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The Microwave Snack Jason Segel Ate Every 3 Hours To Bulk Up For A Role

Actors are sometimes tasked with pulling off major weight changes in short periods of time, and they go about it in different ways. Here’s what Jason Segel did.

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

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Entertainment

Is This $6 NYX Lip Liner a Pillow Talk Lookalike? Reviewers Say So

nyxdupe thumbnail.jpg
We all know and love Charlotte Tilbury’s Pillow Talk lip liner. It’s the viral lip liner that took the beauty world by storm years ago and still reigns supreme. She’s an icon, she’s a legend, and…
​E! Online (US) – Top Stories

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Entertainment

Erika Kirk Launches Tour Amid Protests, Ongoing Clothing Controversy

Reading Time: 3 minutes

In the months since her husband, Charlie Kirk, was shot and killed, Erika Kirk has been just about everywhere.

And if you thought she might cool it with the media appearances and focus on other matters in 2026, you’ve got another thing coming.

Erika launched her 30-city “Make Heaven Crowded” tour in Los Angeles on Wednesday, and as usual, she’s courting controversy everywhere she goes.

Erika Kirk interviews surprise guest Nicki Minaj on the final day of Turning Point USA's annual AmericaFest conference at the Phoenix Convention Center on December 21, 2025 in Phoenix, Arizona.
Erika Kirk interviews surprise guest Nicki Minaj on the final day of Turning Point USA’s annual AmericaFest conference at the Phoenix Convention Center on December 21, 2025 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Caylo Seals/Getty Images)

According to a report from CBS News’ Los Angeles affiliate, dozens of protesters gathered outside of the city’s Harvest Church to convey their disapproval of Kirk’s message.

Undeterred, Kirk took the stage to deliver her signature brand of combative rhetoric.

Her first targets were Jimmy Kimmel and Rachel Maddow, both of whom have been highly critical of Donald Trump during his second term in office.

“I can’t even believe I’m saying their names in a church,” Kirk jokingly told the crowd (via Fox News).

She later turned her sights on the Washington Post, who recently critiqued Kirk’s style in their fashion section.

Turning Point USA CEO Erika Kirk, widow of right-wing political activist Charlie Kirk, speaks during Turning Point's annual AmericaFest conference in Phoenix, Arizona on December 18, 2025.
Turning Point USA CEO Erika Kirk, widow of right-wing political activist Charlie Kirk, speaks during Turning Point’s annual AmericaFest conference in Phoenix, Arizona on December 18, 2025. (Photo by Olivier Touron / AFP via Getty Images)

“Kirk, a mother to two toddlers, continues to take on public-facing leadership duties while promoting traditional ideas about prioritizing marriage and motherhood, and her clothes are attempting to walk the same high wire … her styling of late suggests that she’s aware that she now needs to be able to blend into mainstream, secular, political contexts well enough to be taken seriously — but not so well as to be mistaken for a career woman or a feminist,” wrote Post fashion writer Ashley Fetters Maloy.

Clearly, those comments stuck with Erika.

“I mean, for example, I had a Washington Post article come out about the clothes that I wear. Like, very slow news day out there,” Kirk told her audience on Wednesday.

“If you are now attacking a widow’s attire, like, that’s where we’re at.”

But Kirk wasn’t done yet. She continued to lash out at the Post

“If you would like to know, Washington Post, I’m wearing a black outfit with a pair of Air Forces because I’m a sneakerhead,” she said, adding:

Erika Kirk discusses the newly released book "Stop, In The Name of God: Why Honoring The Sabbath Will Transform Your Life" on "Hannity" at Fox News Channel Studios on December 08, 2025 in New York City.
Erika Kirk discusses the newly released book “Stop, In The Name of God: Why Honoring The Sabbath Will Transform Your Life” on “Hannity” at Fox News Channel Studios on December 08, 2025 in New York City. (Photo by Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images)

“So if you would like to know what I’m wearing, you can call me, and I’d be happy to explain that I just wear what I wear because it’s comfortable. I don’t have a stylist. Like, I don’t really care. I just am myself.”

Kirk continued by hurling a Gen-Z insult at the newspaper.

“Go touch grass. Go walk in nature. Charlie loved to hike. Like, maybe take up hiking as a hobby? Just throwing it out there,” she said.

Again, the article in question appeared in the Post‘s fashion section, so it’s not all that outrageous that it focused on Erika’s clothing.

And while it’s certainly true that it’s only been a few months since her husband was murdered, if Erika wants to continue to climb the ladder of fame, she might want to stop resorting to the grieving widow defense every time she receives some mild criticism.

Erika Kirk Launches Tour Amid Protests, Ongoing Clothing Controversy was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Entertainment

Christina Aguilera & Matthew Rutler Have Rare Date Night in Paris

Christina Aguilera, Matthew Rutler
Christina Aguilera is soaking up the City of Love with her man by her side.
The “Beautiful” singer made a rare outing with fiancé Matthew Rutler for a date night in Paris on Jan. 22.
The couple…
​E! Online (US) – Top Stories

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Entertainment

Dakota Johnson & Role Model GLOW After Apparent Dinner Date

Reading Time: 3 minutes

Last year, Dakota Johnson split with Coldplay frontman, Chris Martin.

That relationship may have ended, but she’s still feeling the music.

The nepo baby actress’ new man is reportedly someone a whopping 20 years younger than her ex.

Good for her!

Dakota Johnson at a deservedly controversial film festival in December 2025.
Dakota Johnson speaks onstage during the In Conversation with Dakota Johnson during the Red Sea International Film Festival 2025 on December 05, 2025. (Photo Credit: Tim P. Whitby/Getty Images for The Red Sea International Film Festival)

Good for them!

TMZ reports that Johnson and Role Model dined together at a trendy restaurants in Los Angeles on Thursday, January 22.

It was not just the two of them — another friend was reportedly present.

Both appeared to be beaming.

Johnson is described as having talked animatedly during the meal.

But why do people take that as a relationship launch? Well …

The same report details that Johnson and Role Model also engaged in some hand-holding.

Cute!

This was not in the restaurant itself, but only after they took to the street.

Johnson appeared totally enamored, with a massive smile on her face.

This is not even their first get-together with romantic vibes.

Dakota Johnson n December 2025.
Dakota Johnson attends The Hollywood Reporter’s annual Women in Entertainment Gala at The Beverly Hills Hotel on December 03, 2025. (Photo Credit: Amy Sussman/Getty Images)

How long has this been going on?

According to TMZ, Johnson and Role Model also shared a cozy candlelight dinner back in December.

Even then, they were not alone.

The two dined with friends.

However, eyewitnesses described the actress as cuddly with him, even “lying on him” (more or less).

That admittedly sounds very cute. And if they’re doing on (alleged) friend dates, then they have more in common than just mutual interest.

Role Model in June 2025.
ROLE MODEL performs during MoMA’s Party In The Garden 2025 at Museum of Modern Art on June 03, 2025. (Photo Credit: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for MoMA)

As we acknowledged, Johnson had been in a relationship with Chris Martin until last year.

That was a long-term romance.

Meanwhile, Role Model was in a romance with influencer Emma Chamberlain for three years until their own breakup.

(His 2024 album, “Kansas Anymore,” is believed to be about their split)

Sometimes, people just rebound. Other times, however, two people are single at just the right time to build something new that lasts.

Dakota Johnson in December 2025, smiling.
Dakota Johnson attends the In Conversation with Dakota Johnson during the Red Sea International Film Festival 2025 on December 05, 2025. (Photo Credit: Tim P. Whitby/Getty Images for The Red Sea International Film Festival)

Who is Role Model?

Role Model, whose name is often stylized in all caps, is a singer-songwriter and a former rapper.

He launched his music career as Tucker (his full birth name is Tucker Harrington Pillsbury).

As Role Model, he has seen a fair amount of growing success over the past several years.

Notably, Chris Martin was born in 1977. Role Model was born in 1997.

Some would say that Johnson, born in 1989, has upgraded. But please don’t call her a cougar. They’re not even a decade apart.

Dakota Johnson & Role Model GLOW After Apparent Dinner Date was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Music

Grand Ole Opry Cancels All Saturday Night Show Tickets

All tickets for Saturday night at the Opry will be refunded. Continue reading…​The Boot – Country Music News, Music Videos and Songs

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Music

Grand Ole Opry Cancels All Saturday Night Show Tickets

All tickets for Saturday night at the Opry will be refunded. Continue reading…​Country Music News – Taste of Country

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Food

The Retro Sandwich That Was The Star Of Picnics In The 1950s

Back in the 1950s, picnics were all the rage, and this one stunning sandwich (which we think deserves a comeback) was one of the most popular items.

​Food Republic – Restaurants, Reviews, Recipes, Cooking Tips

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ICE immigration tactics are shocking more Americans as US-Mexico border operations move north

Federal agents deploy tear gas as residents protest a federal agent-involved shooting during an immigration enforcement operation in Minneapolis, Minn., on Jan. 14, 2026. Madison Thorn/Anadolu via Getty Images

Over the past year, images of masked, heavily armed Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents arresting men, women and children – outside of courts, at schools and homes – have become common across the United States.

The video of an ICE agent shooting and killing Renee Nicole Good – a U.S. citizen – in Minnesota on Jan. 7, 2026, is one example of the brazen, sometimes deadly tactics that the agency employs.

Part of the reason why recent ICE tactics have shocked Americans is because most people haven’t seen them before. Historically, the country’s militarized immigration enforcement practices have played out closer to the U.S.-Mexico border. And for decades, agents with Customs and Border Protection have carried out most deportations near the border, not ICE.

From 2010-2020, nearly 80% of all deportations were initiated at or near the U.S.-Mexico border. During the COVID-19 pandemic, that number jumped to 98%, as both the Trump and Biden administrations utilized Title 42, a public health statute that allowed the government to rapidly deport recently arrived migrants.

But Trump during his second presidency has greatly shifted immigration enforcement north into the interior of the U.S. And ICE has played a central role.

As international migration and human rights scholars, we have examined recent federal immigration policy to determine why ICE has become the main agency detaining and deporting migrants as far away from the southern border as snowy Minnesota.

And we have also explored how the transition in immigration control from the southern border to more Americans’ front lawns could be shifting the public’s views on deportation tactics.

Migration as a threat

ICE is a relatively new agency. The 2002 Homeland Security Act, passed in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, created the Department of Homeland Security, known as DHS, by merging the U.S. Customs Service – previously under Treasury Department control – and the Immigration and Naturalization Service, formerly under the Justice Department.

DHS has 22 agencies, including three that focus on immigration: Customs and Border Protection, ICE and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, which manages legal immigration and naturalization.

Agents dressed in military gear confront protestors.
Federal law enforcement agents confront anti-ICE protesters outside the Bishop Whipple Federal Building in Minneapolis on Jan. 15, 2026.
Octavio Jones/AFP via Getty Images

There is no inherent reason that immigration enforcement should fall under homeland security. But immigration was deemed a national security matter by the George W. Bush administration after 9/11.

In a 2002 presidential briefing justifying DHS’s creation, Bush said, “The changing nature of the threats facing America requires a new government structure to protect against invisible enemies that can strike with a wide variety of weapons.”

The U.S. government has viewed immigration from this national security perspective ever since.

The full impact of the deportations

The Trump administration in early 2025 set a goal of deporting 1 million people during its first year.

But with so few crossings, and thus deportations, at the U.S.-Mexico border, the administration instead has focused its efforts on the U.S. interior.

Trump’s 2025 tax and budget bill reflected this reprioritization, allocating US$170 billion over four years to immigration enforcement, compared to approximately $30 billion allocated in 2024.

Roughly $67 billion goes toward immigration enforcement at the border, including border wall construction. But the largest percentage of the bill’s immigration funding – at least $75 billion – goes toward arresting, detaining and deporting immigrants already living in the U.S.

The Trump administration did not initiate deportations from the U.S. interior. They have formed part of other administration’s policies, both Democratic and Republican.

Interior border enforcement increased under President Bill Clinton in the 1990s with the introduction of the 1996 Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act, which widened the criteria for deportations. And former President Barack Obama was referred to as the “Deporter in Chief” after his administration carried out more than 3 million deportations over his two terms, with roughly 69% of deportations occurring at the border.

But the astronomical growth of government funding toward migration control – at the border and in the U.S. – got the country to where it is today.

Between fiscal year 2003 and 2024, for example, Congress allocated approximately $24 toward immigration enforcement carried out by ICE and CBP for every $1 spent on the immigration court system that handles asylum claims.

The new money allocated under the 2025 budget bill, and the reprioritization of immigration enforcement from the border to the interior, partly explains why Americans are now seeing the long-term consequences of border militarization play out directly in their communities.

Several people hold protest signs.
Demonstrators rally before marching to the White House in Washington on Jan. 8, 2026.
AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana

Americans may not know about the experiences of migrants who are quickly deported near the border, but it is harder to ignore recent images of people snatched up within their own neighborhoods.

Now the visible targets of border enforcement are increasingly immigrants who have built their lives in the U.S. – neighbors, friends, co-workers – as well as anyone who opposes ICE’s tactics, like Renee Good.

Changing political attitudes

In fact, the violence of Trump’s mass deportation campaign may be changing how Americans view immigration.

Just before the 2024 presidential election, a Gallup Poll found that 28% of Americans believed that immigration was the most important problem facing the nation – the highest percentage since Gallup began tracking the topic in 1981. This number dropped to 19% in December 2025, reflecting how more Americans see immigration as a routine issue that the government can manage rather than a crisis that needs to be dealt with.

This is supported in the academic literature. Migration scholars have shown that voters often support strict immigration policies in the voting booth but resist and protest when governments attempt to implement those policies in organized immigrant communities.

In 2002, for example, migration scholar Antje Ellermann documented that immigration officers reported it was more difficult to detain and deport people in Miami – because of resistance by a politicized immigrant community – compared to relatively conservative and less organized communities in San Diego.

But in both places, Republican and Democratic lawmakers were influential in intervening in individual cases to prevent deportations. This is because senior immigration officials, Ellermann noted, were influenced by media attention and pressure by members of Congress to grant relief.

Support for Trump’s handling of immigration is trending downward. Only 41% of Americans approved of Trump’s approach to immigration as of early January 2026, compared to 51% in March of last year, according to CNN polling.

This declining support for Trump’s tactics comes as Republican senators such as Thom Tillis of North Carolina, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Joni Ernst of Iowa have criticized ICE and its operations in Minnesota.

The Conversation

The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

​Politics + Society – The Conversation

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Mary Peltola holding a meet and greet tonight at the Crystal Saloon

NOTN- Former U.S. Rep. Mary Peltola has launched a campaign to serve as Alaska’s next U.S. senator, and now she will be making a stop in Juneau this evening for a Meet and Greet at the Crystal Saloon.

Peltola announced her candidacy Jan. 12, saying Washington politicians are increasingly driven by special interests and national politics at the expense of Alaskans. She said her campaign will focus on affordability, infrastructure, fisheries and protecting Alaska’s way of life.

According to her campaign website, Peltola is holding a public meet-and-greet later tonight, meant to give supporters and undecided voters a chance to speak with her directly about her Senate run.

Peltola is a lifelong Alaskan who grew up along the Kuskokwim River, noting on her website, “I’m running for Senate because I’ve lived firsthand how government is failing Alaskans.”

She is a former member of the Alaska State Legislature and previously served in Congress, where she built a reputation for working with both Democrats and Republicans.