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Music

Watch Alan Jackson Sing ‘Where Were You’ for Memorial Day

It’s one of the most moving songs in country music. Continue reading…​Country Music News – Taste of Country

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Music

Every Country Artist Who Won An Award At The 2026 AMAs

Last night, the 52nd annual American Music Awards aired live from the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, marking the largest venue in the show’s history. Hosted by Queen Latifah, the three-hour show celebrated the year’s biggest artists, chart-topping songs, through standout performances and wins across multiple genres, including country music.

While only two country artists were on hand to accept their awards during the live broadcast, several more country acts also took home wins, which were announced following the star-studded event.

Darius Rucker, Sam Barber; Photos Courtesy of CBS
Darius Rucker, Sam Barber; Photos Courtesy of CBS

Starting off with the awards that were announced in person, Darius Rucker was honored with the Veterans Voice Award presented by USAA’s Honor Through Action, recognizing the meaningful impact he has made in the veteran community through his advocacy and charitable efforts.

Rucker ended his moving speech by calling attention to one particular interaction he once had with a veteran, using it as a reminder for the crowd about the importance of living in a way that honors their sacrifice.

“He said to me that when somebody says to them, ‘Thank you for his service,’ he says, ‘Thank you for living the life, we’re serving.’ And that’s what we all should be doing right now. We should be striving to live, to become a community and become a country that we deserve what they sacrifice. So tonight I want us all to be as loud as we can and yell and use our voices to let these folks know that we love them and we appreciate them and we thank them.”

Sam Barber was also present to claim his win for Breakthrough Country Artist. He was up against Tucker Wetmore and Zach Top in the category.

“This is unreal, I never thought I’d be in a position like this. So thank you,” Barber stated in his speech, after thanking every Veteran, whether they were present or not, for their sacrifice.

Sam Barber; Photo Courtesy of CBS
Sam Barber; Photo Courtesy of CBS

After the show finished airing, a complete list of winners was announced, revealing the award recipients in the remaining country music categories.

Morgan Wallen entered the night one of the highest nominees overall and the most nominated in the country category with seven nods. He took home Best Male Country Artist, after vying for the win against fellow nominees Jelly Roll, Luke combs, Riley Green, and Shaboozey.

Ella Langley took home two wins in the categories of Best Female Country Artist and Best Country Song with “Choosin’ Texas.”

Last but not least, Zac Brown Band scored the title of Best Country Duo or Group and Megan Moroney took home Best Country Album for her 2026 project, Cloud 9.

Other country artists who were nominated but did not take home a win included: Shaboozey, BigXthaPlug, Bailey Zimmerman, Russell Dickerson, Miranda Lambert, Kelsea Ballerini, Lainey Wilson, Brooks & Dunn, Old Dominion, Treaty Oak Revival, Zac Brown Band, and Rascal Flatts.

Although he did not earn a trophy, Green did deliver his debut performance on the AMAs stage with “Worst Way.” Plus, Keith Urban performed the soft-rock classic “Summer Breeze” off his upcoming yacht rock album, Flow State, arriving June 12.

Riley Green; Photo by Francis Specker/CBS
Riley Green; Photo by Francis Specker/CBS

The world’s largest fan-voted awards show aired live coast-to-coast from the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas on May 25 at 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT on CBS and streamed on Paramount+. This marked the second American Music Awards telecast since returning from a two-and-a-half-year hiatus.

A complete list of 2026 winners can be found HERE.

The post Every Country Artist Who Won An Award At The 2026 AMAs appeared first on Country Now.

​Country Now

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Food

17 Walmart Father’s Day Gifts Under $40 That Hungry Dads Will Love

If you’re struggling to figure out what to buy the dad in your life for Father’s Day, don’t panic. We’ve rounded up the best goods under $40 from Walmart.

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

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Entertainment

Sydney Sweeney: Career Doomed by NSFW ‘Euphoria’ Scenes?

Reading Time: 3 minutes

Each week, millions of HBO viewers watch the over-the-top drama and various twists and turns of Euphoria.

When the teen series first launched in 2019, one of the breakout stars was Sydney Sweeney.

She has gone on to take on phenomenal acting roles across a spectrum of genres, earning acclaim for her acting.

But some worry that her nude and all-around NSFW Euphoria scenes could ruin her career in the long run.

Sydney Sweeney in December 2025.
Sydney Sweeney attends the Los Angeles premiere of Lionsgate’s “The Housemaid” on December 15, 2025. (Photo Credit: Brianna Bryson/WireImage)

Can a role be too steamy for a sustainable career?

On Sunday, May 24, Sweeney once again went topless for Euphoria Season 3, Episode 7: “Rain or Shine.”

For the scene, viewers saw the POV of looking up at her while she pretended to have fairly energetic sex.

Topless moments like this one have been going viral throughout the show’s history.

And though her character, Cassie Howard, is an objectively terrible person, she has continued to draw eyes.

Season 3 followed her character’s journey as an OnlyFans creator. Though many sex workers have noted that the “easy money” narrative is not realistic for the vast majority of performers, many viewers have enjoyed the storyline for obvious reasons.

Crisis and reputation management expert Dave Quast spoke to Fox News about the double-edged sword of Sweeney’s nude scenes in Euphoria.

“‘Euphoria’ clearly helped establish Sydney Sweeney as a fearless performer, physically and emotionally, and that’s part of why she broke through,” Quast began.

“The risk is that when the public conversation focuses more on the sexualized aspects of the role than on the performance,” he explained, “the same work that made her seem daring can start to narrow the brand.”

Quast did correctly clarify: “Sexuality on screen is not inherently unserious.”

He added: “The problem is when it becomes the dominant shorthand for the actor.””

Sydney Sweeney models the Comfy lingerie collection for her Syrn brand.

[image or embed]

— fanana hammock (@fananahammock.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 1:24 PM

So what is the real challenge?

“For Sweeney, the challenge is not that she has played sexualized roles,” Quast reasoned.

He clarified: “The challenge is making sure those roles continue to read as character choices, not as the entire brand proposition.”

That’s not to say that Quast thinks that her career is doomed, by any measure.

“Visibility is currency, and Sweeney has become one of the rare young actresses who can reliably generate conversation around almost anything she does,” he praises.

Quast acknowledged: “That has real commercial value.”

PHOTO THREE

There are obvious pitfalls to being something of a lightning rod — even if there are commercial applications.

Sweeney’s jeans ad last summer ignited a firestorm, through no real fault of her own.

Conservative panelists highlighted a handful of people who (not unreasonably) found the eugenics implications of the “good jeans” pun to be off-putting.

Against her will, Sweeney became the epicenter of a national discussion. To some, her relative silence after the scandal seemed like a confirmation of people’s worst assumptions, rather than a fear of stirring the hornet’s nest.

Truth be told, her Euphoria role — with Cassie Howard espousing conservative views and hurling slurs — cannot have helped.

There’s a chance that sexualization could make things worse for her. But Sweeney also has a lot of defenders who first paid attention to her because she’s really, really hot.

Sydney Sweeney: Career Doomed by NSFW ‘Euphoria’ Scenes? was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

Categories
Alaska News

North Slope Borough employee crashes fuel truck while allegedly drunk

(Getty Images)

(Getty Images)

State prosecutors in Utqiagvik have charged a North Slope Borough employee with allegedly crashing a fuel truck while drunk.

According to court documents filed May 13 in Utqiagvik, James Brown was driving on April 9 in Point Lay, a village on the shore of the Arctic Ocean, when he ran the fuel truck off the road in front of a home.

North Slope Borough Police Department Sgt. Neil Lynch had flown into Point Lay that morning and recognized Brown — they had been on the same plane from Utqiagvik. 

According to an affidavit signed by Lynch, James said “he had been binge drinking with his brother for the last five days … and had been drinking whiskey until 8 a.m. (that) morning, but had not brought any alcohol to the village.”

Lynch took James to the holding cells at the Point Lay Police Department, whereupon James fell asleep. 

A subsequent breath-alcohol test measured 0.197%, more than twice the state’s legal limit of 0.08%. 

James has been charged with one count of driving under the influence, a Class A Misdemeanor. No fuel spilled from the crashed truck. 

The North Slope Borough did not immediately respond to emailed questions about the incident on Friday, including whether Brown remains employed by the borough.

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Health

Celebrities Over 40 Who Ditched Dairy For Glowing Skin

Dairy products can be solid sources of several key nutrients. However, some, like these celebrities, say ditching dairy is what gave them better skin.

​Health Digest – Health News, Wellness, Expert Insights

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Entertainment

The Restaurant With The Best Prime Rib In Your State, Hands Down

These restaurants across the country are praised by locals and tourists for having consistently great prime rib. Add them to your beefy bucket list.

​Mashed – Fast Food, Celebrity Chefs, Grocery, Reviews

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Food

How This McDonald’s Burger Tried And Failed To Compete With Burger King’s Whopper In The ’90s

Yes, it’s true: McDonald’s once launched a burger calculated to compete directly with Burger King’s iconic Whopper, but the gambit ultimately failed.

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

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Entertainment

Amanda Conner Calls Cops on Ryan Edwards Day After Her Arrest, Alleges History of Abuse

Reading Time: 2 minutes

There was a period of time when it looked as though Ryan Edwards had sobered up and settled down after years of turbulence.

Over Memorial Day weekend, however, we learned that Ryan’s life is still as chaotic as ever.

The trouble began on Sunday when Ryan’s wife, Amanda Conner, was arrested on suspicion of DUI.

Amanda Conner is in trouble with the law yet again.
Amanda Conner is in trouble with the law yet again. (Hamilton County Sheriff’s Department)

It was Ryan who called the cops on Amanda, telling police that she had a history of substance abuse, had refused to take a drug test, and had a young child in the car with her when she fled their home.

Ryan has a history of addiction and trouble with the law, but his life became much less chaotic in the years since the Teen Mom spotlight dimmed.

Now, however, he once again finds himself on the wrong side of the law.

Just hours after her arrest, Amanda placed a 911 call of her own. According to The Ashley’s Reality Roundup, a dispatcher explained that Amanda “wants to get her belongings from her husband, stating that he has a history of physical abuse towards [her].”

This is the first time that Amanda has accused Ryan of physical abuse. But it is not the first time that he has been accused of abusive behavior.

Edwards’ marriage to Mackenzie Standifer was notoriously chaotic, and the cops got involved on numerous occasions.

Ryan got sober in 2023 and started dating Amanda shortly thereafter.

In a Facebook post about this weekend’s drama, he coyly acknowledged his troubled past.

“I will NOT be answering any questions. Please keep us in your prayers,” Ryan wrote (via The Ashley).

“All I’ll say is this might be my karma!” he added in the comments.

The Ashley has heard, but cannot confirm, that Ryan was the one who bailed Amanda out of jail.

The couple was spotted walking through a gas station parking lot shortly after Amanda was released, and she was still sporting the ankle bracelet that was one of the terms of her parole.

Aside from Ryan’s brief Facebook post, neither party has commented publicly on the events of the past few days.

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

Amanda Conner Calls Cops on Ryan Edwards Day After Her Arrest, Alleges History of Abuse was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Uncategorized

From the San Luis Valley to Vail, Latino labor powers every sector of Colorado’s economy

Migrant workers from Mexico make up a large portion of the agricultural labor needed across the state. John Moore/Getty Images

In Colorado, a national debate about the role of Latinos in American society has deep roots in the state’s history, current identity — and future.

I’m a professor of ethnic studies at Colorado State University. I recently published a book titled “Latino Colorado: The Struggle for Equality in the Centennial State.” In it, I explore how Latinos in Colorado have bridged Old West and New West industries to help our state grow. As a longtime resident of the state, I have witnessed many of these socioeconomic phenomena firsthand and through my research.

Latinos have always been a part of the Colorado story. Let’s look at some ways Latinos help drive the state’s economy and contribute to its unique culture and lifestyle.

Latino labor in Colorado

Latinos were the first Coloradans.

San Luis was founded in 1851 by Hispanic settlers from northern New Mexico. It is the oldest continuously inhabited town in the state. In the late 19th century, Hispanic Coloradans and immigrants from Mexico fanned across the territory and later the state to work in mining, the railroad industry and the emerging agricultural sector.

A black and white photo of a field with people picking potatoes and loading them into a horse drawn carriage.
Workers harvesting potatoes in the San Luis Valley of southern Colorado in 1939.
GHI/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

In the fist decades of the 20th century, Colorado’s sugar beet industry relied heavily on Latino workers. Those workers then established Hispanic neighborhoods in cities along the Front Range and the Eastern Plains.

Colorado’s geographic diversity has led to the development of numerous economic sectors from so-called Old West industries like agriculture, cattle ranching and mining to New West industries like tourism, real estate and tech startups.

The running thread of Colorado’s diverse economic picture is its reliance on Latino labor, whether from U.S.-born or immigrant workers. The state has relied on this labor practically since the territory was acquired from Mexico in 1848. The region known as the Western Slope is a good example of this trend.

In the Western Slope, Latino workers were the muscle behind the building of railroad lines and the growth of the sugar beet industry in the early 20th century. Latino immigrants still work in the oil and gas industry and the fruit orchards that dot the region. But, more recently, their descendants have moved into the middle class. They’ve opened small businesses and some have even become white collar professionals.

As tourism began to flourish in the Western Slope in the 1990s, Latinos quickly became the indispensable labor force that kept the ski resorts, hotels and restaurants running. And as Baby Boomers began to retire and move to the region, Latino labor supported the construction boom fueled by this demographic shift. There is practically no sector of the Western Slope’s — and the state’s — economy that does not rely on Latino labor.

Latino demographic shifts

Latinos have also driven the Western Slope’s demographic growth. The expansion of the real estate and tourism sectors around the turn of the 21st century attracted tens of thousands of Latinos to the region. They came from Colorado’s Front Range, other U.S. states and Mexico and Central America.

Their presence has revitalized towns historically afflicted by the woes of the boom-and-bust cycles of the oil and gas industry. For example, along the west I-70 corridor, towns such as Eagle, Edwards and Gypsum in Eagle County, and towns like Glenwood Springs, Parachute, Rifle and Silt in Garfield County, have seen their Latino populations soar with the arrival of families attracted to job opportunities in resort destinations like Vail and Aspen. By 2020, Latinos made up more than a third of these counties’ total populations compared to the 1990s when Latinos made up less than 10% of the population in the region.

Further west, Montrose’s Latino population has grown in tandem with the popular resort town Telluride’s economic expansion. Nowadays, Latinos represent more than 20% of the Montrose County population compared to 12% three decades ago. Mesa County has the largest number of Latinos on the Western Slope, about 25,000, which make up 15% of the population. Latinos are mostly clustered in and around Grand Junction, the largest metro hub between Denver and Salt Lake City.

Like most working-class Coloradans, these Latino families typically cannot afford to live in the ritzy communities where they work. Many make long commutes over treacherous mountain roads to get to their workplace. Some juggle multiple jobs and rely on carpooling because they don’t own cars and don’t make enough money to afford their long, potentially dangerous commutes.

Cost of living among top concerns for Hispanics in Colorado, a 9News report.

While the first-generation immigrants who came to Colorado’s Western Slope in the 1990s-2000s have a limited educational background and speak little English, their second-generation children are trying to realize the American Dream by moving into the middle class. This second generation benefits from a public education, command of the English language and greater knowledge of American society than their parents.

The U.S.-born descendants of Latino immigrants represent a tip-of-the-iceberg phenomenon. They currently make a large component of the school-age population in these counties. In another decade or two, they will join the labor force, pay taxes, vote and likely transform the demographics, culture and political status quo of these mountain communities.

Challenges facing Latino Coloradans

Latino Coloradans’ story is fraught with challenges, too.

First-generation Latino laborers often endure long work hours for low pay, a high cost of living, occupational hazards and the stigma of racial discrimination. Moreover, shifting political winds represent a significant challenge for Latinos concerned about changes in U.S. immigration policies.

President Donald Trump’s recent immigration dragnet has reached the Western Slope, where Latino individuals have been routinely arrested and Latino families fear deportation. Many Latino families in Colorado are mixed-status families, in which some family members may lack U.S. citizenship or work visas and are subject to deportation. They feel targeted for the color of their skin, their accent or the jobs they do. The immigration operations are having an impact on the economy and social fabric of the communities where Latinos live and work.

Still, Latinos have grown deep roots in Western Slope communities. Grand Junction has a thriving Latino middle class and is home to the Western Colorado Latino Chamber of Commerce. Latinos, such as State Rep. Elizabeth Velasco, are running for office in the region and getting elected. Velasco represents House District 57, which covers Glenwood Springs and Aspen.

Latinos have always been an intrinsic feature of the Western Slope’s socioeconomic landscape, as ubiquitous as the area’s mountains, mesas and canyons. In cities like Grand Junction and Durango, and ski towns like Aspen, Telluride and Vail, they enrich the region’s economy, society and culture.

Read more of our stories about Colorado.

The Conversation

Ernesto Sagás does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

​Politics + Society – The Conversation