Picture this: a summer party soundtrack led by Dasha and her fresh new album. Get ready for some fun vibes coming your way! Continue reading…Country Music News – Taste of Country
Picture this: a summer party soundtrack led by Dasha and her fresh new album. Get ready for some fun vibes coming your way! Continue reading…Country Music News – Taste of Country
Carrie Underwood turned heads during American Idol’s “Songs of Faith” night on Monday (March 30) with a performance of “How Great Thou Art!” alongside 2025 Platinum Ticket winners Filo, Canaan James Hill, and Kolbi Jordan.
As a gentle piano played in the background, Underwood stood center stage in an ethereal white gown adorned with sparkles. She delivered a goosebumps-inducing performance as the stage lit up around her and the audience held candles in the air. As she hit the high notes, the crowd erupted in cheers. One by one, Filo, Canaan James Hill, and Kolbi Jordan joined her, each showcasing their soaring vocals. Underwood lifted her hands in praise as they sang together. She closed out the song with a stunning high note that left viewers with chills. The group received a standing ovation, and fans quickly took to social media to praise the performance.

“It sent chills all over! Powerful voices,” one user wrote.
Another shared, “Carrie hit it out of the park with this song. I’ve seen her sing this song on other award shows and previously on American Idol. This was my favorite performance of hers. No one can sing this song like Carrie. Thank you ABC for showcasing these amazing songs of faith from this group of talented contestants.”
Others praised, “Incredible performance! What I needed to close the day, tears, goosebumps and thanking God” and “I rarely every get chills during a performance and I did for carrie during those last notes. That was INCREDIBLE.”
Underwood recorded “How Great Thou Art!” on her GRAMMY Award-winning gospel hymns album My Savior, and this marks the second season in a row that she has performed the song during the “Songs of Faith” episode, perhaps delivering her most powerful rendition yet.
This episode marked the first time this season that the judges took the stage, including Luke Bryan and Lionel Richie, who joined forces with the American Idol Top 20 for a powerful performance of “Jesus Is Love.”
These performances took place during American Idol’s first live show of Season 24. The special “Songs of Faith” episode featured the Top 14 contestants delivering heartfelt, inspirational performances centered around faith. The Top 14 was determined through a combination of viewer votes, including texts, online submissions, and social media responses tied to the Top 20’s “Ohana Week” performances. By the end of the night, the competition narrowed once again, with just 12 finalists advancing to the next round based on America’s vote.

The “Songs of Faith” episode was first introduced during Season 23 in 2025 in recognition of the Easter season.
“It was a discussion that started at a dinner with the judges, some people from ABC, and myself,” Idol showrunner and executive producer Megan Michaels Wolflick told Rolling Stone.
“We watch myriad Christmas specials. We don’t ever see a faith-based spring Easter-style show. So we kind of embraced that. It was a special show, and people loved it; the ratings were pretty amazing,” she revealed.

Following the success of last year’s episode, producers decided to bring it back again this year.
American Idol will return to ABC on April 6 with the “’90s Judges Song Contest” episode, where contestants will perform iconic ‘90s hits secretly selected by Bryan, Richie, or Underwood. The episode will also feature a nostalgic twist, as stars from ABC’s “TGIF” ‘90s lineup join the hopefuls in the lounge while America votes for the Top 11.
The post Carrie Underwood May Have Just Given Her Best Performance Ever With ‘How Great Thou Art’ appeared first on Country Now.
Country Now
Out of Dijon mustard but need it in a desperate pinch? If you have yellow mustard and a few pantry staples, you can make your own DIY version.

Food Republic – Restaurants, Reviews, Recipes, Cooking Tips
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The bad news just keeps piling up for Taylor Frankie Paul.
Weeks after Paul’s season of The Bachelorette was canceled, the Utah native continues to face new allegations from ex-boyfriend Dakota Mortensen.
According to a newly unsealed report filed with the Draper City Police Department, Mortensen claims Paul attacked him earlier this year.

ABC canceled her season based on footage of a 2023 attack, but now it seems that that was just one of several incidents.
In a filing obtained by Page Six, Mortensen outlines a series of alleged actions he says Paul took during an altercation that took place in February:
He accuses her of “grabbing and pulling his hair,” “pushing him into a wall,” and “scratching him repeatedly.”
The document also claims Paul “struck his arm” and made “hostile and aggressive physical contact,” resulting in injuries that required medical treatment.
According to the filing, the alleged incident occurred earlier this year, around the same time both parties reported separate allegations to law enforcement and the ensuing domestic assault investigation was launched.

Paul has previously described the situation differently, asserting that she experienced abuse and that her past — including a 2023 incident involving Mortensen — has been unfairly resurfaced and scrutinized.
Her legal team has acknowledged that there were “mutual allegations” but has not publicly commented on the specifics of Mortensen’s latest claims.
Mortensen’s filing also paints a picture of being concerned for his safety and that of their two-year-old child, saying the alleged conduct was part of a pattern that led him to seek legal protection.
This development comes amid a chaotic legal backdrop: Mortensen has already sought a restraining order against Paul, and both parties have been embroiled in litigation connected to their former relationship and shared custody concerns.

“The West Jordan Police Department is currently investigating an incident involving Taylor Frankie Paul and Dakota Mortensen,” a spokesperson for the department told Page Six last week.
“The allegations were reported at the end of February 2026, and detectives have reviewed video believed to have been recorded in early to mid-2024.”
As of now, Paul has not directly responded to these specific fresh allegations in Mortensen’s filing, and no criminal charges tied to the 2026 claims have been publicly announced.
A hearing on the protective order request is expected soon, and legal experts say Mortensen’s most recent claims could play a central role in how a judge views the situation.
We will have further updates on this developing story as new information becomes available.
Dakota Mortensen Says Taylor Frankie Paul Punched, Scratched Him In 2026 Attack was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.
The Hollywood Gossip

Cars on the road today are 99% cleaner than they were in 1970. Air quality in the United States is much, much better as a result. In Los Angeles, where I live, lead levels in the air were 50 times higher in the 1970s than today, and the amount of lead in kids’ blood has plummeted.
What made that drop possible is arguably the most important environmental technology ever invented: the catalytic converter.
California has long had the authority under the federal Clean Air Act to set emissions standards for cars and trucks that are higher than the nation’s, and its early use of that authority is a major reason why catalytic converters are now standard in vehicles and people are healthier across the country.
At a time when the Trump administration is attacking California’s ability to cut air and climate pollution and revoking its Clean Air Act waivers, it’s helpful to remember just how important the state’s leadership has been in making the air Americans breathe so much healthier.

As I recount in my forthcoming book, “Smog and Sunshine: The Surprising Story of How Los Angeles Cleaned Up Its Air,” California’s role in the emergence of catalytic technology is often downplayed. The passage of the 1970 Clean Air Act is typically given the credit. That law deserves accolades for its key role. So does William Ruckelshaus, the first administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
But without California’s willingness in the early 1970s to push automakers to meet tough standards, the technology would have developed more slowly and the air would have remained dirtier for many more years.
Eugene Houdry invented the first catalytic converter technology in the 1950s. Years earlier, he had developed the Houdry process for catalytic cracking, which makes converting crude oil into gasoline much easier. That invention in the mid-1930s helped spur the mass adoption of cars and trucks in the U.S.
Widespread car ownership altered American life, changing where people lived, worked and vacationed. But cars also brought terrible smog as their use skyrocketed. When Houdry realized his life’s work was choking the air of Los Angeles, he decided to do something about it. By the late 1950s, Houdry had invented a rudimentary catalytic converter.
You might think that this invention, which Houdry said could make “the lung cancer curve dip,” would lead carmakers to install the technology on their new vehicles.
But that is not what happened. Instead, auto manufacturers engaged in what the government described as a yearslong conspiracy to keep emissions-limiting technology off the market, ultimately leading to an antitrust legal settlement.
It wasn’t until the passage of the 1970 Clean Air Act that carmakers got serious about improving upon Houdry’s invention for mass market installation.
The 1970 Clean Air Act is a remarkable piece of legislation. Passed with only one negative vote and signed into law by President Richard Nixon, the act set wildly ambitious goals. They included a requirement that carmakers cut auto pollutants by 90% by 1975.
Congress passed this requirement knowing that the technology to cut emissions wasn’t ready for prime time. Houdry’s catalytic invention couldn’t work with leaded gasoline, and it hadn’t been tested in tough conditions, such as freezing cold or sweltering heat.
The Ford Motor Co., with Lee Iacocca as its president, told Congress in 1970, “If such (pollution cuts) are established … the technology as we know it today would not permit us to continue to produce cars after January 1, 1975.”

Congress ignored Ford’s dire warning and passed the stringent cuts.
Automakers responded with two separate tactics. The first was to gear up – alongside companies like Corning Glass and the Engelhard Company – to develop technology to meet the 90% cuts. Most of their efforts focused on improving the catalytic converter, made more plausible when Engelhard determined that catalytic converters wouldn’t corrode with unleaded gasoline. The EPA’s Ruckelshaus ordered gas stations to make unleaded gasoline available as of Jan. 1, 1975.
While the auto companies worked to meet the congressional mandate, they also pressured Congress and the courts to weaken or delay it. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit obliged, ordering Ruckelshaus to extend the deadline for compliance by a year. Congress eventually extended the deadline to 1981.
But California did not let up.
California has the authority under federal law to issue its own automobile pollution standards, as long as the standards are stronger than federal standards and the state receives a waiver from the EPA. No other state has similar power, but states can adopt California’s higher standards.
After the federal appeals court gave carmakers an extra year to comply with the federal rules, California decided it would not let car companies off the hook.
The state asked Ruckelshaus to grant a waiver for California to issue standards tough enough that carmakers would have to install catalytic technology to meet them.

Ruckelshaus faced enormous pressure to deny the waiver, with automakers arguing that the technology was neither effective nor available. But in a hint of the resolve he would later show in refusing Nixon’s order to fire Watergate special prosecutor Archibald Cox, Ruckelshaus gave California the go-ahead in 1973, and the state’s rules went into effect for the 1975 model year.
He reasoned that doing so would maintain “continued momentum toward installation of (catalyst) systems … while minimizing risks incident to national introduction of a new technology.” In other words, California could serve as a guinea pig for the rest of the country by adopting tough standards.
The gamble paid off. Since California was the nation’s largest auto market, companies had strong economic incentives to change their models to meet the state’s standards. Catalytic technology is now not only standard on American vehicles but also on vehicles around the world, and air quality in the U.S. is vastly improved.
With the adoption of the catalytic converter, leaded gasoline was banned and eventually phased out, and lead levels began to drop almost immediately.
Catalytic converters have removed 8 billion tons of pollution from the air in the U.S. They have saved hundreds of thousands of lives and led to the removal of a deadly neurotoxin, lead, from the atmosphere.
California’s standards have spurred important technological innovations for vehicles, including new types of less-polluting gasoline and vehicles that emit no pollution at all.
But the state’s ability to set higher standards is under attack. Congress – at the behest of the Trump administration – has overturned three waivers the state was granted to cut even more pollutants and the greenhouse gases that cause climate change. The Trump administration has also sued California to invalidate its mandates for automakers to sell zero-emissions vehicles.
Today, California officials are searching for alternative ways to continue to make cars and trucks cleaner. The state has set aside money to replace federal tax incentives for electric vehicles, and the Legislature is exploring creative ways to hold indirect sources of emissions, such as rail yards, ports and warehouses where vehicles are constantly running, accountable for air pollution.
But these alternatives aren’t as powerful as the authority to exceed federal standards to make the air cleaner.
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Ann E. Carlson’s research was supported by UCLA. President Biden appointed her to serve as Chief Counsel and Acting Administrator of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration from 2021-2024.
Politics + Society – The Conversation
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The Duggars are circling the wagons.
We already knew that Michelle bailed out Kendra, whisking her away into hiding while she awaits trial.
It turns out that she and Jim Bob are doing even more than that for Joseph’s wife.
The infamous Duggar couple are openly declaring their support for Kendra — and even hired an attorney for her.

If you’ve been following the Duggar cult as they sink to new depths (can’t really say highs and lows with this crowd), you’ve likely heard of Travis Story.
He is an attorney. In fact, he was one of the attorneys who represented Josh Duggar. (These days, Josh has a new attorney.)
Story also helped the couple when they sought custody of Tyler, their great-nephew.
He’s essentially the Duggar family lawyer — or one of them.
Story will be representing Kendra Caldwell as she faces eight charges — of endangering the welfare of her minor children and of false imprisonment.

A Duggar family spokesperson has opened up to People on behalf of Jim Bob and Michelle.
“Jim Bob and Michelle are heartbroken over this entire situation,” the spokesperson expressed.
The entire situation, of course, refers to not only the shared charges between Joseph and Kendra, but also to Joseph’s charges of sexually abusing a 9-year-old girl. He has reportedly confessed twice to this crime.
“Right now, they are focused on loving their family,” the statement claimed, “and helping Kendra and her children during this difficult time.”
Vaguely, the spokesperson added: “They are praying for the victim. They ask for privacy and appreciate the kind words and prayers offered by so many.”

We know about Travis Story because of the now-public phone call that Joseph Duggar and Kendra Caldwell exchanged after Kendra’s brief time in custody, but while Joseph was still at the Washington County jail.
(Joseph is no longer at the jail and is believed to be in Bay County, Florida — or on his way there through the extradition process.)
Joseph asked his wife about the attorney situation, and she answered.
“I’ve been talking to Travis,” Kendra told her husband during the call. “I’ve got him as my attorney now.”
She added: “I wasn’t sure if you knew that, I’ve asked him to be my attorney.”

Joseph said: “I wasn’t sure who we settled with but this guy’s good.”
But Kendra objected to that, and moved swiftly to clear things up.
‘Well it’s not for you, it’s only for me,” Kendra clarified to her husband.
She then explained that she needed someone “for the case we’ve got going with the kids and stuff.”
Simply put, no matter what evidence the state presents, Kendra’s attorney will have a much easier time claiming that the kids are safe with her than one would claiming that they are both fit parents. Obviously.

Some have suggested that the plan is to throw Joseph under the bus.
Whatever the state of that home — thus far, we have heard only about children’s rooms that lock from the outside, like jail cells, and expect more details to come — Kendra could hypothetically claim that it was Joseph’s decision.
It’s true that, in the horrific cult to which the Duggars belong, husbands and fathers essentially have ownership over their families.
Fortunately, the law does not see things that way. Unless they can prove otherwise, both parents bear responsibility for the treatment of their children.
We pity any child born into this family, into this cult. And, clearly, any child who is unlucky enough to come into contact with at least two of Michelle and Jim Bob’s sons.
Two and counting.
Jim Bob & Michelle Duggar Openly Support Kendra Caldwell, Hire Attorney for Her Child … was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.
The Hollywood Gossip
The U.S. Army has launched an investigation into the circumstances surrounding why two Apache attack helicopters were hovering outside of Kid Rock’s Tennessee mansion. Continue reading…The Boot – Country Music News, Music Videos and Songs
A first-of-its-kind change is coming to U.S. currency, involving President Donald Trump in a way many won’t expect. Continue reading…The Boot – Country Music News, Music Videos and Songs
‘American Idol’ took an unexpected turn during its live show, leaving contestants and viewers waiting — and wondering what just happened. Continue reading…The Boot – Country Music News, Music Videos and Songs
MARIETTA, Ga. — As he settled into his podium seat for Monday’s packed pre-match press conference inside the sprawling and pristine training facility of MLS side Atlanta United, U.S. men’s national team coach Mauricio Pochettino cut a businesslike figure. The Argentine answered the first dozen or so questions matter-of-factly, displaying little sign of the charm that endeared him to fans of clubs across Europe — including the all-world squads like Chelsea and Paris Saint-Germain — during the 15 years he spent managing on the continent. – Will Defender Chris Richards Play vs. Portugal?- World Cup Schedule, Matches Exactly 24 minutes into the back-and-forth with reporters, Pochettino’s demeanor changed. Asked how the American squad can keep its intensity high for all 90 minutes, something it failed to do in Saturday’s 5-2 capitulation against Belgium, in Tuesday’s World Cup preparation match versus No. 6-ranked Portugal, the 54-year-old instantly became animated. He gesticulated as he spoke. That trademark charisma was suddenly on full display. “If you watched the game [between] France and Colombia, that is intensity,” said Pochettino, referring to Sunday’s exhibition between the 2018 World Cup champions (and 2022 runners-up) and Los Cafeteros in Landover, Maryland. Les Bleus won 3-1, yet the victory was anything but comfortable. “You can win, or you can lose,” Pochettino said. “But do you think the coach of Colombia, [despite] losing the game, is going to complain about [the effort of] some players? They played like this was the final of the World Cup. And France, when they saw the intensity and the aggression of Colombia, said, ‘If we aren’t as intense, they’ll kill us.’ That is intensity.” In stark contrast, the U.S. all but folded up shop when a Belgian penalty put the home side down two goals on Saturday with more than 30 minutes of the contest still left to play. The response, goalkeeper Matt Turner and others said afterward, should’ve been the opposite. As the saying goes: If you can’t beat them, beat them up. Pochettino didn’t go that far, of course. And although English is his third language after his native Spanish and the French he learned playing as a central defender for Ligue 1 sides PSG and Bordeaux in the early 2000s, he couldn’t have expressed himself more clearly. This isn’t the first time intensity has been a problem for the Americans since Pochettino arrived on these shores 18 months ago. Exactly this time last year, a flat and toothless USA dropped home games to regional foes Panama and Canada in the Concacaf Nations League finals. Pochettino was so upset that he and his staff “destroy[ed] what we needed to destroy” and began to rebuild the team in his own image by bringing in a gaggle of newcomers who have since become mainstays. By the end of last year, the lack of fight was no longer an issue: The U.S. literally brawled toward the end of a November win over Paraguay before beating the brakes off two-time World Cup champ Uruguay — arguably the hardest team, pound for pound, on planet fútbol. It’s something Poch’s lot must rediscover between this month’s two games. “It’s a conscious decision. It’s just an overall effort,” captain Tim Ream said when asked why the U.S. faded so badly against Belgium at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. “It’s not that guys don’t want to do it. I think sometimes it’s like ’I’ve just made an effort,’ and now it’s about making the second, the third, the fourth. And sometimes, that doesn’t happen. “That’s something that’s non-negotiable, really,” Ream continued. “It’s something that we were doing really well in the fall last year. And it’s something we have to get back to.” Pochettino noted on Monday that unlike last autumn, his players have been inundated with pre-World Cup media responsibilities this week. That wasn’t the case in November or in the two international windows that preceded it. Yet he also pointed out that it’s not a switch that can simply be turned on when the World Cup kicks off in June. That’s the big lesson from Saturday. It’s the mandate for Tuesday. The 2026 World Cup co-hosts still might not win the match. Portugal has a legitimate chance of hoisting the most coveted trophy in sports next July 19. Even at home, the U.S. would require a miracle even to reach the final four. Failure to rediscover their pugilistic spirit could end in catastrophe. As Pochettino asked rhetorically of whoever his team comes up against next summer: “Do you think that they are not going to fight?” “There’s still time to realize that we need to compete,” he reiterated on Monday. “The players need to believe in that.” We’ll find out on Tuesday how much. 2026 FIFA World Cup: How To Watch The World Cup will run from June 11–July 19, 2026. Spread across three countries, the tournament will culminate with the final on July 19 at New York New Jersey Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey. All 104 tournament matches will air live across FOX (70) and FS1 (34) with every match streaming live and on-demand within both the FOX One and the FOX Sports apps.Latest Sports News from FOX Sports