ERNEST is warming up the cold winter days with his new sun-soaked song, “Lorelei.” The release marks the first track to preview the country star’s third full-length studio album, Deep Blue, arriving later this year.
Co-produced by ERNEST and Jacob Durrett, and written alongside Rhett Akins, Ben Hayslip, and Mark Holman, the track depicts “a sailor’s tale as old as time,” as stated in the opening line.
Ernest; Photo Courtesy of Facebook
The story centers around a man dreaming of a mysterious woman who always seems just out of reach. Somehow she keeps the narrator under her spell, drawing him back into the chase again and again despite her “wicked lies.” With layered instrumentation that blends a relaxed pace with an infectious rhythm, and ERNEST’s mellow, soothing vocals, “Lorelei” transports listeners to a breezy island escape.
He sings, “Lorelei, Lorelei/ I still hear you whisper in the dead of night/ You wreck my world and I don’t know why/ I keep my sails in the wind for ya/ Lorelei, Lorelei.”
While reflecting on today’s release, the GRAMMY®-nominated artist explains how it lays the foundation for his next project and the warmth he hopes it evokes for listeners.
“‘Lorelei’ is the first song off my album Deep Blue,” he says. “It sets the tone for the deep blue world this album lives in. It might be cold where you are, but you can close your eyes and feel the sun and hear the waves like you’re right there looking for her with me.”
Ernest; Lorelei
Before his next studio album, Deep Blue, drops in 2026, ERNEST suggests that fans revisit his 2019 debut album, Locals Only, as those songs were also influenced by the carefree lifestyle and sounds of the U.S. Virgin Islands.
These new songs will showcase ERNEST’s growth over the past seven years while drawing inspiration from a place that has shaped him both personally and creatively. Thematically, the album is expected to use this setting to highlight his thoughtful, storytelling through a deeper, more mature perspective.
As he prepares to share this fresh sound with the world, ERNEST has already hit the road, kicking off his headlining Live From The South Tour last weekend in Jackson Hole, WY, at the iconic Million Dollar Cowboy Bar. The tour will continue through cities like Boston, New York, and Houston before wrapping in April.
Joining him on the road are rising singer-songwriters Rhys Rutherford, Chandler Walters, and Cody Lohden, all of whom are signed to his label, DeVille Records, and his publishing company, Cadillac Music Publishing.
“Do we think there’s a wedding this year?” Savannah asked.
A visibly uncomfortable Kylie hesitated before modestly replying: “Oh, I don’t know.”
Savannah didn’t take the hint.
“Do you really not know?” she asked her guest.
“I have no idea,” Kylie then claimed. She went on to laugh with obvious discomfort and avoid eye contact.
On January 30, 2026, Kylie Kelce got the third degree from ‘Today’ host Savannah Guthrie. (Image Credit: NBC)
She is ‘Not Gonna Lie’ after all
Without accusing Kylie of lying, one can honestly state that nervous laughter and avoiding eye contact are stereotypical signs of a bad liar attempting to avoid telling the truth.
Which is funny, because her podcast happens to be titled Not Gonna Lie. Her host knew that, too.
“You’re not going to lie?” Savannah quipped.
“Yes! I’m not going to lie,” Kylie fired back.
Generally, going on Today doesn’t make someone feel like they’re getting the third degree. Of course, wedding secrets aren’t usually this big of a deal.
In what may have been an attempt to ease off, Savannah asked Kylie if she is going to “get yourself in trouble.”
The implication being that she might say too much and incur the wrath of bride-to-be Taylor Swift.
“Never!” Kylie declared.
“But we are excited to celebrate, though,” she admitted.
Kylie expressed: “We can’t wait.”
On her Not Gonna Lie podcast, Kylie Kelce opened up about experiencing bullying due to her height. (Image Credit: YouTube)
Our information about the wedding is actually pretty limited
In August of 2025, Travis proposed to Taylor. She said yes.
The (admittedly one-sided) power couple had been dating for two years.
We still do not officially know a lot of details about the wedding plans.
Taylor likes to keep things close to the vest, especially when it comes to her personal life.
Maybe she’ll marry Travis this summer in Rhode Island. But she has the resources to marry her man at any place at any time — and she could always surprise us.
Post Malone takes center stage in Bud Light’s Super Bowl LX commercial.
The newly announced spot reunites longtime friends of the brand, Post Malone, Shane Gillis, and Peyton Manning, for an unforgettable Big Game moment, set to the incredible vocals of music legend Whitney Houston.
The 60-second clip finds Posty, Gillis, and Manning at a wedding, where Manning is spotted enjoying an ice-cold Bud Light. Posty asks, “Is there enough for everyone?”
Peyton Manning; Photo via YouTube
Manning points toward a keg being wheeled in the distance, but disaster quickly strikes as the keg slips off the hand truck and tumbles down a rocky hillside.
Chaos ensues as wedding guests, including the iconic trio, chase after the rolling keg. Some guests stumble and tumble, while Gillis finds a path, taps the keg, and kicks the party into full swing.
All of this unfolds to Houston’s classic “I Will Always Love You,” a song written by the legendary Dolly Parton.
Bud Light is taking Super Bowl LX celebrations to the next level — hundreds of kegs will be dropped at Gillette Stadium and Lumen Field, giving fans a chance to score two tickets to the Big Game in the San Francisco Bay Area.
The festivities don’t stop there: Post Malone will headline an exclusive concert, “Bud Light Presents Post Malone & Buddies,” in San Francisco on Friday, February 6, as part of the Super Bowl LX weekend.
“Getting back on the Bud Light stage during Super Bowl weekend is like coming home. I love it! We’ve got something really special planned for this year,” Post Malone, a Bud Light partner of nearly a decade, shared.
Bud Light Super Bowl Commercial
“As the Official Beer Sponsor of the NFL, Bud Light knows best the excitement of Super Bowl weekend, and we show up every year to provide football fans with bucket-list experiences. We’re pumped to run it back with Posty, our buddy of nearly a decade, for what will be one of the most electrifying shows of Super Bowl weekend,” Todd Allen, SVP of Marketing for Bud Light, added.
Super Bowl LX will air live on February 8, 2026, at 6:30 p.m. ET on NBC and Peacock from Levi’s Stadium in San Francisco. The big game will feature the Seattle Seahawks taking on the New England Patriots.
After all, Sydney might be the most sought-after human being on the planet, and while he’s very rich, Scooter is also very problematic.
It was an odd pairing from the start — and it looks it may have already come to an end.
US actress Sydney Sweeney arrives for the 77th Primetime Emmy Awards at the Peacock Theatre at LA Live in Los Angeles on September 14, 2025. (Photo by PATRICK T. FALLON/AFP via Getty Images)
Neither Sydney nor Scooter has publicly confirmed that they’ve called it quits, but all the signs are there:
For starters, they haven’t been seen in public together in more than two months.
On top of that, Syd just gave an in-depth interview with Cosmo, and in it, she sounds very much like a single gal:
“Look, I am a boss in my life. I take control. I go after what I want. I am confident, and I am successful, and I don’t actually need a man,” she told the outlet, adding:
“I’ve got myself. I’ve got an incredible group of girlfriends. I’ve got a team of badass women. That is very intimidating to a lot of guys, so a guy needs to be able to stand in that with me.”
From there, Sweeney went on to say that dating is tough for her, as not every potential partner can handle her lifestyle.
Sydney Sweeney attends the 2024 Vanity Fair Oscar Party Hosted By Radhika Jones at Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts on March 11, 2024 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo by Amy Sussman/Getty Images)
She explained that it “takes a very specific person who can handle the world that comes with” her level of fame.
She added that she recently dated a guy who she “really, really liked,” but he ended it because he “couldn’t handle [her] world.”
“It’s a hard thing,” Syd said, adding that she recently received some advice from her mom:
“The other day, my mom and I were talking about guys, and I was like, ‘Well, he’s not really my type,’” Sweeney recalled.
“Well, maybe your type’s not working out for you, Syd,” Mom offered.
Sydney Sweeney attends FIJI Water at AFI FEST 2025 â “Christy” premiere at TCL Chinese Theatre on October 25, 2025 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Phillip Faraone/Getty Images for FIJI Water)
“Maybe I need to be open to other experiences and try not to put everything in this exact box of what I think I need,” Sydney recalled realizing.
Again, no mention of Scooter, but that’s a lot of dating talk for someone who’s currently in a relationship.
We don’t know if Braun is the guy who couldn’t handle Sydney’s level of fame and fortune, but that seems unlikely, as he’s been highly successful for a very long time.
And as the man who discovered Justin Bieber, it’s not like he’s unaccustomed to hanging out with pop culture icons.
We may never know what happened with the Scooter fling, but Sydney supporters were never a fan of him — so they’re probably quite happy to learn that their girl is back on the market.
Dining on a yacht has its own set of challenges and intricacies. We spoke to a Abby Cheshire for the inside scoop on what cooking and dining on a yacht entails.
Mashed – Fast Food, Celebrity Chefs, Grocery, Reviews
Rep. Kevin McCabe, R-Big Lake, reads a document entitled “Alaska’s Fiscal Options” while listening to a presentation by the Institute for Social and Economic Research of the University of Alaska Anchorage on Thursday, Jan. 29, 2026, at Centennial Hall in Juneau. (James Brooks photo/Alaska Beacon)
A new nonpartisan report by the Institute of Social and Economic Research at the University of Alaska Anchorage has concluded that raising oil and corporate taxes to balance Alaska’s budget likely has the lowest negative side effects for Alaskans’ jobs and income.
The report, eagerly anticipated by state lawmakers and experts, comes as legislators consider ways to balance Alaska’s expenses and revenue over multiple years.
Commissioned by the administration of Gov. Mike Dunleavy, the report was released days after the governor debuted a plan intended to bring Alaska’s expenses and revenue in line.
Since 2015, when oil prices plummeted, Alaska has struggled to balance its budget on an annual basis despite steep cuts to state services. At times, the tug-of-war between services and the Permanent Fund dividend has driven the state to the brink of a government shutdown.
Figures from the Legislative Finance Division, which advises the Legislature on fiscal issues, show state agencies have had their budgets cut by 16.6% when adjusted for inflation since Fiscal Year 2015.
During the same period, lawmakers have passed no significant revenue measures. Dunleavy, who opened his first year in office by proposing massive budget cuts, hasn’t proposed significant reductions in recent years and is now suggesting a statewide sales tax and other revenue measures are needed for the state to keep up with spending.
ISER’s analysis of the situation was keenly awaited by state legislators and other experts, who crowded into a ballroom at Juneau’s convention center on Thursday morning to hear its economists deliver their report.
A 2016 analysis by ISER remains widely consulted in the capitol and was a contributing factor to lawmakers’ decision to begin using the Alaska Permanent Fund as a trust fund two years later. Legislators installed an annual transfer from the fund to the treasury for dividends and services, and it’s now the No. 1 source of general-purpose state revenue for Alaska, accounting for almost two-thirds of the state’s flexible spending each year.
The report released Thursday concluded that Alaska’s unstable fiscal situation has created so much uncertainty that it’s lowered Alaska’s real gross domestic product growth by 2-3% over the past decade, the equivalent of billions of dollars, said Brett Watson, an economist with the Institute of Social and Economic Research and the lead author of the report.
Brett Watson of the Institute for Social and Economic Research of the University of Alaska Anchorage delivers a presentation about Alaska’s fiscal options on Thursday, Jan. 29, 2026, at Centennial Hall in Juneau. (James Brooks photo/Alaska Beacon)
Alaska’s GDP — the value of all goods and services in the state — is about $70 billion and ranks near the bottom of U.S. states in terms of growth over the past decade.
ISER examined 11 different options to balance the state budget, including spending cuts, cuts to the Permanent Fund dividend, income taxes, sales taxes and business taxes.
Raising business and oil taxes would have the lowest negative impact on jobs and income, while cuts to services would have the biggest negative effect on them, the report found.
Reducing the Permanent Fund dividend to balance the budget — which has been the existing legislative policy for the past several years — has similarly large negative effects on income, but smaller negative effects on employment. Poor Alaskans are affected more by a PFD reduction than rich Alaskans, making it the most regressive option.
Among statewide taxes, a progressive income tax would have the biggest negative impact on high-income Alaskans and the lowest negative impact on low-income residents.
Nonresidents would pay 27% of a statewide sales tax with many exclusions — food, utilities, and health care, for example — making it the option with the least direct impact on individual income among broad-based taxes.
Corporate and oil taxes have a lower impact overall, ISER concluded.
Making a sales tax higher in the summer and lower in the winter “shifts the burden toward visitors, reducing the impact on Alaska families by 2-5 percentage points per dollar raised,” ISER concluded.
Dunleavy’s fiscal plan includes a seasonal sales tax as one of its pillars.
ISER also concluded that its models suggest that it is possible to come up with “a budget neutral combination that stimulates growth.”
“For example,” its report states, “coupling a less distortionary revenue source (like property tax) with expansionary spending (like capital project investment) can result in a net increase in total employment.”
Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy opens a presentation by the Institute for Social and Economic Research of the University of Alaska Anchorage on Thursday, Jan. 29, 2026, at Centennial Hall in Juneau. (James Brooks photo/Alaska Beacon)
Imposing a statewide property tax and a broad corporate tax cut in combination, ISER suggested in a slide presented to lawmakers, would result in increased employment and personal income by 2050, it estimated.
The effect of each tax or cut was examined independently, Watson said, in $100 million chunks.
“You can think about these as items on a buffet, and you kind of scoop from them different serving sizes as you construct a plate that is a state fiscal plan,” he said.
ISER also considered things linearly — economists didn’t try to predict whether Alaskans would react differently if a sales tax went from 5% to 6% instead of from 0% to 1%.
“In reality, it is likely that there are certain important thresholds that if you turn that dial too far, consumers start reacting in more and more aggressive ways to it, but we assume that their reaction is the same, regardless of what the level set is,” he said.
Watson said there is a cost if lawmakers do nothing. In addition to the GDP penalty caused by uncertainty, the state remains vulnerable to what’s called the “Alaska disconnect.”
Imagine, he said, if “something crazy would happen and one of the Silicon Valley tech giants were to announce that they were going to create a Silicon Valley of the north somewhere in Alaska and that they would move 100,000 employees somewhere in Alaska and create this northern hub of tech.”
“It would be absolutely catastrophic from the standpoint of the state of Alaska budget,” he said. “There would be 100,000 new Permanent Fund dividends to pay, the children of 100,000 new employees to educate, more roads to maintain, more state services to provide, without any additional revenue collected for any of those individuals. And so there’s this disconnect now that’s growing between our private sector economy and what goes on in our public sector.”
An aspiring head of state shouldn’t leave their stomach in a state of emptiness. Barack Obama filled his belly with these breakfast foods during his campaign.
Mashed – Fast Food, Celebrity Chefs, Grocery, Reviews