Categories
Hip Hop

‘The Dude’: Quincy Jones At The Height Of His Powers

Quincy Jones The Dude album cover

You didn’t need to hear a single note from Quincy JonesThe Dude to know it was going to stand out. All you had to do was look at the album cover and see that unique South African sculpture on the front. Jones once said he found it while visiting a Los Angeles art gallery with Henry Mancini. “It was as if it yelled over at us and said, ‘My brother, take me home.’” He bought it immediately, saying the statue “had an attitude like I’d never seen before.” And that’s the key word for what you hear on The Dude: attitude. It was a statement of worldly, unquestioned confidence.

Jones was part of a generation that introduced the world to the idea that a producer could be an artist too. He had the chops to back it up. He learned from brilliant orchestrators like Gil Evans and Igor Stravinsky, and cut his teeth with bandleaders such as Lionel Hampton and Count Basie, eventually taking center stage as the ultimate pop music alchemist and matchmaker.

Buy Quincy Jones’ The Dude now.

By the early 80s, Jones was riding high, with a clutch of excellent solo albums created in between producing blockbuster albums such as Michael Jackson’s Off The Wall, George Benson’s Give Me The Night, and The Brothers Johnson’s Light Up The Night. As if that wasn’t enough, he masterminded a film score to the hugely successful mini-series Roots and worked on what – at the time – was the most expensive film musical ever made, The Wiz.

YouTube Video
Click to load video

So, when it was time for Quincy to record his next solo project, he didn’t have much to prove. The album was simply one of his tightest realizations of all of his talents: orchestration, arranging, sequencing, and talent scouting. The talent scouting was especially key, as the album was a unique composite of dance, bebop, pop, and balladry. Its genre can scarcely be defined.

And it was a time when some genres were in a state of flux, especially in the wake of the enormous backlash to everything disco. The Dude‘s multi-faceted moods and complex arrangements became a pacesetter for the R&B, boogie, and pop that was to come. The lilting, floating “Velas,” elevated by the keening harmonica of Toots Thielemans, had shades of smooth jazz and Quiet Storm, while the lightning-fast bombast of “Ai No Corrida” showcased how much African syncopation would filter into pop and dance music for years to come.

It works thanks to Jones’ a-team of musicians, like keyboardists Herbie Hancock and Greg Phillinganes, trumpeter and horn arranger Jerry Hey, drummer JR Robinson, bassist Louis Johnson, and star-making vocal performances from Patti Austin and James Ingram.

The Dude introduced Ingram’s distinctive baritone to the world, showing off the emotive delicacy and tenderness of “Just Once,” the soaring smoothness of “One Hundred Ways” and his signature masculine heft on the title track.

YouTube Video
Click to load video

But perhaps the real superstar of The Dude was songwriter Rod Temperton. The Heatwave keyboardist known for composing classics like “Always and Forever,” Michael Jackson’s “Rock with You” and George Benson’s “Give Me the Night,” Temperton wrote four of the album’s nine cuts, exploring the full range of his theatrics. “Razzmatazz” and “Turn on The Action” were clinics of rhythmic urgency, while “Something Special” displayed atmospheric harmonics that created a delightfully understated passion. Patti Austin’s vocals take Temperton’s songs to their apex, thanks to her melding of razor-sharp technique and instinctive sensuality. She might be at her best, though, on Stevie Wonder’s serpentine funk composition, “Betcha Wouldn’t Hurt Me.”

YouTube Video
Click to load video

The mortar that held all these bricks together was engineer Bruce Swedien. Aside from his savant knowledge of microphone science, Swedien’s innovative technique, dubbed the “Acusonic Record System,” provided a nearly endless potential of recording range that gave each recording a celestial sheen. When you heard something Swedien had a hand in played on the radio during this time period, you simply felt the difference.

Quincy Jones’ infectious leadership and charisma helped The Dude go platinum and earn three more Grammys for his already overflowing trophy shelf. Perhaps more importantly, though, the album, alongside Michael Jackson’s Thriller, proved to be a template for pop music for decades to come. The right amount of sophistication and spontaneity, or as Jones himself stated, “soul and science.”

Buy Quincy Jones’ The Dude now.

​Discover more about the world’s greatest R&B artists | uDiscover Music

Categories
Sports Fox

Big Ten’s Historic Sweet 16: Ranking All Six Teams by Championship Potential

The opening weekend of the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament started and ended with a thud for the Big Ten. In an instant, No. 8 Ohio State lost to No. 9 TCU in the very first game that tipped on Thursday afternoon. It wasn’t much later when No. 5 Wisconsin got upended by No. 12 High Point in one of the most exciting games we’ve seen so far. And come Sunday evening, with only two Sweet 16 spots still up for grabs, No. 7 UCLA unraveled against No. 2 UConn. But in between? Oh, man, seemingly everything went the conference’s way in an event that has largely befuddled the league since its last national champion, Michigan State, cut down the nets in 2000. When the dust finally settled, six Big Ten teams had reached the Sweet 16 in Michigan, Illinois, Purdue, Michigan State, Nebraska and Iowa. That’s one shy of an NCAA Tournament record set by the SEC last year. “We’ve been cheering like crazy for the Big Ten, and everyone’s done well,” Michigan head coach Dusty May said at a news conference earlier this week. “It’s important for recruiting, for the future, the television rights and packages, everything that goes with the enterprise of college basketball. How we do in the NCAA Tournament is incredibly important.” So how do the Super Six stack up? Aside from Michigan, which everyone knows was the best team in the Big Ten all season, how does the hierarchy shake itself out? Here’s a breakdown based on what we’ve seen so far: 6. Iowa Hawkeyes (No. 9 seed) Round of 64: defeated No. 8 Clemson, 67-61 Round of 32: defeated No. 1 Florida, 73-72 Sweet 16: vs. No. 4 Nebraska (Thursday, 7:30 p.m. ET) What a run for first-year head coach Ben McCollum, who has now guided the Hawkeyes to their first Sweet 16 berth since 1999 and just the ninth such appearance in school history thanks to a stunning upset of No. 1 Florida. Power forward Alvaro Folgueiras swished a 3-pointer from the right corner with 4.5 seconds remaining to officially dethrone the Gators, winners of last year’s national title. Now, Iowa will challenge conference rival Nebraska for an opportunity to reach the Elite Eight, something the Hawkeyes haven’t done since 1987. McCollum’s team has advanced this far by leaning on the NCAA Tournament’s best offense based on advanced metrics. An offensive efficiency mark of 142 points per 100 possessions since March Madness began is nearly two points clear of any other team in the field, according to Torvik. Much of that success can be traced back to offensive rebounding and free throws. Iowa has snagged 35 offensive rebounds across its first two tournament games and used those extra possessions to rack up 53 free-throw attempts (38 makes). The Hawkeyes will face a stiffer test against Nebraska, whose defense ranks fourth since the Big Dance began. 5. Nebraska Cornhuskers (No. 4 seed) Round of 64: defeated No. 13 Troy, 76-47 Round of 32: defeated No. 5 Vanderbilt, 74-72 Sweet 16: vs. No. 9 Iowa (Thursday, 7:30 p.m. ET) Last weekend’s triumph in Oklahoma City, where the Paycom Center was flooded with red, is one Nebraska’s proud fans won’t soon forget. It began with the Cornhuskers earning their first-ever NCAA Tournament win by pummeling Troy in the opening round, ending its drought as the last power-conference team without a victory in this event. Then, on Saturday, the Nebraska faithful were treated to one of the best games of the opening weekend, narrowly surviving a three-quarter court heave at the buzzer. Hearts thumped, mouths were agape. Though Nebraska is known for running an aesthetically pleasing offense under head coach Fred Hoiberg, who received another contract extension earlier this month, the Cornhuskers are playing ferocious defense in the tournament. They rank fourth in defensive efficiency, ninth in effective field goal percentage defense and 11th in forced turnover rate. The challenge on Thursday will be facing a conference foe against whom Nebraska split its two regular season meetings: a 57-52 road loss on Feb. 17 and an 84-75 home win in overtime on March 8. [MEN’S TOURNEY: Ranking Sweet 16 Matchups] 4. Michigan State Spartans (No. 3 seed) Round of 64: defeated No. 14 North Dakota State, 92-67 Round of 32: defeated No. 6 Louisville, 77-69 Sweet 16: vs. No. 2 UConn (Friday, 9:45 p.m. ET) While it’s true that Michigan State played well during both games of the opening weekend, the Spartans were also fortunate to receive a relatively favorable draw. They were never likely to be challenged by a North Dakota State team that ranks 125th or worse in both offensive and defensive efficiency, according to KenPom. Nor were they ever likely to face Louisville at full strength given the lingering back issue for freshman sensation Mikel Brown Jr. (18.2 points per game), who missed both of his team’s games and is now likely to enter the NBA Draft as a potential lottery pick. But that doesn’t mean there aren’t things for head coach Tom Izzo to be excited about entering the Sweet 16 matchup with UConn. In terms of perimeter shooting, the Spartans have already made 21 3-pointers in this year’s tournament — 10 against North Dakota State, 11 against Louisville — despite only averaging 7.8 made 3s per game, which is tied for 176th nationally. Junior forward Coen Carr, whose offensive contributions are often inconsistent, is averaging 19 points per game through the opening weekend. Tremendous production from role players like freshman forward Cam Ward (15 total points) and senior guard Trey Fort (19 combined points) has taken some of the pressure off the Spartans’ core four. 3. Purdue Boilermakers (No. 2 seed) Round of 64: defeated No. 15 Queens, 101-74 Round of 32: defeated No. 7 Miami, 79-69 Sweet 16: vs. No. 11 Texas (Thursday, 7:10 p.m. ET) Is there any team in the country hotter than Purdue right now? Beginning with a victory over Northwestern in the second round of the Big Ten Tournament, the Boilermakers have won six in a row by an average margin of 16.2 points per game. And during that span, according to Torvik, head coach Matt Painter’s team has the most efficient offense in the country at 140.2 points per 100 possessions. On a larger scale, more than six weeks have passed since Purdue was last held to fewer than 70 points (Feb. 7 vs. Oregon). The biggest question facing the Boilermakers against Texas and, potentially beyond, is whether the leading trio can continue to produce at such a high level. Point guard Braden Smith, now the record holder for most assists in Division I history, has 38 points and 16 assists in two games. Shooting guard Fletcher Loyer has made four 3-pointers in each round. Power forward Trey Kaufman-Renn has owned the paint by scoring 44 points and grabbing 18 rebounds thus far, albeit against undersized front courts. Can they perform that well against the Longhorns’ length and athleticism? What about a potential matchup with No. 1 Arizona in the Elite Eight? 2. Illinois Fighting Illini (No. 3 seed) Round of 64: defeated No. 14 Penn, 105-70 Round of 32: defeated No. 11 VCU, 76-55 Sweet 16: vs. No. 2 Houston (Thursday, 10:05 p.m. ET) Illinois is another team whose first weekend in the NCAA Tournament was rather fortuitous. The Illini opened by hammering an undermanned Penn team, which only qualified for the Big Dance by upsetting a far more dangerous Yale team in the Ivy League Tournament title game. And then, when facing the possibility of a second-round matchup against No. 6 North Carolina, whose head coach, Hubert Davis, has subsequently been fired, the Illini benefited from the Tar Heels’ stunning second-half collapse against VCU. They reached the Sweet 16 without facing an opponent ranked among the top 40 in KenPom. But there is no doubt that Illinois, which is chasing the program’s first Final Four appearance since 2005, has the high-end talent, positional size and roster depth to be considered among the best teams in the country. Brad Underwood’s team boasts a handful of future pros in point guard Keaton Wagler, small forward David Mirkovic and the Ivisic brothers on the interior — a quartet that is difficult for most opposing teams to match. Illinois finished plus-16 on the glass against VCU and plus-23 on the glass against Penn, which shows how dangerous and dominant this team can be, even when the initial shots aren’t falling. 1. Michigan Wolverines (No. 1 seed) Round of 64: defeated No. 16 Howard, 101-80 Round of 32: defeated No. 9 St. Louis, 95-72 Sweet 16: vs. No. 4 Alabama (Friday, 7:35 p.m. ET) Fans could be forgiven for thinking there was an element of Michigan playing with its food during the opening two rounds of the NCAA Tournament. The Wolverines sat back and played lax defense as Howard buried 10 3-pointers in the first half of a game that only had a four-point margin at the break. They also only led St. Louis by a point with under seven minutes remaining in the first half before finally kicking into gear and pulling away. Legitimate causes for concern? Perhaps. But the more likely explanation is that Michigan, one of the most talented teams in the country, always knew it was going to win those games and just arrived fashionably late. Alabama might not test the Wolverines too much, either — especially without second-leading scorer Aden Holloway, who was arrested earlier this month and hasn’t played in the NCAA Tournament. The bigger question is whether No. 2 Iowa State can advance on the bottom half of the Midwest bracket and potentially challenge Michigan in the Elite Eight. Much of that depends on the health of Cyclones star Joshua Jefferson (sprained ankle), a first-team All-American who missed the Round of 32 victory over Kentucky. If Jefferson’s health remains an issue, the Wolverines could breeze to the Final Four.​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports

Categories
Music

Billionaire Philanthropist Ronald Perelman’s Son Dead at 15

The Revlon billionaire is facing an unthinkable loss after his 15-year-old son, Oscar, died following a “longstanding medical issue.” Continue reading…​The Boot – Country Music News, Music Videos and Songs

Categories
Alaska News

Habitat protections for Alaska ringed and bearded seals reinstated by appeals court

A bearded seal rests on ice in Kotzebue Sound in 2011. (Photo by John Jansen/National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration)

A bearded seal rests on ice in Kotzebue Sound in 2011. Bearded seals were listed in 2012 as threatened under the Endangered Species Act. A federal appeals court on Wednesday reinstated designation of critical habitat for bearded seals and ringed seals, also listed as threatened. (Photo by John Jansen/National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration)

A federal appeals court on Wednesday reinstated protections for Arctic Alaska seals across a coastal and marine region stretching from the Central Bering Sea to the Beaufort Sea off the state’s northern coast.

The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that federal regulators acted properly in 2022 when they designated nearly 160 million acres as critical habitat for ringed seals and bearded seals. Both species are listed as threatened because of their dependence on Arctic sea ice. Designated critical habitat is required under the Endangered Species Act. It protects listed populations in the places they are most concentrated.

The appeals court ruling reverses a 2024 decision by U.S. District Court Judge Sharon Gleason that struck down the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s critical habitat designation as overly broad. And Wednesday’s ruling rejects arguments made by the state of Alaska that the critical habitat designated by NOAA’s National Marine Fisheries Service was too vast to justify the negative impacts to oil development and other activities.

NMFS acted properly and in accordance with the law when it designated critical habitat for the seals, making the decisions after weighing impacts to activities like oil development, the ruling said.

The appeals court ruling said that the nearly 160 million acres of designated critical habitat area is large, but size is relative.

“To put that number into perspective, Alaska and its surrounding waters cover nearly half a billion acres—so even a small subset of the state may seem large in the abstract,” it said.

The seal ruling cited one of its earlier decisions, made in 2016, that upheld the designation of 120 million acres of Arctic territory as critical habitat for polar bears, a species listed as threatened in 2008.

“Like the polar bears, the seal species ‘need room to roam,’” Wednesday’s ruling said. “NMFS explained in detail that the seal species rely on resources spread out over a wide area, including sea ice that is ‘dynamic’ by nature. . . . The text of the ESA plainly permits NMFS to designate habitat on that basis.”

Critical habitat designations add a layer of review for any federally permitted activities. Under the Endangered Species Act, permits for activities in critical habitat must undergo an analysis to determine whether listed populations would be harmed.

A ringed seal pup peeks out from its protective snow cave near on sea ice near Kotzebue on May 1, 2011. Ringed seals depend on sea ice and on snow atop that ice. The pups are protected from the cold and from predators in lairs dug into the snow. (Photo by Michael Cameron/ NOAA Alaska Fisheries Science Center)
A ringed seal pup peeks out from its protective snow cave near on sea ice near Kotzebue on May 1, 2011. Ringed seals depend on sea ice and on snow atop that ice. The pups are protected from the cold and from predators in lairs dug into the snow. (Photo by Michael Cameron/National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Alaska Fisheries Science Center)

Ringed and bearded seals were granted Endangered Species Act protections because of the impacts to their Arctic habitat from climate change. Sea ice extent and thickness have diminished over the long term, and shorter winters and more spring rains have compromised the layers of snow on sea ice that ringed seals use to build protective lairs for their newborn pups, federal scientists have said.

The Center for Biological Diversity, which filed the lawsuit that prompted the 2022 critical habitat designation and later appealed Gleason’s 2024 ruling, celebrated the ruling.

“This is a great victory for these ice-dependent seals,” Marlee Goska, an Alaska staff attorney for the center, said in a statement. “It’s just common sense that you can’t protect imperiled animals without protecting the places they live, and I’m glad the court agreed. This decision gives these Arctic seals some breathing room, but we still need to stop expanding oil and gas drilling in their habitat to provide these species and so many others a true shot at survival.”

A statement from the Alaska Department of Law said the state continues to object to the designation and “will continue to fight for a commonsense, plain-text reading of the law that achieves the twin goals of conservation and Alaskan success.”

“The State of Alaska is disappointed by today’s Ninth Circuit decision reinstating an unlawful and expansive critical habitat designation. This designation of over 160 million acres of Alaska’s coastline and offshore waters exceeds the authority granted under the Endangered Species Act and sets a troubling precedent unmatched anywhere else in the nation,” the statement said.

“In Alaska, Arctic ringed seals and bearded seals are abundant and healthy. Yet bureaucrats have decided to directly burden responsible resource development, sustainable fisheries, and other vital economic and subsistence activities essential to Alaska through unnecessary habitat designations larger than the state of Texas.”

The 9th circuit ruling is the latest in a long series of litigation over ice-dependent seals in Alaska’s Arctic waters.

The listing was initiated by a 2008 Center for Biological Diversity petition that was followed by a lawsuit filed by the group in 2012. The state, North Slope Borough, Alaska Oil and Gas Association and others filed legal challenges in the past that sought to overturn the threatened listings for each species. Those lawsuits failed, and the U.S. Supreme Court in 2018 declined to take up the state’s case about bearded seals.

The state and North Slope Borough made another attempt in 2022 when they sued NMFS to try to compel the agency to remove ringed seals from the list of threatened species under the Endangered Species Act. The state and borough also lost that case. Last year, the 9th Circuit Court upheld the agency’s decision to maintain the threatened listing.

Maps show the extent of critical habitat designated in 2022 for bearded and ringed seals by the National Oeanic and Atmospheric Administration's National Marine Fisheries Service. Ringed and bearded seals were listed as threatened in 2012. The Endangered Species Act mandates designation of critical habitat for listed populations. (Maps from the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals opinion, State of Alaska v. National Marine Fisheries Service, March 25, 2026)
Maps show the extent of critical habitat designated in 2022 for bearded and ringed seals by the National Oeanic and Atmospheric Administration’s National Marine Fisheries Service. Ringed and bearded seals were listed as threatened in 2012. The Endangered Species Act mandates designation of critical habitat for listed populations. (Maps from the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals opinion, State of Alaska v. National Marine Fisheries Service, March 25, 2026)

SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE

Categories
Alaska News

Alaska Senate pushes for increase in oil tax revenue, amid war-driven oil boom

An oil tanker sits at the dock in Valdez, where vessels pick up crude moved from the North Slope by the Trans Alaska Pipeline System. (ConocoPhillips photo)

An oil tanker sits at the dock in Valdez, where vessels pick up crude moved from the North Slope by the Trans Alaska Pipeline System. (ConocoPhillips photo)

The Alaska Senate approved a measure to boost state taxes on oil and gas production on Wednesday. Lawmakers tacked it on to what would have been a routine renewal of a state oil royalty agreement.

Sen. Forrest Dunbar, D-Anchorage, sponsored the amendment to House Bill 194, saying it would close a corporate income tax loophole and potentially capture more than $100 million in new state revenues each year — at a time when Alaska is in dire need of revenue to pay for state services. 

Sen. Forrest Dunbar, D-Anchorage speaks on the Senate floor on Mar. 25, 2026 (Photo by Corinne Smith/Alaska Beacon)
Sen. Forrest Dunbar, D-Anchorage speaks on the Senate floor on Mar. 25, 2026 (Photo by Corinne Smith/Alaska Beacon)

“Can we afford this loophole while we close schools? Can we afford this tax subsidy while we slash the permanent fund dividend? Can we afford this tax subsidy while our infrastructure languishes, while we struggle to recruit and retain state troopers and firefighters and maintenance crews?” Dunbar said. “The answer is no.”

The provision would impose the state’s corporate tax rate on oil and gas companies doing business in the state, at a maximum rate of 9.4% for companies whose net profits are more than $5 million per year. 

Alaska’s oil prices are surging amid the Iran War, and state forecasters are projecting hundreds of millions in potential state revenue in the coming months. Despite the spike in oil prices, Dunbar said lawmaker action to capture more revenue from the oil and gas industry is long overdue. 

“There is still a long term revenue problem in this state, regardless of short term prices connected to the Iran war,” he said. “Now is the time to do this. Prices for oil are high. These corporations are doing very well. You fix the roof when the sun is shining.”

The Senate approved the amendment by an 11 to 8 vote, then passed the underlying legislation by a 12 to 7 vote, with Sen. Kelly Merrick, R-Eagle River, absent. 

The original legislation was introduced by the governor, and passed the Alaska House last year. It would renew a three-year oil royalty agreement between the state and Marathon Petroleum Corporation, for state owned oil to be processed at its refinery in Nikiski, on the Kenai Peninsula. The proposed contract is estimated to generate between $4 million to $18 million in state revenue.

However the bill’s sponsor, Sen. Jesse Bjorkman, R-Soldotna, objected to the new oil tax provision, saying the Senate should take time to evaluate how the tax measure would affect the broader industry and energy supply for Alaskans. 

“I’m a no vote on this amendment, because we do need a legitimate plan,” he said. “We don’t rush things. We don’t do things in a half-cocked manner, because that’s how mistakes are made.”

He said lawmakers should model potential revenue measures so they know how they will function within a state fiscal plan.

Lawmakers have been hotly debating Alaska’s oil and gas tax structure for years. A bill introduced last year, Senate Bill 92, would change the way the state’s corporate income tax applies to the oil company Hilcorp, which is an S-corporation, and the state’s largest oil producer. Hilcorp is a privately held, Texas-based energy company that since 2020 has operated the Prudhoe Bay oil field in the North Slope, as well as most of the operations in Cook Inlet. 

That bill is currently in the Senate Rules Committee and has not moved this year. 

The measure approved by the Senate on Wednesday would enact state taxes not just on Hilcorp but many companies, and collect revenues that would otherwise be leaving the state, Dunbar said in an interview after the vote.

“To be clear, it’s not just Hilorp that might be affected by this, but that is one of the large, obvious holes we see in our oil tax structure right now that is causing us to shift tens of millions, and over the long term, hundreds of millions of dollars, from schools and roads and the permanent fund dividend to out of state companies and individuals,” he said.

The amended bill now goes to the House for a concurrence vote. 

Dunbar urged support for the measure, citing financial woes in his own district where the Anchorage School Board has voted to close three elementary schools and cut hundreds of staff positions to help address a $90 million budget shortfall. 

“I hope they agree that it’s not an acceptable world where the price is high and this industry is booming and we are closing Lake Otis Elementary School because we don’t have enough money,” he said.

Correction: A previous version of this story incorrectly identified the bill numbers, and misstated how the tax would be levied on companies’ income. The story has been updated. 

SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE

Categories
Entertainment

Masked Singer’s Pangolin Revealed as Singer With Iconic Fight Anthem

The Masked Singer season 14 on Fox, PangolinPangolin’s fight for The Masked Singer crown has officially come to an end.
The mystery celebrity behind the cuddly animal costume was eliminated during the Fox singing competition series’ season…
​E! Online (US) – Top Stories

Categories
Entertainment

James Marsden Reveals Where He Thinks His Notebook Character Is Today

The Notebook, James MarsdenIf Noah and Allie are birds, then James Marsden is a bird.
Perhaps that’s why the Notebook actor, who played Lon Hammond in the 2004 film, doesn’t feel burned by Rachel McAdams’ character leaving…
​E! Online (US) – Top Stories

Categories
Entertainment

Security Guard in Chappell Roan Confrontation With Ada Law Speaks Out

Chappell Roan, Pascal DuvierPascal Duvier is setting the record straight.
After Chappell Roan was accused of siccing her security guard on Jude Law and Catherine Harding’s 11-year-old daughter Ada Law at a hotel in Brazil,…
​E! Online (US) – Top Stories

Categories
Entertainment

The History Behind Blanton’s Iconic Jockey Bottle Stoppers

If you collect liquor or closely study “John Wick” movies in your spare time, there’s a chance you’ve heard of Blanton’s bourbon and its famed bottle stoppers.

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

Categories
Entertainment

Eiza González Is Pen Pals With Evelyn Hugo Author Taylor Jenkins Reid

Eiza González, Taylor Jenkins ReidEiza González is hoping her friendship with Taylor Jenkins Reid will translate from the page to the screen. 
As rumors continue to swirl that the 3 Body Problem actress may be playing the titular…
​E! Online (US) – Top Stories