Aaron Rodgers, his tail between his legs, begs out of Kimmel-Epstein legal fight
Aaron Rodgers, of “flush the bullshit” recent fame, now wants you to believe that he didn’t say what he said last week about late-night comic Jimmy Kimmel.
Aaron Rodgers, of “flush the bullshit” recent fame, now wants you to believe that he didn’t say what he said last week about late-night comic Jimmy Kimmel.
Many years ago, a newspaper headline asked the question: “What’s the difference between a politician and a psychopath?”
Soon after the NCAA started allowing athletes to profit from their name, image and likeness, a college football player named Rayquan Smith decided he, too, would cash in on the opportunity.
Since the presidency of Donald Trump, our growing preoccupation with deceptive forms of political communication can be charted.
VDOT has updated its scheduled road work in the Culpeper District during the next week.
Tony Bennett doesn’t bristle much publicly, but he did at a question in his postgame presser after Virginia’s 76-60 loss at NC State asking him to address his team’s competitive fire.
Donald Trump, at a campaign rally in Iowa over the weekend, talked up an idea to “build a giant dome” to protect the U.S. from missiles, because that’s been a big problem.
If you were still wondering how Republicans are going to act if things don’t go their way in November, we have New York Congresswoman Elise Stefanik telling you straight up.
Solar and wind power may be free and renewable, but they rely on natural processes that are beyond our control.
In 2014 the concept of solar powered photovoltaic road panels that could collect sunlight and convert it into useable energy went viral when the Idaho-based company Solar Roadways heralded it as a solution to the global energy crisis.