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Lindsey Vonn is competing in the 2026 Winter Olympics alongside teammates who are up to 19 years younger.
Younger skiers like Mary Bocock view Vonn as a source of wisdom and a mentor.
Teammates credit Vonn with fostering a helpful and supportive culture on the U.S. ski team.

CORTINA D’AMPEZZO, Italy – American speed skier Mary Bocock wasn’t born until one year and eight months after Lindsey Vonn made her Olympic debut in Bocock’s hometown of Salt Lake City, Utah.

That was 24 years ago.

“It’s nice to have such a wide range of ages on this team,” Bocock said during a news conference Tuesday at the 2026 Winter Olympics, prompting Bella Wright to raise her eyebrows and laugh.

“Because there’s so much wisdom,” Bocock continued, placing emphasis on the word ‘wisdom’ as she gestured toward the teammate 19 years her senior, “to be given to me.”

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Vonn replied, “I love how you put that,” through a chuckle. “Thank you.”

A humorous, and perhaps blunt, way to state it, but Bocock’s words were genuine. She also spoke about sitting with Vonn during film sessions, watching her break down courses with coaches, talk tactics and decide what line she wants to take. Having just expanded into speed skiing from technical events during the 2024-25 season, Bocock is eager to soak up any and all advice she can get. So Vonn gave the rookie an inside look into her process.

Vonn doesn’t think of herself as a leader of the United States’ 2026 Winter Olympic ski team. But Bocock, Wright, Keely Cashman, Breezy Johnson and Jackie Wiles do. They also think of her as a mentor. Someone who’s always willing to help. Who’s always willing to share her expertise.

“She’s a mentor. And she knows a lot,” Johnson said. “And she has a lot of experience, so she brings that to the team. And then when we do have time and we are hanging out, she’s also a friend.”

Wright is also from Salt Lake City, but she was 4 years old when Vonn made her Olympic debut. Vonn retired in 2019 before rejoining the World Cup circuit after a partial right knee replacement in 2024. So Wright (who qualified for her first Games in 2022) didn’t think she had a chance to ski alongside Vonn. Wright called being Vonn’s teammate in Cortina amazing.

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Wiles’ first year with the U.S. ski team was 2013. She wasn’t fully funded then, so Vonn helped out with the difference. She looked at Wiles’ equipment and took her through intimidating courses. Vonn’s generosity has since permeated U.S. skiing culture.

“It’s cool to be a part of a team that we all really do try to help one another,” Wiles said. “And I feel like Lindsey set that tone pretty early on.”

Having her back at the Olympics, Wiles said, “elevates and inspires” the whole group. 

“I think it’s just a privilege to have Lindsey Vonn on the team,” Wright said. 

Reach USA TODAY Network sports reporter Payton Titus at ptitus@gannett.com, and follow her on X @petitus25.

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CORTINA D’AMPEZZO, Italy – USA luger Sophia Kirkby has one question for the people of Cortina: Who wants to date any Olympian?

The 24-year-old from Lake Placid, New York, isn’t picky. She’s open to sip cappuccinos with fans. She’s down to swig Aperol spritzes with fellow athletes. Though, her area of the Olympic Village isn’t exactly teeming with eligible bachelors.

“It’ll be luge – and I already know all those weirdos – bobsled, skeleton, and I think curling,” she told USA Today. “I could be wrong, but I’m just thinking that they’re a bunch of dads.”

Kirkby is making her Olympic debut in a brand new event: Women’s double luge. Once she and partner Chevonne Forgan finish competing Feb. 11, Kirkby will open up her heart and her dating app profiles. She hopes the following two weeks will provide “crazy stories” to document via journaling and social media posting.

“My married women, my girl friends and my fellow single ladies, I will be there for them to live vicariously through me. Because I, too, am curious. How does an Olympian date?”

Meet every Team USA athlete competing at 2026 Winter Olympics!

Before arriving in Cortina, Kirkby said, dating as an Olympian hasn’t been as glamorous as she imagined. Boys are still “silly” over chats. Still untoward. Still only after one thing.

“They’re just, like, right to it,” she said. “And I’m open to almost right to it, but like, maybe let’s get a coffee. I want to make sure that you’re not a total freak.

“I think I have this golden card. I’m like, ‘Oh yeah, I’m going to the Olympics.’ Doesn’t matter. Doesn’t matter. They’re still acting the same way.’

Hopefully Valentine’s Day in Italy will bring more luck. Or, at least entertainment for her thousands of Instagram followers.

In addition to writing about her first Olympic experience in a sparkly gold notebook, Kirkby will keep social media abreast to everything she’s got going on. Profile pictures and ages will be redacted. Some names, too. But screenshots will make their way onto the internet.

Fellas, you have been warned.

“Alright, ladies,” she’ll say to followers, “this is what Kevin said.”

Or, ‘Oh my god, look what Dave said. Who would say this? Why does he think that this would be a good idea?”

Kirkby said her teammates shared some Tinder hacks before the Games. Open the app near the Olympic Village to see all the athletes pop up. Purchase the “Passport Mode” feature to set your location to any place you want.

When in Italy. At the Olympics. In February of all months. Perhaps Venus, the goddess of love, will help her find romance in the crisp, thin mountain air.

Reach USA TODAY Network sports reporter Payton Titus at ptitus@gannett.com, and follow her on X @petitus25.

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The SEC used to dominate the Big Ten in the NFL Draft. That advantage is eroding.
From Indiana to Ohio State, the Big Ten could control the NFL Draft within the first 10 picks.
SEC remains a massive force in the draft, but its advantage has slimmed.

OK, now it’s getting serious for the SEC.

The Big Ten owned the postseason. It whipped the SEC in head-to-head matchups. Indiana trampled Alabama in the Granddaddy game. The Big Ten captured three consecutive national championships, by three different teams, while the teams from the conference where “It Just Means More” sat home when the three championship games were played.

Check out the latest NFL mock draft of your choice, and you’ll realize the SEC’s troubles run deeper than a few trophies. If NFL draft experts are correct, the Big Ten is positioned to muscle its way alongside the SEC for draft selections, at least in the first round.

That’ll be another assault on a throne that no longer belongs to Greg Sankey’s conference.

SEC football losing its advantage in NFL draft

Until the past few years, the SEC asserted its supremacy in several ways.

For starters, it persistently told you it was better than everyone else. Nobody within college sports mastered the art of messaging (or arrogance) as well as the SEC. 

Then, it backed up that ceaseless bragging with facts — and, a collection of crystal balls. The SEC, during its pinnacle, produced seven national champions in a row.

As a finishing touch, the NFL gave further credence to the SEC’s superiority. Pro franchises loaded up on SEC talent each spring in the draft.

SEC coaches relished this NFL draft success. At every turn, they’d remind you the SEC set the pace for draft picks, proving the conference’s place atop the pecking order.

If athletes wanted to play against the best, if they wanted to prove themselves beyond a doubt to NFL scouts, they needed to be in the SEC, competing within a cauldron of pro-bound talent. That served as a powerful recruiting pitch for SEC coaches, as they pursued blue-chip high school prospects.

Tune in to this year’s draft, though, and you can expect to hear the name of Indiana quarterback Fernando Mendoza called with the No. 1 pick.

Utah, if you can believe this, has as many or more players projected to go in the first round as Alabama. (Side note: Kalen DeBoer has some ‘splainin’ to do.)

LSU likely will supply only one first-round pick. Georgia could have two or fewer go in Round 1. For SEC new blood Texas, it could be Day 1 crickets, while Texas A&M helps the SEC save face in the Lone Star State.

We’re a long ways from Day 1 of the draft becoming a coronation of Nick Saban or Kirby Smart’s roster.

Big Ten can assert itself in Round 1, Indiana to Ohio State

In the latest mock draft from USA TODAY’s NFL writer Michael Middlehurst-Schwartz, he projected only one SEC player, Auburn defensive end Keldric Faulk, to go within the top 10 picks.

The situation should improve for the SEC later in the first round, with a dozen SEC players projected overall in Round 1. The SEC might fend off the Big Ten, barely, for total first-round picks. But, the Big Ten is projected to be the most-represented conference within the first 15 picks.

That’s reflective of the overall shift occurring in college football these past few years. The Big Ten’s crème de la crème has leapfrogged the SEC’s.

However you slice it, this reflects a notable shift from yesteryear.

Consider the 2020 NFL draft.

That year, national champion LSU produced five first-round picks. The SEC broke its previously established record by supplying 15 of the 32 players selected on Day 1.

The SEC players kept coming after Round 1. The conference supplied 40 selections within the 2020 draft’s first three rounds. The Big Ten, ACC and Big 12 combined for 37 selections in those first three rounds.

Mind you, the SEC was smaller then, too. It did not include either Oklahoma or Texas.

“That’s not going to stop anytime soon, in terms of how strong the conference is,” NFL coach Dan Quinn told the AP, before that 2020 draft, of the SEC’s draft dominance.

To Quinn’s point about the SEC being a long-term NFL pipeline, the SEC paced all conferences in 2025 with 79 draftees, eight more than the Big Ten.

Although still on top (for now) on draft day, the SEC’s margin is shrinking.

In 2021, the SEC had 21 more players drafted than the Big Ten. That year, Alabama supplied six selections in the first round alone, after winning the national championship.

By 2023, the SEC’s draft pick advantage on the Big Ten had shrunk to seven.

Conference realignment influenced the shift. The Big Ten is the nation’s largest conference, spreading from coast to coast. Oregon, in particular, buoys the Big Ten’s draft output and its on-field clout. NIL has something to do with the evolution, too.

The SEC’s talent hasn’t dried up, but it did spread out, and it spread to other leagues. The first round of this draft will be a reminder of that.

Watching confetti fall on Big Ten teams humbled the SEC. Surrendering NFL draft bragging rights, though, would reveal the fuller magnitude of the SEC’s slip from all-encompassing supremacy.

Blake Toppmeyer is the USA TODAY Network’s senior national college football columnist. Email him at BToppmeyer@gannett.com and follow him on X @btoppmeyer.

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Framber Valdez, the two-time All-Star and World Series-winning left-hander and the last elite arm on the free agent market, agreed to a startling three-year, $115 million contract with the Detroit Tigers, ESPN reported Feb. 4, creating a potent punch atop the rotation for the 2026 season.

Valdez will team with two-time reigning Cy Young Award winner Tarik Skubal in Motown for, likely, one season only. Skubal becomes a free agent after this season and spent his Wednesday in an arbitration hearing with the Tigers; he’s seeking $32 million while the Tigers countered at $19 million, with a decision due later this week.

In the meantime, Detroit was hammering out an agreement with, potentially, Skubal’s less-decorated successor. And Valdez ended up signing for the highest average annual value − $38.3 million − given to a left-handed free agent.

Valdez, 32, has been among the more durable pitchers in the major leagues since seizing a full-time spot in the Houston Astros’ rotation in 2021. His best campaign came in 2022, when he pitched a career-best 201⅓ innings with a 2.82 ERA and three complete games, and posted three dominant playoff outings in winning Game 2 starts in both the ALCS and World Series, and the decisive Game 6 against the Philadelphia Phillies to nail down the Astros’ championship.

He becomes the latest high-profile, big-money free agent to depart the Astros in recent years, joining George Springer, Carlos Correa and Alex Bregman. Correa eventually returned to the Astros in a trade last summer, while the Astros traded slugger Kyle Tucker one year before he, too, would have likely walked as a free agent.

In Valdez’s final season in Houston, the Astros’ streak of qualifying for the playoffs ended at eight, as Valdez struck out 187 batters in 192 innings. He was embroiled in a mild controversy when he turned his back after his pitch struck Astros catcher César Salazar in the chest.

Valdez and Salazar were clearly crossed up on which pitch was coming, but Valdez’s remorseless reaction and the fact it came two pitches after Trent Grisham hit a grand slam off the lefty sparked questions that Valdez intentionally deceived Salazar.

The players met with manager Joe Espada after the game and Valdez insisted the cross-up wasn’t intentional. Valdez earned All-Star berths in 2022 and 2023, and three times has finished in the top 10 in AL Cy Young Award voting.

His signing will disappoint a handful of potential suitors, most notably the Baltimore Orioles, who lurked as a potential favorite as the winter dragged on and Valdez remained unsigned. Instead, Valdez will form a stout rotation in Detroit with Skubal, Jack Flaherty and 2025 All-Star Casey Mize.

Even if just for one season.

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‘I feel like my sophomore and junior year, I was kind of playing with this pressure kind of on me, just this pressure to get better each and every season,’ Canady told USA TODAY Sports. ‘I’m thankful to say this, and obviously blessed, but I feel like I’ve gotten every individual award I could at this point and the only thing that’s left is a national championship.’

The Kansas native is a two-time first-team All-American, two-time National Pitcher of the Year and was named USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year in 2024.

Canady, who led Texas Tech with 11 home runs and a .639 slugging percentage last season, also has the most expensive arm in college softball. However, the Stanford transfer is one piece of a much larger puzzle.

Texas Tech made an historic run to the WCWS in 2025. Before Canady’s arrival, the program had never won a conference title, let alone made it to the biggest stage in college softball. Under the guidance of head coach Gerry Glasco, the Red Raiders went 54-14 and earned the Big 12 championship.

After making the NCAA Tournament, Texas Tech advanced out of the Lubbock region and beat Florida State and Ole Miss in the super regionals. At the WCWS, the Red Raiders defeated softball bluebloods UCLA (12 championships) and Oklahoma (eight championships). But, they fell short of their championship dream, losing in the championship series to the Texas Longhorns in three games.

‘Obviously, kind of right off the bat, we were disappointed. We didn’t get the kind of outcome we wanted, and I feel like, as the summer went on, even to the fall, it finally set in, what we did,’ Canady said. ‘We did make history, and it didn’t feel like that in the moment, of course. I think it took a couple of months for it to set in, but we did accomplish a lot.’

Terry is another ace pitcher the Glasco will likely pair with Canady, and Spearman could provide critical pitching depth. What’s more, Williams and Burns should help the team’s offensive production. They lead Texas Tech’s transfer class that had over 100 home runs last season, a massive upgrade from the Red Raiders’ 60 homers in 2025.

With the 2026 season beginning Thursday, Feb. 5, Canady says the team has been doing intersquad work to prep for another championship run. She describes their practices as a ‘dogfight,’ and she’s noticed how ‘amazing’ the defense has been playing. As one of the leaders on the team, she’s taken it upon herself to share a message before regular-season action begins.

‘I feel like one that that’s kind of been our motto is to kind of shut out the outside noise,’ Canady told USA TODAY. ‘I feel like softball’s getting more attention, which is obviously good. We want more eyes on the sport, but on the other side of that, that also brings in kind of negative attention. So just trying to remember the only thing that really matters is who’s in the locker room.’

As Canady and the Red Raiders focus on one another, they have one goal in front of them: winning a national championship. The ace pitcher says Texas Tech needs to play its best softball in late May or early June, keep everyone healthy and get a little lucky.

The Red Raiders will also benefit from good team chemistry, ‘playing for the girls to the left and right of you.’ Canady said as athletes, they hope they play their best game all the time, but realistically, ‘that’s just not how it happens.’ Some things are out of their control.

‘This season, I’m not feeling the pressure as much because I know the one thing I still have left to accomplish is the team championship,’ she said.

‘I’m blessed to get all the individual accomplishments and accolades and things like that, but at the end of the day, I’d trade it all for just the team championship.’

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‘All are welcome to meet here in The Middle. The Middle has been a hard place to get to lately … Between red and blue. Between servant, and citizen. We need The Middle. We just have to remember the very soil we stand on is common ground. So, we can get there. We will cross this divide. Our light has always found its way through the darkness.”

– Bruce Springsteen, “The Middle,” Jeep Super Bowl commercial, Feb. 7, 2021.

“Nuance is great, but sometimes you have to kick them in the teeth.” – Springsteen, taking the stage Jan. 30 at “A Concert of Solidarity & Resistance to Defend Minnesota!,” benefiting Minnesota citizens killed by federal agents.

As Super Bowl 60 approaches Feb. 8, the gulf between this year’s national secular holiday and Super Bowl 55 in 2021 seems to get wider with every passing week.

Perhaps you remember: Unprecedented times that still struggled to find precedent, 11 months removed from a global pandemic that would kill 500,000 Americans in its first year. Eight months removed from the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis that spawned a global protest movement.

And one month removed from a band of aggrieved insurrectionists storming the Capitol in an effort to overturn the results of an election.

Five years later, so much has changed, yet similarities persist.

President Donald Trump is back in the White House. The country is largely “divided,” even as extreme times distort the typical fault lines. Shared truths remain elusive, as the news ecosystem takes another battering from industry conditions and aggressive misinformation.

The Super Bowl, though remains one of the USA’s cultural markers. And if the game’s great sidelight – the 30- to 60-second commercials that entertain fans during stoppages – is any indication, a look back at the lineup five years ago and the ads that will hit widescreens and hand-held devices this year reflects a culture less willing to embrace many difficult realities at the expense of mentally checking out.

“It’s so divided in the country right now,” Charles R. Taylor, a Villanova School of Business marketing professor and author of ‘Winning the Advertising Game: Lessons from the Super Bowl Ad Champions,’ tells USA TODAY Sports. “This isn’t that new. But it seemed like there was a period it was a little bit calmer. But now, what’s going on, people are really divided.

“Advertisers that make any reference to that division really risk alienating a lot of consumers. That’s why I think we’re seeing one of these two paths: humanity and messages where they’re trying to help people, or it’s really over-the-top escapism-type humor.”

Indeed, you’ll see the usual blend of celebrity mash-ups and cross-generational stars aiming to make an impact for their brands du jour: Sabrina Carpenter stacking Pringles, Jon Hamm, Scarlett Johansson and Bowen Yang returning fire for Ritz and Matthew McConaughey, Bradley Cooper, Parker Posey and George Clooney putting on for the food delivery apps that can drop a latte on your doorstep, if so inclined.

“I do think ads reflect, at some level, the sentiment and mood of the country,” says Kim Whitler, professor of business administration at the University of Virginia’s Darden School of Business. “They are a lens to understand pop culture at that moment. If you go back and see what’s happening, it’s a way of understanding society.

“Is it complete? No. but it’s a reflection of pop culture, media narrative, managerial press.”

Whitler has analyzed 11 years of data from USA TODAY ‘s Ad Meter, tracking dozens of metrics, most notably around content, tone, use of celebrities and emotional theme. Ads leaning heavily into humor had been on a steady rise in the late 2010s, rising to 76% in 2020, the Super Bowl that aired just weeks before the pandemic began.

It’s probably no coincidence that humor spots peaked at 91% in 2022 – one year after These Uncertain Times were strongly reflected in both ads and the broadcast.

And perhaps launching us into an era where there’s little choice but to play it safe, preferably in the most anodyne fashion possible.

Re-United? Not so much

Springsteen’s message back in 2021 wasn’t exactly radical. The Jeep ad centers on a chapel in Kansas marking the exact midpoint of the Lower 48 states.

“All are more than welcome to come here and meet – in the middle,” he intones, a wailing guitar riff accompanying his weary, everyman delivery.

It closes with a bit of wishcasting that certainly did not hold up in ensuing years:

“To the Re-United States… of America.”

The hopeful tone foresaw a society ready to welcome a vaccine coming online that would greatly dent, if not end, the COVID-19 pandemic when it became widely available months later. Instead, coming months and years would bring skepticism, COVID’s lingering endemic presence and a general rise in grievance culture.

Four years later, and Trump is back in office, the rioters imprisoned for their role in Jan. 6 have been pardoned and Springsteen last week was in Minnesota, joining former Rage Against The Machine guitarist Tom Morello for a benefit show following the killings of Renée Good and Alex Pretti by federal agents.

The middle, one can say, did not hold.

Trying times, flying lemons

If the time capsule from that Super Bowl reflects, as Whitler stated, the societal mood, the 2021 commercials certainly capture the uncertainty individuals, and, by extension, brands felt at that time.

Nine of the 57 ads in the 2021 lineup reflect some sense of civic responsibility or awareness, and five of those are at least loosely tied to the ongoing pandemic. Some likely felt vaguely anachronistic by the time they aired, more suited for, say, April 2020 than the coming spring when a largely vaccinated society reemerged.

The NFL’s “As One” spot features a Vince Lombardi hologram and inspirational speech dubbed into pandemic imagery – weeping medical personnel, porch food drop-offs – before cutting to a live shot of Tampa’s Raymond James Stadium, where a Kansas City Chiefs player is masked on the sidelines, as are fans in socially distanced pods.

Anheuser-Busch goes a lighter route in a pair of spots, with Budweiser’s “Let’s Have A Beer” indirectly acknowledging The Thing We’re Going Through: “So when we’re back, let’s remember – it’s never just about the beer.” Bud Light takes a more sardonic, gee-that-sucked approach with “Last Year’s Lemons.”

Little wonder that nearly nine out of 10 spots the next year steered hard into comedy.

“It’s easy in hindsight to minimize it,” says Whitler. “The summer of protests, the George Floyd killing, people cooped up – how important is watching sports to the psyche of America? All of that was shut down. There was no pressure valve release.

“It’s almost like if you ignored all that and created light and fluffy and silly, I don’t think it would’ve reflected the country at the time.”

The ads also seem to feature a greater commitment to multiculturalism and representation, key themes that emerged after the summer of protests in 2020.

The Ad Meter winner in 2021 was a Rocket Mortgage ad – “Certain Is Better” – featuring a Black family shopping for a home, with Tracy Morgan stressing the importance of certainty.

Squarespace (web site development), Logitech (creators, led by Lil Nas X), Indeed (job-seeking), Huggies (an adorable montage of newborns) and Robinhood (investing) features majority or entirely people of color in their spots.

A nominal increase in representation might have sown the seeds for what developed into the great DEI backlash, cresting with Trump’s reelection and subsequent executive orders. Suddenly, the notion of white “extinction” in advertisements had oxygen in online spaces.

And from 2021 to 2022, the composition of white actors in commercial media “corrected,” rising from 65% to 72%, according to Forbes.

Apolitical impossibility

So, what’s the state of play in 2026?

Increasingly, it’s a world where satire becomes harder to come by.

Five years ago, Will Ferrell, Kenan Thompson and Awkwafina respond to Norway’s dominance in the electric vehicle space by … launching an invasion of Norway on behalf of GM.

Innocuous little Norway? Hilarious!

Yeah, about that.

“What we experienced two weeks ago, when the U.S. used tariffs against allies as a political means to force through the perspective on Greenland – wanting to grab land from another land inside an alliance – exhibits how this is changing,” Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre said this week at the Oslo Security Conference, in the days and weeks after President Trump expressed his disappointment over not winning the Nobel Peace Prize, imposed 10% tariffs on allies like Norway and requested control of Greenland.

“The world order is not breaking down. Completely.”

All this coming at a time when brands are aiming more for the apolitical, an increasingly challenging task.

“The brands are in a no-win situation because once they take a political stand either way, they’re just gonna get themselves in trouble,” says Villanova’s Davis, citing Bud Light, Cracker Barrel and Nike facing dents in sales over perceived controversial campaigns or rebrands.

“It works the other way too – I wonder what Tesla stock price would be if (Elon) Musk had stayed out of politics. They’ve reduced the size of the universe that’s going to buy that brand. And that’s never a good idea.”

Still, politics are almost impossible to avoid, even if you wrap your message in the flag. Anheuser-Busch’s Super Bowl offering leans hard into both patriotism (happy 250th, America!) and its own 150th anniversary. The spot deploys its Clydesdales and a bald eagle (The Colbert Show 2000s intro would be proud), while Lynyrd Skynyrd’s Free Bird provides the soundtrack.

Pretty apolitical – so long as you can uncouple modern Skynyrd’s political leanings from the spot.

Even dogs aren’t safe. Ring is touting its cameras’ ability to track down lost pets, and donating said surveillance to animal shelters across the country. Yet that warm and fuzzy gesture comes at a time their partnership with security technology company Flock may greatly enhance law enforcement’s use of customers’ images.

So far, there is no evidence Ring data is being used for Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids, or other actions by DHS agencies. Yet the narrow degrees of separation make watching a simple dog commercial a little more fraught.

In that sense, not much has changed in five years, with this 250th edition of America bound to create a funhouse mirror of reactions.

“It’s going to be interesting to watch. You have an anniversary combined with perception around the president,” says Whitler. “The answer is a complex one – based on the decision makers, the brands they’re representing.

“You’d hope it be simple. In reality, how different cohorts and generations see America varies.”

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The Golden State Warriors made a move on Wednesday, Feb. 4, in an attempt to keep themselves contenders in the Western Conference.

The Warriors added center Kristaps Porziņģis in the final hours before the NBA’s trade deadline, coming to a reported agreement with the Atlanta Hawks. The Warriors sent Jonathan Kuminga and Buddy Hield to Atlanta in return.

For months, the Warriors were expected to trade Kuminga and were considered a candidate to land disgruntled Milwaukee Bucks star Giannis Antetokounmpo. The latter has seemingly changed, with Golden State having ‘moved on’ from Antetokounmpo in the wake of this deal, according to ESPN’s Shams Charania.

Here’s grades for the Kristaps Porziņģis deal:

Kristaps Porziņģis trade grades

Golden State Warriors grade: B

The Warriors are finally moving on from Kuminga, who had shown flashes of his talent and potential but never appeared to be on the same page as the Golden State coaching staff.

Porziņģis could be seen as low-risk, high-reward. If he is healthy, he could be just what the  Warriors need: a center that can shoot the basketball. He also adds much-needed size near the rim.

Atlanta Hawks grade: B

Kuminga provides a level of athleticism and physicality to the Hawks at the forward position. He has also shown the ability to score and play solid defense during his time with the Warriors. Hield was a positive bonus in the trade, being one of the better long-range shooters in the league. He will also add a lighthearted and fun energy to the locker room.

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The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission said Wednesday that it is investigating Nike for allegedly discriminating against white workers.

The agency that polices discrimination in the workplace filed an action in federal court in Missouri to compel the publicly traded athletic shoe and apparel giant to produce information in response to a subpoena the agency served on the company last fall, according to court filings reviewed by NBC News.

The EEOC said it was investigating allegations that the company’s mentorship and training programs and its personnel decisions gave nonwhite employees preferential treatment that amounts, according to the agency, to discrimination against white workers.

Nike is the world’s largest sportswear and apparel company, with nearly 80,000 employees and revenues of around $51.4 billion in 2024.

The allegations were not made by workers at Nike who believed they had been the targets of unfair treatment, however, as is typically the case in EEOC investigations.

Instead, the court filings show that this case stems from a commissioner’s charge brought by then-commissioner Andrea Lucas herself in May 2024, and based on publicly available information such as Nike’s own annual “Impact Reports” and information on its public website.

The EEOC’s request that a judge enforce the subpoena is the latest instance of the Trump administration using a federal agency that is typically charged with preventing and responding to discrimination against nonwhite Americans, and deploying it instead to protect what it says are the underrepresented interests of white people.

Nike has objected in court to many of the EEOC’s demands to documents over the last several months, arguing that they are vague, overly broad, and seek information dating back to well before the period in question.

“This feels like a surprising and unusual escalation,” a Nike spokesperson said. “We have had extensive, good-faith participation in an EEOC inquiry into our personnel practices, programs, and decisions and have had ongoing efforts to provide information and engage constructively with the agency.”

The spokesperson added that Nike has shared “thousands of pages of information and detailed written responses” in connection with the agency’s inquiry and said the company is in the “process of providing additional information.” Nike will respond to the agency’s petition, the spokesperson said.

Lucas was appointed chair of the EEOC by President Donald Trump in November 2025 after serving as a commissioner since 2020, when the president nominated Lucas to the agency.

The agency said it filed the subpoena enforcement action after “first attempting to obtain voluntary compliance with its investigative requests.”

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A pro-life group is releasing a new report claiming abortions have continued to rise nationwide since 2020 because of a Biden administration FDA policy that allows abortion pills to be prescribed via telehealth and shipped by mail — a move the group says the Trump administration could reverse.

In a report obtained by Fox News Digital, the Restoration of America Foundation (ROAF) argues that a COVID-era FDA policy under former President Joe Biden is driving an estimated more than 500 mail-order chemical abortions per day, citing data from Guttmacher and WeCount.

The data also shows that chemical abortions now account for the majority of abortions, making up about 63% in 2023, a jump from 39% in 2017.

The report also estimates that there were roughly 170,000 additional abortions in 2024 than would have happened if the abortion rate had remained at 2019 levels.

‘Since hitting a low in 2017, the national abortion rate has seen a persistent and troubling climb,’ the report states. ‘In 2019, the last full year that abortion by mail was clearly illegal, there were an estimated 916,460 abortions. Using our estimate for 2024, the overall growth in abortion from 2019 to 2024 was 22 percent. Over the same window, the U.S. population grew by just 2.9 percent. Had the abortion rate remained steady from 2019, there would have been 171,103 fewer abortions in 2024.’

The findings show abortion-by-mail made up roughly one in four abortions in the U.S. in the first half of 2025.

WeCount data cited in the report also shows an estimated 244,590 do-it-yourself abortions were facilitated by telehealth in 2024, including more than 120,000 pills sent into states where abortion was restricted or banned after the Supreme Court overturned Roe V. Wade in 2022, giving the power to make abortion laws back to the states.

The Biden administration policy removed safety standards that required women to see a doctor to be prescribed mifepristone, allowing it to be prescribed through telehealth and sent by mail. The report argues that the FDA under Biden justified the change using limited studies and adverse-event data, despite most mandatory reporting requirements for mifepristone complications being removed in 2016 under the Obama administration. A research paper in 2021 additionally compared adverse-event data with Planned Parenthood data and concluded that the system is ‘inadequate’ to evaluate the safety of mifepristone abortions.

‘People are calling up and saying whatever they need to say to get the drug in the mail,’ ROAF CEO Doug Truax said in an interview with Fox News Digital. ‘The point that we’re making is that abortions are on the rise dramatically. 874,000 in 2023, up to 1.1 million in 2024. Then on this trajectory, by the time President Trump leaves office, it’d be about 1.4 million a year. And so it’s largely driven by the drugs going out in the mail.’

‘There’s about 150 women a day that are being seriously harmed by this drug,’ Truax continued. ‘So we need to get them to go see the doctor. The doctor needs to verify where they’re at with the pregnancy. Obviously, if it’s an ectopic pregnancy, it means they could take this drug, and they could die from it, which has happened. But there are all kinds of sepsis and rupturing and hemorrhaging and everything going on with this drug.’

‘So there are two angles to this. We’re very pro-life over here. We want to go to zero abortions in the country. But the other angle is that this is a women’s health issue. So we need to decrease the number of abortions, and we need to basically save women from being harmed by this,’ he added.

Truax also noted that states with higher populations are receiving the most abortion pills through the mail and that Democrat-led states have enacted shield laws preventing GOP-led states from taking legal action against providers.

‘For instance, Texas, they don’t have abortion anymore, but they sure do,’ he said. ‘People think it’s down to zero. It’s not at all. It’s about where it was. So you have all these abortionists in, to name a few, Massachusetts and California. There’s dispensing organizations now around the country and around the globe that will mail these things out. They’re very active getting these abortion drugs into states that said, ‘we don’t want abortion here.”

The FDA continues to keep the in-person dispensing requirement for mifepristone suspended — a safety rule that had been in place for roughly 20 years before Biden’s FDA permanently removed it following a COVID-era suspension.

The policy was met with legal challenges under the previous administration, but the Supreme Court allowed it to remain in effect after ruling that the plaintiffs lacked standing. The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals had ruled the FDA’s action under Biden was likely ‘arbitrary and capricious’ under the Administrative Procedure Act.

Truax said that the Trump administration has the authority to nix the policy, and urged the federal government to do so.

‘I think that from a political standpoint, they’d rather not talk about it. But our point is, from a political standpoint, it’s going to start hurting. Pro-life Americans are really grateful to the president for the Supreme Court that we have, they got Roe thrown out, as it should have been a long time ago. But there’s more work to be done. We’re grateful for defunding Planned Parenthood. That’s great for a year. But the bottom line is, if the number of abortions is actually going up and there’s a step you could take to stop it, we got to do that,’ he said.

‘There’s a massive number of pro-life Americans that are base supporters of the president who may say, ‘wait a minute, we’ve been in power for this entire time and the number of abortions keeps going up, and we could have stopped it,” he added.

Republican lawmakers on Capitol Hill and state officials have been calling on the Trump administration to take action.

Last summer, more than 20 attorneys general urged Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and FDA Commissioner Marty Makary to complete a safety review of mifepristone and consider reinstating safeguards or removing the drug from the market. Kennedy and Makary vowed to conduct a new review of the safety of the drug, but they have not released a timeline for the results.

‘President Trump, Secretary Kennedy, and Commissioner Makary already have the tools at their disposal to reverse the legally and scientifically dubious decisions of the Biden Administration’s FDA and to reinstate the in-person dispensing requirement. The Trump Administration must act swiftly to restore commonsense medical safeguards to the chemical abortion pill,’ the ROAF report says.

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The Golden State Warriors’ trade saga with Jonathan Kuminga is officially ending as the team is dealing the 23-year-old forward and guard Buddy Hield to the Atlanta Hawks for Kristaps Porzingis, ESPN reports.

In another deal, the Warriors are sending Trayce Jackson-Davis to Toronto for a second-round pick, per ESPN.

Kuminga had been in a tumultuous relationship with the Warriors and head coach Steve Kerr over playing time and production dating back to last season. He’s played in just two games since Dec. 18, currently out with an injury.

While Kuminga gets a fresh start in Atlanta, Porzingis gets another in the Bay Area. Availability continues to be a persistent problem for Porzingis, who has appeared in just 17 games for the Hawks following his offseason trade by the Celtics. But if he can get back on the court he can provide needed size and additional scoring as a stretch 5 to Golden State.

This deal also seemingly ends the idea that Giannis Antetokounmpo could land in San Francisco ahead of the trade deadline, with ESPN saying the Warriors have ‘moved on.’

Kristaps Porzingis stats

Here are Porzingis’ average statistics for the 2025-26 regular season.

Games played: 17
Minutes: 24.3
Points: 17.1
Rebounds: 5.1
Assists: 2.7
Steals: 0.5
Blocks: 1.3
Field goal %: .457
3-point field goal %: .360
Free throw %: .840

Kristaps Porzingis contract details

Porzingis is set to be a free agent after the season. He’s currently sporting a cap hit of $30.7 million.

How old is Kristaps Porzingis?

Porzingis is 30 years old. The Warriors will be the sixth different team the fourth pick of the 2015 NBA Draft has played on.

Jonathan Kuminga stats

Here are Kuminga’s average statistics for the 2025-26 regular season.

Games played: 20
Minutes: 23.8
Points: 12.1
Rebounds: 5.9
Assists: 2.5
Steals: 0.4
Blocks: 0.3
Field goal %: .454
3-point field goal %: .321
Free throw %: .742

Jonathan Kuminga contract details

Kuminga has one year remaining after this season via a club option after signing a two-year, $46.8 million deal with the Warriors on Sept. 30, 2025.

How old is Jonathan Kuminga?

Kuminga is 23 years old. He was drafted by the Warriors with the No. 7 overall pick of the 2021 NBA Draft. He’ll be 24 in October.

Jonathan Kuminga highlights

Buddy Hield contract details

Hield is under contract for next season and holds a player option for 2027-28. He carries a modest cap hit that maxes out at $10.1 million in the final year if he opts in.

How old is Buddy Hield?

Hield is 33 years old. He was the sixth overall pick in the 2016 NBA Draft. The Hawks will be his sixth NBA team.

Buddy Hield stats

Here are Hield’s average statistics for the 2025-26 regular season.

Games played: 44
Minutes: 17.5
Points: 8.0
Rebounds: 2.5
Assists: 1.5
Steals: 0.8
Blocks: 0.2
Field goal %: .433
3-point field goal %: .344
Free throw %: .794

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