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Yesterday — 5 December 2025Main stream

Netflix to buy Warner Bros. for $82.7 billion

5 December 2025 at 13:45

Shortly after rumors of a deal between the two media giants broke, Netflix has announced it is buying Warner Bros., HBO and HBO Max for approximately $82.7 billion. If approved, the deal will take place after Warner Bros. has disentangled itself from both its legacy cable and Discovery assets as part of the already-announced de-merger. That's likely to take place in the third quarter of 2026, with this new tie-up taking place at some point after that.

In a statement, Netflix said it expects to "maintain" Warner Bros. current operations, as well as its policy of theatrical releases for its films. But the deal may spell the end for HBO Max as its own product in the longer term, as the statement also says "by adding the deep film and TV libraries and HBO and HBO Max programming, Netflix members will have even more high-quality titles from which to choose."

Naturally, the deal will see Netflix become one of the biggest players in global media, combining its global reach with some of the most recognizable names in entertainment. That includes HBO, DC Studios, Cartoon Network, its game development studios and TCM, as well as the chunks of TNT not cast adrift with Discovery. 

It's likely the deal will not go ahead without a lot of objections from other buyers, as well as the government itself. Yesterday, Paramount Skydance said (via the Hollywood Reporter) any deal between WB and Netflix would be the result of an "unfair" process. Given the close ties between Paramount's new owners and the administration, it's likely any deal will be subject to scrutiny as well as the usual questions around the size of the combined operation.

Since the announcement was made, Engadget senior reporter Devindra Hardawar has spoken with Hollywood players and collated studies and statements to answer any burning questions you might have on what this deal means for you. He also answers questions about the likelihood of regulatory approval, theatrical releases and physical media. Catch up on all that in his piece titled “The Netflix and Warner Bros. deal might be great for shareholders, but not for anyone else.

Update, December 5 2025, 1:45PM ET: This story has been updated to add a paragraph and link to a new article we’ve published that contains deeper analysis and more information about the Netflix/Warner Bros. deal and what that might mean for streaming, movies, TV and shareholders.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/netflix-to-buy-warner-bros-for-827-billion-120836295.html?src=rss

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Before yesterdayMain stream

One of The Best New Small Town BBQ Joints is Open Saturdays Only

4 December 2025 at 07:00
Casey-Lees-Family-Craft-BBQ-Flatonia-food-barbecue-tray-2Three years ago, Gregg and Casey Lee Ring watched as a building burned uncontrollably in Flatonia, a town about midway between Houston and San Antonio. Once the damage was cleared, the owner put the empty lot up for sale. Gregg, a budding barbecue cook at the time, saw the potential of the prominent location along Main Street and bought it to set up the trailer for Casey Lee’s Family Craft BBQ. Casey, noticing that locals had criticized the volunteer fire department online about the incident, joined Flatonia Fire & Rescue.“That unfortunate day spurred on a lot of things in our life,” Gregg said. It also allowed Flatonia to get some remarkably good barbecue.Don’t expect smoked brisket every time you visit the Saturdays-only joint. Gregg said…

The post One of The Best New Small Town BBQ Joints is Open Saturdays Only appeared first on Texas Monthly.

OWASP Top 10 2025 Updates: Supply Chain, Secrets, And Misconfigurations Take Center Stage

24 November 2025 at 10:00

Discover what’s changed in the OWASP 2025 Top 10 and how GitGuardian helps you mitigate risks like broken access control and software supply chain failures.

The post OWASP Top 10 2025 Updates: Supply Chain, Secrets, And Misconfigurations Take Center Stage appeared first on Security Boulevard.

A North Texas Barbecue Family Serves Its Last Charity Thanksgiving Meal

24 November 2025 at 10:53
Decades ago, the late Hubert Green began an annual tradition of cooking a Thanksgiving meal for free at the Euless Senior Center. This year’s feast, on November 12, was the last served by the Green family.Hubert founded North Main BBQ just down the street from the senior center in 1981. A black-and-white pig statue greeted diners outside the front door, and the pitmaster would fire up an armadillo-shaped smoker around back. Both are now gone. Hubert and his second wife, Shari McKay Green, passed away in 2017. The business went to the McKay side of the family, was sold twice, and eventually closed.When Hubert died, his son Don Green had already opened his own barbecue trailer in Euless, the Saturdays-only Green’s Texas Bar-B-Que. He took…

The post A North Texas Barbecue Family Serves Its Last Charity Thanksgiving Meal appeared first on Texas Monthly.

Workload And Agentic Identity at Scale: Insights From CyberArk’s Workload Identity Day Zero

21 November 2025 at 10:00

On the eve of KubeCon 2025, experts from companies like Uber, AWS, and Block shared how SPIRE and workload identity fabrics reduce risk in complex, cloud-native systems.

The post Workload And Agentic Identity at Scale: Insights From CyberArk’s Workload Identity Day Zero appeared first on Security Boulevard.

These New Dallas Barbecue Joint Owners Are Not Giving Up on Their State Fair Dream

20 November 2025 at 07:00
Tejas-Brisket-Co-Tifany-Swulius-Antonio-Guevara-BBQ-BarbecueTifany Swulius and Antonio Guevara originally partnered to seek glory at the State Fair of Texas. In a shift that surprised both of them, they ended up opening a barbecue joint instead. Now they’re serving some of the best breakfast tacos in Dallas.Swulius and Guevara had worked together at Lakewood Landing, a Dallas institution that describes itself as “an upscale dive.” Swulius was a bartender who often brought in home-baked treats for coworkers and customers. Guevara ran the kitchen while also operating his own barbecue and taco pop-up, Tejas BBQ & Tacos, which became Tejas Brisket Co. after a similarly named Texas barbecue restaurant sent him a cease-and-desist letter. “I wasn’t making any money, but I was getting my name out there,” he said.While working…

The post These New Dallas Barbecue Joint Owners Are Not Giving Up on Their State Fair Dream appeared first on Texas Monthly.

Trust Beyond Containers: Identity and Agent Security Lessons from KubeCon 2025

20 November 2025 at 10:00

From secure service mesh rollouts to AI cluster hardening, see how KubeCon + CloudNativeCon NA 2025 redefined identity, trust, and governance in Kubernetes environments.

The post Trust Beyond Containers: Identity and Agent Security Lessons from KubeCon 2025 appeared first on Security Boulevard.

Head Straight to This Market’s Barbecue Counter for a Brisket Melt and Tallow-Fried Corn Ribs

17 November 2025 at 11:40
Truboy-BBQ-Jereis-Khawaja-Missouri-City-interiorWhen Jereis Khawaja launched Truboy BBQ with nationwide shipping in 2020, he wrote a mission statement for the website that promised to give everyone in the U.S. the opportunity to enjoy Texas barbecue. The Houston native read the statement every day, but he eventually realized it wasn’t true for many Muslim and Jewish customers because of cross contamination with Truboy’s most popular item, pulled pork. “By eliminating one product from my menu, my mission statement could become a true statement,” Khawaja says. In March 2021, he switched to only smoking halal meats, including brisket, lamb, and chicken.Last month brought the next big transformation of Khawaja’s business. Truboy BBQ Market, the first physical location for the brand, opened in Missouri City, outside Houston. Inside, a wall…

The post Head Straight to This Market’s Barbecue Counter for a Brisket Melt and Tallow-Fried Corn Ribs appeared first on Texas Monthly.

A Personal Connection Brings the Thai Heat to This New Barbecue Joint

13 November 2025 at 12:17
Wanalee “Nan” Gorelick grew up without electricity in the town of Rangsit, outside Bangkok, in Thailand. She moved to the U.S. in 2008 with just $100 to her name, eventually making her way to Cypress, northwest of Houston, where she met her now-husband, Adam Gorelick. When the subject of marriage came up, Nan demanded Adam spend some time in the Thai countryside living like a local. “I wanted to make sure he knows who he [is marrying] and where I came from,” she explained.Besides making a request for a window-unit air conditioner (which Nan’s family mercifully granted), Adam rose to the challenge. He took showers with a bucket of warm water poured over his head and lived with few of his usual comforts. While still…

The post A Personal Connection Brings the Thai Heat to This New Barbecue Joint appeared first on Texas Monthly.

CQURE Hacks #69: SMB Signing – Why It Won’t Save Your Data from a Passive Traffic Sniffer

By: Daniel
13 November 2025 at 04:38

The Experiment Setup

Our test environment was configured for maximum network security, with both the server (SRV01) and the client (WIN11-01) explicitly set to support and require SMB signing.

  1. The Attacker: We used a Kali Linux machine to act as the attacker and intermediary.
  2. The Attack: We launched a bi-directional ARP Spoofing attack (Man-in-the-Middle) to intercept all traffic flowing between the client and the server.
  3. The Capture: Wireshark was launched on the attacker’s machine to capture the SMB2 traffic.
  4. The Test: From the client system, we accessed a file share (\\SRV01\CertEnroll) and created a new file with the content: “SMB signing test”.

The Critical Finding

Despite having SMB signing enforced on both endpoints, our packet capture yielded a critical, visible finding: the entire contents of the file, “SMB signing test,” were successfully captured and clearly readable in the Wireshark packets.

The conclusion is clear: SMB signing does not protect data from a passive traffic sniffer in a man-in-the-middle scenario.

The Security Takeaway: Signature ≠ Encryption

The reason for this failure is simple: A signature is not the same as encryption.

  • SMB Signing is a mechanism that prevents session spoofing and relay attacks by verifying the identity and integrity of the data sender. It ensures that the traffic hasn’t been tampered with in transit.
  • SMB Encryption is a distinct mechanism that scrambles the data, rendering it unreadable to anyone without the decryption key.

While SMB signing is vital for protecting the integrity of the communication, it does not automatically encrypt the data being transferred. As a result, an attacker who successfully performs an ARP spoofing attack can still read the unencrypted SMB traffic.For true confidentiality and to protect your data from passive snooping, SMB encryption must also be implemented alongside SMB signing.

Check out the Advanced Windows Security Course for 2026 offer >>


Transcript of the video:

Hi and welcome back to another episode of CQURE Hacks.

Today we will observe how packet sniffing behaves when SMB signing is enabled.

We begin in Kali Linux, the attacker’s machine.

The first step is to enable IP forwarding using the echo 1 command,

and that allows Kali to act as an intermediary for network traffic.

Next, we ensure the necessary tools are installed by checking for that dsniff package.

And with dsniff confirmed our environment is ready, we move to our target systems.

On the 1st system, SRV01 (at 10.10.10.20), we check the SMB configuration.

The settings confirm that the system supports and requires SMB signing.

We perform the same check on the client system, WIN11-01 (at 10.10.10.40).

From the client side we see it also supports and requires signing.

The connection we will test will run from the client, so .40 to the server .20.

Now we’ll launch the attack from our Kali machine.

We execute the ARP Spoofing attack.

The goal is to make the Kali host the intermediary.

The traffic flowing from host .40 to host .20 will be intercepted by Kali.

We poison the ERP cache in both directions, telling host .40 we are host .20 and telling host .20 we are host 40.

This establishes a bi-directional Man-in-the-Middle attack.

Next, we launch Wireshark to capture the traffic passing through our machine.

We’ll begin to capture on our active network interface and apply a display filter for SMB2 traffic.

On the Windows client, so .40 we initiate that file access by navigating to the server share and that is \SRV01\CertEnroll.

We then create a new text file and input the content:

SMB signing test.

We return to Kali. As we confirmed signing was enabled on both the server and the client.

Now we search the captured packets in Wireshark for the content we just wrote.

We search that packet bytes for the word signing.

The critical finding is visible.

We successfully capture the entire content of the file.

SMB signing test.

This demonstrates that signing does not protect against man in the middle attacks.

The reason is super simple.

A signature is not the same as encryption.

How good is the signature if a communication is not encrypted while the attacker can still read the unencrypted SMB traffic after performing an ARP spoofing attack?

While SMB signing prevents session spoofing and relay attacks, it does not automatically encrypt data being transferred.

Signing and encryption are two distinct mechanisms.

For true confidentiality, SMB encryption must also be implemented.

SMB signing does not provide encryption and fails to protect data from a passive traffic sniffer in a man in the middle scenario.

Thank you so much for watching our Secure Hacks episodes.

And as always, in order to continue this serial, please don’t forget to support us by hitting the subscribe button.

And as always, stay secure.

The post CQURE Hacks #69: SMB Signing – Why It Won’t Save Your Data from a Passive Traffic Sniffer appeared first on CQURE Academy.

Where to Find the Best Barbecue in Austin

6 November 2025 at 10:26
Parish BarbecueThis story was originally published in January 2022 and has been updated. No Texas city has Austin beat for its sheer volume of worthy barbecue destinations. Sure, the Houston area’s widespread suburbs might be richer in excellent smoked meats, and the Fort Worth scene is hot and new, but the amount of world-changing barbecue within our capital’s limits is staggering. In the June 2025 issue, we published our list of the top fifty barbecue joints, along with fifty more honorable mentions, but our barbecue recommendations don’t stop there. You can get a great meal at any one of these barbecue joints in Austin and its suburbs.In the City of AustinB. Cooper BarbecueThis unassuming trailer can be easy to miss when driving past. In the city…

The post Where to Find the Best Barbecue in Austin appeared first on Texas Monthly.

If You Spot Three BBQ Flags on a Desolate Road, Pull Over

4 November 2025 at 09:53
portrait of employees standing in front of restaurant exteriorHit the blinker as soon as you spot the trio of BBQ flags waving outside Kirby’s BBQ. The speed limit is 50 miles per hour on Loop 494, and there’s just a wide strip of gravel between the low-slung, metal-roofed shack and the two-lane road. Kirby’s may have the look of a long-standing establishment, but it opened in May, the newest barbecue joint in New Caney, just northeast of Houston.After the cloud of dust settled from my sudden stop in the makeshift parking lot, I walked up the steps to the screened-in porch, where employee Svea Bailey greeted me and took my order. The building only houses the kitchen, so the dining area is limited to the picnic tables lining the porch. I found a…

The post If You Spot Three BBQ Flags on a Desolate Road, Pull Over appeared first on Texas Monthly.

Why the for-profit race into solar geoengineering is bad for science and public trust

Last week, an American-Israeli company that claims it’s developed proprietary technology to cool the planet announced it had raised $60 million, by far the largest known venture capital round to date for a solar geoengineering startup.

The company, Stardust, says the funding will enable it to develop a system that could be deployed by the start of the next decade, according to Heatmap, which broke the story.


Heat Exchange

MIT Technology Review’s guest opinion series, offering expert commentary on legal, political and regulatory issues related to climate change and clean energy. You can read the rest of the pieces here.


As scientists who have worked on the science of solar geoengineering for decades, we have grown increasingly concerned about the emerging efforts to start and fund private companies to build and deploy technologies that could alter the climate of the planet. We also strongly dispute some of the technical claims that certain companies have made about their offerings. 

Given the potential power of such tools, the public concerns about them, and the importance of using them responsibly, we argue that they should be studied, evaluated, and developed mainly through publicly coordinated and transparently funded science and engineering efforts.  In addition, any decisions about whether or how they should be used should be made through multilateral government discussions, informed by the best available research on the promise and risks of such interventions—not the profit motives of companies or their investors.

The basic idea behind solar geoengineering, or what we now prefer to call sunlight reflection methods (SRM), is that humans might reduce climate change by making the Earth a bit more reflective, partially counteracting the warming caused by the accumulation of greenhouse gases. 

There is strong evidence, based on years of climate modeling and analyses by researchers worldwide, that SRM—while not perfect—could significantly and rapidly reduce climate changes and avoid important climate risks. In particular, it could ease the impacts in hot countries that are struggling to adapt.  

The goals of doing research into SRM can be diverse: identifying risks as well as finding better methods. But research won’t be useful unless it’s trusted, and trust depends on transparency. That means researchers must be eager to examine pros and cons, committed to following the evidence where it leads, and driven by a sense that research should serve public interests, not be locked up as intellectual property.

In recent years, a handful of for-profit startup companies have emerged that are striving to develop SRM technologies or already trying to market SRM services. That includes Make Sunsets, which sells “cooling credits” for releasing sulfur dioxide in the stratosphere. A new company, Sunscreen, which hasn’t yet been announced, intends to use aerosols in the lower atmosphere to achieve cooling over small areas, purportedly to help farmers or cities deal with extreme heat.  

Our strong impression is that people in these companies are driven by the same concerns about climate change that move us in our research. We agree that more research, and more innovation, is needed. However, we do not think startups—which by definition must eventually make money to stay in business—can play a productive role in advancing research on SRM.

Many people already distrust the idea of engineering the atmosphere—at whichever scale—to address climate change, fearing negative side effects, inequitable impacts on different parts of the world, or the prospect that a world expecting such solutions will feel less pressure to address the root causes of climate change.

Adding business interests, profit motives, and rich investors into this situation just creates more cause for concern, complicating the ability of responsible scientists and engineers to carry out the work needed to advance our understanding.

The only way these startups will make money is if someone pays for their services, so there’s a reasonable fear that financial pressures could drive companies to lobby governments or other parties to use such tools. A decision that should be based on objective analysis of risks and benefits would instead be strongly influenced by financial interests and political connections.

The need to raise money or bring in revenue often drives companies to hype the potential or safety of their tools. Indeed, that’s what private companies need to do to attract investors, but it’s not how you build public trust—particularly when the science doesn’t support the claims.

Notably, Stardust says on its website that it has developed novel particles that can be injected into the atmosphere to reflect away more sunlight, asserting that they’re “chemically inert in the stratosphere, and safe for humans and ecosystems.” According to the company, “The particles naturally return to Earth’s surface over time and recycle safely back into the biosphere.”

But it’s nonsense for the company to claim they can make particles that are inert in the stratosphere. Even diamonds, which are extraordinarily nonreactive, would alter stratospheric chemistry. First of all, much of that chemistry depends on highly reactive radicals that react with any solid surface, and second, any particle may become coated by background sulfuric acid in the stratosphere. That could accelerate the loss of the protective ozone layer by spreading that existing sulfuric acid over a larger surface area.

(Stardust didn’t provide a response to an inquiry about the concerns raised in this piece.)

In materials presented to potential investors, which we’ve obtained a copy of, Stardust further claims its particles “improve” on sulfuric acid, which is the most studied material for SRM. But the point of using sulfate for such studies was never that it was perfect, but that its broader climatic and environmental impacts are well understood. That’s because sulfate is widespread on Earth, and there’s an immense body of scientific knowledge about the fate and risks of sulfur that reaches the stratosphere through volcanic eruptions or other means.

If there’s one great lesson of 20th-century environmental science, it’s how crucial it is to understand the ultimate fate of any new material introduced into the environment. 

Chlorofluorocarbons and the pesticide DDT both offered safety advantages over competing technologies, but they both broke down into products that accumulated in the environment in unexpected places, causing enormous and unanticipated harms. 

The environmental and climate impacts of sulfate aerosols have been studied in many thousands of scientific papers over a century, and this deep well of knowledge greatly reduces the chance of unknown unknowns. 

Grandiose claims notwithstanding—and especially considering that Stardust hasn’t disclosed anything about its particles or research process—it would be very difficult to make a pragmatic, risk-informed decision to start SRM efforts with these particles instead of sulfate.

We don’t want to claim that every single answer lies in academia. We’d be fools to not be excited by profit-driven innovation in solar power, EVs, batteries, or other sustainable technologies. But the math for sunlight reflection is just different. Why?   

Because the role of private industry was essential in improving the efficiency, driving down the costs, and increasing the market share of renewables and other forms of cleantech. When cost matters and we can easily evaluate the benefits of the product, then competitive, for-profit capitalism can work wonders.  

But SRM is already technically feasible and inexpensive, with deployment costs that are negligible compared with the climate damage it averts.

The essential questions of whether or how to use it come down to far thornier societal issues: How can we best balance the risks and benefits? How can we ensure that it’s used in an equitable way? How do we make legitimate decisions about SRM on a planet with such sharp political divisions?

Trust will be the most important single ingredient in making these decisions. And trust is the one product for-profit innovation does not naturally manufacture. 

Ultimately, we’re just two researchers. We can’t make investors in these startups do anything differently. Our request is that they think carefully, and beyond the logic of short-term profit. If they believe geoengineering is worth exploring, could it be that their support will make it harder, not easier, to do that?  

David Keith is the professor of geophysical sciences at the University of Chicago and founding faculty director of the school’s Climate Systems Engineering Initiative. Daniele Visioni is an assistant professor of earth and atmospheric sciences at Cornell University and head of data for Reflective, a nonprofit that develops tools and provides funding to support solar geoengineering research.

Where to Find the Best Barbecue in San Antonio

30 October 2025 at 10:35
This story was originally published in March 2022 and has been updated. San Antonio barbecue is ever evolving, but it has deep roots, as evidenced by the old-school brick pits that are still operational around the city. Good tortillas aren’t hard to come by here, and neither is excellent smoked chicken. We have our favorites, of course. In the June 2025 issue, we published our list of the top fifty barbecue joints, along with fifty more honorable mentions, but our barbecue recommendations don’t stop there. You can get a great meal at any one of these San Antonio joints.In the City of San Antonio2M Smokehouse2025 Top 50This barbecue spot quickly became the best in town after it opened in 2016, helping usher in a San…

The post Where to Find the Best Barbecue in San Antonio appeared first on Texas Monthly.

This Cheap, Saturdays-Only Special Might Be the Best Deal in Texas Barbecue

24 October 2025 at 07:00
photo of tyler eating a ribFinding a great deal at a barbecue joint these days is like scoring a shaded spot at H-E-B in the summer. So on an early August stop at Tyler’s Barbeque, in Amarillo, I was surprised to see beef short ribs on the specials board for only $16 per pound. Surely, that price for this Saturdays-only offering was for a half pound, a common gambit to delay customers’ sticker shock. I double- and triple-checked the board while in line, as I inched ever closer to the counter, then asked the cutter for one of those ribs, one on the smaller side if possible. It was rung up at just $1 an ounce, and I felt like I was getting away with something as I scurried off…

The post This Cheap, Saturdays-Only Special Might Be the Best Deal in Texas Barbecue appeared first on Texas Monthly.

Where to Find the Best Barbecue in Dallas

23 October 2025 at 06:00
This story was originally published in January 2022 and has been updated. The Metroplex is too big for just one barbecue guide. The Fort Worth area already got its own, so this one is dedicated to Dallas and its many suburbs, which are packed with smoked-meat stops both old and new. We have our favorites, of course. In the June 2025 issue, we published our list of the top fifty barbecue joints, along with fifty more honorable mentions, but our barbecue recommendations don’t stop there. You can get a great meal at any one of the joints below.In the City of DallasHeim BarbecueThe Heims ushered Fort Worth into the modern barbecue movement with their tender brisket, colossal beef ribs, and famous bacon burnt ends, though…

The post Where to Find the Best Barbecue in Dallas appeared first on Texas Monthly.

The Rise of Collaborative Tactics Among China-aligned Cyber Espionage Campaigns

Trend™ Research examines the complex collaborative relationship between China-aligned APT groups via the new “Premier Pass-as-a-Service” model, exemplified by the recent activities of Earth Estries and Earth Naga.

Where to Find the Best Barbecue in Fort Worth

16 October 2025 at 11:10
Tex-Ethiopian barbecue at Smoke 'N Ash BBQThis story was originally published in December 2021 and has been updated. For years, Texas Monthly published a single guide to cover all the barbecue in the Dallas–Fort Worth area. Then Fort Worth—as well as the Mid-Cities—suddenly became the most exciting place in Texas for new barbecue joints. Panther City and its suburbs are now receiving the honor of their own directory. In the June 2025 issue we published our list of top fifty barbecue joints, along with fifty more worthy of honorable mentions, but our barbecue recommendations don’t stop there. You can get a great meal of smoked meats at any one of these Fort Worth–area joints.In the City of Fort WorthAngelo’s BBQThis Fort Worth staple goes back to 1958. The brisket and ribs are plenty…

The post Where to Find the Best Barbecue in Fort Worth appeared first on Texas Monthly.

A Long-Haul Trucker Kept 25 Briskets Rejected by a Customer—and Became a Pitmaster

14 October 2025 at 15:46
BJ Bradford’s jump start to becoming a barbecue entrepreneur began with 25 briskets gifted to him by the universe. In 2016, while working as an over-the-road trucker and hauling a load of beef from Kansas to Florida, a customer rejected five boxes from the delivery because they were damaged. When the company told him to keep or get rid of them, BJ’s choice was clear. Adopting those orphaned briskets would end up altering his career.He picked up four big coolers from a nearby Walmart, packed them full of briskets and ice, and headed back home to Bryan, Texas, where his family was waiting for him. “I got a lot of training from those briskets right there,” he says. Smoking meat wasn’t new to BJ. His…

The post A Long-Haul Trucker Kept 25 Briskets Rejected by a Customer—and Became a Pitmaster appeared first on Texas Monthly.

Where to Find the Best Barbecue in Houston

9 October 2025 at 07:00
This story was originally published in November 2021 and has been updated. The Houston metro area has more standout barbecue joints than exist in many entire states. We have our favorites, of course. In 2023, Texas Monthly released a list of the best new barbecue joints in Texas. In the June 2025 issue we published our list of top fifty barbecue joints, along with fifty more worthy of honorable mentions, but our barbecue recommendations don’t stop there. You can get a great meal of smoked meats at any one of these Houston barbecue joints.In the City of HoustonBrisket & Rice2025 Top 50Phong Tran, his brother Hong, and Hong’s wife, Michelle Nguyen, combined their Vietnamese heritage with classic Central Texas barbecue to create this gem next…

The post Where to Find the Best Barbecue in Houston appeared first on Texas Monthly.

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