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Entertainment

Queen Elizabeth Put Meghan Markle ‘In Her Place’ Amid Bullying Claims, Royal …

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For several years now, the British tabloid press has been obsessing over unproven bullying allegations against Meghan Markle.

And today, the Duchess’ biggest haters are likely overjoyed by claims that the late Queen Elizabeth once lambasted Meghan over her treatment of a gardener.

News of the confrontation comes courtesy of a new book by royal biographer Hugo Vickers.

Queen Elizabeth II sits and laughs with Meghan, Duchess of Sussex during a ceremony to open the new Mersey Gateway Bridge on June 14, 2018 in the town of Widnes in Halton, Cheshire, England.
Queen Elizabeth II sits and laughs with Meghan, Duchess of Sussex during a ceremony to open the new Mersey Gateway Bridge on June 14, 2018 in the town of Widnes in Halton, Cheshire, England. (Photo by Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images)

“She apparently was rude to one of the under-gardeners and the head gardener went up to the Queen and reported this and the Queen got in her car and went down and tore a strip off her because you cannot be rude to staff,” Vickers said on the “Daily T” podcast (via Yahoo! News).

According to Vickers, Elizabeth decided that Meghan had “been rude to the gardener, so she needed to be ticked off, put in her place.”

The biographer claims that that wasn’t the only occasion on which Meghan and Elizabeth locked horns.

The author also claims that Elizabeth took major issue with Meghan’s decision to wear a Dior dress with an “estimated £60,000 price tag” during a visit to Morocco.

Meghan Markle appears on her new Netflix series.
Meghan Markle has not received rave reviews for her Netflix series. (Netflix)

Vickers alleges that the situation “drew the Queen’s ire” when she read about it, and Elizabeth “later let Meghan know” that an outfit that expensive “was an ill-judged choice.”

And then there was Meghan’s decision to rock a wildly expensive tiara for her wedding to Prince Harry.

According to Vickers, when Elizabeth addressed the situation with Harry, he allegedly responded with a comment along the lines of “What Meghan wants, Meghan gets.”

That’s a pretty reasonable attitude to take toward a bride-to-be who’s planning a wedding (a wedding that will be televised around the world, no less).

Prince Harry and Meghan Markle in a scene from her new Netflix show.
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle in a scene from her new Netflix show. (Netflix)

But Vickers is citing this as an example of Meghan’s unbridled narcissism, and he claims that the Queen wouldn’t stand for it.

“Her Majesty did not approve. ‘Meghan cannot have whatever she wants,’ she was reported to have replied. ‘She gets the tiara that she’s given by me’,” Vickers writes in his book.

Again, the British tabloid press will have a field day with this one.

But Vickers’ authority on these matters stems from the fact that he met the Queen “over 40 times” — which really isn’t that many.

And a young bride clashing with her in-laws really isn’t the scandal he’s making it out to be.

This is yet another nothingburger that Meghan haters will use to retroactively justify their hatred of the Duchess of Sussex.

Queen Elizabeth Put Meghan Markle ‘In Her Place’ Amid Bullying Claims, Royal … was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Alaska News

Alaska Forest Service facility slated for closure amid federal restructuring

Two weeks after the Trump administration announced a U.S. Forest Service “restructuring” that would close regional offices and most of the agency’s research facilities, impacts to Alaska – home to the two largest U.S. national forests – remain unclear.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture announced on March 31 that the Forest Service’s national headquarters will move to Utah and that many of its facilities will be shuttered. Among the facilities on the closure list were two that are important to Alaska: the Anchorage Forestry Sciences Laboratory and the Oregon-based Pacific Northwest Research Station in Portland.

But other impacts on the 17-million-acre Tongass National Forest and the 5.4-million-acre Chugach National Forest were not disclosed.

A statement from the Forest Service headquarters provided few details about the Tongass, the Chugach or the visitor and recreational facilities located in either forest.

“The transition will occur in phases. Employees will receive clear information about relocation timelines, available options, and resources to support their decisions,” the statement said. “The number of relocations beyond those already identified in the National Capital Region is unknown at this time.”

U.S. Agriculture Department Secretary Brooke Rollins, whose department oversees the Forest Service, outlined the restructuring plan last year. In a July 24, 2025, memo, she said the plan included the replacement of the Alaska regional office with “a reduced state office in Juneau.” The state capital is currently the site of the Alaska regional office managing both the Tongass and the Chugach.

Three people at Begich, Boggs Visitor Center look out at Portage Lake on Aug. 30, 2025. The U.S. Forest Service's visitor center used to provide a close-up view of Portage Glacier's ice. Now the glacier has retreated so much that it is around the right corner, requiring a boat ride or mountain hike to see it in summer. A bit of Burns Glacier, which has also retreated dramatically, is visible from the visitor center. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
Three people at Begich, Boggs Visitor Center in the Chugach National Forest look out at Portage Lake on Aug. 30, 2025. The U.S. Forest Service’s visitor center, a popular tourist destination, used to provide a close-up view of Portage Glacier’s ice. Now the glacier has retreated so much that it is around the right corner, requiring a boat ride or mountain hike to see it in summer. A bit of Burns Glacier, which has also retreated dramatically, is visible from the visitor center. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)

Alaska has Forest Service facilities throughout the Tongass and Chugach regions, from the southern tip of the Southeast to Anchorage.

Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, is also trying to learn about impacts to Alaska, a spokesperson said.

The senator and her staff are in a “fact-finding” mode and preparing to mount a “defense of the Forest Service in Alaska and make sure the employees are able to continue the good work that they’re currently doing,” said Murkowski spokesperson Joe Plesha.

The issue is expected to be managed through the Congressional appropriations process, Plesha said.

Murkowski is on the Senate Appropriations Committee and chairs the appropriations subcommittee on the Department of the Interior, Environment and Related Agencies.

The Anchorage lab that is scheduled for closure is located in the Ship Creek district of downtown Anchorage. It supports research in the Tongass National Forest, which is the nation’s largest, and the Chugach National Forest, the second largest. It also supports research on forests elsewhere, from the boreal forests of Interior Alaska to those on tiny tropical Pacific islands like Guam and Micronesia.

The lab is used not just by Forest Service scientists but by other federal agencies, state agencies, Native corporations, University of Alaska researchers and private industry, according to its website.

Tourists walk to and from a viewpoint at the Mendenhall Glacier visitor center on May 14, 2025. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
Tourists walk to and from a viewpoint at the Mendenhall Glacier visitor center on May 14, 2025. The visitor center in the Tongass National Forest is a top tourist destination. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)

Up to now, the lab has had a year-round staff of about 22 scientists and administrative workers, but the numbers increase during summer field seasons.

The planned closure of the century-old Pacific Northwest Research Station in Oregon is part of a consolidation of research functions into a single site in Fort Collins, Colorado.

The Pacific Northwest facility, with about 250 employees, has an affiliated lab in Juneau. The fate of the Juneau lab remains unknown.

Among the Alaska projects undertaken by the Pacific Northwest Research station, sometimes with partner organizations, is study of the decline of yellow cedar in the Tongass and adjacent regions in the southeastern part of the state; the status of birds and rare plants in the Tongass; the study of rural Alaskans’ access to wild foods in the Chugach National Forest and the surrounding region; and the monitoring of human recreation’s impacts on brown bears.

The Forest Service closure plans follow deep cuts already made by the Trump administration’s Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE. In the first half of 2025, the Forest Service lost 5,860 of its 35,550 employees, according to a Dec. 17, 2025,  report by the Agriculture Department’s inspector general.  

That includes losses in Alaska. As of January, Alaska’s Forest Service workforce was down to 467 from the total of about 700 before the DOGE-imposed cuts began, KTOO reported in January.

The post Alaska Forest Service facility slated for closure amid federal restructuring appeared first on Chilkat Valley News.

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Sports Fox

2026 NFL Draft: Meet Eli Stowers, the QB-Turned-TE Who Might Be the Next Brock Bowers

Vanderbilt’s Eli Stowers will likely be the second tight end taken in the 2026 NFL Draft, reinventing himself as a pass-catcher with off-the-charts athleticism for his size and earning comps to Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver DK Metcalf in the draft process. But becoming a star tight end in college wasn’t the path that Stowers was initially supposed to take to reach the NFL. Five years and three schools ago, Stowers was coveted enough as a quarterback recruit that 247 Sports ranked him as the nation’s No. 12 quarterback, one spot ahead of Jaxson Dart. But persistent shoulder issues, including a torn labrum and the resulting surgery, made it difficult and even painful for him to throw in college, such that he didn’t attempt a pass in two years at Texas A&M. Stowers transitioned to tight end at New Mexico State, then found a new identity there in the last two years at Vanderbilt, catching eight touchdowns this past season and winning the John Mackey Award, given to college football’s top tight end. “I’m so thankful to be where I’m at. I know it’s a blessing to be in this position,” Stowers told me. Position has been a key word in Stowers’ football life, and even now, his combination of size and speed is a rarity. He’s 6-foot-4 and 239 pounds, but also ran the 40 in 4.51 seconds and came within a half-inch of the NFL combine record at any position with a 45.5-inch vertical leap. That’s made some NFL teams wonder if he could be a big receiver instead of a fast tight end, but Stowers just wants to get on the field and make plays. “I can play wherever a team wants me to play,” he said by phone, taking a break between NFL visits. “If somebody wants to line me out wide, I did that at Vanderbilt, and I can stretch the field that way. I played my whole career at Vanderbilt at tight end, so I can obviously do that, too. I’m just a football player. You can put me wherever.” Former Texas A&M head coach Jimbo Fisher had mentioned the possibility of playing tight end to Stowers when he was at College Station. Still, even when he transferred to NMSU, he did so as a quarterback, competing with Diego Pavia for the starting job. He practiced at both positions, but was valuable enough as a backup quarterback that he didn’t go to tight end meetings until late that season, finishing with 35 catches for 366 yards and two scores. When NMSU offensive coordinator Tim Beck left for the same job at Vanderbilt. Stowers and Pavia transferred with him. Stowers thrived at Vanderbilt. When the Commodores knocked off No. 1 Alabama in October 2024, Stowers led the team with six catches for 113 yards. Three weeks later, in a three-point loss to No. 5 Texas, he had a touchdown in the final minute. Pavia finished as the Heisman Trophy runner-up in 2025, with Stowers as a top target, totaling 111 catches for 1,407 yards and nine touchdowns in two years at Vanderbilt. “Two years ago, when we beat Alabama, we had a lot of man coverage and we used him as a receiver,” Beck told me. “We played him at tight end, but we put him out wide and motioned him in and found a way to utilize some man-beaters to get him the ball. He’s explosive enough that he’ll continue to get better at some of the twitchier, shorter routes. And with the great vertical he’s got, being able to go up and get footballs, that’s going to get better. I think he’s got a bright future, however they use him.” Stowers wants to make it clear that any talk of him playing receiver shouldn’t be a knock on his blocking, something he’s taken pride in and improved on since becoming a tight end. “The narrative that my blocking is an issue, I feel like anybody that really watches my film from this past year can see I’ve gotten a lot better,” he said. “Anybody that’s saying that really doesn’t know what they’re talking about.” After so much time as a quarterback, Stowers sees the game as a tight end now. His go-to players to watch on tape are Travis Kelce and Hall of Fame Chargers tight end Antonio Gates. Vanderbilt’s offense had a route called “Chief” as a nod to Kelce, one that Stowers had great success in over the last two seasons. “You can tell their understanding of the game is what makes them so good at what they do,” Stowers said. “Kelce, especially, being a former quarterback, I think we’re similar that way. He knows how to read zones, to use leverage to beat man coverage, to use his body to create separation. He’s a quarterback’s best friend, and that’s why he and [Patrick] Mahomes have such good chemistry. Gates used such subtle movements to get open, and I try to learn from that.” Stowers worked this past season with former Vanderbilt and NFL receiver Jordan Matthews, who was an offensive consultant at his alma mater and said he shouldn’t be limited by any positional titles. “Eli has what it takes to be a No. 1 receiving option in your offense, regardless of what letters you put beside his name,” Matthews told me. “Who’s your No. 1 option when you drop back? There were years when I was with the Eagles, [Zach] Ertz was the No. 1 option in the passing game. He has what it takes to be the No. 1 option.” Matthews was picked 42nd overall in 2014, the highest ever for a Vanderbilt pass-catcher, but he thinks Stowers could and should be taken higher next week. “He’s athletic enough to beat any safety, he’s big enough to catch against any corner or nickel, outside or inside, and he’s smart enough to pick up any offense he’s going to be in,” Matthews said. “To me, he’s a first-rounder. He should not go past 42nd. I think it’s very clear how you can implement him in an offense. He’s more than capable.” Matthews said his favorite route for Stowers was an “18-yard dagger,” deep enough to require receiver speed. When Vanderbilt played South Carolina this past year, the Gamecocks had won 16 straight in the rivalry, and when the Commodores faced a third-and-21 trying to preserve the lead in the second half, they called a pass to Stowers, which he caught for a 24-yard gain to move the chains. In terms of size and speed, the NFL tight end that Stowers most closely matches is the Las Vegas Raiders’ Brock Bowers, a 2024 first-round pick who has set tight end records and made the Pro Bowl in each of his two pro seasons. Bowers is 6-4, 235 pounds and ran a 4.55 40, and the parallels come from someone who worked with both of them. “There are so many similarities, it’s crazy,” Darrell Dickey, who was Stowers’ offensive coordinator at A&M and later an analyst at Georgia, told me. “Brock has been playing the position a lot longer, but they’re both extremely fast for a quote-unquote tight end. They both have unbelievable athletic ability. They both have unbelievable work ethics. They’re kind of quiet guys, and they can block. “The ability is there to do the things Brock Bowers has done. They’re very similar, and Eli’s going to continue to grow and has the potential to develop into that type of player.” Both of Stowers’ parents were college athletes, with father Donald playing defensive back at New Mexico State and mother Tina playing volleyball at Baylor. He’s not even the most accomplished athlete in the family, as his sister Kyndal was named Most Outstanding Player of the NCAA Championship last fall after leading A&M to a national title in volleyball. Stowers has had official visits with the Tennessee Titans and Dallas Cowboys and met with the Denver Broncos on Tuesday. Oregon’s Kenyon Sadiq is expected to be the first tight end drafted, potentially in the middle of the first round. Once Sadiq’s off the board, Stowers should be the next tight end to go off the board, but that might not happen until Day 2. FOX Sports NFL Draft analyst Rob Rang has Stowers ranked 58th on his top 150 draft prospects list, touting the tight end’s athleticism while questioning his strength. Still, Rang mentioned that Stowers is worthy of being a top-50 pick in this year’s class. However, Stowers said he isn’t worried about when he’s picked and will enter the NFL with confidence, regardless. “I feel like I’m the best tight end in the draft,” Stowers said. “Any team that gets me will get a guy that’s going to help their team win in whatever way I possibly can. As long as the team really wants me, that’s a blessing in itself.”​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports

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Entertainment

Why You Might Want To Skip This Popular Pasta Sauce

Whether you should use a pasta sauce isn’t just about how good it tastes. Sometimes your nutritional goals could rule out an item, as they might in this case.

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

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Music

Luke Combs Plays Rock, Paper, Scissors With Fan Mid-Song (And Still Nails Every Note!)

Luke Combs is a man of many talents: a chart-topping singer, gifted songwriter, and a hands-on father of three. And as it turns out, he’s also pretty unbeatable at a game of rock, paper, scissors.

During his concert at Iowa State University’s Jack Trice Stadium on Saturday, Combs was in the middle of performing his hit “Where The Wild Things Are” when he spotted a fan in the crowd and decided to have a little fun. In a moment that quickly had the audience laughing, he played four rounds of rock, paper, scissors with the concertgoer from the stage, all while staying completely in the groove of the performance.

Photo Courtesy of Luke Combs
Photo Courtesy of Luke Combs

The fan later shared the interaction on TikTok, captioning the clip, “POV you get to play rock, paper, scissors with the GOAT of country.” The video shows the fan standing at the barricade while Combs remains on stage, effortlessly going back and forth between the game and the song. After four rounds, it appeared Combs walked away with the win, with the fan joking, “I’ll get my rematch eventually.”

Fans who were in attendance quickly chimed in in the comments, thrilled to see the moment from another angle.

@jaden_houser024 i’ll get my rematch eventually 😂@Luke Combs @Luke Combs HQ #fyp #foryou #foryoupage #mykindasaturdaynight #lukecombsconcert ♬ Be By You – Luke Combs

“OMG I was praying I’d get to see this POV”

 “I was wondering if I would see this video at some point! Hilarious!”

“I saw this! I knew I was right when I said I’m pretty sure he’s playing rock paper scissors lol. how cool!!!”

“We watched it on the screen! Fun seeing it from your POV!”

Others were especially impressed by Combs’ ability to multitask, noting that he didn’t miss a beat while playing the game.

“The way he was playing rock paper scissors and still hit that note. Insane!”

@jaden_houser024 i can’t figure out how to reply to a comment with a video😭 but here’s the original vid! #foryou #fyp #foryoupage #mykindasaturdaynight #lukecombsconcert ♬ original sound – Jaden🔱

The unforgettable moment took place amid Combs’ massive My Kinda Saturday Night Tour, which has him playing stadiums across the country. The trek also includes a historic international run, with multiple nights at Wembley Stadium, making him the first country artist to sell out multiple shows at the iconic venue, as well as stops at Scottish Gas Murrayfield and Slane Castle.

The tour continues this weekend with a stop at Notre Dame Stadium.

Photo Courtesy of Luke Combs
Photo Courtesy of Luke Combs

The run follows the release of his latest album, The Way I Am, which debuted at No. 1 on Billboard’s Top Country Albums chart and No. 2 on the all-genre Billboard 200, earning 100,700 equivalent units in its first week.

Combs has also earned three nominations for the upcoming 61st ACM Awards, including Entertainer of the Year, Male Artist of the Year, and Artist-Songwriter of the Year. The show will stream live from the MGM Grand Garden Arena on May 17, 2026, exclusively on Prime Video, with additional viewing options available via the Amazon Music channel on Twitch and the Amazon Music app.

The post Luke Combs Plays Rock, Paper, Scissors With Fan Mid-Song (And Still Nails Every Note!) appeared first on Country Now.

​Country Now

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Entertainment

Josh Duggar Argues Trial was ‘Unfair’ In Latest Desperate Appeal

Reading Time: 4 minutes

With all of the attention on Joseph Duggar’s arrest, let’s not forget about the disgraceful OG.

Josh Duggar was tried and convicted in late 2021.

He has spent every moment since then attempting to weasel out of his conviction and his sentence.

His latest argument claims that his trial was unfair — that the “real” culprit may still be out there.

Josh Duggar's Post-Conviction Mug Shot
Josh Duggar will be stuck behind federal bars for a VERY long time. No one feels sorry for him. (Image Credit: NBC)

He’ll likely never stop fighting his conviction

We previously reported that Josh’s new attorney previously represented convicted sex offender R. Kelly.

(It’s unclear who’s footing the bill, as the felonious Duggar had tried but failed to get a court-appointed attorney to carry on with his endless series of fruitless appeals.)

The latest argument — in a court appearance scheduled for Wednesday, April 15 — is that Josh’s trial was unfair.

Not to the victims. Not to his sisters, four of whom were his victims when he was a teenager. But to Josh himself.

Why? Because, as we reported back in 2021, Josh really wanted to argue that the “real” culprit was one of his employees. He thinks that his conviction should be thrown out because he wasn’t allowed to scapegoat the man in court.

In case you need a refresher, back in 2019, the Department of Homeland Security agents swarmed Josh’s business, a car lot.

On his computer, investigators found images and video of the sexual abuse of young, prepubescent girls.

Based upon the testimony presented in court, it sounds like Josh had created a partition on his work computer in order to conceal his crimes from his wife, Anna.

(After his 2015 cheating scandal, Josh had a creepy surveillance program put onto his devices, the same program used by Speaker Mike Johnson.)

It seems that Josh was so busy hiding his crime from his wife that he forgot that the United States government also cared about tracking down and prosecuting people who download and possess horrific material of real children, real victims.

Josh Duggar and Anna Duggar on 19 Kids and Counting.
There was a time when TLC’s cameras caught Josh Duggar pretending to be an upstanding man and a good husband to Anna Duggar. Those were lies. (Image Credit: TLC)

He really wanted to make the jury believe that another man was guilty

During the trial, the judge very understandably did not allow Josh’s team to argue that one of his employees had been responsible.

(One has to imagine the argument. That would mean an employee going into his boss’ office, booting up the computer, setting up a partition, downloading horrific content, and then just hoping that the boss didn’t notice.)

Josh’s legal motion also claims that a prosecution manipulated forensic data and lied under oath.

So, he’s essentially saying that he was framed.

But his filing also appears to be a complaint that he wasn’t allowed to frame someone else.

Josh Duggar in an ugly yellow polo shirt on 19 Kids and Counting.
During his time on TLC’s 19 Kids and Counting, Josh Duggar was hiding dark secrets. (Image Credit: TLC)

“This perjured testimony misled the jury, obstructed the defense’s ability to challenge the evidence, and violated Joshua Duggar’s Fifth and Sixth Amendment rights,” the filing complains.

Notably, Josh has made a similar argument in a past appeal.

It was not successful.

However, the beauty of Josh’s throw-things-at-the-wall-and-see-what-sticks strategy is that only one thing really needs to stick.

He’s serving a 12-year sentence. He has nothing but time. And he only needs to get lucky in court once. (Hey, that’s great for innocent folks — but chilling when it comes to someone like Josh.)

Joseph Duggar has been arrested for the alleged molestation of a 9-year-old girl.
Joseph Duggar has been arrested for the alleged molestation of a 9-year-old girl. (Washington County Sheriff’s Office)

There’s an elephant in the room, and his name is Joseph

For many years, Josh has been the ominous dark cloud casting a shadow over his family — while paradoxically shining a light on how sick and twisted the cult truly is.

Now, the tables have turned, as brother Joseph Duggar is the latest member of the family to be accused of preying upon little girls.

Notably, Josh publicly insisted that Joseph is innocent. Of course, then we heard that Joseph confessed twice. But Joseph has also pleaded not guilty in a Florida court.

Regardless, the fact that he’s not the only sibling accused of very similar crimes is likely to be a hot topic as both disgraced brothers go to court.

We hope for safety for all children and consequences for the evil adults who prey upon them.

Josh Duggar Argues Trial was ‘Unfair’ In Latest Desperate Appeal was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

Categories
Sports Fox

Jackie Robinson Day: Dodgers’ Legend’s MLB Career By The Numbers

Jackie Robinson had a forever impact on baseball. On April 15, 1947, Robinson, who was 28, made his MLB debut with the Brooklyn Dodgers. In doing so, he officially broke MLB’s racial barrier, becoming the first black player to compete in the sport in modern history. And what followed was Robinson becoming one of the best infielders of all time, having a Hall of Fame career and MLB honoring his legacy with “Jackie Robinson Day” every April 15, which sees players wear his No. 42. Here’s Robinson’s 10-year MLB career (1947-56) by the numbers. 1A: Robinson won the 1949 National League MVP in a campaign that saw him lead the NL in batting average (.342), wins above replacement (9.3) and stolen bases (37), while totaling a career-high 203 hits and 124 RBIs. 1B: He won the 1947 NL Rookie of the Year Award in a season that saw Robinson post a .297/.383/.427 slash line (batting average, on-base percentage and slugging percentage), steal an NL-high 29 bases and post 4.1 wins above replacement. 2: Robinson led the NL in stolen bases twice: 1947 and 1949. 3A: The infielder is third in Dodgers’ history with 61.8 wins above replacement. 3B: Robinson led the NL in wins above replacement in three seasons: 1949, 1951 and 1952. 4A: He finished top-10 in NL MVP voting in four seasons: 1947, 1949, 1951 and 1952. 4B: Robinson is fourth in Dodgers’ history with a career .409 on-base percentage. 6: Robinson is sixth in Dodgers’ history with 740 walks. 7A: Robinson is seventh in Dodgers’ history with 947 runs scored. 7B: He earned an All-Star nod in seven of his 10 seasons in the sport. 40: Robinson recorded just 40 strikeouts in 1952, which would be the most strikeouts he posted in a single season. 132: He finished with a career 132 OPS+. 145: Robinson made 145-plus starts at four positions: second base, first base, third base and left field. He also made 33 starts at shortstop. 311: Robinson finished his Dodgers’ career with a combined .311/.409/.474 slash line. 440: He led the NL with a .440 on-base percentage in 1952. 500: Robinson posted a slugging percentage of at least .500 in five of his 10 MLB seasons. 1955: He was part of the Dodgers’ 1955 World Series triumph, the first in franchise history.​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports

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Entertainment

Sandra Lee, aka Dr. Pimple Popper, Suffered a Stroke While Filming

Reading Time: 2 minutes

We have troubling news to report from the world of reality television today.

Sandra Lee, who has starred on the series Dr. Pimple Popper since 2018, revealed this week that she recently suffered a stroke while filming.

News of the medical emergency comes courtesy of Lee herself, who opened up in a recent interview with People magazine.

Dr. Sandra Lee speaks onstage during the Premiere VIP Screening Event Of All-New Lifetime Show "Dr. Pimple Popper: Breaking Out" With Dr. Sandra Lee at Dolby Theatre on April 10, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.
Dr. Sandra Lee speaks onstage during the Premiere VIP Screening Event Of All-New Lifetime Show “Dr. Pimple Popper: Breaking Out” With Dr. Sandra Lee at Dolby Theatre on April 10, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Jesse Grant/Getty Images for Lifetime)

“I notice it right now that I don’t speak exactly the way I used to. You’re really embarrassed to speak because you notice it,” she told the outlet.

“It happened while I was filming the show,” Lee recalled, adding:

“I had what I thought was a hot flash. I got super sweaty and didn’t feel like myself.

“I just felt very restless. In one leg I kept feeling shooting pains.”

Lee explains that she couldn’t sleep, and when she stood up to get something to eat, “I noticed that I was having a tough time walking down the stairs.”

Sandra Lee, aka Dr. Pimple Popper, recently experienced a medical emergency of her own.
Sandra Lee, aka Dr. Pimple Popper, recently experienced a medical emergency of her own. (YouTube)

The show stopped filming for two months, and Lee says she’s still not fully recuperated.

“It is very stressful to open yourself up,” Lee, 55, told People, ahead of her show’s season premiere on April 20th. “

“Especially as a surgeon, you always want to show yourself coming from an area of strength.”

Elsewhere in the interview, Lee opened up about the appeal of her long-running series:

“It’s so fascinating to me that [watching the extractions] relaxes some people,” said Lee, who is a graduate of both a UCLA and Drexel University College of Medicine.

“People watch the videos over and over again because it helps them go to sleep at night. Others watch it like it’s a scary movie or a roller coaster,” she continue, adding

“I’m not a natural pop-aholic [a term for someone who loves watching extractions]. But I feel really lucky that I get to actually see how what I do transforms somebody’s life.”

Clearly, Lee’s enthusiasm for her work hasn’t suffered as a result of her medical issues.

We wish her all the best as she continues along her road to recovery.

Sandra Lee, aka Dr. Pimple Popper, Suffered a Stroke While Filming was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

Categories
Music

Reba McEntire’s Family Is Growing As Son Shelby Blackstock Announces First Baby

Reba McEntire’s family is growing! Her son, Shelby Blackstock, is expecting his first child with his wife, Marissa.

A Magical Disney Announcement

The couple shared the exciting news with fans on social media, posting a Disney-themed photo gallery that captured the special moment at Walt Disney World. The soon-to-be parents could be seen celebrating throughout the park. Alongside the photos, they revealed they are expecting a baby boy, who is set to arrive in October.

Marissa Blackstock, Shelby Blackstock; Photos via Instagram
Marissa Blackstock, Shelby Blackstock; Photos via Instagram

Their announcement included several sweet details, including an “Oh Boy” cake and a customized Mickey Mouse ear hat that read “Baby Blackstock October 2026.” The gallery also featured heartwarming shots of the couple posing in front of Cinderella Castle, proudly showing off ultrasound photos and sharing a kiss as they celebrated the next chapter of their lives together.

“Oh, BOY! We’re beyond excited to FINALLY announce our little man is coming in October,” they captioned the post. “See ya real soon, pal! Mommy + Daddy love you!”

Their post was flooded with congratulatory messages, including comments from McEntire’s Happy’s Place co-star and longtime friend, Melissa Peterman, and rising star Emily Ann Roberts. 

A Full-Circle Moment

This moment served as a full-circle milestone for the couple, who tied the knot at Walt Disney World on February 22, 2022. Their wedding was truly a fairy tale, taking place in front of Cinderella Castle after the park had closed for the day, making this latest visit and announcement all the more special.

A Journey To Parenthood

Shelby Blackstock and his wife, Marissa, have been open about their journey to parenthood, sharing that they were undergoing in vitro fertilization (IVF) and allowing fans to follow along through social media.

On January 21, Marissa revealed that she had just completed a second round of IVF, expressing heartfelt gratitude for the outpouring of encouragement they received along the way.

“The love, messages, prayers, and support from friends and this community have been overwhelming in the best way. I wish I could thank every single person personally. Just know we feel it, and we’re so grateful. Infertility is hard, but we don’t feel alone,” she wrote.

The couple’s baby boy will mark a particularly special milestone for Reba McEntire, as this will be her first biological grandchild. She is already a proud grandmother to her step-grandchildren, River Rose and Remington Alexander, the children of her late stepson, Brandon Blackstock, and his ex-wife, Kelly Clarkson.

The post Reba McEntire’s Family Is Growing As Son Shelby Blackstock Announces First Baby appeared first on Country Now.

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Paul McCartney Loves To Eat This Sandwich After Concerts

Many musicians have a ritual they follow before and after shows. Sir Paul McCartney loves winding down with a drink and this vegetarian snack.

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