29-year-old man shot by police charged for dragging officer during traffic stop, BPD says

By Jake Shindel, Khiree Stewart, Barry Simms

Click here for updates on this story

    BALTIMORE (WBAL) — Baltimore police are investigating an officer shooting that happened Wednesday in Mount Vernon.

The shooting occurred in the 300 block of West Franklin Street, according to a post on X.

Surveillance video obtained by WBAL-TV 11 News showed the officer making a traffic stop and then getting dragged by a car.

The officer is recovering from a minor injury, while police said the man who was shot, Marquise Wells, 29, drove himself to the hospital.

The officer managed to shoot the driver before falling into the street, video shows. The incident appeared to begin as a routine traffic stop on Franklin Street near Eutaw Street Wednesday night.

Moments later, though, while giving the Wells his driver’s license back, the officer noticed a handgun on the man’s waistband and ordered him to put his hands on the steering wheel, according to Baltimore Police Commissioner Richard Worley.

As the officer tried to get the gun, the car sped away, dragging the officer along with it, Worley said.

“We can’t tell from the one video that we have. We know the officer, when he fell down, it looked like he at least tore his fingernail off his thumb and hurt his hand. We are very lucky he didn’t roll under the car and get ran over by the car,” Worley said.

Police said the officer fired at least one shot that hit the driver.

“He sped away from the scene after he dragged the officer, and he drove himself to the hospital,” Worley said. “He checked into the hospital. We were alerted there was a walk-in shooting victim. We had his information. We knew who he was,” Worley said.

Once released from the hospital, police said they questioned Wells. Police allege he is not the owner of the car, which had suspended tags.

“It is quite a surprise on a quiet Wednesday night,” said Amanda Nock, a nearby resident.

Nock wasn’t shocked, though. She didn’t hear any gunshots, but she saw a heavy police presence when she went outside.

“Just came down, saw the block shut down,” Nock said. “Police cars everywhere.”

Nock, similar to her neighbors, wants to know what the investigation finds.

“The fact it happened to anybody, it doesn’t shake my individual sense of security being in the neighborhood,” Nock said.

Police charged Wells with first- and second-degree assault, reckless endangerment and other charges, according to a news release.

“This officer acted in a very appropriate manner.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Swimmer died from shark attack off California coast, coroner confirms

By Tim Fang

Click here for updates on this story

    MONTEREY, California (KPIX) — Authorities on California’s Central Coast confirmed that a swimmer who went missing in Monterey Bay last month died from a shark attack.

On Thursday, the Santa Cruz County Sheriff’s Office revealed the cause of death of Erica Fox. The 55-year-old went missing while swimming with a group off Lovers Point in Pacific Grove on Dec. 21.

According to deputies, the coroner determined the cause of Fox’s death to be “sharp and blunt force injuries and submersion in water due to a shark attack”. The coroner said the manner of death has been ruled an accident.

“The Sheriff’s Office once again extends its deepest condolences to Erica Fox’s family and friends during this difficult time,” the agency said on social media.

Witnesses reported seeing a splash before Fox disappeared, and investigators said people in the area reported seeing a shark.

Authorities conducted more than 15 hours of search operations, covering more than 84 square nautical miles, before suspending the search the following day.

The woman’s body was recovered on Dec. 27 by Santa Cruz County deputies about four miles south of the community of Davenport, about 25 miles from where she went missing.

Fox was the co-founder of the “Kelp Krawlers”, an open water swimming group.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Wisconsin man accused of killing parents, living with decomposing bodies pleads guilty in court

By Duaa Israr

Click here for updates on this story

    WAUKESHA, Wisconsin (WDJT) — A Waukesha man accused of killing his mother and stepfather inside their home last year pleaded guilty in court Thursday morning, Jan. 8.

Just two months ahead of trial, 18-year-old Nikita Casap entered a guilty plea on two counts of first-degree intentional homicide. The other seven charges Casap was facing will be dismissed in exchange for this plea deal.

Back in February of last year, investigators were called to Casap’s home on Cider Hills Drive for a wellness check after no one had heard from the family in two weeks.

Investigators found Donald Mayer and Tatiana Casap inside the home, covered in blankets and clothing. Their bodies had been decomposing for at least two weeks.

Casap was arrested in Kansas, along with a gun, cash, jewelry, and the family’s dog.

“I believe he’s a danger to the community. The facts of this case, which will be further explained at the sentencing – I just think he’s a danger to our community,” said Lesli Boese, Waukesha County district attorney.

A federal investigation into Casap revealed ties to an extremist neo-Nazi group and a plot to assassinate President Donald Trump. The Waukesha County District Attorney’s Office says it’s unclear if federal charges will be filed.

“Certainly, I don’t think he should be out in the community, and I would argue against that,” said Boese.

Boese says while she was surprised Casap pleaded guilty, she believes avoiding a trial is the best option for the victims’ families.

“I guess I’m a little surprised. I mean there’s really no downside for him to take it to trial, but again, I think the courts look at the fact that someone takes responsibility for what they did, and I think that’s a factor they consider at sentencing,” said Boese.

Casap will face life in prison, but he could be eligible for parole after serving 20 years on each count.

Boese says she will push for Casap to be denied any chance at parole during his sentencing. That’s set to take place March 5.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Many news outlets excluded from NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s 1st official City Hall press conference

By Mahsa Saeidi

Click here for updates on this story

    NEW YORK (WCBS) — Many news outlets, including CBS News New York, were excluded from Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s first official City Hall press conference Wednesday.

CBS was in touch with the mayor’s team all day. Our reporters were told the room was at capacity. We offered to go in with just a cellphone and were told “maybe,” but ultimately, we were excluded, along with other outlets.

The decision is raising questions about media access and transparency.

Instead of CBS News and other established outlets, only so-called “new media” was allowed inside the room for the press conference.

“We need to speak to New Yorkers through every single medium … And all of you are such critical parts of that,” Mamdani told them.

Among those invited was Avelyn Castillo, an influencer originally from New York who now lives in Atlanta and flew to the city for the event.

“I think that, overall, people are starting to realize the influence that we have as creators in our different sectors,” she said.

The press conference ended with a selfie.

“The questions were still asked,” Castillo said. “The pressure was still on.”

There’s no legal right to attend press conferences, according to attorney Richard Schoenstein, and, increasingly, politicians from both parties want to bypass journalists.

“Part of the mayor’s job is to be accountable to the public,” Schoenstein said. “And that means giving the public access and that means broad access, not just the people you like.”

“You know, I think that’s a positive for New Yorkers. I just think that everybody needs to be in that tent,” said Jere Hester, a professor at CUNY Newmark Journalism School. “So, look, the Blue Room is the place where the mayor has press conferences … so for the mayor to do this, it’s symbolic.”

On Thursday, the mayor, alongside Gov. Kathy Hochul, announced plans for free universal child care. During the Q&A, CBS News New York’s Mahsa Saeidi tried to ask the mayor about transparency, but off-topic questions weren’t allowed.

CBS News New York did reach out to the mayor’s office about this story, but it did not get back to us.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Three young men attempt world-record train ride to show Atlanta’s transit is reliable

By Kaley Fedko

Click here for updates on this story

    ATLANTA (WUPA) — For three young public transit enthusiasts from Chicago, Thursday wasn’t just about chasing a Guinness World Record — it was about proving something bigger: that MARTA is reliable, safe, and worth riding.

Joabe Barbosa, Matthew Plese and Omar Yousaf spent the day riding the entire MARTA rail system in an attempt to complete the full route in roughly three hours. Their goal? Demonstrate that Atlanta’s transit system can hold its own while encouraging more people to give it a try.

Barbosa said he was impressed with how clean and comfortable the system felt throughout their ride.

“I think it was really clean. Everything was fine. It smelled great — maybe because we were there,” he joked.

The trio has a shared passion for transit systems across the country, but for 20-year-old Omar Yousaf, the mission is personal. His family moved to Atlanta five years ago, and he has seen firsthand how conversations about MARTA often focus on criticism rather than potential.

Their world-record attempt has sparked renewed interest in the city’s transit system, something Yousaf believes is positive

“It’s not only to say, ‘here’s our world record, look at this,’ but to make people try the transportation because it’s reliable,” Yousaf said. “You have it literally on the corner.”

Despite the enthusiasm, the group acknowledged the system isn’t perfect. They fell about 20 minutes short of their three-hour goal due to train wait times — delays they say could be improved with more precise scheduling.

“There are countries in Asia, like Japan, which have trains scheduled by the second,” Barbosa said. “If we’re gonna get a world record, we’re gonna need trains that are scheduled by the second.”

Still, the riders said the experience was overwhelmingly positive, especially when it came to safety — an issue often raised by hesitant commuters.

“Yeah, we felt safe,” Barbosa said. “And we hope people in Atlanta feel safe enough to not just hear about things and say, ‘oh we don’t want to ride MARTA,’ but you should. Because at the end of the day, you’re not gonna stop riding planes if a plane falls down. It doesn’t mean it’s unsafe.”

The group started their journey at North Springs Station early Thursday morning and wrapped up just after 6 p.m. at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport — tired, a few minutes shy of breaking the record, but proud of what they set out to show.

Their message to Atlanta riders is simple: give MARTA a chance.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Cold cap helped mom keep hair during chemo. Now she is trying to help others get access to treatment.

By Juli McDonald

Click here for updates on this story

    BOSTON (WBZ) — A Massachusetts mother who is battling cancer is pushing health insurance companies to cover a treatment that is often overlooked.

Exactly one year ago this week, it seemed like all the pieces were falling into place for Emily Sutliff. New year, new baby, and finding her footing as a mom of two.

“Right when my son was three months, I think it was January 3, [her doctor] called, it was late in the day, and they said we’re so sorry to tell you but it’s actually breast cancer,” Emily recalled of the life-changing moment.

Surgery revealed a potentially invasive cancer, requiring a more aggressive treatment plan.

“Hearing I had to go through chemo, you just feel a sense of losing control. It was very scary,” she said.

There was one thing Emily wanted to try to control: to keep looking like the mom her toddler daughter knew. Dozens and dozens of hours of cold capping helped Emily keep her hair throughout 12 rounds of chemotherapy.

But the feat came at a painful price, both physically and financially. Scalp cooling therapy cost her thousands of dollars.

“I just thought, ‘what about another mother like me who wants to do the same but doesn’t have access to maybe pay for it?’ It really bothered me,” Emily said.

This year, New York will become the first U.S. state to require private insurance companies to cover scalp cooling for chemo patients. Now, Emily is working with her state senator to make Massachusetts next.

“The best legislation generally comes from individuals who are having an experience and wondering why something isn’t as it should be. She’s the epitome of that case,” said Massachusetts Senator Michael Rush. “Based on her courage, her sacrifice, her story, I’m committed, and I know colleagues in the legislature are to get this bill to become law.”

Emily wouldn’t benefit from the bill. But she wants to make it right for other families. And after another Christmas with hers, as they count down until the end of treatment in April, she knows she has everything she needs.

“For me it was just how lucky I was to be surrounded by the people who got me through what I felt like a really impossible difficult year. Overall, I feel very grateful,” she added.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Mother released from ICE detention, still faces battle to prove U.S. citizenship

By Mike Hellgren

Click here for updates on this story

    BALTIMORE (WJZ) — A Baltimore mother is back home with her family in Maryland, 25 days after Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents detained her in the city.

Dulce Consuelo Diaz Morales, 22, said she was born in the United States, and her lawyers presented her birth certificate and immunization records as proof. But the government has yet to back down, and the case remains open. Diaz Morales spent the holidays in ICE facilities across the country, including in Maryland, Louisiana, Texas, and New Jersey.

On Wednesday, her lawyers finally got the call they had been seeking.

“Dulce is being released. We’ve been driving, actually, for about 2 and a half hours because we suspected it was going to happen, and we wanted to be there to make sure that she was processed correctly and actually got out,” her lawyer, Victoria Slatton, said in a TikTok video.

Slatton’s law firm later posted a picture of Diaz Morales smiling after her release from a government facility in Elizabeth, New Jersey.

“I’m one of the attorneys who has been working with her most while she was detained. I’ve been the most in direct communication with her,” lawyer Zachary Perez told WJZ Investigator Mike Hellgren. “I can definitely say that there is a palpable sense of relief, but there’s a lot of apprehension as well because the situation has not been resolved.”

Perez told Hellgren his client has always been “firm in her truth” about her U.S. citizenship.

“Hearing her emphatically state her truth, ‘I was born here. I know I was born here. I was born in Laurel, Maryland.’ She knew that. That should’ve been enough to prevent the situation. It clearly was not,” Perez said.

The ordeal began after agents pulled over Diaz Morales as she left a Baltimore Taco Bell in December with her family.

She said she told agents she was a U.S. citizen but did not have any documentation with her.

Her legal team later produced her Maryland birth certificate and immunization records.

“If people are afraid of living in a ‘show-your-papers’ society, they need to know this is what it looks like,” Perez said. “It looks like four unmarked cars coming up on three young women and someone getting taken away while her sister shouts, ‘She was born here! She was born here.'”

Perez added, “They came to us desperate for help. They didn’t know where she was. She had been disappeared into the black hole of the detention system. I want to emphasize that she was transferred five times over less than five weeks.”

In a prior statement to WJZ, a Department of Homeland Security official insisted Diaz Morales’ birth certificate is not valid and that Diaz Morales provided no other proof of citizenship.

The Trump Administration alleged she entered the country illegally in the border town of Lukeville, Arizona in 2023 and claimed Mexican citizenship when questioned by border patrol at the time.

WJZ reached out to DHS for an updated statement following Diaz Morales’ release but did not hear back from the agency.

Her lawyers said she “entered the United States during an emergency without access to documentation and was mistakenly processed as a noncitizen, assigned an A number, and placed into removal proceedings. That administrative error did not and cannot change her constitutional status.”

“All of a sudden, the government thinks they can just shift all of this to people in these proceedings and expect them to solve all of this while they’re in this black hole of the detention system,” Perez said. That is absolutely terrifying, and I sincerely hope more people start to take notice of that.”

Her lawyers hired an expert at Johns Hopkins University to authenticate her documents.

There are no court hearings set at this point, but Diaz Morales will have to check in with immigration next week in Baltimore.

“Dulce Consuelo Diaz Morales is a United States citizen by birth. She was born in Maryland on October 18, 2003, a fact established by a certified Maryland birth certificate, contemporaneous hospital records from Laurel Regional Hospital, medical affidavits, and Maryland public health immunization records beginning in infancy. These are primary, government-created records generated at the time of birth by United States medical providers and state authorities. A medical expert conducted an extensive and thorough review of these records and confirmed, “Overall, the documents reviewed not only suggest Ms. Diaz Morales’s continuity of care as an infant, but they also substantially support her claim of being a U.S. citizen born in Maryland.”

“Dulce later entered the United States during an emergency without access to documentation and was mistakenly processed as a noncitizen, assigned an A number, and placed into removal proceedings. That administrative error did not and cannot change her constitutional status.”

“Despite this evidence, Dulce was held in immigration detention for twenty-five days. During that time, she was transferred five times between facilities, separated from family, denied access to counsel, and confined in conditions that were deeply troubling and inappropriate for any person, let alone a United States citizen. She experienced prolonged detention, instability, and uncertainty as she was moved repeatedly through the system. Her confinement was not the result of any criminal conduct, but of bureaucratic error compounded by institutional inertia. No United States citizen should be subjected to weeks of detention, repeated transfers, and degrading conditions simply to establish what the government already had the means and resources to confirm.”

“This case also raises profound concerns about precedent. By requiring Dulce and her legal team to produce extraordinary volumes of proof to secure her release, the government has effectively shifted the burden onto United States citizens to affirmatively prove their citizenship while incarcerated. That inversion of responsibility is dangerous. Citizenship, and the rights conferred upon citizens, should not depend on a person’s ability to assemble records from behind detention walls, nor should liberty hinge on how much documentation a citizen can marshal under duress. If this becomes normalized, any citizen who lacks immediate access to paperwork and professional counsel becomes vulnerable to incarceration first and verification later.”

“Although Dulce has been released from custody, her case is far from over. She remains under ICE supervision and, because DHS opposed counsel’s motion and has refused to terminate, she still faces the threat of deportation. Until her proceedings are formally corrected and safeguards are enforced, Dulce’s freedom remains conditional, and the risk that this could happen again to her or to others remains very real. While we will continue to fight for her despite alienage being DHS’s burden to prove, we are deeply troubled that the fight has been prolonged.”

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

What to Know About Houston’s 2026 Elections

By Burt Levine

Click here for updates on this story

    January 8, 2026 (Houston Style Magazine) — If you thought the confetti was barely swept up from New Year’s celebrations before Houston hit pause, think again. While many residents welcomed January with black-eyed peas, vision boards, and promises to hit the gym, Houston-area voters stepped into 2026 facing something equally demanding—and far more consequential: an unprecedented stretch of elections that will shape local, state, and national leadership for years to come.

Let us break it down for you, Houston Style Magazine–style—clear, civic-minded, and empowering.

January 31: A Runoff with National Stakes

The election calendar kicks off immediately with a high-profile runoff on January 31, 2026, to fill the remainder of the late Congressman Sylvester Turner’s term. Voters will choose between former Houston City Council Member Amanda Edwards and newly re-elected Harris County Attorney Christian Menefee.

This special election is more than procedural—it’s about continuity, representation, and momentum. The winner will serve as an interim U.S. Representative through January 2027, holding the seat until the next general election in November 2026. In a district with deep historical roots and evolving boundaries, this vote matters.

February 17–March 3: Primary Season Takes Over

Just weeks later, February 17, 2026, marks the start of Early Voting for the Super Tuesday primaries on March 3, 2026, and Houston voters will see crowded ballots at nearly every level.

At the center is the race for the Democratic nomination in the newly drawn Texas Congressional District 18, a district reshaped geographically and politically. The field includes Edwards and Menefee once again, joined by longtime Congressman Al Green and Gretchen Brown. The new district now stretches south and west—from Sunnyside through Meyerland, Stafford, and Missouri City—bringing new communities and priorities into focus.

U.S. Senate, Statewide Power, and Crowded Ballots

The same February 17, 2026, Early Voting period also launches one of the most closely watched races in Texas: the U.S. Senate primary. Voters will weigh a packed Republican contest featuring incumbent John Cornyn, Attorney General Ken Paxton, and Houston Congressman Wesley Hunt.

On the Democratic side, attention centers on U.S. Rep. Jasmine Crockett and State Rep. James Talarico, setting up what could be a defining matchup for Texas’ political future.

Add to that open races for Attorney General, State Comptroller, and competitive county contests—including Harris County and Fort Bend County Judge—and you have ballots packed with choices that demand voter focus and follow-through.

March 25–April 4: City Hall Meets the Courthouse

Democracy doesn’t slow down after Super Tuesday. On March 25, 2026, Early Voting begins for the April 4, 2026, special election to replace former Houston City Council Member Abbie Kamin.

Kamin is seeking to succeed Menefee as Harris County Attorney, potentially becoming the county’s first Jewish and first woman to hold the post. Challenging her is Judge Audrie Lawton Evans, backed by Commissioner Rodney Ellis, with the opportunity to make history as the county’s first African American woman County Attorney.

Late May: The Runoffs Keep Coming

By May 28, 2026, just after Memorial Day, primary runoffs are expected for U.S. Senate, Congress, and key statewide offices—closing out what can only be described as a marathon season of civic engagement.

The Bigger Picture

Yes, it’s a lot. But it’s also something powerful.

This spring represents renewal—not just of leadership, but of participation. Houston’s strength has always come from its people showing up, staying informed, and refusing to sit on the sidelines. Every election, every runoff, every early-voting day is an invitation to shape the city and state we pass on to the next generation.

Houston Style Magazine will be right here — breaking it down, keeping it clear, and reminding you why your voice still matters.

Because democracy doesn’t run on autopilot. It runs on you.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Francis Page, Jr
fpagejr@stylemagazine.com
7139275444

Commissioner Lesley Briones Announces $33.5 Million in Community Infrastructure Investments for Precinct 4

By Lisa Valadez

Click here for updates on this story

    January 8, 2026 (Houston Style Magazine) — Houston Style Magazine was on the scene in Alief as Harris County Precinct 4 Commissioner Lesley Briones announced a new $33.5 million investment in community infrastructure, marking the third year of her Places 4 People initiative. The latest round of funding will support seven major infrastructure projects designed to enhance public safety, improve flood mitigation, strengthen neighborhood connectivity, and expand access to parks across Precinct 4.

The announcement took place in the Alief community, underscoring the area’s central role in this year’s investments. One of the most significant efforts highlighted was the Alief Forest South neighborhood transformation, a $25.6 million infrastructure investment aimed at improving resiliency and quality of life for residents. The project includes $7 million from Harris County Precinct 4 and $18.6 million from the City of Houston.

Funding for the Alief Forest South project will go toward reconstructing nearly 3.9 miles of local streets, adding two new detention ponds to reduce flooding risks, replacing four miles of water lines, and upgrading 3,000 feet of sanitation lines. Together, these improvements are designed to address aging infrastructure while strengthening flood prevention and public safety in one of Houston’s most diverse communities.

The seven projects announced are being developed in partnership with the City of Houston, the Westchase District, the Houston Parks Board, and the Southwest Houston Redevelopment Authority/TIRZ 20. These collaborations reflect a coordinated, community-driven approach to infrastructure planning and delivery.

The Places 4 People initiative focuses on working with local agencies and organizations to deliver impactful improvements that directly benefit residents. This latest investment continues that mission by prioritizing roads, intersections, traffic signals, parks, sidewalk improvements, drainage, and other critical infrastructure needs.

Beyond this year’s $33.5 million announcement, the broader effort to build safer and more resilient infrastructure across Precinct 4 represents a total investment of $252.4 million. Harris County Precinct 4 is contributing $110.7 million, with an additional $141.7 million coming from 28 different partners, highlighting the scale of collaboration behind the initiative.

Houston Mayor Whitmire

The event brought together local and regional leaders, including Houston Mayor John Whitmire; City of Houston Council Member Tiffany Thomas of District F; Alief Independent School District Superintendent Dr. Anthony Mays; Houston Parks Board President and CEO Justin Schultz; Westchase District President and CEO Irma Sanchez; and Welcome Wilson Jr., Chairman of the Southwest Houston Redevelopment Authority/TIRZ 20.

As the Places 4 People initiative enters its third year, the continued focus on Alief and other communities across Precinct 4 reflects an ongoing commitment to creating safer, more connected, and more resilient neighborhoods throughout Harris County.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Francis Page, Jr
fpagejr@stylemagazine.com
7139275444

George Lopez Brings the Laughs (and the Truth) to Houston’s Biggest Stage

By Francis Page, Jr.

Click here for updates on this story

    January 8, 2026 (Houston Style Magazine) — Houston, get ready to laugh loud, laugh long, and maybe laugh at yourself just a little. Comedy legend George Lopez is heading to H-Town for one unforgettable night of stand-up, and the countdown is officially on.

Originally scheduled for Saturday, August 2, 2025, the show has been rescheduled—and yes, it’s worth the wait.

Previously purchased tickets will be honored for the new date:

Friday, February 6, 2026 | 7:00 PM NRG (Houston’s crown jewel of live entertainment)

A Comedy Icon Who Still Tells It Like It Is

For more than two decades, George Lopez has been doing what only a handful of comedians can do—making audiences laugh while holding up a mirror. A true cultural trailblazer, Lopez didn’t just break barriers for Latino performers; he kicked the door open, held it there, and said, “Everybody come in.”

From family dysfunction and generational clashes to aging, culture, and everyday absurdities, Lopez has mastered the art of turning real life into riotous comedy. His humor is sharp, self-aware, and always rooted in truth—whether he’s talking about Latino family dynamics or the universal chaos of modern life.

From TV Royalty to Streaming Superstar

Houston fans know him best as the heart and soul of the groundbreaking ABC sitcom George Lopez, a show that redefined Latino representation on network television and still resonates today in syndication.

Fast-forward to now, and Lopez is still owning the screen—this time alongside his real-life daughter, Mayan Lopez, in NBC’s hit sitcom Lopez vs. Lopez, currently in its third season. The show blends heartfelt storytelling with laugh-out-loud moments, proving that comedy (and family) only get better with age.

One Last Stand… and It’s a Big One

Lopez’s most recent stand-up special, Muy Católico, premiered to critical acclaim after being filmed live at Los Angeles’ legendary Dolby Theatre. The special dives headfirst into aging, faith, culture, and family—with the fearless honesty fans expect and the punchlines they crave.

Seeing George Lopez live isn’t just a comedy show—it’s an experience. The timing, the crowd work, the stories you didn’t know you needed to hear—it all hits differently when you’re in the room.

A Night Houston Won’t Forget

This February, Houston gets front-row access to one of America’s most influential comedians—live, uncensored, and at the top of his game. Expect big laughs, smart humor, and that unmistakable George Lopez swagger that has defined generations of comedy fans.

If you’ve ever laughed at his sitcoms, quoted his stand-up, or nodded along thinking, “Yep… that’s my family,” this night is for you.

Don’t miss George Lopez—live in Houston—Friday, February 6, 2026 at 7:00 PM. Because some comedians tell jokes… George Lopez tells the truth—funny.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Francis Page, Jr
fpagejr@stylemagazine.com
7139275444