Did You Know ‘Dallas’ Star Patrick Duffy Scored a Huge Hit Single?

Patrick Duffyis best known to fans for his career-altering role as Bobby Ewing onDallas, but did you know that he also scored a huge hit single overseas?

Taste of Country ©Angela Weiss, Getty Images

Did Patrick Duffy Have a Singing Career?

The actor teamed with French pop superstar Mireille Mathieu in 1983 for a duet titled “Together We’re Strong.”

Duffy’s vocal performance on the track alternated between spoken word and singing, revealing the fact that while he’s a singer with limited range and power, his basic singing voice is relatively pleasing.

The song was a smash hit in multiple countries. It reached No. 5 in France, No. 4 in Belgium, and No. 2 in both the Netherlands and Finland.

Listen to Patrick Duffy and Mirielle Mathieu’s “Together We’re Strong”:

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Who Is Patrick Duffy?

Duffy played Bobby Ewing on the iconic dramaDallasduring the show’s run from 1978-1991.

READ MORE:Patrick Duffy Sells Breathtaking Oregon Estate

Before that, he starred onThe Man From Atlantis, and he’s continued his acting career in the decades sinceDallaswent off the air.

Duffy reprised the role of Bobby Ewing in a 2012 reboot of the show, as well as several TV movies.

He’s also landed major roles onStep by StepandThe Bold and the Beautiful.

What Is Patrick Duffy Doing Today?

His wife of more than 40 years, ballet dancer Carlyn Rosser, died in 2017 after battling cancer, and in 2020, Duffy began anunexpected new relationshipwithHappy Daysstar Linda Purl.

Purl played Richie Cunningham’s girlfriend Gloria on Happy Days in a small appearance in 1974, then returned to the show from 1982-1983 in the featured role of Fonzie’s girlfriend, Ashley Pfister.

Did You Know ‘Dallas’ Star Patrick Duffy Scored a Huge Hit Single?

Patrick Duffyis best known to fans for his career-altering role as Bobby Ewing onDallas, but did you know that he also scored a huge hi...
Giants ace Logan Webb goes on 15-day IL with right knee bursitis, ending consecutive start streak

The San Francisco Giants aretied for the worst record in the National League(and second-worst mark in MLB) and now have to endure without their ace starting pitcher.

Yahoo Sports

Logan Webb was placed on the 15-day injured list with right knee bursitis,the team announcedon Saturday. The move is retroactive to May 6, following Webb’s start against the San Diego Padres during which he lasted just four innings. He allowed six runs and seven hits inthe Giants’ 10-5 loss.

After the game, Webb acknowledged that he’s been dealing with an issue in his right knee yet didn’t allow that to excuse his performance.

“I’ve dealt with it for a little while, but it’s still no excuse,” he said,via MLB.com’s Henry Schulman.

The eight-year veteran has allowed four or more runs in three of his eight starts this season, indicating that his knee has been bothering him for longer than he was willing to admit.

However, Webb going on the IL is notable. The right-hander has made 156 consecutive starts without missing his turn in the Giants’ rotation, a streak dating back to 2021. He’s made 32 or more starts in each of the past four seasons.

Giants manager Tony Vitello indicated that Webb going on the IL was for his own good, allowing him to take four or five days off beyond his usual turn in the rotation and not try to make his next start due to his competitive nature.

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“Webby, when he’s out of uniform, he’s a little more rational,” Vitello told reporters (via 95.7 The Game). “You know how competitive he is. Better to keep the long run in mind or the runway of the season that’s still left over.”

Last season was the best of Webb’s career, finishing with a 3.22 ERA in 34 starts. He threw 207 innings and struck out 224 batters. Webb took that success into this year’s World Baseball Classic, in which he allowed only one run in two starts with 11 strikeouts in 8 2/3 innings.

Giants call up two players from Triple-A Sacramento

To fill his spot on their roster, the Giants called up Trevor McDonald from Triple-A Sacramento. In five appearances (four starts) for the River Cats, he compiled a 5.40 ERA with 12 strikeouts and 15 walks in 15 innings.

McDonald, 25, returns to the Giants after making one start for them on Monday. He earned a win inSan Francisco’s 3-2 victoryover the Padres, allowing one run and two hits with eight strikeouts over seven innings.

Despite that performance, he was sent back down to Sacramento in favor of reliever Joel Peguero. McDonald’s appearancewas considered a spot startand the Giants believed all five spots in their starting rotation were taken. That’s obviously changed with Webb’s injury.

In addition to McDonald, the Giants also called up catcher Logan Porter to fill the openingcreated by Patrick Bailey being tradedto the Cleveland Guardians on Saturday. Porter, 30, played in 12 games for Sacramento, slashing .179/.238/.282 in 42 plate appearances.

However, Daniel Susac will likely be the Giants’ starting catcher once he’s activated from the IL. Before being sidelined with a right elbow injury, he was batting .478/.500/.652 in 24 plate appearances.

Giants ace Logan Webb goes on 15-day IL with right knee bursitis, ending consecutive start streak

The San Francisco Giants aretied for the worst record in the National League(and second-worst mark in MLB) and now have to endure witho...
Powerball winning numbers for Saturday, May 9

The winning Powerball numbers in the Saturday, May 9, drawing for a $47 million jackpot are 41, 15, 47, 46, 56 and the Powerball is 22.

USA TODAY

The cash value is $21.2 million.

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Numbers are drawn at 10:59 p.m. Monday, Wednesday and Saturday. The next drawing is Monday.

Powerball tickets are $2 per play and in Michigan, players can buy tickets up to 9:45 p.m. for the night of the drawing.

This article originally appeared on The Detroit News:Powerball winning numbers for Saturday, May 9

Powerball winning numbers for Saturday, May 9

The winning Powerball numbers in the Saturday, May 9, drawing for a $47 million jackpot are 41, 15, 47, 46, 56 and the Powerball is 22....
Before Paige Spiranac, there was LPGA star Jan Stephenson (and she won)

Jan Stephenson was agolfinfluencer a generation (or two) before influencing became a thing. A lucrative thing, too.

USA TODAY

“If I’d had Instagram and Facebook and everything, I probably would’ve even been a bigger star and would’ve made a lot of money from it,” she says.

As it was, she did quite well, and for a unique reason: She wasn’t just an influencer, but an influencer with a genuine portfolio. Her 27 overall professional wins included 16 on the LPGA Tour, including three majors (the 1983 U.S. Women’s Open among them) —all of which landed her in the World Golf Hall of Fame in 2019.

Not bad at all for what the old folks would call a sex symbol and what the really old crowd might label a pin-up girl. Except, unlike today’s internet stars,Stephenson’s attention-getting served an unselfish interest— the 1970s-era LPGA Tour, which was struggling to gain (and even retain) traction at a time when Nancy Lopez exploded onto the scene and gave the women’s game a bit of competitive leverage.

“I did it to help the Tour because it was struggling,” says Stephenson, who also recalls doing it with the thumbs-up, and even encouragement, from the tour’s commissioner, Ray Volpe.

More:Photos: World Golf Hall of Famer Jan Stephenson through the years

Stephenson, now 74, was in town this week as one of 18 former LPGA golfers participating in a charity scramble at LPGA International. The Legends of the LPGA Tour event raised money (nearly $100,000, early reports indicate) for the Air Warrior Courage Foundation.

The native Aussie has called Florida home for many years, and the past decade has lived in Tampa, where her Jan Stephenson Crossroads Foundation uses golf to support military veteran organizations.

Her post-LPGA life keeps her busy enough, she says, and her ability to utilize her celebrity status survives because of all the leg work she put in 40-plus years ago. And, she says, there was more to it than posing for the cover of Sport Magazine or “soaking” in a tub of golf balls for a calendar shoot — those two images, by the way, still show up regularly in her mailbox, in the form of autograph requests (“the bath tub picture is always one of my favorites,” she says).

“If I hadn’t done all that, I would’ve probably won more,” she says. “Back then, I was making a lot of money. I was making second-place money by doing exhibitions. We didn’t play for much back then. Nowadays, if you were making second-place money, you’d be making a lot of money.”

She says it was common for her to finish a tournament on Sunday and fly that night to New York on behalf of the tour.

“The commissioner would set me up for dinners and meetings and golf with potential sponsors,” she says. “We signed a lot of five- and 10-year contracts. The LPGA was really struggling financially.”

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Stephenson says when she was originally asked to take advantage of her appeal, she begged off and said, “I just want to play golf.”

Tour leaders’ reply to that request opened her eyes.

“They said, ‘There may not be any golf if you don’t help.’ So it was, wow, OK.”

While doing a lot of promotional lifting for the LPGA Tour, Jan Stephenson also won 16 tour tournaments, including three majors, and is now in the World Golf Hall of Fame.

At that time, Lopez was winning a lot of tournaments and therefore commanding a certain amount of eyeballs, while Stephenson was commanding eyeballs but also mixing in some big wins. Tour officials adjusted in appropriate fashion, Stephenson recalls.

“We always teased, saying the men would watch me and the wives would watch Nancy,” she says. “So they always tried to have us on different tee times — one in the morning and one in the afternoon, so we could keep the gallery there all day.”

She also likes to point out, it wasn’t (and probably isn’t) just about women serving as objects of attention. She recalls being paired with Fred Couples for a 1983 win in the old JC Penny Mixed Team Classic.

UNSPECIFIED - CIRCA 1979: Women's golfer Jan Stephenson in action during tournament play circa 1979. (Photo by Focus on Sport/Getty Images)

“When I played with Freddie in the mixed-team, all of the women would ask me, ‘Is he as cute as he looks on TV?’” she says. “They all kept saying how gorgeous he was.”

As for today’s social-media darlings, former college golfer Paige Spiranac has become the megastar, but she has imitators and outright competition these days. None will win three majors and three dozen other professional tournaments, much less land in the Hall of Fame.

But Jan Stephenson begrudges no one.

“No, you look at some of the girls who haven’t won a tournament, but they have a great career because of it,” she says. “I’m happy for them. Anything you can do to bring attention to golf … it’s the way it should be.”

—Email Ken Willis at ken.willis@news-jrnl.com

This article originally appeared on The Daytona Beach News-Journal:Jan Stephenson was Paige Spiranac before golf influencing was a thing

Before Paige Spiranac, there was LPGA star Jan Stephenson (and she won)

Jan Stephenson was agolfinfluencer a generation (or two) before influencing became a thing. A lucrative thing, too. “If I’d had In...
Jack Endries fast facts: A sleeper gem rookie weapon for Joe Burrow?

Ourdraft-pick introductory seriesrolls on as we enter the seventh round for theCincinnati Bengals, where they made two selections. The featured player here: Texas tight end Jack Endries, pick No. 221 overall for theBengals.

USA TODAY

As always,Dane Brugler's The Beastwill help guide the creation of this article and these facts.

Has caught passes from at least No. 1 overall pick, potentially two

Before Endries made it to Austin to join the Longhorns in 2025, he spent the first three years of his college career at California. His quarterback those three years? Some guy named Fernando Mendoza. The one who transferred to Indiana and gave the Hoosiers one of the greatest seasons in school history. The one who won the Heisman Trophy, went 16-0 and won the National Championship. The one who just went No. 1 overall in the 2026 NFL Draft and is now the future of the Las Vegas Raiders.

But Mendoza may not be the only No. 1 pick Endries catches passes from. His current quarterback, Texas' Arch Manning, is the current favorite to be the No. 1 pick in the 2027 NFL Draft. Endries totaled 91 receptions for 1,030 yards and four touchdowns in two playing seasons at Cal with Mendoza. He posted 33 receptions for 346 yards and three touchdowns last season with Manning at Texas.

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Fantasy football helped Endries get into football

Football wasn't always Endries' No. 1 sport. He grew up playing soccer, swimming, and baseball. He didn't get into football until high school. The reason he got into football? His friends were playing fantasy football. Matthew Berry would be proud.

His sophomore season was in 2019. That was the year New Orleans Saints' wide receiver Michael Thomas went on a tear, catching 149 passes for 1,725 yards and nine touchdowns. Hopefully, Endries had Thomas on his team.

Received recruiting help from fellow alum Zach Ertz

Endries attended Monte Vista High School in Danville, California (about 30 miles from San Francisco). Among the alumni of Monte Vista are linebacker Nate Landman, quarterback Jake Haener and longtime tight end and Super Bowl champion Zach Ertz.

Ertz ended up playing a role in getting Endries recruited in college. The 3-time Pro Bowl selection shared Endries' highlights on social media. That helped Endries receive offers from Colorado State, San Jose State, and UNLV as well as seven Ivy League schools. That was in addition to the offer he already had from Fresno State. Endries ultimately committed as a preferred walk-on to Cal and eventually received a scholarship.

This article originally appeared on Bengals Wire:Jack Endries fast facts: A sleeper gem rookie weapon for Joe Burrow?

Jack Endries fast facts: A sleeper gem rookie weapon for Joe Burrow?

Ourdraft-pick introductory seriesrolls on as we enter the seventh round for theCincinnati Bengals, where they made two selections. The ...
Canvas, digital platform used by universities, back up after ransom hack

Canvas, a learning management platformused by thousands of schools and universities, was down forhours on May 7 after a cyberattack, disrupting access to grades and coursework during spring finals season for many.

USA TODAY

Colleges and universities across the United States, including theUniversity of Michigan,Harvard University, andPennsylvania State University, disclosed on May 7 that Canvas had reported a security incident and was experiencing an outage. The incident disrupted classes, coursework and exams.

Hacking group ShinyHunters claimed responsibility for the alleged breach at Instructure, the company that owns Canvas, according toThe New York TimesandCNN. The group claimed that nearly 9,000 schools worldwide were affected, and that the data of 275 million individuals — including students, teachers and other staff — was stolen. ShinyHunters gave affected schools a deadline of May 12 "to negotiate a settlement," according to CNN, and told Instructure to "pay or leak."

As of May 8,Instructure said it found no evidencethat "passwords, dates of birth, government identifiers, or financial information" were involved in the data breach. However, it said "names, email addresses, student ID numbers, and messages among Canvas users" were accessed.

Is Canvas back up?

On May 8, Canvas wasagain available for most users, according to astatus update on operator Instructure’s website. Additionally, Instructure said that "Canvas is fully back online and available for use" on a different page. Instructure says it contacted impacted organizations on May 5, and that students, parents and employees at affected schools should take whatever action is suggested by their individual institutions.

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"In the meantime, it is always a good practice to be cautious of unexpected emails or messages referencing this incident, avoid clicking suspicious links, and report anything unusual to your school or institution’s IT or security team," Instructure's website states.

Earlier, the company said Canvas and other related sites had been placed "in maintenance mode" and it was "investigating an issue where some users are having difficulties logging into Student ePortfolios."

A blog postby cybersecurity company Malwarebytes recommends several additional actions for those at affected institutions, including changing the passwords for accounts that shared them with Canvas accounts, remaining alert for follow-up phishing scams and turning on multi-factor authentification where possible.

Sarah Perkel is a South Florida Connect Reporter for the USA TODAY Network's Florida Connect team. You can get all of Florida’s best content directly in your inbox each weekday day by signing up for the free newsletter,Florida TODAY.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:What happened in the data breach that took Canvas offline

Canvas, digital platform used by universities, back up after ransom hack

Canvas, a learning management platformused by thousands of schools and universities, was down forhours on May 7 after a cyberattack, di...
Beyond bouquets: Expert advice for creative Mother's Day flowers

As Mother’s Day approaches, UF/IFAS Extension horticulture expert Erin Harlow says meaningful flower gifts don’t have to come from a florist. With a little thought, she says, creative living gifts can feel more personal than traditional bouquets.

USA TODAY For Mother’s Day, trade cut flowers for living gifts — blooms and herbs that keep giving. UF/IFAS Extension's Erin Harlow demonstrates flower selection in a garden among rows of blooming zinnias and leafy plants.

“First, consider things like mom’s favorite flower or color and whether or not she can handle smells and go from there,” said Harlow. She says paying attention to freshness or choosing living plants from farmers’ markets can make gifts feel more personal and memorable.

Check out some great Florida-Friendly plant options at Leon County Extension's budget-friendly Open House and Plant Sale from 9 a.m.-noon Saturday, May 9, at the extension office, 615 Paul Russell Road.

Once you’ve thought about what Mom likes, you can also get creative with gifts that last longer than a bouquet. That’s where the idea of a ‘grow your own’ flower kit comes in.

“A bigger pot is easier to care for,” said Harlow. “If you're going to get a container, I recommend at least a three-gallon size, which is typically 18 inches.”

The annual Master Gardener Volunteer-led Leon County Extension Open House and Plant Sale is 9 a.m. to noon Saturday, May 9, 2026.

A larger pot also cuts down on watering needs. “A decent-sized pot that they can put a flower in generally requires watering once a week once established. It'll grow and do well.”

From there, the kit comes together easily with seeds, gardening gloves, and a watering can. “That's a great little gift and they come in really fun colors,” Harlow said. “Get her some Zinnia seeds, there are so many kinds and they’re so pretty. You can start them right now really anywhere in the state, and they’ll grow through the summer."

If flowers aren’t the right fit, Harlow says farmers’ markets offer plenty of herbs and vegetables that make just as thoughtful a living gift. Many markets are stocked with fresh options this time of year, and herbs are especially easy to bundle into a small basket or container garden.

She adds that herbs thrive through the summer in Florida and are a favorite for moms who especially love to cook. Shoppers can find choices like sage, thyme, oregano, chamomile, and more at markets across the state.

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“There are so many choices for summer herbs,” Harlow said. “People appreciate them, and you can often find plants that are grown locally.”

If mom prefers something she doesn’t have to tend to, Harlow says a DIY bouquet using grocery store or market flowers is an easy way to make the gift feel personal.

“When building your own bouquet, pick colors that complement each other and you can’t go wrong,” Harlow said.

She recommends starting with greenery, choosing one focal flower, then adding an accent, smaller bloom in a similar color. Finish with filler flowers, which Harlow describes as “little, tiny flowers, usually baby’s breath or something with a type of fruit or berry on it.”

“Those four components really make up a cohesive bouquet,” Harlow said.

With a little planning, those celebrating Mother’s Day can create meaningful gifts using grocery store flowers, locally grown plants, or simple potted options that last longer than a single day.

Hundreds of plants will be available to purchase during Leon County Extension's Open House and Plant Sale on May 9.

Open House and Plant Sale

The Leon County Extension office, 615 Paul Russell Road, is planning on hosting its annual Open House and Plant Sale from 9 a.m.-noon Saturday, May 9, rain or shine! But keep an eye on the weather. In addition to the Plant Sale, there will also be the 4H Auction, bouquets, and a bake sale hosted by the Family Consumer Sciences program.

Learn more about Florida-Friendly landscaping while you're there from our Master Gardener Volunteers. You can also take a tour of our Demonstration Gardens with our Horticulture Agent Mark Tancig. To read about the Florida-Friendly Landscaping principles, check outffl.ifas.ufl.edu.

This article originally appeared on Tallahassee Democrat:Expert advice for creative Mother's Day blooms

Beyond bouquets: Expert advice for creative Mother's Day flowers

As Mother’s Day approaches, UF/IFAS Extension horticulture expert Erin Harlow says meaningful flower gifts don’t have to come from a fl...

 

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