VOUX MAG

CELEBRITIES NEWS

Hot

Saturday, April 25, 2026

TMZ is flexing in Washington, with high-profile results. What took so long?

April 25, 2026
TMZ is flexing in Washington, with high-profile results. What took so long?

WASHINGTON (AP) — Aformer reality television staris in the sixth year of his presidency. His Cabinet includes a former wrestling executive along with a onetime “Real World” cast member who was filmed decades ago dancing in nothing but a towel. More than a half-dozen stars from the “Real Housewives” franchise just swung through Capitol Hill.

Associated Press President Donald Trump arrives at a Turning Point USA event at Dream City Church, Friday, April 17, 2026, in Phoenix. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon) FILE - President Donald Trump speaks alongside the FIFA World Cup Winners Trophy as FIFA President Gianni Infantino, right, and Vice President JD Vance, left, watch in the Oval Office of the White House, Aug. 22, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, File) Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth welcomes Minister of Defense for Indonesia Sjafrie Sjamsoeddin to the Pentagon, Monday, April 13, 2026 in Washington. (AP Photo/Kevin Wolf) FILE - Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., arrives at a campaign event on, Aug. 19, 2025, at Holt Bros. BBQ in Florence, S.C. (AP Photo/Meg Kinnard, File)

Trump

Shouldn't TMZ have been in Washington already?

The tabloid gossip site that reinvented Hollywood and celebrity gossip coverage istaking a swingat the nation's capital of late with TMZ DC, deploying staff to confront lawmakers paparazzi-style in Washington and turning to the public to capture candid images of politicians living it up on the road. The push has already created viral moments, including an image of Sen.Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., holding a wand at Disney World as chaos gripped airport security lines because of congressional inaction on a funding bill.

On Friday, TMZ put its Beltway foray on display at the Pentagon, with Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth calling on the outlet and singling them out as “new members of our press group here” — a subtle dig that mirrored his not-so-subtle campaign criticism of legacy media outlets.

Washington and Hollywood have long had an awkward relationship, with players in each power center harboring insecurities and misunderstandings about the other as politics and entertainment have steadily merged into a single cultural force.

Earlier efforts by TMZ to build a Washington bureau faltered. But this time may prove different.

PresidentDonald Trump’sreturn to the White House further normalizes a particular brand of celebrity culture in the nation’s capital that made him a tabloid fixture for decades. Moreover, Congress is currently gripped by scandal, with three lawmakers resigning in April alone after varying allegations, which include sexual misconduct and fraud.

Also, Gallup polling released this week found that disapproval of Congress has climbed to 86%, tying the record high. Only 33% of U.S. adults approve of Trump's overall job performance, according toAP-NORC pollingreleased this week. That’s a decline of 9 percentage points since early in Trump’s second term.

Washington's institutions are held in low regard

With Washington's institutions held in such low regard, the bigger surprise may be that TMZ hasn't attempted such a flex here sooner.

“I am legitimately surprised they weren't already there,” said Ana Marie Cox, who wrote the Wonkette blog, which covered Washington with an irreverence that was rare in the early 2000s. “They're actually a little bit late to the game.”

A representative for TMZ did not respond to a request for comment.

TMZ was founded in 2005 and is still run by hard-charging Los Angeles lawyer and media figure Harvey Levin, who has had an off-and-on relationship with Trump. Within a decade, TMZ made its name with a combination of sleazy and sensational celebrity news. Early in its life, TMZ broke stories that included antisemitic statements made by actor Mel Gibson during an arrest and an angry voicemail message left by actor Alec Baldwin to his daughter.

But the site, whose initials reference the 30-mile zone from the historic center of the television and film industry in Los Angeles, really established itself by breaking news of Michael Jackson’s death in 2009 and the drug use that led to it.

Its tactics can cross traditional journalistic boundaries, particularly when it comes to paying sources. Beyond the professional breach involved with such arrangements, the payments could run afoul of congressional ethics rules. Levin has not denied paying for story tips, which is frowned upon by traditional journalism outlets.

And TMZ has also had some high-profile failures, including reports that Beyoncé would perform at the 2024 Democratic National Convention, which didn’t happen.

Some of TMZ's work is being applauded

Yet some of TMZ's early work in Washington is being applauded.

Robert Thompson, a trustee professor of television and popular culture at Syracuse University, said the photo of Graham at Disney World was genuinely newsworthy because it showed lawmakers away from Washington during a political crisis. A representative for Graham didn't respond to a request for comment.

TMZ published images of lawmakers from both parties who left Washington during the recent congressional recess that overlapped with the ongoing Department of Homeland Security shutdown. Beyond Graham, the site published pictures of Democratic Sen.Cory Bookerof New Jersey and Rep. Robert Garcia of California.

Advertisement

TMZ is not currently credentialed by the congressional press galleries. That limits its Washington coverage to walk-and-talk interviews on the sidewalks outside the Capitol or in the hallways of public office buildings — a feature of its ambush-style celebrity interviews.

Some of the interviews are entertaining for audiences who are in on the bit. In one video this week, Rep. Troy Downing, R-Mont., seemed confused by questions about a party hosted by the gay dating and hookup site Grindr ahead of this weekend's White House Correspondents' Dinner.

“I don't understand,” Downing said. “Are they a media company?”

Others go in unexpected, sometimes touchingly personal, directions. When Rep. Lateefah Simon, D-Calif., was asked how lawmakers celebrate the 4/20 marijuana holiday, she spoke of how the day marked the anniversary of her father's death.

“4/20 is the day that my daddy died,” she said. “My dad was an amazing man in San Francisco. I think about him every single time there's 4/20.”

And sometimes the gotcha nature of the reports backfires. Rep. Jared Moskowitz, D-Fla., was among the lawmakers whose image was captured away from Washington during the DHS shutdown. He was shown at his son’s basketball game, prompting defense from colleagues, including Republicans, who said he shouldn’t be shamed for being a present father.

At Friday’s briefing, TMZ’s Charlie Cotton eagerly played into Hegseth’s branding of “the Department of War,” and the Trump administration’s claim that the war in Iran is necessary. “Would you consider changing the name again to the Department of Peace since that’s what we’re all after?” Cotton asked.

Hegseth gushed over the “great question” and declared that “the one institution that should win the Nobel Peace Prize every single year is the United States military.”

The long history of the ambush interview

The TMZ approach isn't particularly new. Longtime CBS correspondent Mike Wallace made a habit of the so-called ambush interview, catching unprepared subjects on camera.

Before he broke the news of an extramarital affair that would doom Democrat Gary Hart's 1988 presidential campaign, Tom Fiedler confronted the Colorado senator in a Washington alley. A reporter for the Miami Herald at the time, Fiedler said he “didn't set out to do that.”

“We simply found ourselves in that situation,” he recalled this week. “At that point, we knew that he knew we were there to observe what he was doing. Our feeling was we needed to let him know who we were so he wouldn't think there was, in the worst case, an attempted assassin stalking him.”

Nearly 40 years later, journalism in Washington is drastically different.

The Washington Postcut nearly a third of its staffin February in a brutal blow to the legendary newsroom. Other outlets are growing. The website NOTUS is rebranding as The Star, with ambitions to fill the gap left by the Post, particularly in local and sports coverage.

Cox, the former Wonkette blogger, is now a writer living in Austin, Texas. Reflecting on her time in Washington, she said her goal was to “demystify politics and show that these are people who don't necessarily deserve our respect.”

But she expressed concern about coverage whose tone reinforces the eye-rolling aspects of Washington. If she were starting Wonkette today, she said, “I don't think I'd be as funny.”

“Funny is how we got here,” she said. “Making fun of Donald Trump did not work.”

AP Media Writer Dave Bauder and Bill Barrow contributed to this report.

Read More

Miss Indian World pageant winners mark the end of a decades-long tradition

April 25, 2026
Miss Indian World pageant winners mark the end of a decades-long tradition

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — Codi High Elk was a shy teenager most comfortable caring for horses on her family's ranch on the Cheyenne River Reservation when she threw away an application to compete in a new pageant for Indigenous women — an application her brother fished out of the trash, sending her on a path to becoming the first Miss Indian World.

Associated Press This photo provided by Andrew Steven Hansen shows Miss Indian World Shayai Lucero, front left, at the Stanford University Powwow in 1997, in Stanford, Calif. (Andrew Steven Hansen via AP) In this photo provided by Louisa McCovey, Tori McConnell, Miss Indian World 2023, greets children at the 2023 Yurok Tribe Salmon Festival in Klamath, Calif. (Louisa McCovey via AP)

Native American Pageant Ending

That was in 1984, when High Elk remembers letting her six older siblings do most of the talking and wanting no part in a competition that required public speaking. But the event that transformed her from shy teen to an ambassador for her people has come to an end.

“From the day I got my crown, my life changed,” said High Elk, who credits her time as Miss Indian World with giving her the confidence to pursue two degrees and a career expanding credit access for Lakota people. “I want that same opportunity for my granddaughters.”

The pageant has been a headlining event atGathering of Nations, a massive and at times controversial event that bills itself as the largest powwow in North America, for more than four decades. The competition shaped the lives of young women from across the U.S. and Canada eager to share cultural knowledge and compete for the prestigious title and iconic, intricately beaded crown.

But this yearwill be the lastfor the powwow, with the final Miss Indian World named in 2025. Organizers have said the time has come for the events to end, but gave no other details.

The pageant's rotating collection of beaded crowns are set to be retired when the two-day gathering culminates Saturday.

Stiff competition

Dania Wahwasuck, of the Prairie Band Potawatomi and Pyramid Lake Paiute tribes, won her title before a roaring crowd last year. Her pastel-colored crown and sash featuring a star quilt motif and another set that sparkles with rhinestones and shades of pink will be among those retired Saturday.

The pageant invited Indigenous women, aged 18 to 25, to compete. Contestants had to be single, with no children and pledge to maintain specific moral standards.

Contestants described an intense five-day process with interviews, public speaking and a highly anticipated traditional talent showcase.

Tori McConnell, who won the title in 2023, sought advice from Karuk and Yurok elders while developing her performance. She showcased traditional basketry, explaining first in Karuk and then in English how she weaved using materials gathered from her ancestral homelands in northwest California.

“To have our art recognized on that level was so validating,” McConnell said. “Not just for me but for my community.”

A cultural ambassador

The Miss Indian World crown has traveled around the world, from aMāori Hakacompetition in New Zealand to thePeace Memorial Parkin Hiroshima, Japan and theOceti Sakowin campat the height of protests at Standing Rock against an oil pipeline.

In the summer of 1984, High Elk recalls scouring a Paris grocery store for ingredients to make fry bread and Lakota tripe soup for the university students who had invited her there.

“You become an ambassador not just for your own culture but for all Indigenous peoples,” said Shayai Lucero, who was crowned Miss Indian World in 1997.

Advertisement

Lucero, who comes from Acoma and Laguna pueblos in New Mexico, did not grow up in a powwow culture. But at the 1997 Stanford University Powwow, she was embraced by a community of pueblo people who had been in the Bay Area for decades due to a federal program that sought to relocate Native Americans off reservations and into cities.

“All these people showed up who knew my family, knew our language and traditions,” said Lucero. “Suddenly, I felt at home.”

During their tenure, winners have advocated for causes ranging from Indigenous language revitalization to domestic violence prevention.

Cheyenne Kippenberger, Miss Indian World 2019, focused on mental health as COVID-19 forced ceremonies, cultural events and community gatherings to shut down. As the only two-year titleholder, she hosted online events and encouraged Native people to get vaccinated.

“I remember thinking, everybody’s feeling really lonely and confined. We need to find a way to connect people,” said Kippenberger, a citizen of the Seminole Nation of Florida.

The end of an era

There are no plans for the Miss Indian World pageant to continue, the organization said. The title is trademarked by the Gathering of Nations, Ltd., the nonprofit that operates the powwow and pageant.

Over the years, Gathering of Nations has been criticized and called overly commercial. Founder Derek Mathews, who at times has claimed distant Cherokee ancestry but is not a tribal citizen, has made few public comments in response.

Matthews' daughter, Melonie Matthews, who is Santa Clara Pueblo on her mother's side, said the organization did not consider transferring the Miss Indian World trademark to any other group.

“The Miss Indian World pageant goes hand in hand with the powwow. It was never a stand-alone event,” she said in an emailed statement.

Several former titleholders, however, have been exploring the creation of a new national pageant for Indigenous women.

“A lot of us were saying ‘Miss Indian World is bigger than one powwow,’" Lucero said. “We don't need the powwow to continue her legacy.”

Many tribal nations and powwows crown royalty. But young women who dream of representing their communities on a national, Native-focused pageant stage won't have that avenue. Five years ago, Miss Native American USA crowned its last winner. The Miss Indian Nations and Miss Indian America titles also are defunct.

Many past Miss Indian World titleholders who went on to become lawyers, teachers, entrepreneurs, language and culture bearers and sisters to one another say the crown empowered them as leaders.

“It's a bittersweet feeling,” said Kippenberger, who now heads a tribal consulting firm. "But I feel full confidence and optimism that something positive will fill in the gap.”

Read More

Trump hosts crypto contest winners at Mar-a-Lago as his coin languishes

April 25, 2026
Trump hosts crypto contest winners at Mar-a-Lago as his coin languishes

By Michelle Conlin

Reuters

NEW YORK, April 25 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump is set to host winners of his second annual meme coin contest at his Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Florida, on Saturday, offering top buyers of his $TRUMP cryptocurrency an audience with him even as the ‌token's value has plunged 96% from its peak last year.

The gala will take place as scrutiny of the Trump family’s broader crypto ventures has intensified, ‌with Democratic leaders calling for investigations.

The 297 largest $TRUMP token holders who registered for the contest will attend a gathering that Trump has billed the "most exclusive" crypto and business conference in the world, where he ​will give the keynote address. The top 29 also will attend a “special VIP reception and champagne toast” with the president.

The day-long event is the latest example of Trump blending presidential stature with his family’s growing portfolio of speculative crypto ventures - a convergence government ethics experts say has little modern precedent, particularly since Trump's personal crypto wealth has ballooned as he reshapes U.S. crypto policy.

While many retail buyers who piled into the token around its launch have seen most of their paper gains disappear, the Trump family and affiliated ‌entities have continued to profit from the broader crypto ecosystem.

A ⁠Reuters examination found that the family has taken in more than $1 billion from crypto asset sales, including at least $336 million tied to meme-coin sales in the first half of 2025 alone, with potentially billions more in unrealized gains.

“President Trump’s assets are in a trust ⁠managed by his children," White House spokesperson Anna Kelly told Reuters, adding that the president only acts in the best interests of the American public. "There are no conflicts of interest."

Last year’s meme coin contest, at his golf club near Washington, D.C., raised similar concerns for ethics experts, as did a February conference at Mar-a-Lago hosted by the president’s sons, Eric and ​Don ​Jr., for World Liberty Financial, the Trump family’s most lucrative crypto venture, which drew top figures ​from Washington, D.C. and Wall Street.

Contest rankings were based not ‌only on holdings of $TRUMP but also on purchases of Trump-branded merchandise - including sneakers, watches and fragrances - between March 12 and April 14. Winners are set to receive Trump-branded items including a commemorative poster, two trading cards, a "Fight Fight Fight Red Beauty" watch and a fragrance.

Advertisement

$TRUMP TOKEN NEAR LOWS

The $TRUMP token is hovering near its all-time lows. When the contest closed earlier this month, $TRUMP closed at $2.81, down steeply from the $75 all-time high shortly after it was introduced in January 2025.

The 297 qualifying winners hold roughly $29 million worth of $TRUMP, according to crypto analytics firm Nansen, far below the $148 million Reuters reported they held for the inaugural May 2025 contest.

"The contrast with last year's launch is stark," ‌according to a Nansen analysis prepared for Reuters. When it was launched, buyers accumulated and held ​the token, helping fuel a sustained rally, Nansen said. "The 2026 contest generated a moment of activity, ​but not the same conviction we saw in 2025. Demand just isn’t ​sticking.”

Meme coins - a type of crypto with no utility or intrinsic value - are based on online trends and viral cultural phenomena. Most ‌of them exhibit parabolic price curves, with a rise in the ​early stage often followed by a plunge in ​value.

Among the top $TRUMP wallets, according to blockchain data, is one linked to crypto billionaire Justin Sun, who finished first in the contest for the second consecutive year.

Sun, one of the largest publicly known investors in World Liberty, sued the company on Tuesday, alleging that it froze his holdings. Investors have ​grown frustrated with the venture, saying it is opaque, tightly ‌controlled and unresponsive to complaints.

In a social media post, World Liberty co-founder and CEO Zach Witkoff, the son of Trump administration special envoy Steve ​Witkoff, called the lawsuit “meritless,” and accused Sun of “misconduct that required World Liberty to take action to protect itself and its users."

Sun did not ​respond to a request for comment.

(Michelle Conlin; Editing by Sergio Non and David Gaffen)

Read More

Four people in critical condition after two trains collide in northern Denmark

April 25, 2026
Four people in critical condition after two trains collide in northern Denmark

Four people are in critical condition after two trains collided in northernDenmark, police have said.

The Independent US (AFP/Getty)

Another 13 people were injured when the trains collided between the towns of Hillerod and Kagerup, around 40km north ofCopenhagen.

Dozens of emergency workers have been called to what police describe as a “serious accident”

Two trains have collided between Hilleroed and Kagerup at Isteroedvejen, Thursday, April 23 (Reuters)

Images of the scene on public broadcaster DR showed two yellow and grey trains, both with visible damage to the front, facing each other in a wooded area and surrounded by emergency services.

Advertisement

"It is two local trains that have collided head-on," a spokesperson for the rescue services said.

Four people were critically injured (Reuters)

"There are injuries among the passengers. Everyone is out of the trains, so no one is trapped... Large resources have been dispatched to the scene," the spokesperson added.

The injured have since been transported away from the scene of the accident in ambulances and helicopters, the fire department said on X.

“Rescue work at the scene is still ongoing,” the department said. “Passengers who are not physically injured have been gathered at the collection point.”

More to follow....

Read More

Friday, April 24, 2026

Argentina's World Cup title defense clouded by turmoil in domestic soccer scene

April 24, 2026
Argentina's World Cup title defense clouded by turmoil in domestic soccer scene

BUENOS AIRES (AP) — After Argentina won theWorld CupinQatar 2022, the president of the Argentine Football Association carried a replica of the trophy at every public appearance. He received standing ovations.

Associated Press FILE - Claudio Tapia, president of the Argentine Soccer Association (AFA), arrives at court in connection with a complaint filed by Argentina's tax collection agency on failure to pay social security taxes, in Buenos Aires, Argentina, March 12, 2026. (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko, File) FILE - Claudio Tapia, president of Argentina's Soccer Association, back, attends to the Argentinian soccer league final match between Estudiantes de La Plata and Racing Club in Santiago del Estero, Argentina, Dec. 13, 2025. (AP Photo/Nicolas Aguilera, File)

WCup Argentina Turmoil Soccer

Claudio Tapiahad reason to consider himself part of the sporting achievement. The AFA leader took a chance on the inexperiencedLionel Scalonias the national team's coach, a move many say helped Argentina win its first World Cup title in 36 years.

Now, as La Albiceleste prepares to defend its title inJune-July,Tapia finds himself at the center of a crisis that has shaken the country's soccer landscape.

The public mood has turned against him and AFA due to corruption investigations, unpopular changes to the domestic soccer league and a string of World Cup warmups against low-ranking opponents.

Meanwhile, Tapia, 58, has been locked in apower strugglewith Argentine President Javier Milei over the ownership structure of the country's soccer clubs.

In late March, Tapia was charged with tax evasion following a complaint filed by Milei’s government. Hours later the soccer federation boss was booed while receiving a plaque on the field before Argentina’s friendly match against Mauritania in Buenos Aires.

National team players, including team captain and soccer icon Lionel Messi, have tried to stay away from the conflict as they prepare for the World Cup.

“Let it be clear that we are football players, we came here to play football,” midfielder Rodrigo De Paul said last month after a friendly match against Zambia. “We don’t get involved in politics, we don’t understand those kinds of things.”

Tapia made it a habit to post photos of him and Messi on social media ahead of national team matches. The recent dearth of such photos was seen by Argentine soccer commentators as a sign of distance between the AFA president and the team's most famous player.

Messi, who played with the national team in their recent friendlies in March, left Buenos Aires without making any statements.

A clash between the soccer federation and the government

Milei's long-standing feud with Tapia stems from the libertarian president’s desire to privatize Argentina's member-run soccer clubs, a move AFA has resisted.

Late last year, tax authorities filed a complaint against Tapia and other AFA executives for allegedly failing to pay 19 billion pesos ($13 million) in social security contributions between 2024 and 2025. The courts opened a criminal investigation and in March filed formal charges against Tapia, who could face a sentence of two to six years in prison.

AFAdenies the accusationsand claims that Tapia is the victim of a smear campaign.

Tapia has also faced widespread criticism among soccer fans for reforms to the domestic soccer leagues, which critics say had more to do with strengthening his internal power than improving the quality of the competitions.

Advertisement

After securing re-election in 2024, a year before the expiration of his second term, he suspended relegations for that season and expanded the top Argentine soccer league to 30 teams. Most of the top leagues in Europe have 18-20 teams.

Critics say the new format has diluted the quality of league.

“The schedule is awful. And they don’t play each other in a round-robin format over the course of a year, so there is no way for anyone to truly boast of being the best,” said Osvaldo Santander, a 60-year-old San Lorenzo fan.

Tapia still has the support of the leaders of most of Argentina's soccer clubs, except River Plate and Estudiantes La Plata, who have withdrawn from AFA's executive committee. It's a different situation in the stadiums, where fans frequently hurl insults at the AFA president.

Will the crisis affect Argentina's World Cup performance?

Santander will travel to the United States with his son to cheer on Argentina during the tournament. The journey will cost approximately $12,000, an amount they saved up over four years.

He hopes the players will be unaffected by the crisis in Argentine soccer “given that most of the players play abroad and aren’t living the day-to-day reality that we are.”

Some point to Italy winning the World Cup in 1982 and 2006 despite domestic leadership crises and corruption scandals.

“The connection between the administration and the football can sometimes be logical, and sometimes it isn’t. Football is unusual in these matters, a world of its own,” said Ezequiel Fernández Moores, a columnist for the newspaper La Nación who wrote several books on Argentine sports.

More decisive for La Albiceleste’s performance in the World Cup could be their questionable preparation with friendlies against second-tier teams, none from Europe, in order to obtain greater commercial benefits for AFA.

Argentina has faced teams much lower in the FIFA rankings, such as Indonesia, Puerto Rico, Angola, Mauritania, and Zambia. Their final two warmup matches will be in June against Honduras and Iceland, neither of whom qualified for the tournament.

De Paul, Messi's teammate at Inter Miami, called for unity as the team gets ready for the tournament co-hosted by the United States, Canada and Mexico.

“Winning is difficult, and winning twice is even more difficult," he said. “If we want to defend what we’ve achieved, the whole country has to stand together.”

AP soccer:https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Read More

3 things that stood out in NFL Draft first round: Rams' surprise tops list | Opinion

April 24, 2026
3 things that stood out in NFL Draft first round: Rams' surprise tops list | Opinion

It’s just like theLos Angeles Ramsto go against the grain. While pretty much every other team addressed immediate needs while working the first round of the NFL draft – including the New York Jets with their three picks – Les Snead and Sean McVay looked to the future.

USA TODAY Sports

They nabbed an understudy for reigning NFL MVP Matthew Stafford.

It’s not that Ty Simpson, theAlabama quarterback chosen 13th overall, saw this coming.

There was no private workout with the Rams. He never talked to Snead, the crafty GM, until Thursday night. Ditto for McVay, his new QB whisperer. There was no “Top 30” visit to Rams headquarters. Throughout the draft process, there was not much contact beyond visiting with scouts back on campus.

“I really had no clue,” Simpson said during a video conference not long after he bear-hugged Roger Goodell on the stage in Pittsburgh.

<p style=The NFL Draft regularly produces its most memorable moments off the stage, when selections end with a handshake or embrace from the commissioner.

See the moments when draft night emotions peak as Roger Goodell greets players hearing their names called.

Above, Texas Tech Red Raiders linebacker David Bailey embraces NFL commissioner Roger Goodell after he is selected by the New York Jets as the number two pick during the 2026 NFL Draft at Acrisure Stadium.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> Jeremiyah Love of Notre Dame hugs NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell after being selected third overall pick by the Arizona Cardinals during Round One of the 2026 NFL Draft at Acrisure Stadium on April 23, 2026, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Carnell Tate of Ohio State shakes hands with NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell celebrates after being selected fourth overall pick by the Tennessee Titans during Round One of the 2026 NFL Draft at Acrisure Stadium on April 23, 2026, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Mansoor Delane of LSU hugs NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell after being selected sixth overall pick by the Kansas City Chiefs during Round One of the 2026 NFL Draft at Acrisure Stadium on April 23, 2026, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Sonny Styles of Ohio State hugs with NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell after being selected seventh overall pick by the Washington Commanders during Round One of the 2026 NFL Draft at Acrisure Stadium on April 23, 2026, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Jordyn Tyson of Arizona State hugs with NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell after being selected eighth overall pick by the New Orleans Saints during Round One of the 2026 NFL Draft at Acrisure Stadium on April 23, 2026, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

Roger Goodell shares hugs with players on the NFL draft stage

The NFL Draftregularly produces its most memorable moments off the stage, when selections end with a handshake or embrace from the commissioner.See the moments when draft night emotions peak as Roger Goodell greets players hearing their names called.Above, Texas Tech Red Raiders linebacker David Bailey embraces NFL commissioner Roger Goodell after he is selected by the New York Jets as the number two pick during the 2026 NFL Draft at Acrisure Stadium.

Now Simpson has quite the hint of what the Rams –who typically don’t even hang on to first-round picks– really think of him.

Simpson is pegged to be the Quarterback of the Future. Check back in, say, 2029 to get a fair reading on the worthiness of the pick. Yet knowing the track records of Snead and McVay, the prediction market will lean heavily on the positive side.

And that possibility will be bolstered by the fact that Simpson, the only quarterback drafted on Day 1 besides No. 1 overall pick Fernando Mendoza, can go to school behind Stafford, 38, while trying to close the gap of starting just 15 games in college.

"I haven’t talked to Matthew yet but I’m super pumped to be in a room with him and learn from him,” Simpson said. “He’s one of the greatest of all time. We watched his film all the time when I was at ‘Bama, the stuff the Rams did and Coach McVay. So, the fact I get to be in a room and soak up all the knowledge, I couldn’t ask for a better situation.”

Which sounds just perfect for those sneaky Rams.

Advertisement

More:Rams Draft picks 2026: Full list of team's round-by-round selections

Cowboys got a steal in Caleb Downs

It was no surprise that four Ohio State players were chosen at the top of the draft. But it was undoubtedly something of a shock that Downs, the superb safety, was the fourth one off the board. He lasted until the 11th pick, which came afterDallas swung a trade with Miamito move up one spot.

This fills a major need, adding impact to Jerry Jones’ pledge to overhaul the NFL’s worst defense. And they didn’t stop there in providing new coordinator Christian Parker with a talent upgrade. Malachi Lawrence, the defensive end from Central Florida (23rd overall), may not be another Micah Parsons, but he is sorely needed to juice the pass-rush.

More:Cowboys draft picks 2026: Full list of round-by-round selections

Chiefs, Steve Spagnuolo have major reinforcements on the way

After dealing all-pro cornerback Trent McDuffie to the Rams and losing fellow corner Jaylen Watson to L.A. as a free agent, what did the Kansas City Chiefs need to get out of this draft? Cornerbacks.

The tone was set whenK.C. swung a trade with Clevelandand jumped up three spots to sixth overall, snagging the top-rated cornerback on the board, LSU’s Mansoor Delane. Then, later in the round, Chiefs GM Brett Veach landed Clemson defensive tackle Peter Woods with the 29th pick. Woods’ learning curve just accelerated because he’ll line up alongside ultra-intense all-pro Chris Jones.

It was a great opener for the Chiefs. D-coordinator Steve Spagnuolo has proven to be adept at quickly grooming young talent to impact his schemes.

And with more ammo for Day 2 and 3, they could be just getting started with that theme. Remember 2022? That’s when the Chiefs used seven of their 10 picks to restock the defense with a banner crop that included McDuffie, Watson, George Karlaftis, Bryan Cook, Leo Chenal and Joshua Williams – all of whom made significant contributions to back-to-back Super Bowl championship teams.

Now, four years later, Karlaftis is the only one remaining from that class. Wanted: Reinforcements.

Contact Bell atjbell@usatoday.comor follow on X: @JarrettBell

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:NFL draft Day 1 recap: Sneaky Rams, Ty Simpson biggest surprise of night

Read More

North Carolina Crowds Cheer First Mountain Train Since Helene

April 24, 2026
North Carolina Crowds Cheer First Mountain Train Since Helene

Have you ever seen old photos or illustrations of townspeople who have gathered at their local railway station to cheer on a visiting dignitary or to mourn a dead statesman? Well, it happened in a small North Carolina town recently, and the celebrity was — the train itself.

The Weather Channel

It wasn't a particularly glamorous train. It was a Norfolk Southern freight train with 59 cars loaded full of cement, paper, plastic pellets, hops and barley malt. But this train was a big milestone for a region still recovering from the fury of Tropical Storm Helene: It was the very first revenue train to complete a route that had been decimated by the storm's flooding.

Advertisement

The train, designated NS 9900, had departed from the town of Hickory, North Carolina, around 8 a.m. Saturday and made its triumphant arrival at the Asheville rail yard by 2:30 p.m. Along the route, a crowd of rail enthusiasts gathered at the historic train depot in Old Fort to witness this momentous return, some cheering, others simply watching in quiet appreciation as the locomotive rolled past, marking the end of months without rail service.

The celebration was particularly meaningful because the storm had inflicted its worst damage on a challenging 15-mile stretch of track that includes the famous "Old Fort Loops," an impressive feat of 1900s engineering that guides trains up a steep mountain ascent through a series of tunnels as they approach the Blue Ridge Mountains.

These loops were the final section of the Asheville-Salisbury line to be restored after a massive rebuilding effort. Until their repair, the vital connection between North Carolina's mountain industries and the rest of the state had been completely severed, making this humble freight train's journey a symbol of the region's resilience and recovery.

Read More