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Sports Fox

Big Picture: Maxx Crosby Staying With Raiders Might Be Best After Failed Trade

It’s the same as it ever was for Maxx Crosby. After experiencing the embarrassment of the Baltimore Ravens rescinding their trade offer due to a failed physical by team doctors, the star edge rusher was back on the grind again just hours later. On Wednesday morning, Crosby was working out for the only team he’s known in his seven-year career: the Las Vegas Raiders. That same morning, Crosby took to social media to celebrate the sixth anniversary of his sobriety. “God Doesn’t Make Mistakes,” Crosby wrote in a post on X. Those words could also refer to Cosby returning to the familiar surroundings in Las Vegas and the fact that he might remain there long-term. Crosby playing for the Raiders in 2026 is a real possibility, believing it’s best for all parties involved, according to sources familiar with the thinking of the team. Crosby’s second post on X on Wednesday certainly gave that scenario credence. “Everything Happens For A Reason. Believe Nothing You Hear & Half Of What You See. Im A Raider. I’m Back. Run That Sh*t,” Crosby wrote. It’s a sharp turn from where Crosby was less than one week ago. The Ravens agreed to trade for Crosby’s services in a deal with the Raiders last Friday, giving up two first-round selections for the 28-year-old pass rusher. Crosby even said his goodbyes to Raider Nation in an emotional,13-minute video posted on social media. However, after Baltimore team doctors evaluated Crosby’s balky left knee two months out from a repaired torn meniscus, the Ravens had serious doubts about the long-term health of their new prospect and eventually backed out of the deal, according to the Raiders. [NFL Confidential: League Execs Not Happy with Ravens After Nixing Maxx Crosby Trade] But as Crosby seems to be embracing the Silver and Black again, it doesn’t seem like it’s a certainty that the five-time Pro Bowler is back with the Raiders in 2026. “For now, yes. But maybe this summer he gets moved,” a longtime NFL executive told me when asked if he envisions Crosby staying in Las Vegas. While the possibility of Crosby getting traded remains on the table, the Ravens pivoted to signing Cincinnati Bengals edge rusher Trey Hendrickson on Wednesday. They gave the four-time Pro Bowler a four-year, $112 million deal. But the previous Crosby trade didn’t preclude the Ravens from pursuing Hendrickson, if general manager Eric DeCosta is to be believed. DeCosta told reporters on Wednesday that the team explored ways to sign both Crosby and Hendrickson, but ultimately decided to move on from Crosby. “I’ve got a responsibility to the Ravens, to this community, to our fans and to [Ravens owner] Steve Bisciotti to do what we think is best for the club,” DeCosta said, when asked if the Ravens got cold feet. “And that’s what we always try to do. Every decision we make is based on this side of, ‘Is this what is best for the Ravens?’ “And that’s very, very challenging. I understand how people from afar would feel that way, but nobody’s more upset about this than me. Gutted by it, actually. A big regret for me. But we will move on as a football team.” DeCosta’s somber nature jives with an NFL source telling me that the Ravens desperately wanted Crosby and hated having to back out of the deal. Still, it’s a messy situation for Crosby and the Raiders. The elite pass rusher thought he was moving on from the constant losing with the Raiders to a team in the Ravens that’s regularly in the Super Bowl conversation. The Raiders thought they were getting significant draft compensation to help with the team’s rebuilding effort with new head coach Klint Kubiak and presumptive No. 1 overall pick Fernando Mendoza. Instead, the Raiders and Crosby are stuck with each other. And they must make the most of it. Because the Raiders had the most salary cap space available of any team in the league at the start of free agency, the Raiders have enough cap space to keep Crosby around, even after coming to an agreement with eight outside free agents. And Crosby returns to a team that’s more equipped to compete in the AFC West, including the addition of the top center on the market in former Baltimore offensive lineman Tyler Linderbaum, a fellow edge rusher Kwity Paye, receiver Jalen Nailor and linebackers Quay Walker and Nakobe Dean. Crosby could have impacted his trade value by showing toughness and playing through the painful knee injury at the end of the year. Raiders general manager John Spytek shutting Crosby down created a rift between the team and Crosby that ultimately led to him asking for a trade because of the appearance of Las Vegas tanking. But had Spytek shut Crosby down sooner, maybe his knee would have been at a better place to pass a physical? For now, Crosby is in the building at the Raiders’ facility working on his rehab and moving forward with the team. He is excited about the opportunity to continue playing for Rob Leonard, his former defensive line coach who was promoted to defensive coordinator for the Raiders by Kubiak. The Raiders should use this opportunity to mend fences with the team’s most dynamic and well-known player — the face of the franchise for the rest of the league. Crosby said he’s a Raider for life, and a misstep by the Ravens created a second chance to make that reality.​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports

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Food

The Sandwich Chain That’s Way Overpriced Now, According To Customers

The era of cheap convenience is over for one major sandwich chain, disappointing fans who once prized its affordable prices and reliable rewards.

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

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Entertainment

Jill Duggar Explains Why a Funeral Helped Her Mourn After Stillbirth

Reading Time: 3 minutes

This is such a heavy subject.

In early 2024, Jill Duggar and Derick Dillard announced the stillbirth of their “beautiful baby girl.”

She and her siblings have discussed the trauma of pregnancy loss before.

Now, she’s explaining why holding a funeral for their would-be daughter was so important.

Jill Duggar in tears.
On her sister’s podcast, Jill Duggar tearfully shared the unexpected pains that followed her stillbirth. (Image Credit: YouTube)

They had hoped to meet Isla Marie

On the Wednesday, March 11 episode of her sister’s Jinger & Jeremy podcast, Jill and her husband, Derick, appeared as guests.

They were there to discuss a heavy topic: Jill’s 2024 stillbirth and their grief surrounding it.

Though their would-be daughter died before her March 19 birth, they named her Isla Marie.

Some Duggar watchers did not truly understand why Jill and Derick opted to hold a funeral for a child they never met.

But Jill was very direct in offering her explanation.

“We planned a funeral because that was something that we really wanted,” Jill affirmed.

“I think anybody at any stage of pregnancy,” she suggested, “you can minimize it [and] you can say, ‘Oh, you’re only this many weeks [or] that many weeks.’”

Jill announced: “It doesn’t matter.”

She explained: “Like, whatever you feel is going to remember your baby and remember their life in a significant way.”

Obviously, Jill is speaking personally — and also referring to miscarriages that people know about. A significant minority of miscarriages happen without the individual’s notice.

Jill Duggar and Derick Dillard in March 2026.
Together, Jill Duggar and husband Derick Dillard appeared on her sister’s podcast in March 2026. (Image Credit: YouTube)

She is not the only one in her family to have this experience

“It was really helpful for us … that we do as much of the grieving in a tangible way as possible,” Jill praised of the funeral.

“And, I had seen my mom grieve,” she shared. “I had seen my sisters grieve losses.”

Notably, Jill and her sisters have gotten together to discuss miscarriage grief.

“I had seen other people,” Jill continued.

“So, I was able to incorporate some of those experiences,” she shared, “and thankfully have more knowledge and more resources at my fingertips because of that.”

Jill also delved into the painful logistics of grappling with a miscarriage.

This included the process of procuring a stillbirth certificate from the hospital.

Tearing up, Jill spoke about the experience of calling funeral homes to see if they could accommodate her.

(If you have ever had to make extremely practical phone calls amidst bereavement, like canceling an appointment for a dead family member, you can imagine what this process was like for her.)

“No one ever prepares you” for how this works or how this feels, Jill lamented.

Jill Duggar on her sister's podcast in January 2026.
On a January 2026 episode of her sister’s podcast, Jill Duggar touched upon some very serious topics. (Image Credit: YouTube)

This grief is not something that Jill can set aside, no matter how others feel

For some who suffer miscarriages, they are attempting to become parents. The setback is traumatic and catastrophic.

Others may find that they would have added another child to an existing family. Feelings on this can run the full spectrum.

Notably, not even Jill seems to be telling others how to feel. She’s expressing her own heartache and loss.

Knowing the Duggar cult and their extreme beliefs, some on social media may feel tempted to get drawn into a personhood debate. That is pointless — and not even relevant.

This is about Jill’s sense of loss more than anything else. Our hearts go out to her as she continues to mourn.

Jill Duggar Explains Why a Funeral Helped Her Mourn After Stillbirth was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Music

Marshals Confirmed for Season 2 After Impressive Premiere Ratings

The news is good for fans of ‘Marshals’! Continue reading…​The Boot – Country Music News, Music Videos and Songs

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Music

Marshals Confirmed for Season 2 After Impressive Premiere Ratings

The news is good for fans of ‘Marshals’! Continue reading…​Country Music News – Taste of Country

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Music

Bunnie XO’s Candid Memoir Is Heading To The Big screen

Bunnie XO’s life is about to hit the big screen. About a month after sharing her candid memoir, Stripped Down: Unfiltered and Unapologetic, the Dumb Blonde podcast host and New York Times Best Selling author is set to see her journey come to life in a film adaptation.

The announcement, shared exclusively via Variety, reveals that 101 Studios, the company behind popular TV series like Landman and Yellowstone, has secured the rights to turn Stripped Down into a feature film. The cinematic take on the book will be fast-tracked, courtesy of 101 Studios’ new first-look agreement with Universal Pictures.

“Bunnie Xo’s story is the kind of raw, unfiltered journey that audiences immediately connect with – honest, fearless and ultimately inspiring” said David Glasser, CEO of 101 Studios “At 101 Studios, along with our partners at Universal Pictures, we’re excited to bring Stripped Down to the screen and capture the resilience, humor, and humanity that makes her story so powerful”

Photo Courtesy of Bunnie XO
Photo Courtesy of Bunnie XO

The memoir, and soon the film, portrays a powerful, in-depth look at Bunnie XO’s path, documenting moments from leaving high school and surviving life on the streets of Las Vegas to overcoming addiction and trauma, and becoming the successful entrepreneur, parent figure and wife of country superstar Jelly Roll that she is today. Readers and viewers alike will see her story not just as Bunnie XO, but as Alisa DeFord, as she offers a powerful testament to resilience and transformation.

“Writing this book was one of the most vulnerable things I’ve ever done. I told my story the only way I knew how: raw, real and unapologetic,” Bunnie XO said.

According to 101 Studios, the movie will showcase “the unwavering grit Bunnie carried throughout her life” as well as “her inspirational journey of redemption.”

Reflecting on the journey from memoir to movie, she went on to share her excitement about seeing her story take on a whole new life on screen. She also expressed her hope that viewers will walk away knowing that it’s “never too late” to start over.

“Seeing it now move from the pages to the big screen is something I never could have imagined. I can’t wait for audiences to experience the chaos, the heartbreak, the humor and the redemption in a way that only film can capture. If this film does anything, I hope it reminds people that your past nor your trauma can ever define you, your comeback does. It’s never too late.”

Since being published in February, Stripped Down: Unfiltered and Unapologetic has spent three weeks on the New York Times Best Sellers List. Bunnie also embarked on a book tour in support of the memoir, which ran from February 16 through February 26.

The post Bunnie XO’s Candid Memoir Is Heading To The Big screen appeared first on Country Now.

​Country Now

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Music

18 Sad Country Songs That Sound Happy

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18 Sad Country Songs That Sound Happy

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‘Lanterns’ Aaron Pierre Joins ‘Superman’ Sequel

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Alaska News

Alaska’s glacial lakes are expanding, increasing the risk of destructive outburst floods

University of Alaska Southeast researchers, seen in this undated photo, prepare to use a drone to map the basin where floods originate at Mendenhall Glacier in Juneau. (Photo provided by the University of Alaska Southeast)

University of Alaska Southeast researchers, seen in this undated photo, prepare to use a drone to map the basin where floods originate at Mendenhall Glacier in Juneau. (Photo provided by the University of Alaska Southeast)

Every summer, people living near the Mendenhall River in Juneau, Alaska, keep a close eye on the water level. When the river level begins to rise rapidly, it’s a sign that Suicide Basin, a small glacier-dammed lake 5 miles up the mountains, has broken through the glacier again and a glacial lake outburst flood is underway.

After nearly 15 straight years of ever-larger and more damaging floods in Alaska’s capital city, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers even discussed an ambitious and expensive solution: a permanent drain from the lake that would prevent it from reaching outburst stage.

The initial cost estimates for the project ranged from US$613 million to $1 billion.

Suicide Basin is just one example of a growing problem from glacial lakes that threaten communities around the world, particularly in the Himalayas and Andes, and is transforming Alaska’s landscape as global temperatures rise.

In a new study, colleagues and I documented the evolution of 140 of the largest glacial lakes in Alaska between 2018 and 2024. We found they are expanding about 120% faster on average today than they were from 1986 to 1999 – more than twice as fast.

Using ice thickness data to reconstruct the shape of the land beneath these glaciers, we found that these glacial lakes could become more than four times larger than they are today as the glaciers melt, increasing the potential for damage to downstream ecosystems and infrastructure from glacial lake outburst floods.

The hazards of glacial lakes

Glacial lakes, often the color of aquamarine gems and sparkling with icebergs, are common around the margins of glaciers around the world. Years of satellite images have documented a dramatic increase in their number, area and volume – a direct response to glaciers retreating as global temperatures rise.

Tenuously held back by moraines – the jumble of rock and sediment deposited by glaciers at their edges – or dammed by glacier ice, these lakes are anything but stable.

Between 1985 and 2020, ice-dammed lakes in Alaska alone broke through their barriers and drained more than 1,150 times. Alaska’s vast landscape and low population density means that the impact of these drainages on human infrastructure was fairly minimal, with a few notable exceptions, including Suicide Basin and Snow Lake, on the Kenai Peninsula.

However, the enormous amount of icy water rushing down rivers with each outburst can transform ecosystems, altering river channels through erosion and sediment deposition, tearing out trees and other vegetation, and damaging fish habitat.

A recent study found that glacial lake outburst floods from moraine-dammed lakes are occurring at an accelerating rate. In the steep, narrow valleys of the Himalayan Mountains, the impact of these events are acute: destroyed hydropower stations, roads and entire villages wiped away, taking hundreds of lives over the years.

More than 15 million people globally live in areas at risk of glacial lake outburst floods. Mapping where these lakes might form and expand can help people living downstream prepare. That’s what we did in Alaska.

The Snow River, fed by Snow Glacier, flows into Kenai Lake north of Seward on June 21, 2025. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
The Snow River, fed by Snow Glacier, flows into Kenai Lake north of Seward on June 21, 2025. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)

Mapping Alaska’s expanding lakes

Glacial lakes can form in a variety of settings: on the surface of glaciers, in side valleys, and at the terminus, or toe, of the glacier. We found that the fastest-growing lakes are those at the toe, and in our work, we showed that many of these lakes reside in deep depressions carved by glacial flow.

We mapped these depressions – known as glacial-bed overdeepenings – by subtracting ice thickness estimates from surface elevations measured by satellites.

We found that more than 80% of the lake growth has occurred in the mapped basins, illustrating how this approach can help locate glacial lakes that are likely to form and expand in the future.

With this information, we found that existing glacial lakes in the region may ultimately expand fourfold, growing by as much as 1,640 square miles (4,250 square kilometers). A glacial lake at the terminus of Malaspina Glacier, the largest glacier by area in southeast Alaska, could expand to cover an additional 570 square miles (1,475 square kilometers) alone. That would create what would be the second-largest lake in Alaska.

As glaciers continue to retreat, new basins will be exposed, many of which could fill with water. In total, more than 5,500 square miles (about 14,200 square kilometers) of overdeepened basins exist in Alaska, pointing to a landscape that is going to look very different in the coming decades to centuries.

When a glacier terminates in a lake, the warmth of the water can speed up the ice’s melting, making the glacier flow faster, thin and retreat, thereby expanding the size of the lake. We found that glaciers that terminate in lakes are shrinking 23% to 56% faster than land-terminating glaciers.

A U.S. Geological Survey scientist rappels down a rock face on ropes above Suicide Basin on June 27, 2025. The glacier-dammed lake is within the Mendenhall Glacier system above Juneau. Snow-covered mountains and the glacier are visible in the background, with coiled rope visible on the rocky ledge. (Photo provided by U.S. Geological Survey)
A U.S. Geological Survey scientist rappels down a rock face on ropes above Suicide Basin on June 27, 2025. The glacier-dammed lake is within the Mendenhall Glacier system above Juneau. Snow-covered mountains and the glacier are visible in the background, with coiled rope visible on the rocky ledge. (Photo provided by U.S. Geological Survey)

The future as glaciers retreat

Future climate projections combined with sophisticated glacier models indicate that glaciers will cumulatively retreat by 26% to 41% by 2100, spelling the loss of 49% to 83% of all glaciers globally.

This is concerning for numerous reasons. Glacier mass loss is currently the largest contributor to sea-level rise. Melting glaciers also change the water quantity and timing of ice melt that feed major rivers, particularly Asian rivers such as the Indus and Ganges. And they create hazards, such as the outburst floods that originate from glacial lakes.

The landscapes that we know and love are transforming before our eyes, and with these changes come growing concerns about hazards.The Conversation

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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