Italian Food Lovers

Italian Food Lovers Here are recipes for dishes that the whole family will love.

50 YEARS AGO, 7 COLLEGE KIDS STARTED ACTING IN AN 88-SEAT CHURCH BASEMENT. LAST NIGHT, ONE OF THEM HELD HER 3RD TONY.Lau...
06/09/2026

50 YEARS AGO, 7 COLLEGE KIDS STARTED ACTING IN AN 88-SEAT CHURCH BASEMENT. LAST NIGHT, ONE OF THEM HELD HER 3RD TONY.
Laurie Metcalf just won Best Featured Actress in a Play at the 79th Tony Awards for her role as Linda Loman in Death of a Salesman — alongside Nathan Lane, directed by Joe Mantello. This is her 3rd Tony. Her 7th nomination. But what she did at Radio City Music Hall wasn't about the numbers.
She stood up there and named 6 people. Not agents. Not producers. Six college friends from Illinois State University who started Steppenwolf Theatre together — in a church basement.
Gary Sinise. John Malkovich. Jeff Perry. Terry Kinney. Moira Harris. Al Wilder.
"I still consider them family," she said. "I still draw on lessons I learned from them." After everything — the Emmys, the Oscar nomination, decades on Roseanne — the first people she thanked were the ones who knew her before any of it mattered. Some things don't change, even after 50 years.

CBS NEWS IS FACING A SHOCKING 60 MINUTES FIRESTORM.Veteran correspondent Scott Pelley is reportedly at the center of a t...
06/09/2026

CBS NEWS IS FACING A SHOCKING 60 MINUTES FIRESTORM.
Veteran correspondent Scott Pelley is reportedly at the center of a tense behind-the-scenes clash with CBS leadership, after a heated staff meeting allegedly spiraled into accusations, a termination letter, and claims of an “ambush.”
The drama intensified after Pelley reportedly accused network leadership of damaging the legendary news program, sparking major debate among media insiders and longtime viewers.
Now, fans are asking how one of CBS News’ most recognizable faces became tied to such an explosive newsroom fallout.

Carol Burnett tried to stay professional, but the second Tim Conway’s vacuum cleaner bit went off the rails, live televi...
06/09/2026

Carol Burnett tried to stay professional, but the second Tim Conway’s vacuum cleaner bit went off the rails, live television turned into pure comedy chaos.
What was supposed to be a simple sketch on The Carol Burnett Show suddenly became one of the most unforgettable breakdowns in TV history.
A tiny prop mistake.
One perfectly timed Tim Conway reaction.
Carol losing control.
The cast breaking character.
And a studio audience laughing so hard the entire scene nearly collapsed.

"WE WALKED AROUND CARRYING THE WORLD’S MOST EXCITING SECRET FOR MONTHS!" - Stephen Colbert’s Jaw-Dropping Secret Return ...
06/09/2026

"WE WALKED AROUND CARRYING THE WORLD’S MOST EXCITING SECRET FOR MONTHS!" - Stephen Colbert’s Jaw-Dropping Secret Return To Only In Monroe Just Exploded And The Hosts Almost Lost Their Minds Keeping It Quiet
Two small-town Michigan hosts somehow pulled off the impossible — hiding one of the biggest late-night bombshells ever while Stephen Colbert turned their humble public access show into absolute insanity. NDAs, vodka shots the size of your head, helium balloon chaos that left everyone sounding like cartoon characters, Jeff Daniels and Jack White wildly smashing the entire set with sledgehammers before torching it... this episode was next-level wild. The internet is losing it, millions of views are pouring in, and what went down in Monroe might be even crazier than his Late Show days.

THEY FIRED HIM ON A TUESDAY. BY SATURDAY, HE WAS SMILING ON A SAILBOAT. Scott Pelley spent 37 years at CBS News. He anch...
06/09/2026

THEY FIRED HIM ON A TUESDAY. BY SATURDAY, HE WAS SMILING ON A SAILBOAT. Scott Pelley spent 37 years at CBS News. He anchored the Evening News. He reported from war zones.
He won dozens of Emmys. And last week, on his new boss's very first day, he stood up in a staff meeting and said what nobody else would. He told executive producer Nick Bilton he'd "never be welcome here." He accused CBS chief Bari Weiss of "murdering" 60 Minutes.
But what Pelley claimed they asked him to do behind the scenes — that part changes everything. Within 24 hours, he was handed a termination letter. Fired "for cause." 37 years, gone in a single page.
Then Saturday morning, he posted a photo on Instagram. No anger. Just him at the helm of a sailboat, hands on the wheel, American flag behind him, looking out at open water. His only words: "You are the wind in my sails. So deeply grateful."

"SOMETHING CAME THROUGH MY BOOTS AND HELPED ME GET THROUGH IT... IT WAS LIKE THE LEGENDS WERE RIGHT THERE WITH ME!" - Th...
06/07/2026

"SOMETHING CAME THROUGH MY BOOTS AND HELPED ME GET THROUGH IT... IT WAS LIKE THE LEGENDS WERE RIGHT THERE WITH ME!" - This Is What Happened When Nearly 20 American Idol Fan-Favorites Took Over Nashville For A Jaw-Dropping Reunion Show
Hannah Harper stepped onto the Grand Ole Opry stage in her iconic quilt audition dress and felt the ghosts of legends hit her mid-performance, while season 24 stars, past runners-up like Will Moseley, and even Billy Ray Cyrus crashed the outdoor Nashville Takeover with massive surprise energy. A adorable 10-year-old kid stole the entire show dancing and singing on stage, old-school Idols showed up out of nowhere, and the emotional stories and full-circle moments had the huge crowd losing it. This wasn't just a concert — it was pure chaos, chills, and once-in-a-lifetime vibes that fans are still talking about... but the full livestream is already gone.

Elizabeth Montgomery had just finished “Deadline for Murder” (1995) when Robert Foxworth looked at her and knew the woma...
06/07/2026

Elizabeth Montgomery had just finished “Deadline for Murder” (1995) when Robert Foxworth looked at her and knew the woman beside him was not simply tired from work. In March, after weeks of flu-like symptoms she had pushed aside, doctors found stage IV colorectal cancer. The illness had already spread. She was 62. Less than two months later, she chose the one place that still felt like hers, the Beverly Hills home she shared with Foxworth.
That choice made her final goodbye painfully quiet. No hospital hallway. No public farewell. No grand last scene for the woman who had spent eight seasons making living rooms feel lighter as Samantha Stephens on “Bewitched” (1964). Fans remembered the nose twitch, the smile, the soft sparkle in her eyes when magic went wrong. At home, the magic was gone, but the dignity remained.
Foxworth later remembered the frightening moment in plain words. “I immediately told her, ‘Something is wrong.’ She said, ‘I’m all right.’ But within the next week her doctor took her to a specialist.” That small exchange carries the whole heartbreak. Elizabeth had been working, pushing forward, doing what performers often do when something feels wrong. She kept going until her body forced the truth into the room.
She had been born inside show business, but she never lived like a woman desperate to be adored. Her father, Robert Montgomery, was an actor, director, and producer. Her mother, Elizabeth Bryan Allen, had performed onstage and belonged to New York society. Elizabeth entered television through “Robert Montgomery Presents” (1951), then spent years proving she was more than a famous daughter. After Samantha made her beloved, she fought the pretty sitcom label with serious roles in “A Case of Rape” (1974) and “The Legend of Lizzie Borden” (1975).

"“No Spotlight. No Applause. Just the Truth She Couldn’t Escape.” — At 60, Shania Twain Returned Home… and Confronted Wh...
06/07/2026

"“No Spotlight. No Applause. Just the Truth She Couldn’t Escape.” — At 60, Shania Twain Returned Home… and Confronted What Fame Could Never Replace
Some journeys take us around the world, only to bring us back to where they first began. At sixty, without f"“No Spotlight. No Applause. Just the Truth She Couldn’t Escape.” — At 60, Shania Twain Returned Home… and Confronted What Fame Could Never Replace
Some journeys take us around the world, only to bring us back to where they first began. At sixty, without fanfare or an entourage, Shania Twain quietly drove herself to a small farmhouse in Windsor, Ontario—the place where the foundations of her life were first laid. There were no cameras waiting, no crowd to greet her. Only silence, and the gentle weight of memories long carried.anfare or an entourage, Shania Twain quietly drove herself to a small farmhouse in Windsor, Ontario—the place where the foundations of her life were first laid. There were no cameras waiting, no crowd to greet her. Only silence, and the gentle weight of memories long carried.

‘PEOPLE WERE SCREAMING BEFORE GRETCHEN WILSON EVEN TOUCHED THE MIC AND THEY WENT HOME WITH THEIR LOST VOICE’ Just when f...
06/07/2026

‘PEOPLE WERE SCREAMING BEFORE GRETCHEN WILSON EVEN TOUCHED THE MIC AND THEY WENT HOME WITH THEIR LOST VOICE’ Just when fans thought they had already seen one of the biggest moments of CMA Fest, everything changed in a matter of seconds. Ella Langley had the crowd completely locked in when a familiar figure stepped onto the stage and sent a shockwave through the entire venue. The reaction was instant — thousands of fans jumping to their feet, screaming, pointing, and reaching for their phones as Gretchen Wilson made her surprise appearance. What followed wasn't just a duet. It felt like a collision between two generations of fearless country women, delivering the kind of energy that turns a performance into a viral moment. But one unexpected moment between Gretchen and Ella is what truly pushed the crowd over the edge… SEE MORE BELOW

JUNE 5, 1993. HE COLLAPSED AFTER A BRANSON SHOW, NEVER MAKING IT BACK TO NASHVILLE — BUT THE TRUE HEARTBREAK CAME YEARS ...
06/07/2026

JUNE 5, 1993. HE COLLAPSED AFTER A BRANSON SHOW, NEVER MAKING IT BACK TO NASHVILLE — BUT THE TRUE HEARTBREAK CAME YEARS LATER, WHEN ONLY ONE FRAGILE THING SURVIVED THE RUINS OF HIS EMPIRE...
Conway Twitty didn’t get a grand farewell tour. At 59, he was still on the road, still selling out theaters, still singing like a man who had no plans of stopping. For decades, millions of Americans knew him as the steady, lonely, and fiercely proud voice playing from every jukebox and kitchen radio.
He gave us fifty-five No. 1 hits. "Hello Darlin'." "Tight Fittin' Jeans." Songs that didn't just top the charts—they raised entire generations.
But the deepest loss wasn't just losing the man; it was watching his physical legacy slowly disappear. Twitty City, the massive home and museum he built in Hendersonville, could not hold together without him. It was sold, shut down, and eventually shattered by a tornado.
Out of an entire kingdom built on country music, the one piece they pulled from the wreckage was a single, battered sign that simply read: "Hello Darlin'."

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