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Arkansas Times Recommends: Apple Bottom Edition – Arkansas Times

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Arkansas Times Recommends: Apple Bottom Edition – Arkansas Times

Arkansas Times Recommends is a series in which Times staff members (or whoever happens to be around at the time) highlight things they’ve been enjoying this week.

“ekekekkekkek”

EKEKEKKEKKEK: The best Instagram account you’re not following. Credit: Lexi Adams

Does the word “ekekekkekkek” mean anything to you? In short, it’s the internet’s best attempt at putting into language that super strange chirpy rattle chatter thing that cats get up to whenever they’re looking out the window and a bird suddenly comes into view. Instantly, their demeanor changes and they’re locked in, powerless to deny their ancient instincts. Delightful. And birds aren’t the only trigger for “ekking”! My friend’s cat — believe it or not — regularly makes the sound in response to loud sneezes? Go figure. Feline mysteries abound. 

If, like me, you’re less interested in figuring out why cats “ek” and are more interested in watching them do it ad infinitum, I have just the recommendation for you: an Instagram page (with a million freaking followers) devoted to archiving “ek”s from all over the world. There’s a remarkable amount of variety. It’s a great way to kill an hour. 

Daniel Grear

SPACE APPLES: Cosmic Crisp is a home run. Credit: Matt Campbell

Cosmic Crisp Apples

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Despite my general belief that everything is getting worse all the time, I have to admit that we are living in a golden age of apples. Thanks to developments in apple science, your Fujis and Galas and Grannies Smith are as good as they’ve ever been. (Red Delicious and its somehow-even-worse “golden” cousin are still trash, but even apple science has its limits.)

No matter how good your pomme préférée might be these days, however, there is one apple that clears all of the others: the Cosmic Crisp.

A hybrid varietal that crosses the much loved Honeycrisp with Enterprise apples, the Cosmic Crisp manages to outshine its more well known ancestor by a significant margin. To use a sports analogy, Cosmic Crisp is the Barry Bonds to Honeycrisp’s Bobby Bonds, using modern science to achieve nearly perfect balance in all aspects of appledom. It is simultaneously sweet and tart, with crisp flesh and medium-thin skin that yield easily in a satisfying crunch. It is a fantastic baking apple, holding its shape and texture as good as any pie apple you’ve seen and, despite being a very juicy apple, not releasing so much liquid that it impacts the quality of the finished pastry.

The best part of this? Now that the cosmic crisp has been on the market nationally for four or five years, you can generally get it from your favorite applemonger. I’ve seen them at Sam’s Club, Kroger, Natural Grocers, and even Edwards Food Giant in recent months. It might not fix [/gestures wildly at everything], but you’d be surprised by how much a perfect apple can brighten a few minutes of your day, even in 2025.

UPDATE: There’s a new, interesting apple on the scene locally. Kind of hard to find, and not quite perfected yet. It’s the Opal apple. Looks like a golden delicious, but tastes like a strange mix of apple, melon and a hint of banana. When the texture is right and they are cold, they’re pretty amazing. Problem is, when they get even slightly overripe, they get mealy and depressing.

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-Matt Campbell

Elon Musk headshot
Elon Musk at an AI event in the UK in 2023 Credit: Marcel Grabowski / UK Government

Ezra Klein’s ‘Don’t Believe Him’ and other essays

It’s been three weeks since the inauguration, and the Trump administration has handed over the control panel of the federal government to squadron of 23 year old boys. What’s real? What’s fantasy? Is there any difference? The effect is so disorienting and overwhelming it’s hard not to shut down and turn away. 

If you’re looking for a cognitive lifeline to grab onto, my utterly boring recommendation is to listen to Ezra Klein’s recent run of interviews and audio essays for The New York Times. In the past, I personally never liked Klein all that much as a writer or speaker — he radiates the dull, self-serious excellence of the valedictorian, and his pronouncements too often seemed calibrated to satisfy mainstream liberal opinion. 

But in this particular political moment, in which so many other journalists and commentators seem too disoriented and overwhelmed to have much of anything coherent to say at all, it feels like Klein is doing the work no one else is. He is cogent, careful and curious. He is clearly outraged by the self-evidently outrageous abuses of power, but he’s also thoughtful about his critiques — and genuinely interested in understanding what’s going on, rather than sputtering uselessly about the insanity of it all.

Klein has been churning out material on Trump at a remarkable clip since the November election, and especially since Jan. 20. Start with his essay from last weekend, “Don’t Believe Him,” in which he argues that Donald Trump’s blitzkrieg of executive orders is actually masking a fundamental brittleness. A sample:

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There is a reason Trump is doing all of this through executive orders rather than submitting these same directives as legislation to pass through Congress. A more powerful executive could persuade Congress to eliminate the spending he opposes or reform the civil service to give himself the powers of hiring and firing that he seeks. To write these changes into legislation would make them more durable and allow him to argue their merits in a more strategic way. Even if Trump’s aim is to bring the civil service to heel — to rid it of his opponents and turn it to his own ends — he would be better off arguing that he is simply trying to bring the high-performance management culture of Silicon Valley to the federal government. You never want a power grab to look like a power grab.

But Republicans have a three-seat edge in the House and a 53-seat majority in the Senate. Trump has done nothing to reach out to Democrats. If Trump tried to pass this agenda as legislation, it would most likely fail in the House, and it would certainly die before the filibuster in the Senate. And that would make Trump look weak. Trump does not want to look weak. He remembers John McCain humiliating him in his first term by casting the deciding vote against Obamacare repeal.

That is the tension at the heart of Trump’s whole strategy: Trump is acting like a king because he is too weak to govern like a president. He is trying to substitute perception for reality. He is hoping that perception then becomes reality. That can only happen if we believe him.

The flurry of activity is meant to suggest the existence of a plan. The Trump team wants it known that they’re ready this time. They will control events rather than be controlled by them. The closer you look, the less true that seems.

-Benji Hardy

‘LIKE, FOR WHAT?’: Cher-isms abound in “Cher: The Memoir: Part One.”

“Cher: The Memoir (Part One)”

A friend recommended “Cher: The Memoir (Part One),” the audiobook. I had just finished “From Here to the Great Unknown,” recommended by Arkansas Times editor Austin Gelder. I had never really been able to do audiobooks, but I think I found my new jam. Since the election, I’ve had a hard time listening to NPR every morning on the way to the office. So, I queued up the books and started taking the long route to the office — and everywhere else.

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I grew up listening to Cher with my mom, blaring the cassette tapes in her black Mercury Cougar. I had no idea about half the shit that Cher went through (and this is just part one!)  Her mom is from Arkansas. Never knew that. I found myself relistening to parts of chapters, thinking, “Wait, did she really just say that?!?” Each day I find myself googling more and more photos of all the amazing clothes she talks about. And her houses! Really, if you have the slightest bit of interest in Cher, you should queue it up.

-Mandy Keener

VA VA VICAR: On “Grantchester,” a cozy British mystery from PBS. Credit: PBS

Turn on, tune in, drop out

My fellow Gen Xers, annihilation is on our doorsteps at last! We’ve been prepping for this our whole lives, but turns out, it’s not all that fun to watch in real time. You know what is fun to watch? TV. 

Treat yourself to some PBS for cozy British mysteries and the most adorable li’l murders you ever saw. My current fave is the Masterpiece Theater production “Grantchester,” about a chiseled ginger crime-solving vicar who viewers might find inspires impure thoughts. The good parishioners of Cambridgeshire village circa 1950 are dropping like flies, with a homicide rate that would easily meet, and possibly exceed, “Gang Wars: Bangin in Little Rock” levels. It’s OK, though, because dishy Anglican Sidney Chambers always gets his man.

Public television may well be on the way out, as our new president from South Africa unleashes his tween entourage to cut funding for everything except border walls and Space Force. So grab some snacks and make your way to the couch immediately.

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-Austin Gelder

The gaming library at Caverns and Forests. Credit: Brian Chilson

Live Trivia

I spend a good amount of my spare time filling my brain with random, mostly useless, knowledge and factoids. Sifting through Wikipedia articles like a prospector looking for gold, or watching a 30-minute YouTube video about how safety features in space heaters work? Sounds like a great way to kill a few minutes. 

The pursuit of knowledge has an intrinsic satisfaction, sure, but is that really better than scoring some free food and beer? Enter live trivia, one of my favorite ways to waste an evening.

With multiple games happening nearly every night of the week and dozens of Central Arkansas bars and restaurants participating, there has never been a better time to flex your knowledge about your niche interests. El Sur, Vino’s and Caverns & Forests Board Game Cafe are three of my go-tos. 

In my experience, first place typically nets you a $35 to $50 gift card, with smaller gift cards for second and third.

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The local scene is active. I hear the same team names every week at different places and I’ve started to remember which ones to look out for. (Little Rockers are pretty creative with their trivia-themed team names. “Quiz in Your Face” is a particularly memorable one.) 

Challenge Entertainment, the company behind Arkansas’s trivia scene, has information about game schedules and venues online.

-Milo Strain

A BLOODY FAIRYTALE: Caroline Lindy’s “Your Monster.” Credit: Vertical Entertainment

“Your Monster” (2024)

Plopped into the streamiverse rolodex with little fanfare after an appearance in Sundance’s “Midnight” category and a dismal turnout at the box office, Caroline Lindy’s fanciful little comedy “Your Monster” is an undersung delight. Released just before Halloween last year, Lindy’s movie manages to riff cleverly on genre conventions without adhering to any particular genre itself, and plumbs the depths of major bummers like cancer and childhood trauma in a way that’s, unfathomably, tons of fun. Is it a horror movie? A rom-com? A remake of Beauty and the Beast? Beats me, but the result is certainly a smart and satirical, if breezy, meet cute with a major twist and an ending that I thought about for days afterward. In Oscar season, where it can feel like only Deeply Moving Films of Heft and Gravity are deserving of our attention, this palate cleanser sings and dances and should absolutely be reason enough for Melissa Barrera to get cast in lots, lots more movies.

-Stephanie Smittle

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Central Arkansas council hands out 300 free produce bags at Saline County fresh market

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Central Arkansas council hands out 300 free produce bags at Saline County fresh market


Saline County residents got a fresh boost earlier today when the Central Arkansas Development Council hosted its third Fresh Market event in the county, handing out about 300 bags of fresh produce free of charge.

The council, described as the largest community action agency in Arkansas, said the event is part of its ongoing effort to address food insecurity in the state and expand access to healthy food options.

“What we’re here to do is we’re here to be what our community needs us to be,” Randy Morris, CEO of Central Arkansas Development Council, said. “We are here to serve our mission, which is to alleviate the causes and conditions of poverty, to help vulnerable populations achieve their potential and to build strong communities in Arkansas through community action.”

The council also said it was rewarded funds by the government to host an emergency food drive that will happen soon.



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No. 6 Arkansas ends top-ranked OU’s 31-game home winning streak with 3-2 decision

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No. 6 Arkansas ends top-ranked OU’s 31-game home winning streak with 3-2 decision


FAYETTEVILL – In a thrilling contest that featured 5.1 impressive innings in the circle from sophomore Payton Burnham and a go-ahead two-run home run from Tianna Bell, the No. 6/8 Arkansas Razorbacks defeated No. 1 Oklahoma, 3-2, on Saturday night at Love’s Field to even the series and set up a winner-take-all series finale on Sunday.

Win the win, Arkansas recorded its third victory in program history over a consensus No. 1-ranked opponent, having previously defeated UCLA (Feb. 18, 2011) and Cal (May 19, 2012).

It also marked the Razorbacks’ third win in program history over a No. 1 opponent in the ESPN/USA Softball Poll and the fifth over a top-ranked team in the NFCA Coaches Poll.

Arkansas (36-7, 11-6 SEC) took a 1-0 lead in the top of the second inning courtesy of an RBI double down the right-field line from Kennedy Miller. The Sooners then tied the game, 1-1, in the bottom of the fifth inning, with a solo home run from Sydney Emerling.

Tianna Bell put the Hogs ahead for good by blasting a two-run homer into the left-center field bleachers in the top of the fifth inning. Oklahoma’s Kendall Wells accounted for the final run of the contest with a solo shot to left field, bringing the score to 3-2.

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The Razorbacks’ pitching staff did not allow a walk in the win. Payton Burnham was phenomenal in the circle during her 10th victory of the season, striking out three while allowing two runs on four hits in 5.1 innings of work.

Robyn Herron earned her fourth save of the season by retiring the final five Oklahoma batters in the contest.

In addition to Bell’s two-run blast and Miller’s RBI double, Reagan Johnson and Kailey Wyckoff singled in the victory.

Sydney Berzon fell to 5-2 on the season for Oklahoma (41-6, 14-3 SEC) after allowing two runs on two hits with one strikeout in her 4.2 innings pitched.

QUOTABLES

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Arkansas Head Coach Courtney Deifel

On the victory…
“Any win right now is a big one for the program. It was really great in this environment just to see our team stay the course and trust themselves. It is a hostile environment that is very loud. They have a lot of energy. For our team to just lean into each other and find a way to get the win was big. Any win is really big, so it just feels really awesome.”

On Payton Burnham’s performance…
“She was in her element. She loves the big moment. She wants the ball, and she was locked in today. She was dialed, and I am really proud of her.”

HOW IT HAPPENED

Payton Burnham earned her 12th start of the season in the circle for Arkansas, while Oklahoma gave the ball to Miali Guachino.

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In the top of the first inning, Guachino retired the Hogs in order courtesy of a pair of groundouts and a lineout. Burnham spun a 1-2-3 bottom of the first courtesy of a groundout, strikeout, and a groundout.

Kailey Wyckoff recorded the first hit of the contest with a two-out single up the middle in the top of the second inning. She would later come around to score a batter later on an RBI double down the right-field line from Kennedy Miller, giving the Hogs a 1-0 lead.

Cam Harrison followed Miller’s double with a walk, but OU would escape without further damage courtesy of OU right fielder Ella Parker taking an extra-base hit away from Karlie Davison with a catch at the wall in right field.

Burnham spun another scoreless frame in the home half of the second inning, highlighted by a 6-4 double play from shortstop Atalyia Rijo, who snagged a line drive and threw to Davison at second base to double off the Sooners’ Gabbie Garcia, who reached on a leadoff single.

Brinli Bain drew a one-out walk in the top of the third inning, prompting Oklahoma to make a pitching change and bring in LSU transfer Sydney Berzon.

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Wyckoff made an incredible catch with a leaping grab at the wall in left field for the first out of the bottom of the third. She would then catch a pair of fly balls as Burnham completed a 1-2-3 frame.

Berzon retired the Hogs in order during the top of the fourth inning. Burnham recorded a 1-2-3 bottom of the fourth inning while picking up her second and third strikeouts of the night.

Reagan Johnson reached courtesy of a two-out infield single in the top of the fifth inning. Oklahoma first baseman Isabella Imerling tied the game with a leadoff solo home run to left-center field in the bottom of the fifth inning.

Following the home run, Reagan Johnson made a diving catch in right-center field to take away an extra-base hit from Pickering.

Ella McDowell was hit by a pitch to lead off the top of the sixth inning. Tianna Bell then gave Arkansas a 3-1 lead with a two-run shot into the left-center field bleachers, her 14th of the season, tying Dakota Kennedy for the team-lead.

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Oklahoma made it a one-run ballgame with a one-out solo home run off the bat of freshman Kendall Wells. Following the home run, Robyn Herron entered the circle and would retire the next two batters faced by way of a strikeout and a lineout.

Berzon retired the Hogs in order in the top of the seventh inning. Herron trotted out to the circle looking to complete the save in the bottom of the seventh.

Herron fanned Imerling for the first out of the frame before issuing a lineout to Johnson in center field for the second out.

She then got Aliana Agbayani to ground out to Karlie Davison at second for the final out of the win as Arkansas evened the series and improved to 36-7 overall and 11-6 in SEC play.

NOTABLES

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  • Reagan Johnson registered her 205th start batting leadoff, which tied the career program record set by Devon Wallace, 205 (2012-2015).
  • Payton Burnham improved to 10-3 this season after striking out three and allowing just two runs on four hits and no walks in 5.1 innings. Arkansas is now 22-6 when a starting pitcher goes 5+ innings without allowing a walk.
  • Tianna Bell blasted her 46th career home run and 14th home run this season with a two-run shot in the top of the sixth inning. Bell is now tied for the team lead in home runs alongside Dakota Kennedy.
  • Kyler Del Duca recorded her first collegiate start, batting eighth and playing left field.
  • Arkansas had five different outfielders in the victory (Reagan Johnson CF, Kailey Wyckoff RF/LF, Ramsey Walker LF/RF, Kyler Del Duca LF, Brinli Bain RF)
  • Kennedy Miller increased her career-high reached base streak to 11 games.
  • Arkansas is 148-41 since 2001, when its pitching staff issues no walks in a game. The Razorbacks are 94-18 when issuing no walks under head coach Courtney Deifel (2016-present). Arkansas has won 21 of its last 22 when issuing zero walks dating back to April 6, 2023.
  • Arkansas snapped Oklahoma’s 31-game home winning streak, which was the longest active winning streak in the nation entering the contest.



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Central Arkansas nonprofit leader Aaron Reddin steps down amid health challenges

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Central Arkansas nonprofit leader Aaron Reddin steps down amid health challenges


A big change is rolling in for one of central Arkansas’ most recognizable nonprofits serving the unhoused community.

Aaron Reddin is stepping down as executive director of The Van, effective immediately. The organization has been a critical presence in the region, providing food, water, clothing, hygiene supplies and emergency shelter for people in need, particularly in North Little Rock.

Reddin said he’s leaving day-to-day leadership because of ongoing personal health challenges. “I was diagnosed with CRPS in 22,” Reddin said, referring to complex regional pain syndrome, a condition that can cause severe, persistent pain. He said that “in early 24 I was in a accident that caused the spread of the disease into my upper body,” and that it has “greatly impacted my ability to be present.”

“I’m in weekly treatments and medications and things like that, that caused my absence,” Reddin said. “And you know, even though I may be slowed down, the organization is not and so that’s an unsustainable imbalance, and at some point it has to be acknowledged.”

While he’s stepping away from daily leadership, Reddin will remain involved with The Van as a board member.

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Parker Reid has been selected to take over as executive director. Reid said he’s ready to get started and build on what’s already in place.

“I am most excited, I think, just to really hit the ground running,” Reid said. He said he and Reddin have talked about the organization’s infrastructure and what they want it to look like going forward, with a focus on “really just refining what we what we have going on already, and really expanding our volunteer involvement.”

Reddin reflected on how much the organization has grown during his time leading it. “We’ve grown,” he said. “You know, I’ve always thought that we’ve hit a plateau, and then there’s, it just keeps going.”

He also emphasized how The Van is funded. “We’re 99.9% private donor funded. We don’t touch your tax dollars,” Reddin said. “So this is all people helping people from from the bank account to the streets. It’s people powered.”

Asked about a proud moment, Reddin pointed to a recent opportunity to share The Van’s work with a much bigger audience. “I got the chance this past winter to talk about our work here in Little Rock on CNN International live,” he said, adding that the network gave him “like, 13 total minutes, two different days.”

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Reddin said he valued being able to spotlight Little Rock as a community that looks out for its neighbors. He said he was able to show people that “we care about each other, we care about our neighbors, regardless of you know what those unconventional sleeping circumstances may look like at the time.”

The Van has also raised money to find and build a shelter for the unhoused, and Reddin said the organization’s emergency shelter work started even before the first van was in service. He said having a more permanent setup will be a major step forward, rather than moving supplies in and out during each weather event.

As Reid steps into the role, he said he’s mindful of what the organization means to Reddin and to the community. He hopes to “take care of of his baby,” he said, because “it means a lot to him, and it means a lot to me to have watched him, you know, grow it for as long as I’ve gotten to watch.”



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