Anne Hathaway is giving a bone-chilling performance in Verity.
Indeed, the Devil Wears Prada star portrays her creepiest role yet as fictional author Verity Crawford in the movie adaptation of…
E! Online (US) – Top Stories
Anne Hathaway is giving a bone-chilling performance in Verity.
Indeed, the Devil Wears Prada star portrays her creepiest role yet as fictional author Verity Crawford in the movie adaptation of…
E! Online (US) – Top Stories
To make your favorite Japanese dishes the best they can be, try using the sa-shi-su-se-so rule, which maximizes flavor with a handful of simple ingredients.

Mashed – Fast Food, Celebrity Chefs, Grocery, Reviews
Ready to get your glow on like your favorite reality stars?
Charlotte Tilbury is a go-to for your favorite celebs, and now’s your chance to score an insanely good deal on one of the brand’s…
E! Online (US) – Top Stories
It sounds like the set of Euphoria was pure bliss.
Season three actress Jessica Blair Herman recently shut down rumors of tension among the series’ cast, emphasizing that all the actors got…
E! Online (US) – Top Stories
Channing Taum is getting in touch with his feelings.
Amid rumors that his ex-fiancée Zoë Kravitz is engaged to Harry Styles, who she started dating last year after her 2024 split from the Magic…
E! Online (US) – Top Stories
Calling all BBQ lovers! Read about the spot this Food Network star can’t get enough of. Hint: It’s actually located across the border in Horn Lake, Mississippi.

Mashed – Fast Food, Celebrity Chefs, Grocery, Reviews

A school bus drives in front of the Alaska State Capitol on Monday, Feb. 3, 2025. (Photo by James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)
While many school districts across Alaska are facing severe budget shortfalls, several bills to provide a sustained increase to education funding appear to have stalled in the Legislature. But a bill to add nearly $82 million one-time funding and education policy changes is moving forward with bipartisan support.
On Monday, the Senate Education Committee introduced a revised version of House Bill 28, that adds one-time funds for energy relief, transportation, reading and vocational training, to a bill that would establish a loan forgiveness program for Alaska teachers. It also includes a variety of policy changes related to home school programs and others.
Chair Sen. Löki Tobin, D-Anchorage, described it as a “mini-bus” bill on Wednesday, saying the new omnibus bill includes specific education funding to areas sought by the governor and lawmakers on both sides of the aisle.
“We heard that there is a deep concern about education reform still being left on the table, and so in those discussions we focused the new version of House Bill 28 on codifying some of the best practices that we know are going to improve education outcomes across the state,” Tobin said.
The underlying bill establishes a new three-year student loan forgiveness program to incentivize teachers to stay in Alaska. It’s focused on teachers specializing in special education, English as a second language, science, technology, engineering and math. It would provide up to $15,000 to pay off student loans for those who go out of state and return to work in Alaska. The House passed the bill last May.
“We need to incentivize teachers to stay here,” said Rep. Andi Story, D-Juneau, who sponsored the bill. “We’ve had such tremendous turnover, and we’ve got this tremendous shortage. And so I think the bill will help.”
The bill moved to the Senate this year, and education committee members tagged on a variety of items on Apr. 21. According to data provided by Tobin’s office, it contains an additional $21.8 million for reading proficiency grants, $9.7 million for career and technical education, $7.3 million for transportation, and $43 million to offset rising energy costs for school districts.
“We do not want to divert operating costs, dollars that should be in the classroom, to just keeping the lights on and buildings warm,” Tobin said.
Meanwhile many Alaska school districts are in the midst of budget negotiations and grappling with cuts to staff and programs to address large budget shortfalls.
Districts have announced at least eleven potential school closures to date in Anchorage, the Matanuska-Susitna Borough, the Kenai Peninsula Borough and Ketchikan.
Tobin said at a Senate Majority caucus news conference on Wednesday the goal of the education policy bill is to garner enough support on both sides of the aisle to be able to override a potential veto by the governor.
“It is obviously the hope for all of us that we will continue to increase stable and predictable funding for our schools and ensure that they have the resources they need,” she said. “However, at the end of the day, our goal is to get dollars into the classroom and to get support into our schools, and I will work diligently to do that with the number of people that I can guarantee will be there to get that bill across the finish line.”
Gov. Mike Dunleavy has been a staunch opponent of increasing funding for schools, saying that education policy changes are needed to improve student outcomes. Last year, he issued three vetoes of additional funding for K-12 schools sustained through the state’s funding formula, the base student allocation, and the last was narrowly overridden by the Legislature last summer.
This year, legislators introduced bills to again provide a sustained increase per student funding statewide. Rep. Rebecca Himschoot, I-Sitka, introduced a bill to add $158 million to boost the per student formula, but so far it hasn’t moved out of the House Education Committee.
Earlier in the session, Tobin introduced a bill that would add nearly $100 million in education funding. A portion of that money would go to per student funding through the BSA, and additional reading proficiency grants and transportation funding. But her bill proposed policy changes to enact reporting and testing requirements for homeschool programs that drew public criticism from homeschool proponents, so the Senate Education Committee stripped the provision and held the bill.
The new draft Senate bill also institutes more reporting requirements from school districts to the state on their homeschool programs, including how many students are enrolled by grade, where they live across the state and how their annual allotment is spent, among others.
The draft bill would commission a state audit to evaluate Alaska’s funding for schools, and make recommendations for changes or for alternative methods of education funding. There is no cost estimate yet for the study, or the entire bill.
Tobin said the funding adequacy study is a top priority of the joint Task Force on Education Funding. “We know that our foundation formula needs some reform, and it also needs some additional attention on particular components that have changed significantly in the last few years, the pandemic really showcased that,” she said.
Story said she supports the changes to the bill. “There’s some really good things that got put in there,” she said. “It’s the end of the session, lots of things are happening, so we’ll just see. But I’m hoping good things happen for teachers and families and for our kids to get more attention next year.”
The draft “mini-bus” bill was approved by the Senate Education Committee and now moves to the Senate Finance Committee for consideration.
Meanwhile, senators are debating the draft operating budget for next year that includes up to $100 million in additional funding for schools, but only if oil prices remain high. The House passed a draft operating budget with nearly $158 million in one-time funding for K-12 schools earlier this month.
A select group of lawmakers from both chambers will negotiate and reconcile a compromise between the two budget bills — and a final allocation for Alaska schools next year — in a conference committee in the last days of the legislative session, by May 20.
Miranda Lambert shared a special moment over the weekend when she joined George Strait on stage during his run of back-to-back shows at Jones AT&T Stadium in Lubbock, TX.
After opening the show, Lambert later surprised fans by returning to the stage during Strait’s set. Before the pair launched into two tracks from his catalog, she explained how the country music icon gave her the opportunity to choose what they would perform together.

Lambert recently helped celebrate George Strait as a 2025 Kennedy Center Honoree at the Kennedy Center Honors, where she performed “Run,” a track that has held a longtime place in her set list. Following with the tribute, and a few drinks, she says Strait told her to “pick anything” to deliver in front of the Texas crowd.
“I got to sing for George when he got inducted into the Kennedy Center Honors. I got to sing ‘Run,’ which we’ve done forever. He looked at me after, and we had some drinks, and he goes, ‘You can pick anything you want to sing.’”
She took a while to really think through this decision before landing on the perfect set of tracks for the night: 1998’s “I Wanna Dance With You” and 2002’s “She’ll Leave You With A Smile.”
“Like four days ago, I finally made my decision. I mean, I get to sing with King George, y’all.”
Strait complimented her song choices saying, “they’re good ones” and then noted that he is in fact the “lucky one” that gets to sing with her.
@mikepuckettddm Wait for the ending… #goodeatsLubbock #georgestrait #mirandalambert #concert #fyp ♬ original sound – Mike Puckett
He strummed his guitar as they moved through the beloved tunes, delivering true Texas-bred harmonies while the crowd sang along to every word, creating an unforgettable moment for everyone in attendance.
The performance also marked a meaningful full-circle moment for Lambert, who first joined Strait early in her career as an opening act. Now, with Lambert firmly established as one of the biggest female acts in country music, the two were able to come together on stage all these years later and celebrate how far their journeys have come.
Following the exciting weekend in their home state, the “Mama’s Broken Heart” singer took to social media to recap various highlights of the night through a series of photos.
Her caption simply read, “I 🩵 George Strait!!!”
Strait will continue his run with three remaining shows next month. He’s set to perform in Clemson, SC on May 2 followed by back-to-back nights at the Moody Center in Austin, TX on May 15 and 16. As for Lambert she has a slew of upcoming festival dates on the books.
The post See Miranda Lambert and George Strait Team Up For Two-Song Performance in Texas appeared first on Country Now.
Country Now
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Maitland Ward was just 21 years old when she was cast on the beloved ABC sitcom Boy Meets World.
But while the role might have earned her instant fame, it seems that it didn’t bring the career security or financial freedom that Ward was seeking.
For that, she needed to turn to the world of adult film.

Yes, Ward has abandoned mainstream Hollywood for the world of online adult content creation — and she says she has no regrets.
Ward is the subject of this week’s episode of Hollywood Demons: Child Stars Gone Wild. And in her episode, she reveals that she was making “$20,000 or $25,000” for her work as Rachel McGuire on Boy Meets World.
Not a bad paycheck — especially 25 years ago.
But it pales in comparison to her OnlyFans earnings, which usually exceed “six figures a month.”
“My story is multifaceted,” she explains on the episode (per Us Weekly). “It’s really a story of self-discovery and finding who you are as an authentic person in any way that you want to.”
“Back when I was getting into it … they looked at these young actors as like property coming in,” Ward added while discussing the industry’s “twisted male gaze.”
“Women were just put into this box where you had to be this young woman that was either a virgin and a slut all at once. And I hate to use those terms exactly, but that’s what it was,” she explained.
In a previous interview, Ward claimed that she was given “more respect” working in the porn industry than she received as a mainstream actress.
“I really got a lot of positivity overall, which shocked everyone I knew,” she said.
“Everybody thought people were just going to rip me apart, and I was going to be judged and raked across the coals.”
Ward recently made headlines by clashing with some of her former Boy Meets World co-stars, but for the most part, her life seems to be drama-free these days.
And she’s certainly not the first former child star to warn of the perils of Hollywood.
Ward’s episode of Hollywood Demons premieres tonight on HBO Max.
Maitland Ward Says She Earns More OnlyFans Than She Did From ‘Boy Meets World’ was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.
The Hollywood Gossip
The Federal Bureau of Investigation released a report Thursday that showed Alaskans lost nearly $40 million in cyber crime in 2025.
Special Agent in Charge Matthew Schlegel of the FBI Anchorage Field Office said it is the highest financial loss ever reported in Alaska for such crimes.
“Behind these numbers are real people – Alaskan families who lost hard-earned savings, retirement funds, and financial security,” he said in a news release.
Americans lost nearly $21 billion in cyber crimes in 2025, according to the FBI Internet Crime Report issued by the Internet Crime Complaint Center.
Alaskans reported the 2025 losses in 3,202 complaints to the Internet Crime Complaint Center, making it the highest financial losses ever reported in Alaska in one year. Losses went up by $13.6 million since 2024.
The FBI encouraged people to identify red flags of a potential scam to protect themselves from cyber threats and crime.
“To combat this ever-evolving threat, it has never been more important for residents and businesses to be diligent with cybersecurity, electronic interactions, and safeguarding personal and financial information,” Schlegel said.
The greatest losses in Alaska were from investments-related fraud, confidence or romance fraud, compromised business emails and tech support scans. Approximately 482 Alaskans lost more than $18 million to cryptocurrency crimes.
According to the report, 20% of Alaskans who reported losses from internet crimes were 60-years-old and older who lost $16.2 million.
President Donald Trump issued an executive order on March 6 directing officials to develop a plan to prevent, disrupt, investigate and dismantle Transnational Criminal Organizations in order to stop cyber-enabled criminal activity.
“Cybercrime, fraud, and predatory schemes are draining American families of their life savings, stealing the benefits of years of work, and destroying the lives of our youth,” Trump wrote in the order.
The post Internet crimes on the rise in Alaska, FBI report shows appeared first on Chilkat Valley News.