Report: Bills, TE Dawson Knox agree to 3-year contract

Tight end Dawson Knox is staying in Buffalo, agreeing to a three-year contract extension with the Bills, according to multiple reports Tuesday.

Field Level Media

While contract details were not immediately available, the contract is believed to restructure his current deal to lower his scheduled $17 million salary cap number. His existing contract had one year remaining.

Speaking in January on "Monday Mornings With Mitch," the podcast of former Bills center Mitch Morse, Knox said he anticipated the team to make changes to his contract.

"I know they want to bring me back, however they can't know right now what the cap is going to be, how much money they'll have to spend, what the market will be for tight ends," Knox said. "Whether they'll want to keep me under my current contact for one more year, or try to work out some type of extension."

Knox, 29, said he communicated to the front office that he and his family have made Buffalo their home and he wanted to remain with the Bills.

Buffalo selected Knox in the third round of the 2019 NFL Draft.

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In 102 career games (83 starts), Knox has 229 catches for 2,694 yards with 27 touchdown receptions.

Last season, he appeared in all 17 games (12 starts) and caught 35 passes for 417 yards and four touchdowns.

In other news on Tuesday, kicker Tyler Bass agreed to a revised contract, taking a $1.5 million pay cut for a guaranteed $1 million with a chance to earn up to $3.5 million in 2026 counting incentives, according to multiple reports.

Bass, 29, missed the entire 2025 season due to a hip and groin injury that led to surgery. He signed a four-year, $21 million contract extension in April 2023 that included more than $12 million in guarantees.

For his career, Bass is 131 of 155 (84.5%) on field-goal attempts and 264 of 274 (96.4%) on extra-point attempts in 83 regular-season games for the Bills from 2020-24. He also is 18-for-23 on field goals and 33-for-36 on extra points in 12 playoff games.

Buffalo selected Bass in the sixth round of the 2020 NFL Draft out of Georgia Southern.

--Field Level Media

Report: Bills, TE Dawson Knox agree to 3-year contract

Tight end Dawson Knox is staying in Buffalo, agreeing to a three-year contract extension with the Bills, according to ...
Reports: Patriots reel in WR Romeo Doubs on $80M deal

Wide receiver Romeo Doubs agreed to a four-year deal worth up to $80 million with the New England Patriots on Tuesday, according to multiple reports.

Field Level Media

Doubs, 25, had 202 catches in four seasons with the Packers and two huge playoff performances.

He nearly helped the Packers take down the Bears in January with eight receptions for 124 yards in a wild-card loss at Chicago. Doubs, a fourth-round pick in 2022, set his career marks in a 2023 wild-card win at Dallas that included a touchdown and 151 receiving yards.

The Patriots are set to release Stefon Diggs following one season in New England. Diggs had a team-leading 85 receptions in 2025, when no other wide receiver on the roster had more than Mack Hollins' 46 catches.

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Doubs recorded 55 catches for a career-high 724 yards with six touchdowns in 2025. Three of his touchdowns came in a tie game with Dallas.

But the Packers are walking a tightrope with the salary cap and already committed to a one-year extension with fellow 2022 draft classmate Christian Watson. Watson was a second-round pick (34th overall) in 2022.

Green Bay also used its 2025 first-round draft pick on wide receiver Matthew Golden, and Jayden Reed is entering the final year of his rookie contract. Reed was targeted 75 times to Doubs' 72 when both were healthy in 2024. Reed missed most of last season with collarbone and foot injuries but led the Packers in receptions in 2024 with 55.

The Patriots drafted a wide receiver with their second-round pick in 2022, but Tyquan Thornton (50th overall) was released midseason in 2024. He played last season with the Chiefs and re-signed with Kansas City on Monday.

--Field Level Media

Reports: Patriots reel in WR Romeo Doubs on $80M deal

Wide receiver Romeo Doubs agreed to a four-year deal worth up to $80 million with the New England Patriots on Tuesday,...
Stephen A Smith reveals devastating moment his father said he would never 'be anything'

Sports commentatorStephen A. Smithopened up about the devastating comment from his father that changed his life and motivated his rise.

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Now a successful ESPN commentator and influential media voice, Smith once was told he would never amount to anything. He recalled the moment on the"Hang Out with Sean Hannity"podcast, saying he overheard his parents discussing his intelligence.

"My father said, 'He's just not smart. You know he's not going to be anything, and you just need to accept that right now,' and when my mother turned around and saw me seeing him say that, she was aghast," Smith told Hannity on the podcast's premiere.

"She was appalled and all of that stuff, and he just shrugged his shoulders and turned around and walked away," he added.

Stephen A Smith Warns Democrats 'I Ain't Giving You Anything,' Challenges Them To Earn Black Votes

Stephen A. Smith speaks at HOPE Global Forum.

Smith revealed in his memoir"Straight Shooter"that he suffered from undiagnosed dyslexia and has spoken about his struggles with reading. While he was a talented speaker, reading comprehension remained a struggle. He told Hannity the cold comments from his father came after he washeld back from advancing a gradein school for the second time.

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"My mother thought that was going to [be] something that was incredibly devastating for me, and it hurt. I'm not denying that it did. But something inside of me just was motivated to prove him wrong," said Smith.

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Stephen A. Smith speaks

He also revealed he was ridiculed by neighborhood kids for being held back in school.

Carville Doubles Down On Urging Ilhan Omar To Leave The Democratic Party After She Blasted White Males

"That memory still stays with me because when I got left back the second time, and this time permanently held back for the whole year, I'm sitting on the back porch, and I'm crying because I'mbeing laughed at and ridiculedby the kids in the neighborhood because all kids can be very cruel," he said.

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Smith was the first guest onFox News anchor Sean Hannity's new twice-weekly podcast, released Tuesday. Also on the podcast, Smithshut down rumorshe may consider running for president in 2028.

Speaking with Hannity, he said if he has to "give up money, it's not happening." The Democrat also noted he would be willing to vote for Secretary of StateMarco Rubioover some other prominent Democrats.

Original article source:Stephen A Smith reveals devastating moment his father said he would never 'be anything'

Stephen A Smith reveals devastating moment his father said he would never 'be anything'

Sports commentatorStephen A. Smithopened up about the devastating comment from his father that changed his life and motiv...

A strange pattern acrossSabrina Carpenter's music videoswas hotly discussed online.

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Netizens made claims of double standards after they noticed that the 26-year-old singer's videos had a specific rule: the men rarely survive.

"What would happen if a male artist did this to women?" one asked online, while another wrote, "Imagine the outrage if the roles were reversed."

Once again, viewers have been discussing a strange pattern across Sabrina Carpenter's music videos

Image credits:Nina Westervelt/Getty Images

Sabrina Carpenter's music videos have an exaggerated way of storytelling, where men don't seem to be very safe.

Her hit tracks likeTaste,Tears,Feather, andManchilddepict male characters meeting violent ends, but in a comical and dark-humor kind of way.

TheGrammy winner herselfhas addressed the running gag in her video on a few occasions.

Image credits:Sabrina Carpenter

"In the Sabrina Cinematic Universe, women never d*e. Men, unfortunately, suffer most of the loss," Carpenter said in a behind-the-scenes video for her music videoTaste, where she was seen goinghead-to-head with Jenna Ortegaover a man.

The gory music video forTasteshowed several violent ways through which Carpenter and Ortega tried to un-alive each other to win the boyfriend, but nothing stops them.

Netizens made claims of double standards after noticing a specific rule in Carpenter's videos: the men rarely survive

Image credits:Sabrina Carpenter

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Even after getting impaled by a white picket fence and using a voodoo doll to set the other on fire, the women keep going.

Finally, it is the boyfriend who gets caught up in the violence and meets an unlucky end.

"This video, in particular, it's almost comical how the women still don't d*e," Carpenter said in the behind-the-scenes video.

Image credits:Sabrina Carpenter

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In the 2023 songFeather, severalmen were permanently cutoff in violent but creatively shown ways.

A group of men following and catcalling her in the video were seen unexpectedly getting hit by a truck, "Final Destination"-style.

In another scene, a bunch of gym bros were trying to impress her but ended up fighting each other to d**th.

Yet another scene in theFeathervideo showed a man, who was ogling her in an elevator, getting decapitated after Carpenter jams his tie in the elevator door.

Some men were hit by a truck "Final Destination"-style, while another man was decapitated in an elevator in one of her videos

Image credits:Sabrina Carpenter

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The Sabrina Carpenter universe continued being dangerous for men in her 2025 songManchild, where a man was seen plunging off a cliff in a car.

The car went through numerous flips on the way down, and it certainly didn't seem like a fun way to go.

Carpenter has even addressed the recurring joke in a music video itself.

InTears, from herlatest albumMan's Best Friend, the singer wakes up from a car accident and presumes her boyfriend lost his life in the crash.

However, by the end of the video, her boyfriend wakes up and stumbles towards her, saying: "baby, I'm so glad you're okay."

"In the Sabrina Cinematic Universe, women never d*e. Men, unfortunately, suffer most of the loss," the Grammy winner said

Image credits:Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images

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"Wait, no," a surprised Carpenter says. "You di*d earlier, I thought."

"It's a thing, someone has to d*e in every video. We'll always remember you though," she added as she took off her stiletto and hurled it at her boyfriend.

The boyfriend tragically drops to the ground after the heel strikes him right in his chest.

Image credits:Sabrina Carpenter

"You have to give the people what they want," Carpenter nonchalantly says.

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Over the last few days, the pattern in theEspressosinger's videos wasbrought up for debateonline.

Fans believed the violent moments were simply an exaggerated, tongue-in-cheek way of telling stories. But critics argued that the running gag would be treated very differently if the genders were reversed.

Netizens said the running gag would be treated very differently if the genders were reversed

Image credits:Sabrina Carpenter

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"Grammy winning artist Sabrina Carpenter is under backlash from music fans for constantly k*lling men in her music videos," one said.

"Imagine if a male artist made a music video showing women getting deleted and beaten up. He would be cancelled in a day," said another. "But a woman artist can literally delete men and nobody cares? Never tell me again that misandry doesn't exist."

Image credits:Sabrina Carpenter

"Imagine if the roles were reversed. If a male artist made a career out of k*lling women in music videos, he'd be deplatformed in an hour," wrote another. "But since it's female aura farming, we call it art? The hypocrisy is exhausting."

People on the other side of the argument said, "Some of you saying 'if a man do this you will cancel him.' Actually men do it all the time IN REAL LIFE to women and girls!!!!"

"Her music videos turning into true crime episodes at this point," read one comment

"This is the glow-up we needed after years of male gaze music videos," said another. "Sabrina said 'if y'all can glorify violence against women in every other genre, I can make it camp and slay' Aura maxed."

"Never been a big Sabrina Carpenter fan, but the heel turning into a shuriken is pure art," another said.

Carpenter released her albumMan's Best Friendin August and has so far not officially announced a standaloneMan's Best Friendworld tour. She is nevertheless performing at music festivals over the next couple of months.

"Double standards in full effect… men would be cancelled instantly, women get a free pass," one critic commented online

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“The Hypocrisy Is Exhausting”: Sabrina Carpenter’s Men-Related Pattern In Videos Sparks Outrage

A strange pattern acrossSabrina Carpenter's music videoswas hotly discussed online. Netizens made claims of...

 

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