See Why Madison's Bringing Up Shep's Ex Sienna on Southern Charm Season 11
An infamous piece of jewelry makes waves on the upcoming season of Southern Charm, all thanks to Madison LeCroy.
As audiences eagerly await the return of Southern Charm, they can now anticipate the return of the infamous shark-tooth necklace.
The legendary piece of jewelry makes its rounds once again in a sneak peek of Season 11, when Madison LeCroy dresses as Shep Rose (from the cover of his 2021 memoir, Average Expectations: Lessons in Lowering the Bar
Adding insult to injury — in the most hilarious way possible — Madison came with a shark-tooth necklace not unlike the one that has loomed over Shep and his past relationships.
ICYMI on Season 10, Shep gifted his then-girlfriend, Sienna Evans, a custom-made megalodon necklace during the cast’s trip to The Bahamas. However, it didn’t go down well, since Shep had previously given his ex, Taylor Ann Green, a similar great white shark-tooth necklace during their two-year relationship between 2020 and 2022.
Is Alabama starting to show glimpses of a championship defense?

Alabama forced takeaways. Alabama sacked the quarterback. Alabama made plays in run defense.
The defense wasn’t perfect, but it often looked the part of elite in the 20-9 win over LSU on Saturday at Bryant-Denny Stadium.
“I feel like we played well,” linebacker Deontae Lawson said. “I still think we’ve got things we need to clean up. We’ve got to execute at a high level if we’re really trying to be the defense we want to be. We’ll get back to work tomorrow and learn from our mistakes.”
Alabama didn’t allow a touchdown to the Tigers. In total, LSU finished with only 232 yards. The Crimson Tide tallied two takeaways, three sacks and seven tackles for loss.
But does that say more about the Tigers or the Crimson Tide?
Two things can be true at once. Alabama’s playing good defensive football. LSU’s offense is not good.
The Crimson Tide (8-1, 6-0 SEC) moved up to No. 13 in scoring defense in the nation with the victory, giving up an average of 17.22 points per game. That’s third-best in the SEC behind only No. 7 Oklahoma (14.11) and No. 11 Texas (16.44).
Against South Carolina, one of the Gamecocks’ two touchdowns came off a short field following a punt-return gaffe. Against Tennessee, Alabama held the nation’s then-top scoring offense to 20 points.
Vanderbilt didn’t score in the second half. Georgia only managed seven points after the break. Alabama has allowed only 8.83 points per game to SEC teams in second halves this season.
Alabama’s defense isn’t lights out. It’s known to give up an explosive play from time to time. It bends. But it breaks less and less these days.
In fact, its playmakers find ways to get timely stops and plays.
Look no further than Deontae Lawson’s strip late in the win over South Carolina. Then against LSU, linebacker Nikhai Hill-Green jarred loose a ball in the first half when the game was still scoreless.
Later in the game, Yhonzae Pierre mustered a game-clinching strip sack. The game was all but over anyway with the Crimson Tide up 11 with under five minutes remaining, but Pierre’s play ensured Alabama could just run out the clock.
Pierre has now tallied five sacks over the past three games. He has emerged as an alpha pass rusher on the defense, but you won’t hear him talking about it.
“We played OK as a defense,” Pierre said. “We’ve still got a lot of stuff to clean up as a team for sure. We’ve got a lot of stuff to clean up.”
Maybe so, but the defense that looked helpless and infamously played timid in the season opener against Florida State has all but disappeared. This is a defense that more often than not plays the part of the hammer, not the nail.
Lawson was asked postgame if he thinks the defense is playing at a championship level.
“No doubt,” he said. “This is a championship defense. I just think we can execute better if we want to be that championship defense. We have all the right guys. Got a great scheme. We’ve just got to continue to get better on the practice field and let it show on Saturday.”