Alabama
North Alabama child advocacy agencies receive grants
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (WAFF) – Governor Kay Ivey introduced that eight companies in north Alabama that assist kids who’re victims of abuse and neglect will obtain grants.
The grants totaling $1.6 million shall be used to offer emotional and security help and authorized help to little one victims.
“Baby abuse can go away victims with life-long scars, and it robs them of their innocence,” Gov. Ivey stated in an announcement. “I’m grateful for these organizations and the skilled help they supply to little one victims together with their support in seeing that abusers are prosecuted.”
- Nationwide Kids’s Advocacy Heart in Huntsville: $571,074 to offer help and companies for victims in DeKalb, Jackson, Madison, Marshall and Morgan counties.
- Baby Advocacy Heart of Marshall County in Guntersville: $137,520 to offer help and companies for youngsters in Marshall County.
- James M. Barrie Heart for Kids Inc. in Gadsden: $248,453 to offer companies to abused and uncared for kids in Etowah County.
- Blount County Kids’s Heart in Oneonta: $50,049 to offer companies and authorized help for victims in Blount County.
- DeKalb County Kids’s Advocacy Heart Inc. in Fort Payne: $258,316 to offer companies for little one victims in DeKalb County.
- Jackson County Kids’s Advocacy Heart Inc. in Scottsboro: $110,016 to offer emotional help and authorized companies for victims in Jackson County.
- Kids’s Advocacy Heart of Cherokee County in Centre: $133,853 to offer companies for youngsters in Cherokee County.
- Calhoun/Cleburne Kids’s Heart Inc. in Anniston: $124,685 to offer help and authorized companies for little one victims in Calhoun and Cleburne counties.
Copyright 2022 WAFF. All rights reserved.
Alabama
3 bold predictions for Alabama football against Mercer
Alabama football has seemingly turned the corner after a difficult October that saw the Crimson Tide go just 2-2 and see its hopes of a national championship go up in flames.
But the beauty of an expanded playoff is that the second loss was not the end of the season for Alabama. All it did was remove the margin for error. Since the loss to Tennessee in Knoxville, Alabama responded with dominant wins over ranked opponents in Missouri and LSU.
Last week’s 42-13 win in Baton Rouge might have been Alabama’s single most impressive win of the season, perhaps more so than the home win over Georgia at the end of September.
Alabama now sits at 7-2 and seemingly controls its own destiny for the College Football Playoff, and sits in a good position to make it to Atlanta for the SEC Championship if things break the way most expect.
Prior to Alabama finishing the regular season with back-to-back SEC games against Oklahoma and Auburn, the Crimson Tide faces Mercer at Bryant-Denny Stadium on Saturday.
In last week’s bold predictions, we correctly predicted that Alabama would force multiple LSU turnovers. And while Jalen Milroe didn’t quite get to 400 yards of total offense, he was still the star of the game as predicted. The only real miss was Ryan Williams leading the team in receiving as Alabama’s passing game revolved around the running backs.
So even in a game that isn’t getting as much hype as the others, we’re still going to come up with some bold predictions that are guaranteed to be 100% accurate.
3. Caleb Odom scores his first career touchdown
Ryan Williams was obviously the prized WR of Alabama’s 2024 class, but Caleb Odom was highly ranked in his own regard and has unicorn traits. Odom has yet to be a big factor in the passing game, but he has seen his playing time increase in recent weeks.
With Cole Adams out for the season, Odom has more of a path to getting on the field. Against Mercer, if Alabama takes care of business, this should be a game where the starters are out by halftime. That should open the door for Ty Simpson to come into the game and run the full offense, and a guy like Odom could benefit from that.
I’m betting Odom finds the endzone for the first time in his career on Saturday.
2. Richard Young leads the team in rushing
I’m banking on Alabama coming out of the gate and playing well, learning from its lesson against Vanderbilt following the big win over Georgia earlier in the season. If that’s the case, there should be plenty of playing time for backups like Richard Young.
Young missed some time earlier in the season following an injury he suffered against Wisconsin. He’s been the No. 3 guy in the pecking order behind Justice Haynes and Jam Miller, but Young has impressed when he has gotten the opportunity.
He broke a 62-yard run three weeks ago against Missouri, and he found the endzone for the first time this season last week against LSU in the 4th quarter. I think Young will get a lot of playing time in the second half this week, and I think he’ll break a big run or two and ultimately be the team’s leading rusher.
1. Alabama finally scores a non-offensive touchdown
Alabama is fourth in the country in takeaways forced per game. It’s almost mind-boggling that they haven’t turned a single turnover into a defensive touchdown yet.
Either by a pick-six, scoop-and-score, or a special teams punt/kick return, I believe Alabama will find the endzone this week.
Ryan Williams looks explosive as a punt returner and if the Tide’s defense plays well then he should get a plethora of opportunities early in the game to make a big play in the return game. Williams had a 28-yard punt return last week against LSU.
I think it will be Williams who finds the endzone, but I won’t be surprised if Alabama houses a pick-six, either.
Alabama
Report: The top 10 highest-paid coaches in Alabama 7A high school football
Class 7A in Alabama high school football hosts the 32 largest high schools in the Yellowhammer State, and 16 of those programs entered the 7A playoffs last weekend. Now onto the second round, just eight teams are left.
This Friday — Auburn will face Thompson, Enterprise heads to Baker, Phenix City Central and Vestavia Hills square off, and Hoover will play Opelika.
Of those eight teams, six have head coaches in the top 10 of Alabama 7A coach salaries, per AL.com.
Below are the 10 highest-paid 7A high school football head coaches in the state of Alabama.
1. Mark Freeman
School: Alabaster Thompson
Base Salary: $84,323.55
Coaching Supplement: $77,731.06
Total: $162,054.61
Mark Freeman has been the head coach at Thompson since 2015. In that time, the Warriors have racked up several state championships. This season, Thompson is 8-3 and set to play Auburn this weekend after thrashing Daphne 50-0 last Friday. The Warriors are ranked No. 3 in Alabama, according to the On3 Massey Ratings, and No. 71 in the United States.
2. Patrick Nix
School: Phenix City Central
Base Salary: $62,568
Coaching Supplement: $92,532
Total: $155,100
Patrick Nix became the head coach at Central in 2020. He played quarterback for Auburn from 1992-95 and previously held the offensive coordinator job at Miami. Phenix City Central put up a whopping 70 points on James Clemens in the first round to improve to 8-2 on the year. The Red Devils, home to Miami commit Daylyn Upshaw and Alabama pledge Mal Waldrep, are the No. 5 team in the Yellowhammer State.
3. Josh Floyd
School: Hewitt-Trussville
Total: $151,107.36
Brand new to Hewitt-Trussville, Josh Floyd led the Huskies to a playoff berth in his first season under the hood. Hewitt-Trussville was upset by Baker in the first round, but still put together an impressive 8-3 season and finished No. 7 in the Alabama high school football rankings. Recent alumni include class of 2023 prospects Hunter Osborne and Rickey Gibson.
4. Keith Etheredge
School: Auburn
Base Salary: $104,755.70
Coaching Supplement: $43,813
Total: $148,588.70
Keith Etheredge took over the Auburn job heading into the 2021 season. Now with the best team in the state, the Tigers are looking to get over the Central hump for a state championship. Auburn continues to roll with a perfect record. The Tigers are undefeated and No. 1 in the state of Alabama, fresh off of a 63-27 win over Bob Jones in the first round. They will play Alabaster Thompson this weekend.
5. Robert Evans
School: Birmingham Vestavia Hills
Base Salary: $97,841
Coaching Supplement: $47,500
Total: $145,341
Rob Evans returned to his alma mater in 2022 after serving as the defensive coordinator at Mountain Brook. Vestavia Hills is still alive in the postseason. Evans’ Rebels are just 6-5 against what has been a brutal schedule. They are the No. 10 team in the state and coming off of a three-score win over Mary G. Montgomery.
6. Bryan Moore
School: Opelika
Base Salary: $71,812
Coaching Supplement: $69,467
Total: $141,279
Head coach Bryan Moore has been suspended for Opelika’s playoff game this week after he was seen on the sidelines at Hoover’s round one playoff game against Fairhope last Thursday. A picture captured by Under The Lights shows Moore holding a pen and binder watching the Hoover game on the sidelines. He was also wearing a credential, which, according to WKRG’s Simone Lee, was intended for Opelika student media.
7. Ben Blackmon
School: Enterprise
Base Salary: $91,423.32
Coaching Supplement: $48,534
Total: $139,957.32
Ben Blackmon was also suspended for a single game by the AHSAA for advance scouting earlier this season. A video submitted to WKRG showed Blackmon sitting beside an Enterprise assistant filming Opelika’s (Ala.) game against Dothan (Ala.) ahead of Enterprise’s clash with Opelika.
8. Shane McComb
School: Birmingham Oak Mountain
Base Salary: $62,923.22
Coaching Supplement: $73,442
Total: $136,365.22
Shane McComb took over the Oak Mountain job heading into the 2023 season. The team was coming off of a 3-7 season and went 1-9 in McComb’s first year. This season has seen a marked improvement with a 4-6 record. The Eagles did not make it to the Alabama high school football playoffs.
9. Bert Browne
School: Albertville
Base Salary: $78,493
Coaching Supplement: $48,900
Total: $127,393
Also new to his program in 2023, Bert Browne’s Aggies are 0-20 in his tenure. But, he had a tall task ahead of him when he took the job. In the two years before Browne’s hiring, Albertville had won just two games.
10. Chad McGehee
School: Madison James Clemens
Base Salary: $83,937
Coaching Supplement: $41,789.58
Total: $125,726.58
Chad McGehee took over as the head coach at James Clemens in 2021 after three years as the defensive coordinator at Hoover. The Jets made the postseason with a 6-4 record but fell 70-14 to Phenix City Central in the first round.
Alabama
New Gap ad features Alabama musician, and an iconic pop star approves
You know you’ve crushed a Janet Jackson cover when Ms. Jackson (if you’re nasty) is into it.
The Gap’s new holiday ad campaign has nine “sing-fluencers” — vocalists popular on social media — performing a version of Jackson’s 1997 chart-topper “Together Again” whilst clad in Gap gear.
Among that nonet, north Alabama musician Lamont Landers, whose TikTok followers number over a half-million. Other singers in the Gap campaign include two gifted young nephews of pop star Bruno Mars, who go by the names of Nyah Music and Zyah Rhythm.
Jackson’s classic track was a sensual banger. The Gap version stripes it down to a stirring a capella ballad.
After the Gap shared a video of the “Together Again” cover on the San Francisco headquartered clothing retailer’s Instagram, Jackson’s account commented with a black heart.
Other celebs — including ‘80s pop icon Debbie Wilson, Bruce Willis’ wife Emma Heming Willis and Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue model Camille Kostek — also expressed their fondness for the clip, in the form of likes or comments. As have notable influencers, like Sarah Nicole Landry and Aubrey Fisher, with millions of IG followers.
The Gap content was filmed over two days in Los Angeles a few months ago. Other singers include Hana Effron, Aneesa Strings, Paige Fish, PawPaw Rod, Amaria and Liamani.
Landers says, “Everybody was so cool, and we all meshed very well. We sang the commercial live, so what you hear and see is a live performance. There’s no Auto Tune or us in a studio doing it after the fact. It put the onus on us to really have it tight and sound good.
“I didn’t know what to expect going into it, but it was an overwhelmingly enjoyable experience. It was cool. To represent north Alabama and a nationwide campaign is very cool – and the money didn’t hurt at all.”
The vocal arrangement for the Gap ad was done by Patrick Lawrence Zappia, whose resume ranges from metal band Slipknot tor virtual-reality headset Meta Quest, and Alexander Lloyd Blake, who’s worked on films like “Wakanda Forever” and Aretha Franklin biopic “Respect.”
“It was almost like an impromptu high school choir,” Landers says. Back in the day, Landers sang choir at Decatur High School under choral director Dr. Carl Davis. “It felt like a throwback to that,” he says.
Landers deft, deep-soul vocals are endearingly juxtaposed to his bespectacled, baby-faced, pale-skinned and redhead appearance. As Kiss frontman Paul Stanley posted on X early this year, ” If you love R&B like I do you’ll LOVE him. No, he doesn’t look what you expect but just goes to show ‘Don’t judge a book by its cover’. LOVE him.”
Landers was on tour as the opening act for acclaimed soul-rock band Black Pumas, when his manager called him with the news he’d locked down the Gap gig. He says since the campaign launched November 1, he’s gained a couple thousand followers on Instagram, pushing him back over 300,000 there.
“More so than any kind of benefit I’ve reaped from it,” Landers says, “it’s been cool to see the positive response for the campaign. It’s always good to participate in something that’s successful and that people enjoy rather than, you know, the commercial come out and people are like, ‘Well, this sucks.’”
The Gap content is one of the most effective uses of music in advertising since the now-classic iPod ads featuring the likes of Jet and U2 and Volkswagen’s Super Bowl spot this year with Neil Diamond classic “I Am … I Said.”
“You gotta take every avenue these days,” Landers says. “It’s not a one-shot deal.”
That said, Landers is building a career via more traditional music biz paths too. Touring with Black Pumas “was like a dream,” Landers says. “We got to play these venues that were way above our pay grade.” The trek brought Landers and his band to stages like Brooklyn Paramount Theater and Boston’s Leader Bank Pavilion. The last night of the tour, Black Pumas brought Landers onstage with them to sing on a cover of Otis Redding’s “(Sittin’ On) The Dock of the Bay.” This year, Landers also played sets at Atlanta’s Shaky Knees Festival and Tennessee’s Pilgrimage Fest.
Landers is no stranger to the spotlight. In spring 2018, the Lamont Landers Band wowed on Fox TV’s “Showtime at The Apollo.” They did a hot version of Bill Withers funk-pop classic “Use Me” at Apollo Theater, the hallowed Harlem, N.Y. venue where legends like James Brown, Stevie Wonder, Michael Jackson broke through early in their careers.
The Apollo performance helped score Landers a slot on Tuscaloosa Amphitheater’s Bicentennial Bash, a daylong 2019 concert headlined by Grammy-winner Jason Isbell. That summer, Landers returned to TV. He appeared on top-rated NBC show “America’s Got Talent,” performing Al Green soul standard “Let’s Stay Together” in front of judges including Simon Cowell, the notoriously blunt “American Idol” heel, with whom Landers had a (staged) on-camera confrontation.
Next year should be Landers’ biggest yet. He’s signed a recording contract with a label founded by A-list Americana producer Dave Cobb, known for his work with Isbell, Chris Stapleton, Sturgill Simpson, Slash, Great Van Fleet, and Red Clay Strays. “I’m really excited about it,” Landers says. “The man’s got nine Grammys.”
Landers checks in for this phone interview from writing sessions in Muscle Shoals for his debut full-length album, targeted for a first-quarter 2025 release.
“I’ve got eight songs cut right now,” he says, and I gotta go back and hit some more. We’re gonna finish it by the end of the year.” He describes the sound as “contemporary southern soul and Americana-ish.”
Musicians on Landers’ upcoming album include drummer Derek Phillips (credits include Michael McDonald, Vanessa Williams), bassist Brian Allen (Ed Sheeran, Lady Gaga), and keyboardist Philip Towns (Brent Cobb, Anderson East).
Cobb connected with Landers after The Roots drummer and “The Tonight Show” musician Questlove shared an Instagram clip of Landers nailing the lead vocal from “The Rubberband Man,” a 1976 hit by R&B group The Spinners.
“And because of that,” Landers says, “Dave Cobb reached out to me on Instagram. And lo and behold, a couple days later I was in Savannah, Georgia to meet with him, and we talked, and he wanted to sign me.”
Landers also has an EP in the can recorded with an indie-rock-meets-vintage-soul project called Player’s Club, with Brittany Howard/Alabama Shakes bassist Zac Cockrell. Muscle Shoals legend Spooner Oldham is on keyboards.
Landers says his contract with Low Country Sound includes a provision allowing him to release the Player’s Club recordings, which he plans to drop between his first and second albums for Cobb’s label. Landers previous recordings include a strong self-titled EP, recorded at local studio Clearwave and featuring alt-rock tinged single “Into the Fold.”
Thursday, Landers will perform in Nashville at East Iris Studios, headlining a 7 p.m. bill of north Alabama’s best new artists, including Camacho, Common Man and Local Brand. The show, a collaboration between the Huntsville Music Office, Huntsville commercial development MidCity (home of Orion Amphitheater), and major label Universal Music Group will stream live on volume.com.
All signs point to Landers being the next north Alabama musician to break big, following the footsteps of Jason Isbell, Alabama Shakes and Brittany Howard. He isn’t taking doing a touchdown dance just yet though.
“Something’s gonna happen next year regardless,” Landers says. “I’m just not sure which turn it’s gonna be, but I’m feeling very optimistic with the songs we’ve got and the songs that I’m currently writing. It’s just you just never know how people are gonna receive it. And that’s the scary thing. I can think everything’s good all day, but it’s up to the people to decide whether it’s good.”
A former Huntsville resident, during the pandemic Landers returned to his Decatur hometown, where he currently resides with his fiancé and young child. “Having something worth coming home to,” Landers says, “it’s so good, man. It’s the best.”
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