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Why Priscilla Block +Her Longtime Boyfriend Still Aren’t Engaged

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50 Best Carrie Underwood Songs

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Eric Rosenbrook Says ME is Wrong About 1-Month-Old’s Death, Claims Wife Leida …

Reading Time: 4 minutes

90 Day Fiance alum Leida Margaretha is likely looking at criminal charges in the near future.

The medical examiner ruled that 1-month-old baby Alisa’s death was “non-accidental.”

Eric Rosenbrook says that he — and the private medical examiner he hired — believe otherwise.

He’s ranting about CPS, about the local department of Health and Human Services, and claiming that Leida’s innocent.

'90 Day Fiance' villain Eric Rosenbrook
On ’90 Day Fiance,’ Eric Rosenbrook has a tense conversation with his then-fiancee. (Image Credit: TLC)

Leida has exactly one person in her corner

Former 90 Day Fiance villains Eric and Leida are pushing back at claims that they — or, more likely, Leida — are responsible for the death of 5-week-old Alisa.

Speaking to TMZ, Eric says that he has hired an independent medical examiner to review the autopsy.

According to Eric, his alleged expert disparaged the autopsy for omitting certain steps.

For example, he argued that the report did not delineate the age of one of the bone fractures that the 5-month-old had.

A bone fracture could have occurred during Alisa’s birth, Eric said, just five weeks before her death. She was born via C-section.

Leida Margaretha is blonde in a mugshot.
This mugshot of ’90 Day Fiance’ villain Leida Margaretha is one of several. (Photo Credit: Adams County Sheriff’s Office)

An additional rib fracture, Eric suggested, might have happened during CPR attempts.

Eric claimed that the Adams County sheriff’s department has not found the evidence to blame Leida for Alisa’s death.

He has a lot to say about the county’s Health and Human Services department. 90 Day Fiance fans who remember his rants on and off screen will not be surprised by his comments.

Like many bad parents before him, Eric blasted CPS, claiming that the agency is “the definition of fascism.” Not if words mean things, it isn’t.

“As far as CPS goes,” Eric complained, “they’re a hammer and every parent is a nail.”

Eric and a Disappointed Leida
90 Day Fiance star Eric Rosenbrook took Leida Margaretha to his home for the first time. She was distressed and disgusted. (Image Credit: TLC)

No one has actually been arrested or charged in Alisa’s death

Just for the record, the investigation into Alisa’s death is ongoing.

No criminal charges have been filed — yet.

(Yes, Leida has been charged with numerous felonies, but these are apparently unrelated. Eric was also charged with domestic violence last summer. Lovely people, Eric and Leida.)

Leida has denied all wrongdoing regarding Alisa’s tragic death.

And, though the two were apparently separated at the time, Eric confirmed to TMZ that he and Leida are still married.

Eric Rosenbrook mugshot.
The Adams County, Wisconsin Sheriff’s Office took this mugshot of Eric Rosenbrook on July 5, 2025. (Photo Credit: Adams County Sheriff’s Office)

We of course have not reviewed the evidence in the heartbreaking death of baby Alisa.

It is certainly true that there have been incidents where parents were falsely accused of wrongdoing when their child — especially an infant — suddenly died.

However, we can also acknowledge that it is much more common for children to die at the hands of those who are supposed to love and care for them.

Meanwhile, the medical examiner concluded that the baby’s death was non-accidental. HHS concluded that there was a preponderance of evidence of wrongdoing on Leida’s part.

We don’t know what happened, except that something terrible took place. At the very least, a baby died.

Leida Margaretha on 90 Day Fiance.
It is no surprise that Leida Margaretha was on 90 Day Fiance for such a short time. She didn’t win over fans; her haters only grew in number with each episode. And not without cause. (Image Credit: TLC)

The ’90 Day Fiance’ baggage is not going to help in this case

Leida and Eric appeared on 90 Day Fiance during one of its biggest years.

They did not endear themselves to viewers. Kicking out Eric’s teenage daughter, Tasha, was a vicious move.

Their antics since then, on the Tell All special and on social media, have only made them look worse.

If this goes to trial, prosecutors and defense attorneys are going to face a challenge in the voir dire process as they search for jurors who don’t already know enough about Leida to hate her.

That said, it’s likely the jurors would hear a list of new reasons to hate her. If this goes to trial.

That remains up in the air — which is clearly why Eric is attempting to cast doubt upon the medical examiner’s findings at this stage.

Eric Rosenbrook Says ME is Wrong About 1-Month-Old’s Death, Claims Wife Leida … was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Entertainment

Conan O’Brien Wishes He Had Not Been ‘Dragged Into’ Rob Reiner Murder …

Reading Time: 3 minutes

Back in December of 2025, Rob and Michele Reiner were found stabbed to death in their home in Brentwood, California.

Their son Nick Reiner was arrested for their murders and is currently awaiting trial.

Just hours before the murders, the Reiners attended a holiday party thrown by their friend and neighbor Conan O’Brien.

Actor/Producer/Director Rob Reiner (center) and wife Michele Singer (L) and son Nick Reiner (R) attend Teen Vogue's Back-to-School Saturday kick-off event at The Grove on August 9, 2013 in Los Angeles, California.
Actor/Producer/Director Rob Reiner (center) and wife Michele Singer (L) and son Nick Reiner (R) attend Teen Vogue’s Back-to-School Saturday kick-off event at The Grove on August 9, 2013 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Michael Buckner/Getty Images for Teen Vogue)

The party was to serve as a fun conclusion to a painful year, with many of the attendees having lost their homes in the wildfires that swept Southern California in January of 2025.

Instead, the gathering took a disturbing turn when Nick began loudly arguing with his father.

Nick is still awaiting trial, but police and prosecutors believe he brutally murdered his parents later that same night.

Now, Conan is speaking out about the tragedy for the first time.

“Very simply, we had a party, we invited our really good friends and then, the next day, this terrible thing happened,” O’Brien said in a new interview with The Hollywood Reporter.

Conan O’Brien attends as SiriusXM Podcasts Presents: Conan O’Brien Needs a Friend LIVE with Martin Short at SiriusXM Studios on June 13, 2025 in New York City.
Conan O’Brien attends as SiriusXM Podcasts Presents: Conan O’Brien Needs a Friend LIVE with Martin Short at SiriusXM Studios on June 13, 2025 in New York City. (Photo by Cindy Ord/Getty Images for SiriusXM)

“Whatever difficulties my wife and I have experienced having our name attached to it are nothing compared to the scale of the tragedy for the family and the loss of Rob and Michele,” he continued, adding:

“If you’re a known person, your name is going to get dragged into things sometimes, but it is not a hardship. There is only sadness that they’re gone.”

Given the fact that he was one of the last people to see Rob and Michele alive, it was inevitable that Conan would speak out about their murders at some point.

But he wisely chose to center the victims rather than focusing his comments on himself or the other guests at his party.

Conan O'Brien arrives at the Los Angeles Premiere of Max Original Travel Series "Conan O'Brien Must Go" at Avalon Hollywood & Bardot on April 16, 2024 in Los Angeles, California.
Conan O’Brien arrives at the Los Angeles Premiere of Max Original Travel Series “Conan O’Brien Must Go” at Avalon Hollywood & Bardot on April 16, 2024 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)

The Reiners have two other children, whose grief in this situation is surely more profound than anyone else’s.

Elsewhere in the interview, O’Brien talked about the cancellation of Stephen Colbert’s Late Show and the demise of late night television.

He said he had a revelatory moment when his appearance on the hit YouTube series “Hot Ones” went ultra-viral in 2024.

“That was the moment the scales fell from my eyes,” O’Brien told The Hollywood Reporter.

“If a guy can do World Series numbers with overhead that looked, to me, to be about $600, and you have every big star lining up to do his show or Chicken Shop Date … that’s when I profoundly understood that late night shows are in trouble.”

Conan will be hosting the Academy Awards this Sunday on ABC.

Conan O’Brien Wishes He Had Not Been ‘Dragged Into’ Rob Reiner Murder … was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Alaska News Featured Juneau News juneau Juneau Local Juneau Local Ketchikan Local News Feeds Sitka Local

Alaska lawmakers advance all-time high $523M Department of Corrections budget

By: Corinne Smith, Alaska Beacon

Spring Creek Correctional Center is seen in an undated photo. (Photo courtesy of Alaska Department of Corrections)


The Dunleavy administration has proposed a $523 million budget for the Alaska Department of Corrections for the next fiscal year, which House lawmakers with a finance subcommittee advanced without substantial changes last week. 

It’s the largest corrections budget proposal to date, according to state data. It includes just over $514 million requested in state funding, $475.5 million of which is unrestricted general funds for the agency’s 13 state prisons and jails and estimated 2,127 employees. DOC officials expect an additional $9.3 million in federal funding for inmates held on federal charges.

The Department of Corrections has become one of the state’s most expensive departments in recent years. This year the Department of Health, which has requested $1.1 billion in unrestricted general funds, and the Department of Education and Early Development, which has requested $1.4 billion, would spend more. The Permanent Fund dividend could also be a bigger expense — if the state pays out a $1,000 dividend like last year, it would cost the state $660 million. 

While the number of people in Alaska’s prisons and jails has remained relatively consistent, costs are soaring. Last year, DOC officials reported that state corrections booked nearly 26,000 people and just over 16,000 unique individuals, so roughly 9,000 people were repeat offenders. DOC also held nearly 450 people in involuntary commitments, which is for those who are deemed a danger to themself or others, or gravely disabled as a result of mental illness. The state cost for incarcerating an individual is an average of $223 per day. 

Initially, corrections officials submitted a $500 million budget request, but later added an additional request for $20 million for staffing and inmate transportation, and $3.3 million for healthcare and medical staffing. 

The proposed budget breaks down to roughly 60% for state prison institutions, lawmakers heard on Feb. 24. Roughly 20% is for health and rehabilitation, 10% for pretrial, probation and parole, 4% for administration, 3% for maintenance and operations and just 0.4% to administer the Board of Parole.  

Costs to staffing Alaska’s prisons have ballooned in recent years, along with healthcare costs for an aging inmate population and increasing health needs, DOC officials told members of a House finance subcommittee for corrections. 

“Staffing being the first, and then the second being our medical costs,” Jen Winkelman, corrections commissioner, told lawmakers. “The fees for medical in Alaska is through the roof, and every single individual that’s coming to us — that we don’t know we’re going to be getting — have significant medical issues.”

DOC has a 11.5% staff vacancy rate statewide, according to a spokesperson in February. DOC officials told lawmakers that recruitment and retention is an ongoing challenge, especially because prisons must be staffed 24/7.

DOC reports staffing and decade of ‘policy changes’ as major cost drivers

April Wilkerson, deputy commissioner for the department, told lawmakers in a presentation on Feb. 24 that DOC officials analyzed the budget over the last ten years, and saw a total increase of an estimated $182 million for operational costs in that time. She said roughly one third of cost increases since fiscal year 2016 were driven by employee contracts, salary and benefit increases.

April Wilkerson, deputy DOC commissioner, and Kevin Worley, DOC administrative services director answer questions from lawmakers on the department’s budget on Feb 12, 2026. Jen Winkelman, DOC commissioner is seen in the audience. (Photo by Corinne Smith/Alaska Beacon)

“Collective bargaining agreements, salary adjustments and health insurance changes — that makes up over 30% of the growth of the general funds within the department’s budget, which is outside of the department’s control,” Wilkerson said. 

Wilkerson said an estimated 40% of cost increases have been due to “policy changes” from the Legislature. She pointed to the repeal of Senate Bill 91 enacted in 2020, when lawmakers increased prison sentences for most felonies and misdemeanors, and increased penalties for violating conditions of release. She also pointed to the state’s increased contributions to employees’ retirement benefits in 2022. 

Lawmakers asked DOC officials for policy recommendations to curb costs across the department. Rep. Donna Mears, D-Anchorage, also asked the commissioner to address the problem of the department spending over its allocated budget. 

“Funds allocated to DOC last year included cuts that the department just said, ‘Nope, we can’t do that.’ I think on a larger basis, there needs to be more discussions about that,” Mears said. “There’s this tension between the executive branch and requests for the department to make cuts, and that’s not happening.”

DOC officials reported all 13 state prisons spending over budget for the fiscal year ending in June, resulting in the department requesting an additional $20 million from the legislature to cover personnel costs, plus an estimated $3 million to cover health care costs.

Winkelman said the department had to partially make up for legislative cuts in their budget last year. A department spokesperson confirmed the supplemental budget request makes up for a $13.8 million reduction made by lawmakers last year. 

Winkelman told lawmakers the department has not been able to fill its vacancies, which has resulted in high overtime costs. She said DOC has had to manage a legislative directive to cut costs by closing a housing unit at Spring Creek Correctional Center in Seward. “We were tasked with closing a housing unit, and we did that, and it is not achieving the savings, and as a matter of fact, it’s bottlenecked some of our population management,” she said.  

Winkelman also pointed to unexpected health care costs for inmates as a driver of the department’s increased budget need. “We just recently had an inmate leave us that was with us for a year, that cost us over a million dollars in medical. We didn’t plan for that. We didn’t know that she was going to have that much of a cost associated. So going back to your question, and not being able to achieve some of these,” she said, referring to state budget allocations. “Because we don’t know what’s going to come through the back door.”

Winkelman recommended the creation of a new task force to tackle the question of how to curtail and manage the corrections budget.

“We were going to need some sort of a task force with other agencies, with the legislature, with law enforcement,” Winkelman said. “Some sort of a group to take a look at the broader system to figure out which policy changes are going to make that difference in order for us to be able to stay within our means.” 

Rep. Ky Holland, D-Anchorage, said he found the proposal concerning: “If a task force is needed, why aren’t all the folks that are doing these jobs coming together and doing the work of a task force? Why do we have to somehow create that and then fund it?” 

Holland said it was difficult for him to see that lawmakers are required to pay increasing budgets for DOC because of legal staffing requirements and said he wished the state’s education system had the same safeguards. “I wish we could tell our teachers that they had a maximum class size of the number of students that they had in a classroom because we had a standards council that had the force of law,” he said. 

Winkelman said DOC officials are trying to address the budget challenges. “We are constantly at the table trying to figure out how to solve this, if you will,” she said.

She then walked back the task force idea, and said hiring a consultant could be another option. “I think our recommendation is to maybe hire a consultant, hire an expert in this world, to kind of take all the pieces together,” she said.

Winkelman acknowledged Holland’s concerns about the state’s financial pressure with competing budget priorities, and said she understands the corrections budget is eating into funding for schools.

“Right now, above working for the Department of Corrections for 25 years and fighting this battle, I’m a mom with two kids in school, and that’s most important,” she said. “I’m fighting this battle every day of how expensive Corrections is, and I know it is taking from our school systems.” 

House members with the finance subcommittee for corrections heard several weeks of presentations about the department’s budget and asked questions of DOC officials. Rep. Mike Prax, R-North Pole, introduced several amendments to the budget, proposing millions in cuts until the department could provide further explanation on how the items would be spent and fulfill the department’s goals. But the committee voted them down before advancing the budget proposal without changes. 

The corrections budget now moves to the full House Finance Committee for further consideration.

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Music

Luke Combs Searching for Rare Signed Topps Nashville Stars Card

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Music

Luke Combs Searching for Rare Signed Topps Nashville Stars Card

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Food

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Health

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Gwen Stefani Gushes Over Her ‘Miracle’ Baby in New Interview

Reading Time: 3 minutes

We’ll remember this the next time that miracle baby rumors circulate.

When Gwen Stefani was in her mid-forties, she gave birth to her third son.

According to the singer, she experienced a spiritual and religious awakening as a Catholic ahead of conceiving him.

Now, she brands her third son as her “first miracle.”

Gwen Stefani looks into the camera in a church
During a Hallow interview, Gwen Stefani dishes on her religious journey. (Image Credit: YouTube)

How did she have a baby in her mid-40s?

If you’ve seen Stefani lately, it was probably in an ad for the Hallow prayer app. More on her involvement in that controversial prayer app in a moment.

She did a recent interview with Hallow: Prayer & Meditation, describing a spiritual epiphany that she experienced.

According to Stefani, she was working with a man who was an atheist and was ethnically Jewish.

“He was studying the Torah, and he had this big epiphany awakening,” she recalled.

“And,” Stefani shared, “he starts talking to me about the Torah.”

At the same time, Stefani and her erstwhile husband, Gavin Rossdale, were apparently hoping for a third child.

“I was desperate at this point during all this,” Stefani admitted.

“I really wanted to have another baby,” she expressed. “I really did.”

Stefani explained: “I couldn’t, and I was old.” She was in her 40s, an age when pregnancy is unusual and considered geriatric.

However, she explained that her conversations with her former-atheist Jewish colleague were “waking me up.”

Gwen Stefani speaks and gestures in a church.
With the back of the church behind her, Gwen Stefani chats. (Image Credit: YouTube)

‘And that was the first miracle’

According to Stefani, her eldest son, Kingston, hoped for another sibling. Now 19, he would have been but a wee lad back in 2013.

She’d told him that “mommy is too old” for another baby. But she says that she heard him praying for a sibling.

“It was like, four weeks later, and I was pregnant with Apollo,” Stefani marveled.

“I had him at 44 years old, naturally,” she proclaimed, calling him a “full-on gift. And that was the first miracle.”

Just a few years later, she and Rossdale split. It was widely reported that she found evidence on a tablet device that he was boning the children’s nanny.

Gwen Stefani talks on the Hallow youtube channel
Gwen Stefani carries on a religious discussion while in nun-adjacent cosplay. (Image Credit: YouTube)

Kingston is now 19. Zuma is now 17. And Apollo is now 12.

Many people believe in miraculous occurrences, usually due to the supernatural intervention of one or more deities.

In Stefani’s case, she is Catholic.

Some in her shoes might feel leery of discussing a baby whose conception and birth they believe to be miraculous, out of sensitivity to others who pray for — but do not have — a child.

But Stefani is doing an interview with the polarizing Hallow app. With that in mind, it makes sense for her to make statements that might otherwise be insensitive.

Gwen Stefani contemplates in a church
In a video for the Hallow app, Gwen Stefani considers as she speaks. (Image Credit: YouTube)

Many people are confused by her involvement with the Hallow app

Stefani is best known for her music career. Following that, it’s probably for her role as a coach on The Voice.

Her getting involved with a conservative prayer app that received funding from infamous billionaire Peter Thiel took some by surprise.

(The existence of a “prayer app” at all is also controversial, particularly among the faithful. What role does an app play in prayer? What role should it play?)

Truth be told, this app and her involvement with it was probably always who Stefani was.

It’s just that, these days, the lyrics to “Just A Girl” feel less sarcastic. Now it feels like she’d prefer that no one allow her to drive late at night.

Gwen Stefani Gushes Over Her ‘Miracle’ Baby in New Interview was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip