy
    • Houston – Market Square, 13341 Westheimer Rd
    • Houston – Oxford Plaza, 10407 North Fwy
    • Houston – Royal Oaks, 11807 Westheimer Rd
    • Houston – Wayside Shopping Center, 900 S. Wayside Dr
    • Huntsville – Ravenwood Village, 245 Interstate 45 N
    • Irving – MacArthur Park, 7601 N. MacArthur Blvd
    • Lake Jackson – Lake Jackson Shopping Center, 121 Highway 332 W
    • La Marque – LaMarque Crossing, 6408 Interstate 45
    • Laredo – Laredo Crossing Shopping Center, 4415 S. Zapata Hwy
    • Leon Valley – 5601 Bandera Rd
    • Lubbock – 7th St Lubbock, 1803 Seventh St
    • Magnolia – Westwood Village, 33020 FM 2978 Rd
    • Mansfield – Mansfield Crossing, 1301 E. Debbie Ln
    • Marble Falls – Highland Lakes, 2400 US Highway 281
    • McKinney – Lake Forest Crossing, 4100 S. Lake Forest Dr
    • Mesquite – Town East Mall, 2050 Town East Mall
    • Mission – Shary Plaza, 808 S. Shary Rd
    • Palmhurst – Palmhurst Shopping Center, 4416 N. Conway Ave
    • Paris – Paris Corners, 3842 Lamar Ave
    • Saginaw – Cross Pointe Shopping Center, 1453 N. Saginaw Blvd
    • San Antonio – Alamo Quarry Market, E. 255 Basse Rd
    • San Antonio – Blanco Road, 7117 Blanco Rd
    • San Antonio – Huebner Oaks Center, 11745 W. I-10
    • San Antonio – Northwoods Phase III, 1742 N. Loop 1604 E
    • San Antonio – Walzem Plaza, 5366 Walzem Rd
    • Stephenville – Stephenville Shopping Center, 2811 W. Washington St
    • Sulphur Springs – Sulphur Springs Corners, 1707 S. Broadway St
    • Terrell – Terrell Corner, 1888 W. Moore Ave
    • Tyler – State Highway 64 Tyler, 3842 State Highway 64 W
    • Watauga – Watauga Town Crossing, 8004 Denton Hwy
    video gamesretailclosings
    news/city-life
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