No. 6-seed Maryland women’s basketball had a chance to earn the final shot Thursday night.
Maryland
Comedian Iliza Shlesinger visits Maryland to ‘Get Ready’ for next standup special – WTOP News
Comedian Iliza Shlesinger cracks up The Hall at Live! Casino & Hotel in Arundel Mills, Maryland, on Friday with her new “Get Ready” tour.
WTOP’s Jason Fraley previews Iliza Shlesinger at Live! Casino in Maryland (Part 1)
Marylanders will soon have a chance to see one of the funniest standup comedians working today.
Iliza Shlesinger cracks up The Hall at Live! Casino & Hotel in Arundel Mills, Maryland, on Friday.
“This is the ‘Get Ready Tour,’ you guys are getting ready with me because I’m shooting my brand new special with Amazon, it’ll be my seventh hour in November in Salt Lake City,” Shlesinger told WTOP. “I’m polishing that hour and I’m also capitalizing on those ‘get ready with me’ videos that people like to make online like, ‘Get ready with me while I journal, have a green juice and lie about everything.’ It’s girly, it’s fun and that’s the special.”
Born in New York City in 1983, She mostly grew up in Dallas, Texas, before studying film at Emerson College in Boston, where she joined sketch-comedy groups on campus. Shlesinger then moved to Los Angeles to pursue a career in standup comedy, gaining national notoriety after winning the sixth season of NBC reality competition “Last Comic Standing” (2008).
From there, she began cranking out a string of Netflix standup specials, including “War Paint” (2013), “Freezing Hot” (2015), “Confirmed Kills” (2016) and “Elder Millennial” (2018), which explored the vastly different life experiences of those on opposite ends of a generation defined as being born between 1981 and 1996.
“Comedy is about bringing people together by pointing out the differences,” Shlesinger said. “Elder millennials are where you’re not Generation X but you’re also not a younger millennial, so I wanted to point out, ‘While I’m not one of you, I am an elder, so I do have the life advice and I do remember things that people younger than me may not have a context for.’ All any generation wants is to leave their mark and get an apology from the one before.”
Now, she’s ushering in a new generation by parenting alongside her chef husband Noah Galuten. Their 2018 marriage was the subject of her fifth Netflix standup special “Unveiled” (2019), while her sixth and most recent Netflix special “Hot Forever” (2022) dropped before the birth of her two children in 2022 and 2024.
“I took a step back to actually give birth to a child, which I know we like to fault women for doing that, but you know, I’m doing my best,” Shlesinger said.
Elsewhere on TV, Shlesinger has hosted the game shows “Excused” (2011) and “Separation Anxiety” (2016), the late-night talk show “Truth & Iliza” (2017), the sketch-comedy series “The Iliza Shlesinger Sketch Show” (2020) and the stand-up comedy series “Iliza’s Locals” (2023), highlighting the best rising standup comedians.
“I’m always trying to create things from an honest and funny place and flex different muscles,” Shlesinger said.
She even transitioned into movies, starring with Mark Wahlberg and Rose Byrne in “Instant Family” (2018) and Wahlberg again in “Spenser Confidential” (2020), before writing and starring in her own rom-com “Good on Paper” (2021). Her most acclaimed film remains the indie drama “Pieces of a Woman” (2020), playing the sister of Vanessa Kirby, who earned an Oscar nomination and won best actress at the Venice International Film Festival.
“It’s always great to go to a set where you are the least experienced person; all you have to do is shut your mouth, watch other people and let them make you better,” Shlesinger said. “If you’re doing standup, it’s all me, I do everything; but when you go on set with people like Vanessa or Ellen Burstyn, it’s an absolute chance to get to learn something. As an actor, I want to be around people who are better than me. Standup is such a solo sport.”
WTOP’s Jason Fraley previews Iliza Shlesinger at Live! Casino in Maryland (Part 2)
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Maryland
Maryland Senate Republicans push to roll back MVA fees as drivers complain of costs
MARYLAND (WBFF) — Maryland drivers frustrated by rising costs at the Motor Vehicle Administration (MVA) are watching a push in Annapolis to roll back recent vehicle registration fee hikes.
At the MVA on Reisterstown Road, motorists said the cost of driving has become too high.
“It’s too expensive to drive,” one driver said.
Another driver said, “The cost is ridiculous. They want me to pay almost $400 (for my vehicle registration).”
ALSO READ | Maryland residents react to soaring vehicle registration fees, rank fifth highest in U.S.
Delores Howell, a Maryland motorist at the MVA, said the increases are hitting her hard.
“I think it’s awful. Who can afford it? It’s too much money,” Howell said.
She added, “I’m a senior citizen, and I’m on social security. I’m one person, live by myself. I can’t afford all this stuff. They keep going up, up, up, how high are they gonna go?”
Senate Republicans in Annapolis are pushing legislation this week to roll back the vehicle registration fee increases that were implemented in 2024. Those increases raised registration costs by about 60% to 70%, adding between $70 and $162 a year for many drivers.
The bill’s sponsor, Senate Minority Leader Steve Hershey, said the higher fees are hitting families as the cost of gas, insurance and everyday essentials continues to climb.
Critics have warned the fees help fund transportation projects across Maryland and argue that reducing them could create new budget challenges for road maintenance and infrastructure.
During a recent hearing, Sen. Mary-Dulany James, D-Harford County, questioned how the state would meet transportation needs with less revenue.
“I’ve never had a hearing with the transportation department where we don’t have extraordinary demands and inadequate revenue,” James said. “So, that’s what I’m wondering about with this bill. How would you respond to that?”
Hershey responded by arguing there are competing views of what transportation funding should prioritize.
“There’s two different opinions on what transportation is in the state of Maryland,” Hershey said. “Many of us believe that it’s roads and highways, many of us believe that it’s transit.
The problem is transit is not sustainable on itself.”
James replied, “Well that’s true we should have a separate transportation trust fund for transit.”
“And that’s what’s important to get that conversation going… because the reality is you’re funding mass transit on the backs of motorists,” Hershey said.
ALSO READ | Maryland Judiciary warns of parking violation scam, directs recipients to Baltimore court
Back at the MVA, Howell said she hopes the proposed legislation could bring relief.
“Every time you look around, it’s not taxes. They put fees. Fees is a tax. So what can we do?” Howell said.
For now, the bill remains up for debate as lawmakers continue discussing the potential impacts on transportation funding.
Follow FOX45 reporter Keith Daniels on X and Facebook. Send tips to Kdaniels@sbgtv.com.
Maryland
Around Town: Maryland Home and Garden Show returns to the State Fairgrounds
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Maryland
No. 6-seed Maryland women’s basketball stunned by No. 11-seed Oregon, 73-68, in Big Ten Tournament second round
Oluchi Okananwa drew an and-one opportunity to potentially cut the deficit to one point. But she missed the free throw.
No. 11-seed Oregon went the other way and head coach Brenda Frese decided not to foul. With 4.4 seconds remaining, guard Avary Cain knocked down a 3-pointer to end Maryland’s run in the Big Ten Tournament after just one game with a 73-68 loss in Indianapolis.
“It felt like deja vu,” Frese said.
Just like the last time it faced Oregon — in College Park in late January — Maryland led by a slim margin heading into the fourth quarter.
That night, the Terps were outscored 24-11 in the fourth. It was 21-11 in favor of Oregon on Thursday.
“They just made a few more plays than we did late game that sent us home,” Frese said.
Maryland’s offense didn’t come through when it needed it most — it made just one 3-pointer on 15 attempts on the night.
The Terps relied on interior scoring in the first half. Of its first 23 points, 22 came from inside the paint — the only other score was a free throw. The game finished with Maryland scoring 48 points in the paint. The other 15 points came from free throws.
But that was too one-dimensional offensively. The Terps attempted 21 layups and seven 3-pointers in the first half. It finished with 33 layups and 16 3-pointers, and made 20 layups compared to one 3-pointer.
As the first half progressed, Oregon adjusted to take away that gameplan. The second quarter started with an 11-2 Ducks run — they simply found more ways to score. Maryland could not find scoring outside of the paint or the charity stripe — its only 3-pointer came with 1:50 remained in the first half.
The Ducks weren’t dominating from deep, either; the game consisted mostly of back-and-forth layups. Still, the lack of success from beyond the arc was relatively uncharted territory for head coach Brenda Frese.
Early on, the Terps were overly cautious in avoiding foul trouble. But it backfired.
Oluchi Okananwa started the game on 3-of-3 shooting and scored six of Maryland’s first eight points. She has dealt with foul trouble in recent games. So Frese opted to have her sit for the remaining six minutes of the first quarter after committing a foul.
But amid the intention to avoid foul trouble, Yarden Garzon committed two quick fouls early in the second quarter.
The referees continued to call a tight game in the third quarter. Okananwa got up to three fouls, and so did Isi Ozzy-Momodu. The Terps were in the exact position they were looking to avoid.
Due to its cautiousness regarding foul trouble, Maryland’s rotations were altered. Breanna Williams had some extended playing time — though it started out well, it turned sour quickly. She made an early layup, but also had some defensive lapses and looked largely out of place.
Maryland relied on its freshmen for 35 collective minutes in the first half. They were impactful, but not as much as its senior leadership, which was hampered by foul trouble.
Okananwa finished with 27 points and was Maryland’s main workhorse. It didn’t end up being enough, but her ability to drive inside gave her team a fighting chance.
“Just be aggressive. Be my normal self. A lot of good things happen for me when I drive,” Okananwa said. “Whether it’s me getting to the line or finishing the bucket. So that was my mentality. Just be aggressive.”
With a loss in the first game of the Big Ten Tournament, what seemed like a sure thing that Maryland would host NCAA Tournament games now looks in jeopardy.
1. A shocking loss. Since joining the Big Ten, this is the first time Maryland failed to reach the quarterfinal round of the conference tournament. Last year, the Terps lost their first game but had a double-bye; this was their worst outing ever in the Big Ten Tournament.
2. What now? With the Terps’ run in Indianapolis now over, they will wait to see if they will host in the NCAA Tournament. Maryland was not the only Big Ten team slated to host that lost on Thursday — Michigan State did too. It remains to be seen what that means for the Terps.
“It shouldn’t be judged off of one game, and I think our conference prepares you night in and night out,” Frese said. “I think you should be rewarded for your body of work.”
3. Garzon’s bad game. Maryland needed more from Garzon on Thursday and simply didn’t get it, as she shot 1-of-11 from the field and 1-of-9 from deep. If she made one or two of those shots, there’s a good chance Maryland would have won.
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