Online food influencers face heightened scrutiny over their relationships with restaurants

In a city with as rich a culinary scene as San Antonio, someone need not spend long scrolling on their phone, tablet or computer before landing on a feed full of beautiful food photos. What's not so prevalent is any kind of disclosure whether the online influencer posting the images got a free meal in exchange for sharing them — or even whether they received cash for creating the content.
Recent Posts

REALTORS® Help You Bring It Home

Better Understand Your Listing Options When You Sell

Giant cookies are the rage. We tried San Antonio bakeries and chains to see if bigger is really better.

'It's about censorship, erasure and control': The GOP's push for parental rights

New Tex-Mex restaurant taking over former Don Adolfo’s Bar and Grill space in North San Antonio

Attorney General Ken Paxton’s former aides win $6.6 million in whistleblower case

Texas craft brewers lobby for state bills that would let them deliver to customers, incentivize grain donation

Texas Attorney General sues San Antonio to stop it from paying for out-of-state abortion travel

Texas measles cases jump to 481 as hospitalizations continue to rise

Homegrown San Antonio sando shop Wicked Wich teases new location
"My job is to find and attract mastery-based agents to the office, protect the culture, and make sure everyone is happy! "