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Texas Singer Tanner Usrey Arrested on Felony Drug Charges

Tanner Usrey has been arrested on felony drug charges, including one associated with fentanyl possession. Continue reading…​Country Music News – Taste of Country

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Shenandoah To Embark On 40th Anniversary Tour

Shenandoah has announced their 40th anniversary tour, set to take place throughout 2026. The country group will celebrate four decades of music with performances across the U.S.

They will kick things off on March 27 in Wickenburg, AZ and continue with shows running all the way through December. 

Known for No. 1 hits such as “Two Dozen Roses,” “Church on Cumberland Road,” and “Somewhere in the Vicinity of the Heart,” Shenandoah has remained a staple of country music with their signature harmonies and storytelling. This tour promises to honor their lasting legacy as a band and bring fans up close to the hits with a career-spanning setlist. 

Photo Courtesy of Shenandoah
Photo Courtesy of Shenandoah

Marty Raybon, the group’s lead singer, reflects on what this anniversary tour represents for both the band and the loyal listeners who’ve supported them through every up and down and milestone in their journey.

“Just to think 40 years,” Raybon notes. “Days of late have been filled with the memories of what this has truly meant to all of us. We have seen some of the best days in a lifetime and some of the hard things that is called life on life. I don’t know that we would change anything. We are grateful for every opportunity we have been given and a fanbase that continues to grow with us, love us and support us through all of it.”

Throughout the trek, Shenandoah will share the stage with artists including Jason Aldean, Ella Langley, Kid Rock, Brooks & Dunn, Hank Williams Jr., and Old Dominion.

The announcement follows a strong start to the year, with the band recently appearing at Luke Bryan’s “Crash My Playa” and headlining the San Antonio Rodeo.

Luke Bryan, Shenandoah; Photo Courtesy of Shenandoah
Luke Bryan, Shenandoah; Photo Courtesy of Shenandoah

More information about the 40th Anniversary Tour including all on-sale dates and support vary by market can be found at shenandoahband.com.

Shenandoah 40th Anniversary Tour Dates:

MARCH

 Mar 27 – Wickenburg, AZ – Flying E Ranch

 Mar 28 – Edna, TX – Red White & Bulls

APRIL

 Apr 3 – West Chester, OH – Lori’s Roadhouse

 Apr 11 – Moncton, NB – Casino New Brunswick

 Apr 12 – Moncton, NB – Casino New Brunswick

 Apr 17 – Orange Grove, TX – The Post OG

 Apr 18 – Georgetown, TX – Two Step Inn

 Apr 24 – Lancaster, PA – American Music Theatre

MAY

 May 1 – Belleville, TX – Rock the Country

 May 15 – Rama, ON – Casino Rama Resort

 May 22 – Monticello, MS – Atwood Music Festival

 May 23 – Fort Worth, TX – Billy Bob’s Texas

 May 29 – Bloomingdale, GA – Rock the Country

JUNE

 June 6 – Gail, TX – Coyote Store

 June 13 – West Palm Beach, FL – Alan Jackson’s 5 O’Clock Somewhere Fest

 June 19 – Hiawassee, GA – Georgia Mountain Fairgrounds

 June 20 – Patterson, GA – Mossy Pond Lodge

 June 26 – Gas City, IN – Performing Arts Center

 June 27 – Blacksburg, SC – Festival

JULY

 July 3 – Charles Town, WV – Hollywood Casino at Charles Town Races

 July 11 – Fortuna, CA – Fortuna Rodeo

 July 16 – Florence, AL – St. Jude Trail Ride

 July 17 – Mount Vernon, KY – Renfro Valley Entertainment Center

 July 22 – Paso Robles, CA – California Mid-State Fair

 July 23 – Yerington, NV – Night in the Country

 July 24 – Corona, CA – Dos Lagos

 July 25 – Fort McDowell, AZ – We-Ko-Pa Casino Resort

AUGUST

 Aug 1 – Gethsemane, KY – The Amp

 Aug 5 – Wausau, WI – Wisconsin Valley Fair

 Aug 8 – Detroit Lakes, MN – WE Fest

 Aug 9 – Hastings, MI – Rock the Country

 Aug 14 – North Lawrence, OH – Neon Nights

 Aug 18 – Lewisburg, WV – West Virginia State Fair

 Aug 21 – Fairbury, IL – Fairbury Fair

 Aug 22 – Chippewa Falls, WI – Northern Wisconsin State Fairgrounds

 Aug 24 – Cente Hall, PA – Grange Fair

 Aug 28 – Ocala, FL – Rock the Country

SEPTEMBER

 Sept 11 – Hamburg, NY – Rock the Country

 Sept 17 – Philadelphia, MS – Ellis Theater

 Sept 19 – Morehead, KY – Poppy Mountain Bluegrass Festival

OCTOBER

 Oct 3 – Marshall, TX – Bear Creek Smokehouse

 Oct 9 – Nashville, TN – TBD

 Oct 16 – Rockdale, TX – Rockdale Fair

 Oct 17 – Angleton, TX – Brazoria County Fair

NOVEMBER

 Nov 14 – Lufkin, TX – Temple Theater

 Nov 21 – Kingman, KS – Kingman Historic Theatre

DECEMBER

 Dec 4 – Tulsa, OK – Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Tulsa

 Dec 5 – Thackerville, OK – WinStar World Casino & Resort

The post Shenandoah To Embark On 40th Anniversary Tour appeared first on Country Now.

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Cheers! Here Are the 13 Best Country Songs About Beer

Country music and beer are certainly no strangers to one another. Continue reading…​The Boot – Country Music News, Music Videos and Songs

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Cheers! Here Are the 13 Best Country Songs About Beer

Country music and beer are certainly no strangers to one another. Continue reading…​Country Music News – Taste of Country

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The Food Delicacy Elizabeth Taylor Loved That’s Now Hard To Find In The US

Elizabeth Taylor exuded glamour throughout her long career, and her taste in food sometimes reflected that. She enjoyed eating this rare food with potato skins.

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

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2026 NFL Draft Confidential: Unfiltered Scouting Takes On Top 5 QBs

This is not a good time for NFL teams in need of a franchise quarterback. The 2026 draft class is thin. Scouts are mostly unimpressed. And some are already counting the days until the 2027 draft when a half-dozen QBs could end up with first-round grades. For teams that need help now, though, the cupboard isn’t completely bare. There are good quarterbacks in this class if teams look hard enough. You can expect that a number of clubs will, given that at least a handful of them are still searching for a long-term answer at QB. The 2026 prospects just might need a little extra time, patience and care. “There are 3-4 guys in this class that I think will have good NFL careers,” one scout told me. “Do I think any of them will be great? No. They’re not ‘can’t-miss’ (prospects). But there’s talent there if you know what to do with it.” So, who are the quarterbacks who could be “good”? I talked to seven scouts to get their insights on the five best in the class — what they like about them, what they need to work on and where they might end up. 5. Drew Allar, Penn State Expectations were high for Allar heading into the 2025 season, but he struggled early and then broke his left ankle in mid-October. It made for a disappointing end to a weird college career that never really rose to the heights many anticipated for a guy with such obvious physical tools. He was good as a junior (3,327 yards, 24 touchdowns, 8 interceptions in 16 games), but regressed as a senior (1,100 yards, 8 touchdowns, 3 interceptions in six games). The injury only complicated his outlook. He finished with 26 starts in college. Draft range: Round 3-4. “If a quarterback with his size is still sitting there when Day 3 starts, someone is going to jump up (to trade for him),” one scout told me. Height/weight: 6-foot-5, 228 pounds Scout takes: “My overall evaluation is that he’s good, but probably should have been better. He’s got great size and I love his arm (strength). His mobility is good. His accuracy is good, but inconsistent. There’s obviously a lot to work with there, but he was up and down his entire college career. … He was regressing as a senior before the injury. That’s a big red flag, especially after his interceptions jumped (as a junior) when they opened the playbook for him. But a guy that big who can throw like that? A lot of teams are going to want a piece of that. … If his career was a straight line, he might be a first-rounder based on talent and potential. But he was so all over the place. And it was easy to forget about him after the injury.” Pro comp: Josh Allen, Joe Flacco. “Same general scouting report as those guys (coming out of college): Big body, big arm, but an erratic arm,” one scout told me. “If he figures it out, he’s got Pro Bowl upside. If he doesn’t, he’s Drew Lock.” Biggest strength: Size. Every scout I spoke with raved about his size and strength, and great size can really matter for an NFL quarterback. “If you get a guy that big who can really play, you are set for a very long time,” one scout told me. Biggest question mark: Accuracy, or lack of it. He completed just 59.9% of his passes in his breakout sophomore year. That jumped to 66.5% as a junior, but so did his interceptions (from 2 to 8). Then, as a senior, his completion percentage dipped to 64.8%, and he was picked off three times in his six games. “It was all over the place,” one scout told me. “That’s worrisome since the sample size was big.” Best fit: Los Angeles Rams. “They’re so loaded they can afford to take a shot on him on Day 2,” one scout told me. “He’d be a steal for Sean McVay. There’s so much talent, but it has to be coached right. Watch McVay turn him into a Pro Bowler in 3-4 years.” 4. Carson Beck, Miami He was aiming to declare for the 2025 draft, but after a down season and the need for surgery on a torn UCL in his right elbow, he decided to transfer to Miami and give it one more year. He was outstanding for the Hurricanes, completing 72.4% of his passes for 3,813 yards, 30 touchdowns and 12 interceptions, and leading them on an improbable run to the CFP final. He started three full years between Georgia and Miami, throwing for 11,239 yards, 82 touchdowns and 30 interceptions. He started a whopping 43 games in college. Draft range: Rounds 3-4. “He’s a Day 3 guy,” one scout told me, “but the lack of quarterbacks gives him a shot to go Day 2.” Height/weight: 6-5, 233 Scout takes: “He’s got the look of a classic, big, strong, pocket passer. When he sets and throws, the ball just jumps out of his hand. That was even better before his elbow surgery. It didn’t have the same jump last season, and maybe it doesn’t come back. But that’s still his gift. … He can be rattled. I don’t know if it’s mental or a physical thing, but he’s susceptible to pressure. He doesn’t move well and when things are off schedule he’s not the same. … Last year was a big step up for him mentally. He looked like he was in more command of his offense and made better decisions. But the physical part took a dip. His throws weren’t the same. … He gets a lot of passes batted at the line of scrimmage for a guy his size. It’s not all his fault, but it’s still weird.” Pro comp: Mac Jones, Kenny Pickett. Neither are a perfect comparison. Pickett had more mobility and Jones wasn’t pressured as much at Alabama. But they are big, pocket passers who can wilt when the pass rush comes. “The upside to guys like that is they can play like Eli Manning,” one scout told me, “but they can’t process nearly as well as him.” Biggest strength: Arm strength and pocket presence. As the scouts said, his arm isn’t what it used to be, but he can still fire the ball a long way and throw it hard. That’s especially true when he’s comfortable in the pocket. Biggest question mark: Play under pressure. When the pass rush throws him off schedule, things can go wrong fast. “His decision-making when he’s rushed isn’t always good,” one scout told me, “and the zip in his fastball can disappear, too.” Best fit: Detroit Lions, San Francisco 49ers. “He looks a little like Jared Goff, even though he doesn’t have his talent,” one scout told me. “But that Lions offense is the kind that he needs, with a strong running game and good line.” Another scout added: “Look what Kyle Shanahan did for Mac Jones. (Beck) is the same type of player. And (Shanahan) doesn’t need his quarterbacks to run.” 3. Garrett Nussmeier, LSU Considered by many to be one of the top quarterbacks heading into the 2025 season, his prospects were dimmed by an injury-marred season. He had an abdominal/core muscle injury that left him with “a stabbing pain in my ab every time I went to go throw,” he said at the NFL Scouting Combine. He still threw for 1,927 yards and 12 touchdowns with five interceptions in nine starts. But that was way off his 2024 season — 4,052 yards, 25 touchdowns, 12 interceptions. He made 23 starts in college. Draft range: Rounds 3-4 Height/Weight: 6-2, 203 Scout takes: “It’s a shame about the injury because I really thought he was the No. 1 guy in the class going into the season. He’s got such a strong arm. He’s generally pretty accurate. But the injury took it all away. He never looked like himself. … He’s a gunslinger, with all the good and bad that comes with that. When he’s on and healthy, he can make some incredible plays. But guys who play like that also make some really big mistakes. … If that injury was as bad as he says, it shows a heck of a lot of toughness to play through it.” Pro comp: Baker Mayfield. Two scouts mentioned the No. 1 overall pick of the 2018 draft. “Baker was much better in all areas,” one scout told me. “But the style of play was the same.” Another scout added: “You have to go way back, but you know who I really think of when I see him? Tony Romo. There’s a lot of talent there. You just have to reign him in.” Biggest strength: His arm. He might not have the strongest arm in the draft, but one scout told me he “can deliver big throws from a bunch of different arm angles.” Another scout added: “He thinks he can make every throw, because he probably can.” Biggest question mark: Questionable decision-making, at times. It’s the boom-or-bust reality of a “gunslinger.” As one scout told me, “He likes to take risks. That’s fine. But it doesn’t always work out. You have to live with that with guys like him.” Best fit: Pittsburgh Steelers. “He looks like (Mike) McCarthy’s kind of quarterback,” one scout told me. “He’s not on the same level as (Aaron) Rodgers or (Dak) Prescott, but the style and ability to play on the move is the same.” The Steelers, of course, need a franchise quarterback to groom for when (or if) the 42-year-old Rodgers retires. Also, Garrett’s father, Doug, was McCarthy’s quarterbacks coach in Dallas for three seasons. 2. Ty Simpson, Alabama He bucked the transfer trend of this era and stayed at Alabama for four years, waiting his turn to play. His patience finally paid off when he earned the starting job last season and was very good on a CFP team, completing 64.5% of his passes for 3,567 yards, 28 touchdowns and just five interceptions. He also carried ‘Bama through a tough schedule, before fading down the stretch. He also made just 15 career starts in college. Draft range: Low first round or second round Height/weight: 6-1, 211 Scout takes: “Boy, does he need another year (in college). I like everything about him, but he’s not ready. He’s got to go to a team that has a starter and can take the time to work with him. If they do, he’s got the tools to be good. But he doesn’t have the experience to play right now. … He’s really smart and has a good arm, but he seems to think it’s better than it is. He thinks he can make every throw, but he can’t. … He’s tough and doesn’t like to give up on a play. But he’ll run himself into trouble trying to figure it out. That’s inexperience. … He’s a good mover, but not really a runner. He can scramble out of trouble, but doesn’t always know what to do once he does. He ends up holding the ball too long.” Pro comp: Brock Purdy. “He’s a better prospect (than Purdy),” one scout told me, “but the point is that he’s got the tools, and if the right guy develops him, he’ll be good.” Biggest strength: His accuracy. Scouts told me he didn’t seem to make a lot of mistakes with his decisions and ball placement, and that’s not easy against SEC defenses. Scouts also pointed to his four-week stretch against Georgia, Vanderbilt, Missouri and Tennessee, all ranked in the top 16 at the time. Simpson averaged 267 passing yards and threw nine touchdowns and just one interception in that stretch, while Alabama went 4-0. “That was a big-boy stretch,” one scout told me, “and he was big-time.” Biggest question mark: He’s inexperienced. “You just can’t find many successful NFL quarterbacks who only had 15 college starts,” one scout told me. “It’s a huge risk.” Best fit: Arizona Cardinals. Several scouts noted Simpson would be a good system fit for the Rams, which would make him the same for new Cardinals coach Mike LaFleur, the former Rams offensive coordinator. They wouldn’t take him at No. 3 overall, though, so they’d have to consider trading back into the first round, probably into the low 20s, or hope that he falls to them at No. 34. One sleeper possibility: The Steelers at No. 21, since Mike McCarthy knows QBs and Aaron Rodgers can’t play forever. 1. Fernando Mendoza, Indiana The reigning Heisman Trophy winner and national champion, he’s coming off a storybook season. In his one season with the Hoosiers, after transferring from Cal, he threw for 3,535 yards and completed 72% of his passes in 16 games, throwing 41 touchdowns and just six interceptions. He ran for 276 yards and seven touchdowns, too. He’s the clear cream of this crop. Draft range: Presumptive No. 1 overall pick (Las Vegas Raiders) Height/weight: 6-5, 236 Scout takes: “He’s the best quarterback in this class by far, but it’s not a good class. He would’ve been third (among QBs) last year and probably fifth or sixth (in 2024). … He’s a great kid and a strong leader. He comes off a little goofy, and I don’t know how well that’ll play (in the NFL), but his teammates seem to want to follow him. … He is so smart and so accurate. He can really thread the needle. If you give him time in the pocket, he can pick apart a defense. But that’s the key. You’ve got to give him time. He can’t move. … He needs to be behind a strong offensive line. He’s not going to create off schedule. I’m not sure Vegas is the best place for him.” Pro comp: The three names that came up the most were Jared Goff, Kirk Cousins and Matt Ryan — smart, pocket passers with limited mobility. “Goff had a better arm,” one scout told me. “Mendoza is more accurate than Goff was (in college), though. And he’s a much better prospect than Cousins was, but the style is similar.” Biggest strength: His accuracy and intelligence. Scouts raved about how he placed his throws in perfect spots, showing a remarkable ability to read defenses and his receivers’ intentions. It made up for what many told me was “average” arm strength. “If you look at his film,” one scout told me, “you’re not going to find many mistakes.” Another scout attributed that to “perfect” mechanics. Biggest question mark: His ability to move in the pocket and create off-schedule plays. His completion percentage dipped last season to 53.2% outside the pocket. He has trouble escaping pressure and doesn’t show the same arm strength when he’s not set. “That’s a real problem going to a bad team,” one scout told me. “He needs things perfect, and they won’t be.” Best fit: It’s a moot point because the Raiders will pick him No. 1 overall, even though one scout told me, “that might be the worst fit for him.” Another scout added: “Too bad he won’t drop to the middle of the first round. I’d love to see what a guy like (Vikings coach Kevin) O’Connell could do with him.”​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports

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MLB 2026 Buzz: Juan Soto Has Calf Strain; Mookie Betts Exits With Back Pain

The offseason and spring training are behind us, but there’s plenty of MLB news left to cover. Here are the noteworthy transactions, injuries and more from the 2026 season. Apr. 4 Juan Soto diagnosed with a right calf strain The Mets shared that Soto has been diagnosed with a right calf strain after undergoing an MRI on Saturday. He exited Friday night’s road game vs. the Giants in the first inning with calf tightness. Soto singled in the top of the first and appeared to slow up while going from first to third on Bo Bichette’s run-scoring single. Soto was forced out at home plate when Brett Baty grounded into a 1-2-3 double play. Tyrone Taylor replaced Soto in left field. “Right now,  it’s a minor strain,” Soto said at Oracle Park on Saturday. “We’re going to be going day-by-day, see how it feels. No decisions have been made yet. We’re going to see how I wake up the next couple of days and go from there.” Mookie Betts leaves Dodgers game early Betts exited the Dodgers’ game vs. the Nationals in the bottom of the first inning with lower back pain, the team shared. In his only plate appearance before exiting, Betts drew a walk before scoring from first base on Freddie Freeman’s two-run double in the top of the first. Shortstop Miguel Rojas replaced Betts in the bottom of the first. Justin Verlander to injured list The Tigers announced that they placed the veteran starting pitcher on the 15-day injured list due to left hip inflammation. In the one start he has made this season, Verlander, who’s in his second stint with the Tigers (he pitched in Detroit from 2005-17), surrendered five runs and eight baserunners (six hits and two walks) across 3 2/3 innings. Right-hander Keider Montero was recalled from Triple A to take Verlander’s roster spot. Apr. 3 Brewers sign prospect Cooper Pratt to eight-year, $50M deal Milwaukee finalized an eight-year, $50.75 million contract with Pratt on Friday, adding the prized 21-year-old shortstop prospect to the 40-man roster and optioning him to Triple-A Nashville. The deal with Pratt includes club options that could keep him with the Brewers through the 2035 season. “Cooper has all the tools to be a special player,” Brewers president of baseball operations Matt Arnold said, “and we are thrilled that he will be in a Brewers uniform for years to come. This commitment continues to show our organization’s passion — led by ownership — to consistently produce a winning team season after season.” Pratt is among the top prospects in a Brewers farm system that ranks among the best in MLB. He was rated by MLB Pipeline as the No. 60 overall prospect and fourth among those in the Milwaukee organization — 18-year-old infielder Jesus Made, who is at Double-A Biloxi, is the top Brewers prospect and ranked the third-best in all of baseball. Carlos Rodón hopeful injury is minor Yankees left-hander Rodón thinks his tight right hamstring is only a minor setback in his return from elbow surgery last October. Rodón felt the tightness after throwing 50 pitches of batting practice Sunday at the team’s complex in Tampa, Florida. Rodón got hurt while running and New York called off a planned minor league injury rehabilitation outing at Double-A Somerset. “Just a little bump in the road,” the 33-year-old left-hander said before the Yankees’ home opener against Miami on Friday. Rodón hopes to throw about 50 pitches Saturday in a controlled environment, such as batting practice. “It’s just a matter of when he can run and cover and field his position and things like that,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said. “So he’s able to keep his arm going through this. It’s minor enough that that’s the case.” Rodón is recovering from surgery on Oct. 15 to remove loose bodies in his left elbow and shave a bone spur. Additionally, Boone said shortstop Anthony Volpe started taking at-bats off pitching and could start a rehab assignment in mid-April. Volpe had arthroscopic surgery on Oct. 14 to repair the labrum in his left shoulder. Johan Oviedo added to injured list The Boston Red Sox have placed the right-hander on the 15-day injured list due to a right elbow strain, the team announced. In the one appearance that Oviedo has made this season, he surrendered two home runs, four earned runs and six hits over 3 ⅔ innings pitched. Boston acquired Oviedo from the Pittsburgh Pirates in the offseason. Apr. 2 Pirates calling up top SS prospect The Pirates announced they’re calling up esteemed shortstop prospect Konnor Griffin. Griffin, whom Pittsburgh selected with the ninth overall pick in 2024, is listed as MLB Pipeline’s No. 1 overall prospect. He began the 2026 season in Triple A, going 7-for-16 in five games. Last season, Griffin totaled a combined 21 home runs, 94 RBIs and 65 stolen bases across three levels of minor-league ball (A, A+ and Double A), while posting a .333/.415/.527 slash line. Apr. 1 Luis Gil will join Yankees soon Gil, who did not make the Yankees’ starting rotation out of spring training, is in line to join the team in mid-April after he makes a start for Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, manager Aaron Boone revealed. Boone said Gil recently threw in Florida at the team’s spring training complex, and is headed north to join New York’s top affiliate. “He’ll throw his bullpen with Triple-A, make his next start,” Boone said, “and then be in line for the next one with us.” New York decided to use a four-man rotation to open the season. Gil, the 2024 American League Rookie of the Year, ended up as the odd man out after going 2-1 with a 4.66 ERA in six spring training starts. Last year, Gil went 4-1 with a 3.32 ERA across 11 starts in an injury-filled season. He started last year on the injured list because of a high-grade lat strain, and did not make his season debut until Aug. 3. Nick Lodolo making rehab start for Reds Lodolo is expected to throw 60 to 65 pitches during a rehab assignment on April 2. The left-hander, who’s on the injured list due to a blister on his left index finger, will make his rehab start for Single-A Daytona against Jupiter in a Florida State League game. If Lodolo has a successful outing, he could join the Reds’ rotation during next week’s series at Miami. Lodolo was 9-8 with a 3.33 ERA and 156 strikeouts last season. Left-hander Caleb Ferguson (right oblique strain) threw from 90 feet on flat ground before Wednesday’s game against the Pirates. He’s expected to accompany the team on their upcoming seven-game road trip to Texas and Miami. Red Sox catcher Carlos Narváez scratched Narváez was scratched from Boston’s finale with the Astros on April 1 for an undisclosed reason. Narváez was removed from the lineup about 2.5 hours before first pitch and replaced behind the plate by Connor Wong. “I just made a change,” manager Alex Cora told reporters. “I talked to Carlos a little bit, and we move on from there. It’s one of those that I felt like we needed to make the change in the lineup, and I think it’s for the best.” When pressed if Narváez’s removal from the lineup was for a disciplinary reason, Cora didn’t directly answer the question. “Let’s keep it between me and Carlos,” Cora said. “And he understands. This is something that happens on every club. It just happens to be early in the season, and I think it’s the right thing to do.” The 27-year-old Narváez is hitting .444 in three games this season. He is in his second season in Boston after beginning his career with the Yankees. Mar. 31 Guardians right fielder Chase DeLauter exits after injury DeLauter left Tuesday’s game in the first inning after fouling a pitch from Dodgers starter Shohei Ohtani off his back foot. After a trainer came out to check on him, the rookie took a few practice swings and returned to the batter’s box. He tried to run out a grounder to third, but was thrown out and then hobbled to the tunnel. He was diagnosed with a left foot contusion. X-rays were negative. DeLauter was replaced by CJ Kayfus in the bottom of the first. DeLauter was the American League rookie of the week after hitting four home runs in his first three games. He’s just the second player to accomplish the feat, joining Trevor Story of the Rockies in 2019. Umpire loses track of count in Red Sox-Astros Plate umpire Mark Wegner acknowledged he lost track of the count during Cam Smith’s nine-pitch walk on Tuesday night in the fifth inning of the Astros’ eventual 9-2 win over the Red Sox. In fact, Smith should have been out on strikes after the third pitch. Smith swung at and missed two cutters from Red Sox starter Brayan Bello to begin the plate appearance. After the second pitch, Joey Loperfido stole second base and Christian Walker scored on the play thanks to a throwing error by catcher Wong. After about 40 seconds, Smith swung and missed at a sweeper. That should have been strike three but Wegner, a crew chief working his 29th MLB season, flashed 1-2 for the count. Six pitches later, Smith worked a walk. “I just watched the video,” Wegner told a pool reporter after the game. “I didn’t know what happened until I came in here and, apparently, I somehow didn’t count the second swinging one because I said the count was 1-2. It was actually strike three. Had anybody caught it, we can always go and call replay and check the count. I’ve never done that before. I’m not happy about it. Just made a mistake.” Wegner said no one on the field raised an issue in the moment. Bello said Wegner gave the count as 1-1 after his second pitch, and he didn’t question it at the time. The Associated Press contributed to this report.​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports

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Music

Everything We Know About ERNEST’s Third Studio Album, ‘Deep Blue’

ERNEST is gearing up to take fans on a tropical escape with his brand-new full-length album, Deep Blue. Over the past few weeks, he’s been steadily dropping details about the project, from new songs to the release date and the full track list, giving fans a taste of what’s to come. Now, there’s exactly one month left until listeners can dive into the album themselves.

In anticipation for the upcoming release, we have collected all the information you need to know before Deep Blue arrives. Keep reading to learn about everything from the stories behind the songs, the island that shaped the project, outside cuts drawn from Music Row legends and more.

Ernest; Photo by Delaney Royer
Ernest; Photo by Delaney Royer

Deep Blue Arrives In One Month

For starters, the project is set to drop on May 1 via Big Loud Records, and this will serve as his third studio album.

The Project Offers A Journey of Nostalgia and Island Sounds

Thematically, fans can expect Deep Blue to offer a mix of breezy, laid-back energy and nostalgia as ERNEST taps into the sounds of his debut project, Locals Only (2019 via Big Loud Records). For this collection, he chose to go back in time and revisit the sounds that shaped hi early project, which in turn led him to reflect on seven years of growth and evolution as an artist.

At the same time, it’s exepcted to captures the sounds, stories, and spirit of the of the U.S. Virgin Islands, a place that has made ERNEST the artist and the person he is today. Combining his past with the current phase of his life results in a journey of vibrant tropical songs that are both familiar and entirely new.

ERNEST; Deep Blue; Photo by Delaney Royer
ERNEST; Deep Blue; Photo by Delaney Royer

“I want to say thank you to the fans that have been here since the Local Only Days.” ERNEST shares. “If you are new here, thank you for joining the ride. Most importantly, I want to thank the ocean and the islands. I wouldn’t be here if it weren’t for them. I found myself in that Caribbean water and will always call it home away from home.”

Deep Blue Features 13 Tracks, including Four Outside Cuts

Fans will get to dive into these themes across the 13 tracks. The GRAMMY-nominated hitmaker has already shared early previews into to the project through singles such as “Lorelei,” and “Boat Named After You.”

For the first time on any of his projects, ERNEST also included four outside cuts. To find these tracks, he drew from a treasure trove of backlog cuts from Music Row legends such as Toby Keith, Nathan Chapman, David Lee Murphy, Tony Lane, Scotty Emerick, 2026 Country Music Hall of Fame inductee Paul Overstreet, among others.

Along with the songs listeners have already heard, ERNEST has unveiled two more tracks, giving his fans the chance to explore the album a bit more through the title track as well as an official studio version of Apple Music Lost & Found Session submission “End Of The Night.” 

ERNEST clearly took a hands-on approach with this project, serving as co-writer on the majority of the collection as well as a producer on each of the 13 tracks alongside Jacob Durrett.

Deep Blue Tracklist:

1.   Lorelei(Ernest Keith Smith, Rhett Akins, Ben Hayslip, Mark Holman)

2.   Edge Of The U.S.A. (Ernest Keith Smith, Jacob Durrett, Chris Lane)

3.   What’s A Little Rain (Ernest Keith Smith, Rodney Clawson, David Garcia)

4.   Lucky (Ernest Keith Smith, Cody Lohden)

5.   Quit While We’re Behind (Ernest Keith Smith, Scotty Emerick, Trent Tomlinson)

6.   Somewhere In The Caribbean (Scotty Emerick, Paul Overstreet)

7.   End Of The Night (Toby Keith, David Lee Murphy, Bobby Pinson)

8.   Waste A Day (Ernest Keith Smith, Rodney Clawson, David Garcia)

9.   Deep Blue (Ernest Keith Smith, Grady Block, Rocky Block, Hank Compton, Jamie McLaughlin)

10. If I’m Not Careful (Ernest Keith Smith, Ronnie Bowman, Clint Daniels, Chandler Paul Walters)

11. Same Moon (Ernest Keith Smith, Rhett Akins, Ben Hayslip, Mark Holman)

12. Boat Named After You (Nathan Chapman, Tony Lane)

13. Time Is A Thief feat. Lukas Nelson (Matt McKinney, Rivers Rutherford, Jimmy Yeary)

Deep Blue will be released on exclusive deep blue–colored vinyl. A limited run of signed copies will also be available for fans to purchase.

Along with awaiting the new project release, ERNEST is busy on the road with his nationwide Live From The South Tour. The headline trek is next set to stop at New York’s iconic Irving Plaza, followed by Houston, Fort Worth, Knoxville, and more, before wrapping this April. 

Joining the Nashville, TN native on tour are breakout artist-writers Rhys Rutherford, Chandler Walters, and Cody Lohden, all of which are signed to ERNEST’s record label, DeVille Records, and his publishing company, Cadillac Music Publishing. 

The post Everything We Know About ERNEST’s Third Studio Album, ‘Deep Blue’ appeared first on Country Now.

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Anne Burrell Death Photos Show Chilling Scene With Scattered Pills, Medicine Bottles

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It’s been almost ten months since Food Network star Anne Burrell passed away at the age of 55.

While Burrell’s death has been ruled a suicide, there’s still a good deal of mystery surrounding the circumstances of her final hours.

Now, new photos taken by first responders have been released, and they paint a chilling portrait of a life that ended in despair.

We have new information about the final hours of Food Network star Anne Burrell.
We have new information about the final hours of Food Network star Anne Burrell. (YouTube/Food Network)

Photos obtained by Page Six show pills and several empty medicine bottles scattered through Burrell’s home, a discovery that is now at the center of law enforcement’s ongoing investigation into her death.

While medical examiners believe Burrell committed suicide, police have yet to publicly announce what, if any, role the pills might have played in Burrell’s death.

Her cause of death is officially listed as “acute intoxication due to the combined effects of diphenhydramine, ethanol, cetirizine, and amphetamine.”

Representatives for the chef’s family have declined to comment on the newly released photos or what they may mean.

Burrell had spent decades building a high-profile career as a chef, television personality, and mentor to up-and-coming culinary talent.

Prior to her death in 2025, Anne Burrell appeared on several Food Network shows.
Prior to her death in 2025, Anne Burrell appeared on several Food Network shows. (YouTube/Food Network)

Her sense of humor and culinary expertise made her a familiar face to fans of cooking shows across networks.

In the wake of her death, tributes have poured in from colleagues, friends, and fans, many of them offering warm memories of her generous spirit and passion for food.

With these new photos now circulating publicly, the focus has turned even more sharply to uncovering the full circumstances surrounding her passing.

At this stage, investigators have not provided explanations about the pills or medicine bottles photographed inside the home.

Prior to her tragic death, Anne Burrell was one of the Food Network's brightest stars.
Prior to her tragic death, Anne Burrell was one of the Food Network’s brightest stars. (YouTube/Food Network)

After launching the Food Network’s Worst Cooks In America in 2010, Burrell was not asked back to host the show’s 27th season in 2023.

She made a brief return for the show’s 29th season, just months before her death.

As authorities continue their work, what’s clear is that this is a deeply sad and complicated situation, one that has left loved ones and fans seeking answers in the midst of profound grief.

While photos taken at the scene of Burrell’s death have shed new light on the circumstances of her final hours, they still don’t tell the whole story.

We’ll have further updates on this developing story as new information becomes available.

Anne Burrell Death Photos Show Chilling Scene With Scattered Pills, Medicine Bottles was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

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Alaska lawmakers push for continued ban on Russian seafood imports

By: Yereth Rosen, Alaska Beacon

Fishing vessels are seen in Homer’s harbor on Oct. 22, 2025. A resolution passed by state lawmakers urges federal officials to extend the ban on Russian seafood imports. Russian fish competes for market share with Alaska’s fish. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)

A legislative resolution urging a continued and better-enforced ban on Russian seafood in the United States is headed to Gov. Mike Dunleavy.

Part of a series of actions by Alaska lawmakers to try to shore up the state’s ailing seafood industry, House Joint Resolution 29 won final passage last week and was transferred to the governor on Monday.

The resolution calls for continuation of the ban on Russian seafood imports imposed in 2022, after that country’s invasion of Ukraine. The ban was expanded in 2023 to cover imports of Russian seafood to the U.S. through a third-party country, usually China, where fish are processed.

The import ban is set to expire later this year. That makes the resolution timely, supporters aid.

Among the supporters is Jeremy Woodrow, executive director of the Alaska Seafood Marketing Institute.

Woodrow, in testimony to the Senate Resources Committee on Feb. 27, said a stockpile of Russian fish that was in the U.S. before the ban went into full effect is just now being depleted.

“We need more time to really capture the U.S. marketplace. Our industry has not recovered yet,” Woodrow said. Even though last year’s fishing season was better, it was still one of the worst years in the last 20 years, he said.

“This is one measure that will help our fishermen. We’re starting to see the fruits of this ban coming into play, but we need more time to provide stability to our industry. We need more time to see it come to fruition,” he told the committee.

In addition to seeking an extension of the import ban, the resolution calls for stronger monitoring and enforcement to “ensure fair trade, protect the state’s seafood industry, and promote sustainable and ethical seafood production.”

Legislative resolutions do not have the power of law, but they can influence actions by Congress, the federal executive branch or other institutions.

The Russian seafood import ban resolution was not among the measures introduced by the Joint Legislative Task Force Evaluating Alaska’s Seafood Industry, formed in 2024. However, it addresses an aspect of international trade, one of the issues raised by the task force. The task force’s report recommended an update to a Russia-focused resolution passed by the legislature in 2022, Senate Joint Resolution 16.

Russian king crab is displayed at a Costco in Anchorage on Nov. 14, 2022. The crab, from the Barent Sea, was distributed by Arctic Seafoods of San Francisco, and was part of inventory stockpiled before the U.S. government banned fish imports from Russia. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
Russian king crab is displayed at a Costco in Anchorage on Nov. 14, 2022. The crab, from the Barent Sea, was distributed by Arctic Seafoods of San Francisco, and was part of inventory stockpiled before the U.S. government banned fish imports from Russia. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)

The eight-member task force, comprising Senate and House members from fishery-dependent districts, issued its recommendation report in January 2025, at the start of last year’s session. Recommendations for action resulted in the introduction of a series of bills intended to help the industry, which has struggled with low fish prices, glutted international markets, high costs and other challenges.

Other bills focus on tax credits and revenues

One of the task force’s bills, aimed at encouraging seafood product development and diversification, is headed for a vote in the Senate this week.

That measure, Senate Bill 130, concerns the state’s fisheries product development tax credit system. Currently, seafood companies are allowed to deduct the cost of new equipment used to develop value-added products from salmon, herring, pollock, sablefish and Pacific cod. The bill would expand that to all fish species, including shellfish. That is in line with the recommendation in the task force report, which identifies arrowtooth flounder, fish meal and crab shells as examples of some underused or discarded products that could be processed into something marketable.

The bill, in the amended form before the Senate, also seeks to expand the range of technology for which investment would qualify for credits, and it would extend the sunset date for the credit to 2037. Currently, the tax credit is due to expire next year.

The revenue impact of the bill, if it wins final passage, is difficult to determine because there are several unknown variables, said the fiscal note prepared by the state Alaska Department of Revenue. Estimated annual revenues losses to the state would range from $1 million to nearly $4 million, according to the fiscal note.

Another task force bill, aimed at helping fishery-dependent local governments, had not moved out of the Senate Finance Committee as of Tuesday. That measure, Senate Bill 135, would allow municipalities to increase their share of fisheries business tax and fishery resource landing tax revenues. Currently, the state and local governments split those tax revenues equally. The bill would allow local governments to get up to 75% of the tax revenues.

The legislature passed two seafood task force bills last year, each of which had wide support. However, Dunleavy vetoed one of the bills.

The bill that escaped the governor’s veto, House Bill 116, allows for the formation and operation of member-owned commercial fishing insurance cooperatives. Such cooperativesexist in other states and were used by some Alaska fishers. The bill passed unanimously.

The vetoed bill, Senate Bill 156, would have transferred $3.69 million from a defunct state loan fund to the Alaska Commercial Fishing and Agriculture Bank. The state-owned bank needed the boost to keep serving the seafood industry, bill supporters argued. But Dunleavy argued that the cost of the action was too great for the state budget to bear.