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‘Handle With Care' statewide trauma-sensitive program to support children with help of law enforcement, educators
‘Handle With Care' statewide trauma-sensitive program to support children with help of law enforcement, educators

Yahoo

time12-06-2025

  • Yahoo

‘Handle With Care' statewide trauma-sensitive program to support children with help of law enforcement, educators

KANSAS, Ill. (WCIA) — Law enforcement officers across Illinois are connecting with educators to support children after they may have experienced a traumatic or stressful event outside of the classroom. Doug Cochran with the Kansas Police Department serves as the law enforcement liaison to bring 'Handle With Care' to police departments and schools across the state. The goal is to support kids and provide extra support when they go to school after challenging, traumatic events. WATCH the above video for more details with Cochran and Ambrosia Branson, the project coordinator. If you're a school district or law enforcement officer interested in using Handle With Care, reach out to Cochran at 217-712-0172 or KPDdcochran22@ Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

John Mulaney, Rock Hall of Fame Enthusiast, Breaks Down This Year's Class — and Snubs!
John Mulaney, Rock Hall of Fame Enthusiast, Breaks Down This Year's Class — and Snubs!

Yahoo

time06-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

John Mulaney, Rock Hall of Fame Enthusiast, Breaks Down This Year's Class — and Snubs!

John Mulaney has learned a few things about life from the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. This sounds like the setup for a joke. But the comedian, late-night host, and low-key music obsessive has long been fascinated with the Cleveland institution, the artists it deems worthy for inclusion (or continually snubs), and especially the annual induction ceremony that can reunite bands, rekindle old feuds, and cause music nerds to argue endlessly. For example, to the yearly batch of inducted artists who seem deeply uncomfortable with the idea of the ceremony, he says, 'Life is hard, and when someone wants to give you your flowers, don't overthink it. Just accept it. Whatever terrible moment you're imagining with your former bandmate or whoever you might run into there, you're already having it in your head, so you might as well go, and it probably will be better than you think.' More from Rolling Stone Watch Jessica Pratt and Destroyer Perform Together on 'Everybody's Live' John Mulaney Breaks Down the Music Powering 'Everybody's Live' What Do Rock Hall Voters Have Against Mariah Carey, Oasis, and Phish? When Mulaney first broke down all the Rock Hall inductees and snubs for us in 2018, the plan was to make it an annual tradition, à la Billie Eilish's Vanity Fair interview on the same day every year. 'Covid and some personal problems got in the way,' Mulaney deadpans. But now, he's ready to recommit. 'Hey, listen, I'll make this an annual thing now.' Before we get started, does he have any other big takeaways from following the event each year? 'When you're in your twenties, take as many photos of yourself as possible,' Mulaney says. 'You are so good-looking. You are soooo good-looking. All these photos of the Cure, I was like, 'Look at these early shoegazers, so awkward. But they look great. Everyone looks great.'' Here, what Mulaney has to say about each of this year's honored artists — and the ones that didn't make it. Mazel tov, Bad Company. A friend of mine read these to me over the phone a week ago and he accidentally said Badfinger and I almost drove off the expressway. I was so blown away by the power of Apple Corps to get Badfinger into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. I know the hits and I like a supergroup in [the Hall]. There's certainly other examples. Who's your favorite supergroup?Let's name some. Traveling Wilburys. Sure. Blind Clapton post-Yardbirds feels like a supergroup. Derek and the Dominos is up for Were there even Dominos? My favorite supergroup song is 'Highwayman' by the Highwaymen. It's an excellent use of each person's personality, in a way that [Traveling Wilburys'] 'Handle With Care' is a great song but it feels like they just divvied up… I mean, no, sorry, that's really well-plotted, actually. But 'Highwayman' is like each of those guys is singing the appropriate backstory for their character and I like that Johnny Cash is going to be on a starship. Bad Company's biggest songs: 'Feel Like Makin' Love,' 'Can't Get Enough,' 'Shooting Star,' 'Rock 'n' Roll Fantasy,' 'Bad Company.' Do any of those songs conjure up any emotion or feeling for you?Well, it's tough. No. What does 'Feel Like Makin' Love' feel like? It feels like walking into a bar I've never been in, like I have a memory of walking into a large pool hall kind of Dazed and Confused-like bar with that playing, but I think I just saw it in movies. I don't think that ever happened. But here's my mission statement: More groups in the Hall, not less. The Mulaney Hall of Fame would induct every group nominated? Why not? Do a whole weekend of ceremony. If it's about the ceremony runtime… Last year, they went more than five hours. That's pretty Steven Van Zandt gets to induct a bunch of 45s? Doesn't he always get a grouping? [Imitates Little Stevie] 'Doo-wop on my corner. Da Moonglows! Da Ink Spots! These were 45 records that changed the way I saw doo-wop that year. This cover of 'Bule Bule' changed the way that block in New Jersey dealt with noise complaints.' I was already psyched for him. Mazel, Chubby Checker. Knowing that it was part novelty I think is great. I'm a big proponent of novelty music. I'm a big proponent of 'Weird Al' getting into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. This is one step closer, though I don't know why they need to be led via steps. 'Weird Al' brought more people to music than is recognized at all. I will, in fact, greatly devalue my coolness by saying [when I was young], it wasn't until 'Smells Like Nirvana' defanged 'Smells Like Teen Spirit' that I could enjoy 'Smells Like Teen Spirit.' It was scary at first. It just was like, 'I'm pretty happy, I'm a kid.' I needed a way in. And after you laugh at 'Smells Like Nirvana,' you go, 'Oh, this is a really good song.' Let's talk about the ballot and the nominating process. So there are 30 people on the nominating committee who draw up all the nominees and around 1,100 people in the industry vote after aren't I on the committee? Is Boz Scaggs on it? He is not. I always thought he was in with that, but that's just based on nothing. Did you have any experience with 'The Twist' or 'Let's Twist Again'?Well, I really appreciate 'Let's twist again like we did last summer.' It's a very funny lyric for a reboot. I really, really like the bald-facedness of 'Let's twist again like we did last summer' — saying, 'Remember we did this song 'The Twist' last year? We're doing it again.' Also, I think 'Let's Twist Again' is a better song than 'The Twist.' I don't think I'm alone in that. Sorry, I didn't mean to make it sound like such a novel idea. Is Chubby Checker still with us? He is. He partnered with New York City two years ago for a with bikers in the lane. Sick. I didn't know we could partner with New York City. You could. Billy Idol did an with the city right before lockdowns in 2020. And people followed his advice because the whole world shut down. I do want to tell you about a 750-word letter Chubby Checker wrote to the Rock Hall in 2002 lamenting his lack of inclusion. It read, in part, 'Before 'Alexander Graham Bell'…no telephone. Before 'Thomas Edison'… no light. Before 'Dr. George Washington Carver'…no oil from seed or cloning of plants. Before 'Henry Ford'…no V8 engine. Before 'Walt Disney'…no animated cartoons. Before Chubby Checker…no 'Dancing Apart to the Beat.' What is 'Dancing Apart to the Beat'? 'Dancing Apart to the Beat' is the dance that we do when we dance apart to the beat of anybody's music and before 'Chubby Checker,' it could not be found!'I love this letter. I love every part of it. I love all the examples leading up to it and I trust him. He ends the letter with, 'Where is my more money and my more fame?'Ohhhh, you buried the lede. I had to build to it.'Where is my more money and my more fame?' Well, you know what? We have quotes at the beginning of each episode of my show and I think we just found the finale's. Bizarrely, I knew his cover of 'With a Little Help from My Friends' and I knew 'Up Where We Belong' and I didn't see [the 1971 Cocker documentary] Mad Dogs and Englishmen till I was in my late twenties. Lorne Michaels told me about it. It wasn't streaming anywhere. It was hard to find when I went looking for it. What did you like about the film specifically?Just how hard that tour was, like Festival Express. Just the hard living of it. And again, this brings me back to Chubby Checker and 'Weird Al.' It's like John Belushi's parody of Joe Cocker brought me to Joe Cocker as well. As a little kid, Cocker was upsetting-looking. He looked like he was in great pain and he looked like he was passing a kidney stone at all times. John Belushi defanging that helped me enjoy it more. And I'm very pro-Joe Cocker. He's not like Stevie Wonder, but he has a bit of that 'I Just Called to Say I Love You' phenomenon of, I sort of knew 'Up Where We Belong' and 'You Are So Beautiful' just as pleasant wedding music. And then you go back and indeed he was a Mad Dog. I kinda thought of Randy Newman's 'You Can Leave Your Hat On' in was a little do you think of the original? Love the take the laughs out. 'Turn on the lights. No, all the lights,' is a very funny line. I've never seen 9 1/2 Weeks, but I would love to have Mickey Rourke on my show. He was just fired from a few weeks ago for making offensive remarks toward Jojo Siwa and another was? Oh, then I retract saying I want to. We'll skip the about, John Mulaney Hasn't Seen '9 ½ Weeks'. But again, here we go and I'm not trying to force a through line but the humor of something [like Newman's original version] is our way in. And there's a Randy Newman connection coming up. I know. It's Lenny Waronker. I thought you might be stumped on not at all. I met Lenny Waronker when Randy was on Everybody's Live; he came. These dudes have known each other since they were three and he's at the gig with him and he's his guy. Their relationship was incredible to see up close. Then I was talking to John Cale [who did A&R for Waronker in the 1970s] after the taping of our show and he goes, 'I love Lenny. I loved all those guys. Everyone at Warner Brothers was very good back then.' It's weird to think of John Cale behind a that's why Cale is so brilliant and is the most relevant, because he produced so many people and was an A&R guy. He didn't do a couple vanity productions. He really invested in new groups and continued to develop and didn't escape into persona. What's interesting about the record business is they'll be like, 'Well, this is the single and we're pushing the single.' And I'm like, 'Isn't it just like people come to whatever song they come to?' Lenny, Randy, and I were talking about standards and practices and lack thereof on Netflix, and I said, 'Have you ever done 'Rednecks' on TV?' and [Randy] goes, 'No.' And I was like, 'Right, that makes sense.' And I said, 'But that's the big hit from that album,' and he goes, 'No, it wasn't a hit.' And Lenny goes, 'The first hit was 'Short People' [three years later].' If you're in the trenches looking at numbers every week, you don't go, 'Yeah. That a lot of people have come to it over the years, doesn't mean it's a hit.' But if Randy had asked to do 'Rednecks' on your show, would you have said yes?No. I think everyone would go, 'Let's not do that.' By the way, let me just be clear: No one asked. It wasn't like I said no to something. Everyone involved is smart. They're incredible and what a great treasure of American music. I love Jack in that way that he has what I love so much about David Byrne: just this desire to innovate and collaborate, be it Loretta Lynn or doing some music for a Maya Rudolph and Martin Short variety show or whatever it is. Meg White hasn't really been seen at all in more than 15 years. The big question is if she shows up. Just things the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame is made of. This is no surprise. Such re-emergences into public life is the whole thing of the induction ceremony. Standard stuff. Most folks you see at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction you haven't seen in a while. That's the most fun of it. So do you think she shows up?Yeah, why not? I say 'why not' not trying to cause any controversy. I don't know if there's any issues. I just would say why not. I think the 'why not' is just having not been in the public eye for so long. Is the Rock Hall enough of an event to get her to come out?Yes, it is. Yes, it is. And I'll make the case. Couple examples: Kurt Cobain's mother said when they were inducted, and I'm paraphrasing, 'Kurt would really love this, but he would act like he didn't.' And at the Radiohead induction, which I was at, I think it was Ed O'Brien who said, and I'm paraphrasing again, but this was the spirit of it, 'I wish the other guys were here to see it, because this is a big fucking deal.' And I think it's one of those things you might appreciate when you get there. Your first memories of , I assume, are probably in the mid-Eighties?Yep, The Goonies. It's the way the camera lingers on the TV in Goonies. I just remember being like, 'Well, they're making a moment out of this.' I didn't know if it was a clue to the mystery. It was one of those things where just the very fact, the way the camera hangs on her, I was like, 'Well, this must be someone.' I don't remember when I first heard 'Girls Just Want to Have Fun,' but it's obviously Eighties canon. I found her really funny and I found the whole persona fun and funny and still do. Any other Cyndi songs that you gravitate towards?I love Kinky Boots. I love her whole thing. I can't say I know more than the hits, but they're so singular and were so important for music and music videos that I'm just thrilled. Talk about people that really care about music. And André's career now is so interesting. What a great choice. It's one of those choices where you go, 'Well, let's do half a dozen of those each year.' You mean hip-hop or just groups that are universally beloved?Both. I so admire [André's] pursuit of music. It's just in every direction. And someone not taking the easy road is my favorite thing. I think it's like being a Prince fan. Who isn't a fan of Outkast? Really, really cool. Very cool choice. Very cool to go back and continue to celebrate those early Sub Pop artists and not just look at it as a montage of bands you mention after Nirvana. Kim Thayil how he was looking at as a possible model for what Soundgarden may do. Who could belt like Chris Cornell?I'll nominate Maggie Rogers just because I just had her on and thought she was so great. Do you have a favorite Soundgarden song?Again, I'm a hits guy. I think they're going to play 'Black Hole Sun,' so she'd be great at that. I'm so happy for them. Like Cyndi Lauper, just ubiquitous, especially 'Whatta Man.' Soundtrack of an era. So exciting and a great time in music to go back and revisit and honor. Did they do 'Let's Talk About Sex' on Blossom? Don't even fact-check it. I'm fact-checking, because I don't know the your source here feels they did and let's not even look it up. [Editor's note: He's right. Season Four, Episode 12, in 1993.] Immensely provocative and groundbreaking at the was. This is Tipper Gore central. And it's a great song, too. They're going to be great. Not a ton of knowledge. However, I think my senior year of college, he was very ill and his song 'Keep Me in Your Heart' was very popular with my roommate, Matt Albert, and I. [Matt is] now a pediatric doctor in North Carolina. Then I'm at the Mark Twain awards for David Letterman some years ago and Eddie Vedder played that song and it just was a very full-circle moment. Tons of respect for Warren Zevon. I'm surprised he isn't in already. He's someone that the music business loves, deservedly so. I remember listening to 'Werewolves of London' a lot and thinking about the lyrics and still kind of not understanding what it's about at all and I've never really looked it up. I like that they mentioned Trader Vic's. I always liked that the coolest place was this Polynesian restaurant. The organ on 'You Can't Always Get What You Want' alone. It's incredible how big [session musicians'] contributions are. It's bizarre the amount they affect the success of a track and their lack — and this isn't meant to be controversial — their lack of credit and, through that, profit participation. I'm not criticizing it, I think it's just what it is. Sonny & Cher had every verse of 'The Beat Goes On' and it was just this meandering song and then Carol Kaye, like 11th hour, just lays down [imitates bassline] doom, doom, doom, doom, and you're like, 'OK. So I guess she didn't write it, but you wouldn't know it at all [without her].' I am thrilled with Nicky Hopkins. I'm thrilled with the recognition of session musicians. Andy Samberg and I would really press Lorne a couple of times to have Glen Campbell on. [Kaye played on hundreds of sessions with Campbell.] I'm often wrong, but I thought it would've been great. I think it was when The Smile Sessions came out [in 2011], and getting into what the Wrecking Crew [the legendary group of session musicians that included Kaye] sounded like and just what they contributed was so amazing. I like the documentary a lot, and it's just night and day. It's just like, 'Well, I'm going to take my songs over to the best band in the world that's ever been assembled.' The Hopkins and the Carol Kayes of the world are like, it's not just a nice nod. They are 100 percent essential to these songs. If you think about how you take music in, they get authorship. I think about that with Holland-Dozier-Holland, who are not unknown, but nowhere near as big as the artists they wrote get a good shoutout in a Magnetic Fields song. Do they?Yeah, 'The Death of Ferdinand de Saussure.' Love [The Spinners'] 'Rubberband Man' [written and produced by Bell]. The audience load-in playlist for my Baby J Tour was a lot of Delfonics, Spinners, Thom Bell-adjacent stuff. The O'Jays' 'Stairway to Heaven' was the big song on the lead-up to my arena tour. Let's see. I just want to get this right. Take your had more Number One singles than anyone else? They're from Liverpool. Who has the second most? It's a travesty. I wouldn't even call it snobbery. There's a judgmental aspect to it due to aspects of one's life. I think we have all had our ups and downs in life, but her accomplishment is just unparalleled. It's a no-brainer, but the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame frequently doesn't have a brain. Sorry, they have less than one brain. I don't know much about the Gallaghers. I know what a casual acquaintance of their music would know, which is they're always pissed off about something. I know far more about their constant bitching than I have memories of loving their music. But they get a vote in my mind because they'd be disgruntled during the acceptance speech. You would like to see it just for the theatricality. That is a big part of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame: people of low character behaving badly. 'That is a big part of the Rock Hall: people of low character behaving badly.' Is there another group that you don't care about that you want to see in the Hall for the pure spectacle?Oh, man. OK. I mean, oh, my God. Pure spectacle. A lot of them are already in. Help me think a little. Butthole Surfers? Flaming Lips, they're not in, right? They're not in, I think [Wayne Coyne] would pop off. Liam Gallagher did once say, 'It's like putting me in the Rap Hall of Fame and I don't want to be part of anything that mentally disturbed.'Whatever. 'Wonderwall' don't mean shit to me, but I'm not trying to start anything. I remember Soupy Sales' Wikipedia page for a while was just debunking rumors and it was clearly him getting in there and it was like, 'Soupy never told kids to send him a dollar.' I was like, 'Dude, you're teaching me that you've had a lot of difficulties.' When I hear Jimmy Fallon do 'Wonderwall' at karaoke, I don't think, 'Wow, what tortured mind is behind this?' And also, I'll say that I like a difficult public persona very much. This is a crime. I haven't read about your Phish fandom. How deep does it run?I come on board around 1997 at age 14, 15. When I started listening to them, people at the shows told me, 'You really missed it. It's over now.' I think it was after A Live One came out, people were like, 'Well, you didn't see the early years.' How many shows have you been to?My numbers aren't high. Multiple nights at Deer Creek, Alpine Valley, things like that, and then I went two, three years ago. I'd go anytime, I just keep not being able to. Was it difficult to convince them to do the ? No, they were great. We talked about doing a variety of things on the show, but they were on tour and they had their time in Los Angeles and it was the greatest. I thought of it originally as, 'What if they did a play of Seinfeld?' I didn't know what this would be for and then I thought, 'Oh, it would be through the telescope we'd see them living as Seinfeld.' It was going to be an ad for a Broadway show of Seinfeld starring Phish. We made it more palatable, a little. So Phish is a no-brainer for you to get in?Yeah. Phish, String Cheese Incident, moe., Disco Biscuits, Leftover Salmon. On every level, this was hugely important music to us. It really kept bands alive. The idea of a band in 1999 playing fucking guitars, piano, and drums was not always easy to find. In that documentary [Between Me and My Mind about Trey Anastasio], Trey said that Tommy Lee saw them on the cover of Rolling Stone and went, 'Finally, a fucking band,' and the excitement of that. Now, on the business end, these people printed money. They are enormously successful. Most of my life being on the road, I have a real aversion to snubbing people that sell out football stadiums night after night but aren't necessarily propped up by the industry. It's not that the money's important, but whenever the music business has gone up and down and up and down, they have just consistently brought their music to fans at a huge profit. People pay and travel to see Phish at a time when it's hard to get people to click on Spotify. I wonder what it is [that didn't get them inducted]. So many people like Phish; I'm sure so many people on the committee like Phish. I bet it's oversight more than snobbery. The music they introduced my generation to as well was hugely important. I learned to be eclectic from them. They were always getting compared to the Grateful Dead, but they had this whole world of influences that was really fun to pick up on and cross-check … Getting back into the Talking Heads. Getting into Zappa. That was all them. They also made you want to go to concerts. They're just good for music and they have been for decades. People that keep it at arm's length and didn't want to get into it because they thought it was their friend with the hemp choker in high school or whatever, we're not dumb. They fucking rock. It's not all Gamehendge [the fictional setting for numerous Phish songs], if that bothers you. I love it, but if that bothers you, it's not all Gamehendge. It's not all mythology and everyone in the crowd knows when to yell. The songs are great, we're not stupid people. Do you have a preference between Joy Division and New Order?Both are extremely personal to me. During my worst drug times, I remember very bad moments and there's two lines in 'Disorder' [that go] 'Lights are flashing, cars are crashing, getting frequent now.' I remember just thinking about those lines when it was at its worst. That song, when I listened to it, I'm like, 'This is what it feels like when something you might've set in motion is accelerating out of your control.' So that's a little dark tangent. But then 'Atmosphere.' What's funny about 'Atmosphere' when I listen to that is, I was born right as this was coming out, and I always wondered if I was ever an infant in a taxi cab in Chicago when 'Atmosphere' was released. 'Leave Me Alone' is my favorite New Order song and that song, 'Ceremony,' and the rest are just songs I've listened to for 20, 30 years all the time. And I think about [my wife] Olivia with that line in 'Temptation,' 'Oh, you've got blue eyes / Oh, you've got grey eyes / Oh, you've got green eyes' because Olivia has really beautiful eyes. I have no opinion on the Black Crowes. Are you being diplomatic? No. I genuinely have no opinion. Do you remember when their big album came out or this was not in your wheelhouse at all?What's fun about music is you can be obsessed with a genre and not know a band at all. My blind spots are significant. That's fair. Maybe we just keep the one line, 'I have no opinion,' and that's it.I have no opinion on the Black Crowes. If that's the pull quote, we've got a viral story. 'I have no opinion on the Black Crowes. If that's the pull quote, we've got a viral story.' So Fred [Armisen] is a big Billy Idol fan and I've been trying to get more into it. I know 'White Wedding,' and he has real significance for me as this sort of MTV thing, but I'm ignorant of the rest of him. I think he means a lot to a lot of people. I think a big [thing] is some of the Hall is [about] teaching the audience and some of it is honoring the audience. But it should never be honoring the nominating committee. I am ignorant of them. Well, those are all the snubs. We haven't gone through the biggest snub. Who's that?The standing snub. The standing snub?Sonic Youth. Once again, It's been a pleasure to talk about all these inductees and nominees. Once again, the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame has completely disappointed the universe and all music fans by not inducting Sonic Youth. I think Smashing Pumpkins not being in is also a crime. Actually, you did mention that in 2018. You said the Hall had an 'anti-Chicago bias.'[Laughs hysterically.] Did I? with the headline, 'Is the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Anti-Chicago?' and subhead, 'John Mulaney thinks so, but in reality, we may just punch below our weight as a rock town.''But in reality.' A lot of things I said in 2018 could be buffeted with, 'But in reality.' 'But in reality, John's a little off.' They said, 'Is it possible there's some truth to Mulaney's charge?'I like that they don't say, 'Well, John's just misguided and might be on speed.' They're like, 'Is there some truth? We won't say no,' but there's a ton of Chicago bands that have been inducted. A great way to clear this up would be to give the Musical Excellence Award to Steve Albini. Let's just give that to him next year. I actually think that would be a great decision all around. I doubt they really have an anti-Chicago bias. They're very blues-friendly. And white people loving the blues is, I think, the mission statement of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, and that's most of Chicago. I think we've gone through do it next year. This will be called our annual Billie Eilish conversation. Best of Rolling Stone The 50 Greatest Eminem Songs All 274 of Taylor Swift's Songs, Ranked The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time

Here's what's in store for the Stage at Suffolk Downs this summer
Here's what's in store for the Stage at Suffolk Downs this summer

Boston Globe

time27-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Boston Globe

Here's what's in store for the Stage at Suffolk Downs this summer

Now, on the precipice of its third season – and its most robust slate of shows to date – the Stage at Suffolk Downs seems like it's off to the races at last. The venue's 2025 calendar feels like an official introduction to its capabilities as an 8,500-capacity open-air space, able to wrangle both multi-day music festivals and large-scale outdoor shows from touring artists like Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up 'It took us another year to truly get the venue established out there, and we are really excited to launch an exciting and diverse summer of concerts in 2025,' Bhatti says. Advertisement The venue's 2025 programming launches on Friday when This summer's lineup further cements Suffolk Down's place in the Bowery Boston family of venues, but also highlights the advantages of its lush, general admission infield. An appearance from alt-rock sisters Two festivals will also touch down in East Boston this year: a California-born Pride festival called , and the As the venue continues to strengthen its footing in the Boston music community, it also serves as a landing place for artists who are climbing the ladder of Bowery Boston venues, ascending to larger stages every time they return to the area. Bhatti cites Khruangbin as a prime example of this ongoing graduation; since 2016, the group has vaulted from cozier clubs like Great Scott (which has since closed) and The Sinclair to the mid-sized venues Royale and Roadrunner. When the band returns to Boston this summer on their 'A LA SALA' tour, their stop at Suffolk Downs will be the next logical step, both in terms of crowd size and setting. (The trio rocked Boston Calling last year, if that's any indicator of their draw or their feelings about open-air performances). Advertisement 'Having the chance to present them where their music really shines – outdoors – should be an amazing show later in June,' he says. GIG GUIDE A week after on . The Xfinity Center springs back to life on , complete with indie-pop openers Ben Harper performs with the Innocent Criminals at Roadrunner on Sunday. Adam Keely Denver's husband-wife alt-pop duo Advertisement This Friday, Bloc Party celebrate the 20th anniversary of their debut album "Silent Alarm" at MGM Music Hall at Fenway. Emily Marcovecchio At MGM Music Hall at Fenway, also zoom in on their new record 'Aperture' at the club on New Jersey emcee Whale Jam, an annual benefit for the Plymouth-based nonprofit Whale and Dolphin Conservation, takes over Lansdowne Street this week. At the House of Blues on Advertisement "Handle With Care," the debut album from Lowell band The Ghouls, arrives this Friday. Kira Emery NOW SPINNING The Ghouls, 'Handle With Care.' The last time I heard a project on par with 'Handle With Care,' the year was 2014 and I was enjoying alt-rock demos from The Rare Occasions, a Rhode Island group who have since moved to L.A. and netted a platinum-certified single. Needless to say, the rough 'n' tumble alternative of The Ghouls's debut record gleams with promise, and I predict the Lowell band's cartwheeling youthfulness will nab them many honors beyond their current title of 2024 Rock and Roll Rumble winners. Garbage's eighth album casts a barbed disposition over its electronic-slanted rock. Joseph Cultice Garbage, Matt Berninger's sophomore solo album "Get Sunk" is a flannel patchwork of folk and alt-rock that grows cozier with every listen. Chantal Anderson Matt Berninger, BONUS TRACK Club Passim will revel in the spirit of its Palmer Street precursor Club 47 on Advertisement Victoria Wasylak can be reached at . Follow her on Bluesky @

Jockey Doyle rides 1,000th British winner
Jockey Doyle rides 1,000th British winner

BBC News

time24-03-2025

  • Sport
  • BBC News

Jockey Doyle rides 1,000th British winner

Jockey Hollie Doyle has secured her 1,000th winner in Britain - and hopes to go on and double her 28-year-old became only the second woman after Hayley Turner to reach the landmark with victory aboard Handle With Care, trained by Marco Botti, at Lingfield on Monday."I'm delighted to have got that done, it's another milestone and hopefully there's another 1,000 under the bonnet somewhere," said broke the record for the number of annual winners ridden by a female jockey in 2019 by chalking up 116 triumphs, and reached 1,000 winners worldwide last 2020, Doyle sealed her first Royal Ascot victory on Scarlet Dragon and claimed five victories in one meeting at achievements were recognised as she was named Sunday Times Sportswoman of the Year, as well as taking third place in the BBC Sports Personality of the Year was the first woman to ride a winner on British Champions Day at Ascot and the first female jockey to earn Classic success when landing the French Oaks aboard Nashwa in 2022."It's crazy, I struggle to believe some of the things I've achieved and I'm pretty sure a lot of other people do as well," Doyle, from Herefordshire, told Sky Sports Racing."It's amazing, I just need to keep going." Callan gets suspended ban over social media posts Irish jockey Neil Callan has been given an eight-month ban following comments made on social media, but will be able to continue riding as the sentence was suspended for two was charged with three breaches of the rules of racing and his penalty was announced by independent disciplinary panel chair Tim Grey after a closed plea offences around breaching the code of conduct related to posts on X from December said Callan's post directed at raceday steward Anthony McGlone was "abusive, insulting and did not treat him with respect", while another post was characterised as "not a responsible use of social media and did not show adequate respect to the officials at the BHA".The third allegation related to conduct between 16 August 2023 and 14 January 2024 when he posted, reposted and commented on social media "in a manner that was offensive, abusive and inappropriate, such that it was prejudicial to the proper conduct and good reputation of horse racing in Great Britain".Meanwhile, Scotland's Nicola Currie has been handed a 39-day suspension, with nine days deferred for either six months or 200 rides - whichever comes first - after a fourth offence in six months for misuse of the four offences came from a total of 64 rides. Two breaches were for using her whip twice above the permitted level.

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