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Articles from the November 1, 2024 edition


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  • 20 best Thanksgiving sides to eat on weight loss meds

    Stacker, Amelia Willson|Nov 1, 2024

    Ah, Thanksgiving: a time to gather 'round with friends and family, reflect on what we're grateful for, and, of course, eat. Thanksgiving is a holiday centered around food. That makes it tough to navigate when you're trying to lose weight. And if you're one of the nearly 1 in 10 adults taking a GLP-1 medication like Wegovy (semaglutide) or Zepbound (tirzepatide) to lose weight, the stakes can feel even higher. GLP-1 medications are intended to be used with a reduced-calorie diet, and...

  • How engagement ring preferences differ across generations

    Stacker, Kimberly Zerkel|Nov 1, 2024

    Engagement rings are more than just symbols of love and commitment; they also reflect the cultural and generational trends of their time. From traditional solitaires to modern designs, each generation brings its unique preferences to the table when it comes to choosing the perfect ring. VRAI, a fine jewelry brand featuring lab-grown diamonds, explores how engagement ring preferences have evolved across different generations and what trends are emerging among Gen X, millennials, and Gen Z...

  • Does Ozempic affect fertility? What you need to know

    Stacker, Vanessa Gibbs|Nov 1, 2024

    Currently, there's no reason to believe that Ozempic® causes infertility. In fact, Ozempic could potentially boost your fertility since it helps treat type 2 diabetes and obesity, both of which are linked to fertility issues. Below, Hers dives into how Ozempic affects fertility, including its effects on menstrual cycle, hormones, and birth control. Does Ozempic Affect Fertility? There have been no studies showing that Ozempic can negatively impact fertility. People on social media are actually...

  • Casey's behavior is reminiscent of Hooper versus Hornsby case in Alabama history

    Brandon Moseley|Nov 1, 2024

    November 21, 2024 – MONTGOMERY, AL – U.S. Senator Bob Casey (D-Pennsylvania) lost re-election to Republican Dave McCormick on November 5. Casey lost by over 29,000 votes so most people expected that Casey would have conceded the election on Nov. 6; but the margin of victory was small enough that it triggered Pennsylvania's automatic recount provision. The Associated Press, and almost every other credible news outlet, has called the race for McCormick in the days that followed. Now it is Nov...

  • Matt Gaetz is the first Trump nominee to withdraw

    Brandon Moseley|Nov 1, 2024

    November 21,2024 – WASHINGTON, D.C. – Congressman Matt Gaetz (R-Florida) reportedly is withdrawing from consideration as President-elect Donald J. Trump's (R) nominee to be attorney general. Vice President-elect U.S. Senator J.D. Vance (R-Ohio) had introduced Gaetz to Senators on Wednesday. Whatever happened there apparently convinced Gaetz that his nomination could not move forward. Gaetz announced the decision in a message on X: "I had excellent meetings with Senators yesterday," said Gae...

  • Inside the fight against the counterfeit goods market, and how you can purchase wisely

    Stacker, Keerthi Vedantam, Data Work By Elena Cox|Nov 1, 2024

    Life-sized cardboard cutouts, lightsaber chopsticks (that actually light up!), bacon-themed bandages—these days, anything the mind can dream up can be sold and purchased online. According to the Census quarterly retail e-commerce sales report, e-commerce accounted for roughly 16% of total retail sales in the U.S. during the second quarter of 2024. It marked a 6.6% increase from the same period the year prior. In 2022, digital commerce reached more than $1 trillion in sales for the first time, p...

  • From design to photography: How various creative tools are incorporating generative AI

    Stacker, Jake Kring-Schreifels|Nov 1, 2024

    Artificial intelligence is everywhere. Recent cover songs, résumés, web design, animation, and even voiceovers all have generative AI fingerprints. Creative industries are witnessing a rapid shift in process and production, while artists and creators have pushed beyond what was possible just a year ago. And change shows no sign of slowing down. While today's technology is evolving at a blistering pace, driven by stronger computing power and datasets, it's also the direct result of years of s...

  • Thanksgiving food and drink trends revealed by national poll, online ordering data

    Stacker, Alex Orellana|Nov 1, 2024

    As the air turns crisp and the anticipation of holiday gatherings begins, it's time to rediscover the foods and festivities that define the season. According to a recent Instacart survey of over 2,000 U.S. adults by The Harris Poll, a hearty 89% plan to celebrate Thanksgiving. This report explores the trends surrounding Thanksgiving using Instacart purchase data from the 2023 holiday season as well as a recent Harris Poll survey. The festive findings include the most and least popular...

  • Putin, Gaetz, Swamp Rats and a WW3 Update

    Dr. Bill Chitwood|Nov 1, 2024

    November 22, 2024–You know it’s going to be a bad day when you wake up, turn on the Keurig, and while the first cup of the day (Death Wish dark roast) is brewing you open up the iPad to see… Russia launches ICBM strike against Ukraine. On the bright side, it was only loaded with conventional warheads (or maybe even dummy rounds), so it just made a mess, maybe started a few small fires. It was only an intermediate range ballistic missile (IRBM), not an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM...

  • Alabama executes Carey Grayson by nitrogen hypoxia

    Staff Writer|Nov 1, 2024

    November 21, 2024 – MONTGOMERY, AL – Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall (R) announced that the state of Alabama has successfully executed convicted murderer Carey Dale Grayson at the William C. Holman Correctional Facility in Atmore on Thursday night. Alabama has been on the cutting edge of successfully using nitrogen hypoxia to carry out executions. This was the third nitrogen hypoxia execution performed by the state. Grayson was convicted and unanimously sentenced to death for the mur...

  • From stage to screen: Best musical movies adapted from theatrical productions

    Stacker, MB Boucai, Data Work By Elena Cox|Nov 1, 2024

    Heavily influenced by vaudeville, comic opera, and other performing arts, musicals as we know them emerged in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Around this time, writers shifted from creating comedy and variety shows to stage dramas that integrated story, character, song, and dance while grappling with more mature subject matter. Shows like "Oklahoma!" and "Show Boat" epitomized these qualities. When "Show Boat" opened in the late 1920s, talking pictures were taking the nation by storm, mo...

  • From tuberculosis to heart disease: How the leading causes of death in America have changed

    Stacker, Ali Hickerson, Data Work By Wade Zhou|Nov 1, 2024

    We're all going to die someday. Still, how it happens—and when—can point to a historical moment defined by the scientific advancements and public health programs available at the time to contain disease and prevent accidents. In the early 1900s, America's efforts to improve sanitation, hygiene, and routine vaccinations were still in their infancy. Maternal and infant mortality rates were high, as were contagious diseases that spread between people and animals. Combined with the devastation of tw...

  • States where older people's health is seeing the biggest decline

    Stacker, Jonita Davis, Data Work By Wade Zhou|Nov 1, 2024

    Older people across the U.S. say their health declined between 2021 and 2022, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Americans 65 and older in 34 states reported higher rates of "fair" or "poor" health when interviewed as part of the CDC's Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System survey, so Northwell Health partnered with Stacker to see which states have seen the biggest declines. The population of adults over age 65 in the U.S. has experienced extraordinary growth. They...

  • Steve Marshall files third 24-State brief urging the U.S. Supreme Court to protect Girls' sports

    Staff Writer|Nov 1, 2024

    November 22, 2024 - MONTGOMERY, AL – Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall (R) filed a 24-state amicus brief urging the U.S. Supreme Court to review a lower court' ruling that the Constitution prohibits States from restricting girls' sports teams to biological females. The case arises out of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, which held in September that Arizona's 2022 law likely violates the Equal Protection Clause by not allowing biological males, who falsely claim that they are women-to c...

  • Buyer beware: How to spot fake online shopping sites

    Stacker, Fred Decker|Nov 1, 2024

    How often do you buy something online? A couple of times a month? A couple of times a week? A couple of times a day? Everybody's answer will be different, but collectively, it's done a lot: Online retail accounted for over $1 trillion of purchases in the U.S. in 2022 and a record $277.6 billion in the second quarter of 2023 alone. Retailers ranging from titans like Amazon and Walmart, down to local small-town shops work very hard to land their share of that business. Sadly and inevitably—so d...

  • Americans spend less time outside home post-COVID-19, UCLA study reveals

    Stacker, Jasmin Jose|Nov 1, 2024

    A recent study by the University of California, Los Angeles indicates that Americans are spending more time inside their homes and far less time outside. The LA Post provides details. Other studies—like a survey conducted by the Bureau of Labor Statistics—indicate that this could be a post-COVID-19 phenomenon. At the same time, there are studies that also suggest that Americans were spending more time alone even before the pandemic. A study published on Oct. 30 by Brian D. Taylor and Sam Spe...

  • Poss Adapts as Fishing Changes at Pickwick Lake

    David Rainer, AL Department of Conservation and Natural Resources|Nov 1, 2024

    November 22, 2024 - Andy Poss knows the Tennessee River's Pickwick Lake from top to bottom – literally. Fishing for both largemouths and the scrappy smallmouths, as well as crappie, is what he does now. For 15 years prior, he probed the lake from bottom to top to make a living. Poss was a commercial fisherman and mussel diver during those 15 years until, in his words, "I got tired of being wet all the time. And it's a lot of work to handle 2,000 hooks a day – baiting 1,000 hooks and then tak...

  • "Gladiator II" - A Movie Review

    Luisa Reyes|Nov 1, 2024

    November 22, 2024 - Gore galore is the overriding aspect of "Gladiator II" which is now showing in movie theaters nationwide. A long-awaited sequel to Ridley Scott's "Gladiator" which was released twenty-four years ago, "Gladiator II" makes heavy use of themes typically featured in male-oriented movies such as revenge, filling the little-known late father's shoes, and honor through fighting. While those topics can sound interesting in and of themselves, in "Gladiator II" these themes are...

  • HEADS EXPLODE

    Robert Tate|Nov 1, 2024

    Trump won. By now, everybody knows about it but at the same time, many refuse to accept. It has been interesting to see the left and how they cannot deal with it. To be honest, back in 2020, many on the right lost their minds as well but the left’s approach from celebrities, colleges and universities, and all the way to the media has been beautiful. What has become plainly obvious is that our society has largely become a bunch of babies who when they do not get their way, they react through t...

  • Thousands of US communities forgo federal flood insurance

    Stacker, Evelyn Pimplaskar|Nov 1, 2024

    Catastrophic inland flooding in North Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee has made headlines across the country in recent months. Severe flooding in areas not typically associated with flood problems may have Americans wondering if they should buy federal flood insurance. But National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) coverage may not be available to everyone who wants it, Insurify reports. Nationally, 2,279 communities don't participate in the voluntary program that provides insurance against...

  • Non-mortgage debt balances are declining in 2024

    Stacker, Chris Horymski|Nov 1, 2024

    With the notable exception of mortgages, consumer debts are declining in 2024. This reverses a trend of larger borrowing balances among American consumers that goes back to the Great Recession. Non-mortgage debt includes the total balance of a consumer's loans and lines of credit when their first and second mortgages are removed from consideration. That's obviously a large carve-out: Mortgage balances exceed $250,000 on average in 2024, and collectively make up about two-thirds of the overall co...

  • Greg Reed: A Tribute to Senate District 5

    Senator Greg Reed|Nov 1, 2024

    Northwest Alabama is a very special place. Nestled in the lowest foothills of the Appalachian Mountains, it is known for coal mining and includes so many beautiful wonders and remarkable people. I call it home, and I have for almost my entire life. I was born in Jasper and grew up in Cordova in south Walker County with my mother, Patsy, my father, Rufus, and my sister, Angie. My father worked for the power company, and my sister and I attended Walker County public schools. Upon graduation from...

  • "A Christmas Carol" Opening This Weekend At The Alabama Shakespeare Festival

    Luisa Reyes

    November 22,2024 - The stage adaptation of Charles Dickens' Christmas classic, "A Christmas Carol" opens this weekend at The Alabama Shakespeare Festival. Based on the novella by Charles Dickens, who had a deep interest in Christmas, "A Christmas Carol" relates the story of Ebenezer Scrooge, who is a penny-pinching miser, yet becomes transformed into a benevolent and friendly man after being visiting by the Ghosts of Christmas Past, Present, and Yet To come. Considered an allegory of Christian...

  • OUTDOOR TRUTHS

    Gary Miller|Nov 1, 2024

    Many of my friends have been using every spare moment for the last several weeks, trying to fill their buck tag. Some are holding out for a certain deer, while others are not as picky. But no matter which type of hunter they are, there is one thing certain. Both are growing tired. The early mornings are becoming less exciting, and the cold weather makes even the preparation much more difficult. Some will lay their weapon down and wait until next year. For myself, I am also lingering a little lon...

  • National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine award $600K to UAH to join Gulf Scholars Program

    Russ Nelson|Nov 1, 2024

    HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (NOV. 22, 2024) – The Gulf Research Program (GRP) of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine has announced The University of Alabama in Huntsville (UAH) has been awarded a $600,000 grant to join the Gulf Scholars Program (GPS). The initiative is part of a five-year, $12.7 million pilot program aimed at preparing undergraduate students to address environmental, health, energy and infrastructure challenges in the Gulf of Mexico. The Gulf Scholars Program netw...

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