Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear goes national with podcast, the hot format for aspiring politiciansNew Foto - Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear goes national with podcast, the hot format for aspiring politicians

NEW YORK (AP) — If Kentucky Gov.Andy Beshearvaults into national prominence as a Democratic leader, he may one day look back at Thursday as a key step in that direction. SiriusXM announced that it was giving Beshear's new podcast a national platform starting this month, along with featuring him in a regular call-in show on its Progress network. PresidentDonald Trump's appearances on podcasts wasa pivotal media strategyin his successful 2024 Republican campaign. Moving forward, mastering a personal podcast could replace soft-focus biographies or wonky books as a way for politicians to increase their profiles. Beshear said on NBC's "Meet the Press" this summer that he will "take a look" at running for president in 2028. California Gov. Gavin Newsom, also in the circle ofpotential presidential nominees, started his own podcast earlier this year. Speaking to the anxiety of Americans In an interview, Beshear said a motivating factor in his own podcast was people who have come up to him, especially during the Trump administration, to talk about their anxieties. "That's how Americans feel," he said. "They feel like the news hits them minute after minute after minute. And it can feel like chaos. It can feel like the world is out of control. With this podcast, we're trying to help Americans process what we're going through." He's already done nearly two dozen podcasts, with his audience heavily weighted toward Kentucky residents. His guests have included some potential Democratic presidential rivals, including Maryland Gov. Wes Moore and Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar. Entrepreneur Mark Cuban, former Kentucky basketball coach John Calipari and Kentucky-born actor and comic Steve Zahn have also appeared. Beshear, the son of a governor who's been leading Kentucky since 2019, talks issues himself. Two of his friends, a Republican and a Democrat, are regular guests, and his 16-year-old son helps Dad navigate some youthful lingo. Newsomattracted attention— some of it negative among Democrats — for interviewing conservative guests Steve Bannon, Michael Savage and Charles Kirk on his podcast. "I did disagree with him on certain guests because I don't like to give oxygen to hate," Beshear said. "But Gavin is out there really working to communicate with the American people, and he deserves to be commended for it." Newsom's podcast started slowly in the marketplace but has caught fire in recent weeks, his regular audiences jumping from the tens of thousands to the hundreds of thousands, said Paul Riismandel, president of Signal Hill Insights, an audio-focused market research company. The California governor'sincreased visibility, particularly on social media, is likely a factor in the growing popularity of the podcast, Riismandel said. But it's also a function of how podcasts often catch on: Many tend to be slow burns as audiences discover them, he said. Learning to master the format of podcasts Whether ambitious politicians start their own podcasts or not, they're going to have to be familiar going forward with what makes people successful in the format. "With a podcast, the audience expects a more unfiltered, authentic kind of conversation and presentation," Riismandel said. If politicians come across as too controlled, looking for the sort of soundbites that will be broken out in a television appearance, it's not likely to work, he said. They have to be willing to open up. "That is something that is probably new for a lot of politicians," he said, "and new for their handlers." Beshear's first podcast for SiriusXM will feature an interview with House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries of New York, conducted in the company's New York studio and debuting Sept. 10. The Progress network will air Beshear's podcasts regularly on Saturdays at 11 a.m. Eastern. The first live call-in show will be next Tuesday at noon, with Beshear joined by Progress host John Fugelsang. Beshear stressed that his work for SiriusXM is "not just aimed at a Democratic audience." "We're aiming," he said, "at an American audience." ___ Follow the AP's coverage of Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear athttps://apnews.com/hub/andy-beshear. ___ David Bauder writes about the intersection of media and entertainment for the AP. Follow him athttp://x.com/dbauderand athttps://bsky.app/profile/dbauder.bsky.social.

Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear goes national with podcast, the hot format for aspiring politicians

Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear goes national with podcast, the hot format for aspiring politicians NEW YORK (AP) — If Kentucky Gov.Andy Beshearv...
Poland says two drones enter airspace, cause no damageNew Foto - Poland says two drones enter airspace, cause no damage

WARSAW (Reuters) -Two incursions of Polish airspace by drones occurred overnight from Tuesday to Wednesday, but they were not shot down as they posed no danger, the army said on Thursday. Poland has been on high alert for objects entering its airspace since a stray Ukrainian missile struck a southern Polish village in 2022, killing two people, a few months into Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine. "We had two airspace violations," General Maciej Klisz, Operational Commander of the Armed Forces, told a news conference. "These two violations were under the full control of national forces and units assigned to the state defence system." General Wieslaw Kukula, Chief of the General Staff, said that drones left Polish airspace without causing any damage. The Polish army gave no details about where the drones entered Polish airspace. Russia fired more than 500 drones and dozens of missiles across Ukraine in the night between Tuesday and Wednesday, hitting energy and transport infrastructure at 14 sites and injuring four railway workers. Poland, a NATO member state, has been a staunch supporter of Ukraine against Russia. In August, a drone crashed into a cornfield in eastern Poland. A prosecutor investigating the incident said at the time it appeared to have entered Poland from the direction of Belarus, an ally of Russia. (Reporting by Alan Charlish, Pawel Florkiewicz, Barbara Erling; editing by Mark Heinrich)

Poland says two drones enter airspace, cause no damage

Poland says two drones enter airspace, cause no damage WARSAW (Reuters) -Two incursions of Polish airspace by drones occurred overnight from...
College Football Playoff bracket prediction: Tennessee bumps tumbling AlabamaNew Foto - College Football Playoff bracket prediction: Tennessee bumps tumbling Alabama

Alabamaneeds abreakfast ball. Too bad there are no mulligans in college football – or in column writing. Myseason-opening College Football Playoff predictionsaged like egg salad in the South Florida sun, which is to say they spoiled likeBoise Statein the South Florida sun. Time to scramble the lineup. (Kalen DeBoer might want to consider this, too.) Here's my latest projection of what I think the bracket will look like come selection Sunday on Dec. 7. Subject to change, of course. As a reminder, teams do not need to be a conference champion to receive a first-round bye, after a change to straight seeding. College football looks good on Matt Patricia. Formerly a failed NFL coach with theDetroit Lions, Patricia polished his reputation byoutwitting Texas coach Steve Sarkisianin the season opener. Arch Manningwasn't up to the taskof facing theBuckeyes. Ohio State's linebacker Arvell Reese caused destruction, and its secondary shrink-wrapped the Texas wide receivers. Patricia's effective game plan helped, too. Ohio State's ceiling will be determined by Julian Sayin's growth, but the Buckeyes' defense provides a high floor. I'm not ready todiscard Manning after he failed to solve a defensethat rates among the nation's best. In defeat, Texas showcased a commendable defense, a promising offensive line and a reliable run game buoyed by CJ Baxter's return from injury. Sarkisian admitted his game plan failed to properly incorporate Manning's repertoire. The Texas quarterback looked jittery playing in front of a scarlet-clad crowd of 107,524. A surname proved an insufficient security blanket for a 21-year-old's nerves. Manning will get a chance to settle in against San Jose State, Texas-El Paso and Sam Houston State. He could steady by the time Texas travels to The Swamp in October. If Drew Allar could complete passes against Nevada's defense every week, Penn State would be national champs. Alas, games against Oregon and Ohio State await, but not before theNittany Lionsdine on more catnip in games against Florida International and Villanova. Ohio State's defense proved in Week 1 that it could withstand the loss of veteran talent. At Penn State, the departures of Abdul Carter and Kobe King might loom large, but we won't really know the answer for a few weeks. Penn State treated this like a COVID-19 year and prolonged its preseason by scheduling a cupcake feast the first few weeks. Thefanfare for Carson Beck– all deserved, by the way – overshadowed that Gunner Stockton snapped right into place for Georgia. Granted, Georgia played an opponent that Penn State might like to make room for on the schedule. Vulnerabilities shown by Alabama and Texas are a good sign for the Bulldogs. They'll play each. If Stockton runs as well against SEC opponents as he did against Marshall, Georgia will enjoy a more dynamic offense. Transfer wide receiver Zachariah Branch addressed a need, too. It's good advice to not overreact to Week 1 results, but I also won't ignore what I saw. Considering how Miami played against Notre Dame, it could have its best defense in years. Pair that with a quarterback who's good enough to win the Heisman Trophy and a batch of wide receivers that most SEC coaches would covet, and Miami has the goods to win the ACC. The Hurricanes will play just four regular-season road games. If coach Mario Cristobal can stay out of his own way, he's got a playoff team on his hands. Brian Kelly spoke to the heart of the matter when he said LSU demonstrated "the composure and the resolve" to beat a program as well oiled asClemson's. It's been a minute since LSU had the composure, the resolve or the defensive mean streak necessary to win an SEC championship. This team possesses those ingredients. You never know how a team will gel after a player-buying spree like the one LSU went on in the offseason, but the Tigers looked plenty cohesive in taking apart Clemson. They showed a spine when Clemson tested them with a late rally, and Garrett Nussmeier played like he's the nation's best quarterback, which he might be. After Oklahoma State coach Mike Gundy remarked thatOregon "is paying a lot" of money to its roster, Ducks coach Dan Lanning weighed in: Gundy's correct. Oregon's roster is well-funded. That's the way Lanning wants it. "We spend to win," Lanning said. He's done a consistent job of that throughout his tenure, and it must have been reassuring to see new starting quarterback Dante Moore carve up a Championship Subdivision opponent in Week 1. Oregon won't play Ohio State amid a schedule that's made for playoff contention. Keep Notre Dame in the playoff mix despite its loss to Miami. The Irish rebounded and reached the national championship game last season after losing to Northern Illinois. Notre Dame's playoff hopes are squarely pinned to a Week 3 home game against Texas A&M. The Irish's schedule will become accommodating after that. If they can survive the Aggies, they can overcome their loss to Miami. CJ Carr showed promise in his first career start, but Notre Dame needs to showcase tailback Jeremiyah Love more. He was underused in the opener. In the anything-can-happen Big 12, I'm retreating toward a team that's already 2-0 and owns a conference victory. Iowa State finished as the Big 12 runner-up last season, and veteran starting quarterback Rocco Becht is off to a fine start. The Cyclones' schedule included just six home games, but they've already survived a trip to Ireland, emerging victorious againstKansas State. I've entered the danger zone for a Week 1 overreaction, but the Vols and their transfer quarterback Joey Aguilar looked dynamite while blasting Syracuse. You'd be hard-pressed to find anyone in Tennessee who would welcome back Nico Iamaleava after Aguilar's performance. The wide receivers looked dynamic, too, and the schedule is Tennessee's friend. The Vols got served the SEC's four weakest teams. Can Tennessee split games against Georgia, Alabama, Oklahoma and Florida? That's the formula for playoff entry. South Florida smashing Boise State will help position the American Conference to nab the Group of Five's bid into the playoff. The question becomes, who will win the American? TheBullsestablished themselves as a front-runner, but so, too, is Tulane. The Green Wave already whipped Northwestern. They'll also play Duke and Mississippi, but they won't need to sweep those Power Four games to make the playoff. Winning the conference is the ticket. Quarterback Jake Retzlaff, a transfer from Brigham Young, aids that possibility. The Tigers were fortunate to lose to LSU by only seven points. Clemson got sorely outplayed. It's also fortunate that neither this result nor its game against South Carolina will affect its opportunity to qualify for the playoff by winning the ACC. The larger issue for Clemson could be future opponentFlorida State's surge in sturdiness. But, Clemson will benefit from not facing Miami in the regular season, and Dabo Swinney remains in possession of a talented and veteran roster. It's premature to count out Clemson. Blake Toppmeyeris the USA TODAY Network's senior national college football columnist. Email him atBToppmeyer@gannett.comand follow him on X@btoppmeyer. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:CFP bracket prediction: Tennessee in, Alabama out, Texas stays

College Football Playoff bracket prediction: Tennessee bumps tumbling Alabama

College Football Playoff bracket prediction: Tennessee bumps tumbling Alabama Alabamaneeds abreakfast ball. Too bad there are no mulligans i...
Broadcaster Melissa Stark's 25-year NFL sideline anniversary is perfect timingNew Foto - Broadcaster Melissa Stark's 25-year NFL sideline anniversary is perfect timing

Melissa Stark could wake up Thursday morning and walk down the stairs of her New Jersey home to an empty house, the quietness consuming her. Life as an "empty nester" has arrived for the mother of four, with all of Stark's children already at college for the fall. But mom's gotta go to work, and the job is the 2025 season opener between thePhiladelphia Eaglesand theDallas Cowboys– 25 years to the day from her official NFL sideline reporter debut as a member of the "Monday Night Football" crew that included John Madden at the time. "For me, it's perfect timing," Stark told USA TODAY Sports by phone. "To be an empty nester and to have the quiet around the house doesn't really sit well with me." Assuming Stark spent all of those 25 years between the two dates roaming NFL sidelines and interviewing the most recognizable people in the country would be wrong. After 20 years away from that vantage point, Stark returned as NBC's No. 1 NFL broadcast team sideline reporter for the 2022 season, with Michelle Tafoya exiting. In between, Stark juggled the ultimate job title – mom – while maintaining a presence in media from being a "TODAY" show correspondent to hosting and reporting duties for NFL Network from 2011-24. Stark doesn't remember much from inside the TWA Dome, where the St. LouisRamsdefeated theDenver Broncos41-36, on Sept. 4, 2000. Sharper in her memory is the Hall of Fame Game from a month earlier, her first actual time as a NFL sideline reporter. The New England Patriots, coached by Bill Belichick, were playing. Belichick gave her a tidbit newspeople would die for – that he'd fined some Patriots a hefty amount for being one minute late to a team meeting. She assumed a nugget that juicy would be handed over to the broadcast booth. Her producers taught her a lesson she imparts on young people looking to break into the business. "You're trying to find that one piece of information nobody else has," Stark said of her main job responsibility. That was her scoop – nobody else's, the producers said. Stark reported the news and unearthed something actually insightful for the viewing audience. In the social media age, that can feel impossible. Why power of observation matters. "Those days just feel like a whole lifetime ago," said Stark, who has won three Sports Emmys – one as part of NBC's most-recent NFL postseason coverage and another as a member of NBC's 2024 Paris Olympics coverage. MORE:Scott Hanson says NFL RedZone will no longer be commercial-free starting in 2025 She added: "I can't believe, at 26 years old, I had that job."Not lost on Stark was how "cool" it was for a woman her age to have that responsibility. NBC staffers and producers will find dated clips of her from the games she worked from 2000-02 and it's only then Stark realizes how young she was. Being part of the NFL for that long "is an incredible honor." The Baltimore native covered players in her first act and is now chronicling their sons in her second act. The current players are close to her kids' ages (oldest 22, youngest 18). The parental instinct kicks in as she's arranging postgame interview shots. "You stand here, you stand here," she says, "kind of like how I do (with) my own kids." Coming back to football, Stark had her "2.0" moment. "To come back, it's so rare. I feel so blessed just to be able to come back and do this job. It's not something I ever thought I would come back and do after having four kids and starting a family." But now they're all gone. "So it's absolutely perfect," she said. Sometimes when she's watching old clips, Stark said, she surprises herself with a question the 26-year-old version of herself asked. If only she had the confidence and thick skin she's gained along the way. But she understands that anybody in her business has to both earn and learn that feeling of belonging. It's a career not without tribulations. For example, at Super Bowl 35 between the Oakland Raiders and Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Jerry Rice ran right past Stark for a brief interview meant to be part of the opening segment. Rice returned, but the red light was already off. She's been bumped (accidentally) by players, had to chase coaches down only to have them react unprofessionally to a question, felt a sweater catching fire from pyrotechnics and hit in the head with a football. "It's the best seat in the house," Stark said. Stark and the NBC crew spent Labor Day at "The Star," the Cowboys' facility, to prep for the season opener. They visited with the defending champs in Philadelphia the next day. "It works out well to not have me sitting here absolutely devastated as a mom with everyone gone," she said. MORE:NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell says Taylor Swift a 'maybe' for Super Bowl halftime show Armed with notes, information and plans, Stark has prepared stories and human interest angles. She loved the feeling, while studying at the University of Virginia, of studying for an exam and knowing everything once it was test time. But as a reporter, she sees her value in the senses, the observations. Being the eyes and ears on the ground for the booth. That's her favorite type of report – what Patrick Mahomes said to Travis Kelce on the bench, for example. Postgame interviews are her favorite part of the job, though, for the chance to spotlight some joy in prime time. "We do have so much going on in the world," Stark said. "To be able to bring out the joy of these players who have worked so incredibly hard for these moments, is so important. "I appreciate that so much and I don't overlook the position I'm in and the power to bring that out. You have to do it." This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Melissa Stark, NBC's NFL sideline reporter, celebrates milestones

Broadcaster Melissa Stark's 25-year NFL sideline anniversary is perfect timing

Broadcaster Melissa Stark's 25-year NFL sideline anniversary is perfect timing Melissa Stark could wake up Thursday morning and walk dow...
Mandela's grandson says Palestinians' plight is worse than apartheidNew Foto - Mandela's grandson says Palestinians' plight is worse than apartheid

JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) -Nelson Mandela's grandson has said Palestinians' lives under Israeli occupation are worse than anything Black South Africans experienced under apartheid, and urged the global community to come to their aid. Mandla Mandela, 51, spoke to Reuters on Wednesday evening at Johannesburg Airport, where he was boarding a flight to Tunisia to join a flotilla aiming to deliver food and humanitarian supplies to Gaza despite an Israeli naval blockade. "Many of us that have visited the occupied territories in Palestine have only come back with one conclusion: that the Palestinians are experiencing a far worse form of apartheid than we ever experienced," Mandela said. "We believe that the global community has to continue supporting the Palestinians, just as they stood side-by-side with us." Israel rejects comparisons between the lives of Palestinians who have lived under occupation or economic blockade for more than half a century and the apartheid era in South Africa, when the Black majority was ruled by a repressive white minority government. It has also defended its tight restriction of the supply of humanitarian and other goods to Gaza, saying it aims to stop weapons from reaching the militant group Hamas. Starvation is widespread in the enclave, according to the World Food Programme, and an authoritative hunger monitor says a quarter of the population are suffering from famine. Mandela is joining a group of 10 South African activists in the Global Sumud Flotilla, which includes dozens of boats and hundreds of people from 44 countries including Swedish activist Greta Thunberg. South Africa's African National Congress said their mission "echoes our own struggle for liberation". Mandela emphasised that, when apartheid ended in 1994, it was after intense pressure and sanctions from other nations. "They isolated apartheid South Africa and finally collapsed it. We believe that the time has come for that to be done for the Palestinians," he said. (Reporting by Siyabonga Sishi; Writing by Nellie Peyton; Editing by Kevin Liffey)

Mandela's grandson says Palestinians' plight is worse than apartheid

Mandela's grandson says Palestinians' plight is worse than apartheid JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) -Nelson Mandela's grandson has said ...

 

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