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Priyanka Chopra Jonas’s Hand-Embroidered Gown Reimagines a 20-Year-Old Chikan Sari

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Harper's Bazaar Gold House 5th Annual Gold Gala - Gold Press Carpet

Last night,Priyanka Chopra Jonaswas honored with the inaugural Vanguard award at the fifth annual Gold Gala. And for the occasion, she turned toAmit Aggarwalfor an angelic, sculptural white gown rich with significance.

Designed in partnership with stylistAmi Patel, the sari-inspired gown was a meaningful collaboration between the artists, honoring 25 years of Chopra’s work with a piece worthy of such an accomplishment.

Gold House 5th Annual Gold Gala - Arrivals

Merging vintage and tradition with contemporary sensibilities, the creatives reimagined a two-decade-old chikan sari into a modern piece of couture with a high leg slit, long dramatic train, and intricate hand embroidery. The result was something both delicate and powerful at the same time.

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2026 Gold Gala - Arrivals

For Aggarwal, the piece wasparticularlyspecial because of its wearer. “My mother has adored Priyanka Chopra beyond measure for years,”the designer shared on Instagram. “She is also the first person to comment on almost every post we have ever done, and the woman who believed in me long before the world did. This moment is my small gift to her.”

“And to mothers everywhere, thank you for giving your children not just life, but the courage to pursue the dreams they quietly carry within them,” Aggarwal added. What a perfect way to celebrate Mother’s Day.

Gold House 5th Annual Gold Gala - Program

To pair, Chopra wore a decadent set of Bulgari jewels around her neck, with diamonds and emeralds creating a soft geometric pattern. She finished off the elegant look with a pair of Jimmy Choo heels and walked the gold carpet before heading into the Gold House’s annual ceremony.

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Priyanka Chopra Jonas’s Hand-Embroidered Gown Reimagines a 20-Year-Old Chikan Sari

"Hearst Magazines and AOL may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links." Last night,Priyanka Chopra...
Gisele Bündchen Shares Clearest Photos Yet of Her 1-Year-Old Son Alongside His Older Brother and Sister

Gisele Bündchen took to Instagram on May 10 to celebrate Mother’s Day with a handful of photos of her children.

InStyle Gisele Bündchen on November 22, 2025.Credit: Getty

The Gist

  • One photo shows the clearest glimpse yet of her youngest child, a 1-year-old boy whom she shares with husband Joaquim Valente.

  • The couple have never publicly released their son’s name, and often show photos of him from behind or the side so as to maintain his privacy.

Gisele Bündchencelebrated Mother’s Day with a new photo of her youngest child, whose name has still never been publicly revealed over a year after his birth.

On May 10, the supermodel shared the clearest photo yet of her son’s (adorable) faceon her Instagram, writing alongside it, “Nothing in this world fills my life with more meaning and joy than being a mom.” Bündchen shares her baby boy with husbandJoaquim Valente.

The carousel also included photos of her older children Benjamin and Vivian, who she shares with ex-husbandTom Brady. “I’m so grateful to experience life with them, learning and growing together every day,” she wrote. “Happy Mother’s Day to all moms, especially to my mama, who is always by my side in spirit and inspires me to be the best mom that I can be.❤️❤️❤️”

Elsewhere in the carousel, Bündchen shared cards she received for Mother’s Day, including one from Benjamin that read in part, “I will forever be thankful for everything you have taught me. Never change. I love you so much.”

The supermodel with her sons.Credit: Gisele Bundchen/Instagram

Brady alsoshared a sweet tributeto both Bündchen and exBridget Moynahan, who is the mother of his eldest child, son Jack. On Sunday, the former NFL quarterback wrote, “Happy Mother’s Day to all the amazing mothers in this world…❤️❤️❤️” atop a photo of the supermodel cuddling Jack, Benjamin, and Vivian.

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Marking her baby boy’s birthday in January, Bündchenwrote on Instagram, “I can’t believe it’s already been over a year since you came to bless our lives. Thank you, God, for so much.❤️ 🙏” That message came not long aftera post closing the year 2025where she wrote that her “heart is full. This year brought deep lessons and profound growth. Becoming a mother again reshaped everything—my time, my priorities, my heart. I’m grateful for these sacred moments that changed me in ways words can’t fully hold.”

Bündchen with her baby boy and her daughter Vivian.Credit: Gisele Bundchen/Instagram

The baby boy’s first name has never been revealed, though the supermodel hinted that it started with an “A” after she showed off a necklace with J, B, V, and A charms—for Valente, Benjamin, Vivian, and potentially her youngest child, as well.Peoplehas reported that the baby boy’s middle name is River.

She shared a photo of her children and husband Joaquim Valente on May 10, 2026.Credit: Gisele Bundchen/Instagram The family looking out at nature together.Credit: Gisele Bundchen/Instagram

Three months after welcoming her son last year, Bündchen toldVogue France, “Now that my little one is sleeping through the night, I’m back in control of my routine. As any new mom knows, it’s incredible how much sleep—or lack of it—can change everything!”

“But once again, I feel truly grateful,” she added. “Being able to be home with my kids and enjoy every moment with them is priceless.”

Read the original article onInStyle

Gisele Bündchen Shares Clearest Photos Yet of Her 1-Year-Old Son Alongside His Older Brother and Sister

Gisele Bündchen took to Instagram on May 10 to celebrate Mother’s Day with a handful of photos of her children. The Gist ...
Chris Rea interview: BBC cut me from Rugby Special while I was in cancer remission

“I would say they were the six of the happiest years of my working life.” The velvet voice is just as I remember it. Chris Rea may have spent the majority of his 82 years living in England, but the warmth of his Dundonian accent still resonates as it did four decades earlier when he was a regular fixture for rugby supporters – including me – across the country as presenter ofBBC’sRugby Specialprogramme.

The Telegraph Chris Rea, former Scotland and Lions centre, who used to present Rugby Special

They were the best of times. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, rugby union was edging slowly but inexorably towards professionalism but the players were still amateurs with rich life stories to tell. The programme captured those with intimacy and colour, while providing highlights of the best of the club game and the international stage and offered a platform to debate major talking points.

Even now, hearing the first few bars of the show’s theme tune (quiz night answer, it wasHoly Mackerelby the Shadows’ drummer, Brian Bennett) evokes memories of mud-soaked Sunday afternoons on the unmissable highlights show on BBC Two.

Rea, the former Headingley, Scotland andBritish and Irish Lionscentre, was at the heart of it, presenting the show in its heyday years between 1988 and 1994. He remembers it all like it was yesterday.

“We were opposite theAntiques Roadshow[on BBC One] and followedSki Sunday,” Rea recalls, with a chuckle, from his home in a village near Newmarket. “It was a wonderful time. I am so chuffed you remember it because it’s very tempting to believe that none of the current generation of players think that rugby existed before 1995. It was great fun. In our day, the game was for the players... Now, of course, the game is about entertainment.”

Rea had found great joy himself as a player, winning 13 caps forScotland. He scored a try (which features on the classic video101 Best Tries) in what is regarded as one of the greatest games ever played in the old Five Nations: Wales’ 19-18 victory at Murrayfield played in front of an estimated crowd of 90,000.

In the final round of the championship, he famously scored the last-gasp winning try in the 16-15 victory against England at Twickenham, their first in 33 years. Just a week later he starred in another victory over England, this time at Murrayfield in the centenary match to mark the first match between the two sides, at Raeburn in 1871.

Later that year Rea, whose middle names are “William Wallace”, was selected for the Lions’ historic tour of New Zealand, making 10 appearances and scoring three tries against provincial sides, with the Test side clinching the series 2-1.

Lions’ tours in those days lasted four months, and when he returned Rea, who was then working for the BBC as an administrator in Leeds – where he had played for Headingley alongside the then England captain John Spencer and Sir Ian McGeechan – retired from the game.

Chris Rea for the British and Irish Lions in 1971

He was posted to London and offered a six-month attachment to the BBC Radio sports department. The six months lasted nine years. Seeking new challenges in the media, Rea was appointed rugby and golf correspondent ofThe Scotsmanin Edinburgh but Johnnie Watherston, brother of former Scotland flanker Rory, was appointed to head up the BBC’s director and producer of rugby programmes, approached him to start doing some interviews forRugby Special,he had no hesitation in accepting. It would prove a life-changing moment, but one that ultimately ended in difficult circumstances.

“At the time, Nigel Starmer-Smith was having to do everything – he was interviewing people, he was doing the presentation from places like the ladies’ toilet at Orrell, and it was all done on a Saturday night. At the timeRugby Specialwas probably the graveyard shift, if you were working on it, you probably knew you were not going to become the BBC’s director general.

“Then Johnnie Watherston was appointed and he asked me if I would do a few interviews. One thing led to another and he asked if I would think of presenting the programme. I told him nothing would give me greater pleasure but that I won’t be doing it on a freezing Saturday night outside the clubhouse at Orrell or Harlequins or wherever, and stitching things together. Johnnie did a tremendous job persuading Jonathan Martin, who was the head of sport, that if we were going to build this programme up, it had to be studio-based, with guests, news from overseas and it had to be presented the following day.

“We had a fantastic producer called Sue Roberts who came up with brilliant ideas and features, and the programme was transformed from something pretty basic, and the audience figures started to go up and up and up.”

Chris Rea presenting Rugby Special

Rea recalls taking a call from the late Malcolm Pearce, the former newspaper wholesaler and farmer who was the benefactor that helped establish the great Bath side of the 1980s and 1990s.

“Malcolm was the start of the great Bath sides and would give players like Mike Catt and Gareth Chilcott genuine jobs and built up the team,” Rea added. “He phoned me up one day and said ‘Chris, I have got a young lad here who is definitely going to go to rugby league because he is a bricklayer at the moment. But we would love to keep him at Bath and wondered if you might be able to do something on him. His name is Jeremy Guscott.’

“I asked what his interests were and Malcolm said he was a very good-looking guy and he loved clothes. I took it to Johnnie, and he came up with the idea of bringing in the people who producedThe Clothes Showand giving Guscott a big make-over. It was hilarious. Malcolm had said that Guscott was “very shy” – how things change – so he decided to get Chilcott, who was most definitely not shy, to drive him up, and be his minder. It was like something out of the showStars in Your Eyeswhen the guests would say ‘Tonight Matthew, I am going to be…’ Guscott went off and came back a changed man, preening in this gorgeous outfit. It was one of the funniest and most successful programmes.

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“Another memorable feature took us to St Andrew’s University to do a feature with Damian Hopley, who was studying there, and Neil Back, who was an incredible athlete. Back had been told at the time that he was too small for top international honours, but his argument that extra weight would adversely affect his speed and ball-playing skills, which he expressed forcefully on the programme, won the day. They were great days.

“The days when the game was for the players, not the spectators. When Jonathan Webb, the England full-back, who had a shocker against France at Twickenham, was given a hero’s ovation at Cardiff the next week after it was revealed that he had been performing a surgical operation and had not slept for 36 hours before the French game. The players were amateurs and it was accepted that theyhad other things that occupied their lives.”

TheRugby Specialaudiences soared. When Cornwall defeated Yorkshire in the county championship in 1991, Rea says the audience forRugby Specialthe following day hit two million viewers – from a low-point of 200,000 before the overhaul – and when England beat New Zealand at Twickenham in 1993, it reached 2.2 million.

Yet by far the greatest achievement of all is the fact that for a full year of broadcasting, Rea was secretly undergoing cancer treatment having been diagnosed with bowel, liver and lymph node cancer, having been told in 1993 that he only had a five per cent survival chance within the next five years if the surgery was not successful.

“Thirty-three years ago, that was a death sentence,” he recalls. “I am only here because of a specialist bowel colorectal surgeon called Alan Wells. I underwent surgery in the Fitzwilliam Hospital in Peterborough. I had to go privately to get a certain type of chemotherapy treatment that had just come from the US and was successfully trialled there.”

Instead of a short course of chemo, his treatment lasted 52 weeks. “I said I would do it if I could keep going with the programme,” he added. “They said I wouldn’t lose what hair I had left but would put on weight. We came to an agreement that if there was any change to my physical state, then I would be the first to say, ‘this is not on.’ You can’t have someone looking like death warmed up presenting a sports programme.

“I felt dreadful every Monday and for a couple days after but by the end of the week I was okay. I put weight on because of the effect of the steroids, but nobody would have known, and that was a source of great pride.”

His treatment was ongoing when he travelled to New Zealand in 1993 for the Lions tour, which back then involved covering 13 matches over three months.

“I went off with a suitcase full of drugs and I remember thinking, ‘How am I going to work this?’ The staff at the Fitzwilliam told me that whatever town I arrived in, I had to contact the nearest hospital. I remember my first one, sitting in a pretty basic waiting room and being greeted by a trainee nurse. At the Fitzwilliam, I was treated as a star patient because no-one had ever been through the 52-week treatment. Apparently they had been using the treatment for years in New Zealand. I was staggered.”

Earlier that year Bobby Moore died of a similar condition, and even now Rea thinks about how lucky he was to survive. “I remember thinking I should have been more grateful to the Almighty, but I had an 11-year-old daughter and a family to look after, so I had to keep working.”

The elation of going into remission, however, was later replaced with the acute disappointment when he was told the following year that the production ofRugby Specialwas going to be outsourced to an independent company and that his services would no longer be required.

“I was devastated. Johnnie lost his job too. I hadn’t sought any additional support from the BBC during my illness. It was a real blow for me. I was sorry thatRugby Specialdid go downhill a bit and they took it a different way. That’s fine, you always get to the end of a success story and things need changing, but I think it was the BBC that lost interest in rugby more than anything else. It was also a result and a consequence of professionalism.”

After losing his presenting job with the BBC, he was part of ITV’s commentary team at the 1995 World Cup in South Africa, which he ranks along with England’s victory in 2003 as the two best tournaments. As rugby correspondent forThe Independent on Sunday, he also was not afraid to make a stand in the early days of professionalism, putting him at odds with the club owners by advocating former RFU chairman Chris Brittle’s unsuccessful vision for the top players in England to be offered central contracts by the RFU. He feels England are still paying the price now.

“I think that despite the fantastic resources in playing numbers and funding, I would very much doubt if England would have one player in a composite Six Nations side this season and that is terrible, really,” added Rea, who went on to work for the International Rugby Board [now World Rugby] as it head of communications.

“I say that not because I am a Scot, far from it because I have spent most of my life down here and enjoyed England’s three great sides – Billy Beaumont’s, Will Carling’s and the 2003 World Cup side. At the time Fran Cotton and Clive Woodward were fully supportive of the Brittle plan because they realised that going down the club route was always going to be a problem.

“The idea was that the clubs would retain their identity and support, but that the top players would be to the RFU and the primacy of the international game was paramount. In my view that hasn’t changed. Every time England take the field, they should be favourites, like New Zealand. They should have an aura about them. I think it is vital for the world game that England – and I say this as a Scot – are always up there. Just getting to finals is not enough. The 2003 final was compelling. It was wonderful but they have never really regained that aura of invincibility.”

Chris Rea interview: BBC cut me from Rugby Special while I was in cancer remission

“I would say they were the six of the happiest years of my working life.” The velvet voice is just as I remember it. Chris Rea may have...
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Law Murray:LeBron James: "None of us know what the future holds... and I don't either. Like I said, I'll take time to recalibrate and see what's best for my future"

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David Allan Coe, maverick country star known for his wild life and working-class anthems

David Allan Coe, who has died aged 86, was a maverick country music singer known for his wild tales of prison life and working-class anthems You Never Even Called Me by My Name and Take This Job and Shove It; he was a pioneer of the “outlaw” movement which bristled against Nashville’s conservatism and conformism.

The Telegraph David Allan Coe performing in Austin, Texas, in 2017

A broad, physically intimidating man who could often rub people up the wrong way, Coe arrived in the Tennessee city in 1967, keen to make it as a country music star despite being a self-declared “long-haired redneck” (though the flowing mane that was a feature of his later stage shows was a 3ft-long blonde wig).

He lived for a time in a hearse, perpetually parked outside the Ryman Auditorium, where he would don elaborate rhinestone outfits and a Lone Ranger-style mask and busk for gullible passers-by who believed he had just come off stage.

Six years after arriving in Music City, Coe hit the big time thanks to Tanya Tucker’s cover of Would You Lay With Me (in a Field of Stone), which went to No 1 in the country charts. Coe signed with Columbia and released his major-label debut, The Mysterious Rhinestone Cowboy, in 1974. It included I Still Sing the Old Songs, and a cover ofGuy Clark’s country staple Desperados Waiting for the Train (later popularised by the Highwaymen supergroup consisting of Coe’s fellow outlawsWaylon Jennings, Willie Nelson,Johnny CashandKris Kristofferson).

But it was the album Once Upon a Rhyme, released a year later, that gave Coe his imperishable hit, You Never Even Called Me by My Name. Written by Steve Goodman andJohn Prine, it was a self-knowing send-up of honky tonk stereotypes involving trucks, beer and dysfunctional families: “I was drunk the day my mom got out of prison/ And I went to pick her up in the rain/ But before I could get to the station in my pick-up truck/ She got runned over by a damned old train”. The song remains a jukebox staple in bars across the Southern US, and lived up to its cocky, spoken-word interlude declaring it the “perfect country and Western song”.

Coe in 1975 dressed as The Mysterious Rhinestone Cowboy

That bristling self-assuredness inflected all of Coe’s music, from his Hank Williams-inspired journeyman epic The Ride in 1983 to Son of the South (1986), in which he reels off a list of his all-time favourite artists – Hank Williams Jr, the Allman Brothers Band, Lynyrd Skynyrd, and “David Allan Coe” himself – and, finally, Willie, Waylon and Me (1987), in which he muscled in on Nelson and Jennings’s famous friendship.

It was a pointed dig at his fellow outlaws whom he considered more a part of the country music establishment; those peers, for their part, often suggested that Coe had a tendency to self-mythologise – and at points he claimed to have more than 300 tattoos, and be a practising Mormon and a polygamist.

Jennings in particular struggled with Coe’s abrasive, confrontational edge, and once said he would “stab you in the back and then ride off your name like he’s your best friend.”Shelby Singleton, the producer who discovered Coe, told Rolling Stone in 1976 that “Ninety per cent of what he tells you is probably bulls***t.”

Coe took issue with those who refused to acknowledge his influence: he was the first mainstream country artist to have an all-female backing band, Ladysmith (a milestone which was later wrongly attributed to Dolly Parton’s early collaborator Porter Wagoner).

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David Allan Coe was born on September 6 1939 to Donald Coe and Dorothy, née Wilson, in Akron, Ohio, an industrial city then known as the Rubber Capital of the World. His childhood was impoverished and unhappy, ruled by his violent, drunken father, who worked at Goodyear Tires, and he was sent to a reform facility aged nine.

Two decades in correctional facilities followed, including three years at the Ohio State Penitentiary in Youngstown, where he faced charges for grand theft auto and possession of burglary tools. He later claimed that, while incarcerated, he killed a fellow inmate with a mop bucket after the inmate made homosexual advances in the communal showers, but this was later debunked; he also met the shock-rock pioneer Screamin’ Jay Hawkins, of I Put A Spell on You fame, who encouraged him to start singing.

Coe's 2005 compilation album

Prison left its mark on Coe: his first album, Penitentiary Blues, was released in 1970. Five years later, he reflected on how he had found solace in the system: “There were a lot of times when I would actually be in the county jail after being busted and I’d wake up the next morning and say to myself: ‘Oh I’m glad it’s over; I’m glad I’m going back to prison now, where I know I’ll be safe, where I’ll be out of society.’”

It was a fellow outlaw pioneer who earned Coe his most lucrative hit. In 1977, the aptly namedJohnny Paycheckhad a No 1 with a cover of Coe’s blue-collar anthem Take This Job and Shove It, which inspired the 1981 film of the same name, starring Robert Hays andArt Carney.

Coe’s commercial success began to plateau following his controversial albums Nothing Sacred (1978) and Underground Album (1982) – later reissued together as 18 X-Rated Hits – which were criticised for containing racist slurs and sexist stereotypes. Coe addressed the controversy in 2004, telling the website Swampland: “Anyone that would look at me and say I was a racist would have to be out of their mind.” It was not until his 1983 album Castles in the Sand – which contained The Ride – that Coe was welcomed back into the fold in Nashville.

Decades of obscure albums and purposely uncommercial projects ensued, including a pornographic novel. Late-life Coe was known mostly for his wizened, plaited beard and angry stage presence, as well as collaborations with the metal band Pantera and fellow country controversy-magnet, Kid Rock.

His final two decades were marred by financial struggles. In 2007, there were reports that he owed more than $290,000 in child support to his ex-wife Jody Lynn Coe (he was married six times), with whom he shares four children, including the country music podcaster Tyler Mahan Coe. Coe pleaded guilty to tax evasion in 2015 and was sentenced to three years’ probation and ordered to repay almost $1 million to the authorities.

He is survived by his sixth wife, Kimberley.

David Allan Coe, born September 6 1939, died April 29 2026

David Allan Coe, maverick country star known for his wild life and working-class anthems

David Allan Coe, who has died aged 86, was a maverick country music singer known for his wild tales of prison life and working-class an...
Marks Construction named Small and Emerging Business of the Year

Louisiana Economic Development announced Marks Construction in Donaldsonville was among the five businesses honored at the 2026 Spotlight Louisiana Awards in Baton Rouge.

USA TODAY

Owner Jay Marks and his family were in attendance as his company received the statewide award for Small and Emerging Business of the Year.

"Construction is about more than the things we can see," he saidin a videoshared to LED's YouTube page. "It's about the things we can feel, and about the progress and the memories we make."

Previously a strength and conditioning coach for the Tulane University football team in New Orleans, Marks said in the video he made a leap of faith to start a construction business.

As he recalled, the first years were not easy.

"But I had a praying wife, and I had a state in Louisiana that believed in me," Marks said in the video. "And we have not looked back."

As the business has grown, it has no longer been limited to taking small jobs.

Louisiana Economic Development, partners and small business leaders from across the state gathered for the 2026 Spotlight Louisiana Awards.

"I want to establish something that my own children will be proud to operate one day because family is my why," he said. "This isn't just about projects to me. It's about legacy. And excellence - that's our standard. I always told my players, 'When we focus on the details and the fundamentals, the results will speak for themselves. And now my team approaches every job with strong discipline, clear communication and a championship mindset."

He concluded, "At Marks Construction, we're not just making homes and buildings, we are building community."

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Spotlight Louisiana Awards

The awards ceremony celebrated five companies whose innovation, leadership and investment have created opportunity throughout the state, according to an LED news release.

The Louisiana Growth Network, a division of LED, celebrates the event annually to recognize entrepreneurs and employers leading the state's economic momentum.

"As a former small business owner, I know what it takes to build something from the ground up," Gov. Jeff Landry said in the release. "The companies recognized at Spotlight Louisiana represent the hard work, innovation and determination moving Louisiana forward, and my administration is committed to making sure Louisiana small businesses are connected to the opportunities being created across our state."

Per the release, small businesses employ 54 percent of the state's workforce.

Award winners

The 2026 Spotlight Louisiana award winners were:

  • Small and Emerging Business of the Year, Marks Construction, Donaldsonville

  • Excellence in Entrepreneurial Leadership, Additive Innovators, New Iberia

  • Innovative Company of the Year, OS BENEFiTS, New Orleans

  • Source Louisiana Vendor of the Year, Parish Aggregates, Baton Rouge

  • Spotlight Louisiana Business of the Year, Fire & Safety Specialists, Maurice

Parter awards recognized businesses and small businesses whose work reflected the reach of the state's small business support network, which included:

  • Louisiana APEX Accelerator Government Contractor of the Year, Tunica-Biloxi Services, LLC, Marksville

  • Louisiana Small Business Development Center Excellence in Business Award, Apocalypse Sports, Ponchatoula

  • National Federation of Independent Business Louisiana Small Business Champion, Lott Oil Company, Natchitoches

SBA champions included:

  • Entrepreneurial Success Award, Sweet Kravings Donuts, Gray

  • Family-Owned Small Business of the Year, Washington Building Services, New Orleans

  • Veteran Small Business Champion of the Year, Miles for Smiles LLC, Shreveport

  • Women in Business Champion, Hatten & Hays Mobile Bookstore LLC, Monroe

  • Rural Small Business of the Year, Summit Bike Academy, Ponchatoula

  • Small Business Development Center of Excellence and Innovation Award, LSBDC at Southeastern Louisiana University, Hammond

  • Small Business Person of the Year, Jordanna and Louis Coleman Sr., LC Transport Services LLC, Prairieville

Michael Tortorich is a journalist for the USA Today Network in Louisiana.

Gonzales Weekly Citizen and Donaldsonville Chief, part of the USA Today Network of Louisiana, cover Ascension Parish and the greater Baton Rouge area. Follow atfacebook.com/WeeklyCitizenandfacebook.com/DonaldsonvilleChief.

This article originally appeared on Gonzales Weekly Citizen:Donaldsonville business awarded Small and Emerging Business of Year

Marks Construction named Small and Emerging Business of the Year

Louisiana Economic Development announced Marks Construction in Donaldsonville was among the five businesses honored at the 2026 Spotlig...
‘Saved by the Bell’ Star Tiffani Thiessen’s Lookalike Daughter Could Be a Mini-Kelly Kapowski

Tiffani Thiessenrose to stardom onSaved by the Bellin her teens as Kelly Kapowski, and now her young daughter looks just like her.

Parade

Thiessen, 52, played the iconic Bayside High cheerleader on the beloved teensitcomfrom 1989 to 1993, and continued her role as Kapowski on the short-lived seriesSaved by the Bell: The College Years. Her character finally married Zack Morris inSaved by the Bell: Wedding in Las Vegasin 1994. (Yes, over 30 years ago!) Of course, her post-Saved by the Bellyears led Thiessen not too far away from Bayside High. She landed onBeverly Hills, 90210as the troublemaker Valerie Malone, where she caused chaos for 5 seasons before departing. These days, Thiessen is thriving as a social media influencer and actress known for sharing her delicious recipes online. However, the proud mama took to Instagram for Mother's Day to celebrate her favorite role: mother.

"My most cherished role…. being their mother ❤️ Happy Mother’s Day to all who nurture, mentor, and love," Thiessen captioned the photo, which showed her alongside her children,HarperandHolt. One look at her daughter, Harper, and it's safe to say the apple didn't fall far from the tree. Her daughter could play Kelly Kapowski in a newSaved by the Bellreboot!

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Will They Reboot Saved by the Bell Again?

Saved by the Bellwas back in action… for a short amount of time, at least. A reboot of the series aired on Peacock for two seasons from November 2020 to December 2021, and starred Thiessen as her beloved character, who was still married to her longtime love, Zack Morris. However, the reboot didn’t stick. When asked if she thought another one was possible, Thiessen spoke candidly.

“I don’t think so. I think they tried it,” she toldPEOPLElast year. Even though it didn’t last, Thiessen made it clear she “loved the reboot.”

“It only lasted two seasons, sadly,” she added. “[But] who knows? There are other shows that are in my sort of realm that are further along in possibly getting a reboot.”

Related: ‘Saved by the Bell’ Star Tiffani Thiessen Turns 52 and Is Even More Stunning Than Her Kelly Kapowski Days

This story was originally published byParadeon May 11, 2026, where it first appeared in theNewssection. Add Parade as aPreferred Source by clicking here.

‘Saved by the Bell’ Star Tiffani Thiessen’s Lookalike Daughter Could Be a Mini-Kelly Kapowski

Tiffani Thiessenrose to stardom onSaved by the Bellin her teens as Kelly Kapowski, and now her young daughter looks just like her. ...

 

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