Mississippi
How to watch the Florida vs. Mississippi State NCAA college football game today: Livestream options, more
The Florida vs. Mississippi State college football game will be played today. Both the Gators and the Bulldogs come into the weekend with a 1-2 record.
Keep reading to find out how and when to watch the Florida vs. Mississippi State game, even if you don’t have cable.
How and when to watch the Florida vs. Mississippi State game
The Florida vs. Mississippi State game will be played on Saturday, September 21, 2024 at noon ET (9 a.m. PT). The college football game will air on ESPN, and stream on Fubo, Sling and the platforms featured below.
How and when to watch the Florida vs. Mississippi State game without cable
While many cable packages include ESPN, it’s easy to watch the game if ESPN isn’t included in your cable TV subscription, or if you don’t have cable at all. Your best options for watching are below. (Streaming options will require an internet provider.)
Watch the Florida vs. Mississippi State game free with Fubo
Live TV streaming service Fubo offers the same top-tier programming you can get from your local cable provider at a fraction of the price. The streamer is a sports fan’s dream considering the sheer volume of live sporting events you can watch on it.
Fubo packages include access to college football games airing on your local CBS affiliate, SEC Network, Big Ten Network and ESPNU. There are plenty of channels for NFL fans, including “NFL on Fox,” “Sunday Night Football” on NBC, “Monday Night Football” on ABC and ESPN, and all games aired on NFL Network.
If you want to give Fubo a try, now’s a great time to do so: Fubo is currently offering $30 off your first month of any subscription tier. That means you can watch every NFL and college football game airing on network TV this week starting at just $49.99 after a seven-day free trial. Once you subscribe, you can begin watching immediately on your TV, phone, tablet or computer.
Top features of Fubo:
- There are no contracts with Fubo. You can cancel at any time.
- The Pro ($49.99 first month, $79.99 thereafter) tier includes over 200 channels, including channels not available on some other live TV streaming services.
- Upgrade to 4K resolution with the Elite with Sports Plus tier ($69.99 first month, $99.99 thereafter). It features 299 channels, including NFL RedZone.
- Fubo also offers live MLB, NBA, NHL, MLS and international soccer games.
- All tiers now come with unlimited cloud-based DVR recording.
- You can watch on up to 10 screens at once with any Fubo plan.
- Stream on your TV, phone, tablet and other devices.
Sling: The most cost-effective way to stream college football
If you don’t have cable TV that includes ESPN, one of the most cost-effective ways to stream college football this season is through a subscription to Sling. We suggest leveling up your coverage to the Orange + Blue with Sports Extra tier to get more NFL and college football games this fall.
The Orange + Blue plan regularly costs $60 per month, but the streamer currently offers a $25 off promotion for your first month, so you’ll pay just $35. The Orange + Blue with Sports Extra plan is $50 for your first month and $75 per month after. The Sports Extra add-on features 18 channels, including NFL Redzone, ESPNU, SEC Network, Big 10 Network and ACC Network, making it ideal for pro and college football fans.
The streamer is also currently offering big savings on four months of the Orange + Blue tier plus the Sports Extra plan when you prepay for the Sling TV Season Pass. The plan costs $219, reduced from $300.
Note: Because Slingdoes not carry CBS, Sling subscribers will want to add Paramount+ to their bundle. (Paramount+ and CBS Essentials are both subsidiaries of Paramount Global.)
Top features of Sling Orange + Blue plan:
- Sling TV is our top choice for streaming major sporting events like NASCAR.
- There are 52 channels to watch in total, including local ESPN, NBC, Fox and ABC affiliates (where available).
- You get access to most local NFL games and nationally broadcast games at the lowest price.
- All subscription tiers include 50 hours of cloud-based DVR storage.
- You can add Golf Channel, NBA TV, NHL Network, NFL RedZone, MLB Network, Tennis Channel and more sports-oriented channels (18 in total) via Sling’s Sports Extras add-on.
Watch the Florida vs. Mississippi State game on Hulu + Live TV
You can watch college football, including ESPN, with Hulu + Live TV. The bundle features access to 90 channels, including both Fox and FS1. Unlimited DVR storage is also included. Watch every game on every network with Hulu + Live TV, plus catch live NFL preseason games, exclusive live regular season games, popular studio shows (including NFL Total Access and the Emmy-nominated show Good Morning Football) and lots more.
Hulu + Live TV comes bundled with ESPN+ and Disney+ for $77 per month after a three-day free trial.
While you wait for today’s game to begin, now is a great time to check out Amazon’s college football fan shop. The Amazon College Fan Shop is filled to the brim with officially licensed fan gear: You’ll find jerseys, team flags, T-shirts, hoodies and more, including tons of great gear for the football fan in your life. There are plenty of great deals awaiting you at Amazon, too, including some must-see deals on TVs for watching sports.
Tap the button below to head directly to the College Fan Shop page on Amazon and select your favorite team.
What is the Florida Gators current team ranking?
The Gators are currently ranked No. 81 out of 134 teams, according to our sister site CBS Sports.
What is the Mississippi State Bulldogs current team ranking?
The Bulldogs are currently ranked No. 95 out of 134 teams, according to CBS Sports.
When is the 2024 NCAA college football championship game?
The College Football Playoff National Championship will be Monday, January 20, 2025, at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta.
Mississippi
Mississippi Bar wants Jody Owens suspended from law after guilty plea
Hinds County DA Jody Owens pleads guilty in Jackson MS bribery scandal
Hinds County DA Jody Owens pleaded guilty to a conspiracy charge related to the Jackson bribery scandal. He also resigned as district attorney.
The Mississippi Supreme Court received a formal complaint Monday, July 6, from the Mississippi Bar requesting that former Hinds County District Attorney Jody E. Owens II be immediately suspended from the practice of law.
The compliant comes after Owens resigned from his position and pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy on June 29 inside the Thad Cochran United States Courthouse in connection with a Jackson bribery scandal.
A judge set Owens’ sentencing for 9 a.m. Oct. 15.
According to the complaint, the crime for which Owens entered a plea of guilty is a felony thus the court should “immediately suspend (Owens) from the practice of law.”
The Bar requested that Owens be immediately suspended from practice in the State of Mississippi “with all costs and expenses associated with the filing and litigation of this Formal Complaint being taxed against (Owens).”
The Bar also requested other such relief as the court deems proper.
Owens was charged in federal court as part of a broader public corruption investigation involving former Jackson Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba and former Jackson City Councilman Aaron Banks.
A week after Owens pleaded guilty, Lumumba and Banks followed suit. Lumumba and Banks each pleaded guilty July 6 to one count of conspiracy related to the scandal.
Lumumba’s sentencing hearing is set for 10 a.m. Oct. 15. Banks is set to be sentenced at 1:15 p.m. Oct. 15.
Similar to Owens, Lumumba and Banks consistently denied wrongdoing after being indicted in 2024 and was scheduled to stand trial in mid-July.
Former Ward 2 Councilwoman Angelique Lee and local insurance specialist Sherik Marve’ Smith, an associate of Owens, also previously pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit bribery in 2024. Their sentencing dates have been delayed indefinitely.
Pam Dankins is the breaking news reporter for the Clarion Ledger. Have a tip? Email her at pdankins@gannett.com.
Mississippi
Top Mississippi high school football offensive linemen for 2026 MHSAA, MAIS season
The Mississippi high school football season for 2026 begins in a little less than two months.
As rosters and starting positions are being finalized, the Clarion Ledger takes a look at the top returning Mississippi offensive linemen for the MHSAA and MAIS 2026 season.
Players are listed in alphabetical order.
Kaeden Addison
South Pike | 6-foot-4, 280 pounds | Junior
Addison, a three-star recruit, holds an offer from Ole Miss.
Antonio Berry
Tupelo | 6-5, 300 | Senior
Berry, an Ole Miss commit and four-star recruit, helped Tupelo reach the MHSAA 7A title game last season. He is also the No. 4 recruit in Mississippi, according to 247Sports Composite.
Akiylan Burnett
Picayune | 5-10, 210 | Senior
Burnett helped Picayune to a 10-3 record last season and was second-team All-State.
Payton Burns
Corinth | 6-3, 300 | Senior
Burns was selected to the Second Team All-State last season.
DJ Dotson
Oak Grove | 6-7, 330 | Senior
Dotson is a three-star recruit and a Georgia commit.
PJ Evans
Jackson Academy | 6-2, 335 | Junior
Evans, the three-star recruit, holds offers from Ole Miss, Florida, Georgia and Auburn, among others.
TOP RETURNING PLAYERS: QB | RB | WR
Derick James
Columbia | 6-4, 305 | Senior
James was selected to the Second Team All-State in 2025 and helped Columbia to an MHSAA 4A title.
Jobe Lambert
Poplarville | 6-2, 300 | Senior
Lambert earned First Team All-District and Second Team All-State in MHSAA 4A.
Gage Luther
Pontotoc | 6-6, 305 | Senior
The Memphis commit and three-star recruit was First Team All-State.
Coderro McDaniel
Brookhaven | 6-6, 310 | Senior
The Colorado commit and three-star recruit is the No. 16 player in the state and helped Brookhaven to an MHSAA 5A title.
Julian Morris
D’Iberville | 6-3, 260 | Senior
The Louisiana Tech commit helped D’Iberville to an 8-3 record last year.
Caden Moss
Jackson Academy | 6-5, 320 | Senior
Moss, the Ohio State commit, is the No. 2 recruit in Mississippi and helped Jackson Academy to an MAIS 4A-DI championship.
Riley Peteet
Kosciusko | 6-4, 270 | Senior
Peteet helped Kosciusko reach the MHSAA 4A championship game and holds an offer from Baylor.
Jaden Purvis
Raleigh | 5-10, 210 | Senior
Purvis was Second Team All-State and helped Raleigh win the MHSAA 3A title game.
Neal Roberts
Winona | 6-4, 300 | Senior
Roberts is a three-star recruit and a North Carolina commit.
Tanner Seaton
Madison Central | 6-5, 295 | Junior
The rising junior is a three-star recruit and holds offers from Mississippi State, Ole Miss, LSU, Tulane and Southern Miss, among others.
Jolen Trotter
Quitman | 6-5, 280 | Junior
Trotter, the three-star player, holds offers from Florida and Auburn.
Everett Turnage
Germantown | 6-4, 320 | Senior
The Southern Miss commit helped Germantown to an 8-4 record last season.
Caleb Unger
Madison-Ridgeland Academy | 6-2, 300 | Senior
Unger, the three-star recruit and No. 24 player in the state, holds offers from Mississippi State, LSU, Oregon, Duke and Florida State, among others.
Ford Wade
Oxford | 6-3, 295 | Senior
Wade, the Ole Miss commit, helped Oxford to an 11-2 record last year.
Graham Williams
Clinton | 6-4, 310 | Senior
Williams holds offers from Southern Miss, California, Colorado and UTEP.
Elliot Young
Ridgeland | 5-11, 220 | Senior
Young helped Ridgeland to the semifinals of the MHSAA 6A playoffs and was Second Team All-State.
Michael Chavez covers high school sports, among others, for the Clarion Ledger. Email him at mchavez@gannett.com or reach out to him on X @MikeSChavez or Facebook at Michael Chavez.
Mississippi
Civil rights veteran the Rev. Ed King who helped found the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party has died
The Rev. Ed King, a white minister who challenged Mississippi’s dangerously segregated society in the 1960s and was one of the last living founders of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party, died in Jackson on the same day the nation celebrated its 250th birthday of freedom. He was 89.
“He truly heard Jesus’ commands for us: loving your neighbor, meting out justice, taking care of the least of these and loving your enemy,” recalled former Assistant Secretary of State Constance Slaughter-Harvey.
At the time she met King in 1964, she was a sophomore at Tougaloo College, a private historically Black college in Jackson, where he served as chaplain and a sponsor for civil rights meetings. He supported her and the movement over and over, she said.
“He was an inspiration, always encouraging, always welcoming,” said Joan Trumpauer Mulholland, the first white student to attend Tougaloo. “Everybody was always going by his house.”
King seemed like the least likely person to get involved in the movement. His great-grandfather fought with Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee and generations of his remained committed to segregation
But as he neared adolescence, he began to realize things needed to change.
“By the time I was 10 or 12 in Vicksburg, I had realized that America had not figured out yet how to deal with our history of slavery and continuing racism,” he said in a 2018 interview with a University of Mississippi Medical Center publication.
He had previously attended Millsaps College. There, he began to take part in meetings at Tougaloo College and met Mississippi NAACP leader Medgar Evers, who encouraged him.
After studying in Boston, King, encouraged by Evers, returned to Mississippi and began working at Tougaloo, which served as a safe haven for activists. He helped organize sit-in protests and was repeatedly jailed for his activism.
In 1963, he was a candidate in the Freedom Vote, a mock election that showed Black Mississippians wanted to take part in the democratic process even as they still faced poll taxes and violence that prevented most of them from becoming registered voters. More than 83,000 Black Mississippians cast ballots in that mock election.
Aaron Henry, a Black pharmacist from Clarksdale, was the candidate for governor; King was the candidate for lieutenant governor.
The interracial ticket drew national attention.
“Ed King really provided a lot of the political know-how taught by the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party,” said Leslie Burl McLemore, who served on the party’s first executive committee with King.
In 1964, Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party activists including King, Henry and Fannie Lou Hamer challenged Mississippi’s all-white delegation to the Democratic National Convention. Although they lost, their fight helped remake the Democratic Party.
Mississippi’s segregationist leaders liked to claim that the Civil Rights Movement was led by “outside agitators,” but the involvement of Mississippi natives such as King, Hamer and Hollis Watkins demonstrated that claim was a lie, said McLemore, a retired Jackson State University political scientist who served on the Jackson City Council from 1999 to 2009.
Getting involved in the movement in those days meant “you were putting your life on the line every day,” he said. “You and your family could be harassed. You could lose your job. Lots of people lost jobs because of their involvement in the movement.”
In hopes of waking up Christians in the early 1960s, King challenged racial segregation in churches. He and Evers drove Tougaloo students to all-white churches. In most cases, the churches turned them away.
“Confronting segregation on Sunday morning was one of the more radical things that Ed King was involved in that people don’t know about,” said Millsaps history professor Stephanie Rolph, author of “Resisting Equality: The Citizens’ Council, 1954-1989.”
On the same night that President John F. Kennedy spoke about the grandsons of slaves still not being free, King’s friend, Evers, was killed by an assassin’s bullet.
Six days later, King and Tougaloo professor John Salter were injured in a car crash that shattered King’s jaw and tore up the right side of his face. He required numerous surgeries over the next dozen years.
King suffered severe injuries again in a second collision in Canton. Activists believed both crashes were attempts to kill movement leaders.
Later on, King took a step back from that leadership, Rolph said. “He understood when it was right to let someone else lead.”
Instead, he served as an advocate and ally to the rising leaders in the movement, she said.
Throughout his life, King “sacrificed himself for the good of the cause,” Slaughter-Harvey said, “and that cause was justice and service and love.”
King was one of many plaintiffs in a lawsuit filed in 1977 charging the Mississippi Sovereignty Commission with illegal surveillance of citizens. The state-funded agency operated from 1956 to 1977, spying on civil rights activists and feeding information to law enforcement officers. In 1994, a federal judge established a procedure to release the commission files. An appeals court upheld that decision two years later, and King appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, arguing that every person named in the files should have access to the documents before any public release. The high court declined to hear King’s appeal, and the files were later opened to the public.
King later worked for the University of Medical Center and co-wrote the 2014 book “Ed King’s Mississippi: Behind the Scenes of Freedom Summer” for University Press of Mississippi, which featured dozens of his never-before-published photos from the movement in Mississippi.
The book included an excerpt from a speech King gave at the University of Virginia in 2002, where he said an important part of the Civil Rights Movement was “to get the oppressed people to change their identity of themselves. They had to stand up and claim their freedom and claim their dignity.”
King said this was done by reminding people that they are children of God.
“We also had to … let America, let the rest of the nation, know that Black people weren’t just waiting to be saved by Washington, that they were standing up and demanding,” he said in the speech. “Now, that shocked America.”
Reena Evers-Everette, executive director of the Medgar & Myrlie Evers Institute, said King remained faithful to his friends and the movement. “He was such a loyal confidant and strategist with my father as well as a family friend. He continued fighting for civil rights for all of his life.”
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
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