2025 McAllen Parade: A Night of Community, Celebration, and Coming Full Circle

It had been a long time since I’d been on the ground covering the Official McAllen Parade, so when I was invited back to work with the City of McAllen, I wasn’t quite sure what to expect I just knew it was getting bigger and bigger every year.

I’ll be honest—while I still love events, I don’t attend them the way I used to. My kids aren’t as young anymore, and life after the pandemic has shifted the way I do things. But wow—McAllen went all out for the 2025 parade.

From the moment things got rolling, it was clear this wasn’t just another holiday event. The streets were packed. There were balloons everywhere, beautifully designed floats, and a level of detail that showed how much care the city put into every element. Each float felt intentional—unique, thoughtful, and built to be experienced by the crowd, not just passed by.

One unexpected highlight for me was getting the chance to meet Danny Trejo. I almost never take photos with celebrities—an old 90s news director drilled that rule into me years ago—but let’s be real… when else am I going to run into Danny Trejo at work? We talked for a little bit about his charities, snapped a photo, and he was genuinely kind and down-to-earth. A small moment, but a memorable one.

May be an image of the Statue of Liberty and text

The media presence alone said a lot about the scale of the event. Multiple stations were set up across different locations, each network covering their own angle of the parade. I worked primarily around the McAllen Stadium area, and even there, the crowd was thick—families packed in, waiting, watching, celebrating.

One of my favorite details wasn’t visual at all—it was sounds! Hearing the crowd chant “¡Vuelta! ¡Vuelta!” at the larger floats never gets old. And when a float couldn’t pull off the turn, you could hear the playful disappointment ripple through the crowd. Still, watching the teams maneuver those massive floats gave me a new appreciation for how difficult that job really is. They tried their best, and it showed.

Of course, the biggest reaction of the night belonged to Santa himself. Kids lit up when he appeared, and that energy carried through the rest of the parade. Between the soap snow, kids cheering for their favorite Dallas Cowboys players rolling by on floats, and families hanging out together enjoying it all —it was one of those nights where the city felt fully alive. Felt good to be a photographer.

For me, personally, one of the best parts was reconnecting. Saying hello to friends I hadn’t seen in a while. Catching up, even briefly. That’s become a recurring theme in my journal and in these posts. Since the pandemic, I don’t get out as much, so moments like this feel like a gift—a reminder of how important community still is.

Covering the 2025 McAllen Parade wasn’t just about documenting an event. It felt like coming full circle. A chance to witness McAllen at its best, surrounded by people celebrating together, and to be reminded why I fell in love with storytelling in the first place.