Post told the crowd that he was lowering drink prices, but fans who were there said they still had to pay full price all night. Continue reading…The Boot – Country Music News, Music Videos and Songs
Post told the crowd that he was lowering drink prices, but fans who were there said they still had to pay full price all night. Continue reading…The Boot – Country Music News, Music Videos and Songs
Post told the crowd that he was lowering drink prices, but fans who were there said they still had to pay full price all night. Continue reading…Country Music News – Taste of Country
A classic pot roast is always a crowd pleaser, but it can be a bit plain. Next time, shake things up by adding this Italian-inspired mix.

Food Republic – Restaurants, Reviews, Recipes, Cooking Tips
There’s nothing like gooey chocolate chip cookies when you’re craving a treat, and this brand of store-bought cookie dough is the best you can get.

Mashed – Fast Food, Celebrity Chefs, Grocery, Reviews
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Seven-time Cup Series champion Jimmie Johnson left full-time NASCAR racing after the 2020 season. Some thought he would come back for another full year in 2021 in front of post-COVID fan-filled tracks, but Johnson was ready for his next adventure. He’s had plenty of next adventures, including a couple of years racing in INDYCAR and purchasing a stake in GMS Racing, eventually becoming the majority owner of what is now Legacy Motor Club, which plans to expand from two to three Cup cars in 2027. Johnson had moved to England for a couple of years before returning to the United States full-time in 2025. He is back in the states trying to guide his team to improved performance. He also has two Cup races on his schedule this year — the Daytona 500 (he has run it the last three years) and the one-time race at Naval Base Coronado, near his hometown of El Cajon, California. Johnson talked to me about who he is — especially in his post-full-time NASCAR racing life: Post-full-time NASCAR career, who is Jimmie Johnson? It’s a great question. I am more aware. It’s been a great way to reflect. I’m learning more about myself, who I was, what it took to be that person. You know competition demands so much out of you that you’re on the hamster wheel but maybe don’t have the awareness that you could or should, and the more time I spend away from that environment, the more aware I become. So it’s a lot of reflection, I guess. How would your wife, Chani, describe you? I think at the core, she would say I’m so very much the same person — the work ethic, the journey, the motivation, my hours. Everything else is different, like my focus has shifted. I’m hopeful to train a couple of days a week. I’m still up so many hours and motivated by being a team owner and the things that go with it versus being out on a run in the morning. The hours and dedication are still very similar, but the pressure of [no longer] competing has brought awareness, peace, enjoyment, some other elements that I certainly think I’m much more aware of now. I think Chani would say the same. I remember when you helped open a street food restaurant in Charlotte. What’s more difficult, owning a restaurant or owning a race team? A race team. I had great partners in either scenario, but the restaurant was founded in an environment that was enhanced by my participation, not dependent upon it. So you’re saying that you’re more relied upon on the race team side? Totally. I’m the approved owner of the charters. My involvement is in some contracts written in with our partners and sponsors and in other elements, it’s maybe not in writing, but it’s an understanding. The big business side of this — if I wasn’t in it like I am, we wouldn’t have the great partners that we do. You seem to be a guy who loves people and loves relationships. Legacy has certainly had its share of changes. So I’m curious, how hard is it for you to make personnel changes as an owner? Without question, the most difficult part I’ve played. Because coming in, I felt like I would spend more time in a competition department. I probably talked about it before. As we’ve been on this journey, we’ve realized that my strengths are in different areas, and also my interests are in different areas. [Former Cup champion and Legacy adviser] Matt Kenseth has been such an asset for me, personally, to have the competition side with that experienced, watchful eye that I thought I could offer and bring to and the accountability that I could to our drivers and crew chiefs. But I’ve been on the front lines of revenue generation, partnerships and finding investors, all these different layers. So it’s been in a different scope of work, but highly relationship. Through that, we’ve had some turnover on the business ops side, but more turnover on the performance side. I haven’t been directly in a lot of that, and that’s an area that I’ve got to get more comfortable with and understand. But we’ve had groups that have evolved quite a bit, and there certainly have been plenty of tough conversations. So you’re racing this year, you have at least two Cup races, a truck race (also at Coronado), an off-road race. Is that just the start, or is that mostly what you’re going to do this year? Yeah, that’s the bulk of it. There’s a few historic car races I’ll be playing in. I’ll go to Monterey [California] this year and got a couple historic cars that I’ve purchased, and I’ll have a chance to drive them in addition to the Goodwood revival [in England]. That’s it for now. If something came along, I’d certainly take a look at it. From a Cup standpoint and the at-track demands that I have, I’m far more effective and useful out of a race car. So the Cup side is kind of baked for ’26, but if other opportunities came about, I’d look real hard at them. What is the most Californian thing about you? I’d say my eating habits. Full Mex at all times, especially growing up as close to the border as I did. What I know when we talked when you kind of went INDYCAR racing, of the reasons you went is because you could and because it was something that you wanted to do and had the opportunity to do. And I’m curious, what other things have you been able to do because you could and you had opportunities that you maybe you never thought you would get a chance to do, or were your favorite things to be able to do? I would say each step that I’ve made, personally and professionally, [has] been looking through that lens. Our time in London, that was kind of a reward that Chani and I had for ourselves. When the full-time racing stopped, we wanted to live abroad. And then it delayed a couple of years due to my idea to go INDYCAR racing. And then it all came together, and I was an owner, and thought, ‘Man, maybe, maybe it’s not a good time to go.’ And we had our tragedy [where investigators say his mother-in-law murdered her husband and her grandchild before killing herself], which then shifted it to, yeah, we should probably take advantage of this opportunity. It seems like a blessing that’s for us to be a family unit and be together. And that turned into a second year [there]. That’s one that really stands out personally. And then professionally — I guess it’s maybe not professionally in some respects — but driving that unlimited hydroplane [boat], committing to the [off-road race], committed to engage with a current partner and do cool things, Carvana and their support in this whole journey are like, what else do you want to do on that bucket list of ideas? So to create this fun opportunity with them, they’re like, ‘Hey, what do you want to go and try and do?” We try and do come up with those ideas and just have fun with it. What do you miss most about not being in London? There was a sense of freedom. That first year was really tough, but when you got established, there was big sense of freedom. And it was a good moment for me to separate from this hamster wheel that I’ve been on. You’re abroad. You’re five, six hours ahead. Sure, I had obligations and stuff as an owner and a partner to Maury [Gallagher at GMS], but it was Maury calling the shots. He was still the majority owner. And my schedule lightened up, and it was a nice shift for me to let go in a lot of ways and be with my family. And so that freedom that being away offered in my position in the team as a minority owner, and then the family time — it was just window of time I’ll always cherish. Are your teenage daughters into the 6-7 fad. And if they are, do you embrace it, or do you tell them that’s not allowed in the house? They were. It’s moved on to something else. When we try to be cool and bring it up, we get yelled at like, “You’re not cool, that’s so old, that’s yesterday.” But were you one who allowed it? Are you somebody who thinks there are other things to be worried about or fret over about. Or are you somebody who’s like: I don’t like it, we’re not having it? No. The fads, we just laugh. It’s funny. I remember feeling that my parents were so old and didn’t get it, and I remember thinking, “I’ll never be that.” And before I knew it, and without any clear understanding, I don’t know how to work my phone, I don’t know the fads — any electronic device that I get handed, they’re like, “[Give it] here dad” and within a few clicks, they’ve got it. It’s just wild when you’re younger and you make little mental notes or whatever it might be, “I’m not going to be that.” All of a sudden, you are that. And then finally, is this going to be your last Daytona 500? No, no, no. That was a quick answer. Yeah. Especially owning the team. I can call these shots, do what I want. So, yeah, without a doubt, there’s a trend of things slowing down. But this won’t be my last 500. What is it about the Daytona 500 that keeps bringing you back? What’s the best way to put it? Last year, I finished third. And when I go to other Cup races, and when you’re not a regular with a regular team, squeezing out that last little sliver of speed week in and week out, you’re just not in the window of the win. And it’s just a harsh truth, and one that I’ve accepted recently. And when I look over time and the unpredictable winners of a restrictor-plate race and also of the Daytona 500, why wouldn’t I? I can go get another one, get my 84th [win]. So it just works well with a part-time or a moonlight or whatever the right phrase would be. I think plate races in general, and then, of course, if you’re going to do it, you may as well do the big one.Latest Sports News from FOX Sports
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It’s been 32 years since Kurt Cobain was found dead inside his home in Aberdeen, Washington.
And while the investigation into his death initially seemed to be open and shut — Cobain left a suicide note and appeared to have succumbed to a self-inflicted gunshot wound — many now believe there’s more to the story.
One of those people is forensic scientist Brian Burnett, who firmly believes that Cobain was murdered.

Burnett recently published a peer-reviewed paper exploring “10 points of evidence” regarding Cobain’s death.
And he says his findings couldn’t be more concrete.
“This is a homicide,” Burnett remarked to fellow researcher Michelle Wilkins (via The Daily Mail).
“We’ve got to do something about this.”
Wilkins went on to share some of the details of Burnett’s findings:

“There are things in the autopsy that go, well, wait, this person didn’t die very quickly of a gunshot blast,” Wilkins told the Mail.
“The necrosis of the brain and liver happens in an overdose. It doesn’t happen in a shotgun death.”
She went on to say that given his level of intoxication, it would have been impossible for Cobain to compose a suicide note or handle a gun in his final hours.
“He’s dying of an overdose, and so he can barely breathe, his blood isn’t pumping very much […] I mean, he’s in a coma, and he’s holding this up to be able to reach the trigger to get it in his mouth. It’s crazy.”

While numerous conspiracy theorists have suggested that Cobain’s widow, Courtney Love, played a role in his death, no one from Burnett’s research team has gone so far as to single out any suspects.
The team says their only goal is to convince the Seattle Police Department to re-open the investigation.
“If we’re wrong, just prove it to us. That’s all we asked them to do,” says Wilkins.
“Our office is always open to revisiting its conclusions if new evidence comes to light, but we’ve seen nothing to date that would warrant re-opening of this case and our previous determination of death,” said the King’s County Medical Examiner’s Office in a statement.
We will have further updates on this developing story as new information becomes available.
Kurt Cobain’s Death Ruled ‘A Homicide’ By Independent Forensic Expert was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.
The Hollywood Gossip
Travis Tritt is still making waves in country music, even inspiring some fans to get his face inked on their skin. Continue reading…The Boot – Country Music News, Music Videos and Songs
Travis Tritt is still making waves in country music, even inspiring some fans to get his face inked on their skin. Continue reading…Country Music News – Taste of Country
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On Super Bowl Sunday, Jill Zarin trashed the Halftime Show, loudly complaining that it didn’t feature enough white people or enough English lyrics for her tastes.
This isn’t exactly new territory for Zarin. She’s now fired from an upcoming Bravo project — one that feels increasingly cursed.
Other Housewives, past and present, spoke out immediately to condemn her racist rant.
But Brandi Glanville, for some reason, is actually defending her. Does she have a point?

“We all agree — it was the worst halftime show ever,” Zarin insisted in a swiftly-deleted Instagram rant, which you can view below.
“It’s 250 years that we’re celebrating right now in the United States,” she noted, bizarrely adding: “And I just don’t think it was appropriate to have it in Spanish.”
She also insisted that it “looked like a political statement, because there were literally no white people in the entire thing.”
(That was not true, and Zarin’s rant also complained about Lady Gaga, a white woman who took part in the show)
“I think it was a political statement, and I’m not taking a side one way or the other,” Zarin insisted. “I just do. I think it was an ICE thing.”
Jill Zarin’s review of Bad Bunny’s #SuperBowl Halftime Show… 🥴 pic.twitter.com/XH8f0HjQpI
— Gibson Johns (@gibsonoma) February 9, 2026
Producers for Blink49 Studios, behind the upcoming The Golden Life Bravo series, issued a statement on the following Tuesday.
“In light of recent public comments made by Jill Zarin, Blink49 Studios has decided not to move forward with her involvement in ‘The Golden Life,’” the production company shared.
The statement added: “We remain committed to delivering the series in line with our company standards and values.”
It is important to remember that Zarin was previously on The Real Housewives of New York City (pre-soft-reboot), which lapsed into a hiatus due to a racism scandal.
Even the reboot had a racism scandal early on. Lizzy Savetsky awkwardly declined to do matchmaking work for Brynn Whitfield followed by Savetsky’s husband reportedly using the N-word, to the horror for producers.

Late at night on Tuesday, February 10, Brandi tweeted an inexplicable defense of Zarin.
“OK #1 I have a HUGE crush on BadBunny,” she wrote relatably. “I wanna be his Mrs. Robinson.”
She gushed: “The 1/2 show rocked.” So far so good!
“My friend @Jill Zarin has her own opinion & I don’t agree with it AT ALL,” Brandi acknowledged.
“But opinions aren’t wrong they’re subjective,” she claimed.

“I want to watch Jill on TV explain herself & hopefully learn something,” Brandi expressed.
“Or,” she suggested, “we can just keep watching ‘yes people’ afraid to share.”
As many commenters pointed out in the replies, opinions can cover so many things — from taste in music and dances to pizza toppings to home decor and beyond.
However, Zarin very specifically complained about lyrics that were not in English and about there being “literally no white people” in the show.
Though her statement was factually untrue, that does not make it less racist. It is up to Zarin to interrogate whatever it is within her that leads to this gut response of feeling threatened or excluded when she sees multiple brown people performing. If music and joy upsets you, it probably means that you need to work on yourself.

To Brandi’s other point, we do see where she’s coming from when she talks about “yes people” who might simply withhold rancid comments instead of sharing them.
After all, people might keep silent about their abhorrent views about how people with brown skin should dance, what language they should incorporate in music, or what the minimum percentage of white people should be in any televised event must be. But will they learn anything?
But … are they actually going to change? Will them speaking out and being challenged actually change anything?
A half-dozen years ago, 2020 saw historic protests and a lot of conversation about long-overdue positive changes in our nation. The years that followed have been an intense and coordinated backlash against all decency, giving rise to once-fringe white nationalists like Charlie Kirk stepping into mainstream conservative spotlights.
If these past few years have taught us anything, perhaps it’s that the world is a better place when racists keep their awful opinions to themselves out of fear of societal judgment. The alternative, where they are unafraid to spew racist vitriol, leads to our nation’s current nightmare.
Brandi Glanville Actually Defends Jill Zarin After Racist Bad Bunny Rant was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.
The Hollywood Gossip
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — For a moment when I saw Tony Stewart in November and asked him about racing a truck at Daytona, I had the feeling I looked at him as if he had two or three heads. As my camera rolled, Stewart declined to answer at the time about why he would think about doing it, but certainly my reaction wasn’t the only one. Apparently the reaction is common. Stewart described in a Dodge-moderated teleconference with reporters last month that his wife, Leah, also looked at him with some skepticism. “She looked at me like I had three heads,” Stewart said. “So it took a little bit of convincing to convince her that I was serious about it.” Oh wait, that actually was about him just racing a truck again. Not even at Daytona. And then she gave him another look when she heard about the plan for him to race for Kaulig Racing in the season opener Friday night. “She’s like, ‘Why would you do that?’” Stewart told me. “And she goes, ‘You’ve always told me it’s about a 70 percent chance you’re going to get wrecked out of any race at Daytona.’” So why is Stewart doing it? It’s no secret his NHRA drag racing team exists at least in part because of the investment from Dodge, the sister company to Ram, which enters the trucks for the 2026 season with an eye on returning Dodge to Cup in 2027 or 2028. The three-time Cup champion hasn’t raced anything in NASCAR since 2016, and he figures at least he knows the draft at Daytona. “All these guys that are running the truck series, they know the handling characteristics of these trucks,” Stewart said. “But when you go to a place like Daytona and Talladega, they aren’t necessarily the same handling characteristics and the things that you truly need to know about that is the draft. “And it doesn’t matter how much technology changes. The one thing that doesn’t change at Daytona is the air. So I think our record book shows we had a pretty good success rate at Daytona, and at least that we understood that part of it.” It will be cool to see Stewart in the truck race but also a little scary. It’s no secret that sometimes truck superspeedway races can morph into wreckfests. And at age 54, with a 15-month-old son and a vibrant NHRA team as well as a sprint-car team, is he taking too big of a risk? Stewart, who knows that his racing days are nearing an end, has never shied away from risks and part of him thinks this will be cool. Of course, there’s the big question mark of why even return to NASCAR considering what came out in the 23XI/Front Row antitrust lawsuit against the sanctioning body. Text messages revealed NASCAR brass wanted to “put a knife” in Stewart’s SRX Series that several NASCAR drivers participated in — something that NASCAR felt could impact its television rights negotiations if drivers continued to participate in other nationally televised stock-car events, albeit on a much smaller scale at smaller tracks than Cup typically visits. “I think everybody that’s on this call understands I didn’t have the best relationship with NASCAR, and surely, over the last 12 months, have had more reason to not have the best of relationships,” Stewart told me. “But still, at the end of the day, there were parts of the racing and people there that made it worthwhile — and the tracks and the cars, there were a lot of aspects that I truly do still miss to this day of it.” For young fans and his biggest fans, it will be a treat to see Stewart race the truck. He won’t even rule out another appearance later in the year. And if Stewart really wants to do it, then great — he’s earned the right to do what he wants. But let’s not hope he’s not doing it too often as a favor or in hopes of making sure he keeps his Dodge support. Doing it once as a bit of thanks and strengthening a relationship makes sense. But there’s a lot of risk for that to be the answer. In Second Thoughts, Bob Pockrass offers his opinion on a burning motorsports topic.Latest Sports News from FOX Sports