B E A D I N G D R E A M S seriously unique beads WE ARE OPEN MON - SAT: 1PM-6PM! WE’RE STILL LIVE STREAMING CLASSES AT TWITCH.TV/BEADINGDREAM Make sure To foLLoW us on facebook (beaDingDreaMs) or insTagraM (beaDingDreaMs) for The MosT up To DaTe currenT open scheDuLe! 214.366.1112 • beadingdreams.com 5629 W. Lovers Ln • Dallas, TX Speaking of books, Ryan again took to TikTok last month and quite surprisingly quoted feminist-and-eroticist-essayist-and- author Anaïs Nin. First, Ryan bemoaned haters who project their “own inner ick” onto others. Haters, you see, can’t stand to see you succeed. “And just like Anna-Naïs Nin says, ‘peo- ple see you as they are, not how you are,’” Ryan continues, adding an extra syllable to Nin’s first name. “And so these haters see you like they are, and they think you’re like them. And they can’t deal with their own bad stuff and then so what they’re doing is they’re projecting it on you and they’re blowing you up and they’re hating on you and calling you names and mentally they’re just messed up and so they’re projecting onto you what they are.” Spoken like a true literary genius. Nin would be proud. ▼ HISTORY LANDMARK LOSING HQ L PRIDE THE WEST DALLAS COMMUNITY LOST THE CLYDE BARROW FILLING STATION TO A DEMOLITION. BY JACOB VAUGHN ast week, a property formerly owned by the family of outlaw Clyde Barrow was demolished. The plan to tear it down began in 2020 and when it was done, the Barrow filling station in West Dallas was reduced to rubble and the remains were taken to the landfill. Barrow’s father, Henry, moved his house from Muncie Avenue to a property on what was then called Eagle Ford Road. The street is now Singleton Boulevard. He’d later add more to the building, turning part of it into a gas service station. Clyde Barrow lived in the house when it was still on Mun- cie Avenue. While he traveled state to state on a crime Unique Clothing, Costumes, Lingerie, Rave Wear, Swimwear, Shoes & More! 2152 W. Northwest Highway, Suite 100 972-402-8208 • electriqueboutique.com spree with Bonnie Parker, Clyde Barrow’s family was running the filling station, ac- cording to Oak Cliff Advocate. The location seemed to become a target for some time after Parker and Clyde Bar- row were killed in 1934. In 1938, there was a fire at the business, which the Barrow family suspected was an attack. Just a few months later, two members of the Barrow family were shot by West Dallas gunrun- ner Baldy Whatley, a former member of the Barrow gang. The month after the shooting, the station was fire bombed twice. None of this, including the 13 murders Bonnie and Clyde were accused of, is history that should be celebrated, according to Brent Jackson, the current owner of the property. Jackson is the founder and presi- dent of the real estate development com- pany Oaxaca Interests. He didn’t respond to multiple requests for comment. “He did murder a number of first re- sponders,” Jackson said of Clyde Barrow during a March 2020 Landmark Commission meeting. “The guy murdered multiple multiple multiple people.” But some West Dallas residents argued to the Landmark Commission at the time that the building should be protected with a landmark designation. SATURDAY IN MAY EVERY FROM 10:00AM - 2:00PM LOCAL SHOPPING | LIVE MUSIC KID AND PET FRIENDLY | BEER GARDEN 5670 VILLAGE GLEN DR DALLAS, TEXAS 75206 THEVILLA GED ALLA S. COM/EVENT S 7 Celebrate Mother’s Day with the Giſt of Beauty overset Shop with us May 1-8 and receive 20% off Avalon Giſt Cards www.avalon-salon.com West Village 214-750-5667 DIGITAL MARKETING ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE INTERESTED CANDIDATES PLEASE SEND YOUR COVER LETTER AND RESUME TO CHARLIE.DONDLINGER@ DALLASOBSERVER.COM dallasobserver.com CLASSIFIED | MUSIC | DISH | CULTURE | UNFAIR PARK | CONTENTS DALLAS OBSERVER MAY 5–11, 2022