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Music

Here Are the 40 Sexiest Songs in Country Music

Seven decades of country music hits are represented on this list of sexy songs. Continue reading…​Country Music News – Taste of Country

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What’s Inspiring Tucker Wetmore’s Next Album? I Got the Scoop!

Imagine a small town bursting with pride as their favorite son makes waves in the country music scene. Tucker Wetmore is on the rise, and he’s got a story to tell. Continue reading…​The Boot – Country Music News, Music Videos and Songs

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Music

What’s Inspiring Tucker Wetmore’s Next Album? I Got the Scoop!

Imagine a small town bursting with pride as their favorite son makes waves in the country music scene. Tucker Wetmore is on the rise, and he’s got a story to tell. Continue reading…​Country Music News – Taste of Country

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Music

‘American Idol’ Finalist Hannah Harper Shocked as Jo Dee Messina Unexpectedly Crashes Hometown Show

Hannah Harper has officially earned a spot in American Idol’s Top 3, which meant returning home to Willow Springs, Missouri for the show’s “Hometown Hero” tradition. Amid the excitement of the already special weekend, Harper received the surprise of a lifetime when country music icon Jo Dee Messina unexpectedly joined her on stage.

Fan-captured videos have surfaced online, showing the moment the Idol standout was overcome with pure shock. She was in the midst of performing Messina’s signature hit, “Heads Carolina, Tails California,” the same song she had delivered previously in the season as part of the Judges’ Song Contest.

Hannah Harper, Jo Dee Messina; Photos Courtesy of Hannah Harper
Hannah Harper, Jo Dee Messina; Photos Courtesy of Hannah Harper

Harper returned to her usual style with a blue patchwork dress and had fans singing and dancing along to the beloved tune. Suddenly as she reached the chorus, the cheers from the crowd amped up and Harper noticed another voice had joined her. Turning to the side, the “String Cheese” singer let out a massive scream and jumped back from the microphone at the sight of Messina.

Meanwhile, Messina confidently strutted across the stage towards Harper, who was trying to wrap her head around the moment unfolding before her. After taking a second to process everything, she let the country music superstar finish off the chorus and then introduced her to the crowd.

“Jo Dee Messina, everybody,” she said before turning to Messina saying, “Welcome to Willow Springs, Jo Dee!”

@elizabethsummerw What an amazing night supporting our girl @hannahharperofficial with a surprise guest @Jo Dee Messina ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ #joedeemessina #hannahharper #americanidol #idol #hannah ♬ original sound – elizabeth | MO Hairstylist

Harper joked that she wouldn’t be able to continue singing the track in front of the artist behind it, but she persevered and the two of them traded off the remaining lyrics, making for a performance to remember.

The initial surprise may have thrown Harper off guard, but like the true professional she is, she was able to collect herself enough to finish it off.

This isn’t the first time Messina has shown support for the Idol contestant. Last month she posted a heartfelt video reacting to Harper’s performance of the same tune.

“Okay Hannah, you’re not allowed to sing it better to me,” she joked. A few seconds later tears filled her eyes as she watched the vocalist take on her song in front of the Idol judges.

After the show, Harper took to Facebook to fully reflect on how much this recent surprise meant to her.

“I can’t even begin to thank every single person who showed up or worked behind the scenes to make yesterday happen. I flew into Missouri with no idea what the schedule was, and I was surprised all throughout the day in the sweetest ways,” she began. “This was my “Hometown Hero” visit, and getting to experience it surrounded by the people and places that shaped me made it even more special. I was born and raised in Bunker, Missouri, and later married into Willow Springs — the town where Devon and I are raising our babies.”

She went on to say that getting the chance to return to the place that means so much to her and her family, surrounded by everyone who has supported her dreams throughout this journey is something she will “never forget.”

“I still don’t think I’ve fully processed the entire day, but I was so proud to bring American Idol to Willow Springs. Also Jo Dee Messina made a pit stop from her tour to come to Howell County and surprise me😭,” Harper added. “Thank you for showing up. Thank you for praying. Thank you for voting. Thank you for believing in me long before the rest of the world knew my name. It’s because of each and every one of you that I get to continue sharing my music and chasing this dream. To God be all the glory,” she concluded.

Photo Courtesy Hannah Harper
Photo Courtesy Hannah Harper

Hannah Harper’s hometown performance will air next Monday night, May 11, as part of  the three-hour Season 24 finale. Fans will also get to see Harper’s fellow finalists Keyla Richardson and Jordan McCullough take the stage in hopes of taking home the ultimate win.

Next week’s episode will also feature star-studded lineup of special guests, including Blues Traveler, Cameron Whitcomb, En Vogue, Gin Blossoms, Jason Mraz, Lee Ann Womack, Nelly, Shinedown, Tori Kelly, and Clay Aiken. 

American Idol airs at 8:00 p.m. ET/PT on ABC and available to stream the following day on Hulu.      

The post ‘American Idol’ Finalist Hannah Harper Shocked as Jo Dee Messina Unexpectedly Crashes Hometown Show appeared first on Country Now.

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Alaska News Featured Juneau News juneau Juneau Local Juneau Local Ketchikan Local News Feeds Sitka Local

Legislature approves extra legal help for Alaskans who can’t afford attorneys

By: James Brooks, Alaska Beacon

After four years of effort, the Alaska Legislature has passed a bill offering additional support for the underfunded organization that offers free legal help to Alaskans facing civil lawsuits.

“We’re so excited,” said Maggie Humm, executive director of the Alaska Legal Services Corporation. 

ALSC is the state’s largest provider of free legal assistance for survivors of domestic violence and abuse. It generally supports Alaskans who are unable to afford an attorney on their own.

Under state law, Alaska must provide criminal defendants with a defense attorney. No such mandate exists in civil cases, so the work falls to the ALSC, a nonprofit that lacks the budget to take on every request for help.

On Wednesday, the state Senate voted 17-3 to pass House Bill 48 and give the corporation 25% of all state court filing fees, up from 10%. The change is worth an extra $400,000 to the corporation.

The change does not affect funding for the Alaska Court System; the fees are otherwise used for general purposes, not the courts specifically.

Humm said earlier this year that ALSC provided legal help to roughly 6,200 Alaskans in 2024. By email on Wednesday, she said she expects another 800-850 people will be helped by the additional money.

Because the House passed HB 48 on a 27-13 vote in February, the Senate’s action on Wednesday will send the bill to Gov. Mike Dunleavy for final approval or veto.

Sen. Forrest Dunbar, D-Anchorage, proposed an identical bill in 2023, and while that bill passed the Senate, it never received a vote in the House before the 33rd Alaska Legislature expired in 2024.

That left Sara Hannan, D-Juneau, to reintroduce the bill last year and restart the legislative process. 

By email, Humm said that if signed into law, the bill “helps to ensure that more low-income Alaskans facing issues such as domestic violence, elder fraud, and access to earned benefits receive the legal help they need to protect their safety, stability, and dignity. Investing in legal services benefits all Alaskans by helping resolve problems early, before they become more serious and costly challenges for both individuals and our communities.”

ALSC has been trying since 2011 to pass a bill that reserves 25% of the state’s court fees for the corporation. In 2018, the Legislature passed a measure allocating 10%. 

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Food

New Orleans Natives May Call This Spot A Tourist Trap, But It’s My Favorite Sandwich Shop

While this restaurant may be something of a tourist trap in New Orleans, it serves up some of the greatest sandwiches I’ve ever had in my life.

​Food Republic – Restaurants, Reviews, Recipes, Cooking Tips

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Alaska News Featured Juneau News juneau Juneau Local Juneau Local Ketchikan Local News Feeds Sitka Local

Alaska lawmakers raise education lawsuit conflict concern for attorney general designee

By: Corinne Smith, Alaska Beacon

 Attorney General designee Stephen Cox answers questions from the House Judiciary Committee during a confirmation hearing on May 4, 2026. (Photo by Corinne Smith/Alaska Beacon)

As Alaska state lawmakers consider Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s pick for attorney general, several have questioned a potential conflict between his involvement with a private, religious school and his role in the state’s top legal office.

Stephen Cox currently leads the Alaska Department of Law, which is defending the state in a lawsuit that challenges the constitutionality of spending state homeschool funds on religious and private school tuition. 

He is also the treasurer and a founding member of the Thomas More Classical School, a private Christian school for grades Kindergarten through sixth grade, slated to open in Anchorage in the fall, whose website invites the use of state homeschool funding for nonreligious courses.

Cox has served in the role since his appointment in August, and appeared before lawmakers in a series of legislative hearings last week and Monday, ahead of a confirmation vote for attorney general, expected in the next week. 

Sen. Löki Tobin, D-Anchorage, who chairs the Senate Education Committee, noted the apparent conflict between the state constitution and the school’s financial plans at a May 1 hearing.

“Our constitution directly says ‘schools and institutions so established shall be free of sectarian control. No money shall be paid from public funds for the direct benefit of any religious or private education institution,’” she read.

She pointed to his role as treasurer as a direct conflict with the state constitution because the school’s “tuition assistance” web page said it anticipates accepting payment through state allotment funds for courses “that do not use religious-based publishers and/or content.”

The lawsuit that will decide whether that spending is constitutional is currently underway.

Cox said he was not aware of the school’s tuition information. 

“I am on the board of that school. I am not involved in the day-to-day operations,” he said, adding that he was involved in hiring a headmaster and the formation of the school. “I am not aware of that part of the website and I’m also not aware of any decisions with respect to allotment programs.”

He declined to comment further saying the issue was in active litigation.

Each homeschooled student is eligible for up to $4,500 per year, to be spent on curriculum, supplies or other educational resources. But the question on whether that money can go toward religious or private institutions is currently being decided.

A group of parents brought the lawsuit to prohibit state money from going to such institutions against the state in 2023, and a judge ruled the allotment system unconstitutional in 2024, but that ruling was overturned by the Alaska Supreme Court. The case moved back to a lower court — four school districts were named as defendants — and last fall a judge denied a motion to dismiss the lawsuit, citing need for evidence of how allotments are actually spent. A discovery period for both sides to collect evidence is open until June 1. 

At a Monday hearing before the House Judiciary Committee, Rep. Ted Eischeid, D-Anchorage, pressed the question.

“Does that mean that under Alaska ethics law, you would recuse yourself about decisions that might benefit your school, financially related to public money going to private schools?”

Cox answered a slightly different question. He told lawmakers, for background, he had already looked into the question of recusal given his three children are homeschooled through the Anchorage School District’s correspondence program, Family Partnership Correspondence School. He said that he was advised it wasn’t necessary.

“The advice that I received back from my ethics supervisor after an analysis was that it was not a reason for recusal, because I think there are, like, 25,000 Alaskan students that benefit from the allotment, and so the fact that my kids benefit in piano class and tutoring and whatnot wasn’t itself a reason to recuse,” he said.

Cox is Catholic, and is a parishioner at the Holy Family Catholic Church in Anchorage, according to the school’s website

Cox said he learned that the Thomas More Classical School was anticipating receiving allotment funds during confirmation hearings last week.  He said he was not directly involved with the state’s defense in the lawsuit and that he would seek ethics advice about recusing himself from the case.

“I will say that I’m not involved in any of the day-to-day litigation, or even really any of the supervision of the strategic litigation,” he added. “Recently, last week, I learned for the first time that on the website, there was a reference to the school anticipating becoming a vendor of the correspondent school allotment programs. So I have asked my staff to take another look at that from a recusal perspective.”

On Tuesday, the tuition information on the school’s website had been changed. It now says  that it still anticipates taking allotment money, but only in accordance with state law. 

At the hearing on Monday, Eischeid asked Cox if the school planned to receive public allotment funds. 

Cox said the issue is being litigated in court now, and whether it’s constitutional has yet to be determined. 

“I want to be very careful, because this is in active litigation, and these are the issues that the judge and the judges ultimately will have to grapple with,” he said. “But as I understand it, the school districts and their correspondence schools — so for example, ASD’s correspondent schools, Family Partnership —  the school districts will decide whether or not and to what extent the allotment can be used for private educational or private institutions, and vendors.” 

Cox said when a court rules on the question, the Thomas More Classical School will follow the law. 

Rep. Andrew Gray, D-Anchorage, noted that the Thomas More Classical school board president is Charles Gartland, who is also  working at the Alaska Department of Law as the civil division director. 

“Would he need to recuse from any cases dealing with allotments and private schools?” Gray asked?

Cox said he has asked the department’s ethics lawyers to research the question.

“I would assume that the same analysis that existed for me would also apply with respect to Mr. Gartland,” he said. “But I do not have an answer on that question yet.”

Officials with Alaska Department of Law did not return a request for comment on Tuesday on how decisions on recusal are made. 

Gray said Monday there appeared to be a conflict of interest. 

“Even if it’s all above board, as a member of the public, I see that, and I think that I would be more comfortable if the chairman of the board of a private school and the treasurer of the board of the private school wouldn’t work on those particular cases,” he said. 

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Music

Jason Aldean, Brittany Prepared for Trolls Over Their Duet

A husband protects his wife as they step into the public eye together — this duet promises to reveal a heartfelt journey. Continue reading…​The Boot – Country Music News, Music Videos and Songs

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Music

Jason Aldean, Brittany Prepared for Trolls Over Their Duet

A husband protects his wife as they step into the public eye together — this duet promises to reveal a heartfelt journey. Continue reading…​Country Music News – Taste of Country

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Alaska News

Kodiak fisherman will plead guilty to stealing trees from Alaska’s Tongass National Forest

Yellow cedar trees are seen in this Creative Commons-licensed photo by Richard Droker on Oct. 24, 2015. (Richard Droker photo)

A commercial fisherman in Kodiak will plead guilty to stealing 16 yellow cedar trees from the Tongass National Forest in Southeast Alaska.

Mitchell Keplinger, charged with theft of government property in April, was scheduled to appear in U.S. District Court for the District of Alaska on Wednesday for his formal arraignment.

Keplinger signed a plea deal the day after he was charged. Under the terms of the deal, he will avoid jail time but will pay $85,682.17 in restitution and be on probation for three years, a term that may later be reduced to no less than 18 months.

That would be significantly lower than the maximum penalty for theft of government property, which can be punished by up to 10 years in prison and a fine of up to $250,000.

Keplinger’s attorney did not return a phone call seeking comment on Wednesday.

According to the text of the plea deal, Keplinger and his boat, the 54-foot seiner Alinchak, were working in the Sitka herring seine fishery in late March and early April 2024. After the fishery closed, Keplinger used his boat and crew “to harvest Alaska yellow cedar trees on U.S. Forest Service lands near Sawmill Creek, Sugarloaf Mountain and in and around Sitka Sound.”

The plea deal states that Keplinger knew that a permit was required to cut the trees and knew that he did not have that permit.

“Keplinger’s crew, who were cutting the trees at his direction, had covered one of the stumps with moss to conceal the theft,” the plea deal states.

Paul Robbins, a spokesman for the U.S. Forest Service in the Tongass, said by email that yellow cedar “is important culturally, ecologically, and economically. Its strength is seen in durable wood products from canoe paddles to engineered timber frames and the unique rot-resistant chemistry of its heartwood allows it to live for over 1000 years and to persist long after death as sequestered carbon.”

The 16 trees allegedly taken by Keplinger yielded 22 logs, “belonging to the United States, with a market value of $4,476.25,” according to the plea deal.

Keplinger then used his boat to take the logs to Kodiak, the plea deal states. The restitution required under the plea deal includes the cost of transporting the logs back to Sitka and the Forest Service.

“Timber theft by individuals is not common on the Tongass National Forest,” Robbins said.

Court documents do not state why Keplinger took the trees or how the theft was discovered. A spokesperson for the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Alaska declined to talk about anything not covered by public court documents, as did Robbins with the Forest Service.

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