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    fun night in bangkok

    Hysterical Houston teacher-traveling TikTok star goes viral again after international nightmare journey

    Tarra Gaines
    Aug 16, 2023 | 11:34 am
    Trevor Boffone and students from Carnegie Vanguard High School

    The students and teachers finally land back in Houston to media attention.

    Photo by Trevor Boffone

    The saga begins with a 10-second TikTok dance video set in a suburban 7-ll in Osaka, Japan. Houston teacher, author, scholar and, yes, TikTok dancer, Dr. Trevor Boffone, does a few jump steps behind the caption: “You chaperoned a student trip to Japan and when you arrive at the airport you find out that American Airlines/Japan Airlines lost your booking and now you’re stranded.”

    So begins a four-day odyssey that will take a group of 31 teachers, parents, and Carnegie Vanguard High School students around the world while sending Dr. Boffone on a social media viral journey with millions of views across multiple platforms.

    Boffone is no stranger to TikTok stardom. His series of dance videos with his students at Bellaire High School even landed him on a segment of Good Morning America several years ago. But helping to chaperone this student group with his friend and Carnegie theater teacher, Steward Savage, was just supposed to be a fun but educational experience for students and teachers alike.


    @official_dr_boffone This is not a joke. I’m legit stranded in Japan w/ 31 people and have no clue when I’m coming home #japantrip #japantravel #711japan #travelproblems #AmericanAirlines #japanairlines ♬ original sound - EX7STENCE™


    And it was, initially. They flew from Houston to Dallas, and then Dallas to Tokyo, with no incidents. Then, they traveled by rail and bus to several other Japanese cities with a great learning experience all around, then ended their trip with a final few days in Osaka.

    From dream trip to nightmare

    That’s when the adventure turned into chaos.

    Arriving at the airport, they found the domestic airlines didn’t have notification of their tickets. Japan Airlines, American Airlines, and EF Tours company all blamed each other. American Airlines canceled their Tokyo to Dallas to Houston flights — and told them they had to speak to a specialist on group bookings in the U.S. office. Oh, and that office wouldn’t be open until many hours later.

    Finally, the American representative told them they could rebook them...for August 23, some 12 days after they were supposed to get home.

    While an extra 12 days in Japan might seem like a dream, for teachers and students needing to return to Houston classrooms soon — plus nowhere to stay in Japan — that scenario was definitely not going to work.


    @official_dr_boffone When in Japan #hannahmontana #migos #kyotojapan #kyoto #nijocastle #japantrip #japantravel ♬ Boogie x Hannah Montana - Boogie🤍


    At this point, Boffone took to his extensive social media platforms and danced his 7-11 dance of frustration. It would be the first of a six video series that chronicle their journey home.

    “Whatever is about is happen is going to be insane so I’m going to document it,” describes Boffone of his initial thought.

    The tour company found them hotels for two more nights while the tour company and airlines hashed it out. Somehow, their previously reserved and direct route was not the one they would take back to Texas.

    A direct flight home ... just a mere 50 hours

    Instead, they were sent on a 50-hour-trek the rest of the way around the world, flying from Osaka to Bangkok. From there, they would have to divide up into two groups, one traveling from Bangkok to Paris to Dallas to Houston, while the other would meander from Bangkok to Munich, Germany to Charlotte, North Carolina to Houston.

    All together, they would be traveling through six airports – including two Osaka airports – and endure many-hour layovers. To add to the misery, they left out of Hobby, where Boffone parked his car, but would arrive at IAH.

    Boffone still doesn’t know why the tour company and American routed them the other way around the globe to get them home, but uses the analogy of that “one random” flight that might pop up when looking for the cheapest ticket from Houston to New York that somehow routes us through five different cities over three days.

    “You wonder who books those. Apparently we do,” he laughs as he recalls the journey to CultureMap.

    When learning of their new itinerary the teachers and students treated it like an adventure, in the beginning.

    “At first we were all relieved that we were going to go home before the 23rd, and then it was exciting to go around the world, but then that morning before we left tensions were high.”

    Making fun of a serious situation

    At this point, Boffone got serious and seriously funny about chronicling their journey around the world.

    “I didn’t want to make a Karen-style, rant-fest at American Airlines,” explains Boffone, when asked how he managed to maintain a sense of humor in all the videos. He says making a stereotypical video demanding to speak to a manager is just not his brand.

    Instead, he made his next Osaka video the morning they were to leave, edited it in the taxi and uploaded it at the airport. By the time they had landed in Bangkok it had gone viral with nearly two million views by the time he landed back to Houston.

    “Typically when I’ve gone viral it’s been doing some sort of trend or something dance-y, or a short video,” he says of the video. “This is the first time I’ve gone viral with a non-classroom related thing or a long piece.”

    Fun night in Bangkok


    @official_dr_boffone POV: You’ve been trying to get home from Osaka, Japan for 72 hours because American Airlines droppes the ball and now you’re in Bangkok, Thailand on a 9 hour layover #travelproblems #AmericanAirlines #eftours #travelnightmare #bangkok #onenightinbangkok #bangkokthailand ♬ One Night In Bangkok - Original Single Version / From “Chess” - Murray Head


    The Bangkok airport gave him a wild and fun setting to dance his travel woes away. A theater scholar and musical theater kid at heart, he set this video to the soundtrack to the musical Chess.

    “Bangkok was truly a crossroads of the world, with insane people-watching and flights leaving every 5 minutes,” he describes, adding “When I was dancing on the moving sidewalks, there was a women who clearly knew the dance and couldn’t stop laughing and giggling.”

    Arriving in Munich with their trip only about half over, he admits everyone’s energy levels were depleted. Yet even then, the comedy of the videos perseveres.

    “Morale is low. I’m going to be honest,” he deadpans in the Munich video, while also doing a food review of the airport pretzels.

    In Charlotte, he reports that they’re back in the U.S. but one of the airlines lost his luggage at some point between Bangkok and North Carolina. Because of course they did.

    Teaching travel via TikTok

    Now that he’s finally back in Houston and had a few days to sleep and recuperate, Boffone can look back at the trip and the videos he made with an academic eye. As both a content creator on and a scholar of social media, he believes he knows why so many people have followed their journey back to Texas.

    “If you watch all six videos together, they’re using TikTok tools to tell a story in a TikTok way. I’m hitting a lot of different styles of TikTok videos but using them organically to tell my story,” he describes.

    “It’s sort of an insane story. It’s hard to convey, but these videos actually convey it pretty simply. From there it resonated. It also talks about students and teachers. If you leave 31 CEOs in Osaka, no one cares, but if you leave 31 teachers and students, people are going to care.”

    Trevor Boffone The Carnegie Vanguard High School travel group to Japan

    Photo by Trevor Boffone

    Students and teachers began their 50-hour trip happy to finally get back to Houston.

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    Now hear this

    New Texas museum shines spotlight on Tejano music history

    Edmond Ortiz
    Dec 18, 2025 | 11:30 am
    Totally Tejano Hall of Fame and Museum, San Antonio, tejano music
    Photo by Edmond Ortiz
    Roger Hernandez serves as board president of the Totally Tejano Hall of Fame and Museum.

    For a city that proudly calls itself the capital of Tejano music, San Antonio has long been missing a permanent place to honor the genre’s pioneers and preserve its history. That gap officially closed In December with the opening of the Totally Tejano Hall of Fame and Museum at 1414 Fredericksburg Rd.

    The music couldn’t have found a better steward than its founder and board president. Roger Hernandez has had his finger on the pulse of Tejano music for decades. His company, En Caliente Productions, has provided a platform for countless performing artists and songwriters in Tejano, conjunto, and regional Mexican music since 1982.

    Hernandez says his wife, who ran a shop at Market Square years ago, would often get questions from visitors about the location of a physical Tejano music museum, a thing that simply did not exist. In 2022, he banded together with friends, family, and other local Tejano music supporters to make the nonprofit Hall of Fame a reality.

    “I decided I've been in the music scene for over 40 years, it's time to do a museum,” Hernandez recalls.

    Hernandez says a brick-and-mortar Tejano music museum has long been needed to remember musical acts and other individuals who grew the genre across Texas and northern Mexico, especially those who are aging. Recently, the community lost famed Tejano music producer Manny Guerra and Abraham Quintanilla, the renowned Tejano singer/songwriter and father of the late superstar Selena Quintanilla-Perez. Both deaths occurred roughly one week after the Totally Tejano museum opened to the public.

    “They're all dying. They're all getting older, and we need to acknowledge all these people,” Hernandez says.

    The Totally Tejano Museum — named after Hernandez’s Totally Tejano Television Roku streaming — has 5,000 square feet of space packed with plaques, photos, promotional posters, musical instruments, and other memorabilia honoring the pioneers and stars of the beloved genre. Mannequins wear stage outfits from icons like Laura Canales and Flaco Jimenez, and a wall of photos remembers late greats. Totally Tejano Television plays legendary performances on a loop, bringing the exhibits to life.

    Totally Tejano Hall of Fame and Museum, San Antonio, Tejano music The newly opened Totally Tejano Hall of Fame and Museum includes a growing collection of memorabilia. Photo by Edmond Ortiz

    Hernandez says the museum will soon welcome permanent and rotating exhibits, including traveling shows, a Hall of Fame section, and an area paying homage to Chicano music crossovers, such as the late Johnny Rodriguez, the South Texas singer-songwriter who blended country with Tex-Mex music. Plans call for the organization to hold its inaugural Hall of Fame induction in February 2026.

    Eventually, a 2,000 square feet back room will be converted into additional display space and host industry gatherings, community symposiums, and record and video release parties. The museum also plans to add a gift and record shop and a music learning room where visitors can listen to early Tejano music and browse archival photos. Hernandez is already talking with local school districts about educational field trips.

    Much like Tejano itself, the museum is a grassroots production. Hernandez and fellow board members have used their own money to rent, renovate, develop, and maintain the museum space. The board also leads the selection of the Hall of Fame honorees and curates the exhibits.

    Hernandez has been heartened by the museum’s reception, both from media outlets and music fans around Texas and beyond.

    “We had a radio station come in this morning from Houston to interview us,” he says. “People have come in from Lubbock, Texas. We have had people from Midland, Texas. We have another person who emailed us who’s coming in from New York. People are learning all about us.”

    That includes many of the musicians who helped shape the genre. Johnny Hernandez, Sunny Ozuna, Elida Reyna, and Danny Martinez from Danny and The Tejanos are among the luminaries who have already graced the halls.

    The Totally Tejano Hall of Fame and Museum is now open 10 am-6 pm, Tuesday-Sunday, and closed Monday. Admission is free, but donations are encouraged. Fans can call 210-314-1310 for more information.


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