It’s extremely unlikely, but you can imagine the story of McCarthy coming back, right after Tomlin leaves, and immediately winning it all with Rodgers in his last year? Not one bit of me thinks that will happen, but that would be a pretty wild story.
.@SarahAMatthews1 on Donald and Melania Trump demanding Jimmy Kimmel be fired over a joke: "Forgive me if I roll my eyes, because you don't get to spend years cheering on violent, hateful rhetoric and then demand censorship when there's a joke you don't like."
What happened last night might have seemed extraordinary because President Trump and so many people in the presidential line of succession were in the ballroom when shots were fired outside.
But we need to say out loud that it was actually all too ordinary. In America, this is all too common: a shots-fired moment, a chaotic lockdown, a spasm of violence interrupting a peaceful gathering.
Thousands of media and political elites have now gone through what countless millions of other Americans have experienced in their schools, offices, malls and churches.
And on most of those occasions, there were no Secret Service agents.
As I crouched underneath a table in the ballroom, I didn’t know much, but I knew that help was on the way. Waves of law enforcement officials were pouring into the room, leaping from chair to chair, securing the scene. A man near me seemed hurt, or at least dazed, and a police officer helped him limp away.
Everyone in the room gave thanks to the agents, bodyguards and officers who responded. But I couldn’t help but think that most of the Americans who have found themselves in the middle of a shots-fired emergency feel much more exposed, much more vulnerable.
And I think we should keep acknowledging that during the follow-up news coverage of this incident.
cnn.com/2026/04/26/med…
A useful way to think about migration is to consider what kind of societies the migrants have built in their home countries and to what extent you would like those conditions replicated here.
MARKWAYNE MULLIN: We're a nation of immigrants
INGRAHAM: The right kind of immigrants
MULLIN: But the right kind of immigrants. That's right
INGRAHAM: We want mass deportations, Mr Secretary. That's what the American people voted for
MULLIN: We want to deport all those individuals who came in illegally
In recent weeks, during the holiest season of the Christian calendar, I have been deeply concerned by the rhetoric of President Trump. His remarks during Holy Week and Easter fall short of the standard one would expect from both his office and his professed Christian faith.
His threat to eradicate an entire civilization goes beyond what can be considered just or morally acceptable in war.
Likewise, his criticism of Pope Leo, whom he has disparaged as “weak” and “very liberal,” is misguided. The Holy Father’s call for peace, dialogue, and conversion of heart in the face of war arises not from partisanship or political bias, but from his Christian identity and mission as Supreme Pastor of Christ’s Church on earth.
The Church’s mission is to preach the Good News of her divine founder, Jesus Christ, proclaiming peace, truth, and the dignity of every human person.
“Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God.” (Matthew 5:9)
John Beilein walked so Dusty May could run.
9 years before Beilein: UofM was 145-135 with 0 tourney appearances
Then came Beilein in 2007:
• 278-150 (most wins at MI)
• 9 NCAA app
• 5 Sweet 16
• 2 Final Fours
• 4 B1G titles
Tonight isn’t possible without John Beilein.