During this major sales event, Walmart customers can score the GE Profile Opal Nugget Ice Maker + Side Tank for $391 instead of its typical $550 price tag. This last time this ice maker was on sale at Walmart, it was listed for $435, which means this new deal features an additional $44 discount, a $157 markdown overall.
GE Profile Opal Nugget Ice Maker + Side Tank
$548 $391
The GE Profile Opal Nugget Ice Maker comes with a convenient side tank that ensures three times more ice production than similar models.
The GE Profile Opal Nugget Ice Maker is considered the OG nugget ice maker. However, people continue to gravitate towards this brand despite the price (when not on sale) due to its compact size, stylish design and, most importantly, its ability to store the ice. Other cheaper models require you to transfer the ice to the freezer or it will melt. Not to mention, this particular model comes with a side tank which ensures three times more ice production.
The Frigidaire Gallery Nugget Ice Maker is another notable model that stores the ice and also happens to be on sale this week for only $179, but it is much bigger and takes up more counter space compared to the Opal Nugget Ice Maker.
“Nugget Ice. Pellet ice. Drive-in ice. Whatever you call it, you know it’s ‘the good ice.’ Now that chewable ice is available from the convenience of your countertop with the Opal Ice Maker. It stores up to 3-lbs of ice at one time [and] comes with the side tank attachment for three times more ice production,“ the GE Profile Opal Nugget Ice Maker product description states.
“Built on the belief that modern life needs modern solutions. GE Profile Appliances are designed to make daily life simpler by incorporating cutting-edge features in every appliance. GE Profile’s sleek design and quality engineering will give your kitchen the most up-to-date look and the best innovative performance you’ve been looking for.”
If you purchase a product or register for an account through a link on our site, we may receive compensation. By using this site, you consent to our User Agreement and agree that your clicks, interactions, and personal information may be collected, recorded, and/or stored by us and social media and other third-party partners in accordance with our Privacy Policy.
The U.S. Energy Department has hired two Alabama scientists who are well-known for their skepticism about human-influenced climate change.
The New York Times is reporting that John Christy, Alabama’s state climatologist since 2000, and Roy Spencer, a colleague at the University of Alabama in Huntsville, are listed in the Energy Department’s internal email system as current employees of the agency.
It is not immediately clear what the two scientists were working on or whether they are being paid.
Dr. Christy told the Times he is an “unpaid person who’s available to them if they need it.”
In addition to his position with the state, Dr. Christy is the Distinguished Professor of Atmospheric Science and Director of the Earth System Science Center at UAH, and a fellow in the American Meteorological Society. He served with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Science Advisory Board, but was dismissed in 2021.
Dr. Spencer, a UAH research scientist, is a former NASA research scientist and a visiting fellow for two conservative organizations, the Heritage Foundation and the Heartland Institute.
Both Christy and Spencer have worked together on several climate projects. The two developed a global temperature data set from microwave data observed from satellites beginning in 1979. Together, they were awarded NASA’s Medal for Exceptional Scientific Achievement in 1991.
Earlier this year, the two collaborated with UAH researcher William Braswell on a study on the Urban Heat Island (UHI) effect, which explains why metropolitan areas are significantly warmer than surrounding rural areas.
Their study, published this year, looked at temperatures in cities among six classes of population density and in 22 different historical periods between 1880 and 2020. One issue stemming from the data – how the rate of warming is calculated, accounting for the differences in population density.
Christy, while often called a climate change denier, says he acknowledges that the climate is warming and that human carbon emissions contribute to this warming, but argues that the impact is smaller than most other climate researchers contend. He disagrees with the use of the term “denier.”
Christy argues that reducing carbon emissions would have little impact on climate change and is a critic of efforts to mandate reduction of carbon emissions.
In 2016, Spencer wrote that “while the scientific consensus on climate change is a mile wide, it is only inches deep.”
“The most pertinent questions really are: (1) just how much warming is occurring? (not as much as predicted); (2) how much of that warming is being caused by humans? (we don’t really know); (3) is modest warming a bad thing? (maybe not); and (4) is there anything we can do about it anyway? (not without a new energy technology),” he wrote.
If you purchase a product or register for an account through a link on our site, we may receive compensation. By using this site, you consent to our User Agreement and agree that your clicks, interactions, and personal information may be collected, recorded, and/or stored by us and social media and other third-party partners in accordance with our Privacy Policy.
A MAGA activist is pressing Vice President JD Vance to persuade Donald Trump to fire Attorney General Pam Bondi over delays in releasing the so-called Jeffrey Epstein files.
Laura Loomer, a longtime ally of President Donald Trump who has been behind the firings of other administration officials, is feuding with Bondi — whom she deridingly refers to as “Blondi” –, claiming the attorney general is ignoring the Epstein case.
On Tuesday, Loomer responded to a four-year-old Vance tweet on the Epstein case while enlisting the vice president’s help in getting Bondi fired.
“I remember when a bimbo Barbie was installed as AG and then all of these child sex crimes were wiped under the rug. How come we can’t talk about what a dumb lying bimbo Pam Blondi is?” Loomer tweeted.
“@JDVance, please encourage President Trump to fire Pam Blondi,” Loomer continued. “She is a disgrace.”
Loomer accused Bondi of protecting Epstein and the late financier’s co-conspirators dating back to Bondi’s term as Florida attorney general.
“During Blondi’s tenure as Florida’s Attorney General from 2011 to 2019, Jeffrey Epstein’s flight logs surfaced, many of his victims filed lawsuits, and substantial new evidence against him came to light. It has to be asked: how come Blondi’s FL AG office did not pursue legal action or launch an investigation into Epstein’s activities in Florida during that period when she was AG in FL?” Loomer asked.
She is known for spreading wild conspiracy theories.
In 2023, Loomer shared a video on X that said “9/11 was an Inside Job!” and claimed it was somehow related to then-Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld’s announcing $2.3 trillion in “lost” government funds on Sept. 10, 2001.
The post misrepresented Rumsfeld’s remarks, which were about a challenge in tracking funds due to outdated technology. The day before 9/11 was not the first time the problem had been discussed.
The conspiracy theory that U.S. officials are hiding information about the Sept. 11 attacks or were somehow involved in the planning has taken hold among a segment of determined “truthers,” but many of their most prevalent claims have fallen apart upon further scrutiny.
Loomer also promoted QAnon, an apocalyptic and convoluted conspiracy theory centered on the belief that Trump is fighting the “deep state.”
If you purchase a product or register for an account through a link on our site, we may receive compensation. By using this site, you consent to our User Agreement and agree that your clicks, interactions, and personal information may be collected, recorded, and/or stored by us and social media and other third-party partners in accordance with our Privacy Policy.
Any film or TV location scout looking for a rural Southern barbecue joint to shoot at would love RD’s Smokehouse Barbecue in Harvest, Alabama.
The building’s exterior is charmingly ramshackle, which automatically gives barbecue a leg up. The interior’s also high mileage. During my recent July afternoon visit, the dining room’s humid teetering on sweaty. Neither the air-conditioning nor ice machine are working.
RD’s Smokehouse Barbecue’s original location in Harvest, Alabama. (Matt Wake/[email protected])Matt Wake
It’s a 30-minute drive out to RD’s, address 1811 Nick Davis Road, from my Five Points neighborhood in Huntsville.
But once you get off the highway, besides the subdivisions and McMansions, it’s a country-scenic route past horses, cornfields, ball fields and roadside produce for sale.
The food, especially the ribs and chicken, and experience at RD’s is worth the odyssey. Even if you make it just once.
You order at the counter, and the service is small-town laidback. If you get tea, there are self-serve pitchers of sweet and unsweet in a mini-fridge to the left of the cash register.
RD’s Smokehouse Barbecue employee Freda Clark at the counter of the original location. Cook/kitchen manager Tony Battle is in the background to the right. (Matt Wake/[email protected])Matt Wake
Freda Clark is working the counter today at RD’s. Asked what makes RD’s special, she says, “We have a lot of regulars. It’s almost like they’re my neighbors next door. I love meeting the people in here, so I know most of them by name.” When customers call in orders, Clark says, “I recognize their voices on the phone.”
Small rib plate with mac and cheese and onion rings at RD’s Smokehouse Barbecue in Harvest, Alabama. (Matt Wake/[email protected])Matt Wake
I get the small rib plate, and for my two sides take mac and cheese and onion rings. And add an order of five chicken wings. For sauces, Clark recommends a couple of RD’s signatures: Smack-Jaw for the ribs, and BamaBoi Hot for the bird. Most of RD’s orders during my visit are to-go. Although mine’s dine-in, it also comes out in Styrofoam, too. Complete menu and more info at 4rdsbbq.com.
Three bones in the small rib plate. These pork ribs are tender and meaty with nuanced edge charm. There’s subtle hickory smokiness, but it’s a hint, not a hammer.
Like most ribs done right RD’s don’t really need sauce, although I do try a little Smack-Jaw on one of them, and this sauce is aptly named. Creamy, tangy, dances on your tongue — like some kind of rural remoulade.
Chicken wings with “BamaBoi Hot” sauce at RD’s Smokehouse Barbecue in Harvest, Alabama. (Matt Wake/[email protected])Matt Wake
My chicken wings come out steaming hot, succulent and smothered in BamaBoi Hot sauce, which adds twangy heat. The mac and cheese is homestyle and daydream soft. Onion rings are better than OK if you dip them in Smack-Jaw. But hey, this sauce could elevate even a severed human appendage.
Cook and kitchen manager Tony Battle has worked at RD’s for five years. He says, “We’ve had people come a long way [to eat here]. We’ve had people come from Texas, Sweden, I think, and all around.”
RD’s Smokehouse opened in October 2015, and the RD stands for its proprietor Rodrick Donegan. Donegan wasn’t available for an interview for this story, but Battle fills me in. He says Donegan started his barbecue business from home before growing it into the restaurant.
“He’s a great boss, for sure,” Battle says of RD. “He’s flexible. Everybody here is nice to work with, friendly, easy to work with.”
RD’s Smokehouse Barbecue opened its second location, far left, in January 2025 in Madison, Alabama. (Matt Wake/[email protected])Matt Wake
In January, RD’s opened its second location, in Madison at 1109 Slaughter Road, about 10 miles from the Harvest mothership. But the two vibes feel more like 10,000 miles away.
The Madison location is adjacent to a Chevron convenience store and Subway sandwich shop. Just down the road from Indian Creek Wholesale Nursery and Cummings Research Park. RD’s Madison space was formerly home to an ATL Wings chicken chain franchise that went belly up.
The dining room’s about the size of, well, a Subway. And like that RD’s original location, the only sounds in the dining room here are from orders being placed at the counter and cooking back in the kitchen. No music, no TV audio.
Like at RD’s Harvest, the service in Madison is sharp. The cashier when I visit is pierced and poised. She’s also great at guiding me through the menu, as I actually visited the Madison location a day before I went to the original location.
In Madison, it’s the Monday after July the Fourth weekend, and they’re out of ribs at both locations. Understandable since the Fourth is like the Super Bowl for barbecue restaurants.
The cashier, who bounces between here in Madison and RD’s original location, tells me on the Fourth they sold 80 racks of ribs at Harvest alone.
Pulled pork with “BamaBoi” sauce, potato salad and jalapeno hushpuppies at RD’s Smokehouse Barbecue’s Madison, Alabama location. (Matt Wake/[email protected])Matt Wake
With ribs off the table, I do pulled pork (rustic and hearty). and douse it in BamaBoi (the not hot version). For sides, potato salad (the flavor has some jazz to it) and jalapeno hushpuppies (a worthy, cornbread-cousin variant). A side order of those excellent chicken wings doused in Smack-Jaw awesomeness.
Yep, the vibe at RD’s original location is way cooler than the second location’s, but the trip to Madison took me half as long. As experience has value, so does convenience. What matters most of course, is food, and mine at both RD’s Smokehouses were right on.
If you purchase a product or register for an account through a link on our site, we may receive compensation. By using this site, you consent to our User Agreement and agree that your clicks, interactions, and personal information may be collected, recorded, and/or stored by us and social media and other third-party partners in accordance with our Privacy Policy.
During this major sales event, Walmart customers can score the Frigidaire Gallery Countertop Nugget Ice Maker in the gray design for $179 instead of the previous $220 price tag. This original price tag was also lowered from its initial list price of $379. The navy and black designs are also on sale for $189 and all qualify for free shipping.
Frigidaire Gallery Nugget Ice Maker
$379.99 $179
The Frigidaire Gallery Nugget Ice Maker is on sale at Walmart.com for a limited time.
The Frigidaire Gallery Nugget Ice Maker is a quality nugget ice maker that not only makes the ice, but also stores the ice, so you don’t have to babysit it, unlike cheaper versions that require you to immediately move the ice to the freezer. However, it also doesn’t cost a ridiculous amount of money, like the GE Profile™ Opal™ Nugget Ice Maker that usually costs about $500.
“Frigidaire Gallery Touch Control Nugget Ice Maker delivers 44 lbs. of soft, chewable nugget ice for a restaurant-quality experience at home. It features a sleek stainless steel design, easy drawer access, and a tap-to-start control panel. No water hookup needed—just plug it in and fill the reservoir,“ Walmart’s product details state.
“The 3 lb. ice basket and self-cleaning function ensure fresh ice, while the compact size fits under kitchen cabinets. Includes an ice scoop and drip tray for easy serving and cleanup. Designed with convenience in mind, this ice maker features a drawer access and a viewing window, allowing everyone to catch a glimpse of the tantalizing ice that awaits. Its perfect size fits seamlessly on any countertop and can easily slide under kitchen cabinets. Plus, there’s no need for a water hookup—simply plug the machine into any standard 115V grounded electrical outlet and fill the reservoir with water.”
If you purchase a product or register for an account through a link on our site, we may receive compensation. By using this site, you consent to our User Agreement and agree that your clicks, interactions, and personal information may be collected, recorded, and/or stored by us and social media and other third-party partners in accordance with our Privacy Policy.
A leading U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) official says he has no knowledge of an ‘Alligator Alcatraz’ detention center planned for Alabama, despite reports suggesting otherwise.
Chris Cannon, assistant field officer with the ICE office in New Orleans, said Tuesday he has no knowledge about a similar detention center planned for Alabama.
If a detention facility is in the works, with or without an alligator swamp surrounding it, Cannon said he should be among the first to know.
“I’m not aware of it,” Cannon told AL.com, after addressing a gathering of county sheriffs attending the Alabama Sheriffs Association’s summer conference this week in Orange Beach. “I would be the person responsible for all of it.”
The name “Alligator Alcatraz,” was given to an isolated immigrant compound operating under Florida state control within the Florida Everglades. It is surrounded by swamplands, and state and federal officials have touted its location by citing that alligators and snakes could serve as security for the detainees inside.
“I am unaware of anything like that in this state,” said Cannon, a 16-year ICE employee who helps lead a field office that covers five Southern U.S. states including Alabama. “There were two companies out of Mobile awarded a contract to build these facilities. But my understanding is that is nationwide and not centralized to Alabama.”
President Donald Trump speaks with the media as he arrives at “Alligator Alcatraz,” a new migrant detention facility at Dade-Collier Training and Transition facility, Tuesday, July 1, 2025, in Ochopee, Fla. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)AP
U.S. Sen. Tommy Tuberville, on his gubernatorial campaign site on X, responded “Let’s do it” to a story about Trump floating the idea of a similar facility in Alabama.
Protesters have blasted the Trump administration for the Florida facility, calling it inhumane and labeling it as a makeshift prison camp. But GOP-supporters say it’s “cost-effective” and could serve as a model for other temporary facilities as the federal government undergoes a mass deportation agenda under Trump.
Environmental advocates and protesters at the Dade-Collier Training and Transition Airport on Tamiami Trail E, Ochopee, Fla., on Saturday, June 28, 2025, object to the “Alligator Alcatraz” being built at the facility. (Mike Stocker /South Florida Sun-Sentinel via AP)AP
It was built within a matter of weeks, raising concerns from environmental groups and others over a lack of having sufficient resources like food and water. Civil rights groups have labeled it as a looming human rights disaster.
The facility, which costs around $450 million to operate, is designed to hold about 3,000 people, with the potential to expand to 5,000.
Utilities, such as water, sewage and power will be provided by mobile equipment, according to Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ office.
If you purchase a product or register for an account through a link on our site, we may receive compensation. By using this site, you consent to our User Agreement and agree that your clicks, interactions, and personal information may be collected, recorded, and/or stored by us and social media and other third-party partners in accordance with our Privacy Policy.
The 2025 NFL season is quickly approaching. Teams are currently away for the summer but will be ramping up for training camp in two weeks. Week 1 is just about two months away and it’ll be here in no time.
The Jacksonville Jaguars are an interesting team, as they look to rebound after a disappointing 2024. Jacksonville made a draft day trade, moving up to select electric WR/CB Travis Hunter with the No.2 overall pick.
Their first task of the 2025 season will be against the Carolina Panthers, who are coming in with tons of momentum following Bryce Young’s heater to end last year.
The Jaguars will host the Panthers in Jacksonville on September 7. Fans looking to see the Jags take on the Panthers can do so for pretty cheap, as multiple sites are listing tickets for under $100:
Jags fans are one of the most passionate groups in the NFL. They’ve been starving for good football once again after the last two seasons haven’t gone their way. Fans should definitely take advantage of these cheap prices now.
The Jaguars will take on the Panthers on September 7, 2025 at 1 p.m. ET in Everbank Stadium.
If you purchase a product or register for an account through a link on our site, we may receive compensation. By using this site, you consent to our User Agreement and agree that your clicks, interactions, and personal information may be collected, recorded, and/or stored by us and social media and other third-party partners in accordance with our Privacy Policy.
For the Fiscal Year 2024, Napier’s Florida football program didn’t even spend the most on support staff among public SEC schools. The Gators weren’t even close, finishing ninth, while Georgia took the top spot.
The Bulldogs spent just over $8.1 million on support staff for FY 2024, according to financial reports submitted to the NCAA by SEC schools and obtained by AL.com via a series of open records requests. Vanderbilt was not included, due to its status as a private university, not subject to open records laws.
The NCAA financial reports are a bit unclear as to what constitutes support staff, mostly leaving it up to the schools to define for themselves. However, coach spending has its own category, so support staff pools will not include coaches.
Tennessee ran second to Kirby Smart and company, spending just under $8.1 million. Texas A&M at $7.9 million was the only other football program to shell out more than Alabama, which reported $7.6 million for the fiscal year, which ran from July 1, 2023 through June 30, 2024, meaning it included parts of both Nick Saban and Kalen DeBoer’s tenures in Tuscaloosa.
The FY 2024 number was an increase from Alabama’s $6.8 million in football support staff spending for Fiscal Year 2023.
Ole Miss, with $7.3 million, was fifth among the league’s public schools, one spot behind UA. South Carolina spent just less than the Rebels in FY 2024, finishing sixth in the league.
Auburn was 10th in the league during FY 2024. The Tigers spent just under $6.3 million, just behind Florida’s $6.4 million.
AU’s football support staff spending did increase year-to-year. Auburn had spent $5.4 million in the category during FY 2023.
Just four SEC football programs spent less than $5 million on support staff during the fiscal year. Mississippi State dropped $4.3 million to run 12th in the league, making support staff one of the few revenue or spending categories where the Bulldogs weren’t last among the public schools.
Oklahoma spend just under $4.1 million, good for 13th, while Arkansas spent $4 million and sat just behind the Sooners. Kentucky spent the least in the league on support staff by a healthy margin, at just under $3 million.
If you purchase a product or register for an account through a link on our site, we may receive compensation. By using this site, you consent to our User Agreement and agree that your clicks, interactions, and personal information may be collected, recorded, and/or stored by us and social media and other third-party partners in accordance with our Privacy Policy.
Last season, Pinto finished with an AHSAA-record 1,826 receiving yards for the Bulldogs while hauling in 22 touchdowns for the Bulldogs, while also running for 428 yards and four touchdowns.
He was a first team all-state pick in Class 3A and a finalist for the Alabama Sports Writers Association’s Class 3A Back of the Year award.
Along with his single-season receiving record, Pinto tied for second in the single-game receiving record with 20 during a 34-27 victory over Class 4A runner-up Cherokee County last season that saw him log 250 yards and three touchdowns.
Piedmont finished last season 13-1 and made its ninth semifinal appearance in 10 seasons before falling to eventual Class 3A state champion Mars Hill Bible.
In other recruiting news:
COMMITMENTS
Dale County tight end/athlete Andrevius Smith Jr. also committed to Jacksonville State, announcing his choice on Saturday. He picked the in-state Gamecocks over a final list that also included North Alabama, Liberty and Mercer.
OFFERS
Thompson QB Trent Seaborn announced an offer from Clemson.
The 6-1, 180-pound 4-star junior has also been offered by most SEC school, including Alabama and Auburn, along with Miami, Oregon, Washington and more.
Two Mary G. Montgomery players announced recruiting news. Devin Pettway has narrowed his list to three schools while Kaleb Morris picked up an offer.
The 6-2, 215-pound 3-star LB Pettway, who previously committed to Jax State, will choose among the in-state Gamecocks, Louisiana or Tulane.
Morris, who earlier committed to Mississippi State, was recently offered by Miami. The 3-star 6-4, 260-pound DL also had offers from Kentucky, Georgia Tech, UAB and others.
Jaden McKenzie-Rivers of Tallassee was offered by UNA. The 5-9, 170-pound ATH also has a D1 offer from Southern Miss.
Mars Hill Bible tight end Matthew McIntyre picked up an offer from North Alabama. The 2027 prospect was a part of the Class 3A state championship team last season and also holds offers from Troy, UAB and UT Martin.
In basketball, Park Crossing’s Maliyah Meeks earned an offer from Cal State Fullerton. The 6-foot-2 power forward/center also holds offers that include Jackson State, NC Central, Sacramento State, from Florida A&M and Coppin State.
Hoover’s Aaliyah Blanchard received a Division I offer fro Tulane. The Class 7A state champion was a first team all-state pick last season with the Bucs.
Sports writer Dennis Victory contributed to this report.
If you purchase a product or register for an account through a link on our site, we may receive compensation. By using this site, you consent to our User Agreement and agree that your clicks, interactions, and personal information may be collected, recorded, and/or stored by us and social media and other third-party partners in accordance with our Privacy Policy.
Joe Biden’s White House doctor’s uncooperativeness in a House probe looking into the former president’s fitness to serve has led the Republican congressman overseeing the investigation to allege a “coverup” of Biden’s “cognitive decline.”
“It’s now clear there was a conspiracy to cover up President Biden’s cognitive decline after Dr. Kevin O’Connor, Biden’s physician and family business associate, refused to answer any questions and chose to hide behind the Fifth Amendment,” House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer, R-Ky., said in a statement.
“The American people demand transparency but Dr. O’Connor would rather conceal the truth. Dr. O’Connor took the Fifth when asked if he was told to lie about President Biden’s health and whether he was fit to be President of the United States,” Comer continued.
Republicans on the Oversight Committee subpoenaed O’Connor last month as part of a their sweeping investigation into Biden’s health and his mental fitness as president. They claim some policies carried out during Biden’s term through the use of the White House autopen may be illegitimate if it’s proven the Democrat was mentally incapacitated for some of his term, the Associated Press reported.
Biden has strongly denied that he was not in a right state of mind at any point while in office, calling the claims “ridiculous and false.”
Comer suggested “legislative solutions to prevent such a coverup from happening again,” but did not say what those measures would be.
O’Connor’s testimony is not the end of the probe, Comer said.
“We will continue to interview more Biden White House aides to get the answers Americans deserve.”
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
If you purchase a product or register for an account through a link on our site, we may receive compensation. By using this site, you consent to our User Agreement and agree that your clicks, interactions, and personal information may be collected, recorded, and/or stored by us and social media and other third-party partners in accordance with our Privacy Policy.