Dietmar Lambertz is on a bit of a lucky streak. First, he won a Christmas raffle at his office in December. Then he won a Cadillac at a CultureMap event in March. Seriously.
CultureMap and Cadillac pulled out all the stops for its first-ever Close-up Music Series event featuring the Airborne Toxic Event, who played intimate concerts in Dallas, Austin and Houston. In Dallas, Metroplex Cadillac Dealership brought its photo share contest to 7 Senses on March 7, and Lambertz posted a photo of the car on Twitter to enter.
"No one thinks they are going to win a car, but somehow it happens," says Lambertz, who was presented with the keys to his 2013 Cadillac ATS luxury sports sedan on March 26 on Good Morning Texas.
Lambertz also encouraged his wife and sister to enter the contest. But when he told his wife that he'd won, she thought he was kidding.
"They were pretty skeptical. It's kind of crazy that I actually won," says the still-shocked Lambertz. "Everything was great at the event — free food and drinks — and then a car on top of that? It was definitely a bonus."
Dallas' inflation has cooled off after it was last saddled with the highest inflation rate nationally in January 2024.
Inflation has been one of the biggest hot-button issues in the country in 2025, but a new study says inflation not impacting Dallas nearly as much as it is other U.S. cities.
Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington ranked as the metro with the smallest inflation problem in the U.S. in WalletHub's new report, "Changes in Inflation by City."
The report analyzed the impact of inflation across 23 major metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) using Consumer Price Index data from the latest month available and compared to data from two months prior. The analysis also factored in inflation data from last year to better track both short- and long-term inflation changes.
Dallas saw only a 0.10 percent increase in its local inflation rate when compared to two months prior, and the rate is only 0.60 percent higher than it was this time last year.
Dallas residents may be feeling the sting a lot less than they did in January 2024, when WalletHub said the city had the No. 1 highest inflation rate in the U.S. In April 2023, Dallas-Fort Worth had the 10th highest inflation rate nationwide.
The study found Boston-Cambridge-Newton, Massachusetts-New Hampshire is the MSA that is currently being rattled by the highest inflation rate in the nation. The northeastern metro saw a 1.10 percent uptick in inflation when compared to two months ago, and it's 3 percent higher than it was a year ago.
Inflation has continued to fluctuate throughout the year in different areas, but WalletHub said the national inflation rate has significantly lowered since it last hit a 40-year high during the COVID-19 pandemic.
"The year-over-year inflation rate sits at 2.4 percent as of May 2025, which is still above the target rate of 2 percent," the report said. "Various factors, such as the war in Ukraine, labor shortages and recent tariffs, drive this higher than average inflation. Despite the country not meeting its target yet, the Federal Reserve will keep interest rates at the level set in December 2024."
Elsewhere in Texas, Houston-The Woodlands-Sugar Land experienced the 13th highest inflation rate in the U.S., the report found. Inflation in the region increased 0.90 percent over the last two months, and it is currently 1.2 percent higher than it was one year ago.
The top 10 metros where inflation has risen the most are: