Hair to the Throne

Sorry James Harden, but you’ll never have the most famous beard in Houston. That honor belongs to the Santa Claus-like ginger waterfall on the chin of one Billy F. Gibbons, lead singer and guitarist of rock band ZZ Top. At 67, Gibbons is still a badass and, truth be told, he’ll probably die a badass … and a Houstonian.

Sorry James Harden, but you’ll never have the most famous beard in Houston. That honor belongs to the Santa Claus-like ginger waterfall on the chin of one Billy F. Gibbons, lead singer and guitarist of rock band ZZ Top. At 67, Gibbons is still a badass and, truth be told, he’ll probably die a badass … and a Houstonian. Born and bred here, he’s perhaps the city’s most recognizable and long-lasting international star. Gibbons and ZZ Top still tour, and don’t spend a ton of time at home, but they will be playing the Houston Livestock Show & Rodeo on March 22. Before you go, we’ll share a little trivia about the man behind the beard and shades. Can you spot which two of these three anecdotes about Gibbons are true and which is a lie?

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It's All in the Jeans

Based in nearby Richmond, mysterious designer Ciano Farmer handcrafts authentically old-school, unexpectedly fashionable dungarees for his fellow hardworking Texans.

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It was 2010 when Ciano Farmer went to the port of Long Beach in California to welcome a ship coming from China with six 40-foot-long containers bearing the biggest production yet of his eponymous line of jeans. But when the ship was unloaded, Farmer was presented with just one single 20-foot container. “Millions of dollars of product was missing,” he says. So, he immediately ventured to Asia to see what happened, only to find the factory razed, his inventory vanished. “From that day forward, I vowed never to make another garment overseas,” says Ciano, who rebooted his career in 2014 by raising $21,840 on Kickstarter — a modest sum he’s since turned into one of the most sought-after cult men’s workwear brands.

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Repurpose-Driven Life

When ExxonMobil moved out, a smart developer moved in. Now the oil behemoth’s former Energy Corridor digs are going mixed-use. Tech incubators, artist studios and a farmers market are just the beginning.

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Republic Square is the type of quirky, hidden gem you might only discover on Atlas Obscura, a website of off-the-beaten-path destinations for curious, urban adventurers. It’s a wooded 35-acre business park off Interstate 10 that sits in the Energy Corridor between CityCentre and Katy. Prior to it having been purchased by Third Palm Capital, a development company out of Dallas, in 2013, it served as the global headquarters of ExxonMobil’s chemicals division. The purchase was risky, coming just as the oil-and-gas business took a turn for the worse and shed some 70,000 jobs.

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