Florida
Madonna sets ‘Celebration’ tour dates in Florida

TAMPA, Fla. – No extra hesitation — this September in Florida, it’s a celebration.
Cultural icon Madonna this week revealed dates for “Madonna: The Celebration Tour,” together with two stops in Florida as a part of the upcoming 35-city musicale roadmap that altogether spans July to December.
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Oh sure, she’s nonetheless greater than related.
Even now, with out essentially stepping into why the queen of pop is so extremely regarded throughout a number of generations, it’s gotten to the purpose that her unreleased music nonetheless garners thousands and thousands of performs every day in each regard, from examples we’ve seen earlier than — devoted listeners, radio play and no-request membership DJs succumbing to mob rule — to extra trendy media autos like TikTok.
Take into account we’re speaking a few 40-plus-year profession and a live performance collection positive to incorporate hits from the 80s, 90s, 2000s and 2010s. Relaxation assured, she’s in all places.
Between stops in Atlanta and Houston, although, she’ll be at Tampa’s Amalie Area on Sept. 7, and within the newly-renamed Miami-Dade Area on Sept. 9.
Tickets for each exhibits go on sale Friday, Jan. 20, at 10 a.m., in line with the tour’s web site, with “Icon Pre-Sale” entry restricted to “Legacy Members.”
After the North American leg of the tour wraps up — starting July 15 in Vancouver, British Colombia, and stepping off Oct. 7 in Las Vegas — Madonna will go on to carry out by means of to December in London, Belgium, Denmark, Sweden, Spain, Portugal, France, Germany, Italy and the Netherlands.
You possibly can hear to each episode of Florida’s Fourth Property within the media participant under:
Copyright 2023 by WKMG ClickOrlando – All rights reserved.

Florida
Florida has a knack for rallying from deficits and coming through in crunch time

GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Beware: these Gators bite, especially when they feel threatened.
Florida, which has shown a knack for wearing down opponents all season, has become the ultimate closer in the NCAA Tournament. Late-game rallies against two-time defending national champion UConn in the second round and against Texas Tech in the Elite Eight have the Gators (34-4) believing that no hole is too deep for this gritty group.
Coach Todd Golden pointed to confidence and maturity as the keys to his team’s penchant for comebacks. He also joked that having All-American guard Walter Clayton Jr. on the floor makes a huge difference.
“It’s our ability to not get too high or too low,” Golden said.
Golden clearly would prefer to have his team get off to a better start when it faces fellow Southeastern Conference foe Auburn (32-5) — the Gators won their first meeting in February — to open the Final Four in San Antonio. But he’s seen enough to know there’s no reason to panic if Florida falls behind.
After all, these Gators have looked fairly harmless for the first 20, 30 or even 35 minutes of games before attacking with a frenzy.
Just ask UConn or Texas Tech. Or Alabama, Georgia, LSU and South Carolina. The Gators overcame daunting deficits against all of them.
“Undying belief,” Clayton said. “It goes to show how together we all are. Many times (we) could easily just break, start pointing the finger, blaming each other for this and that. But we just stayed together through the end and stayed the course.”
None of Florida’s rallies have been as impressive as its latest one. The Gators trailed Texas Tech 71-61 with 5:30 to play when Clayton took over. The senior made three 3-pointers, a layup and two free throws down the stretch. He also dished out two assists by finding Thomas Haugh for open 3s.
“Instead of letting our emotions get the best of us or pointing fingers, we did a good job staying the course,” Golden said. “Obviously our guys did a good job understanding it’s now or never and made every big play down the stretch.”
Added Haugh: “When you’ve got guards like these guys, the game’s never over. It’s just wild.”
Florida ranks second in the country in second-half scoring margin, a clear indication of the team’s coaching/talent/depth combination. The Gators wore down against Alabama and Tennessee in the SEC tournament last month and did the same to the Huskies and Maryland in NCAA play.
UConn led much of the game until Clayton stepped up in the closing minutes. The Terrapins held tough early — they trailed 40-38 at halftime — before Florida made a few adjustments at the beak and dominated the second half.
It’s hardly anything new for Golden’s group, either.
The Gators nearly beat Missouri in mid-January despite trailing by 19. They rallied to shock South Carolina a week later after being down 14 in the second half. Although less dramatic, they did something similar at LSU in late February. Down eight in the second half, Florida flipped a switch and routed the Tigers the rest of the way.
Golden’s squad nearly pulled off another stunner three days later. After trailing by 26 in the first half, Florida fought back to take a lead at Georgia before Cain Blue hit a dagger 3 with a minute to play.
“Again, the consistency, the maturity and their belief in each other is a big part of that,” Golden said.
Golden has spent three years rebuilding Florida, which is in the Final Four for the first time since 2014. He ended up with three senior guards — Clayton, Will Richard and Florida Atlantic transfer Alijah Martin — who comprise the core of the team. Each of them has made plays to spark comebacks, although Richard and Martin have so far taken a backseat to Clayton in the postseason.
Still, the trio is the main reason these Gators have won 10 in a row and have a shot at a third national title and first since going back-to-back in 2006-07. And all of them have the potential to chomp, especially in crunch time.
“Guys could just break apart during those moments,” Clayton said. “We all stay the course, stay together. And I think that just goes to show the togetherness of the team, the love we have for each other to get through those tough times.”
Florida
What to watch as Wisconsin and Florida host the first major elections of Trump's second term

The first major elections of President Doanld Trump’s second term will take place on Tuesday, as voters head to the polls in Wisconsin, a perennial battleground, and in Trump-friendly territory in Florida.
Tens of millions of dollars have poured into Wisconsin ahead of Tuesday’s state Supreme Court race in a contest that could have huge national implications. It’s the first major statewide contest in a battleground since the 2024 election — and it’s happening in the state where Trump saw his narrowest margin-of-victory in November.
Elon Musk has emerged as a major player in the Wisconsin race as he expands his political portfolio, providing Democrats with an early test for whether the billionaire Trump adviser can be an effective boogeyman.
And in Florida, voters will head to the polls for special elections in the deep-red 1st and 6th Congressional Districts, where Republicans are looking to pad their razor-thin House majority. And though both districts are on Trump’s turf, Republicans have been anxious that the races could prove to be competitive, as grassroots energy — and dollars — boost the Democratic contenders.
Polls close at 7 p.m. ET in Florida’s 6th District and 8 p.m. ET in the 1st District, which is in the central time zone. And polls in Wisconsin close at 9 p.m. ET.
A nonpartisan race in name only — with huge national and state ramifications
Tuesday’s Wisconsin Supreme Court race marks the second time in two years that the bench’s ideological majority will be at stake. Liberals on the technically nonpartisan court currently hold a 4-3 advantage, and another liberal win could keep that majority alive for at least one more year — while a conservative victory would give them the edge ahead of a term likely to see cases on abortion rights, unions and collective bargaining rights, and congressional maps and redistricting.
The race is between liberal candidate Susan Crawford — a state judge in Madison who has received the backing of the state and national Democratic Party organizations, as well as the financial support, directly and indirectly, of a cadre of liberal billionaires — and Brad Schimel, a state judge and former Republican state attorney general who has the backing of Trump and Musk, the tech billionaire and leader of Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency.
However, more than Trump, who endorsed Schimel 11 days ahead of the race in a late-night social media post, it’s been Musk who has taken on the starring role in the campaign on both sides.
“It’s become kind of a referendum on the Trump administration, and what Elon Musk is doing as part of that, and Musk has amplified that by getting involved in Wisconsin,” explained Barry Burden, a political science professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. “If there was any doubt about whether this election had a connection to national politics, Trump and Musk have made that connection for voters.”
Musk and his super PAC have spent at least $15 million to boost Schimel, campaign finance records show, on top of three $1 million prizes Musk has awarded to those who signed his petition against “activist judges.” He came to Wisconsin on Sunday night to campaign for Schimel in person.
Democrats and groups supporting Crawford leaned heavily into making Musk the centerpiece of the race, attacking him in ads, on the trail, and on social media over his actions at DOGE and accusing him of “trying to buy” Schimel. (Many groups also pointed out that Tesla, Musk’s electric car company, filed a suit in Wisconsin in January challenging a state law banning carmakers from owning dealerships — a case that could potentially come before the state Supreme Court).
Overall, Democrats and their affiliated outside groups have outspent Republicans on the airwaves — they’ve spent almost $42 million compared to almost $33 million from conservatives, enough to make it the most expensive state Supreme Court race on record, as far as ad spending, according to the ad-tracking firm AdImpact.
Despite the level of attention and spending, the springtime, off-year contest, will feature far fewer voters than in presidential and midterm races — meaning that both sides have sought to juice their turnout on Tuesday.
To that end, Schimel and Republican and conservative groups supporting him have heavily emphasized Trump’s endorsement of Schimel — a move that could help turn out Republican voters in a state that Trump carried in two of the past three presidential elections.
In addition to running ads touting the endorsement down the home stretch of the campaign, Schimel appeared at a campaign town hall event in March with Donald Trump Jr. and told a group of canvassers from the conservative group Turning Point USA that Trump needs a “support network” around him to help him fight the myriad suits his administration has faced.
While the race also included a barrage of messaging on both sides on crime and reproductive rights, groups supporting Schimel, in addition to focusing on Trump, built a closing message on the airwaves that attacked Crawford over transgender issues — a move that replicates the successful strategy Republicans and Trump used during the final weeks of their winning 2024 campaign.
Special election tests on Trump’s turf
The pair of Florida special elections will be fought on Trump’s territory, testing his influence over his base and Democrats’ enthusiasm in the Trump era. Republicans are expecting to win both races, but there are concerns that closer-than-expected results could fuel a narrative of Democratic momentum.
The winner in Florida’s 1st District in the Panhandle will replace former GOP Rep. Matt Gaetz, while the 6th District winner will replace former GOP Rep. Mike Waltz, now Trump’s national security adviser. Trump carried the 1st District by 37 points in November and the 6th by 30 points, according to election results from NBC News’ Decision Desk.
The races are more competitive due to expectations of lower turnout, which Democrats have leveraged in other special elections in the Trump era, and blockbuster fundraising from the two Democratic candidates.
Republicans have raised more concerns about the 6th District race, where GOP state Sen. Randy Fine is competing against Democratic teacher Josh Weil, pointing to Fine’s lackluster fundraising and late ad spending. In the 1st District, Florida Chief Financial Officer Jimmy Patronis is facing Democrat Gay Valimont, a former activist with Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America who ran against Gaetz in November.
Both Republican candidates have Trump’s backing, and the president held tele-town halls for them last week, encouraging his voters to go to the polls. They’ve also gotten a boost from outside groups in recent days. Musk’s super PAC has also jumped into the contests, spending nearly $100,000 on phone calls and texts in the races, according to filings with the Federal Election Commission.
Neither Democratic candidate has directly targeted Musk in their ads. But both candidates suggested in recent interviews that the Musk-led effort to slash the size of the federal government, and potential GOP cuts to entitlement programs, could impact their races, since the 1st District has a large share of veterans and the 6th District has a sizable senior population.
National flavor in Wisconsin down-ballot items, too
Further down the Wisconsin ballot on Tuesday are two other races that haven’t garnered much national attention but have been major local issues. There is a proposed amendment to enshrine an existing voter ID law into the state constitution, as well as a state superintendent race that has also become somewhat of a referendum on the role Musk has played in downsizing the federal government.
The voter ID law is already part of the state code, but conservatives want to add it to the constitution to make it more difficult to strike the law down — if, for example, a liberal-majority state Supreme Court were to invalidate the law with a ruling. Trump himself endorsed the proposed amendment in a social media post Monday.
But many strategists in the state, including Republicans, have acknowledged another motivation for adding the question to the ballot was to juice conservative turnout in the state Supreme Court race.
The race for the superintendent of public instruction — a job that oversees the state’s education system — has taken on increased importance in the weeks since Trump signed an executive order to dismantle the U.S. Department of Education, thereby beginning a process to put far more responsibility on education policy directly in states’ hands.
Like the state Supreme Court contest, the technically nonpartisan race has taken on a distinctly partisan flavor. The incumbent, Dr. Jill Underly, is backed by the state Democratic Party, while her challenger, Brittany Kinser, has received the backing of conservative groups and funders, though she has called herself a moderate.
Kinser is an education consultant who has made expanding school choice programs the main tenet of her campaign.
Underly, who is in her first term, has attempted to tie Kinser to Trump’s dismantling of the U.S. Department of Education, as well as Musk’s DOGE effort.
Florida
Parts of South Florida recovering after wet, windy weekend

MIAMI – Severe weather over the weekend caused quite a bit of chaos across areas of South Florida.
Whipping winds, lightning, hail and lots of rainfall led to heavy flooding that forced residents to stay inside in areas like Miami Beach and Edgewater.
On Sunday, the last day of Ultra Music Festival, the event was delayed an hour and guests were forced to seek shelter at certain points.
The festival released alerts telling the attendees to stay safe.
The strong thunderstorms also led to a hazardous scene at the University of Miami.
An area was closed to the public after a portion of one of the freshmen dorm patios collapsed.
The housing department sent an email saying a portion of Mahoney Pearson outdoor patio was damaged. It happened Sunday around 6 p.m.
South Florida’s major airports also felt the impact of the poor weather.
At Miami International Airport, there were 38 delays and 28 cancellations while further north at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport, a total of 33 delays and 12 cancellations were reported.
Copyright 2025 by WPLG Local10.com – All rights reserved.
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