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    Let Me Sum Up

    AA's new look is a good first step, but the airline still has a lot of work to do. Plus: Old people!

    Eric Celeste
    Jan 17, 2013 | 12:01 pm

    It’s all about expectations. When you’re American Airlines, any sign of progress is hailed as good news, even if that sign is that your latest backward step was so much smaller than previous backward steps.

    So the news that AA lost only $130 million is hailed as good news. Fine. I’m inclined to agree with that, given American’s recent large-scale problems.

    Then, this morning, AA unveiled a new logo and livery. This is important for two reasons: One, it taught us all the word “livery” (the paint scheme of an aircraft); two, it is symbolic of a new American Airlines, one divorced of its past mistakes.

    Rebranding efforts like this are often mocked, but they can serve an important purpose. The value is in getting employees to think about fundamental questions.

    That the new look wasn’t roundly mocked in social media is a sign that it wasn’t objectively terrible, which is sort of what we all expected, right? Of course, Frontburner meh’ed it, but if you bet on that happening, it was the easiest money you’ll make all week. (I think it’s a solid, modern look. Actually, I kinda love the logo.)

    Rebranding efforts like this are often mocked, but they can serve an important purpose. When I was at D, the company spent a large sum of cash to have the Richards Group hold a couple of dinners, get a bunch of “influencers” drunk on wine and tell us what the “D brand” meant to them. This is patently ridiculous to outsiders, and it’s way too much money, and on and on and on.

    But the value is not in the takeaways or the action items or whatever buzzword is current. The value is in getting employees to think about fundamental questions. What value do we bring? What differentiates us from our competition? And how do we communicate that to others?

    This is what these “rebranding” exercises are about: taking time to ask important, fundamental questions. Not asking how much money you make or don’t make, or how many Dreamliners you have on order, or what your merger plans are or about the status of your pilot contracts, but asking what it is that American Airlines should strive to do every day.

    For me, that used to be clear: AA began and ended your travels with the most professional experience you could find.

    My grandfather worked there for nearly three decades, and he was immensely proud of that. When I moved here in the late ’80s, American was the Google of DFW. When you met someone who didn’t choose to fly American, you looked at him like he was insane.

    When I first worked at its in-flight magazine in 1989 (I still freelance for it, and I also consult for a Southwest Airlines online content provider), I beamed every time I walked in the doors, feeling as though I’d somehow duped one of the country’s greatest companies into letting me work there. Sure, it was corporate and boring, but it felt important.

    That’s not how it is perceived now. Everyone reading this has a story of an AA employee who made her travels a nightmare. A friend just recounted one such incident from last week that makes you bang your head on your desk. I don’t know how AA got to that point, and it will be hard to become known as a place you look forward to flying with. But it can be done, and it’s good for Dallas if AA can pull it off.

    It starts, though, with figuring out the answers to those core questions, with everyone speaking to each other and outsiders with the same voice, clear in the company’s mission, emboldened with the challenge. Here’s hoping the redesign is a first step toward that.

    Retweets

    Also, it will slide into the sea.

    California is aging while DFW and Houston enjoy a baby boom. Basically, California is dying out H/T the wise @willismsnewgeography.com/content/003398…

    — Bud Kennedy (@budkennedy) January 17, 2013

    Hell yes we are, you little brat.

    Old people are good at doing stuff, says old people-funded UT-Dallas study: bit.ly/13HPJKC

    — Dallas_Observer (@Dallas_Observer) January 17, 2013

    This is AA's new livery, or aircraft paint scheme, a word everyone is now pretending was widely known before today.

    Photo courtesy of American Airlines
    This is AA's new livery, or aircraft paint scheme, a word everyone is now pretending was widely known before today.
    unspecified
    news/city-life

    holiday budgeting news

    Affluent Dallas neighbor boasts 4th biggest holiday spenders in 2025

    Amber Heckler
    Nov 20, 2025 | 9:03 am
    holiday shopping in 2025, Christmas presents wrapped under a tree
    Photo by Isaac Martin on Unsplash
    Flower Mound residents are expected to spend over $3,900 on their Christmas gifts this year, WalletHub found.

    Residents of Dallas' well-to-do suburb Flower Mound aren't stressing about stretching their holiday spending this year: A new report from WalletHub found Flower Mound residents have the fourth-largest holiday budgets in the nation for 2025.

    Gift givers in flourishing Flo-Mo are expected to spend $3,941 on their festive presents, says WalletHub's 2025 "Holiday Budgets by City" report.

    To determine the U.S. cities with the biggest holiday budgets, WalletHub's experts compared 558 cities across five categories: Income, age, a debt-to-income ratio, residents' monthly income-to-monthly expenses ratio, and their savings-to-monthly expenses ratio.

    According to the study's methodology, a consumer is considered to be in a "comfortable financial position to engage in holiday spending if they have: 1) enough emergency savings to cover at least six months of expenses and 2) a debt-to-income ratio smaller than 22 percent for a renter or 43 percent for a homeowner."

    The three U.S. cities that outrank Flower Mound with the loftiest holiday budgets are Palo Alto, California (No. 1); Mountain View, California (No. 2); and Newton, Massachusetts (No. 3). Palo Alto residents are expected to spend nearly $4,500 on their Christmas gifts this year, with the latter cities budgeting for $4,266 and $4,069, respectively.

    Flower Mound's current holiday budget is $400 higher than it was in 2024, when the city ranked No. 7 in WalletHub's top-10 list of cities with the biggest holiday spenders. It's also higher than the $3,485 projected budget from the 2023 report, when Flower Mound ranked No. 3 nationally.

    Festive neighbor Frisco has continued to slip farther outside of the top-10 for 2025 after previously ranking as the city with the third-highest holiday budgets in 2023. Frisco first fell into No. 11 last year, but now currently sits one spot lower as the U.S. city with the 12th largest holiday budget.

    Even with a continued dip in the rankings, Frisco residents are still expected to spend a lofty $3,491 on their holiday presents this year. They're definitely competing with Mr. Claus for the "best Christmas present" award.

    Dallas proper moved up the list into No. 193 with a $1,559 projected holiday budget this year, or $153 more than last year's budget. Fort Worth ranked No. 144 nationally with residents expected to spend $1,719 on their gifts, or $637 more than the previous year.

    These are the projected holiday budgets for cities elsewhere across North Texas:

    • No. 28 – Allen ($3,055)
    • No. 40 – Plano ($2,812)
    • No. 55 – McKinney ($2,502)
    • No. 56 – Carrollton ($2,498)
    • No. 82 – Richardson ($2,146)
    • No. 96 – North Richland Hills ($1,985)
    • No. 106 – Lewisville ($1,928)
    • No. 136 – Irving ($1,772)
    • No. 144 – Fort Worth ($1,719)
    • No. 150 – Grand Prairie ($1,703)
    • No. 172 – Denton ($1,621)
    • No. 182 – Arlington ($1,557)
    • No. 277 – Mesquite ($1,323)
    Regardless of the dollar amount, North Texans should pay attention to their spending and pick a budget that works for their financial situation, experts say. The National Retail Federation expects holiday sales to surpass $1 trillion this year, and the report warns credit card debt is a major challenge faced by many Americans as they plan their holiday shopping sprees.

    "The holidays bring plenty of joy, but they can also spark seasonal stress, much of it tied to overspending," the report's author wrote. "In Q3 2025, the average household carried $10,227 in credit card debt, up 2.3 percent from the year before, according to WalletHub data. Adding holiday shopping on top of that can quickly increase the financial strain, especially if balances roll into the new year."

    Other Texas cities that made it into the top 100 biggest holiday spenders include:

    • No. 19 – Pearland ($3,277)
    • No. 20 – The Woodlands ($3,265)
    • No. 22 – Sugar Land ($3,191)
    • No. 31 – Cedar Park ($3,028)
    • No. 34 – League City ($2,997)
    • No. 47 – Round Rock ($2,641)
    holiday budgetsholidayschristmaswallethubflower mounddallasfort worth
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