General News

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Academy Sport’s is offering a major deal on Nike Air Max 270 sneakers

Academy Sports just dropped a ton of online deals on sneakers and apparel just in time for back-to-school season, including a notable discount on select Nike Air Max 270 sneakers.

With this online deal, you can score select pairs of men’s and women’s Nike Air Max 270 sneakers for as little as $119 as compared to its retail price of $140. Because this is such a hot deal, however, sale styles are selling out quickly.

Nike Air Max 270 – women’s

The Nike Air Max 270 sneakers are on sale in select styles at Academy Sports when purchased online.

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Pictured is the men's white, black and emerald green Nike Air Max 270 shoe.

Nike Air Max 270 – men’s

The Nike Air Max 270 sneakers are on sale in select styles at Academy Sports when purchased online.

Buy Now

RELATED: Zappos is selling the HOKA Mach 6 running shoe for its cheapest price yet

The Nike Air Max 270’s are designed as athletic sneakers for casual and lifestyle activities. They features an upper made from a combination of synthetic and textile materials, designed for breathability and comfort during daily wear. However, the main selling point of these popular shoes is its fashionable, yet versatile design.

The visible Max Air unit in the heel not only provides a distinctive look and responsive cushioning, but significantly enhances comfort during daily activities. This combination of style and function makes them an ideal choice for most.

“Conquer your day in comfort and style with the Nike Air Max 270! These kicks boast a lightweight, breathable upper that keeps your feet cool all day,” Academy’s product details state. “Feel the difference with every step – the visible Max Air unit in the heel cushions your feet, transforming your walk into a smooth ride. A stretchy inner sleeve replaces traditional laces for a personalized fit, while the durable rubber outsole keeps you confident on various surfaces!”

Those interested in this deal can checkout the full listing on Academy Sport’s website.

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Suspect charged with capital murder in killing of 65-year-old man in Birmingham

A suspect is in custody in the weekend shooting death of a 65-year-old man in Birmingham.

Jerome Reese Jr., 56, is charged with capital murder in the killing of Curtis Jerome Pruitt.

The Birmingham Police Department’s Crime Reduction Team arrested Reese in the 200 block of 25th Court N.W.

The Hueytown man was booked into the Jefferson County Jail at 9:24 p.m. Wednesday. He is being held without bond.

Just after 2:30 p.m. Sunday, North Precinct officers received a call of a person shot in the 900 block of Center Street North.

Police investigate a July 20, 2025, fatal shooting shooting on Ninth Avenue West in northern Birmingham.(BPD)

Police arrived to find a gray SUV in the 10 block of 9th Avenue West, which is walking distance from the original location, said Officer Truman Fitzgerald. The location was near the entrance of a small apartment building.

Pruitt was unresponsive in the driver’s seat. Birmingham firefighters attempted live-saving measures on the scene and then rushed him to UAB Hospital where he was pronounced dead.

Police said the suspect – now identified as Reese – Fitzgerald said it appears a man on foot approached the SUV and opened fire. He then fled.

Police have not disclosed a motive.

The charge is capital because Pruitt was inside a vehicle when he was killed.

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‘Shallow Hal’ actor, Farrelly brothers mainstay, dead at 70

Rene Kirby, known for his role in “Shallow Hal,” died earlier this month in Vermont at the age of 70.

Kirby’s brother Jon confirmed to Seven Days that the actor died at the University of Vermont Medical Center after being hospitalized for two months with kidney, bladder and esophagus issues.

According to the report, Kirby was a throat cancer survivor but had his larynx removed and was unable to speak.

Kirby, who was born with spina bifida, was cast in “Shallow Hal” as Walt and worked with Gwyneth Paltrow and Jack Black.

Kirby was also cast as Phil Rupp in “Stuck on You,” marking his second collaboration with the Farrelly brothers in 2003.

He is survived by his mother and six siblings.

“Rene’s a guy we met in real life, on our travels, in Burlington,” Farelly told the Burlington Free Press in 2023. “He’s not the kind of guy you see in a movie. You see him in Burlington, but you don’t see him in the movies. There’s a disconnect there.”

Mark Heim is a reporter for The Alabama Media Group. Follow him on Twitter @Mark_Heim. He can be heard on “The Opening Kickoff” on WNSP-FM 105.5 FM in Mobile or on the free Sound of Mobile App from 6 to 9 a.m. daily.

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South Park’s Trump parody targets Epstein files: ‘Are we still talking about that?’

“South Park” started its 27th season with a Donald Trump parody in which Satan asks the President of the United States about the Epstein Files.

“The Epstein list?” Trump asks. “Are we still talking about that?”

“Well are you on the list or not?” Satan said. “It’s weird that whenever it comes up, you just tell everyone to relax.”

The video of the political satire was shared on social media.

The show comes a day after creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone got a $1.5 billion streaming deal with Paramount, per Newsweek.

Last week, the Writers Guild of America wanted Paramount investigated for bribery after news of “The Late Show With Stephen Colbert” being canceled.

The WGA, per Variety, said it has “significant concerns” that the move may have been a way to bribe Trump into sanctioning Paramount’s pending acquisition by Skydance.

The episode also aired as “The Wall Street Journal” reported that Attorney General Pam Bondi told Trump in May that his name appeared multiple times in files related to Epstein’s case.

White House communications director Steven Cheung denied the report, telling the outlet.

Mark Heim is a reporter for The Alabama Media Group. Follow him on Twitter @Mark_Heim. He can be heard on “The Opening Kickoff” on WNSP-FM 105.5 FM in Mobile or on the free Sound of Mobile App from 6 to 9 a.m. daily.

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Taking a glance at Auburn’s offensive line entering the 2025 season

With Auburn football coach Hugh Freeze calling this position group one of his favorites during SEC media days.

The Tigers offensive line unit is one of the most improved groups on the entire roster, meshing veteran players and bringing in experienced talent out of the transfer portal.

“I would say, you know, I want to give a shout out to Will Redman and his crew. I think they do a great job of evaluating talent,” Freeze said at Auburn’s first AMBUSH.

“I think we got two legit guys there that have played elite football at a high level. And I think that changes us. And I think that changes us. We really haven’t had that in our time here.”

Here’s what to know about the group heading into the 2025 season:

Players

*Dillon Wade — Senior, Right guard

*Connor Lew — Sophomore, Center

*Xavier Chaplin — Junior, Virginia Tech transfer, Left tackle

*Mason Murphy — Senior, USC transfer, Right tackle

*Jeremiah Wright — Senior, Left guard

Izavion Miller — Senior, Right tackle

Seth Wilfred — Junior, Rotating tackle

Malachi Harris — Sophomore, Rotating guard

Tyler Johnson — Sophomore, Left tackle

Harrison Clemmer — Sophomore, Rotating tackle

Cade Barnett — Sophomore, Rotating guard

Dylan Senda — Sophomore, Left tackle

Kail Ellis — Freshman, Rotating guard

Jacobe’ Ward — Freshman, Rotating guard

Tai Buster — Freshman, Right Tackle

Broderick Shull — Freshman, Rotating tackle

DeAndre Carter — Redshirt freshman, Rotating guard

Isaac Boulger — Redshirt freshman, Rotating tackle

John Henry Flatt — Redshirt freshman, Rotating tackle

Favour Ebuka Edwin — Redshirt freshman, Rotating guard

*Indicates Projected starter

What to know

Seeing the full depth of Tigers offensive line core, this year’s veteran lineup will help develop the next generation of lineman for Auburn.

As a sophomore, center Connor Lew is one of the vocal leaders on the entire team. Last season he gave up just up one sack and zero quarterback hits.

With additions of Murphy and Chaplin at offensive tackle, Wade and Miller will be able to play their true position at guard.

“We get three veterans back in the middle with [Dillon Wade] and [Connor Lew] and [Jeremiah Wright]. And we also get the return of Izavion Miller, who’s a two-year starter for us that can rotate for all of those,” Freeze said during media days.

“Now you have two veteran tackles that have played a lot of snaps that have the length and skill sets that really, I think, improve us from the past two years.”

Miller will be in an important position battle during camp as AL.com does not project him to start when the season begins.

Miller served as the starting tackle since his sophomore season. However, As Freeze spoke on rotating players in that group, Miller will still see the field for his senior year.

When it comes to the younger depth, Freeze and Lew are pretty high on a few names.

“I’ve got to bring along a couple of young ones in [DeAndre Carter] and [Tyler Johnson] and some of those guys, but feel really, really good about our first seven guys,” Freeze added.

Lew is excited in the Tigers recent freshmen class and believes in the future of Auburn’s front seven.

“On the offensive line, Kail Ellis, Jacobe’ Ward, Tai Buster, all of them have picked up the calls pretty fast for freshmen,” Lew said. “So, whenever their time comes, I think it will be good to see.”

Jerry Humphrey III covers Auburn sports forAL.com. You can follow him on X at @Jerryhump3or email him at [email protected].

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French president’s wife sues rightwing American influencer for calling her a man

French President Emmanuel Macron and Brigitte Macron have filed a defamation lawsuit against Candace Owens, the conservative influencer and podcaster who claims the first lady was born male.

Filed in Delaware on Wednesday, the lawsuit accuses Owens of publishing “outlandish, defamatory and far-fetched fictions,” causing “substantial reputational damage” and “substantial economic damages” to the Macrons in the process, according to the Financial Times.

The 218 page-court ruling states that along with claiming Macron was born under the name Jean-Michel Trogneux, Owens went on to say that the Macrons are also blood relatives and that Emmanuel Macron is “a product of a CIA human experiment or a similar government mind control programme,” per the Financial Times.

The lawsuit says Owens is responsible for spreading the conspiracy theory in the U.S. and around the world in order “to promote her independent platform, gain notoriety and make money.”

On top of selling some merchandise, she’s garnered a social media presence nearing 4.5 million YouTube subscribers with her eight-part series “Becoming Brigitte” released this year.

The filing also says Owens “ignored multiple attempts by the Macrons to engage,” including a letter that the French President and his wife sent the conservative influencer in December to “pointedly deny that the president was statutorily raped,” according to the Financial Times.

The court document charts the timeline of their relationship which started when Emmanuel Macron was a 15-year-old student at a Catholic high school in Amiens and met Brigitte, who was then a 39-year-old married teacher with three children.

Their relationship “remained within the bounds of the law” for a number of years and the pair eventually got married in 2007 when Emmanuel was 29.

The Macrons recently delivered one of the year’s biggest viral moments in May after the first lady was seen slapping the French President as the doors of their plane opened as they landed in Vietnam for an official visit.

Macron denied having a domestic dispute and said they “were squabbling,” and “joking” with each other.

Brigitte Macron will be portrayed in a biopic series whose development was announced last year by Gaumont, the company behind the Netflix hit show “Lupin.”

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

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Grissom first-year football coach Preston Judah pushing ‘all his chips in’ on his alma mater

Preston Judah isn’t shy when he talks about what being the head football coach at Grissom High means to him.

“It means everything,” he said at Huntsville Area High School Football Media Day on Monday. “To be able to contribute and give back to the community that has invested so much in me and my family … it doesn’t get any better. Extra pressure obviously because, on Saturday mornings, if we don’t perform, I’ll see plenty of people who will have something say, but it’s a challenge that I’m excited to take up.”

Judah played football at Grissom from 2002-2006 for head coach Ronny Massey. He also spent time as the offensive coordinator on Chip English’s staff from 2017-2020.

“I’ve pushed all my chips in on orange and brown,” he said. “I’ve been around the program at times when it’s been successful. I was there in 2004 as a player when we made the playoffs and I was there as an assistant coach in 2020 when we made the playoffs, so to me it’s not an insurmountable hill. To me, my job is to get Grissom back to where it belongs. The wins and losses will come. I’ll be able to sleep at night when the teams we have replicate that saltiness and the blue-collar mentality we had in the early 2000s.”

Judah was named the Tigers’ new head coach in February. He replaces Rich Dutton, who went 10-30 in four years at the school, including consecutive 2-8 marks in each of the last two seasons. The Tigers haven’t been to the playoffs since English – now the Hoover head coach – was there in 2020 and haven’t won a playoff game in 25 years.

What’s the key to turning it around?

“Belief. Legitimately,” Judah said. “I think that’s it. We talk a lot about the fact that we plan on Grissom being the premier program in north Alabama, the fact that there is not any difference in the James Clemens’ and the Austins other than the color of their jerseys.

“We did a lot of scheduling of elite talent over the summer. We had an OTA with Hartselle on Wednesday. I think you could make the argument they have been the premier program in north Alabama. Just to see on their faces knowing that we can compete with those guys, we are just as good as they are, has been really important for our development this summer.”

Judah said his players’ attitude, energy and effort all have been top notch. He is now ready to see the physicality turn up as the calendar turns to August. He also has another question on his mind.

“Can we moderate our mentality?” he said. “When things get bad, do we fight through it or do we just have the mindset that it’s the same old Grissom? We’ve done a lot of that culturally to try to shore that up, so we are ready in August.”

Judah described his defense as “salty” and believes it will keep his team in most games.

“Between the 7-on-7s that we’ve had and OTAs with Hartselle and Arab, we may have given up three or four touchdowns in the air in seven or eight games,” he said. “I think we will be really good there. We should be really solid at offensive line and running back. Hopefully, we can stay in drives, stay in games, make sure every drive ends in a kick – hopefully an extra point – but a punt is fine because we know that defense will keep us in games.”

Grissom opens the season at Lee-Huntsville on Aug. 22.

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Is Jessie Murph, a controversial young singer from Alabama, music’s next superstar?

Grammy-winning band Alabama Shakes are probably about to go from being the most famous music act from Athens, Alabama, to second banana. That’s because the buzz around Jessie Murph is building into thunderclap.

Murph is a provocative and talented 20-year-old singer/songwriter who stands approximately 4-foot-11. She’s got Lana Del Rey’s sultry charisma and cinematic sound, young Priscilla Presley’s wigs, and a country drawl filtered through Amy Winehouse’s rap-swagger. And she’s about to have the world by the throat.

On July 18, Murph released her excellent sophomore album, the subtly titled “Sex Hysteria.” Del Rey posted a video on Instagram of her pole dancing to one of Murph’s songs. On “The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon,” Murph delivered a stylized performance of her single “1965.” Fallon beamed, “That is how you do it right there!”

Meanwhile at a Sports Illustrated Swimsuit fashion show, she sang on the catwalk surrounded by bikini models and brandishing a whip. Murph’s also featured on SI Swimsuit’s digital cover for July and in an accompanying pictorial. And oh yeah, her music, including songs like “Blue Strips” and Jelly Roll collabo “Wild Ones,” have piled up more than a billion Spotify streams. And counting.

Then there’s the matter of the music video for “1965.” The clip is artfully shot and edited. It also puts the N in NSFW, thanks to images including five seconds of (possibly) faux onscreen fornication by two actors.

Also in the vid, Murph sticks a cocked and loaded pistol into the mouth of an older man in bed. Later, another older man is pleasured under the table at a dining party by a younger female. Elsewhere, Murph’s tied up bondage-style on a couch. Lots of cig are smoked. Perhaps most eyebrow-raising is a scene with a child actor’s spliced among the debauchery.

That’s on top of the song’s lyrics. There are winking references to affordable cocaine, physical abuse, benefits of cigarettes, and women belonging in the kitchen.

The hook contains the couplet “I think I’d give up a few rights/ If you would just love me like it’s 1965.” Eleven f-bombs are dropped. Part of the second verse goes, “And I would be twenty and it’d be acceptable/ For you to be forty and that is f—-d up I know, But at least you wouldn’t drive off before I get in the f—ing door.”

The “1965” video posted on YouTube has drawn more than 12,000 comments. Mostly pearl-clutching observations like “since when is pornography allowed on youtube,” “there’s still time to unrelease this” and “I need to get this out of my search history.”

On TikTok, where Murph has 11 million followers, the singer defended the “1965” video in a caption to a video post: “This entire song is satire r yall stupid.” Media outlets with names like BroBible and Whiskey Riff have published content focusing on the purposely button-pushing “1965” video.

Meanwhile, in an album review of “Sex Hysteria,” Variety praised Murph for “her soaring, powerful voice,” “fierce rhyming skills,” “empowerment and humor.” The Variety review concludes that with “Sex Hysteria,” which follows her “impressive” 2024 debut album “That Ain’t No Man That’s The Devil”, Murph has “truly arrived.”

A recent Rolling Stone feature on Murph focuses on her backstory. Currently a Los Angeles resident following a stint in Nashville, Murph says when she comes back to Athens for a visit she heads straight to a local gas station for a big cup of boiled peanuts.

The RS feature addresses Murph’s complicated relationship with her hometown, which has a population of about 32,000. Athens is located in North Alabama about 30 minutes from Huntsville.

“My relationship with home has changed so much since I’ve left,” Murph tells Rolling Stone writer Jonathan Bernstein. “I really remember being 15, 16, even younger, and just knowing that I was not meant to be there. I didn’t feel right there. But I go back and I’m so grateful to be there. There’s something so sweet, something very nostalgic and beautiful, about the South.”

Rolling Stone’s feature also alludes to a dark past. ““I was really f—ed up when I was 17,” she says. “I was very severely depressed, dealing with a lot of s—. I was really struggling, and I think people like to have music they can relate to. I’m very grateful for the music I put out during that’s just not … Thank God I’m past some of that.”

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Tropical Gulf wave to bring south Alabama rain, rip currents and a break from the heat

A trough of low pressure over the Gulf isn’t expected to become a tropical depression, but it will bring higher rain chances for part of Alabama on Thursday.

And Friday too.

The National Hurricane Center on Thursday said the system had only a 10 percent probability of becoming a tropical depression in the next seven days.

It is expected to track westward across the northern Gulf and move inland over the weekend to the west of Alabama.

The National Weather Service in Mobile was keeping a close eye on the system Thursday and said it will cause a moderate risk for rip currents today along the Alabama and northwest Florida beaches.

That risk is expected to increase to high on Friday:

There will be a moderate risk for rip currents Thursday, and the risk increases to high on Friday.NWS

The system will bring high rain chances to south Alabama, with lower chances farther north.

Here is the probability of precipitation for Alabama through 7 p.m. Thursday:

Thursday rain chances
This is the probability of rain until 7 p.m. Thursday. South Alabama has high chances, while they are much lower for north Alabama.NWS

Those higher rain chances will continue into Friday as well:

Friday rain chances
Higher rain chances will last into Friday for south Alabama.NWS

The weather service expects rain to spread northward from the Gulf with a southerly wind, and “numerous to widespread” showers and storms will be possible today and Friday in south Alabama.

The Mobile area could get 2 to even 3 inches of rain from the system through Saturday, according to weather service forecasts:

Rainfall outlook
Most of the rain expected to fall over the next few days will be in southwest Alabama. Above is the rainfall outlook through 7 p.m. Saturday.NWS

The rain is expected to keep the heat in check today, and there are no heat advisories in place for the entire state.

However, forecasters expect once the tropical system moves out that the heat will move back in, and next week looks very hot with more heat advisories likely.

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JD Crowe: Ozzy: Tribute to the voice of heavy metal and bat crazy behavior

This is an opinion cartoon tribute to the Wizard of Ozzy.

“The Black Sabbath guys were a hippie love and peace band that found their soul by wrapping anti-war lyrics into devastating, sludgy guitar riffs and lyrics that warned of approaching doom. Ozzy was the perfect messenger.” – Me. I wrote that somewhere down there in the words and stuff …

I cried when Stevie Ray Vaughan died in a plane crash in 1990.

I knew Stevie Ray. Felt like I knew him. Thought I discovered him.

There was a little basement bar called Blossoms Downstairs on Camp Bowie Boulevard in Fort Worth, Texas. Blossoms was a respectable restaurant during the week. On the weekend, Blossoms Downstairs was the place to be.

Most Blossoms Downstairs shows were free. When Stevie Ray was in town the cover charge was $2.50. In the basement with his band, Double Trouble. An arsenal of guitars.

I went to every show to witness the most intense blues guitar slinger on earth. Electric. Humble. Greasy tank top and jeans. He looked like he had been changing the oil on pickup trucks all day. I went backstage, a closet, after his first set. Asked him questions about guitar stuff. He answered. We were tight.

I played all of Stevie Ray’s albums over and over again after his death. Cried like a baby with every song.

When Kurt Cobain died from a self-inflicted gunshot to the head, I went to his music to search for clues in his lyrics. Why?

Ozzy Osbourne is another story. Love the guy. But I shed no tears. No need to look back over his legacy of heavy gloom and doom music.

Related: Ozzy Osbourne’s Alabama adventures and connections

I have been honoring Ozzy Osbourne and Black Sabbath for years. Every day. With every cartoon I draw.

Thank you, Spotify.

Black Sabbath has always been an inspirational fountain of black ink that flows through my pen at the drawing board.

Most of my favorite Sabbath/Ozzy songs are from the first three near-perfect classic rock albums: Black Sabbath, Paranoid and Master of Reality. Among my personal Sabbath favorites are these songs that revolutionized hard rock and heavy metal: War Pigs, Paranoid, Electric Funeral, Iron Man, Lord of This World, Children of the Grave and Into the Void.

Snowblind, Sabbath Bloody Sabbath, Symptom of the Universe and Hole in the Sky came later … the list goes on and on.

Black Sabbath’s final album, 13, released in 2013, is among my personal favorites. Its heavy riffs and dark lyrics are a relentless and welcome throwback to their classic albums.

Of Ozzy’s solo work, Perry Mason from his Ozzmosis album is at the top of my list.

The Black Sabbath guys were a hippie love and peace band that found their soul by wrapping anti-war lyrics into devastating, sludgy guitar riffs and lyrics that warned of approaching doom. Ozzy was the perfect messenger.

They call Ozzy the Prince of Darkness. But he was far from evil, in my book. He was a family man and a funny dude, sometimes without meaning to be … but still.

Ozzy could have been called the Prince of Snarkness.

He was a clever master of his craft. His voice was strong to the end. Rest in peace and power, Ozzy.

Follow the light, man.

Rock on.

More true stories by JD Crowe

The mysterious ‘Bubble Guy’ of Fairhope and the art of bubble Zen – al.com

How I met Dr. Seuss

Robert Plant head-butted me. Thanks, David Coverdale

The hog killin’

I was ZZ Top’s drummer for a night and got kidnapped by groupies

Check out more cartoons and stuff by JD Crowe

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 and Instagram @JDCrowepix. Give him a holler @[email protected].

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