Check out the outflow boundary blasting out of the back of the storms that are ongoing in the far eastern sections of the Metroplex. The storms to the east fired on a similar boundary, so why are there no storms forming on this new one? Two main reasons: (1) This new boundary is pushing into a region where the air overhead is sinking, so even though clouds are trying to tower up along the boundary, they are getting smashed back down again by the subsiding air; (2) The boundary is moving fast, and behind the boundary the air is cool. So even though clouds are trying to form, they quickly start to ingest the rain-cooled air which makes them want to fall back down. Clouds build high into the sky and turn into thunderstorms more efficiently when it is warm near ground level. They don't like it when the ground has been cooled. Ever try to fly high in a cold-air balloon?
The storms out there now should fade as the sun goes down.
I wish I knew how to link the video he posted on his facebook. I don't though. Go check out his fb page if you want to see the radar video he is discussing. https://www.facebook.com/wfaa.steve.mccauley?fref=nf