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PH
OTO
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AP
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BY
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(S
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FAMOUS AUSTIN MEN WITH
GREAT STREET STYLEIn honor of our Men's Issue, we give a nod to local men who always look sharp.
style
FALL FOOD & DRINK PAIRINGS
FROM LOCAL CHEFSHeres what Austin toques suggest eating and drinking.
COME FOLLOW US
at austinway.comWe have the inside scoop on Austins best
style, parties, and more.
JOIN US ONLINE
SEE THE LATEST
FROM LAST
NIGHTS EVENTS
Couldnt attend? Browse the
newest photos from Austins
most exclusive parties.
photos
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Shane McCauley started taking pictures when he was 7 years old
and has been photographing the music world since he was a
teenager, when he promoted punk shows on his radio show at the
local college station. He has published several books to date; he has
traveled the globe photographing, filming, and writing for travel
blogs and music projects; and he shot the subjects for The Leading
Men feature (page 90).
What sparked your interest in photography? In 10th grade the
girl I had a crush on persuaded me to join the photography club
with her. I remember being in the darkroom and having an image
come up in the developer, and that was where I got hooked. What
are your sources of inspiration? Music, films, and traveling. New
places always help me try to find the romantic aspects of everything
I experience. In what environments do you most prefer to
shoot? I like the challenge of being given any location and finding
what works inside it. I always love beaches and forests, but who
doesnt? Whats the key to putting your subjects at ease? I start
by asking my subjects some questions to see what they react to and
how, and then try to get natural expression out of them. Describe
your dream photo shoot. I would love to do a road trip through
America, like Robert Frank, and just do a modern snapshot of
where we live now the way he did in the 50s. What resonated
with you about shooting the men in this Austin Way feature? I
love Austin for its charm and character.
Shane Mccauleyphotographer
...without whoMthis issue would not have been possible
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While working in the fashion industry
for 15 years, Jean Scheidnes moved
from the Austin American-Statesman to
Womens Wear Daily to Neiman Marcus
corporate. Her main gig is social media
consulting for brands, and she wrote
our Arbiter of Taste (page 29).
What did you learn while writing
about Zoltan David? The time,
creativity, and skill that every piece represents is astonishing. And for
this world-class, artisanal luxury business to have thrived in Austin,
pre-Internet and pre-tech boom, is an extraordinary accomplishment.
Whats your one Austin must? My husband and I went to the Broken
Spoke on our first date, so thats our happy place.
Jason Cohen has moved to and from
Austin three times since 1990. A
contributor for Pitchfork and Eater,
among others, Cohen penned the story
about Barton Hills Choir for our
Hottest Ticket (page 45).
How did you decide on your career
path? I really liked the band Glass
Eye, came to Austin for a college
football game, and somehow ended up in grad school writing for the
Chronicle. What is your favorite writing topic? These days, its
food. At other times, its music, movies, TV, or sports. What are your
Austin loves? The Ice Bats (RIP), breakfast tacos (though Via 313
and Grandmas Humus are a close second), and Hole in the Wall.
Born and raised in Austin, Wynn
Myers has been snapping photos since
high school and now lives in the Hill
Country with her husband and their
four pups. She photographed Jason
Dial for our F1 feature (page 84).
Where do you prefer to shoot? I love
shooting with natural lightoutdoors
or beautiful interiors with great
windows. Whats the key to putting your subjects at ease? I have
a conversation with them to get to know them a bit. For most, being
photographed is an uncomfortable experience; I try to acknowledge
that and give my subject time to get comfortable. Giving subjects an
action or prop can help a lot.
Jean ScheidneS writer
Wynn MyerSphotographer
JaSon cohen writer
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Yahoo Sports Radio, ESPN 97.5 and Yahoo Sports Radiowelcomes our sponsors and fans to the 2015 Grand Prix.
We are thrilled to join Austin Way Magazine as wecover the events surrounding the race.
SAN ANTONIOS NEW Hotel Emma and the Pearl Brewery joined
Austin Way for an intimate evening of food and drink at chef Tim
Loves newly opened mark on the Austin culinary scene, Lonesome
Dove. The evening began in the intimate wine room with sommelier
Patrick Vasquez, who paired four specialty wines with the restau-
rants famous wild-game fettine selection. Guests then migrated to the
private dining room for a memorable four-course meal, presented by
chef Love and his culinary team.
LONESOME DOVE
TITANS DINNER
The Hotel Emmas Beth Smith, John Brand, Mark Yanke, and Hugh Daschbach
Sommelier Patrick Vasquez
Andrew and Ane Lowe
Jada Williams and Sam Davidson
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OTO
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AP
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BY
BE
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OR
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68
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Saving the Blues
With a deeply personal new album, gary clark jr., who returns to Austin for
Acl Fest, is more than just the future of musiches preserving his hometowns
musical legacy by helping to reopen the historic Antones. by kathy blackwell
The campaign to reopen Antones wouldnt have
worked without Clark, says longtime friend and business
partner Will Bridges.
AUSTINWAY.com 85
J u s t t h e R i g h t
Fo rmu l a
And some thought it wouldnt last. Work remains,
but in just four years the US Grand Prix has become
a game-changer for Austin.
BY TOM FOSTER
opposite page: photography by paul gilham/getty images;
this page: photography by m
ark thompson/getty images
Jason Dial enters a conference room overlooking the track at Circuit of the Americas with a springy gait that belies his football-player frame. The CEO of COTA since 2013, Dial has brought along a giant sat-ellite-view map of the racetrack-and-amphitheater complex, ready to show off the latest features that, he says, will make this years Formula One United States Grand Prix weekend, October 2325, a must-attend event not only for Austinites and all Texans, but for the global, big-money set that jets to Monaco and
other exotic locales for the circuits other races. In just a few days, Dial will announce that Elton John and his full band will
entertain spectators right after this years race, and he wants to demonstrate how the tracks giant infield will be trans-formed into a music venue that can accommodate as many as 70,000 peo-plefive times the capacity of the complexs heretofore premier concert setup, Austin360 Amphitheater. Then Dial starts in on COTAs partnership with Pop Austin, the contemporary-art show that will coincide with the race this year and include an exhibition at the track, in addition to its main exhibit hall at Fair Market on East Fifth Street downtown.
So for the price of a ticket, Im going to be able to go for the weekend of F1 and not only see the highest-tech racing in the world but also see an actual Andy Warhol or Richard Orlinski, and, at the end of the day, see a two-hour Elton John concert, the first time hes brought his full band to Austin in nine years? Dial says, practi-cally bouncing in his chair. Wow! What an incredible entertainment value.
Its illuminating that Dial is focused on providing value on Formula One weekend. F1 events around the world usually are glitzy affairs attended by people who arrive in private jets, buy bottle service at special parties, and always dress the part of VIPs.
When Formula One came to Austin in 2012, after several years of controversy over government funding and halting progress that more than once threatened to kill the project, one of the big con-cerns was whether anyone in Texas would care. Although F1 racing is the worlds second-most popular sportafter soccerit, like soccer, is simply not a big deal in this country. And, not insignificantly, F1s flashy culture is some-thing of an odd fit with Austins easygoing style. In some ways, the Austin Grand Prix has been something of a grand experiment.
On one hand, all the extras Dial touts for this years race weekend are part of an attempt to create as much appeal as possible for the glamour set. On the other hand, Dial is betting that if he makes Grand Prix weekend about more than a race, hell be able to draw more mainstream Americans and Austinites wholl see it as a good value, an all-around fun experience.
A former marketing executive with Procter & Gamble and the NFLs Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Dial is attempting a careful balancing act, and one he appears to be performing well as the race matures into a tentpole event on the Austin calendar. Attendance among locals has grown since the inaugural
race, and Dial expects this year to reach new highs from locals and out-of-towners. Last year the economic impact of the racethe dollars flowing into Texas that wouldnt otherwisewas $900 million, he says, and we expect it to be that or more this year. The race community has lauded the track itself, and fans consistently rate the event among the top F1 races worldwide. Yet, Dial knows he has work to do. Our brand awareness isnt where I know it should be yet, he says. And its absolutely critical to our future success that Central Texas and Texas in general really embrace this event.
The F1-Austin marriage has, well, other partners, too; namely the busi-nesses and events catering to visitors. Everybody has had to adjust, says Ginger Leigh, one of the cocreators of Blu, the most successful homegrown
race-weekend afterparty, which will be held this year at Brazos Hall following a three-year takeover of the W Austin downtown. One hallmark of an F1 weekend anywhere in the world is a nightly lineup of ever-more exclusive VIP partiesseveral of which are like traveling bacchanals that follow the race circuit from city to city.
This city wasnt used to seeing parties on the scale that accompany an F1-race weekend, Leigh says. People come here, and theyre like, OK, the barbecue is great, but we want all-night parties with Champagne flowing, pretty womenNew York or Vegas-style nightlife. Blu has provided that, with bottle service and VIP tables, elaborate light shows, a Brazilian martial arts performance, and celebrity guests, including Matt LeBlanc and Keanu Reeves, as well as drivers from the race.
But while all that sounds extravagant, its intentionally a step less over-the-top than the previous two big traveling parties that came to Austin: Amber Lounge and My Yacht Club. My take is that those parties are not for Austin people; theyre more for people who travel the circuit, says Kevin Smothers, editorial director of Austin Social Planner, who follows the party scene closely. My Yacht Club has trapeze artists hanging from
the ceiling delivering bottles of Champagne to people. The overall theme is that the wow factor is magnified, and thats what the crowd expects.
Smothers says much of the usual Austin social set makes it to the race itselftheres a whole scene up in the suites,but he noticed only a smat-tering of that crowd at the late-night parties the past two years, after a heavy turnout the first year. Itll be interesting to see how that plays out this year, he says. While My Yacht Club will be taking over Ballet Austin again, Amber Lounge has opted not to return this year, so the scene may be trending more toward locally created celebrations such as Blu and a new event co-spon-sored by COTA called Apex Nights that will take over Fair Market after Pop Austin closes each day.
Unlike in Monaco or Barcelona, where the recreational and retail scene around F1 tends to involve mega yachts, in Austin part of the draw is ranch life. Dial says its common for people in groups to rent a property outside
Im goIng to be able to
go for the weekend of
f1 and not only see the
hIghest-tech racIng In
the world but also
see an actual andy
warhol or rIchard
orlInskI, and,
at the end of the day,
see a two-hour full-
band elton John
concert? wow! what
an IncredIble
entertaInment value.jason dial, cota ceo
Art At the trAckPop Austin International Art Show will bring a satellite
exhibit to cotA while lighting up downtown Austin. by tobin levy
2.pop austin
3.the party
scene
1.how to
watch
the race
the Need for Speed
Experience the best of the US Grand Prix.
WHEN: Friday, October 23
Sunday, October 25
WHERE: Circuit of
the Americas, 9201
Circuit of the Americas
Blvd., 512-301-6600;
circuitoftheamericas.com/f1
COST: 3-day passes start
at $169; Sunday-only
general admission tickets
start at $99.
WATCH IN STYLE: The
staff at the Paddock Club
travels to all F1 races
across the globe, so it
remains a consistently
top-tier hospitality offering.
A three-day pass includes
multicourse wining
and dining, a Mumm
Champagne bar, exclusive
access to the pit lanes,
driver interviews, and
more; pricing begins at
$4,200. The Skybox offers
spectacular views of the
race at Turns 2, 12, and
19; three-day passes are
$1,350. For event packages,
visit cotaexperiences.com.
F1 ftes have a tradition
of being abundant in both
celebrities and Champagne.
In years past, the original
Made in Monaco Amber
Lounge and My Yacht Club
have targeted international
revelers attending the US
Grand Prix, especially those
with the deepest of pockets
(in 2014, individual tickets
started at $325, while tables
were reportedly in excess of
$75,000). COTAs Pop Austin
partnership will result in a
slate of new parties this year,
Apex, which will take over
Fair Market for three nights
following illumination. Blu
will return this year, but at a
different location, at Brazos
Hall on October 23 and
October 24, says Ginger Leigh
who started the party with
British expat and Austin-
resident, Ian Weightman.
Blu has drawn a larger local
crowd than its imported
competitors. Leigh estimates
the party is about half local
and half visitor and says its
appeal to Austinites is its a
dressier occasion than the
city usually sees. The event
boasts The Full Tilt Fashion
Show (Saturday, October
24, 69 pm). Perhaps Blus
most democratic feature is
a $150 general admission
ticket with a cash bar. It
opens the door to a lot more
locals, Leigh says. You want
to keep the high-end nature
of the party and maintain a
certain demographic, but you
also want to cater to locals.
Blu inclusive packages are
$400 per person, and tables
range from a $5,000 table for
four to a $50,000 platinum
package for eight.
The Pop Austin International Art Show,
which attracted almost 5,000 visitors over
its debut weekend last year, is partnering
with Circuit of the Americas to provide
cultural programming for Formula One
weekend, including a satellite exhibit at
the track featuring work from Andy
Warhol, Jean-Michel Basquiat, and Micky
Hoogendijk, among others.
At Pop Austins
principal show
downtown,
Illumination,
light will be the
shared medium.
Attendees can
expect blacked-out
rooms lit by vehicles, including neon,
projections, and LED. We wanted to
offer an experience, and we have
achieved that, says curator Lana
Carlson. The nature of the exhibition is
inherently immersive. There will be fewer
pieces than last year (five of the installa-
tions are truly expansive), and 17 artists
from all over the worldChile, Italy,
Korea, Japan, and, of course, Austin.
Among the local artists are Bale Creek
Allen and Jason Archer, both of whom
were also featured in the inaugural show.
The collaboration with COTA is sure
to draw a larger, more diverse crowd to the
main exhibition. I feel like joining forces
with Formula One enables us to show the
world that Austin is more than a city of
artists, but rather a capitol of culture,
says creative director Steve Carlson.
Future exhibitions will have different
themes. If Carlson has
his way, sound will be
one of them.
Illumination will take place at Fair Market (1100 E. Fifth St., popaustin.com). The show will kick off
with a ticketed VIP Opening Party on Thursday, October 22, from 8 to 11 pm, for art enthusiasts, collectors, and sponsors. Pop Austin will remain open to the public on Friday, October 23, through Sunday, October 25, from 10 am to 6 pm daily. Tickets for regular show hours over the weekend are $40 per person (children 12 and under are free with a ticketed adult). Tickets for the VIP Opening Party are $200. Pop Austins satellite exhibit at the track will be located in the Grand Plaza and is available to all race ticketholders.
photography courtesy of circuit of the americas (views of the race); adela andea
(illumination (bottom right)), nonotak (illumination (top)), shane guffog (red swirls); dave pedley (blu)
THE WRITER
JUSTIN MARKS
Why Austin: Screenwriter Justin
Marks attributes much of his success
in Hollywood to his decision to move
from there to Austin two years ago with
his dogs and wife, Rachel Kondo, a fel-
low at UTs Michener Center. Marks
who wrote the script for Disneys
upcoming live-action adaptation of The
Jungle Book, starring Scarlett Johansson,
Idris Elba, and Bill Murrayis now writ-
ing the much-anticipated sequel to Top
Gun, which will bring back Tom Cruise
as Maverick. He and Kondo have laid
down roots in Crestview, where, every
day, Marks rides his bike to Little Deli
for lunch. It provides this true peace,
he says. You get up in the morning and
its quiet, and you go grab a coffee and
feel like you see the same faces every
day. Its the place to write.
His Destiny: Growing up in
Houston, Marks saw Top Gun in the
theater seven glorious times. From the
opening frame, the sound of the score,
and the way the carrier was shot in the
magic hour of light, I knew then that Id
never seen any experience like what a
movie could be, and I wanted to write
them, he says. Ive kind of been writ-
ing the movie my whole life.
Whats Next: While in Austin,
Marks got into a magical rhythm
and churned out the script for the
upcoming Starz series Counterpart, an
espionage thriller starring Oscar winner
J.K. Simmons, set to go into produc-
tion early next year. With showrunner
added to his rsum, Marks has never
been busier. Good thing Thunderbird
serves strong coffee.
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in his words: Ive never done writing in my life like Ive done when Im in Austin.
the risk taker
NOAH HAWLEY
Why Austin? The Emmy-winning
Fargo showrunner likes to say he mar-
ried into Austin. He and his wife, a
multigenerational Texan, were living in
New York when he wrapped on the de-
tective series the Unusuals. The couple
came to Austin in 2009 to visit her folks
for a few weeks and never left. Hawleys
experience shooting the short-lived
mockumentary TV series My Genera-
tion proved those instincts right. The
crews in Austin are so amazing because
the flm community here sprang up
around the fact that people wanted to
make movies, he says. It didnt spring
up around a tax credit, like [in] some
other markets.
The Power of Bad Ideas: He ad-
mits that the notion of tackling the Coen
brothers movie masterpiece, Fargo, for
the small screen was a monumentally
bad idea. But FX agreed to let him
approach it as a stand-alone, true-crime
story told in chapters, as opposed to a
recurring series. That seemed interest-
ing to me, he says. For me this limited
series, this 10-hour movie idea, feels like
a new medium.
Whats Next: The second season
of Fargo begins on October 12, set in a
different town and with a new cast of
characters. Its like I followed up my
colossally bad idea [by] getting rid of
actors that everybody loved, [just] to do
it again! he says, laughing. Meanwhile,
Hawley, who is also an author, owes his
publisher, Grand Central, a draft of his
next novel, an emotional thriller.
in his words: Id rather raise my kids in Austin [than
LA]. This is a place where people are creative for the
value of being creative.
THE MENTOR
PAUL STEKLER
Why Austin: Seduced from New
York in 1997 to teach at UTs Depart-
ment of Radio-Television-Film, award-
winning documentary flmmaker Paul
Stekler was tasked with completely
overhauling the schools production
program. [More than] 18 years later
I can confdently say we have the best
production program for its price in the
United States, says Stekler, who has
chaired the department since 2010. He
arrived in Austin just as the flm scene
was catching fre here. SXSW was
much smaller, and the Austin Film Soci-
ety was just gearing up, he says. It was
a really cool place to be, and we were
able to really revise the flm program
here, which was in large part a driver
of the growth of the flm community.
His Impact: Any Austin filmmaker
worth his or her salt probably owes
some form of debt to Stekler, named
Mentor of the Year by Variety in 2014.
Today the RTF program has 1,000
students, many of whom want to stay
and work in Texas. I used to joke
about looking for the film community
in New York. There were tons of film-
makers, but there really is a filmmak-
ing community here.
Whats Next: From the originals
like Linklater and Rodriguez to the new
generation such as Jeff Nichols, Kat
Candler, and Ben Steinbauer, everyone
is a friend and supporter of the talent
RTF is helping groom. This is a really
wonderful place to live as a flmmaker,
says Stekler, who will host the 50th-
anniversary student showcase screening
at the State Theater on November 1.
Clothing and accessories Steklers own
in his words: If you have a support group that you
work with and projects that you really want to do,
it seems that being in Austin is just fine, as
opposed to being unemployed in LA.
THE BREAKOUT
JESSE PLEMONS
Why Austin: Jesse Plemons, who
can instantly transform his corn-fed mug
from earnest bleeding heart to dead-eyed
sociopath, remembers coming to Austin
as a ffth-grader to see the State Capitol.
That feld trip was fun, but it wasnt until
the small-town boyPlemons grew up on
a ranch in Mart, outside of Wacomoved
here to play the eternally good and loyal
Landry Clarke on Friday Night Lights
that the city hooked him. My world just
changed, he says of his adopted home-
town. The people, the creativity, it feeds
me in every way.
Unstoppable: Since Friday Night
Lights, Plemonss career has soared, with
juicy roles as a stolid shop boy in the HBO
miniseries Olive Kitteridge and a stunningly
evil and murderous member of a white
supremacist gang on the fnal seasons
of Breaking Bad. He firted with various
shades of menace alongside Johnny Depp
in the gangster drama Black Mass, re-
leased in September, and will next be seen
playing the tragically devoted husband
of Kirsten Dunst, a small-town beautician
with big-city aspirations, in the second
chapter of Fargo (premiering on FX on
October 12).
Whats Next: Whenever his directors
yell Cut, Plemons races back to Austin,
where he owns a place on the East Side.
All of his best friends are here, like his old
Cowboy and Indian band members, who
are thinking of reuniting after a two-year
hiatus. In the meantime, Plemons is on
the lookout for a project to flm back on
his home turf. Friday Night Lights was
the best of all possible worlds, he says.
in his words:
The goal is to bring more work back to Austin, because its the place where I feel more like myself than anywhere in the world.
photography courtesy of getty images. opposite page: Location: hoteL eLLa; styLing by graham cumberbatch; grooming by stacey hubrath, roar saLon
THE PROMOTER
BRIAN GANNON
Why Austin: Brian Gannon moved to Austin 10 years ago with a keen desire to work in the flm industry. He cut his teeth as a production intern, working on movies like Friday the 13th, and was immediately struck by the easy camaraderie found among Texas crews. (Austin has 700 union crew members and probably 1,400 who are nonunion.) Gannon joined the Austin Convention & Visitors Bureau as its flm and marketing manager, and this summer was tapped to be the next di-rector of the Austin Film Commission, replacing Gary Bond, who over his 30-year career assisted with many movies produced locally, including Dazed and Confused and Spy Kids.
New Role: Gannon will continue Bonds mission of promoting Austins flm industry to the world, wooing productions with the citys wealth of local talent and diversity of location. Every movie that comes to town puts money into the local economy, from putting local technicians to work to hotel rooms to renting cars to lumber to construct sets, he says. Gannon adds that in the past 22 months more than $170 million was spent here on flm projects, including movies, TV shows, and commercials.
The Great Challenge: The hurdle that Gannonand the flm community at largefaces is reduced incentives af-ter lawmakers slashed $63 million from the Texas Moving Image Industry In-centive program in May. Productions go to where they can get the best deal back from state funding, he explains. He promises to work hard on behalf of local flmmakers, while also persuad-ing executives on both coasts to come enjoy some fne Austin hospitality.
Wool sweater, Theory ($265). Neiman Marcus, The Domain, 512-719-1200; neimanmarcus.com. Long sleeve polo, Ermenegildo Zegna ($575). Neiman Marcus, see above; zegna.com
in his words: Were still in a good spot.
There are a lot of places having [incentives]
cutbacks far worse than we are in Texas.
AUSTINWAY.com 97
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18088 FM1431 Leander, TX 78641 512-243-8583
All information (including, but not limited to prices, availability, promotions, incentives, floor plans, elevations, site plans, features, standards and options, assessments and fees, planned amenities, programs, conceptual artists rendering and community development plans) is not guaranteed and remains subject to change or delay without notice or obligations and may differ by neighborhood or homebuilder. Please visit your Neighborhood Builder and review the Purchase Agreement Documents for details. Offer void where prohibited or otherwise restricted by law. April 2014, Travisso, Ltd.
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