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Matthew Stafford will start in Rams’ season opener against Texans

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Matthew Stafford will start at quarterback and the plan is for Alaric Jackson to start at left tackle on Sunday in the season opener against the Houston Texans at SoFi Stadium, Rams coach Sean McVay said Monday.

Stafford, 37, practiced the last few weeks after sitting out training camp and several weeks because of a back issue.

“He’ll be good,” to start against the Texans, McVay said during a videoconference with reporters after the Rams completed a no-pads practice that was closed to the media.

Jackson, who signed a $35-million extension in March, practiced Monday for the first time since he was diagnosed with blood clots in his legs in June. Jackson had been doing individual drills with trainers and had participated with starters in jog-throughs.

“He earned the right to be in the position, where you pay him — it was a big priority for us to get him back,” McVay said. “He’s done everything in his power to be ready to go. This was always the end goal in mind — is to be ready to go against the Texans.”

After Jackson was diagnosed with blood clots for the second time in his career — he also dealt with the issue in 2022 — the Rams signed veteran tackle D.J. Humphries. Warren McClendon Jr. and David Quessenberry are other tackles that could play opposite right tackle Rob Havenstein if Jackson is injured, limited or struggles.

But McVay sounded optimistic that the Rams would continue to manage Jackson’s condition and that he would be ready for Sunday.

“He’s taken great care of himself, and he’s put himself in a rare position that I do believe to step in and play at a good clip,” McVay said, adding, “There’s nothing like actually playing real football … but [Monday] was a great step in the right direction.”



This story originally appeared on LA Times

OpenAI staffer left America for Sweden because of Trump’s presidency

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Miki Habryn can finally sleep at night. For many months, in the run-up to and after President Trump had won the election, that wasn’t the case.

Up until June this year Habryn was living what many would call the American dream. She had a job at ChatGPT-maker OpenAI, surrounded by some of the brightest minds in artificial intelligence. Her pay was comfortably in the six-figures, and she owned a house in San Francisco, the first city she had ever lived in which felt like home.

Her six-year old daughter, Steffi, was enjoying school and her wife, Eden, was thriving in her career as an artist.

But the family couldn’t shake their concern about the direction U.S. politics was moving in. While Habryn was born in Poland and raised in Australia from the age of five, her partner and child had only ever known life in the States.

When President Trump returned to the Oval Office, the family made the decision to leave San Francisco—and Habryn’s dream job—and move to Stockholm, Sweden. There they hope to stay indefinitely.

Habryn said she made the choice to leave the the U.S., where she had lived since 2007, one night in March. She said: “My wife was traveling on the East Coast and I was home with Steffi. And something about that particular night, I was awake worrying about things which was not uncommon, and I just got to the point of: It’s time to go, I can’t just stay here and do nothing, but doing anything comes with such terrible risks for me because of my status.”

“If I came to the attention of, or got arrested by the federal authorities, the outcome of that could be tragic. It turns out that my wife, on the same day, reached the same conclusion.”

Habryn explains the “status” she refers to: “During the campaign it was immigrants and transgender people that was occupying the airways and since I’m both, they’ve got me coming and going effectively.”

The family are not alone in their decision to leave Trump’s America. While it’s hard to pin down the number of people leaving the U.S. every year (the Department of State previously told Fortune it does not keep such records) in 2024 applications from Americans to live in the United Kingdom alone spiked 26% compared to a year prior. More than 6,100 Americans applied for British citizenship last year, a record number.

Immigration experts also previously told Fortune their phones had been ringing off the hook—particularly since that infamous Trump and Biden debate, when many people felt the fate of the November election had been decided. Montreal-based immigration experts Moving2Canada, for example, saw inquiries spike in both 2016 and 2020 and in 2024 saw enquiries triple in volume after the Trump vs. Biden debate.

Life at OpenAI

Habryn is no stranger to working in America’s tech elite: She moved to the U.S. originally to work for Google in Mountain View where she stayed for the next 12 years. Her experience at OpenAI, where she worked from May 2024 to July 2025, is a familiar story to many in Big Tech: An intense atmosphere, “wonderful” people and riveting work.

“It’s challenging,” Habryn said. “I think it’s exciting but I was lucky enough to have a lot of security and confidence in my own abilities—I think without that it would have been very, very hard.”

The prospect of losing her dream role in the research department of one of the world’s most-talked about companies was a key issue which held Habryn back from making the move earlier. While her team was supportive of the decision, ultimately the legalities of Habryn’s work meant it couldn’t move with her.

“It was really hard,” she said. “That was probably the reason it took me as long as it did to make the decision, because honestly I had this period of grief stepping away from this. I’ve been working in tech for a long time … and really the only thing I want to be working on is AI.

“It was hard and I didn’t love making that decision but, ultimately, it was just a question of priority.”

Habryn is confident she will find interesting work when she needs to, and the family are settling into their newly purchased home in Stockholm—the family doubt they will ever return to the U.S. That comes with “guilt”, Habryn says: “I buy the narrative that you should fight for the things that you believe in and that there is value to staying and fighting for that. If it were not for Steffi, I think we would have.”

Ultimately her six-year-old daughter is their focus: “We set aside a lot of things that we love to do [because] we want Steffi to have a routine, a stable home, a stable school and all those things. The hardest thing about this whole move has been worrying about the impact on her and so the priority was that we don’t want to do this again, we’re going to move once, and we want to put down roots and spend the next 15/20 years there.”

Introducing the 2025 Fortune Global 500, the definitive ranking of the biggest companies in the world. Explore this year’s list.



This story originally appeared on Fortune

This brilliant FTSE 100 dividend growth share fell 14% in August. One to consider in September?

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Image source: Getty Images

I’ve been tempted to buy this FTSE 100 for years but one thing stopped me. It was too expensive. Too popular. Just too darn good.

The company in question is Sage Group (LSE: SGE), which develops accounting and payroll software for businesses worldwide. All the share price seemed to do was climb higher and it looked expensive with a price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of around 34. I thought it was one to buy on a dip, and now we have one.

Sage Group has slumped

When I checked the list of best and worst performing FTSE 100 stocks in August, I was shocked to see Sage at the bottom. The shares fell 13.7% in the month, cutting annual growth to 6.7%. They’re still up almost 50% over five years, with dividends on top, so long-term investors won’t be too worried. What explains this sudden slump?

On 30 July, it reported that Q3 total revenue rose 9% to £1.86bn, which seemed fine, while management kept full-year guidance unchanged. This wasn’t a company in crisis. In fact, it looks in fine fettle, with recurring revenues and subscription income both marching upwards, giving the board much greater earnings visibility.

So, why the negative market reaction? Perhaps investors expected more. With sky-high valuations like this one, even a decent set of results can fall short of expectations. The shares fell in the immediate aftermath, with no subsequent news to lift them up.

High price to earnings

The stock has long been priced for perfection, and when that happens, the smallest wobble can spark a correction. Even after August’s slump, the P/E sits at 28.7. That’s still far above the wider market average, although Sage has long commanded a premium.

I’ve gradually eased my strict preference for lowly-rated companies. All too often, they’re cheap for a reason. Paying more for quality can work out well, provided the fundamentals hold up. However, expectations remain high, so Sage has to deliver otherwise investor disappointment could grow.

Sage also carries specific risks. Artificial intelligence could allow customers to replicate services in-house, denting its edge. Competition from rivals in cloud-based software is another.

Dividends keep flowing

At first glance, the 1.88% traidling yield doesn’t look much. Yet Sage has lifted its dividend every year since 1988. Over the last 15 years, payouts have compounded at just over 7% a year, comfortably ahead of inflation.

The reason the yield looks low is simply because the share price has run so strongly in recent years. Income investors shouldn’t dismiss it on that basis, as it still combines reliable dividends with steady long-term growth.

Broker forecasts underline the potential. The consensus one-year target is 1,375p, which is 27% above today’s 1,089p. Which would be a stunning return if it happened. As ever, it’s not guaranteed, and I suspect many of those forecasts will have been made before the recent slump.

My view

To me, this looks like the market taking a more realistic view after years of relentless optimism. For long-term investors building a Stocks and Shares ISA, Sage is worth considering on today’s weakness. It remains a quality blue-chip with dependable income, strong recurring revenues, and a proven model. Having waited so long for a dip, I’m now considered seriously considering taking advantage of it.



This story originally appeared on Motley Fool

How to make a late career switch into cyber – Computerworld

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“Being more organized in terms of time, taking better notes, being clearer in your knowledge before you get on a call when working on something new.”  

4. Do your diligence 

Finally, Ian said that the lack of structure in the industry can create traps to avoid. Not every organization would be good for a new professional making the switch.  

“I found myself in a situation where a colleague gave advice to a client during a call where I was the junior person. I immediately challenged it after the call, and the response was not good enough for me,” he recounted, speaking to a short-lived employment in a boutique consultancy. 

“It made me reflect on the amount of due diligence that you need to do. That was a huge learning point for me.” 



This story originally appeared on Computerworld

Chinese social media platforms roll out labels for AI-generated material

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Major social media platforms in China have started rolling out labels for AI-generated content to comply with a law that took effect on Monday. Users of the likes of WeChat, Douyin, Weibo and RedNote (aka Xiaohongshu) are now seeing such labels on posts. These denote the use of generative AI in text, images, audio, video and other types of material, according to the . Identifiers such as watermarks have to be included in metadata too.

WeChat has told users they must proactively apply labels to their AI-generated content. They’re also prohibited from removing, tampering with or hiding any AI labels that WeChat applies itself, or to use “AI to produce or spread false information, infringing content or any illegal activities.”

ByteDance’s Douyin — the Chinese version of TikTok — similarly urged users to apply a label to every post of theirs that includes AI-generated material while noting it’s able to use metadata to detect where a piece of content content came from. Weibo, meanwhile, has added the option for users to report “unlabelled AI content” option when they see something that should have such a label.

Four agencies drafted the law — which was — including the main internet regulator, the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC). The Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, the Ministry of Public Security and the National Radio and Television Administration also helped put together the legislation, which is being enforced to help oversee the tidal wave of genAI content. In April, the CAC a three-month campaign to regulate AI apps and services.

Mandatory labels for AI content could help folks better understand when they’re seeing AI slop and/or misinformation instead of something authentic. Some US companies that provide genAI tools offer similar labels and are starting to bake such identifiers into hardware. Google’s are the first phones that implement (Coalition for Content Provenance and Authenticity) content credentials .



This story originally appeared on Engadget

Is Fifth Harmony Back Together? The Group’s Future After 2025 Reunion – Hollywood Life

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Image Credit: Getty Images

Fifth Harmony reunited for the first time since 2018 on August 31, 2025, at a Jonas Brothers concert in Dallas, Texas. The performance — which featured current members Normani, Ally Brooke, Dinah Jane and Lauren Jauregui singing “Worth It” and “Work From Home” — caused an uproar among fans, who are hoping that Fifth Harmony is officially back together. So, is it true — did the famous all-female group reunite?

Below, Hollywood Life is unpacking what we know so far about Fifth Harmony’s future.

What Happened to Fifth Harmony?

Fifth Harmony never disbanded, but the members have been on hiatus since 2018 while they pursued solo projects. After Camila Cabello left the band in 2016, the group forged ahead without her. Since then, fans have called for the band to change its name to “Fourth Harmony” considering they have four members now.

“Reflecting on the past six years since we started on X-Factor, we’ve realized just how far we’ve come and we appreciate everything so much, more now than ever,” Fifth Harmony’s 2018 hiatus announcement read. “We’ve really had one hell of a memorable journey together and can’t begin to express our gratitude to y’all for coming along with us on this wild ride! … After six years going hard, non-stop, we also realized that in order to stay authentic to ourselves and to you, we do need to take some time for now to go on a hiatus from Fifth Harmony in order to pursue solo endeavors.”

Is Fifth Harmony Back Together?

Not at the moment since none of the current members of Fifth Harmony has confirmed a formal reunion. However, they reignited the rumors when Lauren, Normani, Ally and Dinah performed “Worth It” and “Work From Home” during the Jonas Brothers’ August 2025 Greetings From Your Hometown Tour concert in Dallas, Texas.

“Where were you on August 31, 2025?” the group captioned a social media post after their surprise performance. “Thank you @jonasbrothers for having us. Felt amazing to be back.” Fifth Harmony fans clamored over the caption acknowledging that they were “back,” but they were likely referring to their Jonas Brothers concert performance.

Nevertheless, the group updated its website to feature new merchandise: a T-shirt and hoodie that read, “Where Were You on August 31, 2025?”

Earlier this year, insiders told The Hollywood Reporter that the current Fifth Harmony members were planning something for 2026 amid the 10th anniversary of 7/27. The sources told the publication that the women were working on a documentary on their return, which would include footage on a tour that has yet to be announced. Ally’s husband, Will Bracey, is leading the group’s endeavors, THR reported.

Why Did Camila Cabello Leave Fifth Harmony?

Camila left Fifth Harmony to pursue a solo career. After releasing her debut solo single, “Crying in the Club,” in 2017, Camila’s music reached global fame. She later won the Video Music Award for Best Video for her hit track “Havana.”

Camila’s departure from Fifth Harmony created quite a stir among fans. Both sides had contradicting statements regarding her exit, and the band added more fuel to the fire when they had a fifth stand-in purposely fall off the stage at the 2017 MTV VMAs.

The “Señorita” hitmaker later appeared on the “Call Her Daddy” podcast in March 2024 to explain why she “started distancing” herself from Fifth Harmony.

“I can remember waking up on tour, and going to my hotel room at like 7 a.m. and going to my garage band, and like writing songs, ’cause I didn’t want to do it while everybody was there, and I had such a passion that turned into writing,” Camila said. “And, at first I was like, ‘Oh maybe I wanna write for other people.’ But then it turned into like, ‘No, actually I want to sing these songs by myself.’ … I started distancing myself from the [group’s] vision, and it felt like, you know, they were still really passionate and into that and so, I was just like, ‘I’m not happy here anymore, it doesn’t feel aligned.’”

Despite leaving the group, Camila has maintained that she and Ally, Lauren, Normani and Dinah had no more bad blood. In 2022, the pop singer told Reuters that they were “supportive of each other through, like, DMs and stuff.”




This story originally appeared on Hollywoodlife

Travel expert shares the ‘best’ day to book your flight – it’s neither Saturday or Sunday | Travel News | Travel

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A travel expert said booking your next flight on a certain day could save you over 20% on plane fares. The tip comes just in time, as travelling costs continue to rise for various reasons, including high operational costs and increased fuel prices.

Sam Argyle, Managing Director at Alternative Airlines, claimed travellers can save nearly a quarter when booking flights by following a simple rule. The expert explained that while most people book flights on a weekend, when they have more free time, that isn’t the best route, as the weekend is “actually when prices peak”. 

Instead, “Tuesday afternoons offer the biggest savings” according to Mr Argyle. This is because, he said, airlines typically launch sales on Monday night and by Tuesday afternoon, competing airlines have matched the lower prices.

Analysis by Alternative Airlines showed that Tuesday bookings consistently outperform weekend bookings by significant margins. Flight prices on Tuesday can be up to 23% less than identical routes booked on Saturdays and Sundays.

Mr Argyle said: “The secret is timing. Airlines want to fill empty seats, so they start the week with fresh deals. By Tuesday afternoon, the market has adjusted, and that’s your sweet spot.”

Travel search engine Kayak also supports the airfare finder company’s findings. Research from Kayak found that Tuesday is the cheapest day to fly one-way within Europe, with average costs of just £82.

The travel expert added: “For international flights, both Tuesday and Wednesday offer the best value with average one-way ticket prices of £413.”

For European travel, a round-trip with a Tuesday departure and a Wednesday return typically yields the lowest fares. For international travel, Wednesday-to-Wednesday bookings typically offer the best value for a week-long trip.

Timing matters when it comes to planning, too. Despite beliefs that booking months ahead will guarantee you the best price, that isn’t always the case. “Last-minute deals exist because airlines prefer revenue over some empty seats,” explained Mr Argyle.

So, the next time you plan to fly out, it is worth waiting for your Tuesday lunch break to book those flights.



This story originally appeared on Express.co.uk

Dwayne Johnson Drama ‘The Smashing Machine’ Lands Rotten Tomatoes Verdict

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Dwayne Johnson’s drastic physical transformation for The Smashing Machine has paid off, as his turn as the legendary UFC fighter Mark Kerr has been praised as a “career-best” performance. The sports biopic has received a verdict on Rotten Tomatoes, and it seems fans of the actor should prepare to see a truly revelatory role for the wrestler-turned-movie star.

As of this writing, The Smashing Machine has a 93% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 14 reviews. The film, which premiered at the Venice Film Festival, was directed by Benny Safdie and stars Johnson, Emily Blunt, Ryan Bader, Bas Rutten, and Oleksandr Usyk. A bulk of the praise has been for Johnson and Blunt, who play Mark Kerr and Dawn Staples, respectively. Johnson, in particular, gave what has been consistently described as the best performance of his career. Variety says that he seems like a “a new actor” in the film, in which he captures the “silent, moody, hidden side of Mark with a quality of mystery.”

Although some critics feel like The Smashing Machine does little to break the mold of sports biopics, the emotionally vulnerable performances by Johnson and Blunt are what separates the film. IndieWire says it moves between a “sweet duet between a remarkably unembellished Johnson and a blazingly good, blue-collar and freshly blown-out Emily Blunt.” Meanwhile, Screen International made it clear that, while the film doesn’t reinvent the wheel, Safdie’s direction offers a “candid look” at Mark Kerr as a working-class athlete with personal struggles.

“The Smashing Machine may not always transcend genre conventions, but is a consistently idiosyncratic and candid look at a working-class athlete with a complicated romantic relationship and a crippling opioid addiction.”

Dwayne Johnson Was “Hungry” for a Project Like ‘The Smashing Machine’

A24

During a press conference at the Venice Film Festival, Dwayne Johnson revealed that his transformation for The Smashing Machine was the kind of role he’d been hungry for. After starring in countless blockbusters over the years, Johnson seemed keen on exploring a new side of his acting. With Smashing Machine, it allowed him to address the voice inside him that said, “I want to do more.”

“This transformation was something I was really hungry to do. I had been very fortunate to have the career that I’ve had over the years and to make the films that I’ve made, but there was just a voice inside of me, a little voice that said, ‘Well, what if I could do more — I want to do more and what does that look like?’”

As revealed in the trailer, Johnson underwent a stark physical transformation to play Mark Kerr, a mixed martial artist whose sheer size was nearly unmatched during his peak. However, there was a profoundly human aspect to the story that seemingly convinced Johnson to pursue Smashing Machine.

“Mark was the greatest fighter in the world at one point, but this film is not even really about fighting — it’s a love story. It’s a love story about Mark and Dawn in this relationship, and it’s a love story about Mark and the love that he had for the thing that he did — his struggle with trying to deliver [in the ring], his challenges and his overcoming. As you know, Mark OD’d twice, and he’s lucky to be alive — and that’s part of why this story is so special.”

Audiences will get to see Johnson transform into Mark Kerr when The Smashing Machine releases in theaters on October 3.


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The Smashing Machine


Release Date

October 3, 2025

Runtime

123 minutes

Director

Benny Safdie

Writers

Benny Safdie

Producers

Beau Flynn, David Koplan, Dwayne Johnson, Dany Garcia, Hiram Garcia






This story originally appeared on Movieweb

Will’s Return Doesn’t Make Up For Maggie’s Exit

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Chicago Med is losing an original star and bringing one back in season 11, and although the show is seemingly trying to, the latter doesn’t balance out the former. The medical drama’s cast has vastly changed throughout its run. It doesn’t look the same as it did when it premiered in 2015, and the changes will just keep coming as Chicago Med continues.

The original cast has been all but decimated as only three stars remained as of the Chicago Med season 10 finale — Marlyne Barrett as Maggie Lockwood, S. Epatha Merkerson as Sharon Goodwin, and Oliver Platt as Dr. Daniel Charles. Everyone else has exited the series. Unfortunately, one of the three will be joining the departed cast in Chicago Med season 11.

Marlyne Barrett Is Leaving Chicago Med Ahead Of Season 11

Maggie Is Saying Goodbye To Gaffney

Maggie sitting in a chair and looking smug in Chicago Med

Marlyne Barrett, who has played Maggie Lockwood in Chicago Med since season 1, is leaving ahead of season 11 (according to a report from Deadline). Fans first met Barrett’s character, who is the charge nurse in Gaffney Chicago Med Center’s emergency department, in the NBC TV show’s series premiere. She was fierce, strong-willed, passionate, and protective. She hasn’t changed much since then.

Unfortunately, the audience and the other Chicago Med characters must bid Maggie farewell when the medical drama returns with its 11th season in the fall of 2025. The good news is that Barrett’s exit is reportedly considered to be temporary (at least, for now). The writers and producers are evidently remaining hopeful that Barrett will eventually come back as Maggie.

It’s unknown what reasoning Chicago Med will use to explain Maggie’s absence in season 11. Given that the show doesn’t plan on her exit being permanent, fans can rest assured that Barrett’s character won’t die. However, Maggie’s big story in season 10 revolved around tension between the hospital board and the nurses’ union. So, perhaps that’ll play a factor in her departure.

Chicago Med Is Trading 1 Original Cast Member For Another

Nick Gehlfuss Is Returning In Season 11

William Halstead wearing his white coat and talking at the hospital in Chicago Med
William Halstead wearing his white coat and talking at the hospital in Chicago Med

While Barrett is leaving, Chicago Med original star Nick Gehlfuss is returning for season 11. Gehlfuss first appeared as Dr. Will Halstead in Chicago PD season 2, episode 17, as he is Jay Halstead’s brother. Shortly after, the actor became a series regular in the NBC medical drama. He stayed there for eight seasons before bidding farewell to Chicago Med in 2023.

Chicago Med season 8 ended with Will taking the blame for sabotaging OR 2.0 and resigning from his position at Gaffney. Afterward, he left Chicago and moved to Seattle. There, he reunited with his one true love, Natalie Manning, and her son, Owen. Although his exit was heartbreaking, Will got his happily ever after, which is all anyone can ask for.

Now, Gehlfuss is set to return in a guest-starring role. But by the sound of it, he should appear in more than one episode, and after learning that Barrett was leaving Chicago Med ahead of season 11, it also seems like the show is trying to trade her for Gehlfuss. That’s not how that works, though. Maggie and Will aren’t interchangeable characters.

Will Can’t Replace Maggie Permanently

Chicago Med Must Find A Real Replacement For Maggie

Nick Gehlfuss as Will Halstead and Marlyne Barrett as Maggie Lockwood in Chicago Med
Nick Gehlfuss as Will Halstead and Marlyne Barrett as Maggie Lockwood in Chicago Med
NBC via MovieStillsDB

It looks like Chicago Med is essentially only bringing Will back to make up for the loss of Maggie. However, as fans know, Maggie and Will are two completely different characters. It’s not like Will’s return can make viewers forget about Maggie’s exit, especially because they have two contrasting roles in medicine. Will is an attending physician, while Maggie is a charge nurse.

Sure, Will’s (limited) appearance in Chicago Med season 11 can briefly distract fans from Maggie’s absence. However, Maggie will be missed no matter what. They can bring in a departed original character, but that doesn’t erase the fact that Maggie has been a steady presence in the series since its inception. It’s going to take time to get used to her not being there.

Plus, Gaffney Chicago Medical Center still needs to find a permanent replacement for Maggie. Will can’t be the emergency department’s charge nurse, after all. He could be a visiting physician, but he could never do what Maggie did. As such, Chicago Med must either cast someone new to step into Maggie’s role or promote an already established character, like Doris Perez.

Only time will tell how Maggie will leave Gaffney, who will replace her, and how Will fits into this mess. Whatever happens, we know that the door will remain open for Maggie’s return (similar to how Will left). Her exit should tease the possibility of her rejoining her colleagues at Gaffney one day.

So, right when an original cast member returns, another is leaving. Despite the timing, the One Chicago TV show can’t expect Will’s special guest appearance to cancel out Maggie’s departure. Hopefully, Chicago Med will acknowledge as much when season 11 premieres.

Chicago Med season 11 premieres on Wednesday, October 1, at 8 pm ET on NBC. The rest of the One Chicago universe will follow on the same night, with Chicago Fire season 14 debuting at 9 pm ET and Chicago PD season 13 airing at 10 pm ET.

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Chicago Med

Release Date

November 17, 2015

Showrunner

Michael Brandt


  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Marlyne Barrett

    Maggie Lockwood

  • Headshot of S. Epatha Merkerson

    S. Epatha Merkerson

    Sharon Goodwin



Source: Deadline



This story originally appeared on Screenrant

Rome after Sublime: A California soul all his own

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Rome Ramirez wasn’t built in a day.

He was once a guitar-strumming, teenage Sublime fan in a Mexican American household in Fremont, Calif. At 18, he moved to Los Angeles to follow his dream of making music. He swept floors, lived in his van and eventually did the impossible: He became the singer of his favorite band.

In 2009, 13 years after the death of Sublime’s founding singer-songwriter Bradley Nowell, Rome befriended Sublime’s remaining members, Bud Gaugh and Eric Wilson, and became the frontman of Sublime with Rome — playing to an established fan base in amphitheaters around the world. Behind the scenes, Rome developed a robust songwriting career of his own, cutting his teeth in the studio-session culture in L.A. and racking up credits on Enrique Iglesias and Selena Gomez songs.

Yet eventually, the band started to feel more like a job than a calling. After several lineup changes, Sublime with Rome embarked on its farewell tour in 2024. “For the majority of being in Sublime, our recording schedule was so busy,” he says. “I knew that in order to do a solo career, it takes everything from you if you want to do it right, so that was not on the mind.”

Despite being a lifelong California boy, Rome moved his family to Nashville during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. There are perks to living in America’s songwriting capital — like a slower pace of life and the ability to do “more errands per day than in L.A.,” he says with a laugh. But now, he says that he and his children are some of the only Latinos in their neighborhood.

“There [are] a lot of people who leave California,” says Rome. “They trash-talk California, but it’s just such a huge part of my identity and culture — growing up as a Mexican American in California, that Chicano culture. I will always love Los Angeles.”

After 15 years in Sublime with Rome, the 37-year-old has forged a new path as a solo artist. His sound is a West Coast cocktail of beachy reggae and hip hop-inspired grooves, specially made for summertime — like his new single “Slow & Easy,” featuring the Dirty Heads, his friends from back when he slept in his van.

It’s the first offering from his debut EP, “Gemini” — “It’s about the duality of my music, I can’t be put into a box,” he says — which is set for a Sept. 19 release. He’s also announced a slate of tour dates in the U.S., starting Sept. 17 in Destin, Fla.

This interview has been condensed and edited for clarity.

Your solo career was kick-started by stepping down as the lead singer of Sublime with Rome. Was having a solo career something you had in your head for a while?
Through the course of touring with Sublime, I was really heavily involved in songwriting. I was doing all kinds of records for people I really looked up to — like Selena Gomez and Jason Derulo and Enrique Iglesias. Huge names. As a kid who grew up writing songs in his mom’s basement, this was just like a dream come true.

It wasn’t until the pandemic happened where for the first time Sublime with Rome wasn’t touring, we were at home and I started live-streaming. People were showing up in these rooms — like 500 to a thousand people. I was one of the first people in my music community who was already outfitted with cameras, ready to go in the studio. I would start with a Sublime album and go through every song on the stream. And then the next album, then the Sublime with Rome album, then I would do covers. After about like six months, I ran out of songs and people were just asking like, “Dude, do you have any music? Like, are you working on anything?” And honestly, I hadn’t worked on music for myself in so long.

I think part of that was not wanting to dig deep into traumas, [like] growing up in a household with drugs. But during the pandemic, I had time to start writing music again for fun — playing with sounds that I loved and grew up on, and starting to pull the scabs off of [wounds] that I tucked [away] in the past. After a while I had a handful of songs, and I just knew I [couldn’t] put them in the Sublime with Rome set. This thing I love to do started to feel like a job, and that is a no-go. So I asked myself, “Am I going to do Sublime with Rome for money, or am I going to really follow something that I believe in?”

We started having conversations about what the future of the band was looking like prior to our summer tour in 2023. I’m really glad that everything happened the way it did. We had a roll out for everything. I needed to trust my gut and follow through with my belief in this music and what I’m building.

“Lay Me Down” with Dirty Heads is one of your biggest songs, with nearly 120 million Spotify plays, but it came out in 2010 — much earlier than your current venture in your solo career. What’s the story behind this song?
I’m from the Bay Area, but I moved down to Los Angeles when I was 18 to go make something of myself. I was hanging around this recording studio that the Dirty Heads were just getting started at.

I was just interning, sweeping floors, [eating] cheeseburgers, that kind of thing. Everyone knew that I could write a song, and eventually, after hanging out there for so long, me and the Dirty Heads worked up a friendship. They said, “Let’s get together and write a song one day.”

So we barbecued some hot dogs and just hung out in one of the guys’ backyard with a couple of guitars on a picnic bench … and we wrote “Lay Me Down.” The song sat around for a year, but we really liked it.

They were going on tour in the van and I wasn’t doing anything — I was homeless at the time, Sublime wasn’t even a thought. They offered me to go on the road with them, so I did and played that one song with them. From there, our manager took the demo to KROQ. The song started getting played on the radio and the shows got fuller. It was such an amazing experience. It was just just by the grace of God, it like all worked out and our lives changed from that point. We cashed our first checks and bought our first cars together from that.

You collaborated with the Dirty Heads again on your recent single “Slow and Easy.” It’s your first single since you’ve gone solo. What was that process like?
It’s come full circle with my best friends again. I knew this song was special. I went into the studio with the aim of — “I want to make a summer song that feels like a Van Morrison record, but [an] Uncle Kracker [vibe]. Real simple.”

I went in with my boy, Nick Bailey, who I write a lot of music with, and we nailed that song in two hours. After I got the demo I was like, “Man, it’s so close. What if I put the Dirty Heads on it? [With] a little rap and a little melody, it would just be so different.”

They loved it. They sent me their vocals the next week and I was like, “OK, I feel like this is a good song.” Eventually some awesome promoters at radio stations heard it and they wanted to take a chance on the record.

The summer vibes are strong on “Lay Me Down” and “Slow and Easy.” What artists introduced you to this sound that’s present in everything you do?
I grew up on Motown and Bob Marley. That’s what I circled back to after I left Sublime.

As I was working on music during the pandemic, I was like, “What do I want to hear? What’s the shit that I like?” And it’s like Stevie Wonder, it’s the Supremes, it’s the Four Tops, it’s Fiona Apple, it’s Leon Bridges, it’s Van Morrison. I really like feel-good music that sonically reminds me of an older time.

I have kids now, so I’m very conscious about the message I put into the world. I’ll try to write a song that the world could benefit from hearing, but not make it a preachy song.

How would you describe the sound of Rome?
The underlying factor is soul music. When you hear soul music, you think of Teddy Pendergrass and things like that. I love soul music. [Take] Bradley’s voice in Sublime, you cannot tell me that that man wasn’t a soul singer.

That’s the music that I really gravitate to, music that just feels really honest. Reggae music [lives] in me. Jack Johnson is another huge influence. My sound is reggae and soul and pop music, for lack of better words, because I write simple-ass songs.

How do you feel like your Mexican heritage makes its way into your music? Or in how you move and how you present yourself?
Growing up Mexican shaped my whole framework for how I live my life. I don’t speak Spanish, but I grew up in two households that were fully fluent in Spanish. All my friends growing up were Mexican. [I remember] seeing Carlos Santana playing with Rob Thomas on [television] and my dad was like, “He’s mexicano right there.” Man, that was pretty sick.

Growing up in a really thick Mexican culture [meant] both my parents worked their ass off, but at the same time, family always came first. These are the kind of morals that are really instilled in Mexican culture, that I’m so proud that I have. As a family man now, those things are so prominent in my life. We take a lot of pride in what we do, we work our asses off … then when it’s time to play, we play.

What makes a good summer song?
Something that you don’t have to try too hard to listen to. There are some songs where you’re like, “All right, I need to get in the car and drive and listen to this thing, ride it out the gate.” When I envision a summer song, it’s very simple and easy to play.

People online are debating what the song of the summer is in 2025. What has been your song of the summer?
In terms of listening and all the damn content I’ve been making, it’s “Slow and Easy!” But aside from one of my own songs, probably “Golden” from “KPop Demon Hunters” because that’s what my kids are spinning. The music is shockingly good. It’s like Max Martin s—.

You’re on quite a big U.S. tour. How is it going?
It’s so sick. We just rolled out a couple dates in Florida just to test the waters and those shows are selling really good, so promoters have been adding more and more.

I’ve been to so many of these places [with Sublime], of course, but the energy’s different. I’m playing smaller spots, [connecting] with people before and after the shows. You can’t really do that in amphitheaters. I’m experiencing everything in reverse. I was homeless when I met Sublime and then I was on the tour bus. Now, it’s like we’re climbing up the ranks again.

I have such a long lineage of songs I’ve been working on and the fan base — shout out to the Romies — who’ve followed me over the years. Putting together the set list has been a celebration of the different eras of my life. I’m just having a lot of fun doing this.



This story originally appeared on LA Times