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    State Fair Conspiracy Theories

    6 reasons to believe Big Tex was set on fire

    Teresa Gubbins
    Sep 27, 2013 | 10:26 am

    With the new improved Big Tex back on his feet at the 2013 State Fair of Texas, we can finally begin to feel closure on the tragic, untimely death-by-fire this lovable wire statue suffered in 2012.

    In the grand tapestry of Dallas tragedies, the Burning of Big Tex stands right up there with the filling in of the Deep Ellum tunnel and the cancellation of The Good Guys.

    The state fair icon went down on October 19, 2012. (A moment of silence, if you will.) It was the last Friday before the fair's final weekend, a sunny day like any other. The voice of (the since coldly dismissed) Bill Bragg could be heard welcoming early fairgoers with his cheery "Howdy, folks!"

    Suddenly black smoke emerged from under Big Tex's hat. A very neatly-defined - too neatly defined? - ring of fire sprouted around his neck like a coral necklace. His head burned, then his clothes.

    Five minutes later, he was a charred shell. A charred shell that became international news, spawned the obligatory Facebook memorial page, and generated a rather tacky request for funds from the State Fair folks, which netted more than $95,000.

    It is nothing less than a miracle that no one was hurt. The fact that the hulking statue resides inside Big Tex Circle was helpful in that regard. In any case, the fair had a bonkers closing weekend, and the world mourned his loss.

    If Big Tex's demise was well-documented, his return is already netting the fair scads of PR. On this first day of the fair, what news outlet has not already posted photos of his hurried re-erection? A press conference on Friday gives this dead horse another guaranteed beating. As far as publicity goes, you couldn't have done better if you'd planned it.

    Which makes us wonder: Was Big Tex's cremation planned? A number of factors suggest that, yes, Big Tex quite possibly may have been deliberately torched.

    1. The oh-so fortuitous timing.

    In the media world, the timing of Big Tex's immolation was very very very convenient. It took place at 10 am on a Friday, a time when journalists are traditionally scrambling for something, anything to get them through the day, and are prime bait for press releases and fake news.

    "I do think that, for journalists, mid-morning is an optimal time," says Dallas Observer reporter and prodigious online presence Eric Nicholson. "It's about the time people get to work and have gotten bored enough to start cruising news sites. I read something on [media blog] Jim Romanesko, that the digital managing editor at the Wall Street Journal sent out a memo outlining when staffers should post stuff. The general idea was that traffic peaks mid- to late-morning, like 10-ish."

    Dallas publicist Lindsey Miller says there are two ideal days to post news. "Monday mornings are good, and Fridays are a great day," she says. "People will read it all weekend long."

    2. The fried food PR bonanza peaked in 2010.

    The State Fair can be broken into two eras: Pre-fried food awards, circa 2004, when the fair was a quaint, doddering, country-people thing that had pigs and rides and corny dogs. Then came the fried Twinkie, social media, and broken attendance records.

    "After the 2004 Fair, fair president Errol McKoy brought a group of us together and said, 'We’re getting a lot of buzz about fried Twinkies and Oreos and candy bars. What can we do to get even more interest in food?'" said spokeswoman Sue Gooding in 2011.

    And then bam: 2006's notorious Fried Coke. Followed by 2008's Fried Bacon, 2009's Fried Butter, and 2010's Fried Beer. It was good times and lots of press. But by the time 2011's fried bubblegum rolled around, the fried-food fever had begun to cool. And the 2012 winner was, um, it's right on the tip of my tongue, wait, what was it now? Oh right: fried bacon cinnamon roll.

    The fair needed a new boost.

    3. Journalists are suckers for fires.

    Fires are one of journalism's most favoritest news stories. No. 1, it looks pretty. No. 2, it's not going anywhere. A slightly puffy journalist doesn't have to chase after it.

    4. The fishy explanation.

    Six hours after the fire, State Fair spokeswoman Sue Gooding sent out a statement that the fire started in Big Tex's boots. Meanwhile, State Fair VP Mitchell Glieber said it appeared the fire was started by an electrical short circuit. "I believe there was an electrical short, but that hasn't been confirmed or investigated."

    A year later, Gooding is still ambiguous about the source. "The fire report, all it said is that it was an electrical fire with an unspecified source," she says. "They think it started at the base where Big Tex plugged into the power in the ground."

    "Lighting an effigy is completely manageable and doable, according to how you do it," says pyrotechnics expert Joe Walker.

    For a fire that started at the base of the statue or in his boot, it sure seems convenient that his head was first to burn. But Gooding says that Big Tex acted like a chimney. "The first thing we noticed was smoke coming up out of his collar," she says.

    5. The ease of arson.

    One of the wondrous things about the Big Tex fire was its efficacy, the way it burned so cleanly, so efficiently. And what a miracle that no one got hurt – unless, of course, you count the unforgettable trauma of witnessing the pyre suffered by a troop of children who were scarfing funnel cakes to celebrate Big Tex's birthday. Their nightmares will never end.

    Is it possible to deliberately set a statue on fire? Enter Joe Walker, pyrotechnics expert from Austin ProFx.

    "Lighting an effigy is completely manageable and doable, according to how you do it," Walker says. "It depends on how much flammable material is on the inside or outside. It could be started and finished in a matter of minutes."

    Cue State Fair spokeswoman Gooding: "The fire started at about 10:05 am and it was about 17-18 minutes from start to end," she says.

    6. The stunningly efficient disposal.

    One attendee at the fair that day who asks to remain anonymous witnessed the fair's recovery of the "corpse" and marveled at how unnervingly efficient it was.

    "I was there the morning it burned down, doing a product demonstration," she says. "Let me start by saying that the experience I'd had was that, to even get a dumpster delivered to where we were was the biggest pain in the ass known to man.

    "So I was amazed to see that, within 45 minutes, they had a truck on site and a crane that they used to lower him onto this truck. They had tarps to wrap his burnt body up, and get him secured and tied down. I remember thinking, 'How in the hell did their response team get that done so quick?' I thought they must have some amazing emergency plan for this. But how do you plan for Big Tex catching on fire?"

    Big Tex stands in the center of Big Tex Circle. Cross your fingers that he doesn't burn up!

    Big Tex, State Fair of Texas
      
    Photo by Marc Lee
    Big Tex stands in the center of Big Tex Circle. Cross your fingers that he doesn't burn up!
    state-fair
    news/city-life

    population report

    Booming Dallas suburb was the fastest-growing city in the U.S. in 2024

    Amber Heckler
    May 19, 2025 | 10:36 am
    Downtown Dallas
    City of Dallas - City Hall/Facebook
    Dallas' population has grown to nealry 1.33 million residents.

    The Dallas suburb of Princeton grew faster than any other city in the United States in 2024, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

    The new population report said Princeton's population has more than doubled in the last five years. The city saw a dramatic growth rate of 30.6 percent from July 2023 to July 2024, now boasting a population of just over 37,000 residents. The suburb is located 42 miles northeast from downtown Dallas.

    The report also revealed Dallas retained its No. 9 spot on the list of the 15 most populous cities in the U.S. Dallas gained more than 23,000 residents during the one-year period, bringing the city's population to 1,326,087 people in 2024.

    Elsewhere across North Texas, Fort Worth surpassed 1 million residents and eclipsed Austin as the 11th largest city in the nation. Fort Worth had the fifth-highest numeric increase in population last year, 23,442 residents, to bring the city's total population to 1,008,106 residents.

    Houston and San Antonio were the only Texas cities to have higher numerical growth rates than Fort Worth. Houston gained 43,217 residents – the second-highest increase nationwide – while San Antonio ranked No. 4 in growth with an additional 23,945 residents.

    Austin has yet to surpass the 1 million population threshold and has a population of 993,588 residents, the report says. The city now ranks 13th on the list of most populous U.S. cities after ranking 11th in 2024.

    Sandwiched between No. 11-Fort Worth and No. 13-Austin is San Jose, California, whose population of 997,368 puts it in the 12-largest spot.

    Fastest growing U.S. cities
    Six additional Texas cities made the list of fastest-growing U.S. cities, with several in the DFW Metroplex:

    • Fulshear, near Houston (No. 2) with 26.7 percent growth (54,629 total population)
    • Celina (No. 4) with 18.2 percent growth (51,661 total population)
    • Anna (No. 5) with 14.6 percent growth (31,986 total population)
    • Fate (No. 8) with 11.4 percent growth (27,467 total population)
    • Melissa (No. 11) with 10 percent growth (26,194 total population)
    • Hutto, near Austin (No. 13) with 9.4 percent growth (42,661 total population)
    The Austin suburb of Georgetown's growth has continued to slow since 2023, and it no longer appears in the list of fastest-growing cities. However, it did surpass 100,000 residents in 2024.

    San Angelo, a small city in West Texas, also surpassed the 100,000-population threshold.

    Most populous U.S. cities in 2024
    New York City maintained its stronghold as the biggest in America in 2024, boasting a population of nearly 8.5 million residents. Los Angeles and Chicago also retained second and third place, with respective populations of nearly 3.88 million and more than 2.7 million residents.

    "Cities in the Northeast that had experienced population declines in 2023 are now experiencing significant population growth, on average," said Crystal Delbé, a statistician in the Census Bureau’s Population Division. "In fact, cities of all sizes, in all regions, showed faster growth and larger gains than in 2023, except for small cities in the South, whose average population growth rate remained the same."

    The 15 populous U.S. cities as of July 1, 2024 were:

    • No. 1 – New York, New York (8.48 million)
    • No. 2 – Los Angeles, California (3.88 million)
    • No. 3 – Chicago, Illinois (2.72 million)
    • No. 4 – Houston, Texas (2.39 million)
    • No. 5 – Phoenix, Arizona (1.67 million)
    • No. 6 – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (1.57 million)
    • No. 7 – San Antonio, Texas (1.53 million)
    • No. 8 – San Diego, California (1.4 million)
    • No. 9 – Dallas, Texas (1.33 million)
    • No. 10 – Jacksonville, Florida (1 million)
    • No. 11 – Fort Worth, Texas (1 million)
    • No. 12 – San Jose, California (997,368)
    • No. 13 – Austin, Texas (993,588)
    • No. 14 – Charlotte, North Carolina (943,476)
    • No. 15 – Columbus, Ohio (933,263)
    dallasdallas suburbdfw metroplexfastest growing citiespopulation growthprincetonus census bureau
    news/city-life

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