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Hip Hop

‘Control’: How Self-Assertion Made Janet Jackson An Icon

Janet Jackson Control Album cover web optimised 820

To say that, back in 1985, Janet Jackson lived in her brother Michael’s shadow was something of an understatement. At that time Michael was at the height of his reign as the undisputed “King Of Pop” and was still basking in the success of his 1982 blockbuster album, Thriller. But that was before Control, the album that proved Janet Jackson had what it took to launch a formidable attack on the charts.

Initially marketed as a sweet-voiced ingénue, Janet had scored a couple of Top 10 R&B hits (“Young Love” in 1982, and, two years later, “Don’t Stand Another Chance”) in the US for A&M Records, but they didn’t reveal the outstanding natural talent that she possessed.

A career relaunch

A shock was in store. In January 1986, Janet Jackson relaunched her singing career on A&M with the single “What Have You Done For Me Lately,” a seismic slab of minimalist techno-funk driven by pounding a drum machine beat. It was both sassy and sexy, and dispelled the girl-next-door image that A&M had used to market her four years earlier. Helmed by ex-Time members Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis – then the hottest production team in R&B, and masterminds of substantial hits for SOS Band, Cherrelle, and Alexander O’Neal – the song quickly shot to the top of the US R&B singles chart.

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The keenly-anticipated parent album, Control, followed on February 4, 1986 and, a month later, it topped the US R&B chart, where it spent a jaw-dropping 91 weeks. Control eventually hit the top of the US pop albums chart and the Billboard 200, and transformed Janet Jackson into a megastar whose fame would rival Michael’s.

A make or break album

Despite its phenomenal international success, Control started out as a make-or-break album for Janet Jackson, who wanted a radical change of musical direction. “That was a point where it was like a crossroads for me in my career,” she told this writer in 2001. “If it wasn’t going to pan out, I was gonna go back to school. I was studying business law and I thought I would try music one more time.”

The album’s title stemmed from the fact that, before she hooked up with Jam and Lewis, Janet felt she had no control over what she was doing: she was like a producer’s puppet with little or no say in the direction of her music. “I wanted to do it differently than being handed a piece of music and told, ‘Here, sing this,’ which it was in the past,” she revealed. “I wanted to express myself, and Jimmy and Terry helped me to do that.”

Listen to Janet Jackson’s Control now.

Jam and Lewis took her under their wing, got to know her, and familiarized themselves with her world. Then they wrote songs together, based on different aspects of Janet’s life. “Jimmy and I rode around Minneapolis and we talked about my life and what I had gone through,” she said. “We talked about everything and they made me feel open enough and comfortable enough to speak to them about everything, because I was kind of withdrawn. My family were not able to trust people so we grew up very sheltered and were very private. So Jimmy and Terry allowed me to open up to them and express myself.”

Finding her voice

Amazingly, Control yielded four more US R&B chart-toppers: the funked-up, attitude-heavy “Nasty”; the assertive title song, which was Janet’s declaration of independence; the sweet ballad “Let’s Wait Awhile,” which showed her sensuous side; and the electro-influenced dance groove “The Pleasure Principle.” Another single, the joyously upbeat “When I Think Of You,” surprisingly stalled at No.3 on the US R&B chart, but became her first mainstream chart-topper. Meanwhile, the slow ballad “Funny How Time Flies” wasn’t released as a single but quickly became a fan favorite spawning a swathe of smooth jazz cover versions.

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Reflecting on her timely collaboration with Jam and Lewis, Janet Jackson was grateful for their input and building her confidence as an artist. “They allowed me to grow, they allowed me to blossom,” she said. “There are producers that would say: wait a minute, this is way too much. But they were like, no, if this is what she wants to do and this is the way she wants to express herself, let her do it.”

With Control, Janet Jackson made an album that truly reflected her as a person. Despite its title, it was the album that finally set her free.

Browse Janet Jackson’s music on limited edition vinyl and CDs here.

​Discover more about the world’s greatest R&B artists | uDiscover Music

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Music

Marty Stuart Postpones Tour Dates After Injuring Hand in Fall

The country music legend is on the mend after a fall on the ice left him with a sprained wrist and hand injury. He’s postponing tour dates while he recovers — but promises he’ll be back soon. Continue reading…​Country Music News – Taste of Country

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Entertainment

Bob Dylan’s Favorite Vintage Dessert Dates Back Several Centuries

Bob Dylan is the voice of a generation. The gravelly voiced singer-songwriter also enjoys a sweet treat now and then, including this classic British dessert.

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

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Featured Juneau News Juneau Local Juneau Local Ketchikan Local News Feeds Sitka Local

Alaska’s ferry system could run out of funding this summer due to ‘federal chaos problem’

By: James Brooks, Alaska Beacon

Cars drive aboard the Alaska Marine Highway System ferry Hubbard on June 25, 2023, in Haines. (Photo by James Brooks)

Alaska’s state ferry system is at risk of a partial or total shutdown this summer due to the failure of the federal government to issue a key annual grant.

“Currently right now, we have a shortfall in our budget,” said Dom Pannone, director of program administration and management for the Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities, to members of the Senate Finance Committee during a Monday morning hearing.

Money from the Federal Transit Administration’s rural ferry program pays for almost half of the Alaska Marine Highway System’s operating expenses, but the administration failed to open its annual grant process in fiscal year 2025, which ended Sept. 30. 

The ferry system’s budget runs according to the calendar year. Last spring, the Alaska Legislature and Gov. Mike Dunleavy budgeted $171 million for the 2026 ferry budget. Of that, almost $78 million was supposed to come from the rural ferry program.

Without that money, the system could be forced to tie up its ships in midsummer, at the peak of the state’s annual tourist season.

“Right now, we have a federal chaos problem,” said Sen. Jesse Kiehl, D-Juneau and a member of the Senate Finance Committee.

Ryan Anderson, commissioner of the state DOT, said his agency is “looking at several options” to prevent a shutdown of the ferry system. 

If a federal grant isn’t delivered, DOT would make significant changes to the summer ferry schedule, which is slated for release in May. 

Anderson said the state could “dispose of the Matanuska,” the state’s oldest active ferry, which has been tied up dockside as a “hotel ship” because of maintenance costs. 

The ferry Kennicott, coming out of drydock, or the Columbia, another old mainline ferry, could be tied up as a hotel ship instead of the Matanuska, he said. 

On Monday, neither DOT officials nor state legislators could say why the Federal Transit Administration has failed to make grants available.

“What is going on in Washington, D.C.? That’s always a tough thing to work with,” Anderson said.

U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, secured almost $1 billion in the 2021 Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act bill for the rural ferry program, which was written in a way to steer much of the money to Alaska. 

By text after Monday’s hearing, Murkowski spokesman Joe Plesha said the Federal Transit Administration told her office it will release the FY26 ferry grants this spring, but did not give a timeline. “We are directly engaged with the FTA and working to advance the release of this grant funding as soon as possible,” Plesha said.

When Murkowski got the ferry language signed into law, it was the first time the federal government had significantly funded operational expenses for Alaska’s ferry system.

“In this particular case, it can actually pay for the operations of those (ferry) vessels,” Anderson said, noting that includes operating costs like crew and fuel. That billion dollars was to be spread across five years, and the program disbursed more than $252 million nationwide in FY22, $170 million in FY23 and $194 million in FY24. 

Alaska received more than five-sixths of the total distribution in that time, something that allowed Gov. Mike Dunleavy to divert state dollars to other parts of Alaska’s annual budget. 

Alaska DOT estimates that about $410 million remains available for the federal government to disburse. 

In each of the three prior grant years, it took between 152 and 199 days from the time the grant application period opened to the time the grant was awarded. 

That timeline means that even if federal transit officials were to open the grant process tomorrow, a decision might not be made before the arrival of the summer ferry schedule in May.

Dunleavy and the Legislature could extend the timeline by changing the ferry system’s budget calendar so that it starts July 1 along with all other state agencies, but if there’s still no federal money, that would just extend operations until January 2027, and then the system would face a $150 million cliff instead of a $78 million one.

Sen. Bert Stedman, R-Sitka, said that finding “backfill” money will be difficult in either case.

“Our budgets are getting tighter and taking away the flexibility the (finance) committee has to backfill some of these holes, and this particular hole could be significant, pushing $80 million,” he said. 

The ferry funding issue could persist even if the federal transit authority resumes paying grants, because its ferry operations program is set to expire this year.

“What happens when that grant money is gone?” asked Sen. Mike Cronk, R-Tok.

“This year, the surface transportation reauthorization is up for renewal,” Anderson said. “This, we understand, is part of that discussion: Will the rural ferry program continue over the next subsequent four years?”

Anderson said that even if Congress renews the program, the current Alaska-favorable rules might be rewritten.

“Other states are very interested in this program as well because they have a lot of similar challenges,” he said. “Nationwide, there’s support for a program such as this. The questions that are out: How will the rules be rewritten, and how competitive will the program be? That will be the challenge.”

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Food

‘The McValue Tag Makes This Even Funnier’: This McDonald’s Breakfast Item Is Totally Overpriced

While some prices fluctuate due to your region, seeing this simple breakfast item listed at a sky-high price shocked Redditors at the drastic climb.

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Entertainment

Found: UGGs Under $100 – Yes, Really!

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ICYMI, the groundhog saw his shadow and that means we have six more weeks of winter ahead. If you’re not a big fan of chilly temps and could use some cheering up, we just found a deal that’s going…
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Entertainment

The Easy Way To Tame Spicy Jalapeños Without Ruining Their Flavor

If you want to appreciate the flavor of a jalapeño, sometimes it helps to remove some of the heat. Luckily, there’s a simple hack that makes it easy to do.

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Politics

Republicans are freaking out about Hispanic voters after a Texas upset

Republicans are in full-out panic mode over their plunging support with Hispanic voters after losing a special election in a ruby-red Texas district over the weekend.

On Saturday, a Democrat posted a 14-point victory in a Fort Worth-based state senate district President Donald Trump had won by 17 points in 2024, a staggering swing that was powered by significant shifts across the district’s Hispanic areas.

It’s the clearest sign yet that the GOP’s newfound coalition that propelled Trump’s return to the White House may be short-lived. Many Republicans are warning the party needs to change course on immigration, focus on bread-and-butter economic issues and start pouring money into competitive races — or risk getting stomped in November.

Polling already showed that Republicans were rapidly losing support from Hispanic voters. But the electoral results were a confirmation of that drop.

“It should be an eye-opener to all of us that we all need to pick up the pace,” U.S. Rep. Tony Gonzales, a Republican from a majority-Hispanic district in South Texas, said in an interview. “The candidate has to do their part, the party has to do their part. And then those of us in the arena, we have to do our part to help them as well.”

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) told reporters Tuesday that the election was a “very concerning outcome.” Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick posted on X that the results should be a “wake-up call for Republicans across Texas. Our voters cannot take anything for granted.” Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said “a swing of this magnitude is not something that can be dismissed.”

Taylor Rehmet, the Democrat who flipped the state Senate seat over the weekend, made huge gains with Hispanic voters amid national pushback to the Trump administration’s aggressive immigration enforcement tactics and widespread economic frustration across demographic groups.

Ahead of the election, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott — an immigration hardliner who bused migrants to Democratic-led cities during the Biden administration — said the White House needed to “recalibrate” on its immigration crackdowns following the shooting of Alex Pretti by an immigration officer in Minneapolis.

“That imagery coming out of Minnesota in the last few days has had a huge impact on not only Hispanic voters, but swing voters, independents in Texas and around the country,” said Texas GOP consultant Brendan Steinhauser. “What’s transpired there has definitely led to a bit of a political backlash.”

As Republicans panic, Democrats are feeling a renewed jolt of optimism after they swept statewide races last year in Virginia and New Jersey. They believe they found a winning formula with Rehmet, whose working-class biography as a union leader, Air Force veteran and Lockheed Martin machinist resonated with voters, along with his narrow focus on local issues like maintaining public school funding.

Tory Gavito, president of Democratic donor network Way to Win, said she received excited texts from several major donors over the weekend after the win. “Knowing it’s a wave year, this just adds a little bit of more wind in our sails,” she said. “It’s not just a question around Texas, it’s a question around Texas and Mississippi and Alabama and what does this mean for lots of places.”

Texas Republicans have the most to worry about of any in their party about a major Hispanic snapback towards Democrats.

Hispanics are now the largest ethnic group in Texas, making up 40 percent of the population. Trump carried Latinos in the state in 2024, exit polls showed, a massive swing from earlier elections, and Republicans had been making especially strong gains with rural, more conservative Hispanic voters in the Rio Grande Valley. But as Texas Democrats look to win a U.S. Senate election for the first time since 1988, they’re eyeing an opportunity to pull those voters back in.

“They are leaving in droves and going in the opposite direction,” said Javier Palomarez, president and CEO of the U.S. Hispanic Business Council. “This is a warning sign.”

And Texas Republicans also banked on retaining at least some of their newfound Hispanic support when they redrew their Congressional map last year, creating several majority-Hispanic districts that Trump would have carried by double digits last year. That includes rejiggering district lines for two top GOP targets, Democratic Reps. Henry Cuellar and Vicente Gonzalez, as well as a third district outside San Antonio.

“They’ve banged three of these five new Republican seats on a demographic that Democrats were never able to turn out for 30-40 years, ” said GOP consultant and Trump critic Mike Madrid, referring to young, Hispanic male voters. But now, Trump’s hardline immigration policies have “angered and upset them.”

Samuel Benson and Alex Gangitano contributed to this report.

​Politics

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Entertainment

2026 Olympic Athletes Unveil Their New Team USA Gear

Hahna Norman, Team USA Gear Haul
The 2026 Olympic Athletes are ready to play their best—and look their best.
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Sports Fox

FOX Sports Unveils Expanded 2026 LIV Golf Broadcast Schedule

FOX Sports released its expanded 2026 LIV Golf schedule, featuring nearly 300 hours of live competition across FOX Sports platforms. LIV Golf will deliver a 2026 season featuring 14 events across 10 countries and five continents. For each tournament, FOX Sports will deliver live coverage across 72 holes and four days of competition across the network’s platforms for each tournament, highlighted by live network coverage from Adelaide, South Africa, and Mexico City on FOX. “As we unveil the 2026 LIV Golf League schedule on FOX, we’re proud to continue and deepen our relationship with FOX Sports, which recognizes the unique competitive structure that makes LIV Golf distinctive among sports leagues,” said Chris Heck, President of Business Operations of LIV Golf. “FOX Sports is excited to continue its coverage of the LIV Golf League, which delivers elite competition and innovative storytelling to fans nationwide,” said Jordan Bazant, Executive Vice President, FOX Sports. The LIV Golf League makes its first U.S. appearance of the season in May at Trump National Golf Club, Washington, D.C., in Potomac Falls, VA, beginning Thursday, May 7. After one international stop, a return to the heralded Real Club Valderrama course in Andalucía, the League makes its Louisiana debut at Bayou Oaks at City Park in New Orleans, LA, beginning Thursday, June 25. The League then travels to the United Kingdom, highlighted by live coverage Saturday, July 25 at 8:00 AM ET on FOX. LIV Golf returns stateside the following week at Trump National Golf Club Bedminster in Bedminster, NJ, beginning Thursday, Aug. 6. The LIV Golf League then turns to Indianapolis for the regular season finale and Individual Championship at The Club at Chatham Hills, beginning Thursday, Aug. 20. The season concludes with the Aramco LIV Golf Michigan Team Championship at The Cardinal at Saint John’s Resort in Plymouth, MI, beginning Thursday, Aug. 27. In addition to live event coverage, FS1 will once again air a one-hour recap show following each tournament, highlighting the week’s biggest shots and storylines. Coverage also includes expanded year-round storytelling through the airing of specialty content such as the inaugural LIV Golf Showcase, and other features coming later this year. LIV Golf telecasts continue to be produced by the League’s in-house team, featuring its distinctive live Team and Individual leaderboard, enhanced drone coverage, statistics-driven graphics, and fast-paced presentation that delivers nearly twice as many shots per hour as traditional golf coverage. All LIV Golf coverage will also stream live on FOX One, the FOX Sports App, and to LIV Golf+ subscribers. LIV Golf Broadcast Schedule: Riyadh, Saudi Arabia: Riyadh Golf Club, Feb. 4-7 Adelaide, Australia: The Grange Golf Club, Feb. 11-14 Hong Kong: Sentosa Gulf Club, March 11-14 South Africa: The Club at Steyn City, March 19-22 Mexico City: Club de Golf Chapultepec, April 16-19 Virginia, USA: Trump National Golf Club, Washington, D.C. May 7-10 Andalucia, Spain: Real Club Valderrama, June 4-7 Louisiana, USA: Bayou Oaks at City Park, June 25-28 United Kingdom: JCB Golf and Country Club, July 23-26 New York, USA: Trump National Golf Club Bedminster, Aug. 6-9 Indianapolis, Indiana: The Club at Chatham Hills, Aug. 20-23 Team Championship: Play-In: The Cardinal at Saint John’s Resort, Michigan, Aug. 27-30​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports