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Trump-Loving Congressman Matt Gaetz And Jim Jordan Are Apparently #FreeBritney Allies And Want An Investigation Into Conservatorships

Although congressmen and Trump supporters Matt Gaetz and Jim Jordan have been previously compared to titular characters of the sardonic cartoon Beavis And Butthead, today they pair are attempting to stand up for a different cause than so-called stolen elections. Even broken clocks are right twice a day, so whatever might have motivated this pair to send a letter to House Judiciary Chairman Jerry Nadler about the state of conservatorships, the national attention on this corrupt system is still a good thing. (Apparently Gaetz is a lifelong Britney fan… didn’t see that coming either.)

TMZ reports that Congressman Gaetz, of Florida, and Congressman Jordan, of Ohio, invoked the situation of Britney Spears, who has been under a suspect conservatorship since 2008, in the two-page letter sent today requesting a hearing be convened on the subject.

“In court appearances in August and November of 2020, Ms. Spears’ attorney represented to the court that Ms. Spears ‘strongly opposed’ having her father as a conservator, that she was afraid of her father, and that she would not again perform publicly so long as this arrangement persisted,” the letter states, and even cites The New York Times recent documentary, Framing Britney Spears, which sought to expose the legal injustices in Britney’s case.

It certainly seems strange that Gaetz and Jordan be the ones behind this motion, but as I said before, broken clocks. Anything that helps expose how conservatorships can be misused to take advantage of vulnerable individuals in this country is ultimately a good thing.

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The Sixers Will Have To Play The Bulls Without Embiid And Simmons As They Continue To Quarantine

The Philadelphia 76ers will open the second half of their season with a road back-to-back, facing the Bulls in Chicago on Thursday and the Wizards in Washington on Friday. For the Bulls game, they will be without the services of their two All-Stars, as Joel Embiid and Ben Simmons remain quarantined after they were forced out of the All-Star Game after it was learned that their barber back in Philly had tested positive for COVID-19.

Per the league’s contact tracing protocols, the two must produce seven straight days of negative tests before they can return. According to Shams Charania of The Athletic, Embiid would be eligible to return on Friday while Simmons wouldn’t be able to return until Saturday, meaning at the very least, they’ll be without their star point guard for two games.

ttps://twitter.com/ShamsCharania/status/1369405232447373317

Whether the Sixers would have Embiid come back after a week off the court and play in Washington remains to be seen, but if he remains negative he would at least be eligible to rejoin the team for that contest against the Wizards. For a Sixers team that is narrowly holding onto the top seed in the East (a half game up on Brooklyn) entering the second half of the season, every win counts and turning two should wins into toss-ups without their stars would be an unfortunate start for a team that has been sensational at home and will be looking to get as high a seed as possible to get homecourt in the playoffs.

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Athlete Heat Index: Taking Stock Of The Hottest Names After All-Star

Welcome to UPROXX’s Athlete Heat Index, where sports marketing executive and self-described “brand geek” Michael Ehrlich ranks athletes by the strength of their personal brands.

This roundup won’t simply just list the most popular athletes or focus solely on box scores, trophies or Instagram followers, but explore what athletes achieve off the court and field — in marketing, media and community work — to authentically build their personal narratives and brands.

This concept first came to life on the podcast “Brand Food” that Ehrlich co-hosted with best-selling author and brand consultant Jeremy Darlow and extends here around key sports moments. Tipping off the series is a NBA All-Star Weekend Heat Index. This was no ordinary midseason festivity, so the rankings reflect the extenuating circumstances and gets creative with the featured athletes.

5. Quavo

A fraction of the NBA players participated in All-Star Weekend this year so I had to think differently about the rankings and with no Hawks taking part (sorry Trae Young, I thought you deserved a nod) hip-hop star/basketball player Quavo became the unofficial Atlanta ambassador of the weekend.

Ahead of All-Star, Quavo’s skills were already heralded as he earned MVP honors in the Celebrity Game in 2018 and his pickup games since continue to garner massive eyeballs across the Internet.

Off the court and outside of music, heading into All-Star Weekend Quavo’s next venture as a feature film actor received widespread media coverage as he’ll share the screen with Robert De Niro, Jack Huston, and John Malkovich in the film Wash Me in the River, which wrapped in January. Building your own brand by association with other strong brands is huge in any industry, so Quavo authenticating his acting skills alongside these major names will absolutely pay dividends as he looks for future opportunities on-screen.

In addition to detailing his film debut, Quavo’s pre-All-Star narrative last week touched on Migos’ anticipated fourth album Culture III, hinting that it will drop before the end of March. Major momentum for his diverse brand, with music at the core, heading into the weekend of hoops.

But it was his dominant performance Saturday night in Bleacher Report’s OpenRun 2-on-2 game alongside Jack Harlow that cemented his All-Star brand conversation. He accounted for 17 of his team’s 21 points, along with 14 rebounds and 4 blocks, to earn the victory over 2 Chainz and Lil Baby plus the $500,000 prize, with matching donations to the HBCUs of his choice, Clark Atlanta University and Spelman College. Another huge moment for his growing basketball legend but more importantly, making an even greater impact to two universities and thousands of students in the process.

4. Lexie Brown/Dee Brown

In year’s past, WNBA players have taken part in NBA All-Star Weekend in various roles on and off the court, but unfortunately, the W wasn’t able to be represented in Atlanta. However, these unique circumstances offered an opportunity for Minnesota Lynx guard Lexie Brown to take center stage without even participating in any All-Star activities.

Thirty years ago, Lexie’s dad, Dee — then a Celtics rookie — famously pumped up his Reeboks en route to winning the 1991 Slam Dunk Contest. The sneaker moment and Dee’s no-look winning dunk remain a fixture of All-Star history.

Now entering her fourth WNBA season, the former top-10 draft pick Lexie continues to create her own path on the hardwood and brand off the court.

In conjunction with the anniversary and Dee returning to the Dunk Contest stage over the weekend to serve as a judge, Reebok relaunched his Pump Omni Zone II with Lexie as the face of the campaign. Her participation garnered massive media conversation — including an interview with Dime’s own Robby Kalland — heading into the weekend and the sneaker sold out within minutes.

All-Star Weekend is traditionally one of the biggest moments of the year for sneaker launches and for Lexie and Dee to be a major part of the conversation, to have such positive media sentiment, along with commercial success of the shoe, allowed the Brown Family brand to shine without even stepping onto the court. This sets Lexie up for further off-court success as she continues her WNBA career.

3. Stephen Curry

Yes, Curry’s brand is already among the best in the league, but heading into All-Star Weekend, he was a bit overlooked, especially on a stacked Team LeBron roster featuring defending champ James, reigning back-to-back MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo, and rising superstar Luka Dončić.

Throughout his illustrious career, Curry’s relatable, fun, family-focused, and authentic personal brand has made him a global icon. On the court, he has single-handedly made the three-point shot cool again, always with a big smile on his face. Kids all over the world now practice deep threes pretending to be the Warriors star. So returning to the Three-Point Contest, which he won in 2015, allowed the future Hall of Fame inductee to showcase his basketball superpower — and the overall entertainment value of long range shooting versus another stale Slam Dunk Contest — to world yet again.

His dominant first round, followed by his dramatic last shot victory over Mike Conley Jr., further cemented his place as the greatest shooter of all-time. Reggie Miller certainly confirmed that claim during the broadcast, over and over again. Upon winning the contest, Curry walked over to his wife Ayesha sitting courtside to give a high-five — the brand geek in me thought to myself, “that is classic Curry and so on-brand.”

Beyond his historic contest performance, the Curry Brand (via Under Armour) announced they’d donate $1,000 for every point Stephen scored to Good Sports Inc. with Foot Locker offering to match the donation. Not that he needed any help garnering support from fans to take as many shots as possible in the All-Star Game, but this donation component was certainly a nice bonus, especially when he started pulling up from half court. Curry’s 28 points, including one rare alley-oop dunk, in the winning effort for Team LeBron raised $56,000.

Curry’s Three-Point Contest victory, combined with his CarMax commercial running throughout the weekend, his ridiculous half court, and no-look shots in the All-Star Game — all while looking like he was having so much fun — absolutely set him apart from other All-Star player brands over the weekend.

But again it’s his relatable, personable and inspiring self that shines brightest. In his post-game interview when asked about what drives him and motivates him he responded: “I have a lot to accomplish, but nothing to prove. There’s a subtle little difference there.”

And in classic Curry fashion, he put a bow on his All-Star Weekend by posting a selfie with Ayesha and the Three-Point Contest trophy on their way out of town.

2. Blake Griffin

Since agreeing to a contract buyout with the Pistons on Friday becoming an unrestricted free agent, Griffin and his potential next destination became a hot topic across the league heading into All-Star Weekend. But once rumors swirled on Sunday morning that he’d be moving from last-place Detroit to second-place Brooklyn, the conversation around his talents and personal brand erupted.

Any time an athlete trends on Twitter throughout the day during All-Star Sunday, they have to be in consideration for the Heat Index. But in Griffin’s case, he didn’t even participate in the weekend’s festivities, so his brand conversation was that much more impressive. He was certainly one of the most talked about NBA players throughout the weekend and he wasn’t an All-Star.

Once the move to Brooklyn was confirmed and the photoshops of him in uniform alongside Kevin Durant, Kyrie Irving, and James Harden flooded our timelines, Griffin continued to rise in the trending topics and in the Heat Index ranking.

On court he will likely have a supporting role to the Nets’ All-Star trio as they continue to build their own super team to contend with the defending champ Lakers in the West, but his strong yet sometimes overlooked personal brand — especially since moving to Detroit — is the major winner here. Transitioning from a challenging market in Detroit to the top one in New York will only continue to elevate the former All-Star’s off-court brand, especially his multiplatform media interests.

His All-Star Sunday brand conversation coincided perfectly with the trailer launch of his upcoming TruTV prank show “Double Cross with Blake Griffin” as the All-Star Game broadcast tipped off coverage with an on-air promotion. Now playing in New York with the potential of adding “champion” to his resume, will only help Griffin’s brand continue to grow outside of hoops.

1. Damian Lillard

Lillard’s authentic and underdog mentality brand narrative has always been one of my favorites since he joined the league in 2012. Throughout his time in “small market” Portland, he’s hit big shot after big shot and the sports universe — especially on social media — knows exactly what “Dame Time” means now.

As the now six-time All-Star’s legend of clutchness continues, the connectivity between his late game shooting and his “Dame Time” celebration of tapping his wrist is a brand case study in itself. Anyone in the basketball community can do that celebration and you would immediately know it’s in reference to Lillard.

Heading into All-Star with his Hulu “Doesn’t Just Have Live Sports” TV campaign in full force highlighting Dame D.O.L.L.A.’s incredible musical talents and launching a new and innovative partnership with Oakley including a massive charity component, the Lillard brand was one I had my eye on for the weekend.

Like Curry, he was a bit overshadowed on the stacked Team LeBron roster, with Dončić edging him out as a starter. So once he came off the bench Sunday night, you knew he would put on a show. The combination of his unbelievable in-game half court shooting competition with Curry and his “Dame Time” deep three game-winner showcased his unique talents on a global stage and blew up social media. But it was the rare perfect storm for sports marketing that put Lillard over the top for the Heat Index crown.

The first commercial to air after the All-Star Game ended at the hands of Lillard, starred the man himself. Gatorade’s TV spot for BOLT24 promoted a new sports drink offering with Lillard saying “it pays to have range.” Roman philosopher Seneca once said that “luck is what happens when preparation meets opportunity” and it seems like Lillard the player and Lillard the brand are living proof.

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What’s On Tonight: Young Filmmakers Take The HBO Spotlight In ‘COVID Diaries NYC,’ And ‘The Flash’ Has A New Trick

COVID Diaries NYC (HBO, 9:00pm) — Granted, this subject matter might be something that you aren’t prepared to voluntarily absorb, but there’s more here than meets the title. This deeply personal film turns the camera on five young filmmakers in New York City, who tell their families’ stories during the pandemic’s first wave in the (best) city that (you know) never sleeps. Frontline workers and every day New Yorkers get real in their own very resilient ways, all while the U.S. continues to process and battle an invisible enemy while searching, somehow, for meaning.

The Flash (CW, 8:00pm) — Barry is now able to harness a “speed thinking” power, so watch out, world. He, naturally, is thrilled, and Cisco is not thrilled, but perhaps this new ability might be able to save Iris?

Superman and Lois (CW, 9:00pm) — The world’s most famous superhero (Superman/Clark Kent) and the most famous journalist (Lois Lane) are behaving as ordinarily as possible in this series, and one can guess how well that will work out. This week, Clark gets real about his Kryptonian history over a rousing family breakfast.

New Amsterdam (NBC, 9:00pm) — One of Max’s policies brings heartbreaking consequences, and Bloom’s made an interesting discovery about Iggy.

Jimmy Kimmel Live! — Riz Ahmed, Janelle Monáe

The Late Show With Stephen Colbert — Vanessa Kirby, Niko Moon

The Tonight Show With Jimmy Fallon — Chrissy Teigen, Rory Mcllroy, Pink Sweat$ Ft. Kehlani

The Late Late Show With James Corden — Tracy Morgan, Kings Of Leon

Late Night With Seth Meyers — Don Johnson, Christina Hendricks, Chloé Zhao, Josh Herndon

In case you missed these picks from the weekend:

Coming 2 America (Amazon Prime film) — The much-anticipated sequel is (according to our own Vince Mancini) a rare example of a comedy that lives up to the original with a bang-up job in the costume department to boot. The followup also, naturally, celebrates the much-heralded return of Eddie Murphy as King Akeem, who’s definitely got Arsenio Hall around as confidante while they travel from Zaumda to Queens, New York, to take things back to basics. More good news: James Earl Jones is back, and the film co-stars Wesley Snipes, Leslie Jones, Tracy Morgan, Louis Anderson, Jermaine Fowler, Bella Murphy, Rotimi, KiKi Layne, Nomzamo Mbatha, and Teyana Taylor.

The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge on the Run (Paramount+ movie) — Look for Keanu Reeves’ cameo in this irreverent animated adventure, which follows SpongeBob and Patrick, his starfish pal, looking to vindicate Mr. Krabs after he’s been framed for heisting King Neptune’s crown. In doing so, they must leave their Bikini Bottom refuge and make their way to Shell City in a journey that illuminates the power of friendship. In addition to the actual movie goodness, check out our “Rapid Fire” video with rapper 2KBaby as he looks to beat the buzzer in a quiz.

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We’re Picking The Best Fast-Food Chicken Nuggets To Save You The Trouble

The chicken nugget is a remnant of a bygone season; a time when fast food was the lowest quality consumable you could find. Before competition from fast-casual restaurants forced McDonald’s and their ilk to rapidly evolve and quality sourcing became a selling point. I’m talking about the halcyon days of 2003, when we didn’t know exactly what was in a fast-food chicken nugget and we didn’t want to know.

Cheap, easy, and fried were all the dining public asked back then; a plastic toy and a small fry rounded out the meal. Thankfully, we’ve (mostly) moved on from the “pink slime” era and we’re all better for it. But the chicken nugget (almost inexplicably) endures.

Invented in the 1950s, the chicken nugget — then called the “chicken crispie” — was created so that meat processors could clump ground chicken parts together in a breading-based skin that could be deep-fried and frozen without falling apart. Yum. A study conducted by the University of Mississippi Medical Center in 2013 and published in the American Journal of Medicine sought to determine the actual contents of chicken nuggets from two national food chains. They found that the chicken nuggets they tested weren’t really chicken, their dominant ingredient was fat, along with epithelium (the lining of all animal organs), bone, nerve, and connective tissue.

Thankfully, most fast-food chains have changed their ingredients over the past eight years. The result is a better product overall, with a few brands sticking to the tried, true, and sorta gross. And seeing as I’ve ranked chicken tenders, explored every fast-food fried chicken sandwich within reach, chatted with the best chicken chefs, and waited in line for multiple hours just to eat some hot chicken, it only makes sense that I turn my attention to these.

Here are the best chicken nuggs in the game, ranked.

10. Burger King Chicken Nuggets

Burger King

Calories: 482 (10 piece)

It only costs $1.89 for a 10 piece order of Burger King’s chicken nuggets? What the hell is in these nuggets that they’re this cheap?

Well, according to the BK website: boneless chicken breast with rib meat, water (so far, so good), isolated oat product (I’ll look past it), potato starch, seasoning, salt, sodium phosphate… so, nothing too out of the ordinary compared to its chicken nugget brethren. Regardless, these aren’t good. The meat has a strange wet and sweaty texture, no matter how fresh you get them. Also, the outer shell never really crusts as much as you’d like them to in order to produce a pleasing audible crunch (a necessity in a good nugget).

They’re always just… slightly soggy. Or perhaps floppy, if you prefer.

Find your nearest Burger King here.

The Bottom Line

Order the Chicken Fries instead, which we contend are not nuggets but more akin to tenders.

9. Sonic Jumbo Popcorn Chicken

Sonic

Calories: 490 (medium order)

Sonic’s Jumbo Popcorn Chicken is a significant step up from BK’s nuggets. The chicken is less processed, the batter is crunchy and keeps its crispiness after being dunked in sauce, and the nugg features a strong pepper-forward flavor that also pairs well with the dipping sauce of your choice.

This chicken lives up to its name, too. These are indeed “jumbo bites” — requiring about two to three bites to finish off.

Still, overall your money is better spent on just about anything else from Sonic. Mozzarella sticks, chili cheese tots, jalapeño poppers. Ordering the nuggets is a disservice to your hard-earned cash.

Find your nearest Sonic here.

The Bottom Line:

Not bad, but one of Sonic’s weakest snack offerings.

8. Carl’s Jr Chicken Stars

Carl

Calories 270 (6 piece)

It seems almost rude to rank Carl’s Jr’s weird star-shaped Chicken nuggets higher than, well, anything. But unsettling shape aside, these things actually have a pretty good flavor. Yes, the chicken inside is spongey, with a webby appearance that is off-putting, but they do have a great crispy outer coating.

(That shell gets harder the longer you wait. So if you order these, eat them first.)

Find your nearest Carl’s Jr here.

The Bottom Line

Chicken the way you’ve always wanted it — in the shape of a star.

7. Rally’s Chicken Bites

Rally

Calories: 760 (half pound chicken bites box)

If you want chicken nuggets from Rally’s, you have to order an entire half-pound box, no exceptions. That doesn’t make this meal expensive, but it does make it excessive. In most cases, asking for a small order of nuggets is a great way to indulge and get an extra side to accompany your fries and burger. At Rally’s, the chicken bites are the meal.

Luckily (considering how many of them you’re stuck with), Rally’s chicken bites are pretty good. They have a crispy-almost-dusty-dry batter that soaks up sauce excellently and the white meat chicken inside is a considerable step up in terms of quality (especially compared to Carl’s Jr’s mystery meat).

Unfortunately, by the time you’re done with the box, you’re going to be burnt out from these things. If chicken is going to be your whole meal at Rally’s, we suggest you opt for the Mother Cruncher chicken sandwich instead.

Find your nearest Rally’s here.

The Bottom Line

Good, but not good enough to make it through an entire half-pound order.

6. Jack in the Box Chicken Nuggets

Jack in the Box

Calories: 238 (5 piece)

When Jack in the Box first dropped their version of the chicken nugget in 2012, I thought to myself, “Wow, this tastes just like Jack in the Box chicken tenders but in a different shape!” But preferring the form factor of the tender (who doesn’t?) I never ordered them again. Then, sometime last year, Jack in the Box quietly changed the recipe of their chicken tenders and now I hate them. This means I’ve since turned to the Jack in the Box nugget to satisfy my JiB chicken needs (I eat a lot of Jack in the Box, perhaps because I write about weed).

I really like the batter here, it’s not as crispy as I’d like it to be but it has a great flavor, with heavy notes of black pepper and subtle undertones of garlic powder, plus a little onion powder that lingers nicely on the palate and cuts through the sauce.

Find your nearest Jack in the Box here.

The Bottom Line

These taste great paired with Jack’s BBQ sauce or Buttermilk Ranch and even better doused in Frank’s Red Hot.

5. KFC Popcorn Nuggets

KFC

Calories: 690

KFC’s Popcorn Nuggets — wait a minute, since when were these things called “Popcorn Nuggets?” Is this a Berenstain Bears Mandela thing? I did the research and no, it’s not. For whatever reason KFC rebranded its Popcorn Chicken as Popcorn Nuggets in 2015. Why? Are nuggets easier to sell than chicken? KFC has since changed its formula from its original ’90s popcorn recipe. The pieces these days are thicker, giving you a meatier bite of white meat chicken in KFC’s extra crispy style batter.

The meat feels pretty high quality here, as far as fast-food fried chicken goes. It looks, smells, and tastes like chicken, and really, what more can you ask for in a chicken nugget (the bar isn’t set too high)? Still, if you’re at KFC, you should probably just get the Original Recipe fried chicken and call it a day.

Find your nearest KFC here.

The Bottom Line

A strong and solid mid-tier nugget, but if KFC offered it in Original Recipe it would be a significantly better experience.

4. McDonald’s Chicken McNuggets

McDonald

Calories: 420 (10 piece)

The Chicken McNugget is arguably why chicken nuggets are even a thing in the fast-food space. The McDonald’s McNugget is every kid’s favorite fast food treat (grown-ass millennials are all over them, too — thanks to Pokemon, of all things) and if this ranking was built purely off of nostalgia, these babies would certainly land in the number one spot.

But we didn’t rank these nuggets based on nostalgia. And even though McNugget has come a long way since its questionable beginnings (these nuggets used to be made with a blend of chicken meats, rather than white breast meat), they’re still not quite to the quality deserving of a position higher than fourth. Don’t get us wrong, when McNuggets are good, they’re great! A fresh McNugget is hot enough that you can’t really zero in on the weird texture of the spongey chicken meat inside and features a crispy batter that is still pretty much unbeatable. It’s airy, flakey, absorbs sauce perfectly, and in perfect ratio to the chicken inside.

Unfortunately, McDonald’s is pretty hit or miss. When you get a bad McNugget the experience is bad enough to turn your off from chicken nuggets for a good grip of time. The texture of a stale nugget is akin to packing material, it’s almost flavorless and will reintroduce its bland aftertaste every time you burp for the rest of the day.

Find your nearest McDonald’s here.

The Bottom Line

Ordering a Chicken McNugget is a gamble, but when they’re good, they’re great.

3. Shake Shack Chick ’n Bites

Shake Shack

Calories: 300

Shake Shack’s chicken is seriously underrated. These things are noticeably hand-breaded — which we can’t say for any other nugget on this list — incredibly crispy with a cornstarch-based batter that is extra crunchy but keeps the chicken inside moist and flavorful and made with antibiotic-free whole muscle chicken, sous-vide cooked!

They’re easily some of the juiciest, highest quality chicken nuggets in the fast-food universe. Dipping them in Shake Shack’s gochujang dipping sauce will turn these chicken bites into umami flavor bombs, too. And yet… somehow I always forget they are on the menu and end up surprised when I remember how good they are. That mystical “forgettable” x-factor counts against them today.

Find your nearest Shake Shack here.

The Bottom Line

Delicious but forgettable. That says something about these nuggets we can’t quite articulate, but it’s proof they don’t deserve the number one spot.

2. Wendy’s Spicy Nuggets

Wendy

Calories: 470 (10 piece)

It took a viral tweet from Chance the Rapper to convince Wendy’s to bring back the beloved Spicy Chicken Nugget in 2019 and since then it looks the spicy treat has earned back its permanent spot on the Wendy’s menu. We didn’t include Wendy’s regular nugget on this list because the spicy version makes the OG taste like a waste of time, so why were the spicy nugs dropped in the first place? We suspect it’s because these babies are actually pretty damn spicy, with a strong cayenne and black pepper flavor that will have you reaching for a swig of soda to help tamp down that lingering heat, but that sensation is exactly why these nuggets are so damn addicting.

The chicken inside isn’t great. It has that unappealing spongey-and-overly-processed texture, which is why Wendy’s is smart enough to let you pick up an order of just four. Four nuggets won’t give you enough time to bother yourself over thinking about what’s actually inside of them.

Find your nearest Wendy’s here.

The Bottom Line

The spiciest nugget in the game. So spicy that it masks the nugg’s lesser qualities.

1. Chick-fil-A Nuggets

Chick fil A

Calories: 250 (8 piece)

I’m no great fan of Chick-fil-A. I think their waffle fries are middling, the tenders are terrible, and their fried chicken sandwich, while delicious, is a little overrated. But the chicken nugget is Chick-fil-A’s best contribution to the fast-food space. Made from boneless chicken breast and seasoned with a mix of black pepper, salt, paprika, a dash of chili powder and… we swear we can taste lingering notes of sugar in there, Chick-fil-A’s nuggets pack a great flavor with a crispy hand-breaded batter that locks in the chicken’s juiciness.

What sets Chick-fil-A’s nuggets in another class against the competition is the brand’s use of peanut oil to fry their chicken — which keeps it crispy and golden brown thanks to the oil’s high smoke point but leaves it juicy and perfectly cooked without drying out. If they were a bit crispier or had a thicker batter they’d be even better, but from a pure flavor standpoint, it’s hard to beat Chick-fil-A’s nuggets.

Find your nearest Chick-fil-A here.

The Bottom Line

The best chicken nuggets in the entire fast-food universe and Chick-fil-A’s greatest menu item.

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Randy Rainbow asks all the right questions in parody song interview with President Biden

Randy Rainbow made a name for himself launching hilarious parodies during the Trump presidency, as he brilliantly transformed musical theater canon into political theater cannons. He’s also helped many of us get through the past year of the pandemic by changing classic musical hits like “Gee, Officer Krupke” and “Put on a Happy Face” to “Gee, Anthony Fauci” and “Cover Your Freakin’ Face.”

Some of us have wondered if the comedian would have enough material to keep up this kind of comedy in the post-Trump era, but there was no need to worry. Today, he released his first Biden-themed parody since the inauguration, and it is simply delightful.

Randy kicks the video off joking about his post-Trump comedy challenges, saying to President Biden, “Could you maybe at some point just, like, curse or say something completely loony tunes or offensive? The other guy used to do that, and it just made this whole thing a little funnier.”


After lightly poking fun of Biden’s middle name, dozing off while the president talked about the vaccine situation, then having a momentary nightmare, Randy starts belting some impressive 1950s Chordettes harmony to the tune of “Mr. Sandman”:

Mr. Biden

Bring my vaccine

Keep me protected from COVID-19

Tell me the trick to how I might earn a

Fix of that magic Pfizer or Moderna

Biden

Gimme a poke

They call you “sleepy” but you’re pretty woke

I’m so tired of quarantine

Mr. Biden, bring my vaccine…

(It’s way better when you listen to it.)

Enjoy:

Randy speaks to what so many of us are feeling right now, as we see the finish line with the country poised to have enough vaccines for every adult by the end of May. It’ll take months more to actually get shots in everyone’s arms, and for many of us, our turn cannot come quickly enough. After a year of diligently wearing masks and staying distanced, we’re ready for all the hugs, and all the friends over for dinner, and all the travel, and all the normal life things we will never again take for granted.

And when “The Robinettes” sang “Oh, I might murder someone if I see another Zoom”? I don’t know about you, but I felt that in my bones.

And wanting to plant a big ol’ kiss on Dr. Fauci? Felt that too. Speaking of which, if you missed this one it’s also worth a viewing:

Randy Rainbow has earned himself the title of King of Parody these past few years, and fans are sharing their hopes that he’ll receive some kind of formal recognition for his talents. The Mark Twain for American Humor has been bandied about as an idea, which seems perfectly fitting since Twain himself was a satirist and parodist.

Even during the darkest times, laughter is healing. Thanks, Randy Rainbow, for helping provide it during a difficult era. Glad to see you’ll still be with us as we turn the corner into (hopefully) better days.

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Things Got Awkward When Maria Bartiromo Invited A Guest To Weigh In On Pepé Le Pew Only To Have Him Blast The Character As ‘Totally Unacceptable’

Fox Business host Maria Bartiromo went into her Tuesday morning segment on Pepé Le Pew fully expecting a barrel of laughs as her guest, Wall Street Journal writer John Hilsenrath, would surely join her in blasting the decision to retire the cartoon skunk and decrying it as yet another example of “cancel culture” gone mad. Instead, Hilsenrath actually agreed that Pepé Le Pew is pretty creepy, which seemed to catch Bartiromo by surprise.

The segment went south after Bartiromo showed old Looney Tunes clips of Pepé Le Pew relentlessly pursuing his cat love interest and grabbing her in his arms while she’s literally fighting him off. After joking, “Bugs Bunny better watch out — they’re coming for him,” Bartiromo kicked the conversation over to Hilsenrath who very clearly did not want to play this game.

Via Mediaite:

“Maria, I’m watching those videos that you have of this — I always used to think that cartoon was funny — but he is kind of grabbing and groping in ways that are just totally unacceptable today,” Hilsenrath said. “I kind of think norms change over time. And maybe it’s time for Pepé Le Pew to beat it.”

When Bartiromo tried to counter that removing Pepé from the Space Jam sequel and future Looney Tunes projects is cancel culture “going overboard,” Hilsenrath didn’t back down from his position. “I think we can go overboard. But watch that video!” he argued. “He’s grabbing that poor little cat in ways that you could never get away with right now.” The Trump-loving Fox Business host then awkwardly went to a commercial break.

You can watch the Bartiromo segment below:

(Via Mediaite)

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Lady Gaga And Adam Driver Became An Instant Meme With Their Very ’90s ‘House Of Gucci’ Photo

During Lady Gaga’s recent dog-napping situation (which has thankfully been resolved), she was out of town filming a movie. That movie is House Of Gucci, in which she co-stars with Adam Driver. Today, she shared a photo of herself and Driver together in character as Patrizia Reggiani and Maurizio Gucci, respectively. The story takes place in the mid-90s and the pair are certainly dressed for the period, which instantly turned them into a meme.

The film is based on the book The House Of Gucci: A Sensational Story Of Murder, Madness, Glamour, And Greed by Sara Gay Forden. The publisher’s statement of the book reads:

“On March 27, 1995, Maurizio Gucci, heir to the fabulous fashion dynasty, was slain by an unknown gunman as he approached his Milan office. In 1998, his ex-wife Patrizia Reggiani Martinelli — nicknamed “The Black Widow” by the press — was sentenced to 29 years in prison, for arranging his murder.

Did Patrizia murder her ex-husband because his spending was wildly out of control? Did she do it because her glamorous ex was preparing to marry his mistress, Paola Franchi? Or is there a possibility she didn’t do it at all?

The Gucci story is one of glitz, glamour, intrigue, the rise, near fall and subsequent resurgence of a fashion dynasty. Beautifully written, impeccably researched, and widely acclaimed, The House Of Gucci will captivate readers with its page-turning account of high fashion, high finance, and heart-rending personal tragedy.”

Check out some more reactions to the photo below.

https://twitter.com/loumagooo/status/1369391010405572610

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People Are Pointing Out How Dave Chappelle Called Out Pepe Le Pew Over 20 Years Ago In His ‘Killin’ Them Softly’ Standup Special

Pepe Le Pew only recently got banned from surfacing again in Warner Bros. cartoons, but Dave Chappelle was all over that skunk decades ago. Dave recognized Pepe’s rape-culture-embodying manner back in 2000, to be precise, and more than 20 years before Space Jam 2 decided to give him the ax, effectively neutering him, so he’ll never bother any lady cats again. Suddenly, Pepe is persona non grata in Warner Bros. cartoons and has contributed to Space Jam 2 becoming the most controversial movie in ages, but Dave saw it coming.

In retrospect, a lot of people likely felt icky about what Pepe was doing, but somehow, it took this long for Pepe to pay the price for not accepting that “no means no” while chasing after that beleaguered kitty. Here’s what Chappelle had to say about the skunk in his Killin’ Them Softly special (taped at Lincoln Center in Washington, D.C.) while discussing kids’ cartoons. FYI, the special is streamable on HBO Max:

“Some wild sh*t! Like, I was with my nephew, sitting there watching Pepe Le Pew, and I said, ‘Now, pay attention to this guy because he’s funny. I used to watch him when I was little. And we’re watching Pepe Le Pew, and… ‘Good god, what kind of rapist is this guy? Take it easy, Pepe!’”

Here’s the relevant clip, by the way, as people passed it around on social media.

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Legendary NBA Writer Jack McCallum Talks USA Basketball And Where The 2008 Redeem Team Ranks All-Time

No amount of hyperbole can do justice to the 1992 Dream Team. It’s on an entirely different plane of existence. Through fate and circumstance, all of the pieces fell into place at exactly the right time to produce an athletic behemoth unlike anything we’ve ever seen.

Fortunately, those who were there to cover it have preserved the artifacts of that era and turned them into wildly entertaining content for future generations. Hall of Fame sportswriter Jack McCallum was one of countless reporters embedded with the Dream Team in Barcelona and is responsible for the definitive tome on the Olympic juggernaut that will likely go down as the greatest assemblage of talent in sports history.

He’s covered each iteration of USA Basketball since, and now in the second season of his podcast, The Dream Team Tapes: Kobe, LeBron & the Redeem Team, he’s chronicling the exploits of the 2008 squad that was tasked with restoring the USA to its former glory, following the debacle in Athens in 2004, which ended in a disappointing bronze medal finish.

We caught up with McCallum this week to talk about the new season of the podcast (part of the Diversion Podcast Network) and the current state of USA Basketball as we look ahead to the Tokyo Olympics after what has been a tumultuous year.

You wrote the definitive book on the Dream Team. What made you want to shift over to telling some of these stories in podcast format?

I had all the tapes saved from when I did the interviews for the book, so the podcast wrote itself. It was basically, I wrote a script, but the highlight of it was I had all the voices, I had Michael, Magic, Larry, Robinson, Ewing. I had everybody there.

So, then we started thinking of another podcast project and the next most interesting Olympic team, which probably was the 2008 team, because our fortunes had fallen so far. We had finished bronze in 2004. So, I knew I could get Mike Krzyzewski’s cooperation and he ended up talking to us for an hour and a half. And if we could get some of the players, I knew it could be successful.

It’s a new world, podcasting, and I enjoy it. So, I signed up J.A. Adande to do it with me, because I didn’t really want to do it alone. And J.A. knew that generation of players probably better than me. So, it seemed natural.

One of the things that I think it does particularly well is charting the steady decline of USA Basketball from the ’92 Dream Team to the ’08 team. Why was that through-line important for the story?

Well, I think that those of us who covered the Dream Team and were dumb, like me, our conclusion in the blush of the moment, like right after ’92 was, “Okay, they wanted a demonstration of how good America is. We showed them and here’s why the NBA is so much better and these players are so much better.” But there were all these other players in other countries, Dirk Nowitzki, Manu Ginobili, Hedo Turkoglu, Tony Parker, who are looking at it in a different way. They’re watching this and they’re going, “Yeah. Okay. They’re a lot better than us.” But the game was kind of, for them, demystified is the word I use. It was like, okay, they do the same things we do, only they do it so much better. Some of them are more physically gifted, but we have physically gifted guys too.

So, the biggest effect of the Dream Team became its impact on international players. By the turn of the century, you had this thing where the Americans were no longer even necessarily favored in international competition. It took an organized effort by Jerry Colangelo and Krzyzewski and these other players to turn that around.

Kobe figures heavily in all this, and one of the more fascinating subplots is the series of events that led to him missing the 2004 Olympics and the ripple effects of that. How big of a what if is that in your mind?

Yeah, no question about it. I mean, nobody’s a one-man team, but one guy can make a huge difference. And the 2004 Olympics, the first game we played was against Puerto Rico, Puerto Rico beat the United States by 19 points. Carlos Arroyo went crazy. He looked like a first team All-Star. Kobe ain’t going to go for that.

And the other thing going on in ’04 was some of the younger players, LeBron, Dwyane Wade, and Carmelo were on that team. They weren’t yet able to step forward. So, let’s face it, when you do these things in basketball, just as Michael, Magic and Larry were the bold face names on the Dream Team, we knew we had to deal with the bold face names on this team. And Kobe certainly being front of mind, because of the tragedy of January 2020.

I want to get your take on Kobe’s legacy with USA basketball. We look at how that ’08 team dominated the field right up until the gold-medal game against Spain, where they really have to rely on his heroics in those final minutes to save the game. How much would his absence have altered the course of USA Basketball?

Well, the legacy, I’ll get to that in a second, but the more interesting thing was what that team did for Kobe. I mean, Kobe is a lone wolf. Kobe wasn’t a guy that embraced the group. This next episode that’s out now, I believe, is on LeBron. LeBron likes being the leader of the pack. He likes his guys. He had it in high school. These are my guys. He brings them along.

That wasn’t Kobe. And one of the things that happened with the Redeem Team was that Kobe at last felt like he was part of the group. So, it really changed him in kind of a big way. Now, he went back to the Lakers and I think he more embraced Pau Gasol, and always talked about what Pau meant to him.

So far as his legacy to USA basketball, it’s 2008, like you said, because one of the things we ask and we’re going to talk about it later in the podcast is if you’re down one or you’re tied and you need a basket and you got the ball. Would you give it to Kobe and clear out, or would you get LeBron, maybe a look at the elbow and let him see the floor, pass, whatever LeBron’s going to do. Which one of those would you do? And the answer, which I’m not going to reveal, is interesting, but let’s just say that ’08 is Kobe’s legacy. And I don’t know whether they’d win that gold medal without Kobe, frankly.

I’ve rewatched that game multiple times, and I can’t shake that thought.

That’s his moment. I mean, that’s what he is. Nobody’s on that top line of that moment besides Michael. It’s Michael and Kobe. That’s what they do.

I want to go back to 2004 for a moment. You talk in the podcast about how it was kind of the perfect storm for disaster. But in hindsight, it was a necessary disaster to reboot USA Basketball.

After that 2003 summer, all these things started falling apart. Tracy [McGrady] couldn’t play, Kevin Garnett didn’t play, Ray Allen didn’t play. There were a variety of reasons. So, you’re right. Things have to fall to a low point, and the person that finally stepped in was David Stern.

Stern looks at this disaster, which was a public relations disaster also, and says, “We got to do something. Here’s Jerry Colangelo. He’s going to be the guy.” So that was like, it had to go that low, as you said, because that forced Stern to come in and say, “This is the guy that’s going to lead it.”

During that time, it also seemed like the sentiment toward USA Basketball, even here in the States, had deteriorated so badly that people almost relished in seeing them losing and getting their comeuppance. What do you think was driving that?

I covered those games and that team, and I remember I did an interview with Brian Williams, who was just becoming the star of NBC News. And the contempt and almost hatred he had for that team. We were at that this nexus of dissatisfaction with the NBA. Remember, Michael had retired in ’02. So the generation that we all embraced, Larry, Magic, Michael, now they’re all gone.

We couldn’t get used to this idea that one of the best players dressed the way he did and had too many tattoos. If you were over there, and I was, Iverson was the most patriotic. Every time, Iverson did not get down on the team, he did not trash Larry Brown. He kept talking about what an honor it was to be there.

Absolutely.

He played his ass off, like he always does. But people just couldn’t get used to Iverson as a central figure. A couple of years later, came in with the dress code and things like that, and it was just this clash of culture that we weren’t ready for. It’s one thing when guys you hate are winning, but now guys you hate are losing. And that 2004 team really took a lot of heat. They deserved some of it, because they did not play very well. But I’ll tell you what, Tim Duncan, possibly a top 10 player, and one of my all time favorite guys, Tim Duncan was more of a reason for them playing badly than Allen Iverson.

Right, he just completely disappeared. I mean, it’s hard to wrap your head around that.

And I know the Spurs exists in this kind of phantom zone we don’t understand. But Tim was the leader of that team, and he just wouldn’t do it. As I said, LeBron was young, Dwyane Wade was young, Carmelo was young, and Marbury was pissed off at Larry Brown of all time. The guy left out on the firing line was Allen Iverson.

Fast-forward to 2008. Bron, Melo, D Wade, who are all on that ’04 team, are now on the Redeem Team. They’re older and more experienced now. What sense did you get from them in terms of how motivated they were to avenge that loss in 2004?

They were absolutely motivated. They knew they were in a better position to do something about it. I was surprised talking to Carmelo about how unprepared they were for ’04. I mean, you think of it, “Okay. They’re great NBA players. They’re going to be Hall-of-Famers. They’re going to be immortal.”

But even they had a kind of, “Whoa, what the hell are we doing here? What kind of offense are we playing? This was all too quick. Who is the leader? What are we doing?” But now they get this invitation from Jerry Colangelo in ’05, “We’re going to need a three-year commitment. You’re going to have to stay with us in the summer. This is a long journey. We’re not playing tomorrow. We’re playing in ’08.” Well, they all bought in. And certainly huge part of that motivation was to get back what they had lost in 2004, no doubt about it. Like I said, they were in much better position now to do it. Certainly by the time they got to ’08, LeBron, if he’s not the best player in the league, he’s right behind Kobe as number two.

Having covered all the different iterations of USA Basketball, where do you think the Redeem Team stacks up? Are they right there with the ’92 team? Are they a rung or two below?

Part of what we talked about in episode one was this kind of hangover from ’92. They end up in this box that nobody else can ever go into. What I will say is ’08 should be up there, let’s say, on the number two rung. They should be up there for what they accomplished in terms of rebuilding the program. However, what Krzyzewski and those guys accomplished in the next two Olympics, to me, is amazing because by then, Spain, Argentina are walking out an entire team of NBA players.

Totally. Yeah.

So, I think, to beat Spain in ’08 was an amazing accomplishment. To beat them in ’16, now without Kobe, that could be even greater. But in terms of symbolism and importance to the whole line of talking about Olympic teams, I think the Redeem Team should be right there behind the Dream Team. They’ll just never eclipse the Dream Team.

USA Basketball once again finds themselves in a weird place going into Tokyo, first in terms just everything surrounding the pandemic and the year-long delay, but also coming off a seventh-place finish in the World Cup two years ago. What’s your sense of where we are with USA basketball heading towards Tokyo?

Part of it is, it’s hard to get a hold on anything, because of the pandemic. Are they going to get together for camp? The one thing we have to remember is Gregg Popovich. It was going to be Krzyzewski or Gregg Popovich to coach the ’08 team. And they went with the college guy, somewhat counter intuitively. But correctly, as it turned out, obviously, with what Coach K did. So, if anybody deserves a good Olympics, it would be Gregg Popovich. But I tell you what, it’s going to be tough. The only thing I would say was that to the extent I followed it, the best player on the USA team that played last summer was Donovan Mitchell. And Donovan Mitchell is kicking ass right now.

Yes sir.

So, perhaps he will be the new kind of leader of the team. Perhaps the guys will buy-in more. But they’re at that point that they were back in ’04, which is, “Hey, we’ve won three in a row now. Three Olympics in a row. Maybe we can just show up.” If they do, and they win again, I tell you what, that’s going to be a pretty remarkable achievement considering all that’s going on in the world right now.