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House Speaker Mike Johnson poked fun at ‘flailing’ Democrats on Sunday and vowed that the House of Representatives would be just as aggressive in pushing legislation as President Donald Trump has been with executive orders.

Johnson made the statement during an appearance on ‘Fox News Sunday’ with host Shannon Bream. Johnson said House Republicans are working to compile the massive legislative package Trump has requested.

‘We’re going to secure the border, we’re going to make sure that American communities are safe. We’re going to get American energy dominance going again in the economy and restore common sense,’ Johnson said.

‘But to do all that in one big bill takes a little bit of time. So we’re working through that process very productively. We’ve been building on this for a year, Shannon. All through last year, we had our committees of jurisdiction working on the ideas to put it together,’ he added.

‘We were going to do a budget committee markup next week. We might push it a little bit further because the details really matter. Remember that I have the smallest margin in history, about a two vote margin currently. So I’ve got to make sure everyone agrees before we bring the project forward, that final product, and we’ve got a few more boxes to check, but we’re getting very, very close,’ he continued.

The budget bill process has not been without its share of in-fighting, however. Republican spending hawks are pushing leaders to include at least $2.5 trillion in spending cuts in the massive legislative package.

One GOP lawmaker said that tension bubbled up in a closed-door meeting last week with several ‘heated exchanges,’ with conservatives demanding a concrete plan and minimum spending cuts at significantly higher levels than what was initially proposed.

‘I think there’s a lot of frustration right now,’ the lawmaker told Fox News Digital. ‘They’ve been trying to be inclusive, but not every open forum they’ve offered is giving members the ability to say, ‘I feel like people are listening to me,’ because I don’t know that’s the case right now.’

Reps. Chip Roy, R-Texas, and Ralph Norman, R-S.C., two conservative members of the House Budget Committee, both told reporters they wanted to see the baseline for spending cuts set at roughly $2.5 trillion.

Fox News’ Elizabeth Elkind contributed to this report.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The waiting is over. Super Bowl Sunday is finally here.

And this evening we’ll get to see which team will hoist the Lombardi Trophy as champions of the National Football League. Will it be the two-time defending champs, the Kansas City Chiefs? Or will it be the underdog Philadelphia Eagles, who lost to the Chiefs on this same stage two years ago?

The game figures to be a close one with the two teams so evenly matched. So much so that oddsmakers in Las Vegas and elsewhere haven’t really moved the betting line at all in the two weeks since both won their conference championship games.

Super Bowl 59 odds

According to the latest odds from BetMGM, the Kansas City Chiefs are 1.5-point favorites over the Philadelphia Eagles.

Expert Super Bowl picks: Unique betting insights only at USA TODAY.

Chiefs to cover -1.5: -105
Eagles to cover +1.5: -115

Super Bowl 59 over/under

BetMGM has the overall total for the game at 48.5 points.

Over: -115
Under: -105

Super Bowl 59 prop bets

There are any number of proposition bets that can be placed on the Super Bowl. Here are some of the most popular.

BetMGM

Coin Toss: Heads (-102); Tails (-102)
Coin Toss winner: Chiefs (-102); Eagles (-102)

DraftKings

Gatorade Color: Purple (+175); Orange (+250); Yellow/Green (+250), Red (+425); Blue (+450); Clear (+850); No Gatorade Bath (+1500)
First TD jersey number: Over 15.5 (-115); Under 15.5 (-115)

FanDuel

Player to record first interception: No INT (+140); Chauncey Gardner-Johnson (+850); Darius Slay (+1100); Reed Blankenship (+1200); Justin Reid (+1700); Jaden Hicks (+1700) 
Successful 2-point conversion: (+180)

We occasionally recommend interesting products and services. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. USA TODAY Network newsrooms operate independently, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

We watch Super Bowl advertisements, with our kids nearby and sometimes a beer in our hands, with the easiness we used to shout “tastes great” or “less filling” at the old Miller Lite ads.

It can be a lesson in osmosis.

“If you pull aside a handful of teenagers and say, ‘What do you think of when you think of the Super Bowl, they’re going to say, ‘Bud Light,’ ” says Megan Moreno, a professor of pediatrics at the University of Wisconsin’s School of Public Health who specializes in adolescent care.

In recent years, sporting events have also featured commercials that offer something that can be right at kids’ fingertips. Ads for online betting don’t make indirect suggestions to try them. Instead, they’re full of invitations and offers of credits from familiar faces who, Moreno says, try to link gambling with what they’re watching.

AD METER 2025: Vote on the big game’s best commercials

“I have teenagers,” says Moreno, who works closely with the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP). “It’s not like they’re coming running to you asking to watch ‘Frozen,’ which is a blessing and a curse. There’s just not a lot of content that’s enjoyable to sit down and watch together. Sports can play a really important role in having something in common and something to bond over. But it’s also pretty tricky.”

Especially when parents bet on games (or drink alcohol) themselves. We don’t necessarily think of watching commercials as teaching moments, but one of the biggest betting days of the year creates an opportunity for one.

“It’s so interwoven and present now that I think, whether or not parents choose to engage in it, it probably means parents need to have a conversation with whatever child is watching,” Moreno says, “and say, ‘This is what it means to gamble. And here’s what you want to be careful about if you decide to do this when you get older.’ ”

Moreno, the co-medical director of the AAP’s Center of Excellence on Social Media and Youth Mental Health, offers ways we can make the exchange engaging and interactive, like watching the commercials themselves.

How kids are at risk for getting involved in online gambling

A 2018 Supreme Court decision struck down a federal law banning sports betting in most states. Today, mobile betting is legal in 30 states and celebrities like Jamie Foxx, Drake, Nicki Minaj and Conor McGregor promote online betting that is just a few taps away on a phone.

“You hear kids talking about it, which I think is just really different than in the past,” Moreno says. “You had to go somewhere to gamble, and it was kind of secret. Now you can gamble during a game on an app on your phone.’

“That’s what we’re hearing,” Moreno says. “Or a parent will set up an account and kind of let the kid use it, and then sometimes the kid uses it without asking.”

Sixty-nine percent of parents in the poll reported their teen has a bank account, debit card and/or credit card in their own name.

“We’re seeing kids doing more app based games, where they’re used to putting money in,’ Moreno says. ‘It’s become really normative for kids to buy in-app purchases and use money, and sometimes those are tied to games of chance within the gaming app. This is not true gambling, but this is like a warmup.”

Teens engage heavily among the estimated 62.5 million who play fantasy sports in the USA and Canada. If you play fantasy, you know that even if you put in just a little money, it’s easy allow your mood to rise and fall with the statistics of your players.

“You feel like you’ve got a stake in it,” Moreno says of fantasy sports, but also online gambling in general. “And I think adults can do a good job of kind of separating themselves through that enough to function during the day.

“But for teens at such a vulnerable age where they’re really seeking things that will connect to them and that will help them build their identity. I think that’s the other piece that worries me about teens getting super engaged in this: It’s just so much harder for them to disentangle because that that identity fully developed.”

Related: Kids face online threats ‘in blink of an eye,’ Homeland Security warns

What we can do to help our kids understand online gambling

Let them distinguish what they’re watching: According to Michigan’s Mott poll, just one in four parents of children ages 14-18 had spoken with them about online gambling.

Start the discussion by putting your child at peer level, something we probably don’t do enough in his age of overprotecting – if not coddling – kids.

Hit that pause button during the game if you see a gambling ad. Ask your son or daughter to describe what they are watching.

Here’s how Moreno suggests the back-and-fourth-might go:

These are some of the most elite athletes in the world that are taking really good care of themselves. But look at the ads we’re seeing. What are those ads telling us to do? What are they trying to sell you, and how does that line up with what we’re watching?

“I have found adolescents really love those conversations,” she says. “They love thinking about what’s ‘the man’ trying to get me to do? It’s an opportunity to have those conversations in kind of a fun way.”

Create real-life scenarios: Once the game is over, find time to talk through not just the idea of placing a bet, but how it might look like for both of you if you lost.

I know you love the Chiefs. Let’s say you wanted to put $5 down because you were really excited they might win, and then they lost. What if it was $5 but you were doing it every week, and that’s your whole allowance?

How would you feel if it was $50?

How would it feel if I put down $500 and now we don’t have enough money to go on that camping trip?

Playing fantasy sports with your kids, and having them experience what it’s like to lose money from them, can work the same way.

“Take the excitement that we know can come from gambling, but tying it to those real world consequences,” Moreno says.

Be transparent about your own habits: According to the Michigan Mott’s poll, 31% of parents say that they or another adult in their household participate in online, in-person, or social betting.

If a teen sees you engaging with it while you are watching the game together, it becomes part of their impression of what’s normal.

‘You want to be careful with how much you’re exposing them to it,’ Moreno says. ‘But I think you also want to pair that with having some really honest communication with it.’

Here is what you might say:

I struggle with this: Here’s what I’m worried about for you.

How are we going to figure out a way to navigate this together?

How are we going to know when it’s a problem and what’s our plan if it’s a problem?

“I think the more a parent can be real, the greater likelihood is the kid’s gonna say, ‘I’m not doing that,’ ” Moreno says. “And it also takes away the forbidden fruit piece. Or that the kid will say, ‘Hey, I’ll try this, and if it’s a problem now we have a plan.’ ”

Coach Steve: Five bold perspectives for sports parents in 2025

Why it’s never too late to talk about online gambling with your kid

They include: restricting betting after a certain amount is lost, offering a “parent view” option to monitor online betting accounts, verifying legal age with photo identification to open the account and limiting the amount of money that can be bet within a certain timeframe.

“I think sometimes parents will think, ‘Oh, gosh. I never had this conversation when they were younger, but now they’re older, and they’re talking to me or I see the apps on their phone. Is it too late for me to have that conversation?’ ‘ Moreno says. ‘No, it’s absolutely not too late to have that conversation.”

If your child has already tried gambling, it becomes another layer of your discussion. As we know, parenting is often about turning an unexpected twist into something productive.

“It’s not that you want to shame anyone,’ Moreno says. ‘Instead it’s that, ‘How do you want to talk about it in a way so that kids have the information that you want to give them.’ ”

Steve Borelli, aka Coach Steve, has been an editor and writer with USA TODAY since 1999. He spent 10 years coaching his two sons’ baseball and basketball teams. He and his wife, Colleen, are now sports parents for two high schoolers. His column is posted weekly. For his past columns, click here.

Gannett may earn revenue from sports betting operators and sports betting partners for audience referrals. The USA TODAY Network newsroom and editorial staff maintains direction on this content, which is created by partner staff. Sports betting operators have no influence over our news coverage. See applicable operator site for its terms and conditions. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, help is available. Call the National Council on Problem Gambling 24/7 at 1-800-GAMBLER. Must be 21 or older to gamble. Sports betting and gambling are not legal in all locations. Be sure to comply with laws applicable where you reside.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

NEW ORLEANS – Bourbon Street looks, sounds and feels no different than normal – people holding daiquiris and hurricanes between sips, music blaring out of every establishment, beads careening from balconies. 

The National Guard and Army personnel every dozens of steps or so, along with the rifles they’re holding, are a jumpcut back to reality – and a sobering reminder of the New Year’s Day attack that left 14 people dead and wounded many more. 

NFL chief of security Cathy Lanier said during a news conference Monday her team’s job is to examine those events and make sure that the group is not only anticipatory but looking forward.

“We don’t want to focus only on the last incident,” she said. “We want to focus on being prepared.” 

Security plans are fluid and capable of being changed on game day depending on the situation, Lanier added. The arrival of President Donald Trump on Sunday, making him the first sitting president to attend the Super Bowl, will only induce a heightened security environment around Caesars Superdome.  

NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.

To begin with, the Super Bowl is categorized as a Special Event Assessment Rating (SEAR) Level 1 event by the Department of Homeland Security, which requires close coordination between state, local and federal law enforcement. Lanier had declined to reveal the number of police officers assisting in keeping the city safe this week, but that it would be in “the thousands.” Lanier told the Washington Post recently she made “probably 10” visits to New Orleans to coordinate security.  

Even before Super Bowl week began, the NFL and authorities promised a “visible law enforcement” presence throughout the city. That has certainly been the case.

Accessing Bourbon Street, the security apparatus is immediately apparent. Anyone walking with a purse or bag has it searched at a checkpoint. Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry created the security zone around and including Bourbon Street via an emergency order. 

All types of barriers prevent vehicles from coming close to accessing the famous road of revelry, which was the site of tragedy in the early hours of Jan. 1.

In addition to the 14 killed, dozens were wounded in a truck attack on Bourbon Street that police say was perpetrated by Shamsud-Din Jabbar, who was fatally shot by police at the scene.

Jabbar rammed his truck onto the street that is pedestrian-only; varying types of barriers for blocks in all directions from Bourbon Street are now in place after bollards were not up prior to the attack. Two improvised explosive devices Jabbar had planted in coolers in the French Quarter did not detonate. 

The Kansas City Chiefs’ hotel is about 0.2 miles from the base of Bourbon Street on Canal Street. The amount of mobile command and law-enforcement satellite vehicles surrounding the Marriott is astounding.

Even Frenchmen Street, the live music and jazz epicenter of New Orleans, had an increased police presence and was closed to vehicles. Barriers also prevented access from any intersecting roads. 

The Philadelphia Eagles’ police escort Monday from practice in nearby Metaire, Louisiana, created a traffic standstill at the Warehouse District exit off Interstate-10. That same day, a pair of military jets conducted training maneuvers over downtown a handful of times. A low-flying helicopter hummed over the city for most of the week. 

Airspace has become an increasingly worrisome battleground for the NFL in recent years. Last week, a man was arrested for flying a drone over M&T Bank Stadium during a Baltimore Ravens’ home playoff game that paused the proceedings. Organizers won’t have to worry about that since Caesars Superdome is an enclosed venue, but the week operated under the second-highest rating in terms of airspace clearance. Drones throughout the downtown area were prohibited starting Monday. On game day, the restriction space is 30 nautical air miles, Lanier said. 

On the ground – on Bourbon Street, the French Quarter and the rest of downtown – the good times have rolled all week. But throwing a party in the shadows of rifles and snipers on rooftops became reality for New Orleans, the NFL and Super Bowl 59 after Jan. 1.   

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

We watch Super Bowl advertisements, with our kids nearby and sometimes a beer in our hands, with the easiness we used to shout “tastes great” or “less filling” at the old Miller Lite ads.

It can be a lesson in osmosis.

“If you pull aside a handful of teenagers and say, ‘What do you think of when you think of the Super Bowl, they’re going to say, ‘Bud Light,’ ” says Megan Moreno, a professor of pediatrics at the University of Wisconsin’s School of Public Health who specializes in adolescent care.

In recent years, sporting events have also featured commercials that offer something that can be right at kids’ fingertips. Ads for online betting don’t make indirect suggestions to try them. Instead, they’re full of invitations and offers of credits from familiar faces who, Moreno says, try to link gambling with what they’re watching.

AD METER 2025: Vote on the big game’s best commercials

“I have teenagers,” says Moreno, who works closely with the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP). “It’s not like they’re coming running to you asking to watch ‘Frozen,’ which is a blessing and a curse. There’s just not a lot of content that’s enjoyable to sit down and watch together when they’re at that age. So I think sports can actually play a really important role in having something in common and something to bond over. But it’s also pretty tricky.”

Especially when parents bet on games (or drink alcohol) themselves. We don’t necessarily think of watching commercials as teaching moments, but one of the biggest betting days of the year creates an opportunity for one.

“It’s so interwoven and present now that I think, whether or not parents choose to engage in it, it probably means parents need to have a conversation with whatever child is watching,” Moreno says, “and say, ‘This is what it means to gamble. And here’s what you want to be careful about if you decide to do this when you get older.’ ”

Moreno, the co-medical director of the AAP’s Center of Excellence on Social Media and Youth Mental Health, offers ways we can make the exchange engaging and interactive, like watching the commercials themselves.

How kids are at risk for getting involved in online gambling

A 2018 Supreme Court decision struck down a federal law banning sports betting in most states. Today, mobile betting is legal in 30 states and celebrities like Jamie Foxx, Drake, Nicki Minaj and Conor McGregor tout online betting that are just a few taps away on a phone.

“You hear kids talking about it, which I think is just really different than in the past,” Moreno says. “You had to go somewhere to gamble, and it was kind of secret. Now you can gamble during a game on an app on your phone.’

“That’s what we’re hearing,” Moreno says. “Or a parent will set up an account and kind of let the kid use it, and then sometimes the kid uses it without asking.”

Sixty-nine percent of parents in the poll reported their teen has a bank account, debit card and/or credit card in their own name.

“We’re seeing kids doing more app based games, where they’re used to putting money in,’ Moreno says. ‘It’s become really normative for kids to buy in-app purchases and use money, and sometimes those are tied to games of chance within the gaming app. This is not true gambling, but this is like a warmup.”

Teens engage heavily among the estimated 62.5 million who play fantasy sports in the USA and Canada. If you play fantasy, you know that even if you put in just a little money, it’s easy allow your mood to rise and fall with the statistics of your players.

“You feel like you’ve got a stake in it,” Moreno says of fantasy sports, but also online gambling in general. “And I think adults can do a good job of kind of separating themselves through that enough to function during the day.

“But for teens at such a vulnerable age where they’re really seeking things that will connect to them and that will help them build their identity. I think that’s the other piece that worries me about teens getting super engaged in this: It’s just so much harder for them to disentangle because that that identity fully developed.”

Related: Kids face online threats ‘in blink of an eye,’ Homeland Security warns

What we can do to help our kids understand online gambling

Let them distinguish what they’re watching: According to Michigan’s Mott poll, just one in four parents of children ages 14-18 had spoken with them about online gambling.

Start the discussion by putting your child at peer level, something we probably don’t do enough in his age of overprotecting – if not coddling – kids.

Hit that pause button during the game if you see a gambling ad. Ask your son or daughter to describe what they are watching.

Here’s how Moreno suggests the back-and-fourth-might go:

These are some of the most elite athletes in the world that are taking really good care of themselves. But look at the ads we’re seeing. What are those ads telling us to do? What are they trying to sell you, and how does that line up with what we’re watching?

“I have found adolescents really love those conversations,” she says. “They love thinking about what’s ‘the man’ trying to get me to do? It’s an opportunity to have those conversations in kind of a fun way.”

Create real-life scenarios: Once the game is over, find time to talk through not just the idea of placing a bet, but howit might look like for both of you if you lost.

I know you love the Chiefs. Let’s say you wanted to put $5 down because you were really excited they might win, and then they lost. What if it was $5 but you were doing it every week, and that’s your whole allowance?

How would you feel about if it was $50?

How would it feel if I put down $500 and now we don’t have enough money to go on that camping trip?

“Take the excitement that we know can come from gambling, but tying it to those real world consequences,” she says.

Playing fantasy sports with your kids, and having them experience what it’s like to lose money from them, can work the same way.

Be transparent about your own habits: According to the Michigan Mott’s poll, 31% of parents say that they or another adult in their household participate in online, in-person, or social betting.

‘I think so but I think maybe you want to be careful with how much you’re exposing them to it,’ Moreno says. ‘But I think you also want to pair that with having some really honest communication with it.’

A danger with gambling, though, is a teen who sees you engaging with it while you are watching the game together, it becomes part of their impression of what’s normal.

Here is what you might say:

I struggle with this: Here’s what I’m worried about for you.

How are we going to figure out a way to navigate this together?

How are we going to know when it’s a problem and what’s our plan if it’s a problem?

“I think the more a parent can be real about that, the greater likelihood it is that either the kid’s gonna say, ‘I’m not doing that,’ ” Moreno says. “And it also takes away the forbidden fruit piece. Or that the kid will say, ‘Hey, I’ll try this, and if it’s a problem now we have a plan.’ ”

Coach Steve: Five bold perspectives for sports parents in 2025

Why it’s never too late to talk about online gambling with your kid

They include: restricting betting after a certain amount is lost, offering a “parent view” option to monitor online betting accounts, verifying legal age with photo identification to open an online betting account and limiting the amount that can be bet within a certain timeframe.

“I think sometimes parents will think, ‘Oh, gosh. I never had this conversation when they were younger, but now they’re older, and they’re talking to me or I see the apps on their phone. Is it too late for me to have that conversation? No, it’s absolutely not too late to have that conversation.”

If your child has already tried gambling, it becomes another layer of your discussion. As we know, parenting is often about turning an unexpected twist into something productive.

“It’s such a nuanced topic,” Moreno says. “It’s not that you want to shame anyone. Instead it’s that, ‘How do you want to talk about it in a way so that kids have the information that you want to give them.’ ”

Steve Borelli, aka Coach Steve, has been an editor and writer with USA TODAY since 1999. He spent 10 years coaching his two sons’ baseball and basketball teams. He and his wife, Colleen, are now sports parents for two high schoolers. His column is posted weekly. For his past columns, click here.

Gannett may earn revenue from sports betting operators and sports betting partners for audience referrals. The USA TODAY Network newsroom and editorial staff maintains direction on this content, which is created by partner staff. Sports betting operators have no influence over our news coverage. See applicable operator site for its terms and conditions. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, help is available. Call the National Council on Problem Gambling 24/7 at 1-800-GAMBLER. Must be 21 or older to gamble. Sports betting and gambling are not legal in all locations. Be sure to comply with laws applicable where you reside.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Gone are the days where WAGs — wives and girlfriends of professional athletes — are relegated to the sideline as supporting acts. 

The likes of Taylor Swift, Brittany Mahomes and Bryonna Burrows are redefining the modern-day WAG, which will be on full display during Super Bowl 59 in New Orleans as the Kansas City Chiefs take on the Philadelphia Eagles. 

Although the lore of WAGs has been around since the early 2000s — think of Victoria Beckham — the term hasn’t always had a positive connotation. What once pigeonholed and stereotyped significant others as gold diggers or trophy wives devoid of their own identity has evolved throughout the years to represent a wide array of women and partners who are successful in their own right.

Swift has brought a new legion of fans to the NFL. Mahomes co-founded a National Women’s Soccer League (NWSL) franchise. Rivera Burrows is taking the tech world by storm. Meet the WAGS of Super Bowl 59:

NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.

SWIFT EFFECT AT SUPER BOWL? Travis Kelce’s stats with, without Taylor Swift in attendance

Kansas City Chiefs

Taylor Swift

Beau: Kansas City Chiefs TE Travis Kelce

Taylor Swift, 35, needs no introduction. The 14-time Grammy award-winning singer-songwriter is one of the best-selling music artists in the world with over 200 million records sold. She has released 11 studio albums (in addition to four re-recorded albums), which have spawned a dozen Billboard Hot 100 chart-topping singles, including ‘Shake It Off’ (2014), ‘Bad Blood’ (2015), ‘Cruel Summer’ (2023) and, most recently, ‘Fortnight’ (2024). Swift wrapped her wildly popular Eras Tour (where beau Kelce made a guest cameo) in December, marking the highest-grossing tour of all time. The Eras Tour is what started the couple’s ‘Love Story.’ They first broke the internet when Swift accepted Kelce’s invitation to watch him play at Arrowhead Stadium in September 2023 after he watched her rock the same stadium on tour. The rest is history.

Brittany Mahomes

Partner: Kansas City Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes

Mahomes, 29, played soccer at the University of Texas at Tyler, where she amassed 31 goals, 16 assists and helped the team to a 56-13-5 record from 2013-16. She finished with the second-most goals scored by a player in Texas-Tyler history. ‘Her competitive nature is one of the many things I love about her. She hates losing and wants to be the best. She works extremely hard to be great and it inspires me to work just as hard,’ Patrick Mahomes said of his high school sweetheart and future wife in 2016, while playing at Texas Tech. After graduating from UT Tyler with a degree in kinesiology, Mahomes briefly played professional soccer in Iceland and became a personal trainer. Her competitive edge din’t end there. Mahomes co-founded the NWSL’s Kansas City Current in 2020.

The couple tied the knot in March 2022 and share three children together Sterling Skye, 3, Patrick “Bronze” Lavon, 2, and newborn Golden Raye, who was born on Jan. 12 during the Chiefs’ first-round playoff bye.

BRITTANY MAHOMES makes her Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue debut

Chariah Gordon

Partner: Mecole Hardman Jr.

Gordon is the owner of The Glo Collection, a beauty and wellness brand that creates a ‘space for melanated organic skincare, chic fashion and vivacious femininity,’ the website reads. Gordon is also in her full influencer era and boasts over 200K on Instagram, where she regularly collaborates with brands, including Clarins, Nair, Famous Daves, NYX, Crown Royale in the last month alone. Gordon and Hardman announced their engagement in June 2024. They share two children, including son Three, who was born on Super Bowl Sunday in 2023.

Philadelphia Eagles

Bryonna Burrows

Partner: Philadelphia Eagles QB Jalen Hurts

Jalen Hurts may have a high-profile career, but his fiancée prefers to stay out of the limelight. The Kennesaw, Georgia native met Hurts while attending the University of Alabama, where she was vice president of the National Pan-Hellenic Council and a member of the Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority. (Hurts is a member of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc.) Burrows graduated cum laude in 2017 with a dual bachelor’s degree in Spanish and political science major. She went on to graduate from Alabama’s Manderson Graduate School of Business with her MBA with a concentration in strategical management in 2019. Burrows accepted a job as a Senior Client Executive Manager with tech company IBM before graduating, her sorority announced at the time.

Burrows made her public debut alongside Hurts on the field following the Eagles’ 2023 NFC Championship win over the San Francisco 49ers. The couple confirmed their engagement to Essence in September 2024.

Ahead of Super Bowl 59 (and Valentine’s Day), Hurts gave a shout-out to his fiancée: “To Bry, the Mrs., thank you for the support, thank you for the love. And thank you for being the rock that I can lean on.’

Anna Congdon

Partner: Philadelphia Eagles RB Saquon Barkley

Congdon grew up in Forest City, Pennsylvania and was the captain of her basketball team at Forest City Regional High School. Congdon graduated in 2016 and attended Penn State University, where she met Barkley. The pair started dating in 2017 and welcomed their daughter Jada in April 2018, two days before Barkley was drafted No. 2 overall by the New York Giants. They also share son Saquon Jr. in September 2022. The couple confirmed their engagement ahead of Super Bowl 59.

Mya Danielle

Partner: Philadelphia Eagles WR Devonta Smith

Danielle graduated from Southern University and A&M College in Baton Rouge, Lousiana in 2021. The couple, who got engaged in December 2024, welcomed daughter Kyse in October 2023 and are expecting their second child together. Danielle has amassed a combined 94,000 followers on Instagram and TikTok, where she regularly shares beauty, lifestyle and fashion content. Danielle celebrated her first brand collaboration on TikTok last month.

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This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Pro Football Hall of Famer and ESPN NFL analyst Randy Moss will return to the network’s ‘NFL Countdown’ show on Sunday after taking an extended leave of absence when he was diagnosed with cancer.

ESPN NFL insider Adam Schefter made the announcement on social media Saturday night. The show will air live from New Orleans ahead of Super Bowl 59.

In December, the 47-year-old Moss said he was ‘battling something internal’ and asked for prayers after concerned viewers wondered about his health after he appeared on camera with yellowish eyes.

Weeks later, Moss said he was recovering from surgery to treat cancer that was found outside of his bile duct between his pancreas and liver, adding that he spent six days in the hospital after the procedure.

Moss has been on ‘Sunday NFL Countdown’ since 2016, and before that played 14 seasons in the NFL with the Minnesota Vikings, Oakland Raiders, New England Patriots, Tennessee Titans and San Francisco 49ers.

NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.

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The parents of Hersh Goldberg-Polin, an American kidnapped from Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, and murdered by Hamas terrorists after surviving 11 months in captivity, made a video plea to President Donald Trump after the latest hostage release. 

In a video message shared on Instagram, Jon Polin and Rachel Goldberg-Polin reacted to the release of civilians Eli Sharabi, 52; Or Levy, 34, and Ohad Ben Ami, 56. They were among the 250 people who were taken during the Hamas-led attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023. The three gaunt, frail-looking Israeli hostages were forced to speak during a Hamas handover ceremony, igniting outrage, as Israel in turn released nearly 200 Palestinian prisoners on Saturday. 

‘We received the wonderful news that Eli, Or and Ohad we released today,’ Rachel Goldberg-Polin said in a video shared to the ‘Bring.Hersh.Home’ account, which has garnered more than 173,000 followers. ‘We also felt this real connection to Or and his family because Or and Hersh were both kidnapped together from the same bomb shelter on the same pickup truck on Oct. 7. And in fact, Or’s brother, Mikha’el, contacted us right after Shabbat today to tell us that one of Or’s first questions he asked his brother this morning was ‘how is Hersh doing?’ Because he had assumed that Hersh had been released long ago, and his brother had to explain to him that Hersh had been murdered five months ago.’ 

Jon Polin then addressed Trump, as well as U.S. special envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff, imploring them to secure the release of the remaining 76 hostages this week. 

‘Seeing the condition of these three hostages, hearing that Or had no idea what happened to Hersh, that Eli was unaware of the fate of his wife and his daughters, is just a gut punch to all of us that we need to do more,’ Jon Polin said. ‘And I’m turning directly to President Trump and to Mr. Witkoff, you have shown that you are the only ones who are able to get this situation moving, moving forward, and my plea to you, our plea to you right now is – now that you’ve done the hard part in getting movement, getting a deal started, let’s not think about Phase 1 and Phase 2 and Phase 3 in many months. Let’s think bigger and faster. All 76 hostages out this week. End of war. Who benefits from dragging it out for so long? Not the people of this region. Let’s get it done right now. Thank you.’ 

‘Godspeed,’ Rachel Goldberg-Polin added. 

Hersh Goldberg-Polin and five other hostages were murdered by Hamas terrorists last August shortly before Israeli troops reached the tunnel where they were being held in southern Gaza. Israeli troops recovered the six bodies from the tunnel, and Israeli forensic experts said they had been shot at close range after surviving nearly a year in captivity. 

Goldberg-Polin, a native of Berkeley, California, was attending a music festival when Hamas-led terrorists stormed into southern Israel, killing some 1,200 people and taking 250 others hostage. He lost part of his left arm to a grenade blast during the attack. In April, a Hamas-issued video showed him speaking under duress with his left hand missing, sparking new protests in Israel.

In their first hours as free men, the three Israeli hostages released on Saturday were beginning to confront the tragic realities to which they returned

Sharabi returned to Israel after 16 months of captivity. He was told only after his return that his wife and two daughters had been killed in the Oct. 7 attack, according to reports in Israeli media.

Levy ‘was not sure’ what happened to his wife on that day, his mother, Geula, told Israeli media on Saturday, adding that he was not exposed to media reports while in Gaza. Levy was taken from a bomb shelter near the Nova music festival in southern Israel and his wife, Einav, was killed in the attack. His mother said he also asked about Goldberg-Polin, who was abducted from the same bomb shelter. Levy was reunited Saturday with his 3-year-old son.

A third released hostage, Ben Ami, sat huddled with his wife and three daughters in a hospital corridor. He told them: ‘I have a lot of things to catch up on.’ Ben Ami is a resident of Kibbutz Be’eri, one of the hardest hit communities on Oct. 7. ‘I need to get answers to a lot of things, and I know some of them will be difficult answers,’ he said in footage released by the Israeli Prime Minister’s office. ‘I need to know what happened on that day.’

It was the fifth swap of hostages for prisoners since the current Israel-Hamas ceasefire began on Jan. 19. 

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Billionaire Elon Musk outlined a list of ‘super obvious’ changes that his Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) plans to make at the U.S. Treasury Department this weekend.

Musk says officials at the treasury are working to make the government’s books more simple to audit, as well as more accountability for where funds are going. The changes also require treasury employees to more frequently update the congressional ‘do not pay’ list, which highlights fraudsters and illegal fronts.

‘Nobody in Treasury management cared enough before. I do want to credit the working level people in Treasury who have wanted to do this for many years, but have been stopped by prior management,’ Musk said.

‘Everything at Treasury was geared towards complain[t] minimization. People [who] receive money don’t complain, but people who don’t receive money (especially fraudsters) complain very loudly, so the fraud was allowed to continue,’ he added.

‘The above super obvious and necessary changes are being implemented by existing, long-time career government employees, not anyone from DOGE,’ Musk added.

‘It is ridiculous that these changes didn’t exist already! Yesterday, I was told that there are currently over $100B/year of entitlements payments to individuals with no SSN or even a temporary ID number,’ he continued. ‘If accurate, this is extremely suspicious. When I asked if anyone at Treasury had a rough guess for what percentage of that number is unequivocal and obvious fraud, the consensus in the room was about half, so $50B/year or $1B/week!! This is utterly insane and must be addressed immediately.’

Musk’s tirade toward the treasury department comes just after a federal judge blocked DOGE’s ability to access treasury department systems. The Tesla CEO condemned the ruling as ‘insane’ this weekend.

The Friday lawsuit, which was filed by 19 Democratic attorneys general, claimed Musk’s team violated the law by being given ‘full access’ to the Treasury’s payment systems. The systems include information about Americans’ Social Security, Medicare and veterans’ benefits, tax refund information and more.

The lawsuit was filed in New York by the office of New York Attorney General Letitia James, who wrote that President Donald Trump ‘does not have the power to give away Americans’ private information to anyone he chooses, and he cannot cut federal payments approved by Congress.’

U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has expressed support for Musk and DOGE in the past, recently saying that the U.S. ‘doesn’t have a revenue problem, we have a spending problem.’

‘At the Treasury, our payment system is not being touched,’ Bessent said in a ‘Kudlow’ interview on Wednesday. ‘We process 1.3 billion payments a year. There is a study being done — can we have more accountability, more accuracy, more traceability that the money is going where it is?’

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After the release of British-Israeli hostage Emily Damari, she and her mother, Mandy, revealed Emily was held captive in a United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) center in Gaza, a location tied to Hamas operations. 

During a phone call with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, Emily, 28, and Mandy described how Emily was denied proper medical care while being detained in one of UNRWA’s schools, where Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) later discovered tunnels and ammunition linked to Hamas. 

Emily was abducted Oct. 7, 2023, by Hamas terrorists who shot her in the hand and leg. She was denied treatment, with only an outdated bottle of iodine provided as medical aid. The IDF’s discovery of Hamas infrastructure beneath UNRWA buildings, including tunnels linked to terror activities, has raised serious concerns about the agency’s role in Gaza. 

Emily and Mandy emphasized the need for international pressure on Hamas and UNRWA to allow the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) access to the remaining 82 hostages.

‘We are asking for maximum pressure to be placed on Hamas and UNRWA to allow the ICRC access to the remaining hostages,’ Mandy Damari told Starmer. ‘The suffering is far from over for those still in captivity, many of whom are elderly or severely injured.’ 

This followed revelations the U.K. government is still an active supporter of the controversial U.N. agency.

Last week, President Donald Trump reinforced his administration’s stance on UNRWA by continuing a freeze on U.S. funding to the agency. Trump’s decision, initially enacted during his first term, remains in effect amid ongoing investigations into the agency’s ties to Hamas. This move reflects growing concerns over UNRWA’s failure to meet international standards of neutrality and accountability.

The troubling allegations of UNRWA facilities being used by Hamas to hold hostages emerged early in the crisis, but the U.N. and UNRWA initially dismissed the claims. Despite growing evidence, both have been criticized for their slow response. 

When the accusations surfaced, the U.N. dismissed them as ‘big accusations,’ failing to conduct a thorough investigation. It wasn’t until significant public pressure mounted that UNRWA, in a tweet Jan. 21, acknowledged the claims and said it was taking them ‘extremely seriously.’

Philippe Lazzarini, UNRWA’s commissioner-general, expressed relief at Emily’s release in his Jan. 21 tweet but continued to downplay the gravity of the allegations. 

‘Claims that hostages have been held in UNRWA premises are deeply disturbing & shocking. We take any such allegations extremely seriously,’ Lazzarini wrote.

However, Lazzarini also said UNRWA was forced to vacate its northern Gaza facilities, including those in Gaza City, Oct. 13, 2023, and had no control over them after military evacuation orders were issued. 

He added, ‘UNRWA has not been involved in any negotiation related to hostage release as it is not within its mandate.’

Peter Gallo, a former U.N. investigator, questioned his statement. 

‘So who has control? UNRWA has 12,000 staff in Gaza, and the agency has been begging for money and aid to support people sheltering in its premises. Does UNRWA want it both ways? Yes, they want funding to support those in the facilities, but they also claim no responsibility for what goes on inside them,’ Gallo said.

‘Somebody must have been distributing — even if it was just two sacks of potatoes among 1,000 people. Somebody must have been reporting the conditions, the numbers of people in these facilities while UNRWA tried to function. And you’re trying to tell me that nobody knew about a young Israeli woman with gunshot injuries? We didn’t know where she came from?’ Gallo added, emphasizing the inconsistency in UNRWA’s position.

The continued lack of transparency and accountability from both the U.N. and UNRWA in response to the allegations has drawn widespread criticism. Gallo has heavily criticized the internal investigation carried out by UNRWA, describing it as a ‘farce.’ 

‘The U.N. investigation FAILED to actually prove that ANY of them were involved in acts of terrorism,’ Gallo said. 

He claimed the staff members who were ‘fired’ by the U.N. after being seen on cameras participating in the Oct. 7 massacre were not actually terminated for misconduct. Instead, they were made redundant and received severance payments. 

‘You’ve had U.N. staff members engaged in crimes, crimes recognized by the ICC as crimes against humanity, and the U.N. is now going to give them a severance package because they were dismissed from their positions,’ Gallo said.

While an UNRWA spokesperson did not respond to Fox News Digital’s questions on Gallo’s allegations, Lazzarini released a statement Friday in response to critics.

‘UNRWA has the most robust systems in place to ensure adherence to neutrality compared to other similar UN organizations and entities,’ Lazzarini said. ‘This applies to both the Agency’s staff and our programs across the region, as confirmed by an independent review conducted last year under the leadership of France’s former foreign minister. 

‘Safeguarding the Agency’s neutrality is central to our ability to continue delivering lifesaving aid in Gaza, as well as education and primary health services across the region. As one of the largest U.N. agencies in the world, UNRWA is committed to U.N. values and principles, which strengthens our response during one of the most challenging periods in the history of the Palestinian people. We remain dedicated to staying and delivering.’

Yona Schiffmiller, director of research at NGO Monitor, further illuminated Hamas’ involvement in the humanitarian aid process. 

‘Hamas used the Ministry of Social Development (MOSD) to direct aid distribution. The head of MoSD, Ghazi Hamad, who was recently designated by the U.S. Treasury as a Hamas leader, met with U.N. officials and international NGOs while promoting Hamas interests,’ Schiffmiller explained. 

‘The data from MoSD influenced aid distribution across various organizations, solidifying Hamas’ grip on Gaza’s humanitarian aid. We’ve got pictures of Hamad meeting with U.N. officials, and if you look closely in the background, you can actually see the Hamas logo on the map on the wall where they’re meeting.’

The Israeli Knesset passed legislation banning UNRWA from operating in Israel, which took effect at the end of January. The Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs reiterated its position on UNRWA’s ties to terrorism.

‘Humanitarian aid doesn’t equal UNRWA, and UNRWA doesn’t equal humanitarian aid. UNRWA equals an organization infested with Hamas terror activity,’ its statement said. ‘Israel remains committed to facilitating humanitarian aid through alternative organizations that are independent and not complicit in terror.’

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