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Sports Fox

Daytona 500 Recap: Tyler Reddick Gives Michael Jordan, 23XI Monumental Win

Tyler Reddick led the 2026 Daytona 500 for just one lap, and that was all he needed to claim victory in the “Great American Race.” The No. 45 car was able to outlast some chaos on the final lap, which saw leader Carson Hocevar get knocked out of the leader’s spot when a crash occurred. Reddick, who was in fourth at the time of the incident, still needed to get around Chase Elliott entering the final turn. Reddick was able to get right by Elliott on the final turn and escape another crash behind him, with 23XI teammate Riley Herbst able to make way for him at the end. Here’s how a dramatic 2026 Daytona unfolded. The Winner Is … Tyler Reddick won his first Daytona 500 on Sunday. It’s also the first Daytona 500 win for the Michael Jordan co-owned 23XI Racing. Reddick started the race in 26th. The final lap was the only lap Reddick led in Sunday’s race. How The Race Was Won Reddick was able to outlast a pair of crashes on the final lap, which helped him go from fourth to first. He also wasn’t one of the 20 drivers that was involved in “The Big One” on Lap 124. One Big Moment Top-10 Finishers 1. Tyler Reddick2. Ricky Stenhouse Jr.3. Joey Logano4. Chase Elliott5. Brad Keselowski6. Zane Smith7. Chris Buescher8. Riley Herbst9. Josh Berry10. Bubba Wallace What’s Next The Cup Series heads to Atlanta Motor Speedway for the Autotrader 400 on Feb. 22 (3 p.m. ET on FOX).​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports

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Politics

DHS watchdog warns shutdown could imperil immigration enforcement oversight

The partial government shutdown that went into effect Saturday is throwing the fate of oversight at the Department of Homeland Security into peril, with the department’s independent watchdog warning a lapse in funding could jeopardize several ongoing investigations.

DHS’s inspector general currently has eight active probes into the Trump administration’s nationwide immigration crackdown, including reviews of the use of facial recognition and allegations of Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents using excessive force.

But with a lapse in funding for DHS, the Office of the Inspector General has been forced to suspend approximately 85 percent of its audits, evaluations and inspections, according to the OIG.

Congressional Democrats are demanding sweeping reforms to ICE and Customs and Border Patrol before they’ll vote to fund DHS, including requirements that immigration enforcement agents wear body cameras and display their ID numbers and last names. With Senate Republicans and the White House refusing to budge on several key demands — including a proposed prohibition on federal agents wearing masks — the department is likely to remain unfunded for at least 10 days.

Democrats in Congress first asked Joseph Cuffari, the DHS inspector general President Donald Trump appointed during his first term, to investigate the use of force by ICE agents last June. The lawmakers, including Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Ed Markey of Massachusetts, wrote to Cuffari earlier this month asking him to expedite the probe, citing the fatal shootings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti by federal agents in Minneapolis as underscoring the “urgent need” for moving quickly.

Republicans have raised concern about the shutdown’s effect on DHS agencies like TSA and FEMA, although it will likely take weeks for the public to start feeling the effects of the funding lapse.

Rep. Andrew Garbarino (R-N.Y.), who chairs the House Homeland Security Committee, said in a statement that “OIG investigations provide transparency and accountability, and any delay in funding will only disrupt these important efforts,” adding that the DHS appropriations bill passed in the House provided “critical funding” for the office.

“As we experience yet another DHS shutdown because Senate Democrats refused to pass this legislation, I urge them to negotiate in good faith so we can ensure these resources and the resources for numerous other components, like FEMA and TSA, are not held hostage because of Washington’s dysfunction,” he said.

ICE, on the other hand, is largely insulated from the effects of the shutdown, with GOP lawmakers having appropriated billions of dollars for the agency in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act last year.

But the lapse in funding raises several potential obstacles to the ability of members of Congress and investigators to conduct oversight of the agency. During the last government shutdown, ICE quietly furloughed most of its congressional relations team and blocked lawmakers from visiting immigration detention facilities. (Prior to the shutdown, Democratic lawmakers on several occasions clashed with DHS over their attempts to inspect detention facilities.)

And with approximately 60 percent of the OIG’s workforce furloughed — including auditors, data scientists and inspectors — only special agents like criminal investigators and personnel whose work is supported by secondary funding sources, like the Disaster Relief Fund, can continue working through the shutdown, per the office.

The effect of the funding lapse for the inspector general’s work is also slated to affect the office’s reviews of the Secret Service’s handling of the July 2024 assassination attempt against Trump, in addition to probes of DHS’s cybersecurity and counterintelligence operations.

The Council of the Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency — an independent government entity that lays out annual legislative priorities focused on government oversight and accountability — has for years called on Congress to establish authority for IGs to continue oversight during government shutdowns.

Mark Greenblatt, who served as the Department of the Interior’s inspector general from 2019 until 2025, said while criminal investigations can sometimes continue despite a lapse in funding, IG offices are forced to pause oversight reviews, ceding valuable time on sensitive audits during shutdowns.

“These situations are raw. They need an independent voice providing facts on what’s happening on the ground with respect to these sensitive issues,” said Greenblatt, who was one of several IGs dismissed by Trump last year. “When they push the pause button on these things, they’re not delivering for the American people, and that, to me, is the problem.”

Democrats have accused DHS Secretary Kristi Noem of deliberately attempting to stymie the OIG’s ongoing probes. In a letter sent to Noem earlier this month, Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.) cautioned that “repeated tacit threats from your Office of the Secretary to DHS OIG may have already succeeded in weakening DHS OIG’s operational independence.”

That warning came after Duckworth met with Cuffari to discuss why her request for an independent investigation into use of force by federal agents during ICE’s “Operation Midway Blitz” in Chicago was denied. During the meeting, she wrote in the letter, Duckworth learned that DHS’s general counsel advised the OIG on several occasions that Noem has the power to halt its investigations.

Cabinet secretaries are empowered by a 1978 law to prevent the OIG from carrying out audits or investigations if they determine the reviews could put national security at risk.

“This broad authority effectively empowers you to select from a broad range of pretextual options to unilaterally prevent or halt any ‘independent’ DHS OIG investigation, regardless of your true intent,” Duckworth wrote.

No DHS secretary has ever invoked the provision, Duckworth wrote in the letter.

​Politics

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Sports Fox

How Much Is the 2026 Daytona 500 Purse? See the Record Prize Money, Payout

Winning NASCAR’s most prestigious race, the Daytona 500, comes with a pretty penny. The purse for the Daytona 500 has increased for the fourth consecutive year, with the 2026 total set at $31,045,575, per FOX Sports’ Bob Pockrass. That’s the largest in the 67-year history of The Great American Race and over a $700,000 increase from last year’s figure ($30,331,250 in 2025). [2026 Daytona 500: Live Updates, Leaderboard] It remains unclear how much the winner of the event receives from the overall purse, as NASCAR doesn’t disclose the exact amount allotted to drivers. The last time NASCAR disclosed the winner’s prize was in 2015, when Joey Logano captured the win and $1.58 million, per Yahoo Sports. However, some recent court documents have shed light on what the possible base payouts could be. The Daytona 500 winner will take 5.160% of the purse, which would total $1,601,950 this year, according to Racing News. Pockrass previously reported in 2023 that Dayonta 500 winners received between $1.5 million and $2 million. The overall purse for the Daytona 500 has jumped more than $13 million since 2015, when it was just $18 million.​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports

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Food

Aldi’s Pizza Tool Is A Williams Sonoma Look-Alike For A Fraction Of The Price

Those who adore Williams Sonoma but want to save on cash should head on down to Aldi where you can buy this golden pizza tool that looks fancier than it is.

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

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Entertainment

The Non-Alcoholic Beer Brand Created By Tom Holland

While Spider-Man probably shouldn’t sling or swing on webs while tipsy, that’s not why Tom Holland decided to launch a non-alcoholic beer brand.

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

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Sports Fox

‘The Big One’ At Daytona 500 Involves 20 Cars In Huge Wreck Up Front

The 2026 Daytona 500 was relatively smooth-sailing through the first 123 laps, with the yellow caution flag only making three appearances in that span. But on Lap 124, “The Big One” arrived. A major 20-car wreck occurred at the front of the race on Lap 124 of Sunday’s race. The crash occurred after Denny Hamlin made an aggressive attempt to try and pass leader Justin Allgaier on Turn 4. Allgaier, who was in the No. 40 JR Motorsports Chevrolet, was way out front of Hamlin, with Ryan Blaney on the outside and Bubba Wallace on the inside. The outside lane appeared to have momentum, and Blaney in the No. 12 Team Penske Ford gave Hamlin in the No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota a bump. Hamlin had a path to take the lead, but Allgaier threw what FOX Sports’ Clint Bowyer called a “lazy” block. Hamlin hit Allgaier, and both cars turned toward the inside of the track and collected a huge chunk of the field. [FULL RACE COVERAGE: Daytona 500 Live Updates, Leaderboard] The wreck allowed Wallace to sneak ahead and take the lead as he somehow went unscathed through the wreck. The caution continued through the end of Stage 2, giving Wallace the stage victory. The green flag emerged again on Lap 136. Allgaier, Alex Bowman and Todd Gilliland’s days came to an end as a result of the crash. They were tended to in the infield care center and were quickly released. Hamlin had no exterior damage, but his car was having radio issues following the wreck. Here’s a look at all 20 cars involved during Sunday’s “The Big One” at the Daytona 500: And here are some other angles of how “The Big One” went down at Sunday’s race:​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports

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Entertainment

Glove Found Near Nancy Guthrie’s Home Possibly Linked to Suspect

Nancy GuthrieAuthorities have discovered key information in the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie.
As the search for Today anchor Savannah Guthrie’s mom continues after she was reported missing Feb. 1, the FBI…
​E! Online (US) – Top Stories

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Entertainment

The Best Wine Bar In Your State, Hands Down

Stopping into a wine bar for a glass of wine or two is a great night out. Discover the best wine bars across the country, home to countless styles of wine.

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

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Food

Why You Should Add Eggshells To Your Smoothies

Smoothies are a great way to pack in nutrients into one convenient drink, but did you know that you should be adding eggshells to your recipe?

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

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Entertainment

Forget Vegetable Oil, Here’s What Your Grandparents Probably Used To Fry Food (And It Likely Tasted Better)

Forget vegetable oil – your grandparents likely fried with a different type of fat that gave food richer flavor and a crispier, tastier result.

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