Trump Wins! Then What?

Historian and Rice prof Douglas Brinkley, whose Katrina book may be TV’s next big thing, knows what America will look like under Trump — or Hillary.

Sandy Carson

HOUSTON’S MOST FAMOUS historian, Douglas Brinkley, doesn’t exactly fit the stereotype of a tweedy, mild-mannered academic. Over the years, he’s flown to Haiti for Vanity Fair to hang out with a Glock-toting Sean Penn, cruised the high seas with Johnny Depp, and dined with President Obama.

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Art+Culture

Oil Rigged?

Hollywood’s take on BP’s epic oil-spill disaster hits theaters this month. But will ‘Deepwater Horizon,’ controversial in Houston, tell the whole truth?

On Dec. 25, 2010, The New York Times published a stirring, gut-wrenching article by a team of reporters, including Pulitzer Prize winner David Barstow, on the fate of the Deepwater Horizon oil platform. It was a riveting account of the chaotic events on the rig that followed the earlier failure of the Macondo well-blowout preventer, 41 miles off the coast of Louisiana — some 350 miles southeast of Houston, where well operator British Petroleum has its U.S. headquarters. In the end, Barstow and his colleagues performed an autopsy of sorts on what exactly caused the hightech, 25-story offshore derrick to suffer such catastrophic damage.

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Art+Culture

Magic Carpets

Part artist and part entrepreneur, luxury rug maker Angel Rios champions Houston artists — and invites you to walk all over them.

Alefiya Akbarally

ANGEL RIOS DESIGNS heavenly rugs. Heavenly, because these bespoke, pricey floor coverings are woven out of wool and silk and tufted by hand in the high climes of Tibet and Nepal — literally as close as you can get to heaven on Earth.

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Art+Culture