Arkansas
Diamond Hogs to have 9 games nationally televised
The Arkansas baseball team is scheduled to have nine games nationally televised during the 2025 regular season, while all 36 of the home games at Baum-Walker Stadium are set to be streamed or broadcast live on the SEC Network+ or the ESPN family of networks.
Ranked preseason No. 5 by D1Baseball, the Diamond Hogs will have one game televised on ESPN2 — May 1 vs. Texas. The other eight nationally televised games will be aired on the SEC Network.
Five of the Razorbacks’ nationally televised games will be played at Baum-Walker Stadium in Fayetteville. The four road games set to be televised nationally are matchups at Vanderbilt, Florida and twice against LSU, all of which will air on the SEC Network. Arkansas posted a 34-5 record in home games during the 2024 season.
– March 28 – Arkansas at Vanderbilt – 7 p.m. – SEC Network
– April 4 – Missouri at Arkansas – 7 p.m. – SEC Network
– April 8 – Arkansas State at Arkansas – 6 p.m. – SEC Network
– April 23 – Little Rock at Arkansas – 5 p.m. – SEC Network
– April 26 – Arkansas at Florida – 2 p.m. – SEC Network
– May 1 – Texas at Arkansas – 6 p.m. – ESPN2
– May 2 – Texas at Arkansas – 7 p.m. – SEC Network
– May 10 – Arkansas at LSU – 5:30 p.m. – SEC Network
– May 11 – Arkansas at LSU – 3 p.m. – SEC Network
Four wildcard games during the final weekend of the regular season (May 15-17) will be selected to air on SEC Network and ESPN2. Arkansas will face emerging rival and 2024 National Champion Tennessee that weekend.
All 15 games of the SEC Tournament (May 20-25) are slated to be televised. The first 14 games will air on SEC Network, while the SEC Tournament Championship Game will air on ESPN2.
The Razorbacks’ midweek matchup against non-conference opponent Grambling on April 1 at CHI St. Vincent Field at Dickey-Stephens Park in North Little Rock, Ark., will stream on SEC Network+.
The Diamond Hogs will open their season in eight days on Friday, Feb. 14 against Washington State. First pitch on Opening Day is set for 3 p.m. CT and the game will be streamed on SEC Network+.
Arkansas
4 risers in Kentucky’s impressive bounce-back win at Arkansas
Just a few days after getting trounced in Nashville by the Vanderbilt Commodores 80-55, the Kentucky Wildcats bounced back in major fashion as they went to Bud Walton Arena and handed John Calipari and the No. 15 Arkansas Razorbacks their first home loss of the season, 85-77.
In what was a very chippy contest from start to finish, Kentucky could’ve easily folded after two ridiculous back-to-back technicals in the 2nd half that immediately handed over the momentum in favor of the Hogs, but the Wildcats grit and determination propelled them to victory when it was all said and done. Otega Oweh was completely unstoppable in the Cats’ upset victory over the Razorbacks as he went for 24 points and 8 rebounds.
The Cats are back at home for the next two games as they welcome the Oklahoma Sooners Wednesday night at 9:00 and have another showdown with the No. 25 Tennessee Volunteers Saturday night at 8:30.
Here are the risers in the Wildcats’ win over the Hogs this past Saturday:
Sophomore forward Trent Noah came up huge in Saturday night’s game against the Hogs as he finished the game with 9 points and 7 rebounds in his 19 minutes off the bench. In a game that had a lot riding on the Wildcats season, the Kentucky native who’d recently been cut out of the rotation stepped up big in a hostile environment to help the Cats prevail over the Razorbacks. With Kam Williams out indefinitely, Trent Noah’s going to have a lot more opportunities to play a huge role for the Wildcats off the bench.
Another individual who played a huge role in the Cats’ win was sophomore guard Collin Chandler. Chandler finished Saturday night’s outing with 13 points and also shot 2/4 from 3. He also hit arguably the two most important shots of the night: one came midway through the 2nd, when it seemed like Kentucky had lost all momentum, and he stepped up and hit a long 3, which shifted the momentum back in the Cats’ favor.
Then, with a little over a minute left and the shot clock winding down, he hit a fadeaway that all but sealed the victory for the Wildcats. Collin Chandler has continued to be one of Kentucky’s go-to guys for a needed basket down the stretch as of late.
Freshman center Malachi Moreno was also huge for the Cats this past Saturday as he consistently grabbed rebound after rebound throughout the game. Moreno finished Saturday night’s outing with 11 points and 7 rebounds (5 OREB). While he won’t get a lot of credit for it, Moreno also hit some very much needed free throws in several instances when the Cats needed them the most.
By far the best player on the court out of both teams in Saturday night’s win in Fayetteville, senior guard Otega Oweh came out with lots of urgency from start to finish as he ended with a season-high 24 points, 8 rebounds, and dished out three assists. The Hogs simply had no answer for him this past Saturday night as he continuously got to his spots and got downhill whenever he wanted all game. Oweh is now averaging a little over 20 ppg in nine games of conference play for the Wildcats.
Arkansas
Arkansas singers hit the high notes on American Idol
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (KATV) — The latest season of “American Idol” is in full swing, and tonight’s episode on ABC features two talented Arkansans ready to shine. Makiyah Mustifal from Pine Bluff and Michael Garner from the Forrest City area are set to showcase their musical prowess.
Micaiah shared her journey to the “American Idol” stage, saying, “I was at home and I was scrolling on Facebook, and I seen an ad come across my Facebook News Feed saying, Arkansas registration for American Idol. And I clicked on it, just to see, you know, is this real? Is this fake?”
She snagged the last spot to meet with executive producers and later auditioned in Nashville. Her audition will air this Monday, Feb. 2, at 7 p.m. central time on ABC and Hulu.
Reflecting on her experience, Micaiah said, “The energy was amazing. I’ve never would have imagined, you know, myself being in front of them and to sing my heart out.”
As an R&B soul artist, Micaiah hopes to release an album featuring powerhouse vocals like her idols, Fantasia and Mary J. Blige.
Meanwhile, Michael Garner dreams of touring the states and making a name for himself. He shared, “I definitely hope to tour. You know, it’s always been a big dream of mine, touring the states and everything. Getting people knowing my name and everything.”
Michael’s musical journey began at a young age, with his grandpa teaching him guitar chords at 13.
His advice to aspiring musicians is simple: “Just never quit. If, when things get hard in music, you just got to push through.”
Catch these Arkansan talents on ABC and cheer them on as they chase their dreams on “American Idol.”
Arkansas
Fighting Hunger in Fayetteville, Arkansas
At Apple Seeds teaching farm, in Fayetteville, Arkansas, the simple act of unearthing a carrot can be life changing.
Executive Director Mary Thompson remembers one child in particular, a fourth-grader who had just harvested a carrot. “He washed it and put it in his pocket. Later, he took it out and took a nibble like he was really savoring it, then put it back,” she says. “I told him we could harvest another carrot, and he said, ‘Oh my gosh, thank you. I’ve really, really been trying to save this to take home to show my mom. She would never ever believe where this carrot came from.’”
In Washington County, food insecurity rates are among the lowest in Arkansas. Those low rates are driven at least in part by many years of remarkable community-driven hunger relief efforts there.
Since 2007, Apple Seeds, a nonprofit, has worked to teach children about the wonders of fresh produce and inspire healthy eating through garden-based education. Recently, this mission took on new urgency: The state of Arkansas has had the highest rates of food insecurity in the nation for three years running, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) latest Household Food Security report.
In Washington County—where Fayetteville is located—food insecurity rates are among the lowest in Arkansas. Those low rates are driven at least in part by many years of remarkable community-driven hunger relief efforts there, led by Apple Seeds and the Arkansas Hunger Relief Alliance (AHRA), in collaboration with the Fayetteville Public School District.
The 2025 One Big Beautiful Bill terminated SNAP-Ed and trimmed funding for the Farm to School program, among other budget cuts. The federal policy changes, which reduced nutrition education for children and are likely to exacerbate food insecurity for many Americans, are affecting Fayetteville too.
While only a small portion of farm to school grant funding has been reinstated for 2026, most of Fayetteville’s efforts continue regardless, providing a look at how proven solutions are adapting to address hunger.
Fighting Hunger in Fayetteville
Nearly 20 percent of Arkansas households lacked adequate access to nutritious foods in 2024, based on the most recent USDA data available. That equates to nearly 600,000 Arkansans facing hunger, as well as 1 in 4 children.
Washington County had one of the lowest food insecurity rates in Arkansas at 17.4 percent, according to the most recent Map the Meal Gap data collected in 2023 by Feeding America. Though higher than the national average of 13.5 percent, it is significantly lower compared to other areas in the state, such as Searcy County, where 24.3 percent of residents experienced food insecurity that year.
For Searcy County children, the rate was much higher than for the county’s general population—32.2 percent—which is a common pattern in counties across the state. Washington County, however, is an outlier; the rate of food insecurity among children there in 2023 was lower—16.8 percent—compared its general population. And Washington County’s childhood hunger rate was the second lowest in the entire state.
Apples are just one of many kinds of fruits and vegetables that grow on the two acres of land that make up Apple Seeds Teaching Farm, which students can pick themselves and enjoy as a healthy snack. (Photo courtesy of Apple Seeds)
These numbers reflect local efforts to focus on students. The work spans the public and private sectors: For roughly 20 years, nonprofit organizations like Apple Seeds and the AHRA, in collaboration with the Fayetteville Public School District, have shown how giving kids access to fresh produce and helping them have positive experiences with vegetables early in life can have lasting and far-reaching impacts.
The AHRA started working to boost food security in 2004. The Little Rock–based nonprofit began as a coalition of six Feeding America food banks in the state, which continue to operate. In addition to providing food for Arkansans in need, AHRA also partners with local and federal organizations on advocacy and educational programming to mitigate hunger in the long term. This includes everything from leading cooking classes to helping people enroll in the SNAP program to coaching volunteers on how to ask lawmakers to negotiate additional funding for the program.
Another driving force is the Fayetteville Public School District, which created edible gardens at its 17 schools between 2009 and 2014. In 2013, the school district received a $99,000 USDA Farm to School grant to expand a sustainable farm-to-school program, and in 2021 it received a second Farm to School grant for $82,000, but this latter grant was never implemented due to COVID restrictions and staffing issues. Currently, the gardens are managed with $450 per school per year.
In 2015, Apple Seeds signed a 20-year lease for 2 acres from the City of Fayetteville at no cost—the land was a gift from the city “in exchange for the services we provide the community,” said Thompson. They built a barn with a kitchen and dining space, placed wooden benches in a semicircle around an old pecan tree for an outdoor classroom, and cleared a plot to plant vegetables. The teaching farm is just 14 miles from the Northwest Arkansas Foodbank, one of the six food banks that form the AHRA.
“While they might not have [had] any interest in trying broccoli at first, if they grew it,…they would literally eat the broccoli off the plant.”
The initial Apple Seeds curriculum was created with the Arkansas Children’s Research Institute, based on seven years of lessons developed by the Fayetteville Public School District. The curriculum covered nutrition, cooking, and gardening with hands-on activities in the school gardens and field trips to the Apple Seeds teaching farm.
In 2018 came a moment of synergy: The farm, the research institute, and the school district combined forces with the AHRA to further develop the on-farm curriculum with components of the AHRA’s nutrition education program, Cooking Matters.
“I learned with my own kids that while they might not have [had] any interest in trying broccoli at first, if they grew it, we wouldn’t even bring it inside; they would literally eat the broccoli off the plant,” says Stephanie Jordan, a nutritionist and the school district’s part-time garden coordinator.
Jordan helps kids plant, harvest, sort through seed catalogs, study pollinators, manage a compost bin, and supply leafy greens to the cafeteria salad bar. Jordan’s enthusiasm for these programs is formidable, limited only by resources.
-
Indiana2 days ago13-year-old rider dies following incident at northwest Indiana BMX park
-
Massachusetts3 days agoTV star fisherman, crew all presumed dead after boat sinks off Massachusetts coast
-
Tennessee3 days agoUPDATE: Ohio woman charged in shooting death of West TN deputy
-
Pennsylvania1 week agoRare ‘avalanche’ blocks Pennsylvania road during major snowstorm
-
Movie Reviews1 week agoVikram Prabhu’s Sirai Telugu Dubbed OTT Movie Review and Rating
-
Indiana1 day ago13-year-old boy dies in BMX accident, officials, Steel Wheels BMX says
-
Austin, TX4 days ago
TEA is on board with almost all of Austin ISD’s turnaround plans
-
Politics1 week agoTrump’s playbook falters in crisis response to Minneapolis shooting