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Post Malone Outraged By Beer Prices at Super Bowl Party

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Amid all the brouhaha that surrounded the Super Bowl, Bad Bunny and the Kid-Rock-led Turning Point USA Halftime Show, fans can be forgiven for missing a good deed Post Malone tried to do at his Super Bowl party ahead of the big game.

Read More: Kid Rock + Turning Point USA’s Show — Why the NFL Should Be Worried

But those who were there in person likely won’t forget how scandalized Posty was by the high beer prices at his show. He said from the stage he’d lower the price by half, and then some.

However, those in the crowd reported that the bar didn’t honor the singer’s statement.

It all went down last Friday (Feb. 6) in San Francisco, where Post was playing his Bud Light-sponsored free Post Malone & Friends Show.

When Happened at Post Malone’s Bud Light Super Bowl Party?

Bud Light beer was heavily featured during the show — one fan-film clip from the event even shows Posty singing “Circles” as he sashays across the stage with a can of the beer balanced on his head.

Another hallmark of the show was Posty’s well documented Dallas Cowboys fandom. The San Francisco Chronicle reports that, at one point during the show, the singer tossed out an offer for “free beers” for Cowboys fans and admitted he was “pretty heartbroken” the team wasn’t playing the Super Bowl.

Most fans assumed it was a joke, but the issue came up again after someone in the crowd alerted Posty that the drinks weren’t free, even though it was a Bud Light-sponsored free show.

Post Malone on The Price of Beers at His Super Bowl Party: “That’s Absolutely Unacceptable”

Not only was beer not free for fans, but the price was way too high for the singer’s liking. The Chronicle reports that a Bud Light Seltzer cost $14, a regular Bud Light cost $12 and a Bud Light draft cost $15.

“I had some young man over on this side tell me that the beers were not free,” Posty reportedly said from the stage. “$14 for a beer? That’s absolutely unacceptable at a Bud Light show.”

He then said he was going to cover half the tab, bringing the price per drink down to $7. Soon after, he further lowered the price to $5, and $3 for Cowboy fans.

Did Post Malone Lower the Beer Prices at His Super Bowl Show?

Well, he tried — but apparently, fans continued to have to pay the full $14 all night.

The Chronicle reports that bartenders continued to charge full price for all drinks, despite what Post said. Though a few fans argued over the price, most of them seemed to cut their losses.

“I expected it not to be real, but I thought I’d give it a shot,” one concertgoer told the outlet. “Honestly, it’s cheaper than most concerts.”

So far, there’s been no further comment from Post on drink prices, and it’s not clear whether or not he was aware that the bar wasn’t honoring his request to cut the drink costs.

Post Malone Facts: 11 Things Country Fans Need to Know

Everyone knows Post Malone (Austin Richard Post) was born in 1995, lived in Texas and serves up originally pleasing pop, hip-hop and country music. These 11 facts about the “I Had Some Help Singer” dig deeper and reveal the man beneath the tattoos and music.

Gallery Credit: Billy Dukes





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AB InBev Upbeat for 2026 After Volumes Decline Slows

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The world’s largest brewer said it is confident of continued earnings growth after beer sales volumes fell 1.5%, less than expected.



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UK PM Starmer demands apology from ‘offensive’ Ratcliffe

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U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer branded comments made by Jim Ratcliffe that the country has been “colonized” by immigrants as “offensive and wrong,” and insisted the Manchester United co-owner should apologize.

Ratcliffe drew a flurry of criticism Wednesday after an interview with Sky News in which the 73-year-old complained at the impact of “huge levels of immigrants” entering the country.

The remarks prompted a rebuke from Starmer, and sparked outrage from a number of United supporter groups.

The Prime Minister posted on X: “Offensive and wrong. Britain is a proud, tolerant and diverse country. Jim Ratcliffe should apologise.”

Earlier in the day, Ratcliffe told Sky News: “You can’t have an economy with 9 million people on benefits and huge levels of immigrants coming in.

“I mean, the UK has been colonized. It’s costing too much money. … The UK has been colonised by immigrants, really, hasn’t it?”

The interview was swiftly condemned by the Manchester United Muslim Supporters Club (MUMSC) for including “language frequently used in far-right narratives.”

A statement issued by MUMSC read: “Manchester United is a global club built on diversity — on players, staff and supporters from every background, faith and ethnicity.

“The strength of our club, and of our country, lies in that diversity. …

“We stand with all communities who reject racism, anti-Semitism, Islamophobia and hatred in all its forms, and we call for leadership that unites rather than divides.”

The Manchester United Supporters Trust said: “Comments from the club’s senior leadership should make inclusion easier, not harder.”

Anti-discrimination organization Kick It Out said in a statement there was “no place” for Ratcliffe’s views in English football.

“Sir Jim Ratcliffe’s comments are disgraceful and deeply divisive at a time when football does so much to bring communities together,” it read.

” … This type of language and leadership has no place in English football, and we believe most fans will feel the same.”



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Lemley, Kauf claim gold and silver in women’s moguls

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Lemley, Kauf claim gold and silver in women’s moguls



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Jake Hall snags Mountain West freshman record and lifts Lobos to win at GCU

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ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (KRQE) – It was a record setting night for UNM freshman Jake Hall as he helped the UNM Lobos squeak out a 70-64 win at Grand Canyon Wednesday night. After racing to an 11-0 start, the Lobos had to claw their way to a victory. Hall shot 4 of 5 from three point range, […]



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CRYPTIC SHIFT Launch Jazz-Fuelled New Single “Cryogenically Frozen”

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UK progressive death metallers Cryptic Shift have shared “Cryogenically Frozen”, the latest single from their upcoming full-length Overspace & Supertime, due out February 27 through Metal Blade Records.

In stark contrast to the sprawling introductions that defined parts of their 2020 debut Visitations From Enceladus, the new track dives in headfirst.

As vocalist and guitarist Alexander Bradley explains, “‘Cryogenically Frozen’ wastes no time by bursting into a flurry of jazz fusion-esque movements as if metal had an alternate timeline progressing from the lineage of masters like Cynic, Pestilence, and Allan Holdsworth, whilst still remaining true to our death/thrashing tendencies with lightning riffs tailor-made for the headbangers and circle pitters!”

The song also serves a narrative purpose within Cryptic Shift‘s ever-expanding sci-fi universe. “Simultaneously, all aspects of our songwriting propel our new character, ‘The Recaller,’ through her sci-fi adventures, beginning with a cybertronic shootout and meditations in dreams and consciousness,” Bradley continues.

One of the album’s shorter compositions, the track “ends with a moment of calm before the true centerpiece of Overspace & Supertime begins with the 29-minute ‘Stratocumulus Evergaol’.”

Formed in Leeds in 2015 by Bradley and drummer Ryan Sheperson, Cryptic Shift channel a shared obsession with science fiction and extreme metal into what they describe as “Phenomenal Technological Astrodeath.” Their debut album earned widespread acclaim for its progressive technical death/thrash assault, setting the stage for a sequel that pushes both concept and composition even further.

Overspace & Supertime continues that story as an alternate reality to their debut. “The concept of Overspace & Supertime plays as an alternative reality to the happenings of Visitations From Enceladus, taking our character into new dimensions filled with both greater adventures and more bizarre encounters,” says Sheperson. “Whilst the concept themes of our sci-fi tale have grown, so have our efforts in synthesizing it with the ultimate Astrodeath soundscape.”

Produced by Jack Helliwell, mastered by Greg Chandler (Esoteric, My Dying Bride), and featuring striking artwork by Jesse Jacobi, Overspace & Supertime is shaping up to be one of the most daring extreme metal releases of the year. Pre-orders are available here.

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U.S. Energy Secretary Talks Oil Revival—and Democracy—in Venezuela Visit

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Chris Wright said “enormous progress” is being made on crude production.



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Jordan Stolz wins gold, shows why he will be 2026 Winter Olympics’ breakout star

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The speed part of speedskating isn’t the easiest thing to translate to a TV screen.

When men and women race in the 100-, 200- and 400-meter sprints at the Summer Olympics, their raw athletic prowess is obvious. It pops through a broadcast. Legs pumping and arms churning, eight racers dart their hearts out mere feet from one another as a sea of humanity of tens of thousands strong shrieks from their guts. It’s obvious and irresistible theater, and the speed (thanks to advanced technology and cameras that move alongside the sprinters) is tangible even while watching from the comfort of your couch. 

Speedskating — sprinting’s Winter Olympics analog — doesn’t carry that widespread appeal every four years, when it gets a February main-stage moment. The skaters look fast, but how fast are they really going? It can be hard to discern. And they’re on skates, after all, so the training and endurance that it takes to be an Olympic-level competitor is somewhat muted because they’re zipping around on ice. Beyond that, racers don unitards with hoods over their heads (for aerodynamics) and wear protective goggles, too.

2026 Winter Olympics medal count: Keep track of Team USA’s quest for gold in Italy

Austin Nivison

2026 Winter Olympics medal count: Keep track of Team USA's quest for gold in Italy

Fair or not, it’s hard for speedskating to cultivate most of its best into highly marketable athletes who can truly break into the mainstream.

Jordan Stolz might be too great to be held back, though. 

Niche sport be damned, the United States looks like it has its next Olympic superstar. The 21-year-old from Wisconsin made his 2026 Olympic debut on Wednesday in Milan and exceeded the considerable hype that trailed in his wake going into these Games. 

Stolz took gold in the 1,000-meter race, and as if that wasn’t enough, he did it in both come-from-behind fashion and record-setting style. Stolz’s superhuman strength is how he doesn’t wear down as races go on. As other elite speedskaters see their times unavoidably weighted by critical seconds the deeper they get into their races, Stolz’s endurance is a phenomenal separator.

Watch how he used his abilities to take gold on Wednesday.

Stolz’s 1:06.28 blitz was .50 seconds ahead of his chief rival, Jenning de Boo from the Netherlands. 

Like so many speed contests in the Olympics, the difference in first vs. second or second vs. third can be one, two or three-hundredths of a second. Stolz’s time was a laughable half-second faster than de Boo’s, marking the largest gap between a gold and silver Olympics finish in the 1,000 since 1984. 

Stolz also broke the previous Olympic record by almost a full second. He didn’t set the world record on Wednesday, though. And that’s OK. He already has that, too. He set it at the world championships in January 2024. 

Get ready, because Wednesday was the start of what could be an all-time Olympic career for a guy who grew up with a huge pond in his backyard, would practice deep into the frigid, black winter nights and is already turning his origin story into a quintessential Olympic fairytale.

If you missed Stolz’s race in real time on Wednesday, that’s understandable. It was in the middle of the afternoon in the middle of the work week. NBC will re-air it on Wednesday night. Make the time to watch, because this is your official announcement to get on the Stolz train. He’s got one gold and is going for four. 

Still to come for Stolz: the 500-meter, 1,500-meter and the must-see chaos race that is the mass start

He may well leave Milan with four medals around his neck, and they could all be first-place finishes. 

He’s practically already at the Michael Phelps, Katie Ledecky level in that it would be stunning to see him finish in any place other than the top podium position. That’s because Stolz claimed first in the world championships in 2023 and 2024 in the 500, 1,000 and 1,500 meters. Everyone on the ice fears him. 

And he is unquestionably the biggest breakout star of these Winter Olympics. 

The sport has had some legends over the decades, to be sure. Eric Heiden changed American speedskating forever when he won five golds at the 1980 Olympic Games in Lake Placid. Bonnie Blair, Apolo Ohno and Shani Davis reached the pinnacle in the ensuing decades. 

Stolz is next, and is poised to perhaps be the greatest to ever do it. He gets his next chance at a legacy-defining Olympics with the men’s 500-meter race on Saturday.





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U.S. Olympic skier Breezy Johnson has plans for her broken and repaired gold medal

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American skier Breezy Johnson told CBS News she’s been treating her replacement gold medal with care after the original, which she won in the women’s downhill event at the 2026 Winter Games in Italy on Saturday, broke.

“I think that because they were so heavy, the ribbons couldn’t really hold them,” Johnson said, calling it “a little disappointing” that Olympic medal winners had to be careful about celebrating too enthusiastically, as it’s “all anybody wants to do.”

Johnson said she was initially told she wouldn’t get her original medal back, but it has been fixed, and she plans to keep it and trade in the replacement. She also plans to knit a special pouch to keep it safe. 

“I am an avid knitter,” Johnson told CBS News correspondent Seth Doane on Wednesday. “I knit a new hat or headband for every race. It’s a big superstition of mine.”

She only wears her special handknit race accessories once, for their respective race, after which they are retired.

“They’re piling up in my bags, but I’ve been wanting for a long time to, like, auction some of them off and, like, have people buy them and donate the proceeds to charity,” she said. “I don’t have anything else to do with them.”

Team USA's Breezy Johnson shows her gold medal at the 2026 Winter Olympics

Team USA’s Breezy Johnson shows her gold medal in the alpine ski women’s downhill race on Feb. 8, 2026.

Andy Wong / AP


Johnson dedicated the gold medal to her father.

“He found out that he can never ski again,” she told CBS News. “You know, he taught me to ski. I thought that the best thing that I could do was try to ski as fast as I could.”

Asked about her views on representing the United States, given political debate around the Games, Johnson declined to go down that slope.

“There’s been a lot of rhetoric. I personally prefer to focus on my skiing. I personally don’t know anybody who has changed their political affiliation because of something that any celebrity or person said. So, I personally prefer to focus on my skiing and donate the money that I make to charities that I feel are actually doing the work that I support.”

Despite winning the first gold medal for Team USA in Italy, the Milano-Cortina Winter Games haven’t been a total success story for Johnson. 

She failed to make the podium after skiing with teammate Mikaela Shiffrin in the team slalom event Tuesday. After the race, Johnson could be seen speaking with Shiffrin, delivering what looked like a pep talk.

“I said, ‘I know you tried your best and it’s gonna be OK,'” Johnson told CBS News of the private chat. “I don’t, like, hold any of that against anyone because I know this sport. There’s so many variables, and there were variables yesterday, too. They weren’t necessarily in our favor, and we went out and we both gave it our all, and it didn’t happen, but that’s OK.”

Johnson said she’s generally pretty good at coping with the pressure of competing at the highest level of her sport — and she understands that such competition, and such extreme speeds, come with extreme danger.

After Team USA’s Lindsey Vonn was injured in a fall in the downhill race Saturday, which Johnson went on to win, she said her 41-year-old world champion teammate texted her. 

“She said, ‘congratulations,'” Johnson said. “You know, I know what she’s going through is hard, and I think she’s dealing with a lot. So, we haven’t spoken, like, on the phone or anything, but I wish her the best.”

Johnson said she also understands what drove Vonn to compete in these Games just a week after rupturing her ACL.

“Part of what breaks your heart is that you’re used to defying the odds. You’re used to writing fairytale endings. And the reality is that those things get made into movies because they’re so unlikely. And unfortunately, you can’t always — it’s not always like the movies,” she said.

“It’s difficult to understand what moves people to do it, but when you’re doing it well, it’s a pretty incredible feeling,” Johnson said, describing the sport of downhill as “counterintuitive” and saying that spectators can share in the rush. 

“Eighty-five miles an hour, nothing to protect you except spandex, combining in gigantic blades on your feet, which people sometimes seem to forget,” she said. “It’s like Formula One on ice, with giant knives, who doesn’t want to watch that?”



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Woman charged with setting apartment on fire while children were inside

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A woman is being charged with child abuse after starting an apartment fire while her children were inside. According to court documents, on Feb. 7, Yailasha Smith, 28, attempted to kill both herself and her children by setting her apartment on fire. Officers responded to a suicide call for service on Feb. 7 at 12901 Central Ave. NE, Apartment 240.Smith allegedly told her neighbor that she was going to kill herself and her kids. The caller could see smoke coming from outside the apartment, and Smith said she had to do this and was sorry for her children.When arrested, Smith told police that she dropped her lighter fluid and her son had spilled her lighter fluid. Court documents state that a UNMH doctor who examined the children said they smelled like lighter fluid. Witnesses say they also heard Smith running around before the fire, saying she was going to set the whole place on fire and take everyone with her. A neighbor reported smelling fire and smoke. Officers located and removed the children from the apartment, who were found lying several feet outside the bathroom. Smoke and fire damage were also found near the bathroom area of Smith’s studio apartment.

A woman is being charged with child abuse after starting an apartment fire while her children were inside.

According to court documents, on Feb. 7, Yailasha Smith, 28, attempted to kill both herself and her children by setting her apartment on fire.

Officers responded to a suicide call for service on Feb. 7 at 12901 Central Ave. NE, Apartment 240.

Smith allegedly told her neighbor that she was going to kill herself and her kids. The caller could see smoke coming from outside the apartment, and Smith said she had to do this and was sorry for her children.

When arrested, Smith told police that she dropped her lighter fluid and her son had spilled her lighter fluid. Court documents state that a UNMH doctor who examined the children said they smelled like lighter fluid.

Witnesses say they also heard Smith running around before the fire, saying she was going to set the whole place on fire and take everyone with her. A neighbor reported smelling fire and smoke.

Officers located and removed the children from the apartment, who were found lying several feet outside the bathroom. Smoke and fire damage were also found near the bathroom area of Smith’s studio apartment.



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