Lifestyle
A High Stakes Obstacle Course, for Dogs
The dogs in the event, which has typically been dominated by Border collies, are grouped by height rather than breed, creating a more chaotic vibe than the rehearsed perfection of the regular dog show.
Lifestyle
‘The Rip’ reunites Matt Damon and Ben Affleck for a propulsive cop drama : Pop Culture Happy Hour
Ben Affleck and Matt Damon in The Rip.
Claire Folger/Netflix
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Claire Folger/Netflix
Matt Damon and Ben Affleck share the screen again in new Netflix film, The Rip. Similar to the pulpy, midbudget cop movies we used to get, The Rip is about a team of cops who are trying to take a huge stash of money from a drug cartel. But that work is not only dangerous, but also complicated as they encounter more money than they expected. The cast also includes Steven Yeun, Teyana Taylor, and Kyle Chandler.
Follow Pop Culture Happy Hour on Letterboxd at letterboxd.com/nprpopculture
Lifestyle
Indiana Hoosiers Win National Championship Over Miami Hurricanes
Indiana Hoosiers
College Football Playoff Champs
… Not Bad For A Basketball School!!!
Published
The Indiana Hoosiers are the 2026 College Football Playoff champions after holding off the Miami Hurricanes in an epic showdown … completing a perfect 16-0 season!!
The Crimson and Cream — led by Heisman winner Fernando Mendoza — got up to a 10-0 lead in the first half … but Carson Beck and the Canes didn’t go down without a fight, clawing back in the second half as both teams traded scores.
BLOCKED PUNT
TOUCHDOWN WHAT A TURN OF EVENTS
WHAT A MOMENT FOR INDIANA#PMSBigCollegeGame pic.twitter.com/Q0BPmovGzb
— Pat McAfee (@PatMcAfeeShow) January 20, 2026
@PatMcAfeeShow
With IU up 27-21 in the final two minutes, Beck had a chance to lead his team downfield for a potential game-winning drive — but he threw it right into Jamari Sharpe’s hands …. and the Hoosiers secured their first title in school history.
JAMARI SHARPE INTERCEPTION
THE INDIANA HOOSIERS ARE YOUR NATIONAL CHAMPIONS #PMSBigCollegeGame pic.twitter.com/lkBuBn0Kcb
— Pat McAfee (@PatMcAfeeShow) January 20, 2026
@PatMcAfeeShow
Mendoza went 16/27 for 186 passing yards through the air … hitting Omar Cooper Jr. five times for 71 yards, and connecting with Charlie Becker four times for 65. He also had a crucial and jaw-dropping rushing touchdown.
FERNANDO. MENDOZA.
THE PLAY OF A LIFETIME ‼️ pic.twitter.com/g3o5nNNslr
— ESPN (@espn) January 20, 2026
@espn
The Miami quarterback had 232 yards, a touchdown and an interception in the losing effort … with Malachi Toney being his favorite target. He had 122 yards and a score on 10 receptions.
On the ground, Kaelon Black had 79 yards for the new champs … and Roman Hemby had 60 of his own.
Fernando Mendoza’s post-game interview after winning the National Championship. pic.twitter.com/ZSO81gr7cS
— CFB Kings (@CFBKings) January 20, 2026
@CFBKings
It was super sweet for Mendoza — he grew up in Miami and tried to walk on for the Hurricanes in 2022 … and he made sure to point out after the game, the program declined.
The Hoosiers already have five championship banners for basketball … and now they’re getting one for football.
Lifestyle
Italian fashion designer Valentino dies at 93
Valentino Garavani attends the Valentino show as part of the Paris Fashion Week Womenswear Spring/Summer 2017.
Vittorio Zunino Celotto/Getty Images
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Vittorio Zunino Celotto/Getty Images
Valentino Garavani attends the Valentino show as part of the Paris Fashion Week Womenswear Spring/Summer 2017.
Vittorio Zunino Celotto/Getty Images
Italian fashion designer Valentino died Monday at his Roman residence. He was 93.
His foundation announced his death on Instagram.
Dubbed an “international arbiter of taste” by Vogue, notable women wore his designs at funerals and weddings, as well as on the red carpet. He dressed the likes of Audrey Hepburn and Jackie Onassis, as well as modern stars from Anna Wintour to Gwyneth Paltrow and Zendaya.
The image of style and lavish living, Valentino’s signature features included crisp suits and a “crème brûlée” complexion — due to his fervor for tanning. He was heavily inspired by the stars he saw on the silver screen and had a lifelong fixation with glamour.
“I love a beautiful lady, I love a beautiful dog, I love a beautiful piece of furniture. I love beauty, it’s not my fault,” he said in The Last Emperor, a 2008 documentary about him.
In the world of haute couture, Valentino embraced sophistication, elegance, and traditional femininity through his dresses and trademarked a vibrant red hue. His work embodied romance, luxury and an aristocratic lifestyle.
He was born Valentino Garavani and named after the silent movie star Rudolph Valentino. A self-described spoiled child, the designer acquired a taste for the expensive from a young age; his shoes were custom-made, and the stripe, color, and buttons of his blazers were designed to his specifications.
His father, a well-to-do electrical supplier, and his mother, who appreciated the value of a well-made garment, catered to their young son’s refined palate and later supported his fashion endeavors, sending him to school and financing his early work.
Growing up in the small town of Voghera, Italy, he learned sewing from his Aunt Rosa in Lombardy. After high school, he moved to Paris to study fashion and take on apprenticeships.
Valentino owed much of his success to his former lover and business partner, Giancarlo Giammetti. The two met in a café on the famed Via Condotti in Rome in 1960, where Valentino had opened his first couture studio.
They founded Valentino Company the same year, and its first ready-to-wear shop opened in Milan in 1969. Together, the pair built a fashion empire over five decades.
They separated romantically when Valentino was 30, but remained business partners and close friends. Valentino knew little about business and accounting before meeting Giammetti; together, they formed two parts of a whole — Giammetti the business mind, and Valentino the creative force.
“Valentino has a perfect vision of how a woman should dress,” Giammetti told Charlie Rose in 2009. “He looks for beauty. Women should be more beautiful. His work is to make women more beautiful.”
They sold the Valentino company in 1998 for nearly $300 million. It made $1.36 billion in revenue in 2021, according to Reuters.
Even after his retirement in 2008, he couldn’t completely leave fashion behind and continued to design dresses for opera productions.
Once the fashion world became more accessible to the public, millions of aspiring fashionistas bought jeans, handbags, shoes, umbrellas, and even Lincoln Continentals with his gleaming “V” monogram. By the peak of his career, Valentino’s popularity would rival that of the pope’s in Rome.
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