Meatball Street Brawl 2 is THIS SUNDAY

Join us for the second annual Meatball Street Brawl on September 17 at Osteria 166.

Osteria is shutting down Mohawk St. and inviting 20 of the best meatball purveyors in town to put their meatballs where your mouth is. Ok, that’s weird. But you get our point.

The Bill’s game will be on a large screen. The meatballs will be many. There will be beer and wine and bread and antacid.

Proceeds go to local charities and you get a chance to tailgate for a road game.

Hope to see you here. Come hungry.

NOTE: Be sure to watch Nick and Lou visit participating restaurants and talk smack all week leading up to Sunday.  right here only on WNYmedia.net!!

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Republicans made a ‘tacit admission’ about midterms — and it could blow up in their face



A conservative columnist warned on Monday that her Republican colleagues just made a "tacit admission" about the 2026 midterms that could blow up in their face.

S.E. Cupp, a columnist for CNN, said during a segment on "The Source" with host Kaitlan Collins that Republicans have all but admitted that they don't stand a chance during the midterms with their push for mid-cycle redistricting. While those efforts seem to have paid off so far, Cupp warned that they could energize the Democratic base in a way that thwarts all the time Republicans spent trying to rig the election in their favor.

"Here's the thing that I think is important to point out if you care about democracy," Cupp said. "The republicans have done what they've done because they've been allowed to. But it's also a tacit admission that they know they cannot win without rigging it. They're out of ideas. They're not even attempting to win new voters or win back the voters that they've been losing since gaining them in 2024."

Several Republican states from Texas to Louisiana and Tennessee have adopted new election maps ahead of the midterms in an effort to preserve the Republican majority in the House of Representatives and the Senate.

Cupp warned that voters can see through the Republicans' plans, and that may cause them to backfire in November.

"So this is the giddiness and the crowing I'm seeing from republicans about the state of the redistricting math and how it's helping Republicans," she said. "What they're not saying out loud is what I think a lot of voters can see, which is you had to rig it to make yourself competitive. And I don't even know if this will still make them competitive. They might actually be handing Democrats an advantage by really ginning up that base, firing them up to go and vote."