Categories
Entertainment

Kyle Chrisley Arrested For Assault, Public Intoxication, Disorderly Conduct

Reading Time: 3 minutes

With Todd and Julie Chrisley newly released from federal prison, reality TV’s most problematic family was poised to enjoy a very merry Christmas.

Unfortunately, the couple’s troubled son came along and said, “Hold my eggnog.”

Yes, Kyle Chrisley was arrested in Tennessee on Saturday night, and he’s facing a whole slew of charges.

In this handout photo provided by the Rutherford County Adult Detention Center, Kyle Chrisley is seen in a police booking photo at the Rutherford County Adult Detention Center after his arrest by the Smyrna, Tennessee Police Department on charges for aggravated assault on March 14, 2023 in Murfreesboro, Tennessee.
In this handout photo provided by the Rutherford County Adult Detention Center, Kyle Chrisley is seen in a police booking photo at the Rutherford County Adult Detention Center after his arrest by the Smyrna, Tennessee Police Department on charges for aggravated assault on March 14, 2023 in Murfreesboro, Tennessee. (Photo by Rutherford County Adult Detention Center via Getty Images)

Kyle Chrisley’s legal woes continue

According to a report from TMZ, Kyle was picked up by the Rutherford County Sheriff’s Department on Saturday night around 7 pm.

He was booked into the Rutherford County Adult Detention Center later that night.

Kyle is being charged with domestic assault, public intoxication, disorderly conduct, three charges for assaulting a first responder, and resisting arrest.

He’s also facing three charges for retaliation for past actions, which means that he may have harmed or threatened someone as an act of retaliation.

The mug shot of Todd Chrisley's son, Kyle.
The mug shot of Todd Chrisley’s son, Kyle. (Rutherford County Sheriff Office)

If you’ve been gawking at the trainwreck Chrisley family for any length of time, then you probably know that this is not the 34-year-old’s first brush with the law.

Chrisley was arrested for aggravated assault in March of 2023.

And in September of last year, Kyle was arrested for allegedly stabbing a man.

He later filed a $1.7 million lawsuit against Rutherford County and two sheriff deputies, alleging that he had been wrongly arrested.

Needless to say, 2025 has been a bit of a mixed bag for the Chrisley family.

Julie Chrisley (L) and Todd Chrisley attend the grand opening of E3 Chophouse Nashville on November 20, 2019 in Nashville, Tennessee.
Julie Chrisley (L) and Todd Chrisley attend the grand opening of E3 Chophouse Nashville on November 20, 2019 in Nashville, Tennessee. (Photo by Danielle Del Valle/Getty Images for E3 Chophouse Nashville)

In May, Todd and Julie were both unexpectedly sprung from jail after being pardoned by Donald Trump on bank fraud and tax evasion charges.

This would have been the family’s first Christmas together since 2022, but given the length of his rap sheet, it’s likely that Kyle will be denied bail.

Todd previously revealed that Kyle has been diagnosed with bipolar disorder and PTSD and “will struggle for life.”

In 2019, Kyle tried to take his own life after suffering a bad reaction to psych meds.

“I take medication and I had a bad side effect to it, and I tried to take my own life,” he shared on an episode of the “Chrisley Confessions” podcast (via Page Six). “With the meds, I got all kinds of crazy thinking going on.”

We will have further updates on this developing story as new information becomes available.

Kyle Chrisley Arrested For Assault, Public Intoxication, Disorderly Conduct was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

Categories
Entertainment

James Ransone Cause of Death: ‘The Wire,’ ‘It’ Star Passes Away …

Reading Time: 2 minutes

We have tragic news to report out of Hollywood this evening.

Actor James Ransone — who was best known for his role on the acclaimed HBO series The Wire — has passed away.

He was just 46 years old.

US actor James Ransone arrives for the World premiere of "It Chapter Two" at the Regency Village theatre in Westwood, California on August 26, 2019.
US actor James Ransone arrives for the World premiere of “It Chapter Two” at the Regency Village theatre in Westwood, California on August 26, 2019. (ROBYN BECK/AFP via Getty Images)

News of Ransone’s death comes courtesy of a report from the Los Angeles County Medical Examiner’s Office.

According to the report, the cause of Ransone’s passing was suicide by hanging.

Ransone has long been open about his battles with substance abuse and mental illness.

Earlier this week, his wife, Jamie McPhee, posted a link to a fundraiser for the National Alliance for Mental Health, an organization that was reportedly close to James’ heart.

The couple had two children together.

James Ransone attends the Premiere Of Warner Bros. Pictures' "It Chapter Two" at Regency Village Theatre on August 26, 2019 in Westwood, California.
James Ransone attends the Premiere Of Warner Bros. Pictures’ “It Chapter Two” at Regency Village Theatre on August 26, 2019 in Westwood, California. (Photo by Jon Kopaloff/Getty Images,)

Ransone had dozens of TV and film credits to his name, but he is likely best remembered for portraying Ziggy Sobotka, the son of Chris Bauer’s Frank Sobotka, on the second season of The Wire.

In more recent years, Ransone starred in a wide array of popular films, including Prom Night, Sinister, Sinister 2, Tangerine, Mr. Right, It Chapter Two, The Black Phone, and this year’s Black Phone 2.

Ransone spoke publicly about his personal struggles

Admirably candid about his private challenges, Ransone admitted to battling heroin addiction, but reported that he had been sober since 2007.

Actor James Ransone attends the 2016 Film Independent Spirit Awards on February 27, 2016 in Santa Monica, California.
Actor James Ransone attends the 2016 Film Independent Spirit Awards on February 27, 2016 in Santa Monica, California. (Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images)

In 2021, Ransone alleged that his former tutor, Timothy Rualo, sexually abused him numerous times at his childhood home in Maryland in 1992.

“We did very little math,” Ransone recalled (per The New York Post), adding:

“The strongest memory I have of the abuse was washing blood and feces out of my sheets after you left. I remember doing this as a 12 year old because I was too ashamed to tell anyone.”

Ransone alleged that the abuse led to a “lifetime of shame and embarrassment” that propelled him to drug and alcohol abuse.

Our thoughts go out to James Ransone’s loved ones during this incredibly difficult time.

James Ransone Cause of Death: ‘The Wire,’ ‘It’ Star Passes Away … was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

Categories
Politics

Vance tries to weather the MAGA storm at Turning Point

PHOENIX — After three straight days of MAGA infighting here at Turning Point’s AmericaFest, top Republicans — including Vice President JD Vance — tried to find agreement on Sunday afternoon, shifting their focus to countering the opposition.

“President Trump did not build the greatest coalition in politics by running his supporters through endless, self-defeating purity tests,” Vance told the crowd to loud applause, adding later: “We have far more important work to do than canceling each other.”

In his speech, Vance ripped into “far left” Democrats, casting their policies as toxic to Americans and blaming them for Charlie Kirk’s September killing, which has loomed large over the gathering. He touted the Trump administration’s policies on immigration, vaccines and transgender issues, while calling for the crowd to engage ahead of next year’s midterms.

“If you miss Charlie Kirk, do you promise to fight what he died for? Do you promise to take the country back from the people who took his life?” Vance asked the crowd.

His speech at the Phoenix Convention Center is the culmination of a weekend-long festival for 30,000 of President Donald Trump’s most ardent supporters. But until Sunday, much of the weekend was clouded by an intra-party schism that kicked off during night one on Thursday, when conservative commentator Ben Shapiro ripped into a number of fellow MAGA-verse influencers, especially Tucker Carlson, Candace Owens and Steve Bannon.

“The conservative movement is in serious danger,” Shapiro said, especially from some “charlatans who claim to speak in the name of principle but actually traffic in conspiracism and dishonesty.”

Those themes carried through on Friday and Saturday, with presidential-hopeful turned Ohio GOP gubernatorial candidate Vivek Ramaswamy casting the moment as “a time for choosing in the conservative movement.”

Like Shapiro, Ramasawamy focused significant time on Carlson and his interview with far-right influencer and Holocaust denier Nick Fuentes, listing some of his most inflammatory remarks and saying they “have no place in this movement.”

Then, Bannon hit the stage and reversed course, comparing Shapiro to a “a cancer, and that cancer spreads.”

“Ben Shapiro is the farthest thing from MAGA,” Bannon told the crowd.

The sold-out annual meeting is the group’s first since founder Charlie Kirk was gunned down in September. It has featured a broad array of figures from within the conservative movement, including top commentators, elected officials, candidates and religious leaders, culminating with Vance and Speaker Mike Johnson on Sunday.

Johnson called the weekend an “epic and faithful battle that truly will determine the future of our great republic” while stressing the importance of keeping control of the House ahead of next year’s midterms.

Vance also spent much of his speech talking about the midterms, bashing Democratic Senate candidates Graham Platner of Maine and Jasmine Crockett of Texas, who are both running in competitive primaries.

“We are gonna kick their ass next November,” Vance said of Democrats as the crowd immediately burst into “USA” chants. Outside of Johnson and Vance, a number of other speakers on Sunday sought to bridge the divisions that emerged in the prior days.

“I choose to build a movement, be part of a movement, that stands on principle, on strength, that loves the people in the movement, even sometimes when they piss you off,” said Rep. Byron Donalds (R-Fla.), who is running for governor. “You can’t form a winning unit if you can’t stay focused on the mission at hand.”

Donald Trump Jr. also sought to shift the focus to Democrats.

“The real enemy? It’s not Steve Bannon or Tucker Carlson or Ben Shapiro, it’s the radical left that murdered Charlie and celebrated it on a daily basis,” Trump Jr. told the crowd.

The political beliefs of alleged Kirk shooter Tyler Robinson, who is facing multiple charges including aggravated murder, aren’t easily defined.

​Politics

Categories
Politics

Democrats are united in bashing GOP on Obamacare. Medicare for All could reopen a rift.

Progressives are pushing Medicare for All in some of the Democratic Party’s most competitive Senate primaries next year, threatening the unity the party has found on attacking Republicans over expiring Obamacare subsidies.

In Maine, Graham Platner said he’s making Medicare for All a “core part” of his platform in his race against Gov. Janet Mills, the establishment pick who’s called for a universal health care program. In Illinois, Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton and Rep. Robin Kelly are both championing the concept — and calling out rival Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi for not fully embracing it.

In Minnesota, Medicare for All has emerged as a key distinction between progressive Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan and moderate Rep. Angie Craig, who supports adding a public option to the Affordable Care Act rather than Medicare for All. Flanagan said she “absolutely” expects the policy to define the primary because “it doesn’t matter if I’m in the urban core, the suburbs or greater Minnesota — when I say I’m a supporter of Medicare for All, the room erupts.”

And it’s become a flashpoint in Michigan, where physician Abdul El-Sayed, who wrote a book called Medicare for All: A Citizen’s Guide, is using his signature issue to draw a contrast with Rep. Haley Stevens and state Sen. Mallory McMorrow, who favor other approaches.

Medicare for All — government-funded health coverage for every American — is “where we need to point to,” El-Sayed said in an interview. “And I think you can galvanize a winning coalition around this issue.”

But some more moderate Democrats worry that progressives’ renewed push for Medicare for All would undermine the party’s recent united front in fighting for an extension of the Obamacare subsidies that are set to expire at the end of the year, leading to a significant spike in insurance costs for millions of Americans. Their effort initially failed in the Senate, but with the help of four vulnerable Republicans who crossed party lines this week, Democrats have now secured a House vote on an extension in January.

“We have a singular message, which is: ‘Don’t let these tax credits go.’ We have Republicans on the ropes,” said a national Democratic strategist who works on Senate races and was granted anonymity to speak candidly. “I don’t think introducing ‘we need MFA’ is the right strategy right now. I think it would be unhelpful.”

Several Democratic consultants pointed to recent public polling showing Americans like having individual insurance coverage, despite being dissatisfied with health care companies. An NBC News poll found 82 percent of Americans were satisfied with their plans, both private and government-sponsored. Based on that data, these consultants said allowing Americans to buy into a government-offered plan, known as a “public option,” is more politically palatable.

Centrists have long dismissed Medicare for All as both a policy pipedream and political albatross for their party — a rallying cry for the left that serves as catnip for Republican admakers looking to broad brush Democrats as socialists. They argue that surveys often fail to present voters with the full picture of how Medicare for All would work, and therefore fail to capture its electoral toxicity.

“What we need to accept is there’s a deeply held skepticism among Americans about going zero to 60 that’s entirely government run, even though they don’t love the current system,” said Adam Jentleson, a Democratic strategist and president of the Searchlight Institute. “In isolation, this thing does okay. But it’s not how it plays out in real life, and the totality will crush us.”

The once-fringe policy that Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) mainstreamed during his presidential campaigns has become a rallying cry for his favored candidates and other progressives across battleground primaries, as Democrats work to make health care costs central to next year’s midterms and as the party base clamors for fighters willing to disrupt the status quo. The push for Medicare for All, which receded during the more moderate Biden era, comes as Democrats have otherwise been unified on their health care messaging, forcing Republicans onto defense over their refusal to extend expiring Affordable Care Act subsidies.

“Do I think every single swing-seat candidate is going to come out for Medicare for All? No,” said Jess Morales Rocketto, a Democratic strategist and board member for the nonprofit Care in Action. “But if you want to signal that you’re unafraid and bold right now, and you want to say you’re not beholden to the status quo, it’s a perfect position for that.”

Progressives are emboldened by partisan and independent polling that shows most Democrats and a majority of independents support Medicare for All. A recent survey commissioned by Rep. Pramila Jayapal’s (D-Wash.) leadership PAC and first reported by POLITICO showed 90 percent of Democrats back Medicare for All and found most independents and one in five Republicans back a “government-provided system.”

Jayapal, the former chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, plans to push her colleagues to start promoting Medicare for All again in the new year. She predicted in an interview that support for the system will be a “defining factor” in the party’s primaries next year and an electoral winner in battleground House seats.

But proponents of Medicare for All argue that a government-provided system would lessen the pinch of rising health care costs. They say pushing to extend the ACA subsidies and promoting Medicare for All as an end goal are not mutually exclusive. And they point to several 2018 candidates who won tough seats while supporting the measure, including former Rep. Katie Porter in California to retiring Rep. Jared Golden of Maine.

“You can know that there are short-term stopgaps that must be taken to protect working people while also thinking that long term, we need a better system,” said Platner, who is vying against Mills to unseat GOP Sen. Susan Collins in Maine.

Platner has been extolling Medicare for All from the start of his campaign and said it gets the “most raucous” response at his events across Maine, where a recent Pan Atlantic Research poll found 63 percent support for the system (and Platner trailing Mills by 10 points).

He argued in an interview that Mills isn’t as steadfast in her support for the concept because she “doesn’t talk about it all that often” and uses “vague language” when she does. Mills has said “it is time” for universal health care and that she’s “committed to finding a way to get there” if elected. Her campaign echoed that sentiment in response to a request for comment for this story, and cited her efforts to expand Mainers access to Medicaid.

In Minnesota, Flanagan said embracing Medicare for All has been a “journey” during her Senate campaign, as she heard from Minnesotans that the “cost of health care is the thing that comes over and over and over again.” Of Craig’s support for a public option, Flanagan said voters don’t want a nominee who “nibbles around the edges” instead of being “bold and audacious.”

Craig calls the public option a “big, bold reform,” but emphasizes that it’s a policy “we could actually accomplish in this country in a fairly short time period,” she said in a video this week.

In Illinois, Stratton and Kelly, two of the three leading Democrats vying to replace retiring Sen. Dick Durbin, are jockeying for position as Medicare for All’s biggest champion in the race while their campaigns knock Krishnamoorthi for couching his support for the system. Krishnamoorthi said in a statement that while it’s “a noble goal, and I’m fighting to get us to universal coverage” his focus is on extending the ACA subsidies and reversing Republicans’ cuts to Medicaid.

And in Michigan, El-Sayed has slammed McMorrow’s call for universal health care with a public option as “incoherent” and ill-informed as the two compete for the same slice of progressive voters. McMorrow has knocked the idea of a single-payer system run by President Donald Trump and his controversial health secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. And she’s promoted a public option so people who like their private insurance can keep it. Stevens’ campaign says she supports strengthening Obamacare, including through a public option, without endorsing Medicare for All.

The issue is also becoming a flashpoint in Democratic primaries for some of the most competitive House seats in the country, driven in part by Sanders-backed candidates running from California’s Central Valley to Pennsylvania’s Lehigh Valley.

“There’s immense hostility and anger toward the way the insurance industry functions, doubled up with health care itself being one of the biggest affordability issues,” said Mark Longabaugh, a progressive strategist who worked on Sanders’ 2016 presidential bid. “Progressives are smart to push the case.”

​Politics

Categories
Health

Donald Trump’s Snacking Habits On Air Force One Are As Unhealthy As His Daily Diet

While Donald Trump’s unhealthy eating habits are no secret, a photo shared by son Eric reveals that his snacks aboard Air Force One are just as bad.

​Health Digest – Health News, Wellness, Expert Insights

Categories
Health

Brendan Fraser’s Health Took A Beating Due To His Commitment To Doing His Own Stunts

“The Rental” actor Brendan Fraser says he took a beating early in his career due his commitment to doing his own stunts. Has his attitude changed?

​Health Digest – Health News, Wellness, Expert Insights

Categories
Entertainment

5 Creative Ways To Make The Most Of Cheap Bourbon

Find out how to transform cheap bourbon with smart, creative tips that make budget bottles work beautifully in cocktails, savory dishes, and desserts.

​Mashed – Fast Food, Celebrity Chefs, Grocery, Reviews

Categories
Entertainment

We Tried 8 Ways To Make Broccoli, Here’s How They Ranked

From air frying to grilling, there are so many different ways to prepare broccoli, but which one steals the show? We tried them to find out.

​Mashed – Fast Food, Celebrity Chefs, Grocery, Reviews

Categories
Entertainment

Martha Stewart Gets Rid Of Nasty Odors With This Unexpected Liquid

Martha Stewart has endless household tips. No store-bought air freshener will do for the domestic diva. She makes her own. And you can, too!

​Mashed – Fast Food, Celebrity Chefs, Grocery, Reviews

Categories
Entertainment

This Is Hands Down The Best Grocery Store Italian Dressing

Dressings are a huge part of many salad lovers’ diets, so getting your hands on the best grocery store Italian dressing is quite important, and this is it.

​Mashed – Fast Food, Celebrity Chefs, Grocery, Reviews