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Sources: Bills promoting OC Brady to head coach on 5-year deal

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The Buffalo Bills have agreed to promote offensive coordinator Joe Brady to head coach, sources told ESPN’s Adam Schefter.

Brady is expected to sign a five-year deal, sources told Schefter.

Brady replaces Sean McDermott, who was fired last week after the Bills were eliminated by the Denver Broncos in the AFC Divisional round of the playoffs. McDermott had spent nine seasons as head coach in Buffalo, taking the team to the playoffs in eight of those seasons.

Brady, 36, has been with the organization since 2022, initially joining former coach Sean McDermott’s staff as the team’s quarterbacks coach. He was promoted to interim offensive coordinator in November of the 2023 season after then-offensive coordinator Ken Dorsey was fired. He was then the team’s full-time offensive coordinator from 2024-25.

Since promoting Brady (Week 11, 2023), the Bills have ranked first in EPA per play (0.14) and second in points per game (29.1). The Bills had nine games with 30-plus points this season, tied with the Rams for the most in the NFL. Allen won his first MVP award in 2024, while running back James Cook finished with the rushing title in 2025. The Buffalo offense in 2024 also broke records for most points (525) and touchdowns (65) in a season in franchise history.

Team owner Terry Pegula said the decision to move on from McDermott became clear after visiting the Bills’ locker room after the overtime loss to Denver, upon seeing the devastation and emotion of quarterback Josh Allen‘s face and around the locker room.

Allen, who turns 30 in May, was involved in the coaching search, sitting in on interviews. General manager and president of football operations Brandon Beane led the search. Pegula, his daughter, Laura Pegula, director of business operations Pete Guelli and assistant general managers Brian Gaine and Terrance Gray were also involved in the process. The search was a wide open one, per Beane.

Beane also said that they were not necessarily looking for an offensive-minded coach, however, seven of the nine candidates interviewed have a primarily offensive background.

“This is a bigger job than just a playcaller and schemer,” Beane said last week. “I think we’ve seen where guys have been excellent playcallers, but they’ve got to the head coach seat and they couldn’t handle the adversity, the conflict management … it’s a CEO job. It really is. … We’ve got to make sure we get the leadership, the CEO part.”

The William & Mary graduate and former college wide receiver has a very close relationship with Allen. Before his time with the Bills, Brady was the offensive coordinator for the Carolina Panthers (2020-Dec. 2021) and the passing game coordinator/wide receivers coach at LSU during the team’s National Championship



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Albuquerque man faces federal charge after FBI finds functional grenade inside home

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ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (KRQE) – An Albuquerque man is facing a federal charge after a modified hand grenade was found inside his home, according to New Mexico’s United States Attorney’s Office. The Albuquerque Police Department responded to Jeff Bramlett’s home on Rio Galisteo Place in northwest Albuquerque on Dec. 31 after he requested medical assistance. While at the […]



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Families of 2 men killed in Caribbean boat strike sue U.S. government

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Washington — The families of two Trinidadian men who were killed in a U.S. missile strike on a boat in the Caribbean in October sued the Trump administration in federal court, arguing the “premeditated and intentional killings lack any plausible legal justification.”

Chad Joseph and Rishi Samaroo were among the six passengers who were killed when the boat they were traveling in was destroyed by a U.S. missile on Oct. 14, 2025, according to a 23-page complaint filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts on Tuesday. Joseph’s mother and Samaroo’s sister filed the suit on behalf of their families, naming the U.S. as a defendant. 

The October strike was part of the Trump administration’s campaign against alleged drug-trafficking boats in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific, mostly targeting boats coming from Venezuela. The administration has carried out at least 35 strikes since September, most recently last week. The attacks have killed more than 100 people.

President Trump posted footage of the Oct. 14 strike on Truth Social at the time, writing that intelligence showed the boat “was trafficking narcotics, was associated with illicit narcoterrorist networks, and was transiting along a known [designated terrorist organization] route.” He said “six male narcoterrorists” were killed.

Footage showing a boat exploding after it was struck by a U.S. missile in the Caribbean on Oct. 14, 2025.

Footage showing a boat exploding after it was struck by a U.S. missile in the Caribbean on Oct. 14, 2025. 

President Trump / Truth Social


The lawsuit said Joseph and Samaroo lived in Trinidad and Tobago and had traveled to Venezuela to fish and work on farms. They were returning to their homes in Trinidad and Tobago on the boat that was struck, according to the complaint.

Joseph was 26 years old and had a wife and three children in Trinidad and Tobago, the lawsuit said. The complaint said he called his wife two days before his death and said he had found transport back home. His family never heard from him again, the complaint said.

Samaroo was 41 years old and had been imprisoned from 2009 to 2024 “for his participation in a homicide,” the suit said. In August 2025, he called his sister and told her he was in Venezuela working on a farm. Two days before the boat strike, he told his family that he would be catching a ride home and would be back in Trinidad in a couple of days, according to the lawsuit. That was the last time they heard from him.

The lawsuit says that “Mr. Joseph and Mr. Samaroo were not members of, or affiliated with, drug cartels.” The administration has justified the campaign by stating that the strikes are targeting drug-running cartel boats. 

“The Trinidadian government has publicly stated that ‘the government has no information linking Joseph or Samaroo to illegal activities,’ and that it had ‘no information of the victims of U.S. strikes being in possession of illegal drugs, guns, or small arms,'” according to the complaint.

The lawsuit is seeking compensation for the two men’s families under two federal laws known as the Death on the High Seas Act and the Alien Tort Statute. The families are represented by the American Civil Liberties Union and the Center for Constitutional Rights. 

The lawsuit is at least the second legal action taken by the family of those killed in the Trump administration’s boat strikes. In December, the relatives of 42-year-old Alejandro Carranza Medina filed a complaint against the U.S. with the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, saying Medina was not involved in drug trafficking and had been fishing when his boat was destroyed.



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NERVOSA Announce New Album Slave Machine, Drop Ferocious Title Track

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Metal heroines Nervosa are officially entering a new era. The Brazil-based modern thrash metal powerhouse have announced their sixth studio album, Slave Machine, set for release on April 3, 2026 via Napalm Records — and they’re marking the moment with the arrival of its blistering title track.

A band that has never been content to stand still, Nervosa‘s latest chapter finds them operating at staggering speed with formidable precision. Having conquered some of the world’s biggest metal stages — from Wacken to Hellfest — and earned a reputation as one of the most uncompromising forces in contemporary thrash, Slave Machine aims to cement their status as true genre frontrunners.

Following the momentum of 2023’s Jailbreak, which saw founding guitarist Prika Amaral step fully into the role of lead vocalist, Nervosa now hit harder than ever. The band tear through the scene “with the force of a sledgehammer,” unleashing twelve new tracks that balance sheer aggression with sharpened melody.

Once again, Nervosa have teamed up with producer Martin Furia, known for his work with German thrash legends Destruction. Together, they bridge the gap between old-school thrash ferocity and modern critical edge, crafting an album that feels both rooted and forward-looking. Slave Machine is available for pre-order now.

The newly released title track serves as a ruthless introduction to what’s coming next. “Slave Machine” immediately cranks the velocity, showcasing relentless riffing and layered vocals, while also revealing a slightly different dimension of the band through a catchy alternative bridge — a surprising twist that still hits with crushing force.

Speaking about the song, Nervosa explain: “This song is everything that we want to say and play, many different vocal layers and guitar melodies like a scream to say that we are all part of the ‘Slave Machine’.”

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Amazon to Shut Down All Amazon Go and Amazon Fresh Stores

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The e-commerce giant said Tuesday it would convert some locations into Whole Foods Market stores.



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NBA trade rumors: Knicks eye Jrue Holiday, Lakers exploring options

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There has only been one in-season trade so far in the 2025-26 season, but with the NBA trade deadline on Feb. 5 now just nine days away, a surge in activity is surely on the horizon. 

Giannis Antetokounmpo’s uncertain status is holding everything up, but even teams with designs on landing the All-NBA forward still have to eventually take care of business with this season in mind. It might take until right before the deadline for teams to start shifting focus away from Antetokounmpo and make trades to bolster their roster for this season. While the trades themselves might not happen until the deadline itself, the conversations to explore what’s available and begin structuring the framework of potential deals are already happening. 

Two fascinating teams going into the trade deadline also happen to be two of the league’s most notable brands. The New York Knicks and Los Angeles Lakers are both firmly in the playoff mix in their respective conferences, with nearly identical records — 27-18 for New York and 28-17 for L.A. — but both displayed some fatal flaws and appear to be solidly in the tier below the true championship contenders as currently constructed. 

For two franchises desperate to get into the title picture, that usually means some activity at the deadline, but they also have a long-term vision to consider. Those two teams are the focus of the most notable NBA rumors and rumblings on Tuesday, offering some idea into what we may see from them over the next nine days. 

Knicks interested in Jrue Holiday, downplaying desire to trade Karl-Anthony Towns

The Knicks reportedly made calls to the Portland Trail Blazers to explore what a potential deal would look like to bring two-time NBA champion Jrue Holiday to New York, per Marc Stein. Holiday won titles in Milwaukee and Boston before being shipped off to Portland this summer for Anfernee Simons, and he remains a coveted veteran for contenders. 

The Knicks would view adding Holiday as a positive both for their ability to compete for a title this year, viewing him as an ideal backcourt complement to Jalen Brunson because of his defensive abilities, and also a helpful addition to wooing Antetokounmpo, with whom Holiday won his first title.

However, Knicks also stated their desire to give this group a chance to go through a full season and playoff run before making any major changes. James Dolan said at the beginning of the month he didn’t see the Knicks “making a big change” and highlighted how much he loved the vibes in the locker room. That was before their recent swoon, of course, but it does bring into question whether New York will be willing to meet Portland’s price on Holiday. 

Somewhat related, Stein also reports the Knicks “downplayed” the availability of Karl-Anthony Towns in trade talks, but rival teams view the All-Star center as still being gettable for the right price. Towns figures to be the centerpiece of any Giannis trade and the Knicks took a major swing to land him prior to the 2024-25 season. That said, Towns has drawn the ire of Knicks fans for some lackluster play in the middle of this season and there have been questions about how he’s fitting in Mike Brown’s system. 

The problem with trading Towns is he’s not likely to yield a huge return if the Knicks were to shop him actively. That likely explains why they’re downplaying his availability on the market, as the best possible deal is going to come from a team that feels more desperate to acquire a stretch big of Towns’ caliber, not by shopping him from team-to-team. 

Lakers canvassing the league to see what their options are

The Lakers were long the “boy who cried wolf” of trade rumors, with the franchise constantly attached to stars during the LeBron James era, but after the disaster of the Russell Westbrook trade, they became a bit gun shy of taking swings at the behest of their star. Last year marked the Lakers’ return to making splashy moves with the biggest trade in recent memory, when they landed Luka Dončić from the Mavericks

Now, one wonders if the Lakers are back to being aggressive with their assets to maximize their chances to contend immediately, or if the uncertainty of this summer with so many free agents will keep them from making major moves. Those are the debates within the Lakers organization, but at the very least GM Rob Pelinka is exploring potential options ahead of the deadline — particularly seeing if the Lakers can turn one of their future first round picks in 2031 or 2032 into multiple firsts, according to ESPN.

Adding multiple firsts would give them some more flexibility in trade talks alongside their expiring contracts like Rui Hachimura, Gabe Vincent and Maxi Kleber. The biggest area of need for the Lakers remains at center, where Deandre Ayton fell out of favor with JJ Redick. Finding a long-term answer at center will be the top priority for the Lakers this summer, but whether they can find that player in the next week is less certain. 

Rockets not interested in trading Tari Eason

The Houston Rockets are going to have some difficult decisions to make financially, as their young, talented roster is going to get progressively more expensive to keep intact. Amen Thompson is next up for a massive extension in Houston. Might make the Rockets willing to listen to offers for Tari Eason? Eason hits restricted free agency this summer. 

However, per Stein, the Rockets made it clear to hopeful suitors that Eason isn’t on the market at the deadline. Houston is fourth in the West and views itself as a contender, so they seem focused on keeping their team as strong as possible for this year’s playoff run and will leave the tough decisions on contracts for this summer. 

While teams rarely extend offer sheets to restricted free agents anymore, Eason might be the exception. He won’t command a max deal, but his value as a strong three-and-D wing may intrigue other teams to see if they can’t make Houston balk at a big offer sheet with other players to take care of. That’s a bridge the Rockets will cross this summer, but for now they know Eason’s value to this team and that it’d be hard to replace him in a trade with someone that helps them more. 





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Speed skater Casey Dawson takes advantage of Utah’s Olympic pipeline

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If you can see it, you can be it. And that might be why so many of this year’s Olympic athletes are from Utah.Casey Dawson is a long track speed skater who will compete in his second Olympics in Milan Cortina. Dawson grew up in Salt Lake City surrounded by the legacy of the 2002 Salt Lake City Olympics. He was only 2 years old when Utah hosted its first Olympics. But he and other kids took full advantage of Olympic venues that transformed into elite training centers and places for community recreation. At age 10, Dawson joined an after-school intro to speedskating program at the Utah Olympic Oval. “I got coached by Olympians when I was 10 years old. I think that’s what kept me in sports, doing speedskating and skiing in the mountains,” Dawson said. Dawson made the U.S. Speedskating team just seven years after trying that after-school program. He made his first Olympic Team in 2022 and won bronze in team pursuit in Beijing. These days, he has the luxury of training for the upcoming Winter Games in his hometown. U.S. Speedskating is still based out of the Utah Olympic Oval. And that facility was a key factor in Utah securing its second Olympic bid for the 2034 Games. Dawson said, “Out of the big heritage from the 2002 Games and now continuing into the 2034 Games coming up, it’s just an amazing thing we have going on in Utah.” Dawson and his long track teammates will compete Feb. 7-21 at the 2026 Milan Cortina Olympics.

If you can see it, you can be it. And that might be why so many of this year’s Olympic athletes are from Utah.

Casey Dawson is a long track speed skater who will compete in his second Olympics in Milan Cortina.

Dawson grew up in Salt Lake City surrounded by the legacy of the 2002 Salt Lake City Olympics. He was only 2 years old when Utah hosted its first Olympics. But he and other kids took full advantage of Olympic venues that transformed into elite training centers and places for community recreation.

At age 10, Dawson joined an after-school intro to speedskating program at the Utah Olympic Oval.

“I got coached by Olympians when I was 10 years old. I think that’s what kept me in sports, doing speedskating and skiing in the mountains,” Dawson said.

Dawson made the U.S. Speedskating team just seven years after trying that after-school program. He made his first Olympic Team in 2022 and won bronze in team pursuit in Beijing.

These days, he has the luxury of training for the upcoming Winter Games in his hometown. U.S. Speedskating is still based out of the Utah Olympic Oval. And that facility was a key factor in Utah securing its second Olympic bid for the 2034 Games.

Dawson said, “Out of the big heritage from the 2002 Games and now continuing into the 2034 Games coming up, it’s just an amazing thing we have going on in Utah.”

Dawson and his long track teammates will compete Feb. 7-21 at the 2026 Milan Cortina Olympics.



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World pauses to commemorate International Holocaust Remembrance Day

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WARSAW, Poland — Holocaust survivors, politicians and regular people commemorated International Holocaust Remembrance Day on Tuesday, gathering at events held across Europe to reflect on Nazi Germany’s murder of millions of people and its attempt to annihilate European Jewry.

International Holocaust Remembrance Day is observed across the world on Jan. 27, the anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau, the most notorious of the Nazi German death camps. The U.N. General Assembly adopted a resolution in 2005 establishing the day as an annual commemoration.

At the memorial site of Auschwitz, located in an area of southern Poland which was under German occupation during World War II, former prisoners laid flowers and wreaths at a wall where German forces executed thousands of prisoners. Poland’s President Karol Nawrocki was scheduled to join survivors for a remembrance ceremony at Birkenau, the vast site nearby where Jews from across Europe were exterminated in gas chambers.

Candles burned and white roses were placed at the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe, a field of 2,700 gray concrete slabs near the Brandenburg Gate in the heart of Berlin, which honors the 6 million victims and stands as a powerful symbol of Germany’s remorse.

In the Czech Republic, a candlelight march is planned for the evening in Terezin at the site of the former Nazi concentration camp Theresienstadt. Thousands of Jews died there or were sent from there to Auschwitz and other death camps.

Nazi German forces murdered some 1.1 million people at Auschwitz, most of them Jews, but also Poles, Roma and others. The camp was liberated by the Soviet army on Jan. 27, 1945. In all, some 6 million Jews were killed in the Holocaust — in ghettos, concentration camps and often shot at close range in the fields and forests of Eastern Europe.

Israel — home to more Holocaust survivors than any other country — marks its remembrance day, Yom HaShoah, on the anniversary of the April 1943 Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, emphasizing the heroism of the Jewish insurgents who resisted the Nazi terror.

An annual gathering took place at the upper house of the Czech Parliament with Holocaust survivors. Pavel Jelinek, a 90-year-old survivor from the city of Liberec — a Czech city with a prewar Jewish population of 1,350 — told those gathered that he was now the last living of the 37 Jews who returned to the city after the war.

There are an estimated 196,600 Jewish Holocaust survivors still alive globally, down from 220,000 a year earlier, according to information published last week by the New York-based Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany. Their median age is 87, and nearly all — some 97% — are “child survivors” who were born 1928 and later, the group said.

Though the world’s community of survivors is shrinking, some are still telling their stories for the first time after all these years.

In London, a Holocaust survivor addressed the British Cabinet in what Prime Minister Keir Starmer described as a first. Government members wiped away tears as 95-year-old Mala Tribich described how Germany’s invasion of Poland in 1939 destroyed her childhood.

She recalled being forced into hard labor at the age of 12 as the first Nazi ghetto was established in her hometown of Piotrkow Trybunalski, and spoke of the hunger, disease and suffering there. The Nazis murdered her mother, father and sister. She was sent to Ravensbrück and then to Bergen-Belsen, where she was liberated by the British Army in April 1945.

She urged the Cabinet members to fight antisemitism — and to remember.

“Soon, there will be no eyewitnesses left,” she told them. “That is why I ask you today not just to listen, but to become my witness.”

Many leaders also reflected on the upheaval in today’s world.

Kaja Kallas, the European Union’s foreign policy chief, warned about rising antisemitism and new threats. She noted that AI-generated content is now being used “to blur the line between fact and fiction, distort historical truth, and undermine our collective memory.”

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, whose country has been under attack from Russia for four years, said that just as the world united to defeat the Nazis in 1945, it “must act the same way now.”

“Whenever hatred and war threaten nations, unity that saves lives is needed,” Zelenskyy said.

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Associated Press writers Karel Janicek in Prague, Kamila Hrabchuk in Kyiv, Danica Kirka in London, Lorne Cook in Brussels and Mike Corder in Amsterdam contributed to this report.



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Stephen Wilson Jr. + Brothers Osborne Song Arose From Heartache

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Stephen Wilson Jr. was a guest on Taste of Country Nights, where he revealed how a heartbreaking phone call from his sister ultimately led to him co-writing a song for Brothers Osborne.

When Wilson Jr. told me the story behind the song, “Make It a Good One,” it gave me goosebumps.

“We actually started writing this other song — I don’t even remember what it was called — and my sister called,” Wilson Jr. said. He noted that she rarely called him in the afternoon, so he immediately knew something was wrong.

Wilson Jr. explained that he told John and TJ Osborne to hang tight while he stepped out of the writer’s room to take the call. On the other end of the line, his sister delivered devastating news.

“‘Dad’s at the doctor right now, and he’s telling me a lot of really bad things,’” she told him.

The country newcomer said his sister was overwhelmed and looking to him for support.

“She’s freaking out, and she needs support,” Wilson Jr. recalled. “And here I am at this write, and she’s like, ‘I’ll let you know in the next 45 minutes — we should get some results back from these scans.’”

“I was really distracted. We got back to sort of writing a song, but I was shell-shocked,” he said. “I couldn’t think about anything else. I was just nervously existing in that room.”

Read More: T.J. Osborne of Brothers Osborne Comes Out as Gay

The “Gary” singer explained that about 45 minutes later, he received a text from his sister that said, “Make sure you’re home for Thanksgiving this year.”

“That told me everything I needed to know,” he added.

When Did Stephen Wilson Jr.’s Father Die?

Stephen Wilson Jr.’s father, Stephen Wilson Sr., died in September of 2018 at the age of 59.

After Wilson Jr. returned to the writer’s room with Brothers Osborne, he recalled something significant happening at the exact moment he was questioning whether the writing session should continue.

“I remember John Osborne turned around and said, ‘Boys, I’m not sure I’m feeling this idea we’re working on,’” Wilson Jr. recalled. “Then he said, ‘I’ve got a chorus I’ve been working on — we wrote it the other night on the bus.’”

Wilson Jr. then sang the hook from the song on Brothers Osborne’s 2020 Skeletons album:

Make it a good one / Make it a long one /
If you’re gonna pour one / Make it a strong one.

He went on to explain that the lyric was exactly what his father would have said to him in that moment.

Taste of Country logo

That was his mentality. Wilson Jr. said, “It became very apparent in that moment that for me to leave that room and not write a song, my dad would have said, ‘Don’t you dare leave that room.’”

He concluded by saying, “When they put that out, that was the song that really meant so much to me, just because of how it started. My whole life changed from that point forward.”

Check out some pictures from Brothers Osborne winning the Angels Among Us Award back in 2023.

PICTURES: See Brothers Osborne Receiving the 2023 Angels Among Us Award

Brothers Osborne received the Angels Among Us Award at the 2023 Country Cares for St. Jude Kids Seminar. Scroll the photos below to see pictures of the award ceremony, which was held in Memphis, Tenn. on Oct. 12-14, 2023.

Gallery Credit: Carena Liptak

2026 Country Music Festivals Guide

Enjoy an updated list of country music’s best festivals, across America, Canada, Great Britain and more. This list of 2026 country fests will be updated to reflect postponements, cancelations or lineup adjustments.

Gallery Credit: Billy Dukes





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Meta Enters Up to $6 Billion Data-Center Fiber-Optic Cable Deal With Corning

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Meta has struck a multiyear deal worth up to $6 billion to buy fiber-optic cable from Corning, a move aimed at advancing the expansion of its U.S. data-center network for artificial-intelligence systems.



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