Phillip Kubiak Phillip (“Phil”) John Kubiak, 81, of

**Phillip Kubiak**

Phillip (“Phil”) John Kubiak, 81, of Albuquerque, New Mexico, passed away peacefully at home on October 25, 2025.

He is survived by his wife of 57 years, Jeanne Kathleen Kubiak; his son, Kenneth Scott Kubiak; his daughter, Sarah Kubiak Wolin; and his grandson. He was also survived by his sister Kathy Shulse, brother John Kubiak, and sister Rosemary Fessinger. He was preceded in death by his parents, Harvey and Betty Kubiak.

A Vietnam veteran, Phil served in the New Mexico Air National Guard and dedicated more than 40 years as CEO of Hampstead Hospital in Hampstead, New Hampshire.

Known for his kindness and quiet generosity, he believed actions spoke louder than words.

Phil will be laid to rest at the Santa Fe National Cemetery. Memorial donations may be made to organizations supporting veterans.

Please visit our online guestbook for Phillip at [www.FrenchFunerals.com](http://www.FrenchFunerals.com).
https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/phillip-kubiak-phillip-phil-john-040800654.html

Today in SCV History (Nov. 8)

**Historical Vote in Castaic: Residents Approve Withdrawal of 7th-8th Grades from Hart District**

In 1977, Castaic residents voted 168-54 in favor of withdrawing 7th and 8th grades from the William S. Hart Union School District, transitioning the Castaic Union School District (CUSD) into a K-8 system.

**Public Health Alert: Hepatitis A Reported at Tam O’Shanter Restaurant**

The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health is currently investigating a reported case of hepatitis A virus infection in an employee of Tam O’Shanter Restaurant, located at 2980 Los Feliz Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90039. Customers who visited the restaurant during the exposure period are advised to take necessary precautions.

**Santa Clarita Valley Invited to Community Drinking Water Feedback**

The California State Water Resources Control Board Division of Drinking Water, along with SCV Water, invites members of the Santa Clarita Valley community to participate in a public comment period and an upcoming virtual meeting regarding local drinking water quality and management.

**The MAIN Announces 2026 Season Lineup**

The MAIN, an 81-seat theater located in Old Town Newhall, has revealed its exciting 2026 season lineup. Audiences can look forward to an engaging mix of comedy, drama, and original theatrical works that promise to light up the stage.

**City of Santa Clarita Releases 2026-2027 Community Development Block Grant Notice**

The City of Santa Clarita has announced the release of the 2026-2027 Notice of Funding Availability for Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) funds. Informational meetings have been scheduled for organizations interested in applying for funding under this program.

**Valencia High Senior Receives Congressional Award Gold Medal**

Arene Oh, a senior at Valencia High School within the William S. Hart Union School District, has been honored with the Congressional Award Gold Medal. This prestigious award represents the highest honor bestowed upon young people by the U.S. Congress.

**The Master’s University Women’s Basketball Team Competes in Raider Classic**

The Master’s University women’s basketball team played in the Raider Classic tournament on Thursday, November 6, in Ashland, Oregon, narrowly losing the first game to Southern Oregon with a score of 61-58.

**Master’s University Women’s Soccer Recognized with Multiple All-GSAC Honors**

Six players from The Master’s University women’s soccer team have been named to the All-GSAC team. In addition, Maddy Traylor was honored as the GSAC Player of the Year, and Esteban Chavez was named the conference’s Coach of the Year.

**Master’s University Golf Wraps Up Fall Season at Firestorm Fall Invitational**

The Master’s University golf teams concluded the fall segment of their 2025-26 season at the Firestorm Fall Invitational on Wednesday, November 5, in Buckeye, Arizona.

**Master’s University Men’s Soccer Players Awarded All-Conference Honors**

Trent Rickard and Clinton Mawusi of The Master’s University men’s soccer team have been selected to the 2025 GSAC All-Conference Men’s Soccer team, presented by Under Armour.

**Historic 1940 Land Deed for Theater in Santa Clarita**

In 1940, William S. Hart deeded land at Spruce and 11th Street to the American Legion for theater purposes, marking a significant moment in local cultural history.

**The Legendary Love Ride Returns on November 9**

The iconic Love Ride motorcycle event will be held on Sunday, November 9. Participants will ride alongside Grand Marshal Jay Leno and Honorary Grand Marshal Robert Patrick, alongside thousands of motorcyclists from Glendale to the Santa Clarita Valley.

**Public Meeting Scheduled for New Santa Clarita Courthouse Project**

The Judicial Council of California has arranged a public meeting regarding the New Santa Clarita Courthouse Project. The meeting will take place from 5:00 to 6:30 p.m. on Wednesday, November 12, at The Centre, 20880 Centre Pointe Parkway, Santa Clarita, CA 91350, in the Oak Room.

**Santa Clarita Valley Harmony Hills Chorus to Host Christmas Dreams Radio Show**

The Santa Clarita Valley Harmony Hills All-Voice Chorus will present its Christmas Dreams Radio Show at 1:30 p.m. on Saturday, November 22, at the Santa Clarita Valley Elks Lodge.

**California Partnership to End Domestic Violence Honors Local Legislators**

The California Partnership to End Domestic Violence, representing over 1,000 survivors, advocates, and organizations, has honored Senator Eloise Gomez Reyes and Assemblymember Pilar Schiavo with the Movement Champion Award for their dedicated advocacy.

**Old Town Newhall Prepares for Annual Holiday Celebration**

Each year, one of Santa Clarita’s most treasured events transforms Old Town Newhall into a vibrant showcase of holiday cheer, featuring festive decorations and community activities.

**Student Art Show to be Held at ARTree and Santa Clarita Artists Association Gallery**

From Friday, November 7 through Sunday, November 9, the ARTree and Santa Clarita Artists Association Gallery will host a student art show at the SCAA Gallery, celebrating the creative talents of local youth.

**Southern California Edison Offers $50,000 Scholarship Through Edison Scholars Program**

High school seniors in Southern California Edison’s service area who aspire to make a difference in the world are encouraged to apply for a $50,000 scholarship available through the Edison Scholars program.


https://scvnews.com/today-in-scv-history-nov-8/

Jonathan Bailey named People magazine’s 2025 Sexiest Man Alive

Something has changed for “Wicked” star Jonathan Bailey — something is not the same. He is People magazine’s Sexiest Man Alive for 2025.

The magazine’s pick was announced Monday night on “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.” Bailey takes the mantle from “The Office” and “Jack Ryan” star John Krasinski, who was the 2024 selection.

“It’s a huge honor,” Bailey, 37, told the magazine. “Obviously, I’m incredibly flattered. And it’s completely absurd.”

Bailey had audiences swooning as Prince Fiyero in his 2024 big-screen debut in *Wicked*, the popular movie musical in which he proudly urges fellow students to join him in his shallowness. The second half of the film arrives in theaters on November 21.

He also dripped with charm as Lord Anthony Bridgerton on Netflix’s *Bridgerton* and earned a 2024 Emmy nomination for his role in the Showtime series *Fellow Travelers*. Most recently, he starred in *Jurassic World Rebirth*, which was released in July.

Bailey told Fallon that the title was an “honor of a lifetime.” “I’m sort of thrilled that People magazine have bestowed this honor on someone who can really cherish the value of a sexy man,” he said.

Bailey shared with People that he’s known he wanted to be an actor since he was five years old when his grandmother took him to see a production of the musical *Oliver!*. Within two years, he had achieved that dream by performing with the Royal Shakespeare Company.

Since then, he has accumulated numerous stage credits, including starring in Shakespeare’s *Richard II* in London earlier this year.

Bailey, who has spoken openly about being a gay actor, founded The Shameless Fund, which helps support LGBTQ+ organizations. “I know the LGBT sector is under immense threat at the moment,” he said. “So it’s been amazing to meet people who have the expertise and see potential that I could have only dreamed of.”

The first Sexiest Man Alive was Mel Gibson in 1985. Other past recipients include Brad Pitt, George Clooney, John F. Kennedy Jr., David Beckham, Michael B. Jordan, John Legend, Dwayne Johnson, Paul Rudd, Pierce Brosnan, and Patrick Dempsey.

Bailey, who will be the cover story in People’s edition coming out Friday, had to stay tight-lipped about the news. But he admitted to the magazine that he couldn’t keep it a complete secret — he shared the news with his dog, Benson, who will also be featured in the magazine.
https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/11/04/jonathan-bailey-people-sexiest-man-alive/

Nearly out of baseball, River Falls native Alex Call’s path to World Series title is one to behold

Driving home with his wife from the airport in Los Angeles, less than 24 hours after hoisting the World Series trophy, the name Mitch Longo still resonated in the mind of Dodgers outfielder Alex Call.

The COVID-19 pandemic wiped out an entire minor league baseball season in 2020 and left organizations with fewer spots to fill a year later. Longo was a casualty of the cutdowns. He was released by Cleveland coming out of spring training in 2021. The last minor league game of his baseball career came just a year later.

That could’ve been Call.

A third-round pick in 2016 by the White Sox, Call had a disastrous 2019 campaign in which he hit .205 in Double-A Akron. Then came the lost season. By the spring of 2021, he was 26 years old.

Cleveland’s decision came down to Call and Longo. The Guardians kept Call. That was the good news. The bad? The organization’s plan was for Call to play just two games a week, effectively as a fourth outfielder.

Call phoned the farm director. Was he now an organizational filler?

“To tell you the truth, all your dreams are still in front of you,” Call remembers being told. “It’s just right now, we’re going to give at-bats to other guys, but that doesn’t mean it won’t change.”

It did on Day 2 of the season, when Steven Kwan, now a four-year starter for Cleveland, strained his hamstring. Opportunity opened up. Call seized it. He batted .310 over the first two months of the season.

When Kwan returned to action, Cleveland moved Call up to Triple-A, and he never looked back.

Call made his Major League debut with the Guardians in 2022. At least 10 teams claimed him when he was designated for assignment, and the outfielder was awarded to the Nationals.

Three years later, the River Falls native was traded to the Dodgers, the team he won a title with Saturday in Toronto.

“It’s been such a long road,” the 31-year-old Call said by phone Sunday. “Everybody in the locker room has a different path to where they are right now. I wouldn’t say mine is any more special than anybody else’s, but it’s definitely special to me.”

### Kept By a Thread

Cleveland told Call the organization kept him over Longo because the Guardians believed he had “a higher upside.” Perhaps.

“It’s probably because I gave myself the most chances,” Call said.

What, exactly, does that mean?

Call believes minor league baseball is all about opportunities. Keep your name in the lineup with semi-regularity, and you maintain the chance to prove yourself as a player.

“It only really takes two months of great baseball to move yourself up the map. Then you move up to the next level, you do it again, and then you move up to the next level,” he said. “And it can happen really quick, because that’s just the way the game is. I always knew that.”

It’s one of the reasons he never gave up on himself and his dream.

Call, a man strongly rooted in faith, is adamant he never needed baseball to make him happy. But he always believed he was meant to be in the sport.

“If I thought I couldn’t hit the ball, I probably would’ve been done. It wasn’t that I was still playing to hold on,” Call said. “I still believed that I could be a Major League Baseball player, I still believed I could do the little things right, I still believed that I could be a player that people would want on their team. I still believed all that, and I just knew I needed to put it together.”

### The Work Behind the Success

So, when things were bad, he went to work.

His swing was clearly an issue in 2019. In 2020, Call traveled around the country with a pitching machine he purchased to take swing after swing against high-velocity fastballs up in the zone. He sent videos of his swing to coaches in the pursuit of feedback.

Call writes everything down. He has journals filled with his communications with God, which he leaned heavily upon during his low points in baseball. He has notebooks flush with hitting advice he’s received throughout his career. He leaves no potential stone for improvement left unturned.

Teams notice. It’s why he believes he’s gotten so many of those precious opportunities.

“At the end of your day, your talent is your talent. This is a game that’s based on the numbers, but it’s also people making decisions about people,” Call said. “Yeah, we’re athletes, but there’s so much more into being an athlete. You are a person first. It’s other people that are making these decisions. So, for me, it’s how do I give myself the most chances as possible?”

He laid out a laundry list of objectives:

– Be a great teammate.
– Work hard.
– Show them you care.
– Show them you’re prepared.

“I’ve got to make sure that they know that I’m doing everything that I can to put myself in the best position to put the team in the best position to win,” Call said. “That I’ll do whatever it takes.”

That meant doing every little thing right and paying attention to even the most minute details.

Rochester Red Wings hitting coach Brian Daubach once called Call “one of most prepared players I’ve ever been around.”

“Whether it’s watching virtual reality with the goggles or his cage routine, watching video of the pitchers,” he told the Democrat & Chronicle. “Just a very hard worker.”

Those types of players are more likely to be given one last crack. Sometimes, that’s all it takes.

Call was aware those two months with Cleveland’s Double-A club represented his “last chance.”

“I was right at the end of my thread,” he said, “and it turned out to be something pretty special.”

The opportunity was likely only afforded to him because of who he was and how he carried himself.

“If you’re a jerk, your leash is so much shorter than what it is if you give yourself chances if people understand what you are about, who you are,” he said. “Because you’re going to fail. And when you give yourself a chance to get hot for long enough, or show them that you can get hot, that you might get hot again at some point, so keep giving me another chance to be in the lineup. Don’t leave any stone unturned. Take advantage of all the technology, take advantage of the things that are out there that I’ve done in order to improve myself, know myself as a player and know that the type of player that I can be is still valuable to a franchise.”

Call noted there are tiny decisions people make every day, most of which they likely think zero about or even view as choices. But they form your routine and approach.

“I feel like I’ve come to a place where I’ve become so routine in making the right decision as far as what to do next, how to train, how to eat, how to sleep, how to prepare, how to do this stuff,” he said. “Those are habits that have been formed over the years by engraining early that, ‘Hey, this is what it takes to be a champion.’ And it’s not something that’s just outrageous. It’s not something that’s undoable. It’s literally just by being diligent and doing it every day.”

### The Dodgers?!

The Nationals loved Call. He was their veteran example which their upcoming outfielders could follow. He prepared and played the right way.

But Washington was going nowhere fast this season, and at-bats needed to be made available for the prospects who will determine the team’s long-term outlook.

As the trade deadline approached, Call knew he might be on the move. He told his wife, Samantha, he felt there was roughly a 20% chance he’d get traded. She knew it was far higher.

That likelihood increased with each passing interaction. The Phillies reached out to gain intel. As did the Yankees. It was all getting very real.

Finally, the call came in from Washington interim general manager Mike DeBartolo.

“It was like, ‘Hey, you’re going to the Dodgers.’ It’s literally like, ‘I’m going to the Dodgers? The Dodgers want me?” Call recalled. “You know, like I’m just trying to keep my spot on the Nats. We’ve got (prospects like) Daylel Lile and Robert Hassle III coming up. I’m just trying to stay on the Nats, and now I’m going to the World Series champs.”

Call’s first thought: “I’m going to the World Series.”

The next thought? “‘OK, if they traded for me, surely they want me to be on the team. I hope they don’t send me down. I still have options,’” Call said. “You still don’t know for sure.”

A conversation with Dodgers manager Dave Roberts put him at ease. He was indeed in the Major League club’s plans.

“They validate all that you’ve been doing by going, ‘Hey, we want Alex Call on our team. We want a guy who’s going to take great at-bats and do the little things and just continue to extend our lineup and see pitches,’” he said. “It was really validating for me.”

And he validated their decision in the months that followed.

Call was on the active roster in all four playoff rounds, getting the nod over the likes of Michael Conforto, a former all-star who made $17 million this season. It was the right decision, as Call logged a .533 on-base percentage in 15 postseason plate appearances.

He was responsible for the Dodgers’ only regulation run of their 2-1 walk-off victory in Game 4 of the National League Divisional series to send the Phillies home, drawing a walk in the seventh inning that Justin Dean got around to score on as a pinch runner.

“Alex, he’s a winner. He’s sort of on the periphery, but the guys love him,” Roberts told reporters after the game. “He’s a baseball player. He’s prepared. Whatever situation I ask of him, he’s ready. He’s always doing something to help you win baseball games.”

### The Missed Moment

It won’t always go your way.

Call had a chance to be the hero in the bottom of the ninth frame in Game 3 of the World Series, when he stepped to the plate in a tie game with a runner at third base and just one out. He popped out to the shortstop.

The Dodgers didn’t score in that frame, and had to wait nine more innings and approximately three more hours to secure the victory on a Freddie Freeman home run.

“I’m not perfect,” Call said, “but I was still free in that moment, and I gave myself the best chance to have success in that situation.”

That ability, he said, is derived from his faith.

“There’s a lot of pressure in life, there’s a lot of pressure in baseball. If you have your dream that you hold onto with all your heart, and that’s the only thing that matters, well that’s a really tough place to perform, because that creates a lot of pressure,” Call said.

“But when you have faith, and you know that your life is in God’s hands and you know that you have your eternity steel, then you actually have peace, because you know that this is all just bonus. It’s really a pathway to better performance. Not that you should use that as that, but if you truly arrive at that place and believe it in your heart, I am a firm believer that it allows me to go out there and compete.

“This is a psychological game. Your brain has got all these things that it’s trying to always hold on and protect you from failure. You have to be able to let go of that in order to perform at your best.”

### Looking Ahead

The Dodgers championship parade was Monday in Los Angeles. Now, it’s onto the offseason.

Call admitted he’s looking forward to the chance to decompress. The last three months post-trade have been a whirlwind he’ll remember for the rest of his life.

“It’s been an amazing ride. It’s super fun. It was really, really fun,” said Call, who is under contract with the Dodgers next season amid their pursuit for a three-peat. “But now it’s time to take a big, deep breath, relax at our house and just soak it all in.”
https://www.twincities.com/2025/11/04/nearly-out-of-baseball-river-falls-native-alex-calls-path-to-world-series-title-is-one-to-behold/

UFC cuts fighter after sportsbooks flag ‘unusual’ betting activity on his first-round loss

Another sports betting controversy has hit professional sports, this time in mixed martial arts. The UFC has released fighter Isaac Dulgarian on Monday, just two days after his first-round submission loss to Yadier del Valle at Fight Night in Las Vegas, according to multiple reports.

“Like many professional sports organizations, UFC works with an independent betting integrity service to monitor wagering activity on our events,” the promotion told The New York Post in a statement. “Our betting integrity partner, IC360, monitors wagering on every UFC event and is conducting a thorough review of the facts surrounding the Dulgarian vs. del Valle bout on Saturday, November 1. We take these allegations very seriously, and along with the health and safety of our fighters, nothing is more important than the integrity of our sport.”

Unusual betting activity was flagged for Dulgarian’s fight. Entering the bout, Dulgarian — now 7-2 in his professional UFC career — was a -250 favorite. However, the betting line shifted drastically to -154 leading up to the fight. Multiple sportsbooks noticed the unusual activity and stopped taking bets before the first-round bell rang.

Caesars Sportsbook even issued refunds to anyone who had placed bets on Dulgarian. The sportsbook posted on X, “Mobile customers with losing bets on the Dulgarian UFC fight will receive a cash credit within 24 hours (singles), or within 24 hours of the last leg being determined (Parlay/SGP/Super Parlay) should that bet have won without that leg included.”

DraftKings also acknowledged the situation, telling The Post it is “aware of potential concerns” about the fight. “We are working with our integrity monitors and will provide updates to customers as they become available.”

Dulgarian, 29, lost by submission, but commentators Daniel Cormier and Michael Chiesa expressed confusion during the broadcast. They described Del Valle’s finish as “white belt stuff,” suggesting it was not a particularly complicated technique.

Adding an extra layer of interest to Dulgarian’s situation are his comments on fighter compensation related to sports betting. He has shared his belief that fighters should receive a cut of the bets placed on their bouts.

As the investigation continues, the UFC and its partners remain committed to preserving the integrity of the sport.
https://www.foxnews.com/sports/ufc-cuts-fighter-after-sportsbooks-flag-unusual-betting-activity-his-first-round-loss

‘It is who we are’: Alaska Native organizations collect whale meat, seals, fish and other traditional foods to help storm victims – Sun, 26 Oct 2025 PST

**ANCHORAGE, Alaska** — Among the losses suffered by Western Alaska victims of ex-Typhoon Halong, the destruction of traditional foods gathered for the winter is among the most deeply felt, Alaska Native leaders say. The flooding devastated caches of seal, salmon, moose meat, berries, and other gifts from the land—foods that families and friends often gather together, providing sustenance for months.

Gathering subsistence foods and sharing them with others is one way Alaska Native people show love, said Liz Medicine Crow, former head of the First Alaskans Institute in Anchorage, which works to preserve Native culture among other efforts. “It is who we are as Native people,” she emphasized.

Partly for that reason, the Alaska Native Heritage Center and the Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium have installed Conex freezers in their parking lots to collect donations of traditional foods for hundreds of village residents evacuated to Anchorage.

The two organizations are collaborating on this effort. The tribal health consortium is already delivering traditional foods to victims housed in shelters. Meanwhile, the heritage center plans to distribute the collected food in the coming days to evacuees staying with families in Anchorage and nearby areas.

Across the city, numerous efforts are underway to collect food, clothing, bedding, and other essentials needed by those affected by the storm that hit Alaska over the weekend of October 11. More than 650 residents from Western Alaska were evacuated to Anchorage after the storm, with about half staying at shelters such as the Egan Center and others staying with family, city officials said last week.

The subsistence food drive is among the most unique relief efforts currently underway. On Thursday, outside the heritage center, Kelsey Wallace, head of the center in northeast Anchorage, sorted through packages of donated traditional foods in a Conex freezer.

“There’s fish eggs,” she noted. “We’ve got some frozen halibut. There’s a lot of moose meat. There’s moose sausages.”

She also held up large Ziploc bags filled with salmon heads. “We have fish heads for making delicious fish head soup,” she said. “We also have reindeer tallow,” which is used in akutaq, or Eskimo ice cream—a local delicacy prepared with animal fat and berries.

The heritage center’s collection effort is still in its early days, said Wallace, who is originally from the Yup’ik region in Southwest Alaska, the area hardest hit by the storm. The center is awaiting a shipment of muktuk, or whale meat, from Alaska’s North Slope as part of the Niqipiaq or “real food” drive supported by organizations in that Iñupiaq region.

“As Yup’ik people and as Native people, we share what’s in our freezer,” Wallace said.

Plans for food distribution or pick-up over the next couple of weeks will be shared on the heritage center’s social media sites as they develop, she added.

Wallace described the overwhelming mood during donations as one of “incredible joy and camaraderie.” “This connects us to the lands, to the waters, to each other,” she said. “These are foods that we have eaten since time immemorial.”

Those interested in donating can sign up for donation windows online or by calling 907-205-0068.

Shea Siegert, spokesperson for the tribal health consortium, shared that the medical service provider is delivering donations of subsistence foods to shelters with the support of World Central Kitchen, a food relief group.

Recently, a frozen seal was donated by Tim Ackerman, a Tlingit hunter from Haines in Southeast Alaska who frequently contributes to the consortium’s year-round traditional foods program for hospital patients. The seal is currently thawing for processing before distribution, Siegert said.

The tribal health consortium’s Conex freezer is located at its patient lodging facility at 4001 Tudor Center Drive, behind the Alaska Native Medical Center. It accepts food donations on weekdays from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

“We’re asking that if folks have small donations, please just go into the café there and talk to the food service staff. They will be able to intake those,” Siegert said.

“For larger donations, we ask that you please don’t try to move those on your own. Come into the lodging without your donation first, and we will have staff ready to assist you,” he added.

These combined efforts highlight the strength and resilience of Alaska Native communities in the face of devastating loss, emphasizing the cultural importance of traditional foods and communal support during times of crisis.
http://www.spokesman.com/stories/2025/oct/26/it-is-who-we-are-alaska-native-organizations-colle/

“Backbone of the establishment”: College football mascot Pudge the Cat comforts grieving a son, saves his team, and goes viral

Fans of college football, cats, and especially both are in love with Pudge, the exotic shorthair who tours with the Bowling Green Falcons. The flat-faced feline belongs to starting long-snapper George Carlson and has been dubbed their official mascot since rising to online stardom in August 2025.

### Meet Pudge the Cat, Emotional Support Mascot

Carlson first met Pudge after doctors diagnosed his mother, Cristen, with stage four ovarian cancer in 2021. The young long-snapper was particularly close to his mother, and the news was devastating enough to interrupt his football career, according to ESPN. Cristen raised her son on a small farm and constantly brought home animals to care for, including cats. Carlson had a special affinity for the flat-faced ones like Persians and exotic shorthairs.

While still fighting her illness, Cristen went out and adopted Pudge for her son in 2023. The following year, Cristen sadly passed away due to complications from the cancer—but Carlson still had Pudge by his side.

### Pudge Boosts Team Morale and Goes Viral

Last August, after a rough practice, Carlson brought Pudge into the locker room, where the cat instantly improved morale. The resulting Instagram reel went viral, set to the sound of the Jet2Holiday meme.

The caption read: “Fall camp so rough we got a locker room cat.” Fans flooded the post with love for Pudge.

Comments included:

– “Might come to homecoming after 9 years just to see this cat,” said @uvtides.
– “Cat you mean backbone to the establishment,” wrote @ryannemarieorosco.

### Pudge Becomes a Star

In the weeks after Pudge went viral, he received his own line of merchandise, gained a dedicated security escort, and appeared in EA’s College Football 26 as the “Star of the Week” in early September. At this point, he likely has more name recognition than any of Bowling Green’s players.

On September 20, three different college football organizations joined forces with Pudge’s official Instagram account to post photos of the cat on the field at Louisville. Pudge was safely tucked in his bubble carrier backpack, strapped to a large man wearing a hat labeled “PUDGE SECURITY.” It’s clear: don’t mess with the star.

### A Humble Celebrity

Thankfully, Pudge hasn’t let the fame go to his head. He regularly greets fans for selfies at tailgate parties and even participates in the game-day Simba cam, allowing handlers to lift him for a better view.

Interviews with the feline tend to be one-sided, but in early October, Steve Hartman of CBS News profiled Pudge and credited him with turning the team’s luck around. The adorable cat has helped bring back fans, filling stadium seats with cat lovers.

“Home game attendance is up almost 60 percent this year,” Hartman reported. “That’s the largest increase of any Division One school in the country.”

“No doubt due in part to the long-snapper and the long napper, who have given everyone in this community a reason to cheer.”

On October 11, the Falcons managed an incredible rally to keep the Battle of I-75 Trophy from their rivals—an achievement fans are sure to celebrate alongside their new favorite mascot, Pudge.

*The internet is chaotic—but we’ll break it down for you in one daily email. Sign up for the Daily Dot’s newsletter [here](#).*
https://www.dailydot.com/news/college-football-mascot-pudge-the-cat/

Qualtrics CEO Zig Serafin steps down after nine years building experience platform ready for AI’s inflection point

**Zig Serafin Steps Down as Qualtrics CEO Amid Strategic Shift Toward Agentic AI**

Zig Serafin is stepping down as CEO of Qualtrics after nine years with the company—a surprise move that comes as the experience management (XM) vendor positions itself to help buyers guide and better understand their agentic AI deployments.

Serafin announced this week that he’s transitioning to Vice Chairman and Special Advisor. Meanwhile, board members Jim Whitehurst (former Red Hat CEO) and Mark Gillett (from Silver Lake) will step in as interim co-CEOs while the company searches for a permanent replacement.

In a note to employees, Serafin acknowledged that “there’s never a perfect time to step back from something you love,” but emphasized that “now is the right time to begin a thoughtful search for our next CEO.” He added:

> “Today, Qualtrics is the AI Experience Management partner to the world’s most iconic organizations, shaping the most critical experiences in business and in people’s lives. That’s a legacy and a future we should all be incredibly proud of.”

### Timing and Company Trajectory

The timing of Serafin’s departure is especially interesting, as Qualtrics has maintained a clear strategy in recent years and is heading toward $2 billion in revenue.

The vendor is also preparing to integrate Press Ganey Forsta, the $6.75 billion healthcare experience management acquisition announced earlier this year. (You can read my recent interview with Serafin on that announcement [here].)

More significantly, the company has been making substantial bets on agentic AI—positioning itself not as a competitor to operational agents from the likes of Salesforce, ServiceNow, or SAP, but as something different: the “experience layer” that measures and ensures quality across AI-driven interactions.

### Building the Foundation

When Serafin joined Qualtrics in 2016 as COO, he came from an 18-year career at Microsoft where he led products like Skype for Business. At that time, Qualtrics was already a significant player in survey and experience management software.

His tenure, which saw him become CEO in 2020, has been marked by significant transitions, including:

– An $8 billion acquisition by SAP
– An IPO in 2021
– Returning to private ownership in 2023 at a $12.5 billion valuation led by Silver Lake

Throughout these ownership changes, Serafin appeared to be building toward a specific vision.

In conversations with diginomica earlier this year, Qualtrics executives outlined a strategy that feels quite different from the agentic AI approaches pursued by most enterprise software vendors.

Rather than building standalone AI agents or rushing to acquire AI startups, the company has been embedding agentic capabilities into its core products—the ones customers already use heavily.

Brad Anderson, President of Products at Qualtrics, explained the approach during our conversation at the company’s X4 Summit in April:

> “A survey, a good old fashioned survey—the next button is clicked 50,000 times every 60 seconds for Qualtrics surveys, and it peaks at 300,000 times every 60 seconds. By agentifying that, every one of those can be an opportunity to close the loop for the customer.”

This pragmatic, build-not-buy strategy came after Qualtrics evaluated more than 100 potential acquisition targets, according to Anderson. The conclusion was that buying technology in such a rapidly evolving market wouldn’t provide meaningful advantages—particularly when no vendor has yet achieved scale with agentic deployments.

### The Experience Data Advantage

What Serafin leaves behind is a company with a unique asset: a vast repository of human sentiment data collected through billions of customer and employee interactions and an expanding platform.

This isn’t operational data about transactions or processes—it’s data about how people feel about those experiences.

When I spoke with Gurdeep Pall, Qualtrics’ AI President, earlier this year, he suggested that this experience data could eventually enable applications beyond traditional experience management.

The company’s thesis is that in a world where multiple AI agents will handle operational tasks, someone needs to ensure these agents deliver the kind of experiences that build trust and loyalty—rather than eroding them.

Given that trust in agentic AI will be critical to its success, this is a compelling argument.

Anderson articulated this positioning clearly:

> “One of the unique values that we bring, independent of what agent is being used, is the ability to be able to tell an organization: Is your digital agent giving the same experience that your best humans do? That’s the difference between an operational agent and an experience agent.”

### Healthcare as a Proving Ground

The Press Ganey Forsta acquisition takes on added significance in this context. Healthcare is arguably the most critical of all human experiences—moments when people are at their most vulnerable and where the quality of interaction can have long-lasting consequences.

When Serafin announced the deal, he told me healthcare was becoming “the proving ground for the enterprise.”

The sector’s combination of complex regulations, life-or-death stakes, and massive inefficiencies makes it an ideal testbed for whether AI can truly improve human experiences at scale.

With Press Ganey, Qualtrics gains not just a larger healthcare presence but deeper domain expertise in a sector ripe for AI-driven transformation.

If the company can demonstrate that its experience platform can improve healthcare interactions while maintaining quality and trust, the argument for deploying similar approaches across other industries becomes considerably stronger.

### My Take

What’s clear from Serafin’s tenure is that Qualtrics understands where it adds value.

Rather than attempting to be everything to everyone, it’s carved out a specific role: the layer that ensures AI systems deliver the kinds of human experiences organizations actually want.

The agentic AI market is still nascent, and many competing visions exist for how enterprise AI architectures will evolve.

Qualtrics is betting that as organizations deploy multiple operational agents, they’ll need a way to ensure these agents don’t degrade customer and employee experiences—and that experience data will be the key to making that assessment.

In his announcement, Serafin emphasized that the company is “at a key acceleration and inflection point.”

He’s built the platform and established the strategic direction. Now it falls to his successors to execute against that vision in an increasingly crowded and competitive market.

Let’s see who and what comes next!

In the meantime, I’m pleased Serafin is sticking around as an advisor and look forward to seeing what the next few months bring.
https://diginomica.com/qualtrics-ceo-zig-serafin-steps-down-after-nine-years-building-experience-platform-ready-ais

‘This is not Gaza’: Palestinians return to war-torn neighborhoods amid ceasefire

Palestinians Return to Gaza After Ceasefire, Find Devastation and Displacement

KHAN YOUNIS, Gaza Strip – While some Palestinians returning to the Gaza Strip this week after two years of war showed joy on their faces, many found their old neighborhoods unrecognizable due to relentless fighting that reduced numerous buildings to rubble.

Following a historic ceasefire agreement enacted on Monday, tens of thousands of displaced residents, along with nearly 2,000 Palestinians released from Israeli prisons, made their way back to Gaza—only to find themselves homeless.

“Of course, I was happy about being released, but not happy about being displaced with no safety in place, no life necessities,” said 23-year-old Abdullah Wa’el Mohammed Farhan, one of the former Palestinian prisoners freed on Monday as part of a ceasefire deal brokered by President Donald Trump.

Standing outside a tent in Khan Younis, where he and his family are currently living, Farhan told ABC News that he was imprisoned for 20 months as the war with Israel raged on. He described how, while detained, he and other Palestinian prisoners were “completely isolated from the world.”

“When I was told about my release, I didn’t believe it because more than once [Israeli authorities] told us about our release and moved us from one prison to another while being tortured and beaten,” Farhan said.

ABC News has contacted the Israel Defense Forces and the Israel Prison Service regarding allegations from Farhan and other released prisoners about being tortured and subjected to starvation while incarcerated, but has yet to receive a response.

Abdullah’s sister, 21-year-old Samaher Farhan, spoke to ABC News about their reunion. While thankful to be together again, she expressed sadness that her brother had to return to a community ravaged by war.

“When I saw Abdullah yesterday, it was mixed feelings of happiness and sadness because of how he looked before he went to prison and how he looked now,” Samaher said. She hopes to resume living in their home, which remains intact but is located in an area currently uninhabitable.

“For the time being, we are living in a tent,” she added. “We felt bad that this is not a worthy welcoming of a prisoner. How can he come out to a worn tent? So, it was a sad feeling. I even tried not to meet him or sit with him for a long time because the situation is dire in this worn tent.”

She recalled that when Abdullah was taken prisoner, their neighborhood was still in good shape. “It was barely 1% of the destruction we have now,” she said.

Devastation Across Gaza

The United Nations and other organizations have reported that there is no safe place left in the Gaza Strip, which measures approximately 25 miles long by 7.5 miles wide. The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) have designated most of the war-torn territory as a “no-go zone,” issuing evacuation orders for civilians, according to the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.

A damage assessment by the U.N. Satellite Centre found that 83% of all structures in Gaza City—the capital of the Palestinian territory—have been damaged. The assessment identified at least 17,734 structures destroyed, representing about 43% of the total number of damaged structures.

In a report issued on Tuesday, the U.N. estimated that it will cost approximately $70 billion to reconstruct Gaza.

Human Toll of the Conflict

According to the Palestinian Ministry of Health’s latest report on Wednesday, nearly 68,000 Palestinians were killed in the Gaza Strip during the war. The conflict began on October 7, 2023, when Hamas terrorists launched a surprise attack on Israel, killing more than 1,200 people and taking about 250 others hostage.

The final 20 living Israeli hostages were released by Hamas on Monday as part of the ceasefire deal.

Voices from Those Released

Shadi Abu Sido, a Palestinian photojournalist released from Israeli prison on Monday, expressed shock at the widespread devastation in Gaza since his detention in March 2024.

“I entered Gaza and found it to be like a scene of Judgment Day,” Sido said in a video testimony. “This is not Gaza. Where is the world?”

He shared that while in prison, an Israeli officer told him his wife and two children had been killed during the war. However, upon returning to his home in Khan Younis, he discovered they were alive.

“I heard her voice, I heard my children—I was astonished. It cannot be explained, they were alive,” Sido told Reuters.

For another Palestinian prisoner, the joy of being freed was quickly replaced by heartbreak upon learning that his three children—aged 2, 5, and 8—had died in the conflict.

In a video testimony, the man, whose name has not been released, is seen falling to his knees and sobbing. Holding a bracelet in his hand, he explained that he had made it in prison and planned to give it to his youngest daughter.

“I made this for my daughter, whose birthday was supposed to be in five days,” he said in the video.

ABC News’ Bill Hutchinson contributed to this report.

https://abcnews.go.com/International/gaza-palestinians-return-war-torn-neighborhoods-amid-fragile/story?id=126551546