General News

General

You can score the New Balance Classics 574 sneaker at a major discount

If you’ve been eyeing a fresh pair of sneakers for summer, now’s the time to grab one of New Balance’s most popular sneakers at a fraction of the price. The classic New Balance 574 sneaker, known for its retro-inspired look and all-day comfort, is currently marked down at Zappos, but sizes are already flying off the shelves.

With this deal, you can get select New Balance Classics 574 shoes in both men’s and women’s sizes at various markdowns. The cheapest available is the Incense/Black style for $55 as compared to the sneaker’s list price of $90. However, most are marked down for around $60-$70.

New Balance Classics 574

The New Balance Classics 574 lifestyle sneaker is on sale in select colors at Zappos while supplies last.

Buy Now

The New Balance U574v1 design incorporates a classic suede and mesh upper, providing a balance of durability and breathability. This design not only enhances the shoe’s aesthetic appeal but also offers practical benefits for daily wear.

RELATED: The ASISCS Gel-Kayano 31 shoe is on sale at Zappos this week, but it’s selling out fast

“Built for reliability using revolutionary technology, the New Balance Classics U574v1 Sneakers are crafted from suede and mesh upper for breathability. Equipped with ENCAP midsole cushioning that combines soft foam with a durable polyurethane rim, these shoes deliver all-day support. Add these sporty shoes to your footwear collection,” Zappos product details state.

All product features included in the New Balance Classics 574 sneaker are as follows:

  • Lace-up closure.
  • Polyester vamp, collar, and tongue mesh design.
  • Round toe design.
  • Rubber outsole.
  • Imported.

Those interested in this deal can checkout the full listing on Zappos website.

Read More
General

See you later? Alligator sightings on the rise in part of Alabama

More alligators are popping up across the Rocket City.

While they have been in the Tennessee Valley for over a century, residents in the southern and western areas of Huntsville are seeing an increased number of alligators, according to the City of Huntsville.

The earliest sighting of an alligator in the area was in 1894.

Over the years, alligators have been seen in Morgan and Lauderdale counties, on Haysland Road and off Zierdt Road, like near this Madison apartment complex.

People may be seeing more alligators right now because the 900-pound animals are more visible after large amounts of rain.

While neighbors may want to approach an alligator and take a picture, officials warn against it.

“I would caution citizens to resist any temptation to play with, feed or otherwise interact with alligators when they are encountered,” District 5 Council Member John Meredith said. “No one wants to see anyone hurt or killed, especially children, as a result of human-alligator interactions.”

It’s rare for an alligator to attack a human. Florida only averages seven unprovoked attacks a year. An attack has not been documented in Alabama.

Because they are a federally protected species, it is illegal to kill an alligator without a reason. City of Huntsville officials say that you should call Huntsville Police if an alligator poses a threat to a person.

Read More
General

Singer who became a film legend with 2001 cult movie hit has died at 57

Rebekah Del Rio, a singer-songwriter who achieved cinematic legend with her performance of “Llorando” in David Lynch’s 2001 opus “Mulholland Drive,” died June 23 at her residence in Los Angeles. She was 57 years old.

Del Rio’s death was confirmed through the Los Angeles Coroner’s Office. No further details about her death are currently available.

Lynch was first introduced to Del Rio by their mutual CAA agent Brian Loucks in the mid-’90s.

The singer was working under a country record deal in Nashville, Tenn., which she had landed off of her recording of “Llorando,” a Spanish-language cover of Roy Orbison’s “Crying.” Upon their meeting, Lynch asked Del Rio to perform the number and covertly recorded her.

The performance became the basis for the Club Silencio scene, an addition by Lynch to his by-then-rejected ABC pilot “Mulholland Drive,” which he was reworking into a feature film.

The Silencio sequence marks a reality-shattering crescendo to Lynch’s film — and an emotional crest, with leads Naomi Watts and Laura Harring both bursting into tears while viewing Del Rio’s performance in the cavernous club.

While the sequence ends with Del Rio’s character fainting, revealing that she had been lip-syncing, the singer belted out the number for every take while filming.

“There were many takes. And with every take, I sang along, because I felt I had to produce that same feeling with the vibrato in my throat so the audience could see it,” Del Rio told IndieWire in a 2022 interview.

“I also wanted the beautiful girls in the balcony, [the film’s stars] Laura Harring and Naomi Watts, to experience it live. They were present while I was doing my scene, so I sang to them.”

The brief but memorable performance put Del Rio on the map in the film industry.

She was called upon by writer-director Richard Kelly for his star-studded 2006 sci-fi dystopia “Southland Tales,” in which Del Rio sang “The Star-Spangled Banner” during an apocalyptic final act.

Her vocals can also be heard on the soundtracks for “Sin City,” “Man on Fire” and “Streets of Legend.”

Del Rio’s connection to Lynch continued through the rest of the filmmaker’s career. (Lynch died in January at the age of 78.)

She performed alongside Moby in one of the episode-capping roadhouse sequences of Showtime’s revival series “Twin Peaks: The Return.” She also joined for touring performances of The Red Room Orchestra Plays the Music of Twin Peaks over recent years.

Less than two weeks before her death, Del Rio performed live at a charity event “Mulholland Drive” screening at the Philosophical Research Society in Los Angeles.

Born July 10, 1967 in Chula Vista, Calif., Del Rio began performing in San Diego before moving to Los Angeles. She had a son, Phillip C. DeMars, in 1986. DeMars died in 2009 at the age of 23.

© 2025 Variety Media, LLC, a subsidiary of Penske Business Media; Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC

Read More
General

Stanley’s new colorful hard coolers are perfect for long summer days

Stanley just made summer even cooler…literally. The brand known for its viral tumblers is now offering a line of colorful hard coolers, and they’re built to handle everything from beach days to backyard barbecues.

Stanley states that its coolers are designed with durability in mind. They’re made to withstand bumps, drops and long days in the sun, all while keeping your drinks ice-cold for days on in. And, with summer in full swing, now’s the perfect time to snag one before your next weekend trip or pool day.

The Stanley hard cooler collection includes several sizes and fresh color options that feel just right for summer including soft pinks, bold greens and classic neutrals. Be sure to checkout the full rundown of these new Stanley coolers below.

RELATED: Stanley surprise drops its highly-anticipated Summer Edit collection

Stanley’s The Cold For Days Wheeled Outdoor Cooler provides easy transportation features with plenty of storage space.(Stanley1913)

The 50-quart Cold For Days Wheeled Outdoor Cooler has space for all your friends’ favorite foods and drinks. Double-wall foam insulation keeps things nice and chilled, while the bungee system sits on top to carry the extras. It also features a telescoping handle that extends for easy wheeling on any terrain. With durability in mind, grab it by the handles, load up your car and have fun out there.

The Easy Carry Outdoor Cooler + Strap

Stanley’s The Easy Carry Outdoor Cooler + Strap is a classic hard cooler that comes with a heavy duty strap for easy transportation.(Stanley1913)

Stay chill with the Easy Carry Outdoor Cooler. Choose from classic colors with a matching shoulder strap for a hands-free delivery. With picnics and beach days ahead, just sling it over your shoulder and go. Double-wall foam insulation keeps things nice and cold wile the Easy Carry shoulder strap clips on and off and a bungee on the lid carries the extras.

Adventure Easy Carry Outdoor Cooler

The Adventure Easy Carry Outdoor Cooler is a smaller cooler made for traveling.(Stanley 1913)

Newest to Stanley’s line of hard coolers, the Adventure Easy Carry Outdoor Cooler is ruggedly lightweight, leakproof and boasting more than twice the foam insulation of a typical cooler. It is ideal for tailgates, fishing trips and even all-day festival festivities. And, it’s roomy enough to hold 21 cans of your favorite brew or soda and can keep ice frozen for over a day. There’s even an adjustable bungee system for securing your favorite Stanley bottle to the lid.

Adventure Cold For Days Outdoor Cooler

The Adventure Cold For Days Outdoor Cooler stands out among the line of Stanley coolers as it can keep drinks cold for up to four days.(Stanley 1913)

Long weekends and epic road trips have met their match. The Adventure Cold For Days hard cooler can keep your food and drinks cold for four days, even under sweltering conditions. The durable, leak-free design and extra height is built to accommodate two-liters, longnecks, fifths and magnums so everything fits comfortably and stays protected. Close it up and use the top as a table, step stool or seat.

Read More
General

Family ‘destroyed’ as Canadian man living in Florida since childhood dies in ICE custody

Johnny Noviello moved from Canada to Daytona Beach when he was 10 years old. He grew up in Florida and became a lawful permanent resident.

On Monday, June 23, he died at the Federal Detention Center in downtown Miami, after six weeks in immigration detention.

Noviello, 49, is the ninth person to die in U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody since the beginning of the year, and the fourth to die in a Florida facility.

ICE did not provide a preliminary cause of death in a statement released on Thursday. The Miami Dade Medical Examiner’s office said that his official cause of death is currently under investigation. Authorities have ruled recent deaths in ICE custody in Florida as natural causes.

On Thursday morning, Noviello’s older brother went to their father’s house to deliver the news. Speaking with the Herald on the phone, Noviello’s father said that the last time he spoke with his son was a two-minute phone call weeks ago, after he was first placed in the federal facility.

“We are destroyed,” Angelo Noviello, 80, said.

Johnny Noviello was found unresponsive at 12:54 p.m, according to an ICE press release. Staff tried to resuscitate him and called 911, but less than an hour later, he was pronounced dead by Miami Fire Rescue Department.

“ICE remains committed to ensuring that all those in its custody reside in safe, secure, and humane environments,” the press release said. “At no time during detention is a detained illegal alien denied emergent care.”

Noviello had been in the United States legally since 1988, and got his green card in 1991. But in 2017, he and his father were both arrested and charged with selling drugs out of their auto shop. Court records show that Johnny Noviello was convicted in 2023 of selling opioids – oxycodone, hydromorphine and hydrocodone – in Daytona Beach.

Daniel M. Leising, a defense lawyer who represented Noviello in the case, said that he served about four months in county jail, was released on community control for a year and then placed on probation in February. He said that Noviello had no prior charges, and had not violated his probation.

On May 15, 2025, ICE arrested Noviello at the Florida Department of Corrections Probation office in Daytona Beach and placed in removal proceedings. The federal government can move to revoke people’s green cards and deport them for committing certain crimes, including drug trafficking and other serious felonies.

Noviello’s family had been repeatedly calling the facility to get in touch with him, his father said. They had recently reached out to Leising for help in trying to contact him when reporters notified the lawyer that he had passed away.

“This comes as an obvious shock,” Leising said.

The defense lawyer said that it is required in Florida that judges warn defendants that criminal charges and convictions can lead to deportation. But prior to Noviello, Leising said, ICE had not detained any of his clients in over 20 years of practicing law to his knowledge.

“He was just working, nothing out of the ordinary, no violations, nothing else,” Leising said. “There was nothing on my mind that would’ve created any circumstance where Johnny Noviello would have been a danger to anyone.”

His family said that Noviello had epilepsy and was on seizure medication. They had been working “painstakingly to make sure that he got his meds,” Leising said.

Under a February interagency contract between ICE and the Federal Bureau of Prisons, the federal detention center in downtown Miami has been contracted to hold immigration detainees in four units.

In January and February, two immigrant detainees died after they were detained at the Krome North Service Processing Center, an ICE facility outside of Miami. The Medical Examiner’s office ruled that both died of natural causes – a stroke and “complications of schizoaffective disorder” – but a Miami Herald investigation found delayed medical treatment and questionable care.

Several months later, on April 25, a 44-year-old Haitian woman, Marie Ange Blaise, died at another nearby ICE detention center, the Broward Transitional Center.

The consulate of Canada was informed of Noviello’s death, according to the ICE press release. His family said they will soon begin planning his funeral.

As required by Congress, ICE must release a report on each death that occurs in the agency’s custody within 90 days. Deaths are published on the agency’s website.

Angelo Noviello said that his son was a “worker” – taking various jobs throughout his life and enjoying the movies, bowling, pool, and the beach in his free time. He called Johnny’s death “the biggest loss.”

“He was a really good person,” he said.

©2025 Miami Herald. Visit miamiherald.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Read More
General

Keep that junk off our junk: Op-ed

Parents, teachers, and coaches often say things they never thought they’d have to say. Real sentences I’ve uttered include “Let’s keep the mulch off the kitchen table” and “Next time you run a fast break, stop near the hoop – don’t sprint into the parking lot.” Cultural observers, mass communicators, and people who write for publication sometimes find themselves in a similar situation. Here’s a baffling public service announcement the world somehow needs:

Spraying ungodly factory-made chemicals on your crotch or injecting salmon sperm into your face are bad ideas.

Wait, what?

(That’s the correct reaction.) Keep reading.

Most of us have seen the commercials for the former, for “full-body deodorants.” These ads show happy people dousing their privates with roll-on or aerosolized chemicals; some even regale us with “balls, under-boob and butt” sung to the toddlers’ tune (or formerly toddlers’ tune?) of “Head, Shoulders, Knees and Toes.”

I’d argue that if we don’t have the common sense to realize spraying mass-produced, made-as-cheaply-as-possible industrial chemicals on our thinnest skin and most sensitive areas is stupid, we’re really in trouble. I’d even argue that if we don’t have a visceral “WTF” reaction to these ads, we’re really in trouble. I mean, y’all … Sometimes people stink. And sometimes certain parts stink worse than others. And that’s okay. It’s part of being human. Especially if you’re working in the heat or exercising, you’re going to sweat (science note: that’s so you don’t potentially die). Heck, here in Alabama, the summer air is basically sweat. Sweat and stink for a bit, then take a shower. Most of us are lucky enough, at least for now, to enjoy the miracle of clean running water. That’s new under the sun, and it’s awesome. Use it. We even have soap. No need for more chemicals designed to increase a corporation’s profit, just to avoid a few moments of – gasp! – odor.

I understand some people have medical conditions, unusual genetics, diets, or medications that contribute to, shall we say, extra funkiness of the non-James-Brown variety, but those small groups are not what these ad campaigns (and half our economy) are about. The commercials and the products they hawk wouldn’t exist if they were targeted only at that niche demographic. The campaigns are designed to heighten and prey on mass insecurity. Apparently we don’t remember the sordid histories of delicately worded but public pressure on women to use unhealthy feminine deodorant sprays or douches, because the same kind of thinking seems to be back in vogue.

Selling beliefs, programs, or products that work against human traits is a winning formula not just for control but for profit. It’s an even easier swindle as we swim through cultural currents created by our insecurity-stoking, ultra-visual, superficial modern media: Step 1, make people ashamed or at least insecure, preferably about a basic human characteristic. Step 2, sell them something to “solve” that “problem,” whether the alleged remedy is a candidate, clergyman, or consumer product. Better yet, get the attractive and gullible (or cynical) to sell it themselves. A recent study by Northwestern University found that skin-care routines recommended by the millions on TikTok are – and this might shock you – harmful.

But our inflamed insecurities combined with our scientific illiteracy are resulting in “treatments” even more harmful than those routines, even crazier than spraying chemicals on your crotch: People are paying real money for facial salmon sperm injections. Also “ionic foot detox baths” and, I kid you not, “insufflation of ozone gases through the vagina, rectum, or ear.” Let all of that sink in (not literally, please). If those treatments sound like nonsense to you, you might just be on to something. For a funny but mind-boggling tour of this comically unregulated snake oil – I mean “med spa” – industry, watch this episode of Last Week Tonight with John Oliver. Fair warning: adult humor and gruesome shots of beauty treatments gone wrong lurk within.

These procedures make me think a “sciencey” word is enough to get people to buy anything, and that’s not just here in Alabama, although we are a perennial “Top 50” state in both education and healthcare. It’s like “Brawndo, The Thirst Mutilator” in Idiocracy – the brilliant comedy that sadly has come true: “It’s got electrolytes!” So clearly, the drink is good for you and for crops. (At least I can feel proud that the Yellowhammer State’s farmers will be some of the last to fall for that as we all continue to become that dumb.)

Idiocracy aside, the things some people pay for seem so laughable it’s tempting to say, “Fools who fall for them deserve to be parted from their money.” Maybe. But do they deserve to be disfigured? Blind? Infected with HIV? Dead? (Not exaggerating. Watch the show.) And bigger-picture, just as historical and civic illiteracy in a democracy lead to serious problems, science and health illiteracy do too. Can you think of local or global problems that’d be less severe if more people knew more about them? I bet you can. Not knowing basic stuff is really not okay. But the worst politicians and snake-oil salesmen depend on our ignorance, which combines with or even contributes to our insecurity, to all of our detriment.

Speaking of things that stink, no one has ever died from a little body odor. People have died, though, from insecurity about human traits seen as negative, insecurity that pushes us toward “savior products,” some of them relatively harmless to the body and the environment, many of them not. Let’s think more about what we put in our bodies and world and remember that powerful, persistent, professionally crafted messages want you not to be okay with who and what you are. Be on the lookout. Shun them like you would a shot of salmon sperm to the face or an insufflation of ozone to the rectum.

In other words, think, be human, and be okay with that.

Dan Carsen is a writer, editor, and teacher who sometimes thinks and doesn’t mind if you stink. (Within normal human parameters, of course.) Share your thoughts with him at [email protected].

Read More
General

Trump’s ‘Big, Beautiful Bill’ threatens the lives of Alabama’s poorest people, advocates warn

Alabama senators Katie Britt and Tommy Tuberville need to fight for changes to President Trump’s tax cut and spending bill to protect programs that serve hundreds of thousands of Alabama families, advocates said at a State House news conference Thursday.

The “Big, Beautiful Bill” that passed the House would cut federal spending on the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) by making states pay more of the cost.

In Alabama, an average of about 750,000 people received SNAP benefits last year, a total of almost $1.8 billion, according to the Alabama Department of Human Resources.

The bill also affects Medicaid, which in 2022 served more than one million Alabamians, including almost 57% of the state’s children, and paid for half of the births in the state.

Robyn Hyden, executive director of Alabama Arise, which advocates for policies to help low-income families, said the state has much to lose if changes imposed by Congress force cutbacks in SNAP or Medicaid.

“It’s wrong to hurt people who are struggling, just to help people who are already far ahead,” Hyden said. “That’s exactly what the Senate is debating right now.

“The budget moving through Congress right now is not only a moral failure, it’s bad policy. And it is a really bad deal for our state.”

Alabama Arise organized the news conference Thursday to call for changes to the bill, which aims to reduce federal spending and extend tax cuts passed during Trump’s first term. It passed the House 215-214.

The Senate is working on its own version of the legislation.

In a statement Thursday, Britt said the goal is to preserve the tax cuts and protect the programs.

“As Republicans continue to work tirelessly to prevent the largest tax increase in American history, I am committed to ensuring these federal programs continue to meet the needs of Alabama families,” Britt said.

“Our reconciliation bill strengthens these programs to ensure eligible recipients receive help now and the safety net is preserved for generations to come.”

Trump has called for the tax cut and spending bill to be passed before the July 4th holiday.

Alabama Arise’s Hyden said the bill that passed the House would force Alabama and other states for the first time to help pay SNAP benefits that have been fully paid by federal funds, a change that would cost the state up to $300 million a year, an amount the state might not be able to cover or that would force cuts in other programs.

Also, tax credits that help people pay for health insurance premiums under the system set up by the Affordable Care Act are scheduled to be reduced.

Hyden said this will force people to pay more for health insurance or lose it.

Britt’s office, in response to some of the assertions made by Alabama Arise, said the Senate version of the bill would allow states to avoid or reduce increased costs for SNAP if they efficiently run the SNAP program, an area in which Alabama has a strong track record.

As for the Affordable Care Act health insurance tax credits, Britt’s office said those will be reduced because enhancements to the credits that Congress made under the Biden administration in response to COVID are expiring.

Rev. Valtoria Jackson of the Alabama Poor People’s Campaign, speaking at the Alabama Arise news conference, said it is important not to consider the tax cut and spending plan as only a spreadsheet of numbers.

“It is a moral document,“ Jackson said. “And in its current form, it will deepen poverty, strip vital support from our most vulnerable neighbors, and cost Alabama lives right here in Alabama.”

Sen. Kirk Hatcher, D-Montgomery, said it is understandable if people grow numb from hearing about proposed changes to massive programs that spend billions of dollars.

“But it does make a difference for people who are living hand-to-mouth,” said Hatcher, who directs the Head Start program for Montgomery, which serves about 1,200 children at 17 sites.

Hatcher noted that about one-fourth of Alabama children live in poverty.

Michael Ledger, president and CEO of Feeding the Gulf Coast, a food bank that has 800 partners and serves almost 400,000 people, said there is a misconception that SNAP is a program that serves a fixed portion of the population.

Instead, he said it is a safety net that helps families move from a crisis, such as unexpected job loss, back to stability.

“In reality, we’ve seen so many people that would have never dreamt they would be in that position,” Ledger said. “I think as a community, it’s our responsibility to make sure we help those people through those struggles.”

Rhonda Mann, executive director of VOICES for Alabama’s Children, said everyone in Alabama is affected by SNAP and by Medicaid, not just the direct recipients.

Mann said that includes the thousands of retailers whose customers buy products with SNAP.

“SNAP is incredibly important to the economy of our state,” Mann said.

Mann said cuts to Medicaid could close rural hospitals already struggling and affect healthcare for everyone, such as services in hospitals that would have to cover increased costs of uncompensated care for those without insurance.

Tuberville, who is running for governor next year and could be dealing with the consequences of the bill, has said about increasing the cost of SNAP for states.

“Everybody that’s going to be in state government is going to be concerned about it,” Tuberville told Politico.

Hyden said now is the time to make the changes in the federal spending plan that reflect those concerns.

“The good news we have for you today is that none of this has happened,” Hyden said. “This bill is moving through Congress.

“We have time to speak out, protect Alabama’s economy, protect the long term health and well being of our communities.”

Read More
General

JD Crowe: ‘DNA doesn’t lie:’ On death row in Alabama, DNA doesn’t matter

This is an opinion cartoon.

Editor’s Note: The state of Alabama has a complicated relationship with science, and its criminal courts are no exception. Often, state prosecutors defend debunked junk science, like bite marks, to keep people in prison. Other times, they ignore updated scientific findings, such as recent DNA tests, to defend old theories that led to a conviction. In this series, AL.com will highlight several cases where science is at odds with the sentence.

Major props, high fives and fist bumps to my friend and esteemed AL.com colleague Ivana Hrynkiw for doing the heavy lifting on the story behind today’s cartoon. I just did a drive-by hit and run drawing.

Ivana did all the deep dive investigative work, fidgeting, fretting, writing, cussing and reporting on her latest AL.com series, Alabama vs. Science. It’s great work. There’s more to come.

The first story of the series was published under the headline: Confronted with DNA, Alabama offers theory that ‘defies logic’ to keep man on death row.

Here are some excerpts:

Christopher Barbour’s entire adult life has hinged on words he uttered when he was 22.

More than 30 years ago, Barbour confessed to police that he killed a 40-year-old single mother in Montgomery and helped another man rape her. Almost immediately he tried to take back the confession — he said later that he didn’t do it nor even know the woman — but it was too late.

Barbour remains on Alabama’s death row.

But now, new DNA testing points to someone else — a man who’s already in prison for an unrelated murder. Yet there is no cinematic rush to release Barbour. Instead, there is a push by prosecutors to explain away the DNA.

“It’s a refusal to admit error, not to accept the science,” said Robert Dunham, the director of the Death Penalty Policy Project.

Back in 1992, Barbour was homeless. Police found him living behind the mall across town, and Barbour said he was pressured to falsely confess to the grisly crime that had happened a few weeks prior.

State prosecutors now acknowledge that the only DNA at the scene belongs to someone else, but they argue that doesn’t clear Barbour.

Now 55 years old, Barbour isn’t the only person who remains in Alabama’s prison system despite evidence suggesting he didn’t do the crime. Alabama’s legal system has a complicated relationship with science, one that often plays out however is most advantageous for the state’s case.

The state, often through the Alabama Attorney General’s Office in its criminal appellate work, has a history of defending junk science, of relying on old, now-debunked theories to keep people locked in prison for a crime there is little evidence they committed.

They often choose those old theories over new, updated science.

“One of the things you hear about the death penalty, which is true, is that the facts don’t matter once somebody has been sentenced to death,” said Dunham.

In the case of Barbour, U.S. District Judge Emily Marks in an order last year wrote that the state’s version of the crime is hard to accept “because the theory defies logic, common sense, and science.”

Read the full story here and stay tuned for the rest of this compelling Alabama vs Science series. There will be lots to draw from it.

JD Crowe is the cartoonist for Alabama Media Group andAL.com. He won the RFK Human Rights Award for Editorial Cartoons in 2020. In 2018, he was awarded the Rex Babin Memorial Award for local and state cartoons by the Association of American Editorial Cartoonists. Follow JD on Facebook, Twitter@Crowejam andInstagram @JDCrowepix. Give him a holler @[email protected].

Read More
General

Fireball; poop cruise; DNA and an old murder case: Down in Alabama

We’re taking a break on the weekly quiz for now, but it will reappear soon.

Also, today’s a great day to listen to the podcast. We’re talking about a Death Row inmate’s case that some people believe needs to be revisited in light of DNA evidence — but the state wants to keep its 30-year-old conviction.

A fireball in broad daylight

The meteor that appeared as a daytime fireball across part of the South Thursday was seen in some parts of North Alabama, reports AL.com’s Patrick Darrington.

According to NASA, the meteor had split from a larger meteor and plunged to earth. It was not a typical space rock: It had a brightness measure that surpassed that of a full moon and added to its “fireball” appearance.

It was also seen in Georgia, Tennessee, South Carolina and North Carolina.

Tuberville’s comments

A Muslim civil-rights group in Alabama is asking gubernatorial candidate and current U.S. Sen. Tommy Tuberville to visit a mosque, reports AL.com’s William Thornton.

The Alabama chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations issued the invite after Tuberville referenced an “Islamic” atmosphere while more generally criticizing sanctuary cities and illegal immigration on “The Benny Show.”

Tuberville said federal funding to those cities could be cut off: “President Trump can do anything he wants when it comes to the federal. Again, these inner-city rats, they live off the federal government. And that’s one reason we’re $37 trillion in debt. And it’s time we find these rats and we send them back home, that are living off the American taxpayers, that are working very hard every week to pay taxes.”

During the conversation Tuberville said there is a difference between what he called “good Muslims” and radical Islamists. He said those in the country illegally won’t get any handouts down South.

“Bring your lunch with you because you’re not going to be welcomed if you’re going to bring that Communist, Islamic atmosphere with you. We’re not going to deal with it.”

CAIR attorney Britton Shields issued a statement inviting Tuberville to a mosque. It read, in part, that “American Muslims have been thriving in Alabama for decades, creating an atmosphere of fellowship, charity, and devotion to God.”

FBI hits pause

The FBI has paused plans to move its training facility to Huntsville’s Redstone Arsenal, reports AL.com’s John R. Roby.

How that might affect what ultimately moves from D.C. to Huntsville remains to be seen. A spokesperson for the FBI at the arsenal said a National Academy is still part of the FBI’s “long-term plan” for Redstone. Although the FBI National Academy Associates posted on social media that “We’re pleased to share that the FBI has decided not to move forward with a National Academy pilot in Huntsville, citing infrastructure limitations.”

Remember the poop cruise?

If you’ve been following Alabama news for a few years, you remember the poop train, a controversy in Central Alabama that involved sewage sludge from the Northeast.

If you’ve followed Alabama news for a few more years, then you remember the poop cruise.

The poop cruise was a February 2013 trip across the Gulf of Mexico aboard the Carnival Triumph, which was stranded at sea after an engine fire. The 4,000-plus poor passengers, bless their hearts, were without power, air conditioning or toilets that worked. They ran low on food and were eating tomato-and-onion sandwiches, and the tomatoes were store-bought.

What they did have, though, were those red biohazard bags, which they used as substitutes for a commode.

Hence the poop cruise.

Mobile had been out of the cruise business for a couple of years, but the city had the closest port to the Triumph and played the part of the gracious host.

If you want a detailed look at the very uncomfortable saga, AL.com’s John Sharp reports that a documentary is out titled “Trainwreck: Poop Cruise.” It has a run time of 55 minutes and is now available on Netflix.

Meanwhile, the Carnival Triumph underwent hundreds of thousands of dollars in repairs and upgrades along with a name change to the Carnival Sunrise.

More Alabama News

Born on This Date

In 1880, Helen Keller of Tuscumbia.

In 1964, former San Antonio Spur Chuck Person of Brantley.

The podcast

Read More
General

Alabama football offers younger brother of Tide quarterback

Kalen DeBoer didn’t recruit Ty Simpson, but the Alabama coach and his staff are now officially recruiting Simpson’s younger brother.

Graham Simpson shared late Thursday he received an offer from the Crimson Tide. He’s a 2028 quarterback recruit from Martin, Tennessee.

His older brother was a 2022 recruit also from Martin, but Nick Saban recruited Ty Simpson. The quarterback has been with the program ever since. The Alabama coaching staff considers him the frontrunner for the opening at quarterback heading into the summer, but he will still have to go win the job.

His younger brother’s recruitment remains in its infancy, considering the 2026 recruiting class is the primary focus right now across the country. But Graham Simpson already has offers from Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Boston College, Duke, Memphis, Mississippi State, UNC, Oklahoma, Ole Miss, Syracuse and UCLA.

Ty and Graham’s dad, Jason Simpson, is the head coach at UT-Martin.

Nick Kelly is an Alabama beat writer for AL.com and the Alabama Media Group. Follow him on X and Instagram.

Read More