What's happening in New Mexico July 25-31? Lavender in the Village Festival and more
Albuquerque
July 25 Movies in the Park Double Feature – Visit Balloon Fiesta Park for a showing of 'The Wizard of Oz' and 'Wicked' playing at the same time on separate screens! Bring a blanket and enjoy local food trucks. Gates open at 6:30 p.m., and both movies start at 7:30 p.m.
July 26 Poulin Marketplace – Shop local vendors, home decor, and coffee at this indoor Summer Mini Market from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
July 26 Albuquerque Little Show – This free event features lowrider bicycles, vintage bicycles, pedal cars, strollers, and RC cars. The show starts at 11 a.m.
July 26 Lavender in the Village Festival – From 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Balloon Fiesta Park, this fundraising event is open to all ages and features over 120 different vendors of all things lavender.
July 26 Downtown Growers' Market – Visit Albuquerque's longest-running farmers' market for the largest selection of local farmers providing fresh produce, eggs, honey, meats, local goods, hot prepared foods on-site, and handmade art, crafts, and body care products. Every Saturday from April to mid-November, enjoy live music starting at 10 a.m.
July 26 Winrock Artisan Market – Visit Winrock Park every Saturday for a one-of-a-kind market experience. This market is pet-friendly, with local artisans, food trucks, live entertainment, and family fun. It starts at 8 a.m. and ends at 12 p.m.
July 26-27 Mean Girls Brunch – Damacios Bar & Tapas hosts a two-day Mean Girls brunch with themed items, cocktails, and music from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. both days.
July 26-27 Albuquerque Cards & More Expo – From 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. both days, browse sports cards, memorabilia, anime, Pokémon, Funko, comics, magic, crafts, and more.
July 27 Neighborhood Day at the Rail Yards Market – Connect with Barelas and nearby neighborhoods through local stories, vendors, and grassroots projects that strengthen community pride. This event is from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
July 27 Bluey & Bingo at ABQ Food Park – Join ABQ Food Park for a fun-filled free public event featuring some of the kids' favorite characters—Bluey and Bingo. Starting at 1 p.m., enjoy free photo ops, water activities from splash pads to water games, and food trucks serving up the best local eats.
New Mexico
July 25 Back to School Block Party – Visit Alamogordo for a night of fun, music, games, and more. APS staff will be available to provide information, answer questions, and help students and parents prepare for the 2025-2026 school year. There will be food trucks on-site as well as organizations providing community resources. This event is from 4 to 7 p.m.
July 25-27 Route 66 Freedom, Ride, Flight & Cruise Festival – Join Gallup for a high-octane weekend of fun, freedom, and family-friendly festivities at the Freedom, Ride, Flight & Cruise Festival. Set along the iconic Route 66, this three-day celebration features hot air balloons, classic cars, live music, and more.
July 25-27 Back to School Tax-Free Weekend – It's one of New Mexico's biggest shopping weekends of the year, and Animas Mall in Farmington is the place to stock up on school essentials without paying sales tax on qualifying items.
July 26 Retro Roadshow – From 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. in Clovis, travel the 'Retro Road' to a dozen local vintage/antique shops. Enjoy savings and maybe a few snacks along the way.
July 26 Southeast NM High Hoppers Custom Car Show – This Hobbs show features cash prizes, live music, food trucks, and plenty of fun for the whole family, starting at noon.
July 26 Summer Time Family Fest – The San Juan College Foundation and Dugan Production invite Farmington to a day of sunshine, smiles, and unforgettable summer fun. With lawn games, live music, face painting, food, and more, this free event is from 4 to 8 p.m.
July 26 Otero County Farmer's Market – Check out the only year-round farmers market in the area with many local farmers, crafters, bakers, and more, exclusively from Otero County. This event occurs every Saturday from 8:30 to 11 a.m.
July 26-27 Contemporary Hispanic Market – From 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. in Santa Fe, the Contemporary Hispanic Market offers an unparalleled opportunity to acquire exceptional pieces and support talented artists. Artists participating in the Contemporary Hispanic Market represent various artistic disciplines, including painting, photography, sculpture, ceramics, textiles, jewelry, and mixed media.
July 26-27 Skate Festival – Join Angel Fire for a high-energy weekend of skating, live music, and community fun. This event is from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. both days.
July 31 Christmas in July Market – Rio Grande Winery in Las Cruces hosts this festive market with local vendors, food and drinks, karaoke, and family fun. This event is from 4 to 8 p.m.
Albuquerque Notices
🔶 New Mexico Museum of Natural History & Science to host community celebration before temporary closure – The New Mexico Museum of Natural History & Science will be hosting a community 'closing celebration' on Aug. 3, one day before the museum is set to temporarily shut its doors for its first major renovation in decades.
🔶 Retired MMA fighter writes, directs, and acts in 'Kill Me Again' – An MMA fighter who retired from the ring, not only wrote an entire movie himself but directed and acted in it as well. Keith Jardine held a special screening for his psychological thriller Kill Me Again at the Icon Cinema 4 Hills location. The movie is about a notorious serial killer who finds himself trapped reliving the same violent night at a roadside diner.
🔶 Explora holds event showcasing the future of Extended Reality – An event at Explora brought together experts from across the country, letting the public get their hands on the future of the technology known as virtual, or extended, reality. Imagine slipping on a headset and instantly stepping into a whole new world or you can stay grounded in reality as digital objects appear right in front of you. With a pair of XR gloves, you can reach out and interact with them, as if they were real.
🔶 Expect traffic delays on Coors Blvd. until the end of the month – Expect to encounter bumper-to-bumper traffic on Coors Blvd. in Albuquerque until the end of the month. A utility company is working in the area of Coors Blvd. and St. Joseph's Drive to make room for a new restaurant and retail development across the street from St. Pius X School.
🔶 400+ Albuquerque students participate in talent show – Hundreds of kids from around Albuquerque took to the stage for a youth-led talent show. Family and friends got to enjoy the choreographed dance routines and homemade costumes, all judged by some local celebrities.
🔶 Albuquerque non-profit dealing with funding cuts lays off some staff – One of New Mexico's biggest non-profits helping the homeless is laying off employees in the face of major federal funding cuts. Hopeworks has been around for almost 40 years now and had about 70 employees until recently. The cuts have led to the laying off of around a quarter of their staff.
🔶 Albuquerque Reliques: A statue on Fourth honoring pioneer women – At the corner of Fourth Street and Marble Avenue, there's a statue that's been standing for nearly 100 years. The piece aims to honor the pioneering women of the early 1900s.
🔶 City of Albuquerque to host public meeting on potential changes to tree-related ordinances – The City of Albuquerque's tree-related ordinances are being reviewed, and officials want community members to provide their input.
🔶 Celebrate National Day of the Cowboy with western music and cowboy poetry – The New Mexico chapter of the International Western Music Association is inviting the community to join them for a day of western music and cowboy poetry.
🔶 Albuquerque officials discuss moving historic diner to Route 66 Visitor Center – The traveling Valentine Diner, known as the Little House Diner, has moved around the city from places like Downtown to Nob Hill. And now, the city will decide its future with this goal in mind, 'To fulfill the original intent of the donation by the Hernandez family, which was to preserve it and celebrate its individual history,' said Shelle Sanchez, Director of Arts and Culture with CABQ.
New Mexico Notices
🔶 Atomic City Transit launches Saturday service program – Atomic City Transit (ACT) is announcing its new Saturday service pilot program. On Saturdays from August 2 – October 5, 2025, riders can request same-day service from 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Rides can be reserved through the free ACT Ride app, or by calling 505-661-RIDE (7433).
🔶 FEMA says assistance is available to Lincoln County residents impacted by flooding – FEMA on Thursday encouraged Lincoln County residents who were impacted by severe storms, flooding and landslides that began on and after June 23, 2025, to apply for assistance.
🔶 Santa Fe announces road closures for upcoming Spanish Market – The 2025 Traditional Spanish and Contemporary Hispanic Market is coming to the Santa Fe Plaza and surrounding locations on July 26 and 27. To accommodate the event road closures in the area go into effect Thursday, July 24, at noon. Roads will reopen on Monday, July 28.
🔶 Village of Ruidoso says it's ready to welcome visitors back after devastating flood – The Village of Ruidoso says it's ready to welcome back visitors after flooding swept through part of the village earlier this month, killing three people and leaving homes and businesses damaged.
🔶 Annual Elephant Butte Balloon Regatta canceled – Low levels at Elephant Butte Reservoir have caused officials to cancel the annual balloon regatta. The non-profit organization said it made the decision because of safety concerns for boats and balloons.
🔶 Holloman AFB and Fort Bliss participate in flood relief efforts with the Mescalero Apache Tribe – Soldiers and airmen are lending a hand to the relief efforts in Lincoln County. More than 90 personnel from Holloman Air Force Base and Fort Bliss visited the Mescalero Apache Tribe this week, removing debris, filling sandbags, and sorting clothes.
🔶 Report ranks New Mexico 10th in traffic fatalities nationwide for 2024 – A new report said New Mexico was among the worst states for deadly crashes last year. According to the nonprofit transportation research firm, Trip, New Mexico saw 1.43 traffic fatalities per 100 million vehicle miles per hour. That's the 10th highest rate in the country, and above the national rate of 1.20.
🔶 Pro-level bike park opens on Picuris Pueblo – A New Mexico pueblo is hoping to become a go-to place in the BMX world with a brand-new bike park they're hoping will attract large competitions. A world-class bike park is now open for bike enthusiasts on Picuris Pueblo.
🔶 New Mexico school districts prepare for measles cases ahead of return to classroom – New Mexico's measles outbreak has now grown to nearly 100 cases statewide, and just weeks away from the start of the school year, there's concern about the possibility of more cases. The latest measles case was found in an unvaccinated child under 10 years old in Santa Fe County. Nearly half the cases have been in patients under 18 years old.
🔶 Flooding prompts evacuations, search in Vado – The Doña Ana County Sheriff's Office and Fire Rescue responded to significant flooding in the Vado area late Tuesday night, July 22, which prompted evacuations and search operations, the County said.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Forbes
12 minutes ago
- Forbes
This Billionaire Is Partnering With The Ellisons On The Paramount Deal
T he year-long saga of Skydance Media's $8 billion Paramount takeover is fit for its own Paramount+ mini-series. There's political intrigue with critics slamming departing boss Shari Redstone's apparent capitulation to Donald Trump to get the deal approved, including Paramount's agreement to pay $16 million to Trump's future presidential library to resolve a lawsuit over a 60 Minutes segment on Kamala Harris followed by CBS News' announcement that it was cancelling popular Trump critic Stephen Colbert's late-night show in 2026 (supposedly for financial reasons). Trump celebrated both announcements vociferously. Then there is the potential family intrigue worthy of a Succession spinoff: David Ellison, the Skydance founder and former Biden backer behind such films as 'Top Gun: Maverick' and 'True Grit', is teaming up with his staunch Republican father Larry Ellison who is the second richest person in the world and founder of software giant Oracle. Flying under the radar, beneath all the high-stakes drama, is Gerry Cardinale, a private equity investor who is poised to be an influential figure in the new-look Paramount. His firm RedBird Capital Partners is a shareholder in Skydance, having first invested in 2020. Now the firm is putting in $1.8 billion towards the $8 billion purchase price. Cardinale will join Paramount as a director and will appoint a yet-to-be-named second director. Jeff Shell, former CEO of NBCUniversal who chairs RedBird's sports and media business, will join Paramount as president. Andy Gordon, head of RedBird's West Coast office, will become Paramount's chief operating officer and chief strategic officer. Under the new ownership structure, RedBird will hold 22.5% of Paramount's voting rights, while David Ellison will hold 50% and Larry, who is Skydance's biggest investor, will hold the remaining 27.5%. This complicated familial-financial dynamic is likely to make Cardinale a pivotal voice in scenarios where the Ellisons butt heads. Paramount will become Cardinale's highest-profile investment but it's hardly his first big bet. In the worlds of sports, entertainment and media, the 57-year-old investor has been striking high-stakes deals for over a quarter of a century, first at Goldman Sachs and for the last decade at RedBird, which he founded in 2014. RedBird bought Italian football club A.C. Milan for $1.2 billion in 2022, and has backed household names like Lebron James, Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson, and Ben Affleck and Matt Damon in their independent entertainment ventures. It has also hired big names like Jeff Zucker, former CNN president, who is now leading its acquisition of British broadsheet The Telegraph (alongside co-investor Abu Dhabi-based firm IMI) for $675 million. The firm has also invested a smaller portion of its funds capital ($1.5 billion) on financial services companies. Its willingness to dive into the nitty-gritty of portfolio companies and their operations has helped RedBird grow to $12 billion in assets under management with 100 investment professionals across six global offices. 'I like playing shadow entrepreneur and solving problems with capital,' Cardinal said on Bloomberg podcast The Deal last year. It's been a winning recipe so far: RedBird has delivered 2.5 times gross multiple of capital and a 33% internal rate of return, according to a person familiar with the matter. Cardinale owns 100% of RedBird, filings show, and Forbes estimates he is worth $1.8 billion. (He declined to comment on his net worth or be interviewed for this article). W all Street glory was not always in the cards for Cardinale, who once harbored dreams of being a diplomat. Born in 1967, he grew up in the leafy Main Line suburbs outside Philadelphia, the son of a trial attorney. He later studied social studies at Harvard, where he rowed heavyweight crew and graduated with honors before studying politics and political theory at Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar. Later on, he took a job at a Japanese think tank in Tokyo where he got a front-row seat to the effects of globalization. At the time, he was still considering law school, or getting his PhD in political theory. 'I wasn't one of these Wharton kids who knew I wanted to go to Wall Street from day one,' Cardinale recalled on The Deal. But meeting with investment bankers in Tokyo convinced Cardinale that finance would be a rewarding (and no doubt lucrative) career path. He joined Goldman Sachs as an analyst in 1992, the same year he published an article on Japanese anti-American sentiment and rising trade tensions in the academic journal Asian Survey . (His strong interest in Japan is something he shares with Larry Ellison, who has a Japanese art collection and modeled his Woodside, California home after a 16th century Japanese emperor's palace.) Cardinale worked at the bank's Hong Kong and Singapore offices before settling in the New York office in 1997 to work in the telecom, media and technology group as an investment banker. He later joined the bank's principal investment division, where he made his name persuading Yankees owner George Steinbrenner to launch the YES regional sports network in 2001. The project was finalized the day before September 11, and Goldman Sachs ended up backstopping the deal with a $335 million private equity investment after another investor pulled out. Though risky, the deal turned into a huge success, and Goldman made Cardinale a partner in 2004. A few years later in 2008, he persuaded Dallas Cowboys' billionaire owner Jerry Jones to team up with Steinbrenner to create the sports stadium concessions business Legends Hospitality, which investment firm Sixth Street Partners acquired a majority stake of in 2021. Cardinale left Goldman in 2013 and briefly worked at merchant bank BDT, founded by fellow Goldman alum Byron Trott, whom he'd previously done deals with. (BDT later merged with Michael Dell's family office to become BDT & MSD, and the firm has advised outgoing Paramount boss Shari Redstone). Cardinale founded RedBird in 2014 and raised $665 million for an inaugural fund from high-net-worth backers he'd met while at Goldman (their identities have not been disclosed) and an anchor investment from the Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan, which he also had a preexisting relationship with. RedBird became Skydance's second largest investor in 2020 when it led a $275 million capital raise. It backed Skydance again in 2022 when it raised another $400 million at a $4 billion valuation. RedBird's $1.8 billion cash outlay to buy Paramount represents 15% of its total assets under management. T he potential rewards from investing in Paramount are great but so are the risks: Between the inexorable decline of linear television, competition between streaming platforms, an existing $14.2 billion long-term debt load, and possible viewer blowback to perceived capitulation to Trump, Paramount faces a raft of challenges under its new ownership group. '[It] has the potential to overwhelm RedBird's portfolio,' Paul Wachter, the founder of Main Street Advisors, said earlier this year in a Harvard Business Review case study on RedBird. 'Turning Paramount around is going to be an enormous amount of work.' (Wachter also said he believes the investment will be a success 'because the executives are smart and highly motivated.') From Cardinale's perspective, the new Paramount—with its more than 1,200 film titles, distribution rights to another 2,400 films, and roster of television networks emblazoned in the American viewer psyche—is the perfect candidate to receive the RedBird treatment. 'What we do at RedBird is we look for ways of monetizing world-class IP. This is an over 100-year-old business…with really high-quality intellectual property,' he said last year on The Town, Puck founder Matthew Belloni's podcast, after the Skydance-Paramount deal was announced. 'We're not just deal guys looking to do a deal; we're not just private equity guys looking to go buy something.' While investors eye the numbers, media critics and consumers will be waiting to see how Skydance follows through on what the FCC described as its 'written commitments to ensure that the new company's programming embodies a diversity of viewpoints from across the political and ideological spectrum' and to 'adopt measures that can root out the bias that has undermined trust in the national news media.' There are reasons to believe the new Paramount will be less Trumpy than some fear: David Ellison gave around $1 million to Joe Biden's reelection campaign, and Cardinale, while not a megadonor, has previously given to both Democrats and Republicans. In any case, Cardinale has more to worry about than politics. With its massive debt load and facing structural headwinds, the new-look Paramount is crying out for a financier who understands the industry and is willing to stake his reputation on it. The test begins when the deal closes - which could happen any day now. More from Forbes Forbes How The World's Second-Richest Person And His Son Pulled Off The $8 Billion Paramount Deal By Phoebe Liu Forbes Inside Private Equity's $29 Trillion Retirement Savings Grab By Hank Tucker Forbes Want To Hedge Against Inflation? Buy A Forest By William Baldwin Forbes The New Owner Of The San Diego Wave Soccer Team Is The World's First Woman Private Equity Billionaire By Giacomo Tognini
Yahoo
17 minutes ago
- Yahoo
A Graceland discovery inspired Peter Guralnick's myth-busting biography of Colonel Tom Parker
As the author of multiple books about Elvis Presley — including his magisterial 1994 biography 'Last Train to Memphis' and its 1999 sequel, 'Careless Love' — Peter Guralnick has interviewed hundreds of subjects and combed through a tall mountain of archival material in his quest for the truth about the most consequential American musical artist of the post World-War II era. But as it turned out there was more material, far more than Guralnick could squeeze into his Elvis biographies, and that material is the basis for his latest deep dive, "The Colonel and the King." A visit to the Graceland archive shortly after the publication of 'Last Train to Memphis' revealed a trove of correspondence written by Presley's manager Colonel Tom Parker, the rotund, blustery operator that shepherded the musician's career from the mid-1950s until shortly before his death in 1977. A cursory sift through the material revealed tens of thousands of letters tracing in minute detail the inner workings of Elvis business, from publicity campaigns to the finer points of his recording and movie contracts. These missives exploded the myths around a man who has for decades been derided as a cynical and unscrupulous opportunist that cheapened Presley's legacy while enriching himself at his client's expense. 'I read the letters and thought, 'Oh my God, this is nothing like the person that has been portrayed,'' says Guralnick from his Massachusetts home. What Guralnick found was a scrupulously honest businessman in love with what he called 'the wonderful world of show business' and the art of the handshake deal, in thrall to his star client's talent and willing to do whatever was necessary to keep him front and center. Guralnick's new book is the story of an immigrant scrapper who became a kingmaker with his unerring instinct for the main chance. The first half of the book is Guralnick's narrative; the second half contains a generous selection of Parker letters. Born Andreas Cornelis van Kuijk in Holland, Elvis' manager-to be-dropped out of school at 12. "His uncle owned a small circus," Guralnick notes. "He did every sort of job, like how to site the tent so it would have the maximum visual impact. He knew how to water the elephants, he studied the acrobats.' After a few false starts, he stowed away in 1929 on a ship bound for New Jersey, adopting the name Tom Parker shortly after reaching American soil. There was an Army stint in Hawaii, some odd jobs, and then he found what he loved: the itinerant world of the traveling carnival. At home in this milieu, Parker mastered the art of grassroots promotion, of pulling in large crowds by plastering the town with loud, hyperbolic placards. "In the world of the carnival and the circus, nobody questioned your pedigree," says Guralnick. "Your handshake was your word, and everyone trusted and supported each other." Parker scouted talent and took them on as clients. By the time he witnessed Elvis performing at the Louisiana Hayride in the summer of 1955, he had already enjoyed big success with singers Hank Snow and Eddy Arnold and had adopted the Colonel moniker. Elvis, he sensed, was different. 'He sees in Elvis someone without limits, a great creative artist with great drive,' says Guralnick, "and Parker was prepared to throw over all of what he had achieved with Arnold and Snow in order to cultivate this untested talent. And he put everything he had into it.' Even a cursory reading of Parker's voluminous correspondence reveals a man not prone to passing over even the smallest detail in order to please his client. Working with a small staff of loyalists including his trusted associate Tom Diskin, Parker oversaw every aspect of Elvis' business, from meals to publicity to hotel accommodations. Work was play, it consumed his life, and this is exactly how he liked it. "It is of course these funny letters and my feeling that One must enjoy his work or grow stale keeps me on the go," he wrote to his friend Paul Wilder in a 1957 letter. He was a tireless proselytizer for his star client. Shortly after signing Elvis to a management deal, he immediately set about convincing the William Morris Agency of the greatness of his charge, writing to agent Harry Kalcheim that Elvis "has the same type of personality, and talents along the line of James Dean," and that "if you ever follow one of my hunches, follow up on this one and you won't go wrong." Elvis, for his part, deeply appreciated Parker's enthusiasm and loyalty. "Believe me when I say I will stick with you thru thick and thin and do everything I can to uphold your faith in me," Presley wrote to Parker in November 1955, shortly after he had secured a recording contract with RCA. "I love you like a father." "Parker defended Elvis against every single entity with which he was dealing," says Guralnick. "RCA wanted to turn him into a mainstream artist, like a crooner, and Colonel wouldn't allow that to happen. When Kalsheim asked Parker to rein in Elvis, because he was too wild on stage, Parker refused." "The Colonel and the King" debunks some of the most stubborn myths about Parker, refuting the notion that Parker destroyed Elvis' career by force-feeding awful material down his throat. While Parker was a hawk when it came to contract negotiations, he had no say in any artistic decisions and fended off record and film executives with designs on grabbing Elvis' ear. "He completely removed himself from Elvis' creative life," says Guralnick. "It was a partnership of equals, but Parker didn't get involved in that aspect of Elvis' career." For many Elvis fans of long standing, Parker's hands-off approach as revealed in his letters will be hard to square with the singer's enlistment in the Army in 1958 and his subsequent posting to Germany, which, so the conventional wisdom tells us, killed the first vital phase of his career and kick-started the descent into awful Hollywood movies that effectively turned this erstwhile force of nature into a B-movie hack. Read more: Heartbreak estate: Inside the legal battles of Elvis Presley's financial legacy Parker endorsed Elvis' Army move — his client wasn't about to be a draft dodger — but the decision to push Elvis into movies was a bilateral strategy that both men agreed was the best way to generate income at a time when Presley was reeling from his mother's death and fretting about money — as was Parker. 'It was actually financial and psychological,' says Guralnick about the left turn that changed Presley's career. 'And so the Colonel needed to reassure him, to say, 'things are even better now than when you went into the Army, and when you get out you'll be making even more money.'' But even 'Clambake' and 'Harum Scarum' couldn't douse Presley's musical artistry and fire. His triumphant 1968 comeback TV special kick-started an artistic renaissance. The hits returned: 'In the Ghetto,' 'Suspicious Minds,' 'Burning Love.' In 1969, Parker booked Elvis for a triumphant series of dates at the International Hotel in Las Vegas. The downside of this was that Parker picked up a nasty gambling habit, while his client soon became dependent on prescription drugs. Presley and Parker grew distant, as Presley insulated himself with sycophants and his behavior both on and offstage grew increasingly erratic. Read more: Col. Parker Dies; He Made Elvis a Star Parker was cast adrift by Elvis' death in 1977, retreating to his Palm Springs home. Ten years later, he was brought back into 'Elvisland' by Priscilla Presley and Elvis Presley Enterprises President Jack Soden, coordinating an Elvis festival at the Las Vegas Hilton and selling all of his memorabilia to the estate. But he never regained his standing at the top of the Elvis hierarchy, much to his dismay. In assessing Parker's legacy, Guralnick thinks that it all comes down to 'the great music he helped Elvis bring to the world — not through any musical contributions of his own, obviously, but by creating the conditions necessary to ensure Elvis' creative independence from the start. Not to mention all the joy he himself delivered and derived from what he always liked to call the Wonderful World of Show Business.' Get the latest book news, events and more in your inbox every Saturday. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times. Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
25 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Kirk Herbstreit's Son Lands Analyst Job - And College Football Fans Aren't Happy
Kirk Herbstreit's Son Lands Analyst Job - And College Football Fans Aren't Happy originally appeared on The Spun. Kirk Herbstreit's son, former Ohio State tight end Zak Herbstreit, will be covering college football this season as a national analyst. On Monday morning, On3 revealed that it's hiring Herbstreit's son for the 2025 season. He'll interview the top players, coaches and voices in college football on his show called "Off Script." It's a great opportunity for the son of ESPN's top analyst. "Zak has tremendous natural talent and has grown up immersed in college," On3 Founder Shannon Terry said. "His ability to connect with today's college stars will bring a fresh and authentic perspective to the On3 network. He'll be traveling each week to the biggest games across the country, giving fans a behind-the-scenes look at everything that makes Saturdays the greatest day in sports." Immediately after On3 announced this hire, fans questioned Herbstreit's résumé. Of course, some people congratulated him on this accomplishment. "Congratulations @ZHerbstreit Go Buckeyes," one fan wrote on X. "Is this the son that runs @KirkHerbstreit's Twitter? Not sure how he's gonna do both," a second fan replied. "Totally not nepotism I mean just look at all the hard work put in by Zak the last year building his online presence tweeting 0 times in a year," a third fan commented. "I don't necessarily think all nepotism is bad but what has he done to earn this role at all," a social media user wrote. "Atta baby young man," another social media user said. "Best of luck to you on this new journey!" Zak Herbstreit is obviously amped up for this opportunity. He said, "I'm grateful for the path that led me here, and I'm excited to bring real passion, insight, and a player's mindset to the content that On3 creates." Time will tell if Herbstreit can become one of the best analysts in the Herbstreit's Son Lands Analyst Job - And College Football Fans Aren't Happy first appeared on The Spun on Aug 4, 2025 This story was originally reported by The Spun on Aug 4, 2025, where it first appeared.