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    Are You Influential?

    Houston Twitterentials: My search for the real local stars of the 140-characterworld

    Matthew Williams
    Aug 17, 2010 | 2:32 pm
    • Kelsey Ruger (@TheMoleskin)
      Photo by Michael Cummings
    • Jenny Lawson (@TheBloggess)
    • Jay Rascoe (@gunsandtacos)
      Photo by Paul Sedillo
    • Monica Danna (@Cosmopolitician)
      Photo by Aimee Giese
    • Matthew Wettergreen (@organprinter)
    • Miya Shay (@MiyaShay)
    • Marc Nathan (@marc1919)
      Photo by Jay Lee
    • Heather Pray (@HeatherPray)
      Photo by Anthony Rathbun
    • Jonathan Cohen (@JRCohen)
      Photo by Jay Lee
    • Grace Rodriguez (@GraceRodriguez)
      Photo by James Crossman
    • FarWyde (@FarWyde)
    • Dwight Silverman (@DSilverman)
    • Alan Davidson (@AlanDavidson)

    I want to talk about the most influential people in Houston on Twitter because while I appreciate and fully endorse its benefits, I'm simply not a strapping Twitter stud with adoring followers in tow.

    I'm more that scrawny, ghostly white guy on the beach with zinc oxide on my nose and a Gilligan hat tightly on my head watching everyone else be cool.

    But first allow me to philosophize a bit by quoting, via our beloved Wikipedia, Mr. Søren Kierkegaard, one of the fathers (posthumously) of existentialism.

     

    What I really lack is to be clear in my mind what I am to do, not what I am to know, except in so far as a certain knowledge must precede every action ...

    If you accept that Twitter is an interactive broadcasting technology that allows individual human beings to express ideas, opinions and information that inevitably result in actions at magnitudes, efficiency and reach unrivaled in history, then Twitter is in fact one hell of an existentialist orgy.

    Wondering about Twitter and its existential underpinnings all started after I attended the recent Aspen Ideas Festival, an alpine summit of Who's Who doing some kind of greater good in neighborhoods to nebulae. Or as described on the event's own website: The Aspen Ideas Festival is a gathering of "some of the world's most inspired and provocative thinkers, writers, artists, business people, teachers, and leaders." Bill Gates, Eric Holder and Alan Greenspan were in attendance alongside dozens of other national and global A-Listers.

    Then there was Evan Williams and Biz Stone, Twitter's evangelizing founders, serving as obvious reps of a new generation of thinkers with serious credentials as technology visionaries.

    Seeing Evan and Biz at a cool, breezy 8,000 feet with the lush, green grass of Aspen underfoot and the perfect Colorado mountain sun overhead got me "existentializing" about the collision of ideas, individuals, information and actions as fueled by their sky rocketing, although yet to be profitable, media platform.

    Sure, Twitter is a "whatever-the-hell-you-want-to-tweet-about" chatterbox, but as such, it offers each of us an opportunity to tweet for various types of influential actions — from offering useful tips in our daily lives to informing others about local or widespread crises to broadcasting ideas with specific actions one can take to turn them into reality and even spur others to do the same.

    A little altitude-induced loftiness blurring a typically keep-it-real Houston state-of-mind? Perhaps, but stick with me. I'll bring you down to sea level soon enough.

     

    Consider how one person can acquire a huge following on Twitter through the quality, quantity and frequency of their 140-character tweets. Or if you're a celebrity, then thousands of people may start following you overnight (see Twitaholic), but what keeps them tuning in and turning on?

     

    I'm looking for true "Twitterentials" — individuals who, through his or her use of Twitter wields terrific influence on the actions people take in both the digital and physical worlds. They produce a consistent flow of tweets that entertain, inform and even inspire others on a regular basis.

     

    Twitterentials rise above the webby din of fleeting, blathering tweets by producing 140 nuggets of value. To paraphrase Evan from his interview at the festival, it's like an object in flight that a flock of birds suddenly shift direction en masse to follow.

     

    So back in a not-so-Alpine-high-or-climactically-cool Houston, I asked myself and others living in the Bayou City: Who are Houston's Twitterentials?

     

    I ask this question having read articles about similar questions published by other local news organizations and the ennui list for Houston on Twitaholics These pieces felt obvious, easy and incomplete. Like eating just one pistachio, I wanted more.

     

    And while the followers of my personal Twitter account are meager at best (I spend most of my Tweet energy on the business side), it troubles me that it's so hard to find Houstonians who are worthy to follow for useful information or even inspiration (no offense, Joel Osteen). The search function on Twitter is lame, and TweetDeck and the like help, but still fall short. What's a simple, run-of-the-mill Twitterer to do short of chaining myself to my laptop and iPhone?

     

    Alas, let me not complain and instead offer an idea to improve how we define and find Twitterentials on Twitter ... at least in Houston. It seems any respectable solution should involve something nerdy with numbers, a mathematical algorithm with a symbol or two from an ancient alphabet. A key that summons the inner calculus in us all, or at least some formulas we learned in college and fantasized about one day using to help solve some great mystery a la Dan Brown.

     

    And let us not ignore the need for a warm, more human qualitative approach to augment this cold empirical methodology. What should it look like? Would it involve appointing a special committee with hearings, testimonies and secret ballots?

     

    To start, I'm thinking an index value that factors the number of followers with tweets/updates, retweets, "both following," lists and people followed on one level combined with number of months active and search page results for @name plus content on another level. I can also see a secondary algorithm factoring the index values of everyone in a user's network, then assigning some power rating. But Twitter has a massive ecosystem.

     

    I'm sure smarter minds have studied this, so I welcome suggestions about other criteria that can be fairly applied to discern the merely popular from the truly influential.

     

    Meanwhile, I would be remiss not to attempt to list a variety of folks who have established a certain noteworthy voice in HTown, with a special thanks to CultureMap social media editor Fayza Elmostehi for her suggestions.

     

    Of course, this is simply a list to get things started, it's hardly exhaustive or definitive. I welcome help from the crowd, or more exact, the individual, so please agree, disagree and suggest away in the comments section. Embrace the existential pleasures of Twitter.

     

     Females

     

     TheBloggess — nearly 54k Followers with rollers in your hair, now that's influence

     

     GraceRodriguez — apparently your Peeps love you as much as they love Houston

     

     Cosmopolitician — for a voice listened to by many and backed up by a chorus of Warhols

     

     Miyashay — a reporter at ABC 13 with serious multi-platform "skillz"

     

     FarWyde — you had me at cockfighting

     

     HeatherPray — does your dog Tweet?

     

     

     

     Males

     

     Dsilverman — a Grand Wizard of Technology; or at least you look the part

     

     JRCohen — you look worth knowing ... and following

     

     TheMoleSkin — clearly a passion for all things digital

     

     GunsandTacos — who can deny the magic of guns, tacos and weird music?

     

     OrganPrinter — I'd like to hear you spin

     

     Marc1919 — a master networker in Houston and ...

     

     AlanDavidson — dude, you're selling

     

     

     

     video platformvideo managementvideo solutionsvideo player

     

     

     

     Matt Wiliams is co-founder of Mouth Watering Media LLC, a Houston-based company that developed the platform for CultureMap

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    Flood Response

    $30M+ Hill Country flood relief fund announces first phase of aid awards

    Brianna Caleri
    Jul 11, 2025 | 2:30 pm
    Death Toll Rises After Flash Floods In Texas Hill Country
    Photo by Brandon Bell/Getty Images
    The Central Texas community has come together in huge numbers to grieve and offer support.

    When the floods in Central Texas started over July 4 weekend, it didn't take long for the Community Foundation of the Texas Hill Country to put an important call out for aid. In fact, it created the Kerr County Flood Relief Fund on the first Friday of the tragedy, which quickly became the default recipient of donations from locals and businesses. On July 11, the foundation made its first major announcement regarding how funds will be distributed.

    During a press conference, the foundation announced it has received more than $30 million so far. Top donors included H-E-B, which contributed $2 million in addition to sending its disaster relief convoy, and James Avery Artisan Jewelry, which is based in Kerrville and donated about $500,000.

    “The heartbreak we’ve experienced as a community is profound, but so is the response,” said Community Foundation of the Texas Hill Country CEO Austin Dickson. “In a matter of days, thousands of donors from across Texas and beyond have stepped up to say: we are with you. This is a moment of collective grief, but also of extraordinary love.”

    The foundation is dividing its response into five phases, which include an initial phase of financial assistance and an end phase of longterm recovery, with more detailed logistics in between. The first phase starts with $5 million in emergency grants to nonprofits. Those nonprofits will then further distribute funds as they see fit. Priorities are divided into four categories of $1.25 million each: support of individuals and families, local businesses, first responders, and crisis response.

    There are 22 allocations on the full list, with some entities receiving grants in multiple categories. The full list includes the Salvation Army Kerrville Kroc Center, Mercy Chefs, World Central Kitchen, five volunteer fire departments, LiftFund, the Kerrville Area Chamber of Commerce, Schreiner University, Kerrville Pets Alive!, Freeman Fritts (Vet Clinic and Shelter), Arcadia Live Theater, Ingram ISD, five churches, and Christian outreach organization Light on the Hill.

    The fund is still open to donations, and the foundation plans to form a Community Advisory Committee that would seek the advice of local nonprofit leaders, residents, and other "stakeholders" regarding long-term recovery and equity.

    “We know this is just the beginning,” Dickson said. “We’re grateful to say we’ve raised over $30 million in just one week — but the needs are tremendous, and continued support will be critical in the months ahead. Recovery will take months, if not years, but we are committed to walking every step of this journey with the communities we serve. We will listen, we will learn, and we will continue to act with compassion, urgency and accountability.”

    charitydisaster relieffirst respondersflood reliefgrantshill countryhill country floodskerr countynatural disasternonprofitsjuly 4 floods
    news/city-life
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