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Hall County welcomes first baby of the new year

Hall County's first baby of 2026, Hudson, is seen here with his parents and big sister at Northeast Georgia Medical Center in Gainesville. He arrived at 2:26 a.m. on Jan. 1, 2026. (Northeast Georgia Health System)

HALL COUNTY, Ga. — Hall County welcomed its first baby of the new year on Thursday. Baby Hudson arrived at 2:26 a.m. on Jan. 1 at Northeast Georgia Medical Center Gainesville. He weighed 6 pounds, 14 ounces, and measured 19 and three-quarters inches long, according to hospital officials.

Proud parents Amanda and Zachary of Dahlonega celebrated the arrival of their son alongside his 18-month old sister, Georgia.

Certified Nurse Midwife (CNM) Tiffany Tucker with Northeast Georgia Physicians Group delivered Hudson. The family received a gift basket from the Northeast Georgia Health System Auxiliary and Safe Kids Northeast Georgia.

Welcome to the world, Hudson!

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Athens welcomes New Year’s baby

Police & Fire Games leaving Gainesville

Georgia Police and Fire Games
(Facebook) - Georgia Police and Fire Games competition

The Georgia Police & Fire Games is moving out of Gainesville, at least for the next two years. After being hosted by the City of Gainesville in 2025, the annual event will move to Cherokee County for 2026 and 2027, according to a social media post by Game organizers.

The games are a week-long series of events traditionally held in late June. They honor public safety professionals, including law enforcement officers, firefighters, and medics.
According to the organization, the games offer “camaraderie, networking, and friendly competition” for first responders.

(Georgia Police & Fire Games/Facebook)

Participants compete in a variety of athletics and skill-based contests. Events include a bass-fishing tournament, flag football, and softball. There are also profession-specific challenges, such as the “toughest cop” and “toughest firefighter” competitions, sniper competitions, and a motorcycle rodeo.

Established in 1984, the games have a nearly 42-year history. Eligibility is open to active and retired officers and firefighters from every state. In 2022, the games opened to volunteers, corrections staff, and support staff, such as dispatchers.

A social media post for the event stated that these men and women “risk it all on a regular basis and work not for the money, but for the call to duty.”

Georgia is eager to make better Sugar Bowl memories while Ole Miss eyes payback

FILE - Georgia running back Nate Frazier (3) runs with the ball during the first half of an NCAA college football game against Mississippi, Saturday, Oct. 18, 2025, in Athens, Ga. (AP Photo/Colin Hubbard, File)

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — For the Georgia Bulldogs and coach Kirby Smart, last year’s Sugar Bowl brought a heavy dose of sadness that had more to do with life — and the loss of it — than football.

As fate would have it, the third-ranked Bulldogs (12-1, No. 3 seed CFP) are back one year later to take on No. 6 Mississippi (12-1, No. 6 seed CFP) in the quarterfinal round of the College Football Playoff on Thursday night.

MORE How to watch tonight’s Sugar Bowl

When Georgia’s team plane touched down at Louis Armstrong International Airport this week, it “brought back some memories,” Smart said. “It was a different mood, a different time. A very different frame of mind.”

In the early morning hours of Jan. 1, 2025, Georgia players and coaches were in a hotel just a few blocks up Canal Street from where an attacker turned right onto Bourbon Street and plowed his truck into pedestrians — killing 14 — before dying in a shootout with police.

After that day’s Sugar Bowl was delayed by a day, Georgia lost to Notre Dame. Then Smart’s father, Sonny, who’d injured his hip in a fall on New Year’s Eve, died in a New Orleans-area hospital from complications during surgery.

UGA head football coach Kirby Smart addresses the CFP quarterfinal rematch against Ole Miss during a press conference on Dec. 31, 2025. (Photo courtesy Georgia Football/Facebook)

“You can’t help but think a little bit about the last time I was here, what I was going through,” Smart said.

“It was a terrible time in this city,” Smart continued. “It was a horrific deal. It changed everything in this city and really the celebration of New Year’s.”

Still, Smart sounded gratified by his opportunity to be part of another big game in the Big Easy.

“We owe it to all those guys over there in sweat suits to be focused on the task at hand,” Smart said, gazing across a hotel ball room to where many of his players had gathered for media interviews. “Our guys are excited to be back.”

For Ole Miss, the game is a chance to redeem its only loss this season — a 43-35 setback at Georgia on Oct. 18. It’s also a chance for the Rebels to demonstrate how capable they can be without Lane Kiffin, who coached them the whole regular season before leaving for LSU on Nov. 30.

Kiffin was replaced by Pete Golding, a feisty defensive coordinator who made his head-coaching debut in a 41-10 rout of Tulane in the CFP’s first round.

Golding also happens to be from Hammond, Louisiana, across Lake Pontchartrain from New Orleans.

“It’s awesome coming back home,” Golding said. “It’s a great city to host, great city to play football in, and a great city to eat in as well.”

The winner will move on to the Fiesta Bowl on Jan. 8 for a CFP semifinal against the winner of the Cotton Bowl between No. 2 seed Ohio State and 10th-seeded Miami.

Second bite

The first meeting between these teams in October was a thriller in which Ole Miss led in the fourth quarter before Georgia scored 17 unanswered points.

While Smart was proud of the resilience the Bulldogs showed in that game, he downplayed the significance of the previous meeting.

“It’s way more about living in the moment,” Smart asserted. “There’s nothing about our last game against Ole Miss that’s going to help us in this game.”

One significant difference is that Kiffin won’t be on the Ole Miss sideline. But Golding suggested that how his defense plays will be a bigger factor; Georgia never punted in the previous meeting.

There were “double-digit missed tackles,” and “busts on critical downs,” in the last meeting, Golding said. “That’s been the big message to our players. You’re in the playoffs. You’ve got to play your best.”

Keep dreaming

The game features a pair of quarterbacks who emerged from humble beginnings and became dynamic, resourceful playmakers who are poised in the clutch.

Mississippi’s Trinidad Chambliss is a transfer from Division II Ferris State. He began the season as a backup, but kept the starting job for good after first coming in as an injury replacement. The dual-threat QB has passed for 3,298 yards and 19 TDs to go with 506 yards and eight TDs rushing.

“It’s really cool to see where I am right now,” Chambliss said, noting that he considered giving up football and playing small-college basketball instead.

When asked if he could have envisioned his success at Ole Miss, he responded, “If you would have told me that before the season, I would have just laughed at you.”

UGA QB Gunner Stockton speaks with reporters in New Orleans ahead of his team’s rematch against Ole Miss. (Georgia Football/Facebook)

Gunner Stockton, who grew up in rural Georgia, arrived at Athens with little promise of playing time.

Toughness and work ethic helped him become a backup last season. An injury to then-starter Carson Beck thrust Stockton into last season’s SEC title game and he helped lead Georgia to a comeback win over Texas before getting his first college start in last season’s Sugar Bowl.

Beck later transferred to Miami and Stockton kept his starting role in 2025, passing for 2,691 yards and 23 TDs while also rushing for 442 yards and eight TDs.

“It’s crazy how much I’ve grown in a year,” Stockton said. “I feel more comfortable and more confident.”

Near-sighted

Ole Miss became a poster child for college football’s new paradigm — and what’s wrong with it — when Kiffin had to decide whether to leave the Rebels for LSU two days after the regular season.

Since then, several of Kiffin’s top offensive assistants — including offensive coordinator Charlie Weis Jr. — have committed to join him in Baton Rouge in 2026, but have been permitted to remain with Mississippi until the postseason ends.

Golding said working with those short-timers hasn’t been as much of an issue as one might suspect.

“I felt pretty comfortable throughout the entire process, regardless of whether they were going to be coaching somewhere else next year or at Ole Miss, they were going to finish what they started for our players,” Golding said. “We have a good relationship with them on a personal level anyway, so there’s a respect factor.”

By Brett Martel

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How to watch tonight’s Sugar Bowl

Ducks move into CFP semifinals after topping Texas Tech 23-0

Texas Tech linebacker Jacob Rodriguez dives over Oregon running back Noah Whittington (6) during the first half of the Orange Bowl College Football Playoff quarterfinal game, Thursday, Jan. 1, 2026, in Miami Gardens, Fla. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)

MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. (AP) — The first thing that Oregon quarterback Dante Moore did after winning the Orange Bowl was salute the thousands of fans who made the cross-country trip to South Florida.

If the Ducks’ defense keeps playing like this, those fans might be back in Miami before long.

Matayo Uiagalelei caused a fumble to set up an Oregon touchdown, freshman Brandon Finney Jr. had three takeaways — two interceptions and a fumble recovery — and the fifth-seeded Ducks silenced No. 4 Texas Tech’s offense for a 23-0 win in the College Football Playoff quarterfinal at the Orange Bowl on Thursday.

“They’ve earned this opportunity,” Oregon coach Dan Lanning said. “I told them go get their pound of flesh today. They did that today.”

Jordon Davison rushed for two scores, Moore threw for 234 yards and Atticus Sappington kicked three field goals for Oregon (13-1), which will play either No. 1 Indiana or No. 9 Alabama in the Peach Bowl — a CFP semifinal — on Jan. 9.

The Peach Bowl winner will be back in Miami Gardens for the national title game on Jan. 19.

“I believe we have the best defense in the country,” Finney said.

Texas Tech probably wouldn’t argue with that.

Texas Tech — which finished at 12-2 — came into the day second nationally in points per game (42.5) and fifth nationally in yards per game (480.3) but got absolutely nothing going. The Red Raiders turned the ball over four times, were stopped on fourth downs three other times and had four three-and-outs.

“Texas Tech fans, I’m sorry that we let you down,” coach Joey McGuire said. “I hope you’ve enjoyed every second of this year. Man, this was such a special team and I’m so proud of them. Hats off to Dan Lanning. Hats off to the Oregon Ducks. Just an incredible football team … and I told Dan after the game I hope he wins the whole damn thing.”

Tech quarterback Behren Morton — who finished 18 of 32 passing for just 137 yards — was stripped by Uiagalelei early in the third quarter in Red Raider territory. Uiagalelei rumbled deep into the red zone and Davison scored one play later to make it 13-0.

Morton threw a red-zone interception early in the fourth quarter and a fourth-down stop from their own 30 midway through the fourth quarter doomed whatever comeback chances existed for the Red Raiders. Davison plunged in from the 1 with 16 seconds left to cap the scoring.

“We had a great game plan,” Morton said. “We just didn’t execute base plays.”

And once again, a CFP bye meant a team went bye-bye.

It was the sixth quarterfinal under this 12-team tournament format that started last year — there were two others coming later Thursday — and the sixth time that the team coming off an extended break lost to a team that played a first-round game.

In 2024, Boise State (against Penn State), Arizona State (against Texas), Georgia (against Notre Dame) and Oregon (against Ohio State) all went out in the quarterfinals after first-round byes. Miami added to that list Wednesday night, beating Ohio State in a quarterfinal at the Cotton Bowl. In those six games, including Thursday, the team with the bye has held the lead for less than five minutes — combined — of regulation.

Texas Tech thought it could avoid that fate. It could not, and Oregon finished off its first shutout of an AP-ranked opponent since 2012. Oregon was playing a top-10 team for the 113th time — and for the first time, allowed zero points.

Oregon played James Madison in Round 1 this year, winning 51-34, and generally was unhappy afterward with how it played defensively.

There wasn’t anything to not like from that side of the ball on Thursday.

“Last week a lot of people talked about our defense,” Lanning said. “They showed up today.”

The takeaway

Oregon: The Ducks are flying home to Eugene, instead of staying in the Eastern time zone to prepare for the Peach Bowl in Atlanta next week. It was a decision the Ducks made not long after seeing how the CFP bracket could shake out.

Texas Tech: It simply was an uncharacteristic offensive showing from the Red Raiders, who had scored at least 10 points before halftime in 26 of their last 27 games going back to 2023. “That was the best defense we have faced this year,” McGuire said.

Up next

Oregon: The Ducks, who have tied the school record for wins in a season, await the Indiana-Alabama winner.

Texas Tech: The Red Raiders are scheduled to open the 2026 season at home against Abilene Christian on Sept. 5.

As the calendar flips to 2026, battle for control of the Georgia House cranks up

As the sun rises on a new election year at the Georgia Capitol in Atlanta, battle lines are already being drawn for legislative races in November's high-stakes midterm election. (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

(Georgia Recorder) — Most legislative races are pretty anti-climactic by the time general election voters cast a ballot in the fall, and that is by design.

The state Legislature has power to determine the boundaries of its own districts, and they tend to do it in a way that protects the party in power. That leads to a lot of races where only the incumbent runs or a long-shot candidate from the other party steps up and gets a small slice of the total vote.

But when a state gets closer to 50-50, like Georgia is getting, districts that were mostly safe become less safe.

That’s what happened around the turn of the century in Georgia, when Democrats ruled the roost and Republicans were hot on their heels.

Today, Democrats – bolstered by a surprise seat flip in a northeast Georgia special election and victories in the statewide Public Service Commission race before that – think the political winds are at their back and they’ve got a shot at making big gains in the state House this year.

“There’s nothing like an election to tell us what voters think,” said Georgia Democratic Party Chair Charlie Bailey. “That’s what matters, not what I think, but what voters think.”

Bailey said Democrats are gearing up for a tough fight.

“(Republicans) are not going to sit around and spend no money,” he said. “They’re going to spend money to keep people in power that reward billionaires and big corporations. They will spend a lot of money to do that, as they have, and so it is on us to raise the resources we need and deploy them in an effective way, like we did with the PSC, like we did with House District 121, and win as many seats as we can.”

Carmen Bergman, director of the House Republican Caucus, predicted that Democrats’ effort will fall flat.

“The Georgia House Republican Caucus has a full-time political operation so that we can recruit candidates, we can train candidates, we can prepare candidates for 2026 in addition to our existing members,” she said.

Currently, the House includes 98 Republicans and 81 Democrats, including two who were recently elected and have yet to be sworn in. There is one vacancy representing a Cherokee County district that is set to be filled by a special election before the legislative session begins Jan. 12.

Bailey said there are 17 GOP-controlled House districts that are more left-leaning than the Athens-area seat that flipped in December.

“Are we going to spend significant money in all 17 of those? I don’t know. We’ll see. It depends on what the environment is like,” he said.

Bailey said there’s no guarantee that the environment will be as favorable for Democrats this year, but he’s optimistic based on the results of last year’s races.

“What it shows is that voters are quite dissatisfied and fed up with the Republican betrayal of working people, and we’re going to carry that message across all of our races across this entire state, and we’re going to net a lot of wins,” he said.

Here are some of the state House races to watch as the 2026 campaigns heat up. 

Gwinnett grudge match

Buford Republican state Rep. Sandy Donatucci won her seat in 2024 by just 80 votes out of more than 30,000, defeating incumbent Democrat Farooq Mughal. Donatucci serves on the House education, transportation, and intragovernmental coordination committees.

Mughal thinks 2026 is the year he’ll make a comeback in the Gwinnett County district. He launched a campaign over the summer with an emphasis on economic issues.

Reeves rematch

Democrats think they have a fighting chance in another Gwinnett-based district that Duluth Republican Rep. Matt Reeves now represents.

Reeves, who is vice chair of the House judiciary committee and also sits on the appropriations and insurance committees, narrowly fought off Democratic challenger Michelle Kang in 2024 by around 600 votes or just about 2% of the vote.

Kang announced her comeback bid in July with a pledge to focus on kitchen table issues.

Democrat Shelly Abraham of Suwanee, who works in the architectural and engineering industry, has also filed paperwork to run against Reeves in 2026.

Silcox in the sights

Sandy Springs Republican Rep. Deborah Silcox was first elected to District 52 in 2016 but lost in 2020 to Democratic state Rep. Shea Roberts. Two years later, after Georgia redrew its legislative boundaries, Silcox went on to win in District 53, which had been drawn to favor a Republican.

But Democrats are hoping a swing in their direction will help send Silcox packing for a second time. In 2024, Silcox defeated Democrat Susie Greenberg by 1,351 votes, or just under 4%.

Democrat Beth Fuller, a former contractor with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, has announced that she is seeking election in the district.

Cleveland takes on Hilton

As a Republican in a district Joe Biden won in 2020, Peachtree Corners Rep. Scott Hilton was seen as at risk following that year’s election, but he won convincingly in 2022 and 2024, soundly defeating Democratic opponents both times.

Democrats are hoping that with Trump now in the White House, they can push the pendulum the other way in the Gwinnett and north Fulton-based district. Former Democratic state Rep. Mary Robichaux, who lost to Hilton in 2022, was recently elected mayor of North Fulton’s city of Roswell, defeating incumbent Kurt Wilson, who had the backing of Republican Gov. Brian Kemp.

Attorney Adam Cleveland, a Democrat from Johns Creek, has filed paperwork to challenge Hilton in 2026.

Potential Republican Flips

The party in the White House usually faces some heat in a midterm, and Democrats are hoping that pattern holds.

But Bergman said Georgia Democrats should not read too much into Democratic wins in other parts of the country last year.

“A special election environment is just that: It is special, strange, and odd things can happen that typically wouldn’t happen in a midterm or a general election environment,” she said.

“When you look at polling, we know Georgians think the nation is on the wrong track,” she added. “We clearly think that as a country, we are moving in the wrong direction, but that Georgia is on the right track, and that’s because of conservative Republican leadership. Frankly, the Georgia Republican brand is different than the national Republican brand, and the onus is on us to make sure that voters know that.”

One of the districts that may be most ripe for Republicans to test that theory is that of Sandersville Democratic Rep. Mack Jackson in central Georgia.

Jackson in Jeopardy?

In 2024, Jackson squeaked out a victory by 128 votes, or just .18% over Republican Tracy Wheeler. Jackson, a pastor and retired probation officer, was first elected in 2008.

Republican Thomas Wilkerson of Warrenton has filed paperwork to run against Jackson, and Sandersville Republican Trey Sheppard, a co-president of a transportation and logistics company, has also announced plans to run.

Other Democratic lawmakers who won by narrow margins in 2024 include Macon state Rep. Tangie Herring, who won by about 1% against Republican Noah Harbuck, and Butler state Rep. Patty Stinson, who beat Republican Cary Moore by about 6.5%.

As of mid-December, no opponent has filed paperwork to run in either of those districts. The official qualifying process to run in 2026 is scheduled for the first week of March.

“We are going to be playing in all of those seats and more with quality candidates who are well prepared to be able to take on that race (in 2026),” Bergman said.

Welcome to the first baby born in the city of Columbus in 2026

Welcome to 2026 Solani Alaina Williams. (Photo/Piedmont Columbus Regional Midtown)

Baby girl Solani Alaina Williams was born Jan. 1 at 1:04 a.m. at Piedmont Columbus Regional Midtown. She entered the world weighing 6 lbs., 4 oz., and measuring 19.5 inches long. 

The proud parents are Destini Harper and Clyde Williams, who received a commemorative plaque and gift from the hospital. This is their first child. 

Baby Solani with her proud parents. (Photo/Piedmont Columbus Regional Hospital)

Piedmont Columbus Regional Midtown is one of six regional perinatal centers in the state of Georgia. Comprehensive women’s center services include an Obstetrical Emergency Department, midwifery, OBGYN Hospitalist group and a Level III Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) that features a high-risk surveillance clinic, outpatient retinopathy of prematurity services and neonatal transport services. 

A look back at the year’s top stories in Georgia politics

U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene broke with President Donald Trump and later announced her resignation. The year started with the funeral of former President Jimmy Carter. House Democrats staged a walkout during a vote on one of this year’s most controversial legislative proposals. And Gov. Brian Kemp decided to sit out the 2026 U.S. Senate race. (Photos by Ross Williams and Jill Nolin/Georgia Recorder)

(Georgia Recorder) — Looking back, a year that started with the funeral of the only Georgian to ever serve as president and snowstorms in the South was destined to be an especially wild ride.

But some stories stood out amid the chaos of 2025. Here is our list of the biggest, most memorable moments of the year.

Georgia says goodbye to native son Jimmy Carter

Former President Jimmy Carter died in late 2024 at the age of 100 as the longest-lived president in American history. His death prompted international mourning and a six-day funeral procession. A motorcade left Americus in early January for Atlanta, with mourners paying tribute all along a route with stops representing key moments in his life – including the state Capitol, where he served as a state senator and a governor. Services were held in Washington before Carter was brought back to Plains to be buried alongside former first lady Rosalynn Carter, who died in 2023.

Election interference case is dismissed

It wasn’t looking good for the Fulton County election interference against President Donald Trump and his allies going into 2025 after an appeals court disqualified District Attorney Fani Willis in late 2024. But any chance of getting the case back on track evaporated when Willis was unsuccessful in challenging her disqualification and a special prosecutor who took over in November ultimately recommended the case be dropped. But the case now lives on in other ways. Fulton County taxpayers could be on the hook for the defendants’ legal fees because of a new state law passed in early 2025, and a GOP-led state Senate committee continues to investigate Willis’ office, leading to an explosive encounter with the district attorney in December.

MTG announces plans to resign

There were early signs in 2025 that Georgia’s most famous conservative firebrand, U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, was starting to break from the GOP and President Donald Trump. There was her open disapproval of the U.S. strikes on Iran and her comments calling the crisis in Gaza a “genocide.” That escalated with her push for the Justice Department to release the Jeffrey Epstein files and her searing criticism of her party’s handling of the expiration of health care subsidies. By November, Trump had withdrawn his support for the lawmaker, who had once been one of his most prominent and ardent supporters, labeling Greene a “traitor” and vowing to back a primary challenger. That same month, Greene announced the stunning news that she plans to resign on Jan. 5. A special election will be set once she vacates the office, and time will tell what the future holds for Greene, who has expressed an interest in running for higher office.

Georgia Democrats show signs of momentum

Peter Hubbard and Alicia Johnson went into November’s Public Service Commission election in an unusual position for Georgia Democrats: They were seen as the favorites to win. Their perceived advantage was partly due to the coinciding municipal elections happening in left-leaning areas like vote-rich Atlanta (and in fact we did find voters who said they saw the PSC election as secondary to the local issues that drove them to the polls). The two Democrats did win, but the stunning part was by how much: They dominated the races with 25-point margins, handing Republicans a pair of defeats in a statewide election. Part of their success has been attributed to their focus on utility affordability on the campaign trail. In December, Democrats scored another upset in an Athens-area state House race when Eric Gisler defeated the Republican candidate. Gisler campaigned on health care access and addressing the rising cost of living.

Kemp skips U.S. Senate race

There has been a lot of speculation in recent years over what Gov. Brian Kemp will do next. A two-term governor who is barred from seeking another term, the popular Georgia Republican was seen as a formidable challenger to take on Democratic U.S. Sen. Jon Ossoff next year. But Kemp made big news in May when he announced he would pass on running for the seat. Instead, the governor backed attorney and former football coach Derek Dooley to run. Kemp’s support for Dooley didn’t settle the GOP primary race though, and with the election less than a year away, there is still no clear frontrunner on the Republican side.

Alleged Ponzi scheme

A politically connected lender, Newnan-based First Liberty Building & Loan, and its founder, Brant Frost IV, were accused in a lawsuit by federal regulators in July of running a $140 million Ponzi scheme. Frost allegedly donated more than $570,000 of investor funds to conservative groups and causes across multiple states. Work is underway – and likely will be for a long time – to recover donations and defaulted loans to go toward repaying the victims.

Adriana Smith is kept on life support

Adriana Smith, a pregnant 30-year-old mother and nurse, was kept on life support for months after being declared braindead in mid-February. Her case became a flashpoint in the debate over reproductive rights and Georgia’s six-week abortion ban after family told news outlets that doctors told them that although she had no chance of recovery, Smith’s organs would be kept functioning so as not to violate Georgia law. The baby, Chance, was delivered by emergency cesarean section in June.

The GOP’s focus on transgender issues intensifies

Gov. Brian Kemp’s all-in push for new limits on lawsuits in Georgia may have officially been the big-ticket item of the 2025 legislative session, but the slate of GOP bills focused on transgender Georgians also dominated lawmakers’ time and was at the center of one of the most tense moments of the session when House Democrats walked out on a vote. In the end, bans on transgender athletes in girls sports and gender-affirming care in state prisons made it into law, but other proposals remain alive for the 2026 session. A federal judge recently struck down the ban on gender-affirming care in state prisons, but the state has appealed the decision.

Mining company agrees to sell its property near the Okefenokee Swamp

A proposal to mine near the Okefenokee Swamp National Wildlife Refuge had appeared to be on the verge of getting the green light when it was announced in June that Alabama-based Twin Pines Minerals had agreed to sell its property to a conservation group. Environmental groups are now pushing for permanent protections for Trail Ridge, a mineral-rich geologic feature that acts as a barrier protecting the swamp.

Trump 2.0

The biggest overarching storyline of the year, of course, has been the return of President Donald Trump to the White House and the flurry of directives and changes coming from his administration – and what it all means for Georgia. There have been National Guard deployments to Washington and to assist with immigration enforcement, cuts to public media, research, clean energy and Georgia’s Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and much more. Several Georgians – like former U.S. Rep. Doug Collins, ex-U.S. Sen. Kelly Loeffler and former state Sen. Brandon Beach – also joined Trump’s administration.

Athens welcomes New Year’s baby

Zantavia Armstead welcomes her New Year’s baby boy, Zahkari Nymir Hardy! Born at 12:41 a.m. on January 1st. Mom and son are pictured here with Piedmont Regional Athens nurse, Mallory Smith. (Piedmont Athens Regional/Facebook)

ATHENS, Ga. — A Northeast Georgia family rang in the New Year with a special arrival.

Zantavia Armstead welcomed her baby boy, Zahkari Nymir Hardy, just after midnight on Jan. 1 at Piedmont Athens Regional Medical Center.

Zahkari was born at 12:41 a.m., weighing 7 pounds, 2 ounces, and measuring 20 inches long.

Armstead posed for photos with her son as the hospital staff welcomed their first delivery of 2026.

SEE ALSO

Hall County welcomes first baby of the new year

Watch the Skies: January 2026

We’re headed into a new year which means a whole new year for more sky watching!

While January is pretty cold, the low humidity levels in the air make this a great time to catch the night skies. We’ve got some great events to catch this month.

January 3: Full Moon and Perihelion

We’re starting the year off with a full moon right off the bat. The January full moon is also known as the Wolf Moon, Cold Moon, or Ice Moon among other things. This year’s Wolf Moon will be full at 5:03 a.m. on Saturday morning. This early morning full moon means one thing: two chances to see it. It will appear full on both Friday and Saturday nights. On Saturday night, the moon will also appear very close to Jupiter, so be sure to take in the view of these heavenly bodies paired right next to one another.

Full moon from Apollo 11 (Source: NASA)

In addition to the full moon, Earth will reach its closest approach to the sun on Saturday night as well. This is known as perihelion and at this moment the sun will be about 91.4 million miles away. The Earth’s orbit only varies by around 3% each year, so you won’t notice anything different. This small increment isn’t enough to cause seasons, those are caused by the Earth’s tilt. It is just a coincidence that perihelion occurs close to the Winter Solstice this year.

January 9: Jupiter at Perigee/Opposition

If you catch Jupiter next to the moon on the 3rd, you’ll be seeing it very near its closest approach to Earth for the year. The actually closest approach will occur just 6 days later on the 9th. At this time, the Earth will lie directly between Jupiter and the Sun, putting the Great Red Spot at its closest approach to us. That distance: a staggering 393 million miles. When Jupiter reaches perigee is by far the best time to see the giant planet through a small telescope. You’ll easily be able to make out its four largest moons: Io, Europa, Ganymede and Calisto, and with a large enough telescope you might even catch the Great Red Spot.

Jupiter from a telescope (Source: NASA)

January 19: γ-Ursae Minorid meteor shower

A very minor meteor shower will occur mid-month. the γ (gamma)-Ursae Minorid shower peaks on the 19th with only around 3-5 meteors per hour. With that said, it does occur during a new moon and would make a great companion event to stepping out with a telescope to see the constellation Orion. Orion the Hunter rises just after the sun sets this month and is high enough in the sky for easy viewing by 8-9 p.m. A small telescope aimed at his sword will reveal the M42 nebula, easily the best looking nebula through a telescope in our night sky. In fact, the nebula is bright enough to be seen through a good pair of binoculars, the view just gets better with a little more magnification.

The constellation Orion the Hunter (Source: NASA)

January 23: Conjunction of Moon, Saturn and Neptune

The young moon will meet up with both Saturn and Neptune on the night of the 23rd. While Neptune is nearly impossible to pick out with the naked eye, Saturn will be easily seen. With a good pair of binoculars you may also be able to pick out blue Neptune nearby. The moon will be only 26% full, a beautiful crescent in the evening sky.

January 30: Moon and Jupiter reunite

The moon will end the month the same way it started it: right next to Jupiter. You can catch the pair in the night sky. We will just barely miss out on a “blue moon” with the next full moon falling on the morning of February 1st.

Get out and enjoy the night sky to start 2026!

 

Cities around the world welcome 2026 with thunderous fireworks and heightened security

NEW YORK (AP) — From Sydney to Paris to New York City, crowds rang in the new year with exuberant celebrations filled with thunderous fireworks or light shows, while others took a more subdued approach.

As the clock struck midnight in Japan, temple bells rang and some climbed mountains to see the year’s first sunrise, while a light show with somersaulting jet skis twinkled in Dubai. The countdown to 2026 was projected onto the Arc de Triomphe in Paris, while in Moscow people celebrated in the snow.

In New York City’s Times Square, revelers braved frigid temperatures to celebrate with the famed New Year’s Eve ball drop.

Confetti falls over attendees in Times Square during New Year’s Eve celebration, Thursday, Jan. 1, 2026, in New York. (AP Photo/Eduardo Munoz Alvarez)

In Rio de Janeiro, crowds packed more than 4 kilometers of the city’s Copacabana Beach for concerts and a 12-minute fireworks show, despite high tides and large waves that rocked barges carrying fireworks.

Other events were more subdued. Hong Kong held limited celebrations following a recent fire at an apartment complex that killed 161 people. Australia saluted the new year with defiance less than a month after its worst mass shooting in almost 30 years.

There was disaster in the Swiss resort town of Crans-Montana, where a fire at a bar in the early hours of the new year killed multiple people.

MORE Georgians ring in the new year with local flair

Ball drop in New York City

Crowds bundled up against the chilly temperatures cheered and embraced as the New Year’s Eve ball covered in more than 5,000 crystals descended down a pole and confetti fell in Times Square.

Revelers wearing tall celebratory hats and light-up necklaces had waited for hours to see the 12,350-pound (5,602-kilograms) ball drop. The festivities also included Tones and I performing John Lennon’s “Imagine” just before midnight.

The television hosts interviewed visitors who were attending from such places as Florida, Mexico and South Korea, and read people’s wishes for the new year. A sixth grader from Dallas, Texas, told one of the hosts that he wants to get good grades in 2026 and have a better year.

Police in the city had planned additional anti-terrorism measures at the ball drop, with “mobile screening teams.” It was not in response to a specific threat, according to NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch.

Moments after the ball dropped it rose again, sparkling in red, white and blue, to mark the country’s upcoming 250th birthday.

A few miles away in a decommissioned subway station, Zohran Mamdani was sworn in as mayor during a private event just after midnight Thursday.

More security in Sydney

Fireworks burst over the Sydney Harbour Bridge during the New Year celebrations in Sydney, Thursday, Jan. 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Rick Rycroft)

A heavy police presence monitored crowds watching fireworks in Sydney. Many officers openly carried rapid-fire rifles, a first for the event, after two gunmen targeted a Hannukah celebrationat Bondi Beach on Dec. 14, killing 15.

An hour before midnight, victims were commemorated with a minute of silence, and the crowd was invited to show solidarity with Australia’s Jewish community.

New South Wales Premier Chris Minns had urged residents not to stay away from festivities, saying extremists would interpret smaller crowds as a victory: “We have to show defiance in the face of this terrible crime.”

Shadows of war and disasters

Indonesia scaled back festivities in solidarity with communities devastated by floods and landslides in parts of Sumatra a month ago that killed over 1,100. Fireworks on the tourist island of Bali were replaced with traditional dances.

Hong Kong rang in 2026 without fireworks over Victoria Harbor after the massive fire in November. Facades of landmarks were turned into countdown clocks and a light show at midnight.

And in Gaza, Palestinians said they hope the new year brings an end to the conflict between Israel and Hamas.

“The war humiliated us,” said Mirvat Abed Al-Aal, displaced from the southern city of Rafah.

People watch Russian President Vladimir Putin’s New Year’s message a few minutes prior to the New Year at the Palace Square, in St. Petersburg, Russia, late Wednesday, Dec. 31, 2025. (AP Photo/Dmitri Lovetsky)
Fireworks explode over the Chao Phraya River during New Year celebrations in Bangkok, Thailand, Thursday, Jan. 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)
Performers ring in the new year at the Juyongguan Great Wall on the outskirts of Beijing, China, early Thursday, Jan. 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)

Around Europe

Pope Leo XIV closed out the year with a plea for the city of Rome to welcome foreigners and the fragile. Fireworks erupted over European landmarks, from the Colosseum in Rome to the London Eye.

In Paris, revelers converged around the glittering Champs-Élysées avenue. Taissiya Girda, a 27-year-old tourist from Kazakhstan, expressed hope for a calmer 2026.

“I would like to see happy people around me, no war anywhere,” she said. “Russia, Ukraine, Palestine, Israel, I want everybody to be happy and in peace.”

A light show is projected on the Arc de Triomphe as fireworks explode during New Year celebrations on the Champs Elysees, in Paris, France, Thursday, Jan. 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Christophe Ena)
Fireworks light-up the sky in central London to celebrate the New Year on Thursday, Jan. 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Alberto Pezzali)

In Scotland, where New Year’s is known as Hogmanay, First Minister John Swinney urged Scots to follow the message of “Auld Lang Syne” by national poet Robert Burns and show small acts of kindness.

Greece and Cyprus turned down the volume, replacing traditional fireworks with low-noise pyrotechnics in capitals. Officials said the change was intended to make celebrations more welcoming for children and pets.

In Crans-Montana, a fire that swept through a bar at 1:30 a.m. caused heavy casualties, according to police, who gave no firm death toll but planned a news conference later in the morning.

By AP’s Ted Shaffrey and Hallie Golden

SEE ALSO

Georgians ring in the new year with local flair

How to watch tonight’s Sugar Bowl

Ole Miss coach Pete Golding and UGA head coach Kirby Smart shake hands during a pre-game press conference in New Orleans on New Year's Eve. (Georgia Football/Facebook)

NEW ORLEANS — The road to the College Football Playoff semifinals runs through New Orleans tonight as the Georgia Bulldogs face the Ole Miss Rebels in a Sugar Bowl quarterfinal matchup.

The game is part of the expanded College Football Playoff and features two SEC powerhouses meeting on one of college football’s biggest stages.

Kickoff is set for 8 p.m. Eastern (7 p.m. Central) on Thursday, January 1, at the iconic Caesars Superdome in New Orleans, Louisiana.

Fans can watch the game live on ESPN, with streaming available through the ESPN app or any streaming service that carries ESPN, including Sling, YouTube TV, Hulu + Live TV and fuboTV. You’ll need a valid subscription or TV provider login. Some services offer free trials.

Spanish-language coverage will also be available on ESPN Deportes, giving viewers an additional way to follow the action.

With a spot in the CFP semifinals on the line, tonight’s Sugar Bowl matchup promises a high-stakes showdown to open the new year. The winner will face Miami in the next round. Former UGA quarterback Carson Beck and his 10th-ranked Miami Hurricanes beat defending national champs Ohio State, 24-12, in the Cotton Bowl on Wednesday to advance in the playoffs.

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Georgia is eager to make better Sugar Bowl memories while Ole Miss eyes payback

 

Song Sung Blue

Song Sung Blue is a musical biopic that is based on the 2008 documentary of the same name. It hits similar beats that are accustomed to a biopic of this sort, but the execution is much more involving than the likes of Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere.

The movie stars Hugh Jackman as Mike Sardina, who impersonates Don Ho while working at an amusement park. He’s also 20 years sober with some health issues. Kate Hudson costars as Claire, who impersonates Patsy Cline, and the two immediately bond over their love of music, which, of course inevitably leads to their own love affair.

Claire gives Mike the inspiration to try his hand at impersonating Neil Diamond, but at first, he’s reluctant to do so. They decide to go on tour together as “Lightning and Thunder.” They also get married, much to the chagrin of their kids from previous marriages, but eventually they become a unit.

Things take a turn for the worse when Claire is hit by a car, which causes her left leg to be amputated, and her mental health begins spiraling out of control. I guess it’s par for the course in a musical biopic to have one of its subjects develop some sort of affliction, but the way this is handled is one of real honesty as Claire battles her inner demons while Mike tries to be the backbone.

Jackman and Hudson’s presences vibrate the screen with electric energy when they perform Diamond’s hits such as “Sweet Caroline,” and of course, the title song, “Song Sung Blue.” They truly shine when they’re performing the material and seem to have a lot of fun in their roles.

More importantly, they also know how to balance the glitz and glamour with the inner demons of mental illness and alcoholism. This is where the film unapologetically turns formulaic, but I guess we should expect that. It’s impossible not to show off the good times without a fraction of what is in the personal lives of these people to give them some credibility, as well as showcasing scenes that can give them time to breathe from the music.

Like a lot of musical biopics, I’m not sure if it will win converts to its subject, but fans of Diamond as well as Jackman and Hudson should be charmed by their performances and the treatment of the music. Song Sung Blue is a perfectly passably entertaining diversion.

Grade: B+

(Rated PG-13 for thematic material, some strong language, some sexual material and brief drug use.)

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