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Music

RISERS: Josh Ross Is a Country-Rocker on a Major Roll

He’s having a huge breakout moment. Continue reading…​Country Music News – Taste of Country

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Entertainment

Busy Philipps Is “Deeply Hurting” After James Van Der Beek’s Death

James Van Der Beek, Busy PhilippsBusy Philipps will forever open up her morning light for James Van Der Beek.
Shortly after the actor’s family shared he died on Feb. 11 at the age of 48 following a battle with colorectal cancer,…
​E! Online (US) – Top Stories

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Sports Fox

6 Corbin Carroll Replacements For Team USA in the World Baseball Classic

There’s no sugarcoating it. Corbin Carroll’s hamate bone injury is a brutal loss for Team USA in next month’s highly anticipated World Baseball Classic. The Diamondbacks’ star outfielder broke his right hamate bone during batting practice at the outset of spring training on Tuesday. Carroll underwent surgery for the hand fracture on Wednesday, and he’s expected to be sidelined for several weeks, which sent Team USA scrambling for a replacement. Filling Carroll’s shoes won’t be easy. The 25-year-old is coming off his first-career 30/30 season. Carroll recorded a 140 OPS+ and won the Silver Slugger award last year. Team USA, strutting into the WBC with the best all-around roster in the tournament, suddenly needs to find another outfielder to suit up alongside Aaron Judge, Byron Buxton and Pete Crow-Armstrong. As difficult as it will be to replace Carroll, who has been among the top position players in baseball since he debuted in 2022, if there’s any team that can pivot quickly to an exciting name, it’s the USA. Let’s dig into possible outfield replacements Team USA could try to recruit: Kyle Tucker, Los Angeles Dodgers Though Tucker might immediately seem like a no-brainer, particularly because he participated in the 2023 WBC for Team USA, there are some concerns worth flagging. Tucker played through a right-hand injury last season, and even though the newest Dodgers star is expected to be fully healthy to begin the year, playing in the WBC might not be worth the risk. The Dodgers also might prefer the outfielder to stick around at spring training and familiarize himself with his new team. Still, Tucker is the most obvious backup to fill in at the last minute. Jackson Merrill, San Diego Padres Merrill, entering his third season in the big leagues, is another logical replacement for Carroll. Though the 22-year-old only played in 115 games last season due to injuries, he still hit 16 home runs, collected 67 RBI and posted an OPS+ of 112. By any measure, that’s solid production for a center fielder in his sophomore season, even if it fell short of his incredible rookie campaign. Merrill is an obvious bounce back candidate for 2026 — and he can warm up by bringing his talents to the international stage. Cody Bellinger, New York Yankees After inking his new five-year contract with the Yankees, Bellinger said he preferred to stay with his team in a full spring-training regimen rather than compete in the WBC. But that could change now that Team USA is in need of his services. His Yankees teammates Judge and reliever David Bednar will be suiting up for the USA, and Bellinger has never participated in the WBC. The 30-year-old is coming off a successful year in New York; he hit 29 home runs and posted an .813 OPS in 152 games for the Yankees. In addition to his bat, Bellinger’s defensive versatility would be another huge asset for Team USA. James Wood, Washington Nationals Talk about imposing. This would be a tremendous opportunity for Team USA to roster a pair of 6-foot-7 outfielders in Judge and Wood. Wood is coming off a breakout season for the Nationals; the 23-year-old slugged 31 home runs and recorded an OPS+ of 132 last year despite no real protection in the lineup. The concerns for rostering Wood are his sky-high strikeout rate and limited track record. He might be overmatched in the WBC, especially against Japan’s terrifying pitching staff, should the USA face the Samurais. But Wood’s menacing power is enough for manager Mark DeRosa to give him a call. Wyatt Langford, Texas Rangers One of the biggest losses stemming from Carroll’s absence is his stolen-base threat — and Langford could be the best option to restore that speed. The 24-year-old swiped 22 bases and hit 22 home runs for the Rangers last year. Langford is one of the best defensive outfielders in baseball, and though he’s not as impactful at the plate or a brand-name like Carroll, his on-base skills and speed are worth seriously considering. Mike Trout, Los Angeles Angels Could this really happen? Will the former captain once again wear the Stars and Stripes? It’s unlikely, due to the insurance issues that are preventing a number of MLB stars from participating in the tournament. But we can still dream.​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports

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Entertainment

The Going Out Top Is Back—Abercrombie’s Sale Has Styles From $14

abercrombiesale thumbnail.jpgYou only have one day left to score an extra 40% off already discounted styles at Abercrombie, and that includes their going out tops.
Currently, Abercrombie’s going out tops are all less than…
​E! Online (US) – Top Stories

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Health

James Van Der Beek Dead At 48 — What He Wanted People To Know About Colorectal Cancer

“Dawson’s Creek” actor James Van Der Beek has died from colorectal cancer at the age of 48. However, he did leave this important message for us all.

​Health Digest – Health News, Wellness, Expert Insights

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Entertainment

Teddi Mellencamp Health Update: Is She Finally Cancer-Free?

Reading Time: 3 minutes

We all want the good news.

Though things are not quite as bad as they sounded when her father spoke, she is not yet cancer free.

However, Teddi Mellencamp’s latest cancer update explains the fluctuations in good news and bad news about her health that we’ve been hearing.

She’s the first to acknowledge that she’s been suffering.

Teddi Mellencamp in January 2026.
On ‘Jeff Lewis Live’ in January 2026, Teddi Mellencamp delivered everything from a health update to Bravo opinions. (Image Credit: SiriusXM/YouTube)

This is a positive cancer update

On Wednesday, February 11, Teddi spoke to Page Six‘s Virtual Reali-Tea to deliver a health update.

“I think physically, I’m in a good place,” she expressed.

Referring to her father’s alarming comments, she clarified: “I think what he was saying when he said ‘suffering’ is what we don’t often talk about when it comes to cancer.”

Teddi explained that the suffering “is how you feel after all of the surgeries and all of the testing … how your mental state is doing.”

She acknowledged: “And that has been suffering.”

Teddi Mellencamp Arroyave Pic
Teddi Mellencamp Arroyave poses here for a Bravo promotional photo. She has been let go by the network. (Image Credit: Bravo)

“I’ve been in therapy,” Teddi revealed of how she has worked to cope.

“I’ve been working really hard trying to figure out, find that peace, find that happiness, find that joy, find myself again,” she expressed.

It has now been nearly three-and-a-half years since Teddi disclosed her stage 2 melanoma diagnosis back in October 2022.

Since that time, she has undergone over a dozen surgeries — including last year’s brain surgery — to combat the cancer’s growth.

“Going onto surgery, I didn’t even know what was happening,” Teddi admitted. “I went in thinking I had a headache.”

Teddi Mellencamp on RHOBH in 2020.
During a 2020 episode of The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills, Teddi Mellencamp dazzled viewers despite being on her way out of the franchise. (Image Credit: Bravo)

Is she in remission?

“I was working the Super Bowl with Tamra [Judge] and then the next day I went in to the hospital thinking I had migraines,” Teddi recalled, referring to the 2025 Super Bowl.

“And that’s when they found the tumors in my brain and my lungs,” she detailed.

“So it’s not something that I thought about for months leading up to it,” Teddi clarified. “It’s just, ‘Oh, OK, you’re in surgery the next day.’”

Since then, there has been good news. In October 2025, Teddi reported that there was no longer any detectable trace of cancer in her system.

But does that mean that she’s in remission?

Teddi Mellencamp on The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills.
It looks like Teddi Mellencamp wasn’t sure what to make of what she and the other RHOBH ladies were hearing. (Image Credit: Bravo)

As Teddi has previously explained, it will take time — possibly years — before doctors can safely declare that she is in remission.

That is because previously undetected remnants of the cancer can again begin to grow.

Which is what fans had feared had happened after John Mellencamp described her as “suffering” during a recent interview.

“He hates seeing me go through anything,” Teddi explained of her father’s state of mind as he set off alarm bells.

She knows that she has to remain vigilant

“People talk about being strong,” Teddi reflected.

“But sometimes,” she opined, “strength is admitting you’re still figuring it out.”

She’s right about that.

Teddi recently did a stint on The Masked Singer, a show that perpetually feels like a parody of television.

Some people feel that they can best combat cancer by pushing themselves. So long as they don’t overextend themselves, they’re often right.

We hope that Teddi is listening to her doctors and to her body.

Teddi Mellencamp Health Update: Is She Finally Cancer-Free? was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Uncategorized

Trump administration losing credibility with judges and grand juries – a former federal judge explains why this is “remarkable and unprecedented”

Turns out, grand juries − usually rubber stamps for prosecutors − might not indict a ham sandwich. ilbusca/iStock Getty Images Plus

The word “unprecedented” is getting a workout after a grand jury in Washington on Feb. 10, 2026, rebuffed an attempt by federal prosecutors to get an indictment against perceived enemies of President Donald Trump.

It began with an unprecedented video in November 2025 featuring six Democratic lawmakers alerting military and intelligence community members that they had the duty to disobey illegal orders. That enraged Trump, who in an unprecedented move said the lawmakers were guilty of sedition, which is punishable by death. The U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia, Jeanine Pirro, made the unprecedented attempt to indict the lawmakers. The final element in this drama – the federal grand jury’s rejection of Pirro’s request – wasn’t itself unprecedented. That’s because it’s only the latest in an unprecedented string of losses for the Trump administration before grand juries.

Dickinson College President John E. Jones III, a former federal judge, spoke with The Conversation politics editor Naomi Schalit about the role of grand juries, why a grand jury would not indict someone – and how all of this is a reflection of the administration’s remarkable loss of credibility with judges and the citizens who make up grand juries.

Six Democratic lawmakers advising the military and intelligence community that they do not need to obey illegal orders.

How does the grand jury process work?

The grand jury really dates back to before the Bill of Rights, but for our purposes it’s memorialized in the Fifth Amendment within the Bill of Rights. It is meant to be a mechanism that screens cases brought by prosecutors.

Ordinary citizens, not fewer than 16 or more than 23, have the facts presented to them by a United States attorney or assistant United States attorney. They must make a determination as to whether or not there is probable cause to believe that a crime has been committed. It is not the purview of grand jurors to determine guilt or innocence, but merely to determine whether there is probable cause sufficient to indict.

So that means that a prosecutor will come to a grand jury and present them with the facts that they have chosen to present them with. There’s no defense at that point, and the grand jury then, relatively routinely, says OK, “Indict that person,” or “Indict those people”?

That’s correct. It’s a very one-sided process. There are no defense attorneys present. There’s a court reporter, the grand jury, the United States attorney, and such witnesses as the United States attorney decides to call. While the target of a grand jury can endeavor to present witnesses, including themselves, that generally never happens because of the danger of self-incrimination. The grand jurors can ask questions of the witnesses, but the United States attorney can choose the evidence that it wants to present to the grand jury, and typically they present only such evidence as is necessary in order to establish probable cause that a crime has been committed.

Does the public know what is presented in a grand jury room by the prosecutor?

The grand jury proceedings are absolutely secret and they remain that way, unless a federal judge authorizes that they be unsealed. So in the case involving the six lawmakers, we don’t know what the prosecutor presented to the grand jury. We just know that the grand jury refused to return an indictment. As far as I know, we don’t even know what crimes were put before the grand jury, let alone what testimony was presented. What we do know is that in all six cases, the grand jury refused to vote in favor of the indictment that was requested by the United States attorney.

Why would a grand jury refuse to give the prosecutor what they want?

It’s unprecedented, although we now see a wave of grand juries pushing back against the government. I don’t recall a single instance, during the almost 20 years I served as a U.S. District judge, when a grand jury refused to return a true bill, an indictment. It just is completely aberrational. The grand jury would have to totally reject the whole premise of the case that’s being presented to them by the United States attorney because, remember, there are typically no witnesses appearing before the grand jury to dispute the facts. The grand jury is clearly saying, “Even accepting the facts you’re putting before us as true, we don’t think under these circumstances this case is worthy of a federal indictment.”

Can a prosecutor just try again?

They can return to the well, so to speak, and they did that in Virginia in the case of Letitia James. But it’s pretty perilous because, bluntly, it’s a way that a prosecutor can get their head handed to them twice.

Originally, as set out in the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution, the grand jury was supposed to be a vigorous and robust check against prosecutors simply charging people with crimes. But over time, it’s become far less than that. And there is the famous quote by Judge Sol Wachtler in New York that a grand jury can be made to “indict a ham sandwich.”

So to see a grand jury fail to return true bills multiple times over the past couple of months is remarkable and unprecedented. It occurs to me that what is happening here is kind of parallel to what’s taking place with the administration and federal judges. I think we now have entered a world where the Department of Justice has lost its credibility with the judiciary.

We’re seeing that time and again in appearances in court where judges simply don’t believe what U.S. attorneys are telling them, based on past demonstrable falsehoods that have been stated in open court. And now we see grand juries that are also doubting the credibility of federal prosecutors. And these grand jurors are not blind to what is taking place in the world around them.

I think that this is further polluted by the fact that the president of the United States, for example, in the case of the six defendants from Congress and the Senate, said that they had committed seditious acts – which is punishable by death.

Obviously, this tilts the scales and is fundamentally unfair because it is destroying the concept of due process of law. People notice what the president says, and I am happy to see that the average citizen serving on a grand jury has retained what I think is a fundamental sense of fairness, even in the face of a pretty stacked deck.

A screenshot of a social media post by President Trump, which says 'SEDITIOUS BEHAVIOR, punishable by DEATH!'
President Donald Trump’s social media post of Nov. 20, 2025, responding to the lawmakers’ video.
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What does it mean if you have a court system, judges and the grand juries who do not have faith in the administration and its legal claims?

It’s a complete drag on our system of justice. For all of the time that I sat on the federal bench, I had great respect for the Department of Justice, and the department had tremendous credibility. They were straight shooters. The prosecutors who appeared in front of me were professionals. I didn’t always agree with their arguments, of course, nor did I agree with a few of their charging decisions, but I can tell you that not once did I see a federal prosecution in front of me that I felt strongly should never have been brought at its inception.

But we now have a system where, because of the whims of the president, the Department of Justice has become utterly weaponized against his perceived enemies, and that’s a gross misuse of our prosecutorial power at the federal level.

Also, if, for example, these members of Congress had been indicted, they’d have to lawyer up, they’d have to fight their way out. That would take a lot of resources.

So, yes, the judiciary can be a bulwark against improvident prosecutions. But that comes at a cost to the defendant, and it’s been said that the process itself is the punishment. I suspect that’s what the president wants; it’s the trauma that you put somebody through that can be almost as bad as being convicted. And, of course, there’s the reputational harm as well.

The Conversation

John E. Jones III is affiliated with Keep Our Republic’s Article Three Coalition.

​Politics + Society – The Conversation

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Entertainment

Joe Rogan Breaks Silence on Epstein Files Inclusion: ‘B-tch, Are You High?’

Reading Time: 3 minutes

As you’ve almost certainly heard by now, some of the world’s most famous names appear in the Epstein files.

And most of them have been doing everything they can to distance themselves from the deceased sex trafficker.

But while people like Prince Andrew will be linked to Epstein forever, guys like Joe Rogan will have a much easier time clearing their names.

Joe Rogan introduces fighters during the UFC 269 ceremonial weigh-in  at MGM Grand Garden Arena on December 10, 2021 in Las Vegas, Nevada.
Joe Rogan introduces fighters during the UFC 269 ceremonial weigh-in at MGM Grand Garden Arena on December 10, 2021 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Carmen Mandato/Getty Images)

Yes, Rogan is mentioned in the Epstein files.

But unlike Donald Trump, Bill Clinton, Bill Gates, Howard Lutnick, and the other rich and powerful men whose names are associated with Epstein, Rogan doesn’t seem to have anything to worry about.

The wildly popular comic host addressed the matter on the latest episode of his podcast, during a conversation with actress (and RFK Jr. spouse) Cheryl Hines.

“I’m in the files for not going,” Rogan claimed.

Joe Rogan MC's during the UFC 300 ceremonial weigh-in at MGM Grand Garden Arena on April 12, 2024 in Las Vegas, Nevada.
Joe Rogan MC’s during the UFC 300 ceremonial weigh-in at MGM Grand Garden Arena on April 12, 2024 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Carmen Mandato/Getty Images)

“Jeffrey Epstein was trying to meet with me. And I was like, what? Like, no thanks,” Rogan said.

“Aren’t you glad [you didn’t go]?” Hines asked Rogan.

“It’s not even a possibility that I would’ve ever went, especially after I Googled him,” he replied.

“I was like, what the f— are you talking about? This was like 2017. One of my guests was trying to get me to meet him. I was like, b—h are you high? Like, what the f— are you talking about?”

According to the files, Lawrence Krauss, a physicist who has appeared on Rogan’s show multiple times, was close friends with Epstein.

“I saw you did the Joe =ogan [sic] show, can you introduce me, I think hes =unny [sic],” Epstein wrote in an email to Krauss in 2017 (via Radar Online).

In this handout provided by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, Jeffrey Epstein poses for a sex offender mugshot after being charged with procuring a minor for prostitution on July 25, 2013 in Florida.
In this handout provided by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, Jeffrey Epstein poses for a sex offender mugshot after being charged with procuring a minor for prostitution on July 25, 2013 in Florida. (Photo by Florida Department of Law Enforcement via Getty Images)

As Epstein had already done time for soliciting a minor for prostitution, Rogan prudently decided not to meet with the man.

He told Hines that he would have had no reason to meet Epstein, as he was now “a guy who is sucking up to the rich and powerful.”

He added that “some people get intoxicated by being in a circle of rich and powerful people, even if they don’t have any ambitions of being one of those people. They just want to be around them.”

Rogan went on to describe Epstein as “very clever,” explained that the financier “was getting all of these very powerful and very respected people together.”

“Yeah. And you would figure like, [former President Bill] Clinton’s here. How could this be bad? You know, he’s a genius,” Rogan added.

So there you have it. Joe Rogan was smart enough to steer clear of the island — so what excuse do these other guys have?

Joe Rogan Breaks Silence on Epstein Files Inclusion: ‘B-tch, Are You High?’ was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Entertainment

What People Get Wrong About Airplane Food

Airplane food gets no respect. It has a reputation for being pretty awful, but you’d be surprised to know how much care goes into the maligned meals.

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

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Music

Multiple Greg Biffle Tributes Planned During Daytona 500 Weekend

Here’s how drivers will pay tribute to Greg Biffle during the Daytona 500. Continue reading…​The Boot – Country Music News, Music Videos and Songs