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Plus: Energy sector chaos as Middle East war continues 
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Is anyone else obsessed with their local grocery store?
 
In the chronically online world we live in, there’s something wholesome about shopping shoulder to shoulder next to our neighbors. While covering the rapid growth of supermarket construction in Texas, I realized these concrete megamarts aren’t just focal points of the food economy, they’re gathering places that reflect what the local community eats and cares about — like Texas-shaped pasta or the local football team.
 
I’m taking over the Marketplace newsletter this week to dig into this idea, and connect the oil industry outside my door in Houston to the war in the Middle East. Whether you’re a North Texas family in a fast-growing suburb or one of the 3.2 million Iranians uprooted from their homes, at the end of the day don’t we all just want to be able to live in peace and put food on the table? – Elizabeth Trovall, Marketplace reporter
Atmosphere at a Kroger store in Dallas
Elizabeth Trovall/Marketplace
Grocer rivalries are Texas-shaped as new stores open in Lone Star State
Competitors like H-E-B and Kroger emphasize Texas pride and shopping local as supermarkets vie for shoppers in fast-growing metros.
Not a cucumber or cereal box is out of place at the spacious new Kroger store that opened last fall in north Fort Worth, Texas.
 
The superstore, roughly the size of two football fields, boasts wide aisles, local high school sports merch, and coffee from Pax & Beneficia, a local North Texas chain that’s set up shop inside.
 
The new supermarket is part of a wave of new grocery store construction in Texas , spurred by years of rapid population growth in the region. Many of these new builds are concentrated in Dallas-Fort Worth, one of the most active markets for new grocer construction in the country.
 
As retailers like Kroger, H-E-B, and Costco build up their brick-and-mortar footprint to meet pent up demand from population growth, they’re strategizing on how to attract and retain new customers. 
 
“Development jumped,” said Bob Young, who helped develop the new Kroger and other Texas grocery stores for the real estate firm Weitzman. “Can it be competitive? Yes.”
 
That competition has taken on a unique Texas flavor. 
 
Kroger is running a new Texas playbook, which includes a corporate restructure and leans into state pride, authenticity and local store customization. Signage at the new Fort Worth Kroger features the shape of Texas and local brands and producers. 
 
Young said it’s not a coincidence that the vibe feels reflective of one of Kroger’s biggest competitors: Texas’s own grocery chain H-E-B. 

“The identity of H-E-B is preeminent in the grocery space,” Young said. “They have people camping out at night to go into their store. Talk about customer loyalty!”
READ MORE


 
Stories for the weekend
Energy chaos and the Middle East War
  • Volatility is the name of the game this week in the energy sector. Crude oil prices were on a rollercoaster, responding to mixed messaging about the war from the Trump administration. 

  • For Americans, this looks like higher gasoline and diesel prices. But the U.S. decision to bring war to the Strait of Hormuz, a critical energy shipping corridor, is also hitting Europe and Asia. Those regions are competing for liquefied natural gas, and competition will heat up considerably if this war stretches into April and May. 

  • Retro petro: The U.S. may now be the world’s top producer of crude oil, unlike when OPEC decided to embargo the U.S. in the 1970s, but the oil market is still a global one so prices here reflect the high global market price. 

  • Experts had predicted low oil prices this year, but the war is changing that for now, hitting consumers at the pump… and there’s plenty more economic ripple effects to consider.
More Texas stories:
  • What a $21.50 turkey leg can teach us about inflation at the Houston rodeo   

  • Dangerous jobs: Would you distract a 1,500 pound bull while wearing clown makeup? 

  • Want to make your own Pan dulce? I do.

  • The first new U.S. refinery in nearly 50 years is coming to the Port of Brownsville – bringing jobs — and environmental risks. 
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Cows in an arid field.
Austin Johnson / AFP via Getty Images
A parasitic fly threatens the Texas cattle industry
The New World screwworm has been eradicated from the U.S. for over 60 years. But in recent months, it has been detected as close as 70 miles from the U.S.-Mexico border. Carlos Morales reports.
As a kid growing up in Far West Texas, Joe Williams would have to look over the family’s livestock to make sure they weren’t infected with screwworm larvae.

“If you come up on one that has been flystruck, you know it immediately,” said Williams. “You can smell it.” 

At the time, the New World screwworm was a common and devastating reality of ranching. The parasite’s named for the way its larvae dig – or screw – into the living flesh of warm-blooded animals, causing nasty, painful lesions. 

“It’s putrid, I mean super putrid,” said Williams, who works as a cattle broker these days.

While the days of monitoring livestock and treating them for screwworm have been over for decades now, a possible return is making folks in the cattle industry anxious. 

The Department of Agriculture says an outbreak today could deal a $1.8 billion blow to Texas’ economy. 

“Worst case scenario: You lose all your cattle,” said Janna Stubbs, who runs a cow-calf operation with her husband just outside of Alpine, Texas. “Absolute worst case scenario: You go out of business, and you can’t afford to get back into the business.”
READ MORE
A man live streams on YouTube, superimposing himself on a wind velocity map.
Screenshot via Ryan Hall Y'all/YouTube
Social media, YouTube, and the “golden age” of meteorology
A growing number of meteorologists are taking a non-traditional path, making a name and a living, doing the weather online. Marketplace's Samantha Fields reports.
Around noon on the second to last Sunday in February, as a massive snowstorm was getting going along the East Coast, Ryan Hall went live on YouTube.
 
He stayed live for 10 hours, updating the forecast and checking in with storm chasers, officials and viewers. The next morning he was back before 7 a.m. for another full day of live coverage of what he called the “full-dumpage snowicane.”
 
Hall’s channel, Ryan Hall, Y’all, is one of the most popular weather accounts on social media and YouTube, where he has more than 3 million subscribers. It started as a hobby early in the pandemic.   
 
“I didn't think it was going to turn into anything, and here we are, about five years after that,” he said with a laugh, “we took off insanely.”
 
A growing number of degreed meteorologists and self-taught weather enthusiasts are taking that non-traditional path, trying to make a name, and a living, doing the weather on social media. Hall is an outlier — few accounts are as big or bring in as much money as his. But with audiences increasingly turning to social platforms rather than television news for forecasts and weather coverage, many are having success.
 
“I say I took a non-traditional path into meteorology,” Hall said. “And I think it's opened up a door to where this is a real career path now for people who want to get into doing the weather not on TV.”
HEAR MORE
 
ICYMI: Your picks
Here are the stories readers clicked on the most in our Daily Wrap newsletter this week. Sign up to get the latest news and numbers in your inbox every weekday evening.
  • Is the U.S. headed for a repeat of the 1973 oil crisis? (Marketplace)

  • Most and Least Expensive Supermarkets (Consumer Reports)

  • Without Middle East crude, some refineries have to shut down (Marketplace)

  • Airfares are climbing because of the war in the Middle East (Marketplace)

  • The price of eggs is down more than 40% since 2025 (Marketplace)
 
SONG OF THE WEEK
“Lost in the Supermarket” by The Clash
A cover art for
Listen to “Lost in the Supermarket” on YouTube | Apple Music | Spotify

I may be enamored by the local brands and Texas-shaped products at my local supermarket shelves, so let’s balance things out with a song about consumerism and suburban alienation: “I'm all lost in the supermarket / I can no longer shop happily / I came in here for the special offer / A guaranteed personality.” Coincidentally, the song was written in 1979, the year of the second oil crisis when global oil production dropped following the Iranian Revolution. 


This newsletter was written by Elizabeth Trovall and editted by Jon Gordon and Tony Wagner.
 
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