The Connection Between Willie Nelson and Texas Roadhouse Restaurants
Everyone knows about Willie Nelson’s country music legacy, his altruistic endeavors through Farm Aid and other initiatives, as well as his appreciation and advocacy for a certain little green plant. But not enough is made about Willie Nelson the entrepreneur, or Willie Nelson the savvy poker player. Both these things come into play when you ask the question, “Why does every Texas Roadhouse restaurant have a wall, a corner, and/or a booth dedicated to Willie Nelson?”
The easy answer might be that Willie Nelson is synonymous with Texas, and so it makes sense to include an homage to Willie in the restaurant called “Texas Roadhouse.” This is true in itself, but that only tells part of the story. After all, the Texas Roadhouse restaurants aren’t even based in Texas. Their headquarters are in Louisville, Kentucky, and the first ever Texas Roadhouse was opened in a mall in Clarksville, Indiana in 1993.
The founder of Texas Roadhouse restaurants was a guy named Kent Taylor, who was a Kentucky Fried Chicken manager that had a vision for his own restaurant mapped out on the back of napkins that he would pitch to anyone who had money. When he finally convinced a local doctor to forward him $100,000 to start the restaurant, the Texas Roadhouse was born.
After the Indiana location was so well-received, Kent Taylor began expanding the franchise almost immediately, but it still didn’t come to Texas. Instead, the initial expansion happened in Florida. The idea was to give people a taste of Texas outside of the borders of the Lone Star State. There was less of a need to do so in Texas proper.
But 20 years ago today on December 16th, 2004, a Texas Roadhouse was opened in Austin, TX at 9300 South I-35 in the Southpark Meadows development near Slaughter Lane. This one didn’t just include a “Willie Nelson” booth. The franchise is owned (at least partially) by Willie Nelson himself.
The connection between Willie Nelson and Texas Roadhouse founder Kent Taylor has to do with the two’s love for charity giving. Just like Willie, Kent Taylor wanted to use the opportunities bestowed by his success to help others. But it was also their mutual appreciation for poker that stoked their friendship.
Willie’s late night poker tournaments are the stuff of legend, and Kent Taylor is one of the few people Willie would invite into his inner circle to ante up. Other famous names that Willie would regularly run the table on were actors Woody Harrelson and Owen Wilson, former Dallas Mavericks basketball coach Don Nelson (no relation), as well as musicians Jamey Johnson, Jack Johnson, Merle Haggard, and others.
Despite Willie’s kindhearted nature, he’s apparently a ruthless card player. Willie once took Woody Harrelson for $40,000 in just one night, and wouldn’t let him leave until he paid up. One could even surmise that the Willie Nelson-owned Texas Roadhouse in Austin is a payoff for a bad night of blackjack between Kent Taylor and Willie. But in truth, Willie just probably got tired of waiting from Kent Taylor to build one in his back yard, so he took the initiative himself.
Another cool feature of the Texas Roadhouse restaurants is their Artist of the Month initiative. While performers like Silverada, Kaitlin Butts, and Kylie Frey can’t get their music on mainstream country radio, they have enjoyed the benefit of being beamed into the now 655 locations of Texas Roadhouse, including international franchises in Canada, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Philippines, Taiwan, Mexico, China and South Korea.
As many chain restaurants struggle in the post COVID era, Texas Roadhouse has continued to expand, in part due to the continued fascination with Texas culture because of legendary characters such as Willie Nelson. You can consider each franchise sort of like a Texas embassy. Kent Taylor was famous for walking around wearing a pair of fake Willie Nelson braids, which some Texas Roadhouse locations sell along with T-shirts, etc.
Along with each restaurant paying tribute to Willie Nelson, there is also a tribute to Native Americans, as well as homage paid to a local hero, sometimes a sports icon, sometimes a famous first responder. The chain restaurant does its best to import Texas culture, while also keeping a local flavor.
Unfortunately, Texas Roadhouse owner and founder Kent Taylor passed away in 2021 at the age of 65 during the pandemic. In 2020, Taylor donated his entire salary totaling $800,000 to his employees, making him a model of how affluent CEO should handle the mandated COVID-19 shutdowns. But this didn’t keep Taylor from getting COVID himself. The disease resulted in him experiencing severe tinnitus, or ringing in the ears. The noise became so excruciating for Taylor, he ultimately committed suicide.
It was a sad ending to a cool story, and a cool friendship between Willie Nelson and Kent Taylor. But the legacy of Kent, Willie, and Texas live on through the Texas Roadhouse restaurants.
Heyday
December 16, 2024 @ 12:16 pm
I liked dining at Texas Roadhouse when I lived in Springfield, IL. Seemed like they had a decent menu. And their chili had no beans in it so it was actual chili. Stick beans in chili and it is no longer chili. It’s just bean soup.
Trigger
December 16, 2024 @ 12:28 pm
Oh no. Here we go crashing the comments section with another controversial take that will descend into chaos. 🙂
Di Harris
December 16, 2024 @ 1:02 pm
I’ll go 2nd.
1) Beans go in chili.
2) I could kick Willie’s ass in poker.
trevistrat
December 16, 2024 @ 3:59 pm
I shudder to think what you would be doing to take his mind off the cards, Di. 😉
Di Harris
December 16, 2024 @ 7:33 pm
: D I’d be whuppin’ his butt, but good.
My husband Steve, and a bunch of his besties, taught me how to play.
They had a dedicated poker house, cross my heart.
Used to be a radio station, that was across the street from one of the golf courses, in Fort Wayne. Guy named Art ones it.
Had one of those oval poker tables with the green baize(sp?) tops.
We could fit 11 around it, when it came right down to it.
They taught me V E R Y well.
Then would get a little pissy after i cashed in my two racks of chips, and walked out the door, trying very hard not to laugh and smile.
What really irritated them was when guys would come in off the golf course to grab a beer or soda out of the frig., saunter into the “poker room” with the big glass plate window, and see how bad they were getting stomped.
Then someone would stage whisper sing, Luck be a lady tonight …
To ease their pain, I would make cookies, or chocolate mocha frosted brownies, now and then to take to them.
Old Five and Dimer
December 18, 2024 @ 2:37 pm
Nothing controversial here. There arent beans in chili. Its that simple. Only in lesser states (outside Texas) do people pretend their bean soup can pass as chili.
Kevin Smith
December 16, 2024 @ 12:59 pm
I agree that competition chili has no beans, no filler. 100% correct. No argument.
BUT….
Amateurs and restaraunteurs alike sometimes use beans and that is OK. I pride myself on chilimaking and I’ve been known to use pinto beans in it sparingly, mind you, simply because I like them…a lot.
Nonetheless, chili is all about the meat and the sauce. And if I’m gonna make competition chili, then no beans.
Cool background on the Texas Roadhouse connection. At one time I was connected to the Willie Fan club and occasionally they would have meet- ups at various Texas Roadhouses. Was always told he was part owner.
Sofus
December 16, 2024 @ 2:00 pm
What about chili in the bean soup? Is it still a bean soup?
Bull Mason
December 16, 2024 @ 8:38 pm
Tell that to Wendy’s
RD
December 17, 2024 @ 8:45 am
I agree that real chili does not have beans. I have been told by a couple chefs that beans starting to be included in chili during the depression and WWII, due to a lack of meat, in order to make it go further.
Di Harris
December 16, 2024 @ 1:55 pm
Without a doubt, the Best Chili E V E R, made by Carla Hernandez, in Guymon, Oklahoma, during the chili cook off at the hospital.
White chili.
I’d put Carla’s chili up against any chili worldwide.
And that includes Texas Roadhouse chili.
CountryKnight
December 16, 2024 @ 2:42 pm
Hippies love money just as much as anyone else. They just don’t admit it.
Sofus
December 17, 2024 @ 10:59 am
Look at the society those hippes gave us…
CountryKnight
December 17, 2024 @ 3:45 pm
Baby boomers and hippies wrecked a perfectly good society and now lament how it went to hell. They drove the bus down the ditch.
Willie has the right to invest as how he pleases but he is way more corporate than fans like to admit.
Sofus
December 18, 2024 @ 9:37 am
My Dad, who was born in ’45, said he was too busy working for a living to ever become a hippie.
Spoiled, rich kids, he said, a middle class suburban/city phenomena. Nothing the working class could afford.
Trigger
December 18, 2024 @ 9:52 am
“Spoiled, rich kids, he said, a middle class suburban/city phenomena.”
Yes, this perfectly describes the upbringing of Willie Nelson 😀
David:The Duke of Everything
December 16, 2024 @ 4:50 pm
Cool story, wish our ceo would have been so nice. Though he makes far more than 800,000 dollars. Far as chili goes, i prefer beans in chili. The meat in chili is my least favorite part.
Ben Parks
December 16, 2024 @ 4:51 pm
Good article, but what a sad ending for Taylor. My wife had to have surgery in each of her ears to do a bone inside her ears that was calcifying and causing tinnitus. It pretty well cured her, but she still mildly freaks out if she hears a random hum or high-pitched noise until I tell her I hear it too. To bad they couldn’t have done something for him.
Marcus
December 16, 2024 @ 6:48 pm
I didn’t know the CEO had done himself in, very sad.
Sofus
December 17, 2024 @ 11:00 am
Not every CEO are lucky enough to decide for himself when it’s over.
Derrick
December 16, 2024 @ 7:18 pm
Apologies for jumping in on an unrelated article, but any idea what’s going on between Benjamin Tod and Arlo McKinley right now? My Instagram the past few days has been a lot of them taking shots at one another.
Trigger
December 16, 2024 @ 9:35 pm
I’ve honestly been trying to keep my nose out of it, just because it does neither of them any good for the press to get in the middle of it. I am aware of the situation and monitoring it, and if I feel it’s of any benefit, I will report on it.
Sofus
December 17, 2024 @ 11:01 am
Too much time on their hands, too little media attention.
Just my guess.
CountryKnight
December 17, 2024 @ 3:45 pm
Likely a pre-arranged, fabricated brushup.
Jerseyboy
December 18, 2024 @ 6:37 am
There is a good book about the Texas Roadhouse and Kent Taylor, its worth getting and reading!