Latest news with #Nashville
Yahoo
an hour ago
- General
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TN Lottery Mega Millions, Cash4Life winning numbers for June 27, 2025
The Tennessee Lottery offers several draw games for those aiming to win big. Here's a look at June 27, 2025, results for each game: 18-21-29-42-50, Mega Ball: 02 Check Mega Millions payouts and previous drawings here. 09-14-18-20-39, Cash Ball: 02 Check Cash4Life payouts and previous drawings here. Morning: 8-8-4, Wild: 8 Midday: 1-8-0, Wild: 0 Evening: 3-5-3, Wild: 2 Check Cash 3 payouts and previous drawings here. Morning: 0-4-1-4, Wild: 1 Midday: 3-0-5-1, Wild: 7 Evening: 3-6-3-4, Wild: 4 Check Cash 4 payouts and previous drawings here. 04-08-11-13-34 Check Daily Tennessee Jackpot payouts and previous drawings here. 07-14-21-26-34, Bonus: 03 Check Tennessee Cash payouts and previous drawings here. Feeling lucky? Explore the latest lottery news & results All Tennessee Lottery retailers will redeem prizes up to $599. For prizes over $599, winners can submit winning tickets through the mail or in person at Tennessee Lottery offices. By mail, send a winner claim form, winning lottery ticket, a copy of a government-issued ID and proof of social security number to P.O. Box 290636, Nashville, TN 37229. Prize claims less than $600 do not require a claim form. Please include contact information on prizes claimed by mail in the event we need to contact you. To submit in person, sign the back of your ticket, fill out a winner claim form and deliver the form, along with the ticket and government-issued ID and proof of social security number to any of these locations: Nashville Headquarters & Claim Center: 26 Century Blvd., Nashville, TN 37214, 615-254-4946 in the (615) and (629) area, 901-466-4946 in the (901) area, 865-512-4946 in the (865) area, 423-939-7529 in the (423) area or 1-877-786-7529 (all other areas in Tennessee). Outside Tennessee, dial 615-254-4946. Hours: 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. This office can cash prizes of any amount. Knoxville District Office: Cedar Springs Shopping Center, 9298 Kingston Pike, Knoxville, TN 37922, (865) 251-1900. Hours: 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. This office can cash prizes up to $199,999. Chattanooga District Office: 2020 Gunbarrel Rd., Suite 106, Chattanooga, TN 37421, (423) 308-3610. Hours: 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. This office can cash prizes up to $199,999. Memphis District Office: Chiles Plaza, 7424 U.S. Highway 64, Suite 104, Memphis, TN 38133, (901) 322-8520. Hours: 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. This office can cash prizes up to $199,999. Check previous winning numbers and payouts at Powerball: 9:59 p.m. CT Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday. Mega Millions: 10:00 p.m. CT Tuesday and Friday. Cash4Life: 9:15 p.m. CT daily. Cash 3, 4: Daily at 9:28 a.m. (Morning) and 12:28 p.m. CT (Midday), except for Sunday. Evening game daily, seven days a week, at 6:28 p.m. CT. Daily Tennessee Jackpot: 9:00 p.m. CT daily. Tennessee Cash: 10:34 p.m. CT Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. Powerball Double Play: 10:30 p.m. CT Monday, Wednesday and Saturday. This results page was generated automatically using information from TinBu and a template written and reviewed by a Tennessean editor. You can send feedback using this form. This article originally appeared on Nashville Tennessean: TN Lottery Mega Millions, Cash4Life winning numbers for June 27, 2025
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Entertainment
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Taylor Swift Fans Sends Bold Message While Supporting Travis Kelce
Taylor Swift Fans Sends Bold Message While Supporting Travis Kelce originally appeared on Parade. fans are convinced she sent a bold message while supporting her NFL boyfriend, , during his Tight End University camp in Nashville, Tenn. On Tuesday, June 24, photos and videos emerged of Swift and Kelce at abar after the Kansas City Chief star's summer training camp, created with NFL players George Kittle and Greg Olsen. 🎬 SIGN UP for Parade's Daily newsletter to get the latest pop culture news & celebrity interviews delivered right to your inbox 🎬 On X, one snapshot showed Swift, 35, posing with Kittle's wife, Claire Kittle, and another woman (seemingly Olsen's wife, Kara Dooley.) The "So High School" singer stunned in a green-and-white plaid outfit with her signature red lip—and many fans took note of the return of her plaid trend, sparking renewed speculation about what it could the comments, one Swiftie shared, "We're plaid speed again yall." Someone else jokingly speculated, " edm album is coming." A different X user quoted Swift's lyrics to "All Too Well" writing, "PLAID SKIRT DAYS AND NIGHTS WHEN YOU MADE ME YOUR OWN." Another fan pointed out, "Good for Taylor! Love when she wears plaid ! She's probably having so much fun!" Since Swift started re-recording her first six albums, fans have theorized that the pop superstar wearing plaid signaled a major announcement on the horizon. She memorably rocked the pattern at the 2024 MTV Video Music Awards and a Chiefs game in October 2024. The "Alchemy" singer has since purchased the masters to those albums and hinted she will not be re-recording her long-awaited Reputation album. So if fans are correct in thinking plaid means something big is coming, it could mean new music. Meanwhile, others connected Swift's outfit to her Eras Tour segment featuring her 1989 album, during which she wore different skirt/top combinations each night. "Omg we finally got the double green set guys!! 😍😍," one X user joked. Another Swiftie quipped, "Not Taylor casually pulling out the green 1989 outfit😭😭😭." Whether or not Swift's plaid outfits hold a hidden meaning, fans love searching for Easter eggs and trying to predict her next move. Next: Taylor Swift Fans Sends Bold Message While Supporting Travis Kelce first appeared on Parade on Jun 24, 2025 This story was originally reported by Parade on Jun 24, 2025, where it first appeared.
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Entertainment
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At 13, He Lost His Arm. Now He's a Top Peloton Coach
Growing up, Logan Aldridge could never sit still—and if you've met him, you know that hasn't changed. Sitting across from him in his cowboy hat at Sounds Like Nashville Live, his smile was warm and his energy magnetic, so much so that you might not even notice he's missing his left arm. And that's exactly how he wants it. When Aldridge was 13, he was out wakeboarding—something his family did almost every weekend. In an instant, the rope he was holding tangled in the boat's propeller. His left arm was severed, and blood was everywhere. On the way to the hospital, still in shock and trying to process what had just happened, he looked to his mom for answers. 'In the ambulance, when I was thinking, 'Oh my gosh, my arm might get amputated,' I asked my mom [what would happen],' he told Men's Journal. 'And she says, 'Logan, it's just an arm.' That mentality can be viewed by someone as tough love, but it was also the moment that shifted my perspective. It kind of transformed the way I saw myself—and what could become of this.'Aldridge has never let his accident define him, and he doesn't want it to define how others see him either. After he lost his arm, he stood up in front of his entire school and told them what happened—head-on, no drama, no whispers. He's never been afraid of the spotlight—and he's spent the years since turning that resilience into a movement. Today, Aldridge is Peloton's only adaptive fitness instructor. The accident that changed his life also changed how he sees others: with compassion, not caution. While he encourages his trainees to work within the realities of their bodies, you better believe he'll still push them. "My coaching style is one of inclusive accessibility and democratization of fitness, where there shouldn't be barriers to entry, especially if the individual has physical limitations. And through that lens, it's made me a really compassionate instructor and coach. But, big but here, I will make you want to throw up." When he was young, Aldridge remembers people constantly trying to help him. Whether it was teachers stepping in to assist before he had a chance to figure things out, or people gently reminding him of what might be harder now that he'd lost his dominant arm, he understood they meant well. But he never saw himself that way—and he never wanted to be told what he couldn't he brings that same mindset into his training and coaching. He wants everyone he works with to walk away knowing they're capable of more than they think. That they can work hard, push themselves, and move past the limits they—or others—have placed on them. "Just because you're a seated athlete, bilateral amputee, one arm, or whatever the case may be, I have compassion and understanding, but I don't have sympathy," he said. "I still want to push you and show you, regardless of impairment condition or not, if somebody's timid and afraid, doesn't think they can become strong, I want to show them through affirming, empowering action that they're capable." He's able to do just that through Peloton, a platform that meets people wherever they are—no gym membership required. Since joining in 2022, Aldridge has made it his mission to help people of all abilities see themselves reflected in fitness. "I want to help build a way in which people who are intimidated, fearful, who have disabilities, can have this platform. It doesn't have to be on a bike or a tread. It can be in their pocket. It can be on an app. They can just be on the couch and open the app and just watch, just watch. And then maybe the next day you'll try, you know, it's just baby steps, micro changes that make it to macro solutions. And the community at Peloton is the definition of an inclusive, welcoming, understanding community." At 13, He Lost His Arm. Now He's a Top Peloton Coach first appeared on Men's Journal on Jun 27, 2025
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- General
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People Are Revealing The "Warning Signs" That A Place Is About To Get Really, Really Expensive, And It's Spot On
For years, people have opened up about gentrification and how it's affected their own lives and communities. The Urban Displacement Project describes it as "a process of neighborhood change that includes an economic change in a historically disinvested neighborhood — by means of real estate investment and new higher-income residents moving in — as well as demographic change — not only in terms of income level but also in terms of changes in the education level or racial make-up of residents." Gentrification is a complex issue, and it has been known to negatively impact low-income communities and people of color, as it typically leads to forced displacement. And people online have shared the unexpected and clear signs it's bound to happen in an area. Here's what they had to say: Note: Some responses were pulled from these two Reddit threads. 1."I live in the Nashville area, and this has been an issue for a few years now. We have a particularly bad case of 'tall/skinnies' here. Developers buy an old house, tear it down, and put up two tall/skinny houses on the single lot, and they look absolutely ridiculous. Some of them honestly look like they aren't much wider than a shipping container and are three to four floors tall." "They stick out like a sore thumb, and most are honestly just slapped together like Ikea furniture and sell for millions just because they are close to downtown." —user1982 2."Painted utility boxes are a huge sign of gentrification in PG County. Expect matchbox fancy $2K studio apartments next, and then a series of strip malls with the weird ash wood look." —mahuwenagoito 3."When it happened in E. Austin. I noticed two things: the removal/replacement of anything frequented by poor people, and the lack of random roosters. It was already done by the time the vegan cat café showed up. But the developers will still tell you to move to the 'historical part' of Austin, even though all the history has been shoved out and painted over. And now, they call the cops on our 'historic' car club meetups." —smellsbells 4."When you start seeing/hearing a lot of positive press about a known-to-be-sketchy area. Gentrification doesn't work if the place doesn't become desirable to new businesses and residents. Investors want those who avoided the area before to start thinking of how great it could be to get that gentrification momentum going." "I watched it happen to a certain area in Los Angeles proper, just outside downtown, that you didn't want to walk through after dark, 10 to 15 years ago. Now, it's been very much reborn as a millennial Mecca and hipster haven." —debrastarrm resident here. I've been watching all these new (mostly gated and HOA) housing communities go up, charging upwards of $700K at minimum, but most are more than that, and all these people moving inland from the Bay Area willing to pay for it are driving up the cost for the locals. And you'd think that would bring more businesses, but no, just more houses and warehouses. Then there's competing with 'investors' buying the cheaper houses only to do the cheapest cosmetic changes and put them back on the market well above what they paid, or renting them out." "I just took a day trip recently and was reflecting how many awesome places my state has to visit and how many of them I've driven to, and how it's a shame I'm being priced out of where I've lived my entire life." —panda_13 6."The FIRST sign is the first quirky coffee shop that isn't a Starbucks. See one of those, and grab you some real estate, because the bougies are coming, and they're bringing wild housing prices with them." —u/HawaiianShirtDad 7."Old buildings get torn down. Before the beginnings of gentrification, the lots weren't worth removing the condemned buildings; renovation teams start showing up in neighborhoods that haven't been renovated in decades. Lawns start getting cut on a weekly basis. Once a neighborhood goes from condemned to livable, all the other stuff starts to happen pretty quickly." "A lot of this is spearheaded by property developers/home flippers looking at analytics to find the next neighborhood to invest in." —u/ghostwriter85 8."At some point, an organic grocery store opens up. The crime rate goes down over time. Home prices/rents go up quickly. More coffee shops and breweries." —u/iapetus3141 9."Recovering planner here. In the background, people look for parcels that are worth more than the improvements. If there are a lot of them in an area — especially an area with amenities and good transport bones, it is a good candidate." —u/DanoPinyon 10."Rent going up 300% over the course of a decade." —u/Canada_Haunts_Me "I took a gander at my old Atlanta apartment that I moved into six or seven years ago that I rented for $800 a month. It's now around $2K. It was a POS." —u/Ol_Scoobert 11."If an area is headed for gentrification, people who don't have children start moving in. Artists, musicians, writers. College students. Restaurants, especially trendy restaurants. Galleries and music venues. Bookstores. Coffee houses. All the kinds of places young hipsters like. Housing stock that is neglected but can be restored. Young people living in a cooperative." "Sometimes, the gentrification doesn't launch. It's not guaranteed. If there's too much crime, if the resources needed to lift it up vanish due to external circumstances or a lack of collective momentum by investors, it may fail." —u/jupitaur9 12."One thing that has stood out is a new trendy name that has come out of nowhere. We live in 'insert name,' and it's been called that forever. Uhhh, no it hasn't!" —u/w84primo "Exactly! We actually have a new area deemed SODO. I asked someone once about all of the names, and I almost lost it and laughed in their face. They asked how would you know where to go if you had to meet someone somewhere or go to their house. I held it together, but I'm sure my face gave it away. I don't even think I responded to that." —u/w84primo 13."If you follow your local newspapers and you start reading about apartments being sold and the new owners wanting to renovate is a sign. This type of action by the new owner will usually come with mass eviction notices — especially, if they are rent-controlled and support certain demographics, like senior citizens or those who are lower income." "Then when the reno is complete, the new owner jacks the rent up ensuring old tenants can't ever come back, sending displaced tenants away like a ripple effect to the next cheapest block or city. Then the neighboring apartment buildings say, 'Well, the apartments next door are charging the new amount, so should I,' then the next wave starts, with or without the renovations. The cycle continues. Demand in the new area for newly displaced or gentrified population will then be focused on by the last corporate apartments buyers to do it all again until we all live in a van down by the river." —u/labormarketguide 14."The 'artisan' restaurants that make a classic food (burger, taco, etc.) and make them 25 dollars because of their premium 'aiolis' or other fancy ingredients. They're usually decorated with a graphic of the parts of a cow or pig." —u/andrew2018022 15."Mass buying of local properties by real estate investors, while pricing out local buyers." —u/Hel-or-Highwater 16."Gentrification isn't random. It's an ongoing process. I live in Charleston, South Carolina. We've experienced significant growth in my lifetime. We've gotten to the point where building new neighborhoods further out is an increasingly less viable option. Add to this, large employers moving into North Charleston, and you have a recipe for gentrification. This isn't because someone bought an old gas station and turned it into an art gallery. It's because people need a place to live, and industry is growing in our city. Those art galleries and taco shops are responding to the same economic conditions that the developers are. They see an economically depressed area in commuter distance to major employers." "This drives down rents, which makes the area desirable for new businesses. Some of them will stay (like the taco shop), while others will have to move on when rents start to get high (like the art gallery)." —u/ghostwriter85 17."People running or jogging, especially during the weekday mornings." —u/Irunmtns "I lived in a neighborhood that was gentrifying and remember a local telling me, who was pushing my baby around in a stroller, that 10 years prior she had almost never seen anyone walk around in her neighborhood." —u/doctorboredom 18."I've worked in Civic Center San Fransico since 2003, so I've seen its evolution for the past 19 years. This place went from a total wasteland to one of the busiest locations in the city. The first thing they did right when Twitter moved in? They started razing all the cheap hole-in-the-wall restaurants and parking lots for shiny new apartment buildings. Basically expect any old ma and pa businesses and parking lots to be the first to go." —u/cocktailbun 19."You know a place is being gentrified when a lot more artists move in. Artists first go somewhere for cheap prices and then make it 'interesting' to richer people. We then — usually accidentally — attract monied people who want to either be associated with us or exploit us, and then, the dive bars flourish. Then, you start seeing artisanal coffee spots. From there, you give it five years." —Anonymous 20."Franchises start replacing local businesses." —u/Hel-or-Highwater 21."Big demographic shifts. Not just the people of the neighborhood, but the local businesses as well." —u/Antitenant 22."I experienced this in Atlanta through the full process. I moved into a neighborhood that was mostly elderly residents who have probably lived there 20+ years. The house I bought needed repair, but this was in 2011, so the price was manageable. The first sign of things changing was an increase in racist judgemental posts on Nextdoor that were like, 'Sketchy AA male acting weird and walking in the street.' When I moved in, my neighbors were extremely friendly and let us know some of the characters in the area, like 'Watch out for the guy who tries to get you to drive him to Auto Zone then try to scam you for cash-type stuff. Then a new development went up down the street (my street was half in a nice city zone and half in the incorporated county). This is what really started the process. Another development went up a year or so later." "Skip maybe five years, and I ran into a lot more families out and about, many houses were renovated, flipped, etc. Eventually, a higher-end grocery store was developed very close by." —u/BoydCrowders_Smile 23."For restaurants, at least like 8–10 years ago, it was: Edison Bulbs, those metal bar chairs (you know the ones), reclaimed pallet wood facades, roll-up doors, and $15 for a handful of tater-tots with 'aioli,' which is just hot sauce mixed with mayonnaise." —u/Shoobert And finally... 24."I think by the time you start seeing it, it's already happened. Displacement and rent increases are mostly invisible (comparatively). By the time the new condos and bougie shops sprout up, it's already past the tipping point." —u/novium258 Note: Some responses have been edited for length and/or clarity. What are some other signs that an area will be gentrified/is about to become really expensive? Let us know your thoughts in the comments, or if you prefer to remain anonymous, you can use the form below.
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Sport
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Georgia's Future Star QB Pushing Projected $355,000 Playmaker to Join Dawgs
Georgia's Future Star QB Pushing Projected $355,000 Playmaker to Join Dawgs originally appeared on Athlon Sports. The Georgia Bulldogs landed 2026 four-star wide receiver Craig Dandridge on the recruiting trail Thursday. But the Bulldogs may not be done adding star playmakers. Advertisement Bulldogs five-star quarterback commit Jared Curtis is hoping Georgia can land yet another highly touted receiver. On3's Steve Wiltfong reported Friday that Curtis is taking matters into his own hands to ensure that happens. "Nashville (Tenn.) Christian five-star quarterback Jared Curtis is the top-ranked prospect competing at the [Overtime OT7 Playoffs] checking in as the nation's No. 2 overall prospect and No. 1 signal-caller," Wiltfong wrote. "He's playing for the Overtime RWE Team and he talked future Georgia teammate Lincoln Keyes to fly down and play with him. Those two will continue to build on the chemistry already formed. "Curtis is doing his part to help recruit another one of his teammates at the event in five-star receiver Cederian Morgan." Georgia Bulldogs five-star quarterback commit Jared Curtis.© Mark Zaleski / The Tennessean / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images Morgan explained he and the quarterback have built strong chemistry together. Advertisement 'We've got a great connection and I feel like if I go there I have a quarterback that's going to get me the ball,' Morgan told Wiltfong. Morgan is the No. 2 receiver and top Alabama prospect in the 2026 recruiting class, according to the 247Sports Composite rankings. The receiver is also rated the No. 12 overall recruit in the class. On3 projected Morgan's NIL value to be $355,000. It may be difficult, though, for the Bulldogs to poach Morgan from his home state. The 247Sports crystal ball predicted the Alabama Crimson Tide and Auburn Tigers as the favorites to land Morgan. The On3 Recruiting Prediction Machine also had Alabama and Auburn as the top two candidates for Morgan. Based on the On3 RPM, Georgia has under a 1% chance of landing the five-star wideout. Advertisement Related: Georgia Lands Highly Touted Playmaker Amid Hot Streak This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 27, 2025, where it first appeared.