Latest news with #YourWeek
Yahoo
3 days ago
- Business
- Yahoo
Annual sale: 5 reasons to subscribe to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Beer gardens are open, tailgating is in full swing and it's time for another cycle of the Wisconsin state budget process -- it must be summer in Wisconsin. The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel brings you exclusive coverage of all those topics and more - better than anyone in the state. Take advantage of our annual subscription rate to get more than 6 months free and lock in unlimited access through football season and beyond. Already a subscriber? Whether you get home delivery of the print edition or have a digital-only subscription, these benefits are included! Check out our activation guide for help on getting started. With a subscription, you can be one of the first to learn about breaking news with news alerts, flip through a digital replica of the print paper, get exclusive newsletters and more. Download the free app and start to personalize it to your liking. You can download articles for offline reading and sign up for breaking and topical news alerts. Also in the app, you'll find the eNewspaper, available exclusively for subscribers. As an added benefit, subscribers can access the eNewspaper from any of our more than 200 sister papers across the United States, plus each edition of USA TODAY. ► SPECIAL OFFER: Save on a new subscription today. We know when you subscribe, you expect more. Each day, you can expect to see some of our best storytelling, investigative work, sports analysis and more. Just log in with your account to enjoy your exclusive access. Here's some examples: Enjoy a streamlined, fast-loading experience that makes it easy to view the stories, photos and videos you're most interested in. Through the app, you can personalize notifications so you can know the news right when it happens. You can select alerts for breaking news, news, sports, entertainment, weather and business. Quiet times for your alerts can be set within the app. Miss out on recent news? Get the latest effortlessly with our Catch Up feature. Want alerts when we publish something new on a topic you're interested in? Sign up to follow specific topics of interest with the "Add Topic" button at the top of articles. Personalize your feed further in the For You front. The app also provides you access to daily horoscopes and access to over 100 games. Want to follow the news from another city? You can add up to five of our sister publications across the country to get more news right in the app. ► DOWNLOAD THE APP: Get the latest news, sports and more To keep our subscribers informed, we email the most important articles to their inbox each day in the form of a Daily Briefing newsletter. Subscribers also get exclusive access to our Your Week newsletter. Each week, you'll get a note directly from the executive editor with background on a big story from the week, a behind-the-scenes look at our reporting and links to some of our top subscriber-exclusive work. ► SIGN UP FOR NEWSLETTERS: Browse our entire portfolio of newsletter offerings to pick more topics that interest you specifically. Subscribers have exclusive access to events featuring Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reporters. Photographer Mike DeSisti shared tips on how to take a better photo with your phone, and Packers columnist Tom Silverstein gave insights on how he covers the team. The events are free to subscribers and are held throughout the year. Right now, we have a special introductory offer. Visit our subscription page to start supporting our work. This article originally appeared on Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: Why subscribe to Journal Sentinel: Unlimited access, personalized app

Yahoo
23-05-2025
- Yahoo
Annual sale: 5 reasons to subscribe to azcentral
[Subscribe now. Sign up here.] You can play a vital role in supporting local journalism that you and your community can trust. With an subscription, you can help our journalists hold those in power accountable. With a subscription, you can also be one of the first to learn about breaking news with news alerts, flip through a digital replica of the print paper, get exclusive newsletters and more. Already a subscriber? Whether you get home delivery of the print edition or have a digital-only subscription, these benefits are included. Check out our activation guide for help on getting started. Here are 5 digital benefits of a subscription to azcentral and The Arizona Republic: Brass knuckles, beatings, fear: Random attacks on teens loom over Preston Lord murder case. Gilbert police still face scrutiny over the teen attacks. Crime-free lease addendums: An Arizona woman's landlord accused her of a crime. It cost her family their home. Sexual assault, suicide attempts: Fourteen-year-old Emily Pike's painful past still lingers after her body was found dismembered off U.S. 60 north of Globe on Valentine's Day. 'Kind of like Uber': Arizona Christian football players were caught in a migrant smuggling scheme, yet those arrested were not prosecuted. Football fever: Arizona State star Cam Skattebo ran a 40-yard dash time in the 4.6-range. That doesn't mean he can't succeed in the NFL. Essential restaurants: Check out our guide to metro Phoenix restaurants, which includes 100 essential spots, new and iconic, for Mexican food, Italian, pho, pizza and burgers. Here's the full list. End of an era: After 75 years, Durant's, an iconic restaurant known for its celebrity clientele, red booths, martinis and steak, is closing a chapter on its storied past. Read about the passing of the torch. Mesa Gateway Airport: Passengers will have more flight options at Mesa Gateway Airport, including new routes from Allegiant Air, plus other improvements this year. To keep our subscribers informed, we email the most important articles to their inbox each day in the form of a daily AZ Briefing newsletter. Subscribers also get exclusive access to our Your Week newsletter. Each week, you'll get a note directly from our team with background on a big story from the week, a behind-the-scenes look at our reporting and links to some of our top subscriber-exclusive work. ► Sign up for newsletters: Browse our entire portfolio of newsletter offerings to pick more topics that interest you specifically. Great stories don't stop with great writing. With your subscription, you'll have unlimited access to bonus content not found in the paper, such as drone videos of dust storms. You will be able to stream our acclaimed documentaries and listen to our popular podcasts. You will see galleries filled with amazing pictures from award-winning photographers. You will be active participants in the news process. Miss out on recent news? Get the latest effortlessly with our Catch Up feature. The app also provides you with access to daily horoscopes and over 100 games. Want to follow the news from another city? You can add up to five of our sister publications across the country to get more news right in the app. ► Download the app: Get the latest news, sports and more Through the azcentral app, you can personalize notifications so you can know the news right when it happens. You can select alerts for breaking news, sports, entertainment, weather, traffic, and business. Quiet times for your alerts can be set within the app. Want alerts when we publish something new on a topic you're interested in? Sign up to follow specific topics of interest with the "Add Topic" button at the top of articles. Personalize your feed further in the For You front. Special offer: You can access the print edition daily on your computer, mobile device, or tablet by accessing the eNewspaper, a digital replica of the print edition of The Arizona Republic. The eNewspaper can be accessed through our app, available exclusively to subscribers. As an added benefit, subscribers can access the eNewspaper from any of our more than 200 sister papers across the United States, plus each edition of USA TODAY. ► Special offer: Save on a new subscription today. Right now, we have a special introductory offer. Visit our subscription page to take advantage of this limited-time offer. This article originally appeared on Arizona Republic: Why subscribe to azcentral: Unlimited access, personalized app


USA Today
19-02-2025
- Entertainment
- USA Today
Do not read this if you're hungry
WARNING: If you're hungry, you probably shouldn't keep reading this. Had a snack? Ah. Now keep scrolling. Hi! 👋 Nicole Fallert here and welcome to Your Week, our newsletter exclusively for USA TODAY subscribers (that's you!). This week, we're sizzling, grilling and serving up a food lover's dream and diving into the one-of-a-kind USA TODAY Network 2025 Restaurants of the Year (check out the 2025 list here!). We chat with Liz Johnson, a senior director at The Record and part of the USA TODAY Network. Johnson, who lead the Restaurants of the Year project, shares how USA TODAY's national newsrooms compiled these remarkable restaurants for our readers — and good news, many are no reservations required.


USA Today
07-02-2025
- Entertainment
- USA Today
Reporting from the Superdome
Hear this story Tyler Dragon likes to show up for game days at least two hours early. Not because he has to warm up his passes and sprints on the football field, but rather to prepare for the stories he'll type from the press box as USA TODAY's NFL correspondent. On Sunday, he'll arrive at the Superdome in New Orleans with plenty of time to spare ahead of Super Bowl 59. If you haven't heard already, the Kansas City Chiefs are up against the Philadelphia Eagles in the NFL's biggest annual match-up. For the Chiefs, Sunday marks an attempt for an unprecedented consecutive three-peat victory. The Eagles want greatness — and the pleasure of unseating a rival. 👋 Nicole Fallert here and welcome to Your Week, our newsletter exclusively for USA TODAY subscribers (that's you!). This week, we talk with USA TODAY's Tyler Dragon about covering Super Bowl 59 from New Orleans, and how both teams are chasing history. Don't miss a moment: Follow Tyler here for live Super Bowl updates 🏈 But before we kick things off, here are a few stories I've read this week from USA TODAY: Two teams vie for a chance at history Many people don't realize the Super Bowl is more than just the fleeting hours of the game and a 15-minute halftime show. USA TODAY's Tyler Dragon arrived in New Orleans on Monday for a full week of player events, special access to the halftime performers and a chance to anticipate every pass and down the teams will attempt on Sunday. The week kicked off with Super Bowl Opening Night, where Dragon heard from star players like Chiefs' quarterback Patrick Mahomes and tight end Travis Kelce. The players took to the NFL stage to greet fans, stir up support and make their mark ahead of the game. Opening Night set the tone for the days to come, full of fan experiences, tailgates, merch hand-outs, performances, meet-and-greets and special panels hosted by coaches and players. "It's literally an entire week," said Dragon, who has made a New Orleans hotel his temporary Super Bowl home base. "But I've covered the Olympics, I've got it." Both teams have a chance to leave their mark. Kansas City could be the first team to win three straight Super Bowls. If Mahomes leads his team to victory, he's likely go down as one of the best quarterbacks of all time, Dragon said. Philadelphia has the chance to win two Super Bowls in one decade. Either way, NFL history will be made: The match-up is also only the second time in the league two Black quarterbacks are starting at the Super Bowl against each other. Your guide to halftime:Grammy winner Kendrick Lamar takes the field After reporting on a flurry of events this week comes the big moment. On Sunday morning, Dragon will get on a bus to New Orleans' Superdome (two hours before kick-off). Once seated in the press box, he'll pull up his game prep: The plays that could happen and the players that could execute them, ready to be published for USA TODAY readers at a moment's notice. Dragon has done his research: He's strategized myriad possible avenues each side could take. "The Eagles could try to keep the ball out of Mahomes' hands and establish a ground game with a lot of pressure," Dragon said. "But the Chiefs may go after Eagles' running back Saquon Barkley to force Philadelphia to pass a little more than they are accustomed to." And his job isn't done after the trophy is possibly won. He'll race from the press box to the field, where players will remain for interviews. He'll go from one player to the next, asking them about their takeaways from the competition into the night. If he could talk to anyone, it would be Barkley, who is yards away from the all-time rushing record in regular season and playoffs. He wants to know how Barkley feels about potentially breaking that record. "You can make the argument this may be the best individual season for a running back in history, nobody has done what Barkley has," Dragon said. But if you're a more casual football fan, there's still something in the big game for you, Dragon said. The iconic Super Bowl ads will deliver celebrity faces (Paris Hilton for Frank's RedHot?!) and memorable moments (like Snoop Dogg's call to action against racism). And, of course, there's the opportunity to cook favorite tailgate food. Queue the buffalo chicken dip. "Enjoy the event in its totality!" Dragon said was his advice. "I miss the commercials, I don't see them because I'm focused on the game, but I love to laugh." Also get up and dance during the halftime show, Dragon said. Grammy-winner Kendrick Lamar is taking the field with singer-songwriter SZA for what is sure to be a hype performance featuring Lamar's iconic lyricism and the duo's emotional hip-hop melodies. "Even if you may not love rap music, enjoy the event itself and what these artists do," Dragon said. "There's no other concert with this many eyeballs, or any other moment for many artists than those 15 to 20 minutes. It's something all artists dream of." If it were up to Dragon, we'd all have a holiday for the Monday after the Super Bowl to rest our voices from screaming at our televisions and recover from a night of stress-eating tortilla chips. But alas, if you must go to work or school on Monday, definitely participate in Super Bowl fever so you're not missing out, he said. "This is football's ultimate game," Dragon said. "There's something for everybody in the Super Bowl." Read more about Super Bowl 59 from USA TODAY: Thank you I'll be heading to prepare my buffalo chicken dip and order some wings (the Super Bowl is about the food for me!). Thank you for supporting our journalism with your subscription. Our work wouldn't be possible without you. Best wishes, Nicole Fallert

USA Today
26-01-2025
- Business
- USA Today
The best South Shore stories of the week
The best South Shore stories of the week This is Jen Wagner, executive editor at The Patriot Ledger. Welcome to this week's edition of Your Week on the South Shore. Only for subscribers. Bill Belichick made some local news this week. A South Shore high school football standout got a college offer from the UNC coach. And, Belichick made a recruiting visit to a Boston-area school. As always, be sure to scroll all the way to the bottom of this newsletter for more stories. Thanks for reading and for subscribing. Bird flu coverage Development stories not to miss Dining (and brewery) to feast on Bonus USA Today stories Want more newsletters from us in your inbox? We know this newsletter is great. But do you subscribe to any others? The most popular newsletter is the Daily Briefing – in your inbox early each morning with the biggest South Shore headlines. You can sign up here. (There are others, too – obituaries, Fore River Bridge alerts and more.) Download The Patriot Ledger mobile app and get the latest news first Want to get your news sooner? Download our app – iOS or Android – and turn on the alerts. Doesn't get much more convenient. Be the first to get your South Shore news. Thank you for subscribing and reach out to us any time to let us know what you think of this newsletter and what else you'd like to see here. Reach Jen Wagner at jwagner@