In-N-Out is famed for its fresh, never-frozen burgers and not-so-secret menu, but if you don’t live near one, you can attempt to replicate it at McDonald’s.

Food Republic – Restaurants, Reviews, Recipes, Cooking Tips
In-N-Out is famed for its fresh, never-frozen burgers and not-so-secret menu, but if you don’t live near one, you can attempt to replicate it at McDonald’s.

Food Republic – Restaurants, Reviews, Recipes, Cooking Tips
Reading Time: 3 minutes
A little over a month ago, Savannah Guthrie returned to The Today Show.
She had been away from NBC’s flagship morning show for a little over two months, grappling with her mother’s disappearance.
There was a lot of anticipation about her return to the desk.
But a jarring new report says that NBC felt so disappointed by the episode that some wish that she’d remained off the air for a little while longer.

According to a report from RadarOnline, both viewers and even some colleagues haven’t welcomed back Savannah as warmly as one might have assumed.
She returned to The Today Show on Monday, April 6.
On-screen, everyone seemed glad to have her back — even as they felt respectfully heartbroken over her family’s loss.
Reportedly, her comeback did not draw morbidly curious crowds that some of NBC’s bigwigs had expected.
Maybe it was that Nancy was (and is) still missing. Maybe it’s just that we live in chaotic times. But Savannah’s return almost felt like business as usual to some.
“The show really thought this was going to be a massive moment,” an alleged source told RadarOnline.
“Everybody at NBC thought there were going to be hundreds of people, if not thousands of people, in the plaza,” the insider continued.
“They’d hired extra security,” the source claimed. “They thought that this was going to be like a pop concert, like Justin Bieber in the plaza.”
While a “decent” number of fans showed up in person, it wasn’t a stampede.
And the six percent boost in viewership from the previous week meant that the numbers “were not up like the show thought it would be.”

As you can see, people were overjoyed to see Savannah return.
She was also tearful, not only during her interview with Hoda Kotb, but at times during her return.
After all, she didn’t step away from the show to go on vacation. Her mother disappeared on February 1 following a violent kidnapping.
It is not unreasonable to assume that Nancy Guthrie died very early into her disappearance, but we don’t know for sure.
In fact, that uncertainty makes all of this so painful. Savannah and the rest of her family do not yet have closure. Many fear that this will never change.
Even now, there are some sick and twisted individuals spinning conspiracy theories about Nancy’s disappearance. Some even blame Savannah.
We get it — it’s not exciting for a low-level criminal to kidnap a news anchor’s mom, botch the job, and go to ground while incompetent federal authorities go to party it up at the Olympics for some reason.
But evil is so often banal. The truth does not have to be exciting — and it seldom is.
We don’t believe that Savannah or her comeback were responsible for the ratings only being slightly higher.
The Today Show mostly exists to be background noise and “company,” especially for older folks. These would be the individuals most invested in the Guthrie case.
Some shows have a finite audience — especially in the age of streaming.
Savannah Guthrie’s ‘TODAY’ Return Reportedly Disappointed NBC was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.
The Hollywood Gossip

Gov. Mike Dunleavy speaks about at a May 4, 2026, news conference about his property tax bill intended to help draw investment in a massive natural gas pipeline. The news conference was held in his Anchorage office. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy is urging state lawmakers to act on his proposal to cut state taxes by $7.2 billion over the next 36 years to subsidize construction of the proposed trans-Alaska natural gas pipeline.
Failing to act, he said, could keep the pipeline from being built at all.
“This bill is too important. This concept is too important,” Dunleavy said. “This is not setting up a tax for the lemonade stand down here in the corner by the hot dog stand. This is the biggest (natural gas) project on the planet.”
But some state lawmakers are skeptical about the size of the governor’s proposed subsidy. Two alternatives — one in the House and the other in the Senate — are advancing through committees in the final weeks of the session.
Other legislators believe the pipeline already makes financial sense and no change is needed.
As a result, four different paths await state legislators in their last weeks, and it isn’t clear which one they’ll take — or whether the governor will call legislators into special session on the issue.
There’s also been no agreement with cities and boroughs affected by the proposed tax cut. There’s also no public agreement with North Slope gas producers or the state’s labor unions.
At the core of the problem facing lawmakers is how much — if any — subsidy is needed in order to attract investors who would pay for building the pipeline project in two stages.
The first stage would involve a pipeline from the North Slope to Cook Inlet for in-state use. The second stage would construct processing plants at the north and south ends of the pipeline, allowing larger volumes of gas to be exported overseas.
If both phases of the project are built, Department of Revenue economist Dan Stickel told legislators on Tuesday, the result would be cheaper natural gas than currently available from Cook Inlet.
“If the full project goes forward, it’s a significant reduction in cost to Alaskans,” he said.
Rep. Zack Fields, D-Anchorage, noted that Alaskans could be locked into high natural gas prices if the second phase is never built or if both phases are built but no exports take place.
For a hearing last week, the Department of Revenue estimated that under that scenario, prices in Anchorage would exceed $27 per thousand cubic feet by 2033, more than double current prices.
It’s unclear how likely that worst-case scenario is.
The larger the subsidy, the greater the chance that the project is built in full and the lower the price of gas for Alaskans, project proponents say.
“Our objective is to have the lowest cost gas for Alaskans and have certainty on the project,” said Adam Prestidge, president of Glenfarne Alaska, the project’s developer.
A problem, some legislators say, is that they’re working without information. Glenfarne, an international firm that last year bought 75% of the project and became its developer, has not shared its latest estimate for how much the pipeline will cost.
“I think it’s important for us to have starting points on what the actual numbers are, because if it needs tax relief, let’s figure out what the relief is,” said Sen. Bill Wielechowski, D-Anchorage.
Legislators also don’t know how much North Slope gas producers will charge for the gas, or what international buyers will pay for it.
Some of that information is impossible to know — legislators are trying to anticipate the price of natural gas in 2033 and beyond, once the pipeline is up and running.
Other information is being kept confidential until a final investment decision or when proposed prices are submitted to state regulators, something that’s months away at the earliest.
Legislators are being asked to take action within weeks.
“We’re not really competitive in the global market if the (cost) overrun is 40%,” said Rep. Julie Coulombe, R-Anchorage, on Tuesday.
The gas pipeline’s publicly stated cost on Tuesday was $46 billion, but most legislators believe the true figure is higher.
“I think it’s really $57 billion … if not higher,” said Sen. Bill Wielechowski, D-Anchorage, relying on a prior statement from former U.S. Sen. Mark Begich.
Begich, a Democrat, lost to Gov. Mike Dunleavy in the 2018 governor’s election. Now, Begich is a paid adviser, hired by Dunleavy’s administration on a $100,000 contract.
In a Tuesday hearing, Begich said lower taxes would not increase profits for investors or developers and would simply lower the end cost of gas for consumers.
“If you lower the tax, it does not go to the return or the profit or anything of this project,” he said.
“I am just telling you right now, every dollar you save consumers is a dollar in their pocket in an economy that is struggling,” Begich said.
Under his calculations, Wielechowski said, the average Southcentral Alaska family would save $55 per year if the pipeline is built and produces gas according to the latest available cost analysis from the Department of Revenue.
The subsidy needed to create that savings amounts to a loss of $500 per Alaskan per year, he said, money that could be used for the Permanent Fund dividend or state services.
“That’s not a good deal,” he said of the exchange.
The latest available version of the Senate proposal shows an increase in revenue to the state, rather than a subsidy. Instead of earning $27.9 billion through 2062, the state would earn $42.1 billion.
“I would describe that as very burdensome for the project and potentially prohibitively so,” Prestidge said.
“I will characterize that tax at that level as something that would require some real reconsideration of the drawing board of how the project is structured and taken forward,” he said.
In the House, discussions have been less acrimonious. The House Resources Committee on Tuesday morning discussed a proposed a subsidy of less than $5.9 billion, smaller than the governor’s concept but similar in other regards.
“It would be a tax reduction but a smaller tax reduction than proposed by the governor,” Stickel said of the House proposal.
On Tuesday afternoon, the committee worked methodically through a long series of amendments to its plan, frequently consulting Prestidge and Begich about how each might affect financial negotiations.
The House and Senate bills are each in an early stage of development. If passed by the resources committees, each would have to pass through their respective finance committee before advancing to a floor vote and on to the other half of the Legislature.
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Back in March, Joseph Duggar was arrested amid allegations that he molested a 9-year-old girl during a trip to Florida in 2020.
Joseph is out on bond after posting $600,000 bail and pleading not guilty.
And as he prepares for trial, Joseph is demanding the right to speak to investigators whose information led to his arrest.

According to The Ashley’s Reality Roundup, Joe’s legal team has filed court documents requesting that the judge allow them to question individuals from the Department of Children and Families, Child Protection Team, and any other law enforcement agency involved in the investigation.
Joe reportedly filed a “Motion to Compel” on May 1, which asks the court to compel disclosure of information obtained in the investigation up to this point.
As we previously reported, Joe was arrested after his accuser told her parents about what had happened.
Police then conducted a “forensic interview” with the alleged victim, who is now 14.

Joseph’s legal team now wants to interview anyone who works for DCF, law enforcement, or any of the government agencies connected to Joe’s case.
In his latest filing, Joseph alleges that these witnesses “conducted an investigation of the child who is the alleged victim in this case.”
He now believes he is “entitled” to receive their testimonies, as well as “records and evidence in the possession of the witnesses for a fair determination of [Joe’s] guilt or innocence at trial.”
The accuser’s identity has not been made public, but Us Weekly reports that she has ties to the family of Joseph’s wife, Kendra Caldwell.
“[Kendra’s parents] Christina and Paul Caldwell are not hiding the fact that Joseph’s victim is [close to the Caldwell family],” a source tells the outlet.
“Christina has told other members of their church, but she is not sure she wants to talk about it so publicly. That is what she’s struggling with, but she is not hiding it.”
The insider added that the alleged molestation took place while Joseph was on vacation with his in-laws in Panama City Beach.
“When [the alleged sexual assault] happened, Joseph was on vacation with Kendra and her family,” they stated.
“No other Duggar [family members] were there … As years passed, [the alleged victim] understood more and got the courage to tell her family. Just like the police report says, when she told her family, they acted on it.”
The Caldwells have issued a statement supporting the accuser. Insiders say they are no longer on speaking terms with Joseph and Kendra.
Joseph has yet to speak publicly on the charges against him.
We will have further updates on this developing story as new information becomes available.
Joseph Duggar Demands Right to Question Police Who Spoke to His Alleged Molestation Victim was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.
The Hollywood Gossip

Jessie Reyez has confirmed that her fourth studio album, A LITTLE VENGEANCE, will be released on June 12 via FMLY/Island Records.
The news continues a new era for Reyez, who has been consistently releasing music in 2026. Last week, she recruited Muni Long for “AIN’T U TIRED?” Earlier in April, she dropped “N.Y.F.F.,” alongside the surprise $TILL PAID EP.
On “AIN’T U TIRED?,” both Reyez and Long take aim at partners who took advantage of them. The former employs a half-rapped, half-sung flow as she takes a former flame to task: “Upper echelon, I’m the one in charge/ Hair and money long, you do what you want/ Wanna sleep, wanna sleep, wanna sleep on me, I dare you,” Reyez sings.
A LITTLE VENGEANCE and the $TILL PAID EP follow the Canadian songwriter’s 2025 LP, PAID IN MEMORIES. That album featured cover art that displayed a questionnaire Reyez answered as an eighth grader. In a section titled favorite hobbies, she wrote: “Rapping/singing/dancing.” This passion still informs her artistry. She discussed this drive in a 2025 interview with Clash, reflecting on how her music mirrors the world she wants to live in.
She said, “So ultimately I just want to live a good life. I want to continue to do that and when times come in life where heavier s**t goes left, I just want to be able to have more elasticity to be able to come back with equanimity and not be in the low for too long. To make the world a better place is the nice little pageant queen answer, but I believe it [laughs]. I abide by it and I think it’s a beautiful thing that I want to make sure I do. Like when I die, I want to make sure I’m leaving the world in a better place than when I found it. I want to help the people I can, love the same people I love wholeheartedly, and just be.”
Order A Little Vengeance here.
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Decades ago, going vegetarian or vegan had negative connotations. Still, these ’70s stars adopted meat-free lifestyles for health reasons and personal beliefs.
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