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Sports Fox

2026 NFL Offseason: The Biggest Question Facing Every AFC Team Entering Summer

After a huge week on the NFL trade front, teams will wind down offseason activities and get ready to break for summer. But they’ll still have a lot to think about in the weeks-long wait until training camp. On Thursday, I identified the biggest question that will hang over every NFC team. Here’s the AFC edition: AFC East Buffalo elevated Joe Brady from offensive coordinator to head coach after the firing of Doug McDermott, who led the franchise for nine years. The big question is if Brady and his staff can take advantage of the team’s Super Bowl window with star quarterback Josh Allen in a way that McDermott could not. Defensively, new DC Jim Leonhard is transitioning the unit to a 3-4 scheme. Signed to a three-year, $67.5 million free-agent deal this offseason, Willis essentially has two years to show Miami that he can be its quarterback of the future. The former third-round pick flashed promise as Jordan Love’s backup in Green Bay, but he started only three games over the past two years combined. It’s also unclear if the Dolphins have enough talent around Willis to be successful. On paper, they have arguably the NFL’s worst wide receiver room. New England officially acquired three-time All-Pro receiver A.J. Brown on June 1, giving Maye a legitimate WR1. But protecting the third-year Patriots quarterback remains the biggest priority after he was sacked 68 times in 2025 (regular season and playoffs). The Patriots used their top pick on offensive tackle Caleb Lomu and signed guard Alijah Vera-Tucker to a three-year, $42 million deal in free agency. New England will also have a new center, second-year pro Jared Wilson, after trading veteran Garrett Bradbury to the Chicago Bears. Smith may be an upgrade over Justin Fields, but he struggled mightily last season as the Las Vegas Raiders’ starter, throwing a league-high 17 interceptions. Returning to the Jets, where he started his NFL career as a second-round pick in 2013, Smith will have a promising cast of pass-catchers to throw to — star wide receiver Garrett Wilson and first-round picks Kenyon Sadiq and Omar Cooper Jr. among them. AFC North Former Ravens coach John Harbaugh took tight end Isaiah Likely and star fullback Patrick Ricard with him to the New York Giants, while Pro Bowl center Tyler Linderbaum signed with the Raiders. Baltimore made a slew of notable additions — first-round pick Olaivavega Ioane and John Simpson stabilize the guard position; outside linebacker Trey Hendrickson bolsters the pass rush — but getting back into the AFC’s elite will be the real task for new coach Jesse Minter and star QB Lamar Jackson. On paper, Cincinnati is much improved defensively. The Bengals traded the No. 10 overall pick for star defensive tackle Dexter Lawrence, and also added DL Jonathan Allen and edge rusher Boye Mafe to bolster the defensive line. Free-agent acquisition Bryan Cook stabilizes the safety position. If the defense can perform to at least a league-average level, Cincinnati has more than enough firepower on the offensive side of the ball to be a major contender. Under new coach Todd Monken, 2025 draft pick Shedeur Sanders and former Pro Bowler Deshaun Watson are in a full-fledged competition to be the Browns’ QB1. Both players have been getting reps with Cleveland’s starting offense in offseason practices. It helps that new coach Mike McCarthy spent 13 years with Rodgers in Green Bay. But the QB’s success at age 42 will largely hinge on his supporting cast. On paper, the Steelers are stronger at wide receiver with the additions of veteran Michael Pittman Jr. and second-round rookie Germie Bernard. Pittsburgh also used its first-round pick on offensive tackle Max Iheanachor. AFC South Stroud had the fifth-year option in his rookie contract picked up, but he’s had back-to-back disappointing seasons since his stellar rookie campaign in 2023. The former No. 2 overall pick needs to make notable strides in the upcoming season to show Houston he’s worthy of a record-setting extension. If Stroud plays well, the Texans are positioned to be one of the AFC’s top contenders. Jones was enjoying a career year in 2025 before a fractured fibula slowed him down and a torn Achilles ended his season in Week 14. The Colts showed faith in Jones by giving him QB1 money this spring — a two-year, $88 million deal — but it’s unclear how long it will take the former first-round pick to regain a rhythm, if he can do that at all in 2026. A torn Achilles is one of the most challenging injuries to return from. The Jaguars had a surprisingly successful 2025 campaign in head coach Liam Coen’s first year, winning 13 games en route to the franchise’s first division title since 2022. But they let two key contributors leave in free agency — RB Travis Etienne Jr., LB Devin Lloyd — and didn’t have a first-round pick in the 2026 draft. Cornerback/wide receiver Travis Hunter’s health will be key — the former No. 2 overall pick missed 10 games as a rookie. Quarterback Trevor Lawrence played at an MVP level toward the end of last season, and that will need to continue for Jacksonville to build on last season’s success. Under new coach Robert Saleh, the Titans have been intentional about bolstering their offense around second-year QB Ward, who showed flashes as a rookie but led the NFL with 55 sacks in the regular season and tied for the league lead with 11 fumbles. Questions remain on the interior offensive line, but Tennessee has improved substantially at wide receiver. The team used the No. 4 overall pick on Ohio State’s Carnell Tate and signed slot WR Wan’Dale Robinson in free agency. New offensive coordinator Brian Daboll is a seasoned playcaller with plenty of experience working with talented quarterbacks, so the hope is that his presence will help Ward develop into a true franchise QB. [Where Titans QB Cam Ward Stands Entering Pivotal Year 2] AFC West Through two seasons, Nix has been a good quarterback and a very successful one, helping to guide the Broncos to back-to-back playoff appearances. But the former first-round pick has been inconsistent as a passer, particularly in his deep-ball accuracy. A big step forward from Nix would make the Broncos one of the NFL’s most feared teams, as they already have one of the league’s best defenses. Trading for former Miami Dolphins receiver Jaylen Waddle should help Nix’s development. In reigning Super Bowl MVP Kenneth Walker III, the Chiefs now have the most dynamic running back they’ve had in the Mahomes era. Walker left the Seattle Seahawks for a three-year, $45.03 million free-agent deal from Kansas City. But questions remain at the pass-catching spots. Veteran tight end Travis Kelce, at 36, is another year removed from his prime, and Kansas City’s supposed No. 1 receiver, Rashee Rice, hasn’t proved to be dependable. Rice has played just 12 games over the past two seasons, and he’s currently serving a 30-day jail sentence for violating the terms of his probation on a previous charge. His incarceration may slow his recovery from an offseason cleanup surgery on his right knee. The expectation is that veteran quarterback Kirk Cousins will start the season for the Raiders while Mendoza sits and learns. That’s the preference of new head coach Klint Kubiak and general manager John Spytek. But struggles by Cousins and/or a quick acclimation by Mendoza would present a situation where the No. 1 overall pick sees the field earlier than expected. Herbert is one of the league’s most talented quarterbacks, but his lack of playoff success (0-3) has hurt his standing compared to other top QBs. The Chargers hope that changes with McDaniel, a creative offensive mind who orchestrated the NFL’s top offense in 2023 as Miami’s head coach.​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports

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Music

How The ‘Urban Cowboy’ Craze Took Over Country Music

It changed the entire culture of country music. Continue reading…​Country Music News – Taste of Country

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Music

See the Lyrics to Taylor Swift’s Song ‘I Knew It, I Knew You’

Taylor’s back with a new cowgirl-inspired track. Continue reading…​The Boot – Country Music News, Music Videos and Songs

Categories
Music

See the Lyrics to Taylor Swift’s Song ‘I Knew It, I Knew You’

Taylor’s back with a new cowgirl-inspired track. Continue reading…​Country Music News – Taste of Country

Categories
Food

Why Restaurants In Italy Temporarily Close In The Afternoon

In Italy, if you’re unprepared for the midday shut down, you may find yourself without lunch. Yes, in the afternoon, restaurants close. Here’s why.

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

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Alaska News

AK Board of Fish limited a commercial fleet to protect Western Alaska salmon. Then the AG stepped in

An Aleutian Islands commercial fishing boat. (Courtesy Jared Danielson)

An Aleutian Islands commercial fishing boat. (Courtesy Jared Danielson)

Just as hundreds of fishermen begin pouring into the Aleutian Islands ahead of its most productive season, a conflict over restrictions on commercial salmon harvests has erupted.

After the Alaska Board of Fisheries passed restrictions on the Aleutian commercial fleet to protect salmon bound for Western Alaska spawning streams, Alaska’s acting attorney general, Cori Mills, invalidated the measures last month.

Now, subsistence advocates say they may try to win the restrictions back in a lawsuit against Mills.

The board’s new regulations, pushed by subsistence fishermen for years as Western Alaska salmon runs declined, would have shortened the number of days and size of the harvest that commercial fishermen could make in the Aleutians, widened a regulated area and added some restrictions on net depths.

The threat of a lawsuit follows the subsistence advocates’ attempt to re-implement the regulations ahead of the commercial fishery opener on June 6. The advocates tried to join a lawsuit originally filed by the commercial fleet and its allies that challenged the restrictions — but the judge threw out the suit Monday.

A lawsuit and ethics complaints

June is when salmon, after fattening themselves for years in the North Pacific Ocean, squeeze through narrow channels between the Aleutians on their way back to the waters where their lives began as eggs in gravel beds.

Some are headed for spawning streams in rural Western and Interior Alaska — regions where Indigenous subsistence fishermen have seen salmon populations crash for over a decade, making it difficult for residents to put food on their tables.

The conflict over these salmon pits the mostly Indigenous subsistence fishermen, along rivers like the Yukon and Kuskokwim, against the commercial fleet in the Aleutians, which hails from all over Alaska and the lower 48.

Each group says the salmon is critical to maintaining their way of life, their community and their culture. The commercial fishermen say their income has taken a big hit in recent years, due in part to falling fish prices — but also because they have been voluntarily regulating their own fishery, closing down on some days in an attempt to let salmon pass through to Western Alaska subsistence rivers.

The issue heated up ahead of the February meeting of the Board of Fisheries. After years of pressure from the subsistence fishermen and Tribal leaders, the board adopted more restrictive measures targeting the June salmon fishery in a section of the Aleutians known as Area M.

(A map of Area M from the Alaska Department of Fish and Game)
(A map of Area M from the Alaska Department of Fish and Game)

After the most contentious proposed restrictions passed in a 4-3 vote, the Aleutians East Borough, along with six local Tribes aligned with commercial fishing interests, filed two ethics complaints against several of the board members in the majority.

The complaint alleged that Olivia Irwin, Märit Carlson-Van Dort, and Curtis Chamberlain had conflicts of interest. It also alleged that Chamberlain made a “materially false statement” when he denied having advocated for Western Alaska fishermen against Area M commercial fishing interests in his role as a lawyer for the Calista Corporation, the Alaska Native regional corporation for the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta region.

That lack of disclosure, the complaint alleged, violated both Alaska’s Executive Branch Ethics Act and its Administrative Procedure Act.

After the borough said its ethics complaint went “unanswered for 42 days,” it filed a lawsuit in April in Anchorage Superior Court asking a judge to strike down the new regulations on the basis of a lack of scientific evidence — as well as based on Chamberlain’s alleged “materially false statement.”

Other groups joining the borough’s lawsuit included an Aleutian tribal government and two Area M commercial fishing organizations.

Weeks later, on May 19, Mills, the acting attorney general, sided with the commercial fishermen in their ethics complaint — rejecting most of the board’s regulation changes because, she ruled, the vote to pass the regulations was improper. A spokesman for the state Department of Law did not respond to multiple requests for comment about Mills’ decision.

The Aleutians borough and the commercial fishing groups then dismissed their lawsuit, given that the attorney general had nixed the regulations they challenged.

In a last-ditch effort, though, a group representing Western Alaska subsistence harvesters, the Bering Sea Fishermen’s Association, filed a formal objection to the dismissal. After the judge overseeing the case, Herman Walker Jr., rejected the request, the subsistence group said it may try to appeal to the Alaska Supreme Court.

Mike Kramer, a lawyer for the subsistence groups, complained at the lack of public rationale the attorney general gave in her short letter siding with the commercial fishermen on the ethics violations, as well as the judge’s subsequent rejection — typed in a single word, “denied,” on the groups’ motion.

“I would hope he would have spent a little more time and actually typed up his own order denying our motion,” Kramer wrote in an email.

For subsistence fishermen: every salmon matters

Charlie Wright is one of the subsistence fishermen, and chair of the Yukon River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission. He is Athabaskan and grew up in the Yukon River village of Rampart, and later lived for decades in Tanana, downstream.

When he was growing up and raising his own family, Wright practiced subsistence fishing as much as possible, taking for granted sometimes how much abundance there was.

“There was so much fish when I was a kid that we could literally see them jumping from my grandma’s camp,” said Wright.

But Wright says that due to a mix of overfishing, climate change and poor management of the fisheries on the Yukon River, the fish are going away. Summer chum salmon on the Yukon River have seen about a 72% decline over the past 5 years, compared with the two decades prior. And that’s on top of declines in the other subsistence food he relies on, like moose and caribou.

“I lived my whole life on a river, and I’d be still there, just living that good, healthy lifestyle,” said Wright. But now, instead of hunting and fishing in his village himself, he has moved to Fairbanks so he can spend his time sitting on 11 subsistence advocacy boards and committees to try to preserve his way of life.

Charlie Wright's mother, Antoinette Wright, at their fish camp before fishing was closed on the Yukon. (Courtesy Charlie Wright)
Charlie Wright’s mother, Antoinette Wright, at their fish camp before fishing was closed on the Yukon. (Courtesy Charlie Wright)

“The whole salmon culture from the Yukon River is gone now,” he said.

Wright points out that while the Aleutians commercial fishery remains open, allowing the harvest of some Western Alaska salmon, the Yukon River has been closed down to most subsistence salmon fishing for years.

Studies show that the Aleutians fishery is taking some fish from Western Alaska. But the research is inconclusive as to how many.

Scientists also believe climate change is the driving force behind the region’s salmon declines. Still, longtime subsistence fishing advocate Karen Gillis, with the Bering Sea Fishermen’s Association, said with a crash so dire, getting every spawning salmon back matters.

“Where we can influence human-induced harvest of these stocks, we need to be doing that,” she said.

Commercial fishermen: finances suffering due to restrictions

Aleutians East Borough Mayor Alvin Osterback is Alaska Native and has lived in the commercial fishing town of Sand Point his whole life.

He was born in 1950 and watched his community grow from a place with no harbor to one transformed by infrastructure money flowing in after the construction of the trans-Alaska pipeline.

“Then the state had more money, they started building harbors, so fleets got better, boats got bigger, we got better gear,” said Osterback.

Osterback says the money from the new fleet and larger fishery helped the community grow from some 300 people to about 1,100 permanent residents today.

“And then when the salmon fleet showed up, it was probably triple that size,” he said. “It was good. People here made good money.”

Osterback said various regulations over the years “interfered with our ability to be assured that we were going to have a profitable season,” leading him to switch from seining to setnetting, a cheaper operation requiring many fewer people and less fuel.

But even setnetting got tricky over the past few years amid tighter restrictions on harvests, he said. “It was just harder to get crews, when you don’t know if you’re going to be fishing or if you’re going to be sitting on the beach,” said Osterback.

Sand Point is a commercial fishing hub town in the Aleutians East Borough. (James Brooks via Creative Commons license)
Sand Point is a commercial fishing hub town in the Aleutians East Borough. (James Brooks via Creative Commons license)

Osterback said that the regulations the Board of Fisheries voted to adopt in February were too restrictive to the fleet in his area. Instead, Osterback prefers a system of management the Area M commercial fishermen have been using for the past three years.

After the commercial fishermen caught an unusually high number of chum salmon in their June fishery in 2021 — almost 1.2 million fish — they adopted a voluntary strategy to shut down if they catch too many chum salmon along with the sockeye salmon that they target.

The Area M fleet has taken fewer salmon overall the past several years, dropping from their haul from some 65 million pounds in 2021 to 53 million pounds in 2023. Amid falling prices, that also means they have made less money: harvests in 2021 brought in some $47 million, while the 2023 catch brought in $18 million.

The fight isn’t over

Now, management of Area M will revert back to the voluntary measures of the past few years.

Gillis, the subsistence advocate, described that plan as a “fox guarding the hen house,” with state managers at the Alaska Department of Fish and Game who are in full support of the commercial fleet.

The next Board of Fisheries meeting in which Area M is on the agenda is still two-and-a-half years away.

But both sides say they could force a change to bring Area M into discussion at next winter’s meeting. Gillis said the Bering Sea Fishermen’s Association also is considering suing the state in an effort to revive the Board of Fisheries restrictions.

Osterback, the borough mayor, underscored the importance of commercial fishing to his region —  arguing that shutting the Area M fleet down for more days each year won’t help Western Alaska subsistence users.

“What’s taking place today, I think, is really hurting both sides. It hurts us and our communities. Those people up there are not going to be happy until we are totally shut down, we have no economy and no fishery,” said Osterback. “Then you’ll have two areas with no economy and no fishery, and that’s not going to help anybody.”

Wright, the Yukon River subsistence advocate,said that he and his allies just want commercial fishermen to stand down on certain days to try to see if salmon would begin spawning in their rivers once more.

“​​We’re not trying to take nothing away. We just want to see if that works — see if we could get some more salmon back on the spawning ground, so people can at least eat and try to create a sustainable fishery for us all,” Wright said. “If we work together in unity, then I think it’ll be a better day for everybody.”

Olivia Ebertz is a freelance journalist. Reach her at oliviaebertz@gmail.com.

Disclosure: Northern Journal Publisher Nathaniel Herz was paid $1,000 for work commercial fishing in 2025 by Mike Wood, a Board of Fisheries member. Herz asked an outside editor to do the major editing of this story, and to review any subsequent edits he made for bias.

This article was originally published in Northern Journal, a newsletter from Herz. Subscribe at this link.

Categories
Hip Hop

Infinity Song Announces New Self-Titled Album

Infinity Song INFINITY SONG

Infinity Song is almost ready to share their fourth album, Infinity Song. After teasing the album with new music in the first few months of 2026, the group confirms that their new self-titled album is due out on June 12. It is available for preorder on CD and vinyl now.

The album Infinity Song comes on the heels of two new singles. “One Foot Out” sees the band performing their signature blend of nearly-choral harmonies combined with sundrenched guitar strumming and a danceable beat. “Hurricane” gets into funkier territory, with a disco-influenced bassline, guitar, and string harmonies. The latter track also comes with a stylish music video, shot mostly in black and white with a few pops of color.

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Infinity Song consists of siblings Abraham Boyd, Angel Boyd, Israel Boyd, and Momo Boyd, who have been performing together for nearly their whole lives. “We’ve been singing since we were little kids, and music is truly our family’s way of life. It’s been an outlet for development, for processing life – we come together around music. We made it official in 2014 or something, I don’t know the exact date. But really, it was a formality more than anything,” Abraham told Euphoria magazine in 2024. After the group made it official, they released their debut album, Infinity’s Song, in 2015. That was followed by 2020’s Mad Love and 2024’s Metamorphosis Complete. The return to an album bearing the group’s name feels momentous, like a full circle moment more than a decade in progress.

Of course, like so many musicians in the 2020s, Infinity Song was able to reach a new audience thanks in part to TikTok, which made their track “Hater’s Anthem” go viral in 2023. The group also frequently performs live, with dates scheduled this summer in U.S. cities like New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, and San Francisco before they’ll embark on a tour of Australia and New Zealand, stopping in Melbourne, Auckland, and more. Later in 2026, Infinity Song will also tour Europe, performing in London, Berlin, Istanbul, Brussels, and more cities.

Shop INFINITY SONG here.

​Discover more about the world’s greatest R&B artists | uDiscover Music

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Music

Bailey Zimmerman’s Plea for Free Food For Life is So Relatable

Picture this: a small-town kid with a passion for corndogs suddenly becoming the face of Sonic Drive-In. Talk about a dream come true! Continue reading…​The Boot – Country Music News, Music Videos and Songs

Categories
Music

Bailey Zimmerman’s Plea for Free Food For Life is So Relatable

Picture this: a small-town kid with a passion for corndogs suddenly becoming the face of Sonic Drive-In. Talk about a dream come true! Continue reading…​Country Music News – Taste of Country

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Health

Everyone Wore Them In The ’80s — But Your Feet Are Waving Red Flags At Their Comeback

While nearly everyone was wearing them back in the ’80s, you should know that your feet are furiously waving red flags at their comeback. Here’s why.

​Health Digest – Health News, Wellness, Expert Insights