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Grandson Of Reese’s Inventor Slams Hershey, Calls Recent Holiday Chocolates ‘Not Edible’

Hershey had some answering to do after a descendant of the Reese’s family publicly called out the quality of the company’s modern version of the chocolate.

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

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Entertainment

Meghan Markle, Prince Harry Feel ‘Vindicated’ By Prince Andrew Arrest, Royal …

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As we previously reported, the former Prince Andrew was arrested today on suspicion of misconduct while in public office.

The arrest — which appears to be a result of Andrew’s connection to Jeffrey Epstein — took place on the disgraced royal’s 66th birthday.

King Charles has already revealed that he supports the move, and other members of the royal family are believed to be preparing statements.

Prince Andrew, Duke of York, attends the Christmas Day service at St Mary Magdalene Church on December 25, 2022 in Sandringham, Norfolk.
Prince Andrew, Duke of York, attends the Christmas Day service at St Mary Magdalene Church on December 25, 2022 in Sandringham, Norfolk. (Photo by Stephen Pond/Getty Images)

But there are two royals who are blissfully exempt from the need to do damage control.

We’re talking, of course, about Prince Harry and Meghan Markle.

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex currently live more than 5,000 miles away from London, and their emotional distance from Harry’s family might be even greater.

While there may have been times when Harry and Meghan felt pangs of regret over their decision to step down as senior royals, you can be sure that that’s not the case today.

“Meghan and Harry have long felt the royals have used them as scapegoats to distract from much more damaging issues, like Andrew and his ties to Epstein,” a source tells Heat UK.

Meghan, Duchess of Sussex and Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex attend the Project Healthy Minds 3rd Annual Gala at Spring Studios on October 09, 2025 in New York City.
Meghan, Duchess of Sussex and Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex attend the Project Healthy Minds 3rd Annual Gala at Spring Studios on October 09, 2025 in New York City. (Photo by Michael Loccisano/Getty Images)

“That’s been their private narrative for years: while they were being ‘crucified over so much less,’ the Andrew situation was quietly pushed into the background.

“It was always hard for them to understand how that could just be swept under the rug and ignored,” the insider adds.

“So, to have Andrew finally facing some consequences has got to feel vindicating for them.”

And if you think Meghan feels any sympathy for the in-laws who drove her out of London, think again.

“With the royals coming under further scrutiny and pressure over their family ties with Andrew, we’re told that Meghan has little sympathy — and both she and Harry feel that William and Kate deserve this,” the insider says.

Meghan, Duchess of Sussex and Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex attend the 75th NBA All-Star Game at Intuit Dome on February 15, 2026 in Inglewood, California.
Meghan, Duchess of Sussex and Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex attend the 75th NBA All-Star Game at Intuit Dome on February 15, 2026 in Inglewood, California. (Photo by Ronald Martinez/Getty Images)

“The fact that this mess has landed on William and Kate’s doorstep won’t earn them any sympathy from Meghan. In her view, they chose the side of the institution that let this go on for years, so now they’re going to pay the price for that decision,” the source continues.

“No doubt they’ll be cleaning up this mess for years to come and Meghan and Harry are thrilled to be 10,000 miles away from all of it.”

Meanwhile, a newly released 2010 email from Andrew to Epstein says that the two of them have “some interesting things to discuss and plot” (per TMZ).

Epstein was convicted of soliciting a minor for prostitution in 2008. Needless to say, it’s a good time to be far away from the Windsor clan.

“It must be nice not to be a part of the royal noise for once,” the insider says of Harry and Meghan, adding:

“Harry and Meghan are immensely relieved that they removed themselves from the whole institution years ago, and after all they endured, it’s got to be hard not to feel smug about this. They’ve been saying for years that uncomfortable truths can’t be buried forever and now they’re being proven right.”

Meghan Markle, Prince Harry Feel ‘Vindicated’ By Prince Andrew Arrest, Royal … was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Music

See Ella Langley Through the Years [PHOTOS]

So much has changed for Ella Langley – and it’s not just the bangs! Continue reading…​The Boot – Country Music News, Music Videos and Songs

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Music

See Ella Langley Through the Years [PHOTOS]

So much has changed for Ella Langley – and it’s not just the bangs! Continue reading…​Country Music News – Taste of Country

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Music

Jelly Roll to Be Inducted Into Grand Ole Opry March 10

It’s official: Jelly Roll will be inducted as a member of the Grand Ole Opry on Tuesday, March 10, with his friend and duet partner, Opry member Lainey Wilson, inducting him.

The special night will feature performances from his friend and mentor, Opry member Craig Morgan, as well as fellow artists Leanne Morgan, ERNEST, and more, making it a celebration of both his career and the friendships he’s built along the way.

Grand Ole Opry; Jelly Roll
Grand Ole Opry; Jelly Roll

Jelly Roll first received the invitation to join the Opry during an appearance on The Joe Rogan Experience last fall. During the interview, Rogan played a surprise video message from Craig Morgan, personally welcoming Jelly Roll into the Opry family.

In the video, Morgan appeared seated in the Grand Ole Opry pews and congratulated Jelly Roll on his accomplishments, while also thanking him for the “positive difference” he has made in the lives of countless fans. 

“You’re doing great work, buddy, and I’ll never forget meeting you on the Grand Ole Opry and how much it meant to me to hear you say my music helped you get through some really tough times. That’s one thing country music does really well,” he said. 

Jelly Roll couldn’t believe his eyes and even tossed his headphones aside when he realized what Morgan had to tell him.

“Who would’ve ever dreamed back then that I’d be back at the Opry house today to say, Jelly Roll, you’re officially invited to become a member of the Grand Ole Opry. It’s an honor to say, welcome to the family brother.”

The “Need A Favor” singer broke down in tears as he realized one of his life-long dreams was about to come true.  

He left the podcast with an inspirational message to listeners : “Somebody out there right now is dreaming of something and it’s too small. Dream bigger baby. Dream bigger baby.”

Jelly Roll; Photo by Jacob DiStasio
Jelly Roll; Photo by Jacob DiStasio

Jelly Roll made his Grand Ole Opry debut on November 9, 2021, and has made it a priority to return to the Opry stage whenever possible. He has also given back by mentoring artists through the Opry NextStage program and serving as host for Opry NextStage Live shows in Texas.

The Tennessee native’s Grand Ole Opry induction comes on the heels of a remarkable year at the GRAMMY Awards, where he took home every award he was nominated for in 2026. His wins include Best Contemporary Christian Music Performance/Song for “Hard Fought Hallelujah” with Brandon Lake, Best Country Duo/Group Performance for “Amen” with Shaboozey, and Best Contemporary Country Album for his sophomore release, Beautifully Broken, which debuted at #1 on the Billboard 200.

Tickets to attend the Opry are available HERE.

The post Jelly Roll to Be Inducted Into Grand Ole Opry March 10 appeared first on Country Now.

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Food

The Big Changes Coming To Culver’s In 2026

Culver’s launches new, often limited addition items every single year. This is what we at Food Republic know is coming to us in 2026 from Culver’s.

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

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Politics

Ohio’s GOP governor sidesteps defending Kristi Noem

Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine would not immediately endorse his fellow Buckeye, Vice President JD Vance, for his party’s 2028 presidential nomination and would not express confidence in Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem amid reports that ICE could target Springfield.

Asked whether Vance should be the Republican party’s nominee, DeWine said Thursday that “he’s a favorite son of ours, and we’ll see how this whole thing plays out.”

At POLITICO’s 2026 Governors Summit, the Ohio Republican said he has not heard further news following reports that Springfield could face an ICE crackdown on its large population of Haitian immigrants: “We’ve not been told at all if they’re going to come in.” And while DeWine said that state and local law enforcement would work to keep the peace if there was a crackdown, he warned that federal officers also need to perform professionally.

“Frankly, we expect ICE, if they come in, to follow good police protocols. If they do that, we’re going to be able to work our way through it,” he said.

DeWine sidestepped multiple opportunities to express confidence in Noem’s handling of DHS’ stepped up interior enforcement.

“Look, I think that what happened in Minnesota was a signal to a lot of people — they didn’t like what they saw,” DeWine said when asked about Noem.

DeWine did defend Les Wexner, the billionaire businessman and former client of Jeffrey Epstein whose name is blazoned across many central Ohio institutions, including the The Ohio State Wexner Medical Center. DeWine said Thursday that no evidence has emerged of his wrongdoing.

“Barring some new information of something that he has done illegal, I don’t see that as a problem,” said DeWine.

The governor, who has frequently tangled with Trump and Vance — including over their baseless attacks of Haitian immigrants eating pets in Springfield — would not say whether the president has been a “force for good” for the GOP and country.

Instead, he praised Trump’s actions on border enforcement.

“He has done something that has not been done before, and that is he has basically sealed the southern border,” DeWine said. “And you can talk to Democrats, talk to Republicans. I think everybody is happy about that.”

​Politics

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Entertainment

The $50 Million Invention Behind Chick-Fil-A’s Signature Chicken

Chick-fil-A went all in on finding the perfect chicken recipe, but was the $50 million investment worth it? Here’s what you need to know.

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

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Politics

‘Pay for your own power’: Shapiro digs in on data center energy costs

PHILADELPHIA — Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, a bellwether Democrat on AI and data centers, is tempering his message ahead of his reelection campaign.

Shapiro, a swing-state Democrat and a 2028 presidential prospect, has staked his state’s economic fortunes on the tech industry. He wooed a $20 billion investment from Amazon along with major investments by Microsoft and Google. Shapiro has backed President Donald Trump’s call for more nuclear and natural gas plants to power new tech hubs.

He’s now trying to hedge his bet as data centers absorb a nationwide backlash from voters increasingly concerned about their impact on electricity bills.

“Pay for your own power, so it’s not saddling local businesses or homeowners with higher costs,” Shapiro said in an interview with POLITICO earlier this month from a union hall in Philadelphia.

It’s an unmistakable pivot by a leading practitioner of data center politics who along with other Democratic governors has been trying to bring under control rising electricity prices that could be political kryptonite for both parties. Household electricity bills are rising at twice the rate of inflation. In recent weeks, Shapiro has joined Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul and other Democrats who are sharpening their tone and putting new policies in place to try to claw back taxpayer expenses, increase pressure on utility companies and address local backlash against development.

“Too many of these projects have been shrouded in secrecy, with local communities left in the dark about who is coming in and what they’re building,” Shapiro said in his annual address to the Pennsylvania General Assembly earlier this month.

Shapiro, who is riding high in the polls as he launches his reelection campaign, is pitching the AI and data center boom as a source of union jobs during the yearslong construction phase — but also trying to manage the boom’s potential to alienate other voters.

Christopher Borick, a political science professor at Muhlenberg College in Allentown, said Shapiro’s “get stuff done” political brand runs into trouble if voters tie energy affordability concerns to data center projects.

“People have started to connect the demand for AI and data centers to pricing,” he said.

Construction of the future Amazon data center site in Fairless Hills, Pennsylvania, on Dec. 17, 2025.

Jobs and energy

Few Democrats have anticipated the data center zeitgeist as deftly as Shapiro. Shortly after taking office in 2023, he ordered an analysis of where the state and U.S. economies were headed. AI jumped out as a key opportunity, a top adviser said.

“Not just because we thought it was cool, but because we have strengths,” said Rick Siger, a former Obama staffer who serves as Shapiro’s secretary of community and economic development.

Carnegie Mellon University, a top engineering and technology school, was a selling point. So was the state’s manufacturing base, which makes hardware for data centers and boasts tech companies that will deploy advanced AI. Shapiro’s team fixated on what major developers were after. “Speed matters, in particular to companies that are competing in AI,” Siger said.

In June 2025, Shapiro announced Amazon’s $20 billion investment in two data center complexes: one in the Philadelphia suburbs of Bucks County and another south of Wilkes-Barre.

“The employees will be making, in some cases, double the average wage in that county,” Siger said, “to work in a high-tech job and be able to stay home and raise their kids in their hometown.” The data center piece of the AI juggernaut also works well for Shapiro’s union-heavy constituency. He toured Steamfitters Local Union 420’s training center in Philadelphia earlier this month, which is training apprentices to install cooling systems for the computer chips packed in wall-to-wall racks inside the cluster of AI factories being developed in Bucks County.

Rory Carroll, a 42-year-old steamfitter who was among the trainees greeting Shapiro, said he’s “tried everything” to make a living. “I sold cars, delivered pizza, managed a supermarket.” Now, he says he’s on a rising tide.

Local officials in Bucks County — which Trump flipped red in 2024, for the first time since 1988 — are wary but welcoming.

“Do I think the trend of technology replacing jobs will continue with the data centers? Of course I do,” said Erin Mullen, vice chair of the Falls Township Board of Supervisors. But she said the temporary construction jobs were worth pursuing. “This is a blue-collar township,” Mullen said. “So even though the jobs are temporary, a lot of families here survive on temporary jobs, and this is huge for the trades.”

Data centers’ demand for energy also works for Shapiro, who’s been touting the state’s large natural gas reserves in talks with tech companies. Last summer, he joined Trump and the state’s Republican senator, Dave McCormick, in Pittsburgh to announce multibillion-dollar commitments for restarting aging hydropower and expanding electricity generation from nuclear and natural gas.

Now, after cuts to federal renewable energy tax credits, he’s still touting Pennsylvania energy — with a partisan edge.

“I’m an ‘all-of-the-above’ energy governor,” Shapiro said in the POLITICO interview. “Unfortunately, the president of the United States has cut hundreds of millions of dollars from clean energy development in this commonwealth, which has cost us 26,000 union trade jobs who were set to work on these projects.”

“I don’t think it’s an either-or — it’s a both-and,” he continued. “We need to generate more power. Yes, it will rely in part on Pennsylvania natural gas. We also need to generate more power with renewables.”

Power politics

Shapiro’s call for data center developers to pay for electricity infrastructure that could drive up utility bills echoes the Trump administration’s recent rhetoric exhorting them to “pick up the tab” — but Shapiro’s focus on power bills was a long time coming.

In July 2024, as Shapiro was chasing Amazon, mid-Atlantic ratepayers were hit with a $14.7 billion, one-year charge from PJM Interconnection, the region’s electricity grid manager. The double-digit cost increases in utility bills came as a result of projections that electricity supplies could fall short of demand across the 13-state region stretching from northern Virginia to Chicago.

Shapiro demanded a price cap in December 2024 on the fastest-rising part of PJM customers’ electricity bills — a headline-grabbing event in Pennsylvania. And he’s threatened to pull Pennsylvania out of the PJM market all together, a major uprooting of the way power is delivered in the region. He’s attacked PJM for its byzantine utility-heavy leadership structure that leads to a sclerotic response to rising power prices.

Top: Construction of the future Amazon data center site, in Fairless Hills. Bottom: An industrial facility near the same site, in Morrisville.

According to federal data, electricity prices in Pennsylvania rose roughly 20 percent between November 2024 and November 2025 — the highest rate in the country. And PJM has warned that states could face power shortages by the end of the decade if the construction of new data centers race ahead of the energy supply.

“PJM is broken,” Shapiro said in December. “They’re too damned slow. And the needs we have in this country to produce more energy to support everything from data centers to more manufacturing need to be met. And we are being held captive.”

The enormously complex market rules that affect power prices in Shapiro’s state are outside average Americans’ conversations. But Shapiro and Trump have tied a rising part of their political parties’ credibility to the outcome of their pledges to make data centers pay their own way.

In January, Shapiro went to the White House alongside other East Coast governors of both parties to call for PJM to control power prices — and for data centers to “bring their own power” through long-term contracts with new generation developers.

Big tech companies are starting to sign on. Trump used a Truth Social post in early January to announce the White House was working with tech companies to get more agreement on containing the public cost of energy infrastructure. Microsoft then pledged to shoulder more of those costs.

Shapiro’s tack could work for him, according to recent polling.

A POLITICO poll released last week showed an electorate still wrestling with the data center question. Respondents’ top concerns surrounding data centers were power prices and the risk of blackouts — yet they were generally willing to support a new data center in their area evenif it hikes their power bills.

In his address to lawmakers, Shapiro proposed a three-pronged strike against rising energy costs — proposing new rules for data center developers, electric utilities and the regional grid PJM. He pledged to “hold data center developers accountable to strict standards if they want our full support.”

Last week, PJM agreed to extend price controls on future electricity production into 2030.

​Politics

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Music

Carrie Underwood Explains Her Tough Judging Style on ‘Idol’

The country superstar says she’s not trying to be harsh on ‘American Idol’ — she just believes the truth helps contestants grow. Continue reading…​The Boot – Country Music News, Music Videos and Songs