Have you seen the trailer for “Tony,” the upcoming Anthony Bourdain biopic? Even if you have, consider a rewatch – we found some details you may have missed.

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Have you seen the trailer for “Tony,” the upcoming Anthony Bourdain biopic? Even if you have, consider a rewatch – we found some details you may have missed.

Mashed – Fast Food, Celebrity Chefs, Grocery, Reviews
An American Idol reunion? It’s a yes from Randy Jackson, dawg.
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Season 1 of ‘Dutton Ranch’ is sure to come with tragedy. I think I know what it is. Continue reading…The Boot – Country Music News, Music Videos and Songs
Season 1 of ‘Dutton Ranch’ is sure to come with tragedy. I think I know what it is. Continue reading…Country Music News – Taste of Country
If you’ve already got tickets to see Ella Langley on her Dandelion Tour, chances are you’re already thinking about what to wear. The good news? You don’t have to stress about it. We’ve rounded up a few outfit ideas to help you channel her signature style and pull together a look that fits perfectly with the vibe of the tour.
With each new chapter in her career, the Alabama native’s style has evolved right alongside her sound. Right now, it can be best described as gritty, feminine and undeniably country. So in order to capture the same laid-back confidence she brings to the stage each night, think denim-on-denim, easy summer dresses, boots that are sure to stand out in the crowd and of course, the right accessories.
The run officially kicks off May 7 in Toledo, Ohio, and continues through August 15, giving you plenty of time to find your concert look. Keep reading to learn how to build an outfit that feels right at home on the Dandelion Tour, no matter what city you’re catching Ella Langley in.


Starting off strong, you can’t go wrong with the Gwyneth Ivory Lace Mesh Cardigan Top from Pink Lily, especially because it closely resembles the look Ella Langley wears on the cover of her Dandelion project. Pair it with denim shorts or a classic pair of blue jeans, like the AE Stretch Super Low-Rise Kick Bootcut Jean she’s been seen modeling, to keep things effortless and on-brand. Finish it off with a few gold jewelry pieces and add a standout accessory like the Blume Gold Flower Chain Belt from Lulus to really lean into that Dandelion-inspired look.


Leaning into this new era for Ella Langley, a delicate yellow dress is the perfect way to highlight that softer, brighter side we’ve been hearing through her latest releases. The Bright Personality Yellow Embroidered Floral Skater Mini Dress from Lulus captures that vibe effortlessly with its lace and floral details. Pair it with a set of white cowboy boots and add the Solon White Embroidered Band Western Hat for a look that feels concert-ready.


Keeping with the lace theme, Lulus delivers again with the Exceptionally Graceful Cream Lace High-Rise Tiered Midi Skirt, a flowy piece that goes well with the Coveted Appeal Medium Wash Denim Vest, creating that perfect mix of feminine and country edge. To tie it all together, Pink Lily’s “You Look Like You Love Me” trucker hat adds a fun nod to Langley’s hit duet with Riley Green, while a pair of bold red cowboy boots brings just the right pop of color to finish off the outfit.


For a more simple, comfortable option, the So Delighted Washed Black Denim Corset Seam Mini Dress from Lulus is a perfect choice. It’s a laid-back piece that has just enough style to stand out without much effort. You can keep it minimal or elevate it with a small statement purse, a stylish belt, and a pair of Thunder Road Camel Suede Leather Knee-High Western Boots.


You can never go wrong with an all-denim moment, and luckily Ella Langley’s American Eagle “Denim Darling” campaign makes it easy to bring the vision to life. The AE Denim Tube Top paired with the AE High-Waisted Wrap Skort makes for a matching set that feels effortless, flattering, and perfectly on-theme for the tour. To finish it off, the Justin Women’s Wyoming Cowgirl Hat adds that classic Western edge, pulling the whole look together.
The Dandelion Tour will make stops in major markets including St. Louis, Oklahoma City, Austin, and more before wrapping up in Fort Worth, Texas.
Joining Langley as support on select dates throughout the tour are Kameron Marlowe, Dylan Marlowe, Kaitlin Butts, Gabriella Rose, and Laci Kaye Booth, making for a stacked lineup of rising country talent.
A full list of dates can be found on her official website.
The post What to Wear to Ella Langley’s Dandelion Tour: Outfit Ideas Inspired by Her Signature Style appeared first on Country Now.
Country Now
Another Chilkat Valley restaurant has closed.
The 33-Mile Roadhouse has not opened to the public for several days and now has one sign on the front reading “Closed” and another reading “For Sale.”
Reached in person Monday, Roadhouse owner Robert Harris said he wasn’t interested in talking about the circumstances around the closure and that the signs speak for themselves.
Harris took over the popular upper valley restaurant and gas station in 2011, after he purchased it from Kathi and Jerry Lapp.
He owns the nearly eight acres of parcels around the roadhouse, which included a home behind it, and four cabins.
His is the second restaurant to close in just over a month. Alpenglow Woodfired Pizza announced its closure at the end of March after lease negotiations collapsed.
The post 33-Mile Roadhouse closed appeared first on Chilkat Valley News.
If you’re looking for an upscale and elegant atmosphere, this Italian restaurant – discreetly located beneath an Atlanta condo complex – is a premier choice.

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DAYS THE BUDGET IS LATE: 35
VORNADO CHIEF SLAMS MAMDANI: Billionaire real estate magnate Steve Roth is standing strong with fellow billionaire Ken Griffin in his spat with Mayor Zohran Mamdani.
Instead of being singled out and scorned in viral videos, Roth, CEO of Vornado Realty Trust, thinks the ultra-rich should be “praised and thanked,” and said calls to tax them more are akin to some racial slurs.
“I must say that I consider the phrase tax the rich — quote tax the rich — when spit out with anger and contempt by politicians both here and across the country, to be just as hateful as some disgusting racial slurs, and even the phrase ‘from the river to the sea,’” Roth said, referring to the controversial rallying cry used by pro-Palestinian activists, during a Tuesday earnings call.
Roth decried Mamdani’s social media video on the proposed pied-à-terre tax — in which the mayor used Griffin’s $238 million second-home as a backdrop — as “irresponsible and dangerous.” Griffin, CEO of the hedge fund Citadel, was offended by the video, and according to The Wall Street Journal, his chief operating officer suggested Citadel may pause its $6 billion plan to develop a Midtown office tower with Vornado and Rudin Management.
“We are all shocked that our young mayor would pull this stunt in front of Ken’s home and single him out for ridicule,” said Roth, who brought up the “blunder” unprompted before launching into a six-minute rant about the mayor.
On the planned office redevelopment at 350 Park Avenue, Roth said “it’s a good bet that we will go all in.” But he added that “this fence cannot be mended by a short, terse, insincere private apology.”
City Hall did not immediately return a request for comment. Mamdani ran on a pledge to raise taxes on corporations and the wealthiest New Yorkers, but Gov. Kathy Hochul has resisted that push — save for the pied-à-terre tax.
Griffin further blasted Mamdani at a conference Tuesday while voicing fears the video could spark political violence, noting the CEO of United Healthcare was “killed just a few blocks from my house.”
Roth on Tuesday stressed the significant contributions of the city’s wealthiest residents to its tax base and said these members of the so-called one-percent are “not enemies” and are “at the top of the great American economic pyramid for a reason.”
Roth, who donated generously to Mamdani’s opponent — former Gov. Andrew Cuomo — in last year’s election, went on to ponder: “Maybe we can draft Ken to become active and lead an effort to educate New York voters and to elect right-minded candidates.”
For now, he wants the city’s democratic socialist mayor — who, he allowed, is “young, smart and energetic” — to be friendlier to billionaires.
“What I beg my mayor to do is to begin every day being business-welcoming and business-friendly as his first priority,” Roth said. “That’s the only way to get the growth and financial wherewithal to accomplish his programs, some of which I must say are interesting and valid.” — Janaki Chadha

CHECKING IN ON LAWLER LAND: The crowded and competitive Democratic primary to replace Republican Rep. Mike Lawler just got a pulse check — and the out-of-district military vet who’s wooed party insiders with her compelling biography has some ground to make up.
A new poll of likely Democratic primary voters commissioned by left-leaning underdog Effie Phillips-Staley shows Rockland County Legislator Beth Davidson leading the pack with 26 percent of the vote, an 11-point lead over Cait Conley, who served in the Army for 16 years and netted 15 percent of the vote. Still, 48 percent of those polled were undecided.
The poll was shared with Playbook and first reported in left-leaning outlet Zeteo. It was conducted by the left-leaning firm Data for Progress from April 17 to 24, about a week after former Briarcliff Manor Mayor Peter Chatzky dropped out of the race. The survey has a margin of error of plus-or-minus 5 percentage points, and respondents were quizzed online and via text.
“This Democratic primary clown car keeps producing surprises, but Conley’s flameout might be the biggest yet,” Lawler’s campaign manager Ciro Riccardi said in a statement to Playbook.
But beyond NY-17, the poll also provided some interesting tea leaves for Democrats weighing where to land on one of the most contentious issues ahead of the midterms: the conflict in the Middle East. Even in this suburban, heavily-Jewish congressional district outside New York City, Israel is increasingly unpopular with Democratic voters.
The poll found 44 percent of Democratic voters sympathize more with Palestinians than Israelis, with 18 percent favoring the Jewish state. Twenty-three percent of respondents sympathized with both equally and 11 percent sympathized with neither.
And if that wasn’t surprising enough, Mamdani is so far not proving to be the political pain point for swing district Democrats that Republicans had hoped. In the hills of Rockland and Westchester counties, Mamdani has an 80 percent favorability rating with Democratic voters, with just 16 percent of respondents viewing him unfavorably, per the poll.
In the survey’s initial polling question on the primary, Phillips-Staley trailed behind Conley and Davidson at 8 percent. But after respondents were flooded with messaging on her opponents, Phillips-Staley’s support jumped to 31 points, just above .
The poll also tested negative messaging on Phillips-Staley, including the fact that she apparently “owns stocks in casino companies, defense contractors, and other industries that profit off the backs of working Americans,” according to one of the messages tested in the poll. — Jason Beeferman
NOT FONDA THIS IDEA: Actress and activist Jane Fonda is weighing into the politics of the Northeast Supply Enhancement pipeline.
The Williams Co. project, which was boosted by the Trump administration last month during a ceremonial groundbreaking event, would deliver fracked gas from Pennsylvania to New York City and Long Island. Despite rejecting water quality permits for the project in prior years, both New York and New Jersey awarded those permits last November, sparking ire from environmentalists. Advocacy groups sued both states over the about-face.
On Wednesday, the New Jersey Tidelands Resource Council will consider awarding a permit to the pipeline project. It is unclear what the project’s fate will be if the council does not approve the permit.
“You have the opportunity to exercise leadership on this issue that will resonate all over the United States,” Fonda wrote in a letter to Sherrill this week.
“If the pipeline is rejected by the Tidelands Resource Council, that rejection will be a giant victory for New Jersey’s environment and the world’s climate,” the letter later added.
A spokesperson for Sherrill declined to comment on the letter.
While Sherrill, like Hochul, supports an all-of-the-above approach to energy policy, Hochul has cited affordability concerns in her defense of the Department of Environmental Conservation’s decision to issue the water quality certification, arguing that she needs to “govern in reality” amid skyrocketing bills and the Trump administration’s antipathy to renewables.
Sherrill, while also focused on affordability, is in a tough spot as the pipeline would not deliver any energy to New Jersey. She has not weighed in on the project since taking office, but she criticized the pipeline while she was governor-elect for doing “nothing to lower electric bills for New Jersey residents.” — Mona Zhang

IT’S IN THE BAG: Carl Wilson was officially crowned the winner of a high-stakes City Council race today after ranked-choice tabulations put him more than 2,000 votes ahead of Lindsey Boylan, his closest competitor whose defeat is seen as a black eye for Mamdani.
Wilson’s victory was already all but certain after Election Day on April 28, as he trounced Boylan by a wide margin in early ballot returns.
But since no candidate secured a simple majority in the April 28 results, the city Board of Elections needed to run ranked-choice tallies.
Those tabulations, released by the board this afternoon, show Wilson won after three rounds of ranked choice tallying with 7,863 ballots, or 59.4 percent of the vote total.
That put him well ahead of Boylan, who netted 5,373 ballots, or 40.6 percent of the vote total, the ranked-choice tallies show. The other two candidates in the special election for the 3rd Council District, Layla Law-Gisiko and Leslie Boghosian Murphy, were eliminated in the third and second ranked-choice rounds, respectively.
“This victory belongs to all of us,” Wilson said in a statement after the release of the ranked-choice results. “From the start, this was a true grassroots effort powered by neighbors, volunteers, unions and supporters who showed up day after day. We build something real together, and these results reflect that.”
Last week’s special election was called because former Council Member Erik Bottcher, who used to count Wilson as his Council chief of staff, vacated his seat after being elected to the state Senate in February.
After initially being seen as a shoo-in for Wilson, the race was scrambled in mid-April when Mamdani endorsed Boylan, a onetime adviser to former Gov. Andrew Cuomo who became the first woman to accuse him of sexual misconduct in 2020 (Cuomo has denied the accusations). Mamdani’s move made the race the first true test of his endorsement power since his inauguration and created a proxy war between him and more moderate Democrats backing Wilson, including Council Speaker Julie Menin.
Read the story from Chris Sommerfeldt in POLITICO Pro.
ACCESS DENIED: The city’s Department of Investigation released a report today outlining several ways its oversight of the Administration for Children’s Services is stymied by both state law and a state agency, leaving the municipal watchdog unable to properly probe some of the most sensitive work done in government.
The problem is twofold.
First, a provision in state law prohibits investigators from accessing ACS records of unfounded accusations of child abuse or maltreatment. A second provision ices out the department if a case is put into a deferral program that avoids a full-blown investigation of a caretaker.
Often, that is the very information investigators need to draw a conclusion in instances where children are harmed.
“If there is a history of unfounded investigations by ACS, we’re unable to go back and look and see: Were these investigations conducted properly? Was there some misconduct? Was there a home visit that a caseworker said they did but never actually did?” DOI’s newly installed commissioner, Nadia Shihata, said in an interview. “We can’t look into it because we can’t even access the records.”
The rules can have tragic consequences: In 2025, DOI was prohibited from accessing the full case history in 17 out of 18 child deaths it was notified of. In 2024, it was denied full records in 13 out of 16 child fatalities. And the year before that, the same thing happened in 19 out of 25 cases, according to the department.
The state Office of Child and Family Services at times can present its own roadblocks. State law requires DOI to obtain authorization from that office before receiving nearly any type of record relating to children who have encountered ACS, placing a drag on inquiries. And DOI has found the state office often goes above and beyond what the statutes lay out, excessively delaying or limiting records in a way that limits DOI’s ability to investigate potential shortfalls in city service delivery.
“What we want to look into affects the most vulnerable children in the city,” said Shihata, who noted the department is supporting state legislation that would alter the rules and allow DOI more access. “It’s frustrating.”
The state countered that limitations on data sharing exist to protect the children involved but that it cooperates with DOI to the extent it can. Spokesperson Daniel Marans noted investigators are entitled to full records in criminal cases via law enforcement bodies and can obtain unredacted files with permission from the affected family.
“OCFS is deeply committed to the wellbeing of children and families and takes seriously its obligation under New York State law to protect the identities of children experiencing abuse and maltreatment or institutionalization,” Marans said in a statement. — Joe Anuta

FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: Progressive organizer Darializa Avila Chevalier is homing in on Spanish-speaking voters as she vies to unseat Democratic Rep. Adriano Espaillat in next month’s primary.
Avila Chevalier’s campaign is going up with its first broadcast ad of the primary, backed by an initial buy of more than $165,000. The Spanish-language spot leans into an issue that Democrats have been using in primaries across the country to activate their base: Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
In the spot, Avila Chevalier touts her work to release people detained by ICE, and vows to abolish the agency in Congress. She also takes a swipe at Espaillat, whom she claims aided President Donald Trump by funding ICE — a reference to votes he took in line with many other Democrats approving DHS funding.
During the latest DHS funding standoff, Espaillat was adamant about not providing funding for immigration enforcement without guardrails.
Hispanic residents make up around half of Espaillat’s district, which covers parts of Manhattan and the Bronx, according to Census data. The five-term incumbent is chair of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus.
Avila Chevalier, who is backed by the city chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America, is running to Espaillat’s left and looking to harness the progressive energy that got Mamdani elected last year. The mayor has not endorsed in this race. — Madison Fernandez
— ‘NOT MY BOSS’: Brooklyn police captain James Wilson has been transferred following a video capturing him trashing Mamdani at the scene of anti-immigration enforcement protests. (Gothamist)
— JUDGE OF CHARACTER: The opaque, party-controlled and patronage-driven system that selects and assigns New York City judges raises concerns about accountability and persistent abuses. (Hell Gate)
— GETTING SQUEEZED: New York’s budget woes are forcing upstate cities to implement government layoffs and service cuts as officials say state and federal funding are not meeting rising costs. (Syracuse.com)
Missed this morning’s New York Playbook? We forgive you. Read it here.
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The Bahamas, Saint Lucia, Cabo Verde, Casablanca, and now, maybe, Haines? The world’s largest cruise port operator wants to lease Haines’ Port Chilkoot dock and add it to a portfolio of global holdings.
Haines Borough officials said last week they had been approached by representatives from Global Ports Holding, a Turkey-based company, that reported hosting 17.6 million passengers at its more than 30 global cruise ports last year.
Former Skagway mayor Andrew Cremata, acting as a paid representative of the company, first broached the possible dock lease last fall, according to multiple borough officials. Cremata did not respond this week to a request for comment.
Borough manager Alekka Fullerton said she met late last month with Cremata and Colin Murphy, Global Ports Holding’s regional head of business development. Murphy this week did not comment on the potential deal.
Exact lease details were not discussed during that meeting, Fullerton said, but she and the assembly intend to hold a public meeting later this month.Theoretically, the company would present more information to residents at that meeting.
Based on the company’s other dealings, it’s likely the borough would see two major impacts from a lease: more cruise ship passengers and more borough revenue.
The company’s nearest port is in Prince Rupert, British Columbia, where it signed a long-term lease in 2022. That deal followed a failed bid to lease Ketchikan’s municipal cruise dock in 2020.
Under the Ketchikan proposal, the company would have taken on control, management, and maintenance of the facility.
The twenty and thirty year leases on the table offered large sums of money to Ketchikan: at least according to the company’s pitch, compensation to the city could have totaled $140-212 million over the length of the lease. Ketchikan’s city council ended up voting down the lease, 4-3, maintaining the dock’s public ownership.
There are other considerations, too, besides just the total amount of compensation.
With public ownership, Ketchikan was charging cruise lines a per-passenger berth tax, bringing revenue into city coffers. Haines currently does the same, with fees at the Port Chilkoot Dock expected to bring in $818,500 this year.
Federal law requires those revenues be spent on cruise-ship related improvements, and Haines’ revenue is restricted to a fund that only spends on the dock itself.
During its 2020 negotiations with Ketchikan, Global Ports Holding argued that if it collected those fees and then shared them with the municipality, those funds could be freed up to use for any purpose.
The additional millions for Ketchikan likely would have been fueled by an increase in total visitors.
According to Global Ports Holding’s annual report from 2025, passenger volume “underpins, directly or indirectly, most of our revenue and is the key to successfully delivering organic growth.”
Despite being a global behemoth, the company isn’t on the public-facing side of things; it has a grand total of one google review — a one star review from a Spanish user — which reads “Worst company to work with, go away! Run!”
Rather, the company’s dealings would likely be with the cruise lines themselves, advocating for Haines as a more frequent destination.
“They can grow the cruise ship industry here, with their connections, in a way I can’t do,” said Haines tourism director Rebecca Hylton.
The annual report talks about big picture dealings — “the global cruise ship order book,” for instance — as determinants of which ships go where. Getting into that game, Hylton said, would require the borough government take on duties like sending staff to Miami.
Whether residents want more cruise ship volume is an open-ended question. A 2025 survey found a majority of Haines residents supported cruise ship volume holding steady, or increasing slightly. Only 16% of respondents preferred a “much higher” amount of cruise ship business. There was, however, a spread of opinions, including a higher rate of support for the cruise industry among younger survey respondents.
Haines currently lags well behind its nearest neighbors, Juneau and Skagway, in terms of cruise business. Some see a larger cruise industry as a potential boon for the local economy.
Right now, it’s difficult for local tour operators to run a business solely on cruise ship passengers docking in Haines, said Barbara Nettleton, owner of tour-company Takshanuk Mountain Trail.
Now, Nettleton’s business relies heavily on the Haines-Skagway fast ferry, which delivers a predictable stream of customers to Haines from Skagway cruise dockings. But in the past, when Nettleton was targeting Haines cruise and independent travelers, the flow of customers wasn’t reliable enough to hire staff.
“Last year we decided to go back into the Skagway market, and now we have crew that have complete weekly schedules,” she said. “If we had ships regularly calling into Haines, it would be easier to hire appropriately. Skagway could be more of a supplemental market.”
Hylton acknowledged that many residents would likely only support an increase to a certain point, if at all. But broader industry trends may force a change, regardless of local preference.
“I think the cruise ship industry is moving toward a Caribbean model, with complete control over cruise ship guests at private islands,” Hylton said. According to Hylton, in Mexico or Belize, that might look like a gated-off shopping area at a port guarded by private security. Closer to home, it looks more like Huna Totem Corporation’s Icy Strait Point or Port Klawock, she said.
Cruise visitation is currently trending up in Southeast overall, which has to some extent masked movement away from ports like Haines to the specialty, private ports, Hylton said. But if the trend continues, she warned, Haines could lose the industry.
Earlier this year Haines lost an offer from American Cruise Lines that would have seen the cruise line contribute money to Letnikof Dock repairs in exchange for long-term guaranteed use of the facility.
Soon after withdrawing its offer to Haines, American Cruise Lines finalized similar deals with the Chilkoot Indian Association and the Wrangell and Petersburg boroughs.
Fullerton said that in her recent meeting with Global Ports Holding, the company’s representatives “intimated” that they were discussing similar possible deals with other communities in the region.
That introduces some time pressure, said assembly member Gabe Thomas.
“I know these port companies looking at Klawock, all these other small places, so we can’t sit on it too long,” he told other assembly members at last Tuesday’s meeting.
With little solid information yet, the near-universal answer on the issue from borough officials has been, “it depends.”
Said Hylton this week, “it’s all going to be about how the lease looks and if it’s the right fit for the community.”
The post Haines receives offer from world’s largest cruise port operator appeared first on Chilkat Valley News.