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Alaska Gov. Dunleavy joins Arctic research commission as focus turns to security

Yereth Rosen, Alaska Beacon

Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy talks to reporters during a news conference on Monday, May 19, 2025. (Photo by James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)

Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy has been appointed to the U.S. Arctic Research Commission at a time when the federal agency is pivoting from its longtime focus on environmental science to more emphasis on military defense and economic development.

Dunleavy is an ally of President Donald Trump. Dunleavy’s presidential appointment, announced by the commission this week, comes five months after Liz Qaulluq Cravalho’s position on the commission was terminated. Cravalho is vice president of lands at NANA Regional Corporation, the Alaska Native corporation for the state’s northwest region. She was initially appointed by then-President Joe Biden in 2021 and reappointed in 2024.

The commission, created in 1984, advises the president and Congress on research policy. Its seven commissioners are appointed by the president.

Dunleavy is the first sitting governor to be appointed to the commission, which advises the president and Congress on Arctic research. Past Alaska lieutenant governors have served on the commission, but not during their time in state office. Mead Treadwell chaired the commission prior to being elected in 2010 as lieutenant governor in the Parnell administration, and Fran Ulmer chaired it after serving as lieutenant governor in the Knowles administration and after serving as chancellor of the University of Alaska Anchorage.

In 2019, his first year in office, Dunleavy used his veto powers to cut state funding of the University of Alaska system by 41%, an action that at the time was characterized as devastating to the university’s Arctic research, among other activities. Much of the funding was later restored through a compromise Dunleavy made with the university.

In a statement released by the commission, Dunleavy praised the role of Arctic research, saying it helps Alaskans.

“Alaska sits at the forefront of the Arctic, and our communities, resources, and strategic position make us essential to advancing responsible research, economic development, and national security in the region,” he said in a statement released by the commission. “I look forward to working with fellow commissioners to ensure that Arctic research reflects the needs of Alaskans while strengthening America’s leadership in the Arctic.”

The Trump-appointed chair of the commission, speaking Wednesday at the Arctic Encounter Summit in Anchorage, said the organization is “tremendously thrilled” to have Dunleavy as a member.

Thomas Emanual Dans, appointed by President Donald Trump as chair of hte U.S. Arctic Research Commission, speaks at the Arctic Encounter Summit in Anchorage on April 15, 2026. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
Thomas Emanual Dans, appointed by President Donald Trump as chair of hte U.S. Arctic Research Commission, speaks at the Arctic Encounter Summit in Anchorage on April 15, 2026. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)

“We’re super excited about that,” said Thomas Emanual Dans, appointed in December. “We’ve got the very experienced hand and voice at our commission, and we’re looking to do big things here.”

A pivot to security needs

Dans, who also served on the commission during the first Trump administration, expressed an expansive view of the Arctic that he likened to that of 19th century explorers.

“We want to create the conditions that really unleash human flourishing. We want more. We want human life. We want people to have big dreams,” he said.

Rather than focusing on pure science, the commission is focused on security, as Dans described it.

“Security is probably the overriding, overarching theme of things,” he said.

But security has several facets, he said. It includes military security, international security, energy security and community security, “which can be interpreted broadly in terms of health and well-being” for Arctic residents and others in the nation and the world, he said.

Dans, who lives in Texas and spent most of his career in finance, served on the U.S. Arctic Research Commission during the first Trump administration. But his comments on Wednesday indicated some gaps in his Arctic and Alaska knowledge.

He mentioned Russia’s Wrangel Island, off the northern coast of Siberia, as a security threat. Wrangel island “is close to Alaska here,” he said in his speech. “And for a long time it was incorporated as part of the United States. Today we face missiles pointing at us from Wrangel Island.”

Canadian government brochures and fliers, displayed April 15, 2026, at the Arctic Encounter Summit in Anchorage, describe that country's countribution to U.S. national defense. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
Canadian government brochures and fliers, displayed April 15, 2026, at the Arctic Encounter Summit in Anchorage, describe that country’s countribution to U.S. national defense. U.S. Arctic policy now has a stronger emphasis on national security. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)

Wrangel Island was never part of the United States. There is a place with a similar name – Wrangell Island – that is located in Southeast Alaska. Since 2004, Russia’s Wrangel Island, located 300 miles from the nearest point in Alaska, has been designated as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. It is famous for its Arctic biodiversity, including the world’s largest concentration of Pacific walruses.

A decade ago, Russia built a military base on the island with a focus on radar systems to monitor airspace. The military use of the island is part of Russia’s military buildup in the Arctic, which has worried U.S. officials, and it is also considered to pose a potential threat to the natural resources there.

In his Arctic Encounter Summit comments, Dans hailed the planned expansion of the U.S. Coast Guard’s icebreaker fleet, saying the fleet has “gone from zero to maybe 14.” However, the Coast Guard for decades has operated two polar-class icebreakers: the Healy, which performs annual missions in Alaska and the wider Arctic, and the Polar Star, which usually sails in the Antarctic. The Coast Guard recently acquired another icebreaker for Arctic operations. Originally an oil industrial vessel called the Aiviq, the ship was renamed Storis and commissioned in a Juneau ceremony in August. The fleet is poised to expand: there was funding for more than a dozen new icebreakers in the Trump administration spending bill known as the One Big Beautiful Bill Act.

Concerning Russia, which holds more Arctic coastline and land than any other nation, Dans urged more cooperation and communication. “I’d love to have the younger generation in Alaska learn Russian,” he said.

Within a few miles from the Dena’ina Civic and Convention Center, where Dans spoke at the Arctic Encounter Summit, classes were being conducted in Russian language at elementary, middle and high schools through the Anchorage School District’s Russian immersion program. It was launched as a full-time program in 2024, according to the school district.

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Mitchell Tenpenny and Meghan Patrick Share Special Opry Moment With ‘It’s Your Love’ Duet

Mitchell Tenpenny and Meghan Patrick shared a truly special moment on the Grand Ole Opry stage on Wednesday night, closing out the show with a heartfelt performance of Tim McGraw and Faith Hill’s iconic duet, “It’s Your Love.”

Before coming together for the emotional finale in the legendary Opry circle, the married couple each delivered their own individual sets.

Watch Mitchell and Meghan Warm Up Backstage

“There’s something so sacred about the Opry circle, and getting to stand in it with Mitchell and share that moment, knowing one day we’ll get to show our daughter and tell her she was there with us, is something I’ll cherish forever,” Meghan sweetly shared.

The performance carried even more meaning as the couple prepares to welcome their first child this fall. The pair revealed the exciting news on March 31 via Instagram.

“We’ve been blessed with the greatest gift of all this year! God is so good and always right on time… we can’t wait to be Mom and Dad,” they shared.

Meghan Patrick, Mitchell Tenpenny; Photo by Ford Fairchild
Meghan Patrick, Mitchell Tenpenny; Photo by Ford Fairchild

Their baby girl is expected to arrive later this year, marking another major milestone in what has already been an unforgettable chapter for the couple, who tied the knot in a rustic Tennessee ceremony on Sunday, October 23, 2022.

On the music side, Tenpenny’s Opry appearance came shortly after the release of his new track “Speed of Light,” co-written with Teddy Swims, Jesse Hampton, and Dallas Wilson. The song is now available on all digital platforms, while his Speed of Light tour continues rolling out new stops this weekend.

Meanwhile, CRS New Face Class of 2026 member Meghan Patrick continues a standout year of her own with the release of her deluxe album Golden Child (The Final Chapter), out now. The project’s title track reached No. 16 on U.S. country radio, while “Safe Place to Break” is currently sitting in the Top 10 at Canadian radio. She’s now taking the new music on the road with her headlining Golden Child tour.

The post Mitchell Tenpenny and Meghan Patrick Share Special Opry Moment With ‘It’s Your Love’ Duet appeared first on Country Now.

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Entertainment

NFL Reporter Blasts Dianna Russini Amid Mike Vrabel Scandal, Claims She Also Slept With …

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Earlier this month, we reported on the news that New England Patriots head coach Mike Vrabel had been accused of having an affair with Dianna Russini, an NFL reporter who was working for The Athletic at the time.

On Wednesday, Russini resigned from the outlet amid ongoing scrutiny of her relationship with Vrabel.

In her resignation letter, Russini maintained her innocence and insisted that she had not crossed the line with Vrabel — but some folks aren’t buying her version of events.

ESPN commenator Dianna Russini at BODY at ESPYS at Avalon on July 11, 2017 in Hollywood, California.
ESPN commenator Dianna Russini at BODY at ESPYS at Avalon on July 11, 2017 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by John Sciulli/Getty Images for ESPN)

One of those people is sports journalist Crissy Froyd, who blasted Russini in a series of tweets:

“I’m sure you were told to submit this or that you’d get fired instead. Don’t let the door hit you on the way out,” Froyd tweeted this week following news of Russini’s resignation letter.

“We know who you really are and what you’ve been up to for years,” she continued, adding:

“It does so much detriment to women in sports who have done things the right way

Froyd doubled down in remarks to the Daily Caller, telling the outlet that Russini “deserves” to be called out for her actions.

“All of us do know what she’s been up to,” she alleged.

“I can honestly say I have never slept with a player or coach for professional gain. Dianna cannot say the same. That’s where the difference is,”

In a separate tweet, Froyd also blasted Vrabel:

“Since it seems to have not been taken correctly — I equally despise Mike Vrabel for his behavior,” she wrote, adding:

“As someone who covered the Titans for years, even on the ground as a hopeful teenager in Nissan Stadium, I am absolutely distraught at his actions after I used to look up to him.”

She also accused of Russini of getting into a fight with another reporter after they learned that they were both romantically involved with Sean McVay, who was the offensive coordinator in Washington at the time.

“From fights with other reporters in Chili’s parking lots about hooking up with married NFL coaches to everything else, it is almost certainly all true. It was the worst kept secret in the NFL reporting world for a while,” she wrote.

Froyd soon found herself on the receiving end of some very harsh criticism, with some going so far as to accuse her of hypocrisy.

She went so far as to invite critics to offer details of her own alleged affairs with NFL insiders.

“Hi! Opening up a thread here for anyone in my comments also accusing me of sleeping with players/coaches for info,” Froyd tweeted, adding:

“Please hit me with your best shot. Once again, I have nothing to hide and am damn sure you can’t provide any legitimate evidence if you have a ‘claim.’”

For her part, Russini continues to deny that she carried on an inappropriate relationship with Vrabel:

“The photos don’t represent the group of six people who were hanging out during the day. Like most journalists in the NFL, reporters interact with sources away from stadiums and other venues,” she said in her resignation letter.

“These photos show a completely innocent interaction and any suggestion otherwise is laughable. This doesn’t deserve any further response,” Vrabel echoed in his own statement.

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

NFL Reporter Blasts Dianna Russini Amid Mike Vrabel Scandal, Claims She Also Slept With … was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

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The Best Cottage Cheese Trick To Try If The Texture Isn’t Your Thing

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Music

CMA Triple Play Awards Shine Spotlight on Nashville Songwriters

Members of Nashville’s songwriting community gathered at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum on Monday for the 2026 CMA Triple Play Awards. The celebratory evening honored 16 songwriters who achieved the remarkable milestone of writing or co-writing three No. 1 songs within a 12-month period.

Those recognized with Triple Play honors included Andy Albert, Louis Bell, John Byron, Jessie Jo Dillon, Ashley Gorley, Riley Green, Charlie Handsome, Jacob Kasher Hindlin, Ella Langley, Chase McGill, John Morgan, Blake Pendergrass, Taylor Phillips, Austin Post, Ernest Keith Smith, and Morgan Wallen, although Green, Langley, Post, and Wallen were unable to attend.

Hosted by songwriter and CMA Board Member Jim Beavers, the evening also recognized Bart Herbison with the 2025 CMA Songwriter Advocate Award. In tribute to his legacy, Josh Osborne delivered a performance of “John Cougar, John Deere, John 3:16,” with Lee Roy Parnell following with “They Don’t Know You.”

Bart Herbison at the 16th Annual CMA Triple Play Awards on Monday, April 13, 2026 at the Country Music Hall of Fame in Nashville, TN;

This marked John Morgan’s first CMA Triple Play Award, earned for writing chart-toppers “Friends Like That,” recorded by John Morgan featuring Jason Aldean, “Whiskey Drink,” and “How Far Does A Goodbye Go.”

Moments before the event, Morgan kept things honest and humble, opening up about the surreal feeling of earning a spot among Nashville’s top songwriters.

“I’m just happy to be here, to be honest with you. It’s such a niche category of songwriters that even have the ability to achieve this. And again, I get imposter syndrome sometimes…I’ve been so blessed to be in great rooms and just be there at the right time and contribute however I can. That’s always my goal… I always try to read the room and make sure that I’m adding to what everybody else is feeling and vibing on. It’s a fun job. I know that.”

John Morgan at the 16th Annual CMA Triple Play Awards on Monday, April 13, 2026 at the Country Music Hall of Fame in Nashville, TN; Photo by Alyssa Barker/CMA
John Morgan at the 16th Annual CMA Triple Play Awards on Monday, April 13, 2026 at the Country Music Hall of Fame in Nashville, TN.

Meanwhile, Jessie Jo Dillon, a second-time CMA Triple Play winner, took a moment to reflect on what the recognition means for songwriters as a whole and her continued disbelief at earning the honor again.

“I think it means a lot because I feel like I say this probably too much, but there are no songs without songwriters. So when we do get forgotten, that’s a little bit crazy to me because you’re talking about a business that actually wouldn’t work or be there without us. So for CMA to recognize us tonight is amazing,” she shared. “And one number one is definitely hard. Three is absolutely bananas. Last year in my speech for this, it’s honestly something I never thought I would get. I didn’t think I was that kind of a songwriter. And then to get it two years in a row, I almost just can’t even process that, to be honest with you.”

Dillon, who was honored for writing the chart-topping singles “Lies Lies Lies” recorded by Morgan Wallen, “Am I Okay?” recorded by Megan Moroney, and “Happen To Me” recorded by Russell Dickerson, admitted she loves how different each of the three songs is.

“When I was just starting as a writer, I always hoped to be able to be a bit of a chameleon and do different things. And I think each one of these songs resonates because they’re just pretty pure. I mean, ‘Happen To Me’ is a banger of having fun, but it’s pure. ‘Am I Okay?’ is an amazing love song that was very pure when we wrote it. And then ‘Lies, Lies, Lies’ is definitely one you cut yourself open to write and was also very pure. So even though they’re all very different, they come from a really honest place,” she explained.

Throughout the evening, the songwriters took to the stage to express their sincere gratitude to the CMA and the Nashville songwriting community.

“It is not lost on me how cool this is,” ERNEST said from the stage. “There’s a lot of legendary songwriters in this town that have had great careers that somehow haven’t gotten a triple play. I think this is one of the coolest things you can get as a songwriter.”

CMA Triple Play Award recipients at CMA's Triple Play Awards on Monday, April 13, 2026 at the Country Music Hall of Fame in Nashville, TN; Photo by Alyssa Barker/CMA
CMA Triple Play Award recipients at CMA’s Triple Play Awards on Monday, April 13, 2026 at the Country Music Hall of Fame in Nashville, TN; Photo by Alyssa Barker/CMA

Chase McGill admitted to feeling an overwhelming sense of gratitude.

“I’m deeply indebted to this town,” he shared.

In addition to the Triple Play honorees, the Country Music Association also recognized 43 songwriters who earned their first No. 1 song since last year’s Triple Play Awards, as well as Paul Overstreet’s upcoming induction into the Country Music Hall of Fame in the rotating Songwriter category.

The 2026 CMA Triple Play Awards Recipients:

Andy Albert 
“Bigger Houses” recorded by Dan + Shay 
“Hometown Home” recorded by LOCASH 
“Somewhere Over Laredo” recorded by Lainey Wilson 

Louis Bell 
“I Had Some Help” recorded by Post Malone featuring Morgan Wallen 
“Pour Me A Drink” recorded by Post Malone featuring Blake Shelton 
“Guy For That” recorded by Post Malone featuring Luke Combs  

John Byron  
“This Town’s Been Too Good To Us” recorded by Dylan Scott 
“What I Want” recorded by Morgan Wallen featuring Tate McRae 
“Just In Case” recorded by Morgan Wallen 

Jessie Jo Dillon 
“Lies Lies Lies” recorded by Morgan Wallen  
“Am I Okay?” recorded by Megan Moroney  
“Happen To Me” recorded by Russell Dickerson 

Ashley Gorley 
“Liar” recorded by Jelly Roll 
“This Town’s Been Too Good To Us” recorded by Dylan Scott 
“Park” recorded by Tyler Hubbard  

Riley Green 
“you look like you love me” recorded by Ella Langley featuring Riley Green 
“Worst Way” recorded by Riley Green  
“Don’t Mind If I Do” recorded by Riley Green featuring Ella Langley  

Charlie Handsome 
“Guy For That” recorded by Post Malone featuring Luke Combs 
“This Town’s Been Too Good To Us” recorded by Dylan Scott 
“What I Want” recorded by Morgan Wallen featuring Tate McRae 

Jacob Kasher Hindlin 
“Beautiful As You” recorded by Thomas Rhett 
“Love Somebody” recorded by Morgan Wallen  
“What I Want” recorded by Morgan Wallen featuring Tate McRae 

Ella Langley 
“you look like you love me” recorded by Ella Langley featuring Riley Green 
“weren’t for the wind” recorded by Ella Langley  
“Choosin’ Texas” recorded by Ella Langley 

Chase McGill 
“Happen To Me” recorded by Russell Dickerson 
“I Got Better” recorded by Morgan Wallen 
“20 Cigarettes” recorded by Morgan Wallen  

John Morgan 
“Friends Like That” recorded by John Morgan featuring Jason Aldean 
“Whiskey Drink” recorded by John Morgan  
“How Far Does A Goodbye Go” recorded by John Morgan 

Blake Pendergrass 
“Just In Case” recorded by Morgan Wallen 
“Heart Of Stone” recorded by Jelly Roll 
“I Got Better” recorded by Morgan Wallen 

Taylor Phillips
“Liar” recorded by Jelly Roll 
“This Town’s Been Too Good To Us” recorded by Dylan Scott 
“Fix What You Didn’t Break” recorded by Nate Smith 

Austin Post 
“I Had Some Help” recorded by Post Malone featuring Morgan Wallen 
“Pour Me A Drink” recorded by Post Malone featuring Blake Shelton 
“Guy For That” recorded by Post Malone featuring Luke Combs  

Ernest Keith Smith 
“Guy For That” by Post Malone featuring Luke Combs  
“Just In Case” recorded by Morgan Wallen 
“I Got Better” recorded by Morgan Wallen 

Morgan Wallen 
“I’m The Problem” recorded by Morgan Wallen 
“What I Want” recorded by Morgan Wallen featuring Tate McRae  
“Just In Case” recorded by Morgan Wallen 

The post CMA Triple Play Awards Shine Spotlight on Nashville Songwriters appeared first on Country Now.

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Alaska News

Alaska Gov. Dunleavy joins Arctic research commission as focus turns to security

Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy talks to reporters during a news conference on Monday, May 19, 2025. (Photo by James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)

Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy talks to reporters during a news conference on Monday, May 19, 2025. Dunleavy was appointed by President Donald Trump to the U.S. Arctic Research Commission. (Photo by James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)

Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy has been appointed to the U.S. Arctic Research Commission at a time when the federal agency is pivoting from its longtime focus on environmental science to more emphasis on military defense and economic development.

Dunleavy is an ally of President Donald Trump. Dunleavy’s presidential appointment, announced by the commission this week, comes five months after Liz Qaulluq Cravalho’s position on the commission was terminated. Cravalho is vice president of lands at NANA Regional Corporation, the Alaska Native corporation for the state’s northwest region. She was initially appointed by then-President Joe Biden in 2021 and reappointed in 2024.

The commission, created in 1984, advises the president and Congress on research policy. Its seven commissioners are appointed by the president.

Dunleavy is the first sitting governor to be appointed to the commission, which advises the president and Congress on Arctic research. Past Alaska lieutenant governors have served on the commission, but not during their time in state office. Mead Treadwell chaired the commission prior to being elected in 2010 as lieutenant governor in the Parnell administration, and Fran Ulmer chaired it after serving as lieutenant governor in the Knowles administration and after serving as chancellor of the University of Alaska Anchorage.

In 2019, his first year in office, Dunleavy used his veto powers to cut state funding of the University of Alaska system by 41%, an action that at the time was characterized as devastating to the university’s Arctic research, among other activities. Much of the funding was later restored through a compromise Dunleavy made with the university.

In a statement released by the commission, Dunleavy praised the role of Arctic research, saying it helps Alaskans.

“Alaska sits at the forefront of the Arctic, and our communities, resources, and strategic position make us essential to advancing responsible research, economic development, and national security in the region,” he said in a statement released by the commission. “I look forward to working with fellow commissioners to ensure that Arctic research reflects the needs of Alaskans while strengthening America’s leadership in the Arctic.”

The Trump-appointed chair of the commission, speaking Wednesday at the Arctic Encounter Summit in Anchorage, said the organization is “tremendously thrilled” to have Dunleavy as a member.

Thomas Emanuel Dans, appointed by President Donald Trump as chair of hte U.S. Arctic Research Commission, speaks at the Arctic Encounter Summit in Anchorage on April 15, 2026. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
Thomas Emanuel Dans, appointed by President Donald Trump as chair of the U.S. Arctic Research Commission, speaks at the Arctic Encounter Summit in Anchorage on April 15, 2026. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)

“We’re super excited about that,” said Thomas Emanuel Dans, appointed in December. “We’ve got the very experienced hand and voice at our commission, and we’re looking to do big things here.”

A pivot to security needs

Dans, who also served on the commission during the first Trump administration, expressed an expansive view of the Arctic that he likened to that of 19th century explorers.

“We want to create the conditions that really unleash human flourishing. We want more. We want human life. We want people to have big dreams,” he said.

Rather than focusing on pure science, the commission is focused on security, as Dans described it.

“Security is probably the overriding, overarching theme of things,” he said.

But security has several facets, he said. It includes military security, international security, energy security and community security, “which can be interpreted broadly in terms of health and well-being” for Arctic residents and others in the nation and the world, he said.

Dans, who lives in Texas and spent most of his career in finance, served on the U.S. Arctic Research Commission during the first Trump administration. But his comments on Wednesday indicated some gaps in his Arctic and Alaska knowledge.

He mentioned Russia’s Wrangel Island, off the northern coast of Siberia, as a security threat. Wrangel island “is close to Alaska here,” he said in his speech. “And for a long time it was incorporated as part of the United States. Today we face missiles pointing at us from Wrangel Island.”

Canadian government brochures and fliers, displayed April 15, 2026, at the Arctic Encounter Summit in Anchorage, describe that country's countribution to U.S. national defense. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
Canadian government brochures and fliers, displayed April 15, 2026, at the Arctic Encounter Summit in Anchorage, describe that country’s countribution to U.S. national defense. U.S. Arctic policy now has a stronger emphasis on national security. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)

Wrangel Island was never part of the United States. There is a place with a similar name – Wrangell Island – that is located in Southeast Alaska. Since 2004, Russia’s Wrangel Island, located 300 miles from the nearest point in Alaska, has been designated as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. It is famous for its Arctic biodiversity, including the world’s largest concentration of Pacific walruses.

A decade ago, Russia built a military base on the island with a focus on radar systems to monitor airspace. The military use of the island is part of Russia’s military buildup in the Arctic, which has worried U.S. officials, and it is also considered to pose a potential threat to the natural resources there.

In his Arctic Encounter Summit comments, Dans hailed the planned expansion of the U.S. Coast Guard’s icebreaker fleet, saying the fleet has “gone from zero to maybe 14.” However, the Coast Guard for decades has operated two polar-class icebreakers: the Healy, which performs annual missions in Alaska and the wider Arctic, and the Polar Star, which usually sails in the Antarctic. The Coast Guard recently acquired another icebreaker for Arctic operations. Originally an oil industrial vessel called the Aiviq, the ship was renamed Storis and commissioned in a Juneau ceremony in August. The fleet is poised to expand: there was funding for more than a dozen new icebreakers in the Trump administration spending bill known as the One Big Beautiful Bill Act.

Concerning Russia, which holds more Arctic coastline and land than any other nation, Dans urged more cooperation and communication. “I’d love to have the younger generation in Alaska learn Russian,” he said.

Within a few miles from the Dena’ina Civic and Convention Center, where Dans spoke at the Arctic Encounter Summit, classes were being conducted in Russian language at elementary, middle and high schools through the Anchorage School District’s Russian immersion program. It was launched as a full-time program in 2024, according to the school district.

Editor’s Note: The story has been updated to correct the spelling of Thomas Emanuel’s middle name.

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Sports Fox

2026 NFL Draft: A Look Inside the Strangest Job Interview Process in Sports

Getting a job playing in the NFL is nothing like getting an entry-level job in any other field. At the NFL Combine, Texas A&M receiver KC Concepcion was headed into a formal interview with the Philadelphia Eagles. And Philly hit the draft prospect with an exercise he’d never seen before. The Eagles had a machine that dropped three different-colored foam batons. As the batons fell, a coach called out the color that Concepcion needed to catch — and the hand he needed to use to catch it. Left hand blue, right hand red. Good thing he’s an All-American receiver. Concepcion managed to catch four of five pairings. “That right there was fun,” he told me at the Adidas “Pro Day” in Portland last month. Such is the unique, demanding and sometimes bizarre nature of the NFL draft process, which includes workouts, medical checks and lots of interviews. When it comes to the interviews, which come one after another, Alabama quarterback Ty Simpson and Indiana QB Fernando Mendoza have the perfect type of mind for the pre-draft process. The same is true of Ohio State safety Caleb Downs, whose interview with one team “was kind of boring with how easy it was for him,” per a scout in the room. Of course, no matter who it is, these prospects are nervous stepping into a room with NFL evaluators, particularly for the first time. “The first one — a little nervous, a little anxious. But after that one, it was just rolling,” Ohio State edge Arvell Reese told me in Portland. Often, prospects can get into a groove. There’s a routine from one team’s interview to the next. And the prospects will answer many of the same questions during their Top 30 meetings. (Each NFL team can invite up to 30 prospects to their facility to conduct interviews, medical checks and on-field workouts.) “It kind of gets kind of repetitive — just answering the same questions,” Arizona State receiver Jordyn Tyson told me in Portland. “Shoot, you’re talking about yourself, so nobody knows you better than yourself. But, yeah, I’d say it’s going pretty good. Just trying not to shoot myself in the foot and trying to just leave it all on their end.” For the on-field portion, there are the freak athletes whose measurables are perfect, whether it’s at the combine in Indianapolis or at pro day or any of the other venues where players meet with teams. Count Downs and Reese in that category. Let’s also throw in Oregon tight end Kenyon Sadiq and Ducks safety Dillon Thieneman, who absolutely crushed the workout portion of the combine. Not everyone has it so easy. “It’s all mental,” a former NFL first-round pick told me. “[You’re in Indianapolis] for days, then you don’t get on field until the end. … I graded out higher because some guys just couldn’t handle all the days stacked on each other.” Every measurement matters — even, as it turns out, the things you can’t exactly measure. The experience is a microcosm of what can be so terrible and so thrilling about these liminal months when football players are “prospects” — not college football players or NFL players. They get measured. They get interviewed without end by teams, by media members and by marketing reps. The invasive probing transcends the average job interview. “They’re doing background checks on your childhood stuff, so at this point, your whole life is sort of a job interview,” Downs told me. “So I can’t say this three-month process is my job interview. Your whole life is pretty much a job interview.” Here’s what we learned about the process while speaking with several of the draft’s top prospects — and some of the people who are preparing and evaluating them. Getting the body right for the workouts Excel Sports Management has a gym in Southern California where Washington receiver Denzel Boson spent weeks training for the combine and his pro day, with consultant coaches on-site to provide comprehensive preparation. Almost all the likely first-rounders spend their time training at their agency’s facility. After that, the draft process is about doing everything except playing football: watching it, drilling it, discussing it. There’s a clear dichotomy between the offseason drills that NFL veterans are doing and the ones that the incoming rookies are doing. Look at Instagram, where you can see current NFL players running functional drills to help them improve at their position. And then look at the combine, where you see a set of drills that have rightfully earned the event the nickname “the Underwear Olympics.” As antiquated as these general drills might seem, they measure a certain kind of athleticism, which draft prospects can and should hone prior to showing up in Indianapolis. So that’s where their attention shifts: learning proper form for the 40-yard dash, the broad jump and the three-cone drill. Downs, however, pushed back on that idea. “I’m trying to get ready to go play football, so that’s what my workouts are tailored to,” he told me in March. “Just try to make sure that when I get to camp I’m ready to play ball. That’s the most important thing, so that’s really what I’m focused on.” But Downs is an anomaly, a surefire top-10 pick. Not everyone can get away with that mentality. Carnell Tate, the consensus top receiver in the draft and Downs’ college teammate, said he might be doing new drills, but he’s keeping the same routine he had at Ohio State. “It is basically my college routine,” Tate told me. “It’s just, I’m not in college no more at Ohio State.” For many players, draft prep extends beyond their training routine. Miami All-American edge rusher Rueben Bain Jr. said he is cutting out fried foods and excess sugar from his diet. And he’s more regimented about when he eats — changing his meal schedule. It helps that he’s hired a private chef. “It’s more consistent,” Bain told me in Portland in March. “It’s something I kind of tighten up on, and being a little bit more serious about my approach, rather than just doing it here and there and kind of slacking off.” Getting the mind right for the interviews The most universal elements of the interviews are the film study and install. NFL teams will put up film from a player’s college career and quiz him on what went right or wrong. And then the players will often need to learn a series of plays: the install. Sometimes, they get these plays onsite. Sometimes, they’ll get a small playbook ahead of a meeting. The players will have to prove they’ve retained the information, as best they can. “This process is all about me,” Tate told me. “Teams watch your film and see what you retain from your previous school and see what you could have done better. And then they just pick out like, ‘Why did this work? Why didn’t this work?’ I’ve just been watching my film and making sure I know my play in and out — knowing why I messed up here or knowing why I did something good here. “And then they just install a play for me — or a couple plays — and see what I can retain from that meeting, and then go put it on the field or go put on the board.” Players lean on different resources to prepare themselves for their interviews. There are formal interviews at the NFL Combine and Top-30 visits. But informal interviews happen throughout the process, with evaluators striking up a conversation with a prospect at an all-star game (like the Senior Bowl), at the combine and at their pro day. Players might even get a random phone call from time to time. Teams may contact an unlimited number of incoming rookies up to three times per week, for up to one hour at a time, per NFL rules. Teams are not allowed to contact college players until they have declared for the draft — or are no longer eligible to keep playing in college. When teams can finally speak with players, any morsel of information could prove important. That means an interview is lurking behind every corner. “I think you’ve just got to be yourself,” Arvell Reese told me. “It’s hard to put on the act and it’s hard to lie. So I feel like being yourself is the easiest thing to do. So when I’m meeting with all the teams, I just be myself.” As best they can, prospects prepare thoroughly. Take Boston, for example. He spent time with Excel consultant Ricky Proehl, who played receiver in the NFL for 17 years and is now the head coach of the UFL’s St. Louis Battlehawks. Proehl worked with Boston on and off the field to make sure he had the tools to take on the rigors of the draft process. That includes interview prep, drill prep and pro day design. “Teams bring you in for an official visit,” Proehl told me by phone. “They want to see how much you can retain. They’ll give their offense, they’ll give formations, concepts or routes, different things, and then they want to see how much you can retain. So we’ll go over different scenarios.” Boston said he and Proehl can’t go over every NFL system. But they can work to build fundamental skills and concepts around receiver positions, offensive formations and defensive coverages. The receiver studied on his iPad with a magic pencil to work through the defenses. He and Proehl made a cheat sheet of all the defenses to review. “You can’t expect every team to be the same or have the same terminology, but you can get the rules kind of down in your head when it comes to the O’s and the X’s and all those different things,” Boston told me. In the case of some of the top Ohio State prospects, they might work with an agency consultant. But they also have easy access to a former NFL head coach. Matt Patricia, who served as the Lions’ head coach from 2018 to 2020, is now the Buckeyes’ defensive coordinator. “Coach Patricia did a great job giving us the time we needed to make sure that we’re ready to go out and articulate the way that we need to. So a lot of appreciation for him for finding the time to do that,” Downs told me. “Mock interviews. Zooms about the film they’re going to show and the questions they’re going to ask. Trying to get those opportunities to answer the questions on the test before they’re asked.” [2026 NFL Draft: Top 150 Overall Prospects] The interviews will extend beyond football. When it comes to getting to know a prospect as a person, teams have different philosophies and methodologies, particularly when addressing sensitive issues or legal matters. One scout told me he’d save the difficult questions for when he felt like he knew a prospect, in large part because he didn’t think he’d get an honest answer prior to that point. That scout said: “[A prospect will say] way more if he knows you care. … You’ll get everything you want by establishing relationships.” Another scout told me he’d ask the difficult questions to see if players would lie — and, sometimes, they would, which the scout knew from his research. For the most-prepared prospects, the chalk talk is actually the highlight of the draft experience. They get to meet some of the smartest minds in football and pick their brains. “It’s been awesome,” Downs told me. “Honestly, I feel like my mind is what separates me, and just being able to share that and have conversations about things. And also just learning is always such a huge thing for me, just putting myself in positions to learn. And there’s no higher football than the NFL, so it’s a great opportunity to learn from the coaches that are there and try to expand my mind.” For prospects, there’s no better feeling than nailing an interview. “I just feel like knowing you crushed a meeting,” Washington running back Jonah Coleman told me at Adidas Pro Day. “After you come out of a meeting or after you get off the Zoom, just knowing that you crushed it — that has been the best part.” [Inside Adidas Rookie Pro Day with Fernando Mendoza, Other Top Prospects] Expect the unexpected. The draft process is infamous for producing absurdity and even inappropriate behavior. Thankfully, that practice has grown less pervasive. But there is still plenty of silliness. It was one thing for people to debate over whether Joe Burrow’s hand size mattered. (Which happened!) It’s another thing for evaluators to ask about sexual orientation, murder weapons or … whether a player finds his mother attractive. One former NFL player said that, when he interviewed with the Cleveland Browns, they took the tape from his junior season rather than his senior year — and only asked about his worst plays. It was a painful and unnecessarily contentious meeting. What was that scout’s intention? Unclear. But on the plus side — after the pro day and combine — a draft prospect might never have to run the 40-yard dash again. Or catch foam batons dropped from a machine. “The pro day’s over, combine’s over, you’re not gonna have to train for that anymore. Now it’s back to football,” Denzel Boston told me. That’ll come after the draft — when prospects finally become players again.​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports

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