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Hollywood hit maker with Birmingham roots rebrands as country artist

Coleridge Tillman, better known as Sebastian Kole in Hollywood, has made a name for himself as a successful songwriter, but the Birmingham native is making a change in his music career.

Kole grew up in the Dolomite neighborhood of Birmingham. Growing up, he honed in on his musicianship by joining the Birmingham Boys Choir, eventually going to the University of Alabama. He graduated from UA with a degree in Music Technology.

After graduation, Kole co-wrote songs for Jennifer Lopez and Flo Rida that helped him land a music deal with EP Entertainment and Motown in 2012. He left Birmingham, moved to Los Angeles and wrote his biggest hit for Alessia Cara, “Here.” That song ultimately won her a Grammy in the Best New Artist category. After that he went on to work with artists including Alicia Keys, John Legend and Usher.

Since then, Kole has reinvested in Birmingham. His family bought the longtime Birmingham business, Michael’s Restaurant with a rooftop bar named after the songwriter, Bar Sebastian.

But today, Kole has developed a new persona, Pynk Beard. That identity, visible in the pink whiskers on his chin, allows him to delve into country music, something he said was always a part of him due to his Alabama roots.

In the last year, Kole wrote a song with country artist Shaboozy in mind, but every time he submitted it, the A&R representatives told him that he should keep the song for himself.

“I thought they were saying, ‘Don’t send me this no more – it’s trash,’” he said. “But eventually I sent it to a producer friend of mine, and he said, ‘Hey my wife thinks you should do this yourself.’

“That same day, a good friend of mine in Ireland called me and told me that, ‘Bro, God told me to tell you, you have spent the last 10 years putting batteries in everybody else’s back, it’s time for you to come out and shine,’ and I’m thinking, ‘What?!,‘” Beard said.

The song he shopped around is called “One Slow Dance.” That song will be on his upcoming album, “Sugar and Salt.” And the song is already making rounds on social media.

Birmingham Mayor Randall Woodfin shared Pynk Beard’s clip of his new song on Facebook and Instagram, just one day after Beard posted on his own page.

While Beard gave his interview to AL.com during an interview at Yo Mama’s Restaurant, the restaurant cashier, a police officer, and another diner stopped by his table to say how much they enjoyed his new song.

According to Beard, he hasn’t even officially put the song out.

“That feels so weird to me! I’m not used to that! Not as an artist,” he said. “As a songwriter, people know that I write songs and say they’re proud of me. This little moment where people are recognizing me as an artist…I’m like what?! Okay,” Beard said. He smiled, showing off a diamond-studded grill.

At the end of the day, Beard said, he wants people to experience good music and to feel inspired by it.

“I want them to remember what it was like to be real and vulnerable!” he said.

On Jan. 31st, Pynk Beard will be performing at Michael’s Restaurant. Tickets start at $20.

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Blue Origin spacecraft rides into orbit on Huntsville-built engines

Huntsville-built rocket engines pushed a new craft into space early Thursday in a milestone for both Blue Origin and NASA’s hopes of a permanent base on the moon.

The New Glenn heavy-lift vehicle’s seven BE-4 engines – put together on the company’s sprawling campus at Cummings Research Park – ignited at 2:03 a.m. on a launch pad at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, according to Blue Origin.

A set of different engines, also assembled in the Rocket City, pushed the company’s second-stage payload into medium Earth orbit about 13 minutes later. The Blue Ring Pathfinder will test core flight, ground systems, and operational capabilities of the Blue Ring payload platform, which can accommodate up to 6,600 pounds of cargo, primarily satellites.

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4 armed people, including 2 teens, arrested after Jefferson County police chase

Four people, including a 16-year-old, are facing charges after leading law enforcement officers on a chase in a stolen vehicle.

Jefferson County sheriff’s deputies were in pursuit of a stolen vehicle on Gadsden Highway and I-59 South on Tuesday.

The chase ended in the 400 block of West Valley Avenue, when the suspect’s vehicle left the roadway and collided with a curb and a fence, said sheriff’s spokesman Lt. Henry Irby.

Four people inside the vehicle fled on foot; however, they were all captured.

The driver, 19-year-old Juwon Poole, is charged with two counts of receiving stolen property, reckless endangerment, attempting to elude and various traffic violations.

He has been released from jail after posting bonds total $83,500.

Irby said attempt to elude and resisting arrest are being sought for an 18-year-old, and a charge of attempting to elude is sought for a 19-year-old. Their names have been withheld pending formal charges.

A 16-year-old boy also faces charges of attempting to elude.

All four suspects were armed, Irby said. Two of the guns were stolen.

Anyone with additional information is asked to call investigators at 205-325-1450 or Crime Stoppers at 205-254-7777.

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Birmingham mother releases late son’s music on his 30th birthday: ‘Legacy’

This is another installment in the series “Beyond the Violence.” Sign up for the newsletter here.

Instead of hugging her son on his birthday, Catrina Carey will be releasing the music her son, Derrick Marks, never got the chance to finish.

Derrick Marks, a Birmingham musician, was shot and killed on Feb. 25, 2020, at the age of 25. Carey will release her son’s music, a collaboration with another local artist and close friend of Marks, on Jan. 16, on what would have been his 30th birthday.

“It’s a legacy. Being a parent that has lost a child, you want their legacy to live on, but you also want other young men to continue their legacy while they’re alive,” Carey said. “When you’re actually working on something, it’s keeping his legacy alive, because when that music is out there, we can go to any platform and see his face and hear his voice, and that’s what it’s all about.”

Birmingham ended 2024 with 151 homicides, breaking the city’s all-time homicide record. As the city works to make Birmingham safer in 2025, families who are still grieving the loss of their loved ones are finding ways to keep their legacies alive.

Marks died in a hail of gunfire at Hunter Ridge Apartments in the Roebuck area. The shooting occurred mere minutes after he left home to try to get his mind off the death of his best friend, Delquan McNeily, 21, who had been fatally shot just four hours earlier.

Carey pleaded with her son to stay home because he was so upset, but he thought it would help to get together with other friends to game on their PlayStations.

Carey said she believes her son was then ambushed. His murder is still unsolved.

Shortly after Marks’ death, his family hosted an album release party in his honor, where they played his music, projected his videos on the walls and invited other rappers that Marks collaborated with to perform.

“We even had ministers come out and talk to the young men about life. Even Derrick’s father came to that event and spoke to the young men about the violence and helping them do something positive to be out of the street,” Carey said. “We think it’s positive when you can go to a young man, and say, ‘you have so much talent. What can I do to help you?’”

Mose Leonard, 30, a Birmingham musician, finished the song his best friend never got to release.

Leonard met Marks when they were only 17, when Integrity Bible Church would open up their gym for kids in the neighborhood to play basketball.

“We used to go there after school sometimes and after, we would go over to each other’s house and hang out. We started becoming real close,” Leonard said as he laughed at the memories.

“We love each other to death. We would go over there every day to Ms. Catrina’s house, play the game, hang out, spend the night over there. And it was one point in time that I stopped going home, I just stayed over there. It was my first home, my real home.”

As young adults, Leonard and Marks started a music group with six other friends called My Brother’s Keeper. They all got MBK tattoos together in 2014.

Derrick Marks’ mother, Catrina Carey, put up a billboard to celebrate what would have been her son’s 30th birthday.Catrina Carey

“It was like a brotherhood between us, a brotherly bond…It really meant a lot, how serious we took it, being loyal to each other,” Leonard said. “I want everyone to know that Derrick was a wonderful person, a real genuine person…He’s going to always put his friends and family first.”

Carey encouraged Leonard to continue working on his music even after Marks’ death.

Leonard said growing up, Marks was like a brother to him. He still calls Carey mom.

“Ms. Catrina, that’s really my mother. That’s my mom. I love her to death too. I really appreciate her. Every morning, she tells me good morning, she loves me. It’s small things like that let you know how much love she has for me,” Leonard said.

He fondly remembers spending days in the studio with Marks. Leonard said finishing and releasing the song for Marks means a lot to him because a lot of the music they made together over the years has been lost.

“This young man is still living. It would be good if we put this song out and he gets discovered, he gets offered the contracts that my son was being offered,” Carey said.

Since losing her son, Carey has become a counselor and mentor to others who have lost a loved one to gun violence.

“Remember the happy times…Think of the laughter, the memories you made. Your loved one would not want you to grieve and be sad all the time. It’s okay to move on with your life. They’re never forgotten,” Carey said. “Losing a loved one so violently and so premature taught me that every moment is special.

While Marks’ family is still grieving his loss, they find ways to honor his memory every day.

Velinda Carey holds a photo of her brother, Derrick Marks, who was shot and killed Feb. 25, 2020, at the age of 25, hours after a friend was killed. Marks was a rapper and a singer. Amarr Croskey/The Birmingham Times.

Velinda Carey holds a photo of her brother, Derrick Marks, who was shot and killed Feb. 25, 2020, at the age of 25, hours after a friend was killed. Marks was a rapper and a singer. Amarr Croskey/The Birmingham Times.Amarr Croskey

Carey recently helped her daughter, Velinda, move to a new home in Pensacola, Florida, which was one of her brother’s favorite places to visit. Velinda believes her son can live a safer life away from Birmingham.

“My daughter chose to move out of the state because her son is graduating high school next year. He’s afraid to be in Birmingham after he graduates…She is so afraid for him to be here because of all of the killings,” Catrina Carey said.

On New Year’s Eve, the mother and daughter met in Pensacola, where they scattered Marks’ ashes, to release balloons in his honor.

Carey said she hopes she can help other young men get the opportunities her son did not get the chance to.

“It’s like I’m stepping into his role now…He was the type of person that would give someone the shirt off their back, and if you wanted to be motivated to do something, he was definitely a motivator that would help you in any kind of way, motivate you in any kind of way, work with you, collaborate with you to reach your goal,” Carey said.

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UPS, U.S. Postal Service package delivery change: What it will mean for P.O. Box users

UPS has ended a contract with the U.S. Postal Service and the termination means changes for some people with post office boxes.

Under the change, UPS Sure Post packages are now only being delivered by UPS drivers, a spokesperson for the International Brotherhood of Teamsters spokesperson told Supply Chain Dive. In the past, the final leg of these deliveries was made by the U.S. Postal Service; now, they will be handled by UPS after the Jan. 1 contract expiration.

“Millions of packages moved away from SurePost and the United States Postal Service and returned to UPS package cars this month, now being sorted and delivered by hardworking UPS Teamsters,” Teamsters said in a Facebook post. “The increase in volume provides more delivery opportunities and access to overtime for rank-and-file UPS Teamsters.”

While Teamsters touted the changes, it creates issues related to some deliveries. The Postal Service is the only carrier permitted to deliver to post office boxes, Army posts and Navy fleets, MyNBC5 reported. The end of the agreement means UPS customers will now have to ship their packages directly to a U.S. location or their address.

UPS told the station if someone does not have a valid street address, the best option is to have packages to sent to a UPS store. Now, any package addressed to a P.O. Box or military address shipped through UPS will be refused and sent back to the sender.

You can read more here.

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Alabama high schoolers may soon have another requirement before they can graduate

Alabama state Sen. Rodger Smitherman, D-Birmingham, has pre-filed a bill that would require public high school students to receive instruction in violence prevention, conflict resolution, and mediation before graduation.

Under SB34, public school students entering ninth grade in the 2026-2027 school year would complete a course or program in violence prevention, conflict resolution, and mediation before they could graduate from high school, according to the bill’s text.

The course would be required to cover all of the following topics:

  • Responsible decision-making.
  • The causes and effects of school violence and harassment, cultural diversity, and nonviolent methods for resolving conflict, including peer mediation.
  • The consequences of violent behavior.
  • The causes of violent reactions to conflict.
  • Nonviolent conflict resolution techniques.
  • The relationship between drugs, alcohol, and violence.
  • The implementation of voluntary peer mediation programs and the integration of conflict resolution models in classrooms.

The bill states that each local board of education would be able to choose their own curriculum for satisfying the requirements.

Teachers would receive additional training from the State Department of Education on these topics, the bill says.

Smitherman did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

But he has been outspoken about pushing legislation to reduce violent crimes in his district in response to the Sept. 21 mass shooting at Hush Lounge.

The shooting, which occurred in Birmingham’s Five Points South entertainment district, killed four and left 17 injured.

The senator has also prefiled another bill, SB33, that would require couples to take at least one conflict resolution class before they can get married in the hopes of reducing domestic violence occurrences.

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Florida governor makes his pick to replace Marco Rubio in US Senate

Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody will take Marco Rubio ‘s seat in the U.S. Senate, Gov. Ron DeSantis announced Thursday, making Moody only the second woman to represent Florida in the chamber.

Elected as the state’s top law enforcement officer in 2018, Moody campaigned on a pledge to voters that she’d be a prosecutor, not a politician. Along with DeSantis, Moody boosted her political profile during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, calling on the federal government to “hold China responsible” for the outbreak.

In elevating her to the post, DeSantis praised Moody as a key player in his political battles, a law and order prosecutor who’s prepared to help President-elect Donald Trump “secure and shut the border,” rein in inflation, and overhaul what he described as a federal bureaucracy “run amok.”

“I’m ready to show up and fight for this nation and fight for President Trump to deliver the America First agenda on Day 1,” Moody said during Thursday’s announcement at a hotel in Orlando.

Before running for statewide office, Moody worked as a federal prosecutor. In 2006, she was elected to the post of circuit judge in Hillsborough County, home to Tampa. A fifth generation native of Plant City, Florida, Moody was once named queen of the city’s famed strawberry festival. She’s a three-time graduate of the University of Florida and she and her husband, a law enforcement officer, have two sons.

As the state’s attorney general, Moody has been instrumental in defending DeSantis’ conservative agenda in court and has joined other Republican-led states in challenging the Biden administration’s policies, suing over changes to immigration enforcement, student loan forgiveness and vaccine mandates for federal contractors.

“I’m happy to say we’ve had an Attorney General that is somebody that has acted time and time again to support the values that we all share,” DeSantis said.

Under Florida law, it’s up to the Republican governor to pick Rubio’s replacement, after Trump picked the three-term senator to be his next secretary of state. Moody will serve in the Senate until the next general election in 2026, when the seat will be back on the ballot.

Moody fought unsuccessfully to keep an abortion rights measure off the ballot in Florida in 2024, saying proponents were waging “a war” to protect the procedure. The measure did go before voters but ultimately failed to get the 60% approval needed to pass.

She was also among the state attorneys general to sign on to the lawsuit backed by Trump aimed at overturning Joe Biden’s election victory in 2020.

Moody could play a key role in the upcoming hearings for Trump’s Cabinet nominees, some of whom are expected to face a tough path to confirmation.

Republicans narrowly hold a majority in the Senate, 53-47, but they are down to 52 after Vice President-elect JD Vance resigned his seat last week ahead of taking office. That mean’s Trump’s nominees need support from almost every GOP senator for majority confirmation over objections from Democrats.

Republican state Sen. Joe Gruters, a key Trump ally in the state, was among those who had pushed the president-elect’s daughter-in-law Lara Trump as their top pick for the Senate seat. Lara Trump removed herself from consideration in December.

Still, Gruters praised Moody, calling her “a winner here in Florida.”

“She’s very popular. And I think people see the job that she does and they appreciate her work and her effort at trying to … keep Florida safe,” Gruters said ahead of the announcement.

Moody’s appointment opens up a key vacancy in Florida’s Cabinet, giving DeSantis another shot at expanding his influence in the state. DeSantis will also get to pick a replacement for outgoing Chief Financial Officer Jimmy Patronis, who’s leaving his post to run for former Rep. Matt Gaetz’s open seat in Congress.

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Legendary MLB announcer dies at 90: ‘His enthusiasm for life was always present’

MILWAUKEE (AP) — Bob Uecker, the voice of his hometown Milwaukee Brewers who after a short playing career earned the moniker “Mr. Baseball” and honors from the Hall of Fame, has died. He was 90.

The team announced Uecker died Thursday morning, calling it “one of the most difficult days in Milwaukee Brewers history.” In a statement released by the club, Uecker’s family said he had battled small cell lung cancer since early 2023.

“Even in the face of this challenge, his enthusiasm for life was always present, never allowing his spirit to falter,” the family said.

Uecker was best known as a colorful comedian and broadcaster who earned his nickname during one of his numerous appearances on Johnny Carson’s late night show.

Born and raised in Milwaukee, Uecker signed his first professional contract with the Milwaukee Braves in 1956 and reached the majors in 1962. He’d last six seasons in the big leagues as a backup catcher, finishing with a .200 average and 14 homers.

He won a World Series ring with St. Louis in 1964 and also played for Atlanta and Philadelphia.

“Career highlights? I had two,” he often joked. “I got an intentional walk from Sandy Koufax and I got out of a rundown against the Mets.”

Uecker also befriended former Brewers owner and MLB commissioner Bud Selig, who initially hired him as a scout. Selig liked to joke about how Uecker’s initial scouting report was stained with mashed potatoes and gravy.

Selig eventually brought Uecker to the broadcast booth. Uecker became the voice of the Brewers in 1971, in the second year after the team moved from Seattle.

Uecker remained with the club from that point on and became one of the Brewers’ most indelible figures. Brewers manager Craig Counsell grew up in the Milwaukee area and remembered spending summer days throwing a baseball against the roof and catching it while listening to Uecker’s broadcasts.

“There’s no single person in this franchise’s history who has been as iconic and as important as Bob Uecker,” said Jeff Levering, a member of the Brewers’ broadcast team since 2015.

Even as his celebrity status grew nationwide, Uecker savored the opportunity to continue calling games to fans in his hometown.

“To be able to do a game each and every day throughout the summer and talk to people every day at 6:30 for a night game, you become part of people’s families,” Uecker once said. “I know that because I get mail from people that tell me that. That’s part of the reward for being here, just to be recognized by the way you talk, the way you describe a game, whatever.”

Uecker was honored by the Hall of Fame with the Ford C. Frick award in 2003 and spent nearly 20 minutes keeping the Cooperstown, New York, crowd of about 18,000 in stitches.

“I still — and this is not sour grapes by any means — still think I should have gone in as a player,” he quipped.

“Ueck” got his big break off the field after opening for Don Rickles at Al Hirt’s nightclub in Atlanta in 1969. That performance caught Hirt’s attention, and the musician set him up to appear on “The Tonight Show” with Johnny Carson. He became one of Carson’s favorite guests, making more than 100 appearances.

Carson was the one who dubbed Uecker “Mr. Baseball.” And the name stuck.

But Uecker’s comedy was just a part of his abilities. His warm storytelling and delivery made Uecker a natural to become one of the first color commentators on network TV broadcasts in the 1970s with ABC. In the ’90s, he teamed up with Bob Costas and Joe Morgan for the World Series.

From there, Uecker reached most households as one of the Miller Lite All-Stars in popular commercials for the beer brand based out of Milwaukee and Uecker later launched his TV acting career in 1985 on the ABC sitcom, “Mr. Belvedere.”

Uecker played George Owens during the successful 122-episode run of the series that lasted six years, as the head of the family and sports writer in a home that brings in a butler who struggles to adapt to an American household.

In a bit of casting that kept things pretty close to home, Uecker also played a prominent role in the movies Major League (1989) and Major League II (1994) as crass announcer Harry Doyle for a down-and-out Cleveland Indians franchise that finds a way to become playoff contenders.

“I’m part of American folklore, I guess,” Uecker told The Associated Press in 2003. “But I’m not a Hollywood guy. Baseball and broadcasting are in my blood.”

His wry description of a badly wayward pitch — “Juuuust a bit outside!” — in the movie is still often-repeated by announcers and fans at ballparks all over.

Uecker’s acting left some to believe he was more about being funny than a serious baseball announcer, but his tenure and observations with the Brewers were spot on, especially when games were tight. Equally enjoyable were games that weren’t, when Uecker would tell stories about other major leaguers, his own career and his hobbies as an avid fisherman and golfer.

“I don’t think anyone wants to hear somebody screwing around when you got a good game going,” Uecker said. “I think people see ‘Major League’ and they think Harry Doyle and figure that’s what Bob Uecker does. I do that sometimes, I do. But when we’ve got a good game going, I don’t mess around.”

In his later years, he took a serious approach to his health, swimming daily leading up to heart surgery in April 2010. Very soon after the procedures, doctors said Uecker returned to walking several miles and was ahead in recovery.

Uecker pushed to return to the booth and began calling games again in July, saying he bribed the doctors by allowing them to throw out the first pitch.

“You talk about all the things Bob has done, he never wanted to leave Milwaukee,” Selig said. “Above all, he made himself into a great play-by-play announcer. That’s what he did. He’s everything to this franchise and loves every minute of it.”

Uecker’s own career provided him most of his material. His former teammates said Uecker would do impressions of other broadcasters on the bus, but Uecker turned the spotlight on himself after his playing career was over.

“I signed with the Milwaukee Braves for $3,000. That bothered my dad at the time because he didn’t have that kind of dough,” he said “But he eventually scraped it up.”

Another classic: “When I came up to bat with three men on and two outs in the ninth, I looked in the other team’s dugout and they were already in street clothes.”

Uecker also presided over the stirring ceremony that closed Milwaukee County Stadium in 2000. When the Brewers’ new stadium opened as Miller Park in 2001, the team began selling “Uecker Seats” high in the upper deck and obstructed for a $1.

The stadium, now known as American Family Field, has two statues in Uecker’s honor. There’s a statue outside the stadium and another one in the back of Section 422, a nod to the Miller Lite commercial in which he famously said “I must be in the front row!” while getting taken to one of the worst seats in the ballpark.

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Gatorade Girls Alabama Cross Country Player of the Year is repeat winner

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Dunkin’ had a temporary doughnut shortage: Will other doughnut chains run out?

Some Dunkin’ stores across the country temporarily ran out of the chain’s signature item.

According to multiple reports, stores in states including Nebraska, New Mexico, and Arizona ran out of doughnuts, posting signs apologizing for a shortage due to a manufacturing error.

In an email to USA TODAY on Tuesday, a spokesperson for Dunkin confirmed a single-supplier issue “temporarily impacted some locations in a handful of states.”

“Less than 1% of Dunkin’ locations are currently still impacted, and we’re actively working to restock those locations,” the spokesperson said in the statement. “We anticipate that inventory will be replenished soon.”

USA TODAY reports that as of Tuesday, locations in Nebraska have replenished their doughnut supply.

The publication also reached out to Krispy Kreme to see if the North-Carolina-based coffee and doughnut chain had any supply issues.

“At Krispy Kreme, we make our doughnuts fresh from scratch every day at shops all across the country,” Dave Skena, the Chief Growth Officer at Krispy Kreme, told USA TODAY in an emailed statement. “We don’t rely on other manufacturers for the awesome doughnuts we serve our guests.”

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