Governor Gavin Newsom has finally opened up about the cause of his mother’s death, and his frank commentary is shining a light on a very difficult topic.

Health Digest – Health News, Wellness, Expert Insights
Governor Gavin Newsom has finally opened up about the cause of his mother’s death, and his frank commentary is shining a light on a very difficult topic.

Health Digest – Health News, Wellness, Expert Insights
If you’re hosting a party, a slow cooker is a great way to take some of the pressure off of your shoulders, even if you don’t cook with it. Here’s how.

Food Republic – Restaurants, Reviews, Recipes, Cooking Tips
National Republicans are throwing money and bodies at a down-ballot initiative to try to wrest back a congressional seat in Utah. Their efforts could blow up in their face.
With a looming February 15 deadline, Republicans have seen only half the number of verified signatures they need to move things forward. And the effort, which has the backing of President Donald Trump and support from multiple MAGA groups, has devolved into chaos.
Local county clerks are flagging hundreds of potentially fraudulent submissions. People have reportedly been repeatedly misled into signing the petition by signature-gatherers, with some telling local news outlets that they were told it was an anti-ICE petition. Those signature-gatherers have reported being assaulted by hecklers and their signature packets stolen or destroyed.
In the Beehive State, where politics are often seen by outsiders as cartoonishly friendly, this effort has turned so tumultuous that Republican Gov. Spencer Cox — who earned national attention for his pleas for civility after conservative influencer Charlie Kirk was assassinated in the state — called on Utahns to “resolve [their] disagreements peacefully.”
While the GOP groups insist they’ll have the numbers needed, they’re still far short — which would represent a major failure in a ruby-red state.
The effort aims to overturn a new judge-ordered congressional map that hands Democrats one safe blue seat by attempting to repeal an anti-gerrymandering law that would allow the Republican-controlled legislature to reinstall a more favorable map ahead of the 2028 elections. It has garnered support from Trump and his allies, who had already spent $4.3 million on the effort as of November — and have only ramped up since.
The signature-gathering initiative represents an early test of Republicans’ ground-game efforts in a midterm year where they face strong headwinds in the polls.
Trump and his son, Donald Trump Jr, have signaled support to the Utah initiative, with Trump recently encouraging his Truth Social followers to support the “very important effort” to ”KEEP UTAH RED.”
Turning Point Action — the 501(c)(4) founded by the late Charlie Kirk, who was killed in the state last summer — is “all in” on the effort, its COO said, and is canvassing the state with a half-dozen events over the next week. A fleet of about 700 paid workers, many of them from out of state, have been hired to gather signatures, bankrolled by Securing American Greatness Inc., a 501(c)(4) previously run by former Trump White House official Taylor Budowich. MAGA celebrity Scott Presler parachuted in last month for a series of events. And Trump Jr. cut an 11th-hour ad begging Utah outdoorsmen to protect “their pioneer heritage” by signing the petition at the state’s largest hunting expo in Salt Lake City next week. (Trump-loving country singer Ted Nugent, who will attend the expo, will autograph merch for signers.)
But so far, those efforts don’t appear to be paying off. As of Friday, the initiative had garnered just over 76,000 verified signatures, about half of the more than 140,000 required statewide for a measure to be added to this November’s ballot. A daily analysis conducted by independent journalist Bryan Schott shows the initiative on track to fall well short of the required signature thresholds: eight percent of all active registered voters statewide, and eight percent in at least 26 of the 29 Utah state Senate districts.
“The only thing that will matter is on the very last day, do we have enough signatures, and I strongly believe that we will,” said Brad Bonham, a Republican National Committeeman and initiative sponsor.
The initiative’s Republican backers claim the lagging signature count is part of their strategy. Bonham said the initiative’s sponsors have “many, many thousands of signatures” they are independently verifying and have not yet submitted. Utah Republican Party Chairman Rob Axson said “many tens of thousands” more have been submitted to county clerks and are undergoing verification.
“We feel very, very good about the strategy that we are executing on and the momentum that we’re building,” Axson said.
Dropping a large tranche of signatures close to the February 15 deadline could backfire, said Elizabeth Rasmussen, the executive director of Better Boundaries, the anti-gerrymandering group opposing the repeal, as signers still have a 45-day window after their signature is verified to remove it.
Rasmussen said her group mailed nearly 8,000 letters last week to petition signers encouraging them to remove their names, and will continue to do so in coming weeks. Her groups’ previous efforts have led to over 500 signatures removed, Rasmussen said.
And she’s not so sure that Trump’s involvement will help the GOP in a heavily conservative state whose voters nonetheless have long been skeptical of the president.
“Trump’s approval rating in Utah is at an all-time low,” Rasmussen said. “We’re not seeing that as a value add, if anything.”
The ongoing saga in Utah is an odd addendum to the nationwide redistricting push. In 2018, Utah voters passed Proposition 4, a ballot measure that created an independent redistricting commission to prevent partisan gerrymandering. Earlier this year, District Judge Dianna Gibson ruled that the GOP-controlled state legislature failed to comply with Prop 4 when it drew four safe Republican districts in the 2022 map. The GOP submitted another map with four safe seats last fall, but the judge selected a different map, which includes a blue seat in Salt Lake County, in November.
The GOP-controlled state legislature is appealing Gibson’s decision to the state Supreme Court, and two sitting U.S. House members joined a federal lawsuit pushing for the current, Republican-friendly map to be used in 2026. The state GOP’s signature-gathering push would repeal Prop 4 and allow the legislature to redraw a map ahead of the 2028 cycle.
If they meet the requisite signature threshold, the initiative will go on the ballot this November, where voters will decide.
In Utah County, the state’s second-most-populous county, the clerk’s office has flagged hundreds of signatures for possible fraud. Some appear to be forged signatures, and when the clerk’s office called the signers, they denied ever signing the petition; others appear to be made-up names and addresses.
“I think it’s just the signature gatherers that are doing this are just trying to find an easy way to make money,” Aaron Davidson, the Utah County Clerk, told POLITICO.
The Salt Lake and Davis county clerks — the first- and third-most populous counties in the state — said they have not seen any significant irregularities. “The number of alleged fraudulent voters that Utah County has found, that is startling,” said Lannie Chapman, the Salt Lake County clerk. “We all take this very seriously.”
Axson, the GOP state chair, said some of the signature-gatherers under review were flagged by his team before submission, and several paid signature-gatherers who are under review for fraud have been fired. “I don’t want a single fraudulent signature counted,” Axson said.
“Are there going to be a couple of bad actors, or bad examples, or places where the process has fallen short, or whatnot? Of course there are,” added Axson. “But what’s not being talked about in all of these stories is the fact that out of 3,000 people engaged in this effort, you only have a small handful of bad actors.”
But as the signature push enters its home stretch, tensions have only accelerated.
“Violence is not the answer to any of this. I don’t understand anybody that would do that,” added Bonham, the initiative sponsor. “It brings me back to Charlie Kirk losing his life here in our own backyard. It’s like, what on earth is going on here?”
Politics

Saquon Barkley is passing some words of wisdom to this year’s Super Bowl teams.
Indeed, the 2025 Super Bowl champ shared some sound advice for the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks, who…
E! Online (US) – Top Stories
Yeah, this would’ve been something. Last offseason, superstar defensive end Micah Parsons and the Dallas Cowboys were at an impasse in extension talks, and the team considered trade offers. In the end, the Cowboys traded Parsons to the Green Bay Packers mere days before the 2025 regular season. Here’s the kicker: Dallas apparently almost traded Parsons to their bitter NFC East division rival. “It [a trade] was very close [with the] Philadelphia Eagles, before the Jaelan Philips move, it was me,” Parsons said during a live broadcast of his podcast, “The Edge With Micah Parsons.” “I was really about to come [to Philadelphia], but there was one person that I had to play with that, if he was gone, I did not want to be there, and that was Jalen Carter. They [the Cowboys] wanted a D-Tackle, and they wanted to trade me, plus some picks. I don’t really care about the picks, but I’m coming to play next to JC [Jalen Carter], you feel me? “So, sorry, Cowboys fans. It really almost happened.” This story lines up with FOX Sports NFL Insider Jay Glazer revealing in September that, at one point, the Eagles had the strongest trade offer on the table for Parsons, which included two first-round picks and a third- and fifth-rounder. That said, Dallas refused to make a move of that magnitude within its division, per Glazer. Ultimately, to extract Parsons from Dallas, Green Bay traded defensive tackle and three-time Pro Bowler Kenny Clark and two first-round draft picks. The Packers then signed Parsons to a four-year, $186 million extension, which begins next season. Parsons, a three-time All-Pro and Pro Bowler in each of his five NFL seasons, recorded 12.5 sacks, two forced fumbles and 41 combined tackles in 14 games this season. Unfortunately for Parsons, his debut campaign with the Packers ended in December after he tore his left ACL. Both Philadelphia and Green Bay were eliminated in the NFC wild card round this season, while Dallas missed the playoffs for a second consecutive year. Parsons is targeting a return in September of next season. He has registered double-digit sacks in each of his five seasons in the sport.Latest Sports News from FOX Sports
These singers are quick to sing the praises of sober living. Continue reading…The Boot – Country Music News, Music Videos and Songs
These singers are quick to sing the praises of sober living. Continue reading…Country Music News – Taste of Country
Reading Time: 3 minutes
Lindsey Vonn is making her 2026 comeback!
Despite a gnarly injury, she’s hitting the slopes again.
In addition to being one of the most decorated alpine skiers in the history of the sport, she has also led a colorful, headlines-making love life. At times, anyway.
Here’s a quick refresher and where things stand today.

On September 29, 2007, Lindsey Caroline Kildow married Thomas Vonn.
Both had competed in the 2002 Olympics. Both are from the US Ski Team.
The marriage lasted four years.
In November of 2011, the Vonns announced the end of their marriage.
They finalized the divorce in January of 2013. Lindsey would keep one important thing from that marriage: her now-famous surname.

Lindsey’s divorce process spanned over a year. She was still Lindsey Vonn in 2012 when she met Tiger Woods at a charity event.
The two would date from March of 2013 until their May 2015 breakup.
Lindsey and her presence on the PGA Tour became a subject of media sensationalism.
To date, this remains her most famous relationship. It was also the golfer’s most publicized relationship following his infamous cheating scandal.
Despite this indelible chapter in Lindsey’s life, the two never became engaged or married.

In between Tiger Woods and her next relationship, Lindsey dated Kenan Smith, an assistant coach for the NFL. The romance spanned for about a year.
In June 2018, Lindsey began dating a hockey player, PK Subban.
In August of 2019, they announced their engagement. As it turned out, Lindsey had been the one who proposed.
The next year, they purchased a villa in Beverly Hills. The $6.75 million purchase was followed by joining the ownership group of Angel City FC, an LA-based National Women’s Soccer League team.
However, the romance did not last. During the final days of 2020, Lindsey and PK split amicably. They remain friends.
In the spring of 2021, Lindsey Vonn began dating Diego Osorio.
Diego was a little different from her other famous exes.
Her past men were athletes or part of the world of athletes, even if the sports in question varied widely.
Diego, on the other hand, is a documentarian. He is also the founder of Lobos 1707, a tequila company.
The relationship spanned for years, but they announced the breakup in February 2025 — just ahead of Valentine’s Day.

In more recent months, Lindsey Vonn has been more focused upon other matters.
February 2026 is the Winter Olympics in (and around) Milan, Italy.
Despite a very recent injury and her age (41 is young for a person but geriatric for most Olympic sports), she’s hitting the slopes to represent America.
Unfortunately, this is an awkward time to represent this country. All Olympians for the US have a dark cloud over their heads (perhaps even more than the rest of us) as they step into the international spotlight.
On and off of the slopes, we’ll continue to root for Lindsey.
Lindsey Vonn Divorced: Her History of Marriage, Explained was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.
The Hollywood Gossip
You used to find this retro cold chicken dish in restaurants. In the past, it was the height of haute cuisine — understandably so as it is a French classic.

Food Republic – Restaurants, Reviews, Recipes, Cooking Tips
Rumors have swirled that President Donald Trump may have pooped his pants recently, indicating that he has dementia. Could dementia actually cause incontinence?

Health Digest – Health News, Wellness, Expert Insights