Country star Ronnie McDowell suffered a stroke mid-performance at the Summer Solstice Music Festival in Pennsylvania earlier this summer.
McDowell slurred his words onstage June 21 in Oley, before his son and tour manager stepped in and paused to show to make sure his dad was OK.
In a new interview with Town & Country, McDowell revealed what he told his son at that moment.
Ronnie McDowell reveals he had to have surgery after suffering from a stroke onstage.(Erika Goldring/FilmMagic)
“And I said, ‘No, I think I’m having a stroke,’” he told the outlet. Ronnie was taken to a nearby hospital in Pennsylvania where the stroke was later confirmed.
At the hospital, McDowell was informed that surgery was needed to clear the blockage that caused the stroke. He was told by the doctors onsite that he could travel home for the procedure and emergency surgery was not needed.
“[The doctor] said, ‘I’m gonna let you go home, and let me tell you why. I’ve been doing this 30-something years. I listened to your heart, and you’ve got the strongest heart I have ever heard,’” McDowell recalled the conversation with his doctor.
“[The doctor] said, ‘I’m gonna let you go home, and let me tell you why. I’ve been doing this 30-something years. I listened to your heart, and you’ve got the strongest heart I have ever heard.’”Â
â Ronnie McDowell
He continued, “He said, ‘That’s what saved you. Because you were 70-, almost 80 percent blocked.’ He said, âYour heart was pumping through that really hard, and it scraped the plaque off.â”
McDowell had surgery a few weeks after his onstage stroke. He told the outlet that it was a successful procedure, but did not come without complications.Â
“They woke me up the first time, and the doctor said, ‘Ronnie, I hate to tell you this, but we gotta put you back to sleep, because a…hematoma formed and we’ve got to wash it out,’” McDowell recalled.Â
His son, Tyler, told the outlet that the hematoma that formed was due to blood thinners his father was on.
Ronnie McDowell gained fame in the 1970s.(ABC Photo Archives/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images)
Following the surgery, McDowell had some issues recovering from the anesthesia.Â
“It was quite unbearable. The swelling and how I felt was just terrible, but I’m improving every day,” McDowell said.
The singer thanked fans for the overwhelming support she’s received since the stroke.
“Most times I go to my mailbox there’s so much mail in there, I can’t hardly get it out. I’m sure the post office is wondering why Ronnie McDowell is getting so much mail all of the sudden. But it just shows you how people care,” he said.
Dick Clark and Ronnie McDowell hosting “Coverage” in 1977.(ABC Photo Archives/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images)
McDowell, 75, has a new appreciation for life after his health scare.Â
“It makes you realize, every morning when we get up â you, me, every human â that we take for granted that all this stuff is just gonna work perfectly.
“You know, we’ll all so fearfully but wonderfully made. I mean, just, in a second, you can be dead. When the ticker stops ticking, you’re gonna leave here anyway,” he told the outlet.
“It made me realize even more that we are all so fearfully but wonderfully made,” McDowell concluded.Â
Ronnie McDowell in 1970.(Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)
McDowell gained fame in the 1970s after releasing the song “The King Is Gone,” which paid tribute to Elvis Presley. He quickly released another hit, “I Love You, I Love You, I Love You.”
He went on to release a string of hit albums and singles between 1979 and 1986. During this time, he was best known for his songs “Older Women” and “Youâre Gonna Ruin My Bad Reputation.”
Other hits released by McDowell include “Watchin’ Girls Go By,” “Personally,” “You Made A Wanted Man Of Me,” “All Tied Up” and “In A New York Minute.”
Janelle Ash is an entertainment writer for Fox News Digital. Story tips can be sent to janelle.ash@fox.com.Â
Gavin Adcock continues to criticize Zach Bryan over his interaction with a teenage fan.
The country singer, 26, discussed Bryan, 29, on the Wednesday, August 20 episode of âRolling Stone Nashville Now,â claiming, âI think that Zach Bryan puts on a big mask in his day-to-day life and sometimes he canât help but rip it off and show his true colors. I donât know if Zach Bryanâs really that great of a person.â
Earlier this summer, Adcock condemned how the âI Remember Everythingâ musician handled a complaint from a 14-year-old TikToker who had hoped to meet him following a recent concert.Â
âIf you canât handle the criticism of a 14 year old why do people idolize you?â Adcock wrote via X on July 22. âThat kid was head over heels to meet you and spent/ parents spent a ton of money to see you. Heâs got feeling too and a youâre a âgrown manâ nearly 30.â
He added at the time, âTheyâre the only reason you are around.â
According to Whiskey Riff, Bryan defended himself when the teen took to TikTok and complained that he drove past fans who âwaited four hours to meet himâ after wrapping three nights of shows at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey.Â
Zach Bryan performing in New Jersey on July 20.(Photo by Taylor Hill/Getty Images for ABA)
âHe didnât even roll down his window to say hi,â the fan alleged in the post, prompting Bryan to surface in the comments section, replying, âYouâre not entitled after someone plays two and a half hours to a picture or a hello. Get off my d***.â
He later explained, âI went out and took pictures both night one and three. I had a third show the next day and it was late, needed to rest.â
Mickey Bernal/Getty Images Zach Bryan has faced a few public controversies since blowing up with the release of his album American Heartbreak. Bryan gained a following after he began releasing his own music online in 2017. He released two albums before 2022âs American Heartbreak, his first record with a major label, skyrocketed him to the [âŠ]
While speaking with âNashville Nowâ host Joseph Hudak, Adcock doubled down on his previous remarks.
âIt wasnât about not wanting to sign autographs after a show, itâs like letting a 14-year-old kid rant, without saying, âGet off my d***.â Youâre bigger than that,â he said.
Us Weekly has reached out to a Bryan representative for comment.
Kansas City has apparently seen the end of Zach Bryanâs live shows. The country star, 29, who supports the Philadelphia Eagles in the NFL, engaged in an online war of words with a stream of Kansas City Chiefs fans on Friday, August 8, resulting in his X declaration, âPlease understand I will never play in [âŠ]
He continued: âThat s*** ainât country music, it ainât ever been country music and it ainât gonna be country music.â
Thank You!
You have successfully subscribed.
Though Adcock may not be a fan, Cowboy Carter topped the U.S. Billboard 200 albums chart and became the first album by a Black woman to top the Billboard country albums chart.
He added, âI donât need to put down a black woman to advance my music. Thatâs just embarrassing to the idea of America and I got no respect for it.â
President Trumpâs decision to deploy hundreds of National Guard troops to Washington has California officials on high alert, with some worrying that he intends to activate federal forces in the Bay Area and Southern California, especially during the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics.
Trump said that his use of the National Guard to fight crime could expand to other cities, and suggested that local police have been unable to do the job.
Legal experts say it is highly unusual and troubling for forces to be deployed without a major crisis, such as civil unrest or a natural disaster. The Washington deployment is another example of Trump seeking to use the military for domestic endeavors, similar to his decision to send the National Guard to Los Angeles in June, amid an immigration crackdown that sparked protests, experts said.
Washington has long struggled with crime but has seen major reductions in recent years.
Officials in Oakland and Los Angeles â two cities the president mentioned by name â slammed Trumpâs comments about crime in their cities. Oakland Mayor Barbara Lee said in a statement that the presidentâs characterization wasnât rooted in fact, but âbased in fear-mongering in an attempt to score cheap political points.â Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass called it âperformativeâ and a âstunt.â
Trump has said he would consider deploying the military to Los Angeles once again to protect the 2028 Olympic Games. This month, he signed an executive order that named him chair of a White House task force on the Los Angeles Games.
The White House has not said specifically what role Trump would play in security arrangements.
Los Angeles City Councilmember Imelda Padilla, who sits on the city panel overseeing the Games, acknowledged last week that the city is a âlittle nervousâ about the federal governmentâs plans for securing the event.
Congress recently approved $1 billion for security and planning for the Games. A representative for the Department of Homeland Security declined to explain to The Times how the funds will be used.
Padilla said her concern was based on the unpredictable nature of the administration, as well as recent immigration raids that have used masked, heavily armed agents to round up people at Home Depot parking lots and car washes.
âEverything that weâre seeing with the raids was a real curveball to our city,â Padilla said during a Los Angeles Current Affairs Forum event. It dealt âa real curveball to [efforts] to focus on the things that folks care about, like homelessness, like transportation … economic development,â she said.
Bass, appearing on CNN this week, said that using the National Guard during the Olympics is âcompletely appropriate.â She said that the city expects a âfederal response when we have over 200 countries here, meaning heads of state of over 200 countries. Of course you have the military involved. That is routine.â
But Bass made a distinction between L.A. Olympics security and the âpolitical stuntâ she said Trump pulled by bringing in the National Guard and the U.S. Marines after protests over the federal governmentâs immigration crackdown. That deployment faces ongoing legal challenges, with an appeals court ruling that Trump had the legal authority to send the National Guard.
âI believed then, and I believe now that Los Angeles was a test case, and I think D.C. is a test case as well,â Bass said. âTo say, well, we can take over your city whenever we want, and Iâm the commander in chief, and I can use the troops whenever we want.â
On Monday, Trump tied his action to what has been a familiar theme to him: perceived urban decay.
âYou look at Chicago, how bad it is, you look at Los Angeles, how bad it is. We have other cities that are very bad. New York has a problem. And then you have, of course, Baltimore and Oakland. We donât even mention that anymore âtheyâre so far gone,â he said. âWeâre not going to let it happen. Weâre not going to lose our cities over this.â
White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said officers and agents deployed across the District of Columbia have so far made 23 arrests for offenses including homicide, possession with intent to distribute narcotics, lewd acts, reckless driving, fare evasion and not having permits. Six illegal handguns were seized, she said.
Citing crime as a reason to deploy National Guard troops without the support of a state governor is highly unprecedented, experts said. The National Guard has been deployed to Southern California before, notably during the 1992 L.A. riots and the civil unrest after George Floydâs murder in Minneapolis in 2020.
âIt would be awful because he would be clearly violating his legal authorities and heâd be sued again by the governor and undoubtedly, by the mayors of L.A. and Oakland,â said William Banks, a law professor at Syracuse University. âThe citizens in those cities would be up in arms. They would be aghast that there are soldiers patrolling their streets.â
The District of Columbia does not have control over its National Guard, which gives the president wide latitude to deploy those troops. In California and other states, the head of the National Guard is the governor and there are legal limits on how federal troops can be used.
The Posse Comitatus Act, passed in 1878 after the end of Reconstruction, largely bars federal troops from being used in civilian law enforcement. The law reflects a tradition dating to the Revolutionary War era that sees military interference in American life as a threat to liberty and democracy.
âWe have such a strong tradition that we donât use the military for domestic law enforcement, and itâs a characteristic of authoritarian countries to see the military be used in that way,â said Erwin Chemerinsky, dean of the UC Berkeley Law School and a constitutional law expert. âThatâs never been so in the United States, and many are concerned about the way in which President Trump is acting the way authoritarian rulers do.â
Whether the troops deployed to Los Angeles in June amid the federal immigration raids were used for domestic law enforcement in violation of the Posse Comitatus Act is central in the trial underway this week in federal court in San Francisco.
If Trump were to send troops to California, Banks said, the only legal lever he could pull would be to declare an insurrection and invoke the Insurrection Act.
Unlike in D.C., Trump wouldnât be able to federalize police departments in other parts of the country. There are circumstances where the federal government has put departments under consent decrees â a reform tool for agencies that have engaged in unlawful practices â but in those cases the government alleged specific civil rights violations, said Ed Obayashi, a Northern California sheriffâs deputy and legal counsel on policing.
âYou are not going to be able to come in and take over because you say crime is rising in a particular place,â he said.
Oakland Councilman Ken Houston, a third-generation resident who was elected in 2024, said his city doesnât need the federal governmentâs help with public safety.
Oakland has struggled with crime for years, but Houston cited progress. Violent crimes, including homicide, aggravated assault, rape and robbery are down 29% so far this year from the same period in 2024. Property crimes including burglary, motor vehicle theft and larceny also are trending down, according to city data.
âHeâs going by old numbers and heâs making a point,â Houston said of Trump. âOakland does not need the National Guard.â
Times staff writer Noah Goldberg contributed to this report.
[ad_2]
Hannah Fry, Dakota Smith, Richard Winton, Andrea Castillo
YARMOUK, Syria â On a ferociously hot summer morning, the inspectors stepped gingerly through an alley and cast a critical eye at the war-withered buildings in this sprawling Palestinian refugee camp on the edge of Damascus.
The alley was typical of what Yarmouk had become after 14 years of Syriaâs grinding civil war, which had cut the campâs population from 1.2 million people â 160,000 of them Palestinian refugees â to fewer than several hundred and turned what had been the de facto capital of the Palestinian diaspora and resistance movements into a wasteland.
The ramshackle structures that survive â often with missing roofs and walls, and stairs leading nowhere â have little in common, save for their shambolic, ad hoc construction designed less for permanence than speed and low price. Most have a sprinkling of holes picked out by bullets or shrapnel.
âNothing to repair here. This one we have to remove completely,â said one of the inspectors, Mohammad Ali, his eyes on a pile of indeterminate gray rubble with an orphaned staircase coming out of its side.
He pressed a tablet to record his assessment and sighed as his partner, Jaber Al-Khatib, hoisted himself up on a wall and examined the skeletal remains of a bombed-out, three-story building.
1
2
1.A mother and her child walk down one of the destroyed streets in Yarmouk, the once vibrant Palestinian camp outside Damascus. 2.A pile of rubble reflects the damage to the Yarmouk headquarters of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine – General Command.
âThe columns seem OK,â Al-Khatib called out.
Ali raised the iPad and snapped a picture he would later upload to a central database. It was a bit after 9 a.m. and the heat was already creeping past 96 degrees. And they still had plenty of buildings to assess.
âAll right. Letâs move on,â he said.
Mapping the damage in Yarmouk would require several weeks more for the volunteer engineers in the Yarmouk Committee for Community Development. But the work is seen as vital in reviving a once thriving community.
Successive waves of fighting and airstrikes, not to mention the looting that inevitably followed, had left around 40% of the campâs 520 acres damaged or destroyed. Vital services like electricity, water and especially sewage are at best intermittent or unavailable. Even now, mountains of rubble â enough to fill 40 Olympic-sized swimming pools, the committee estimates â line almost every street.
Jamal Al-Khatib, an engineer, takes photographs as he conducts a survey of damaged buildings in Yarmouk, Syria.
(Hasan Belal/For The Times)
âCompared to its size and population, Yarmouk paid the highest price across Syria in terms of damage and hardship,â said Omar Ayoub, 54, who heads the committee and was coordinating with Al-Khatib, Ali and other engineers on the assessment. Though large swaths of Yarmouk are still in ruins, conditions are now âfive starsâ compared with nine months ago when then-President Bashar Assad fled the country, Ayoub said.
Still, people have been slow to return. Only 28,000 people have come back, 8,000 of them Palestinians, according to Ayoub and aid agencies. For them and the tens of thousands still hoping to come back to Yarmouk, the concept of âhomeâ â whether here or in places their families left behind after the 1948 war and Israelâs founding â has never seemed so far away.
âIt used to feel like a mini-Palestine here. Streets, alleyways, shops and cafes â everything was named after places back home,â Ayoub said.
âWill it come back? Life has changed, and the war changed peopleâs convictions on the issue of Palestine.â
That image of how life in Yarmouk once was drew Muhyee Al-Deen Ghannam, a 48-year-old electrician who left the camp in 2013 for Sweden, to visit last month. He was exploring the idea of bringing his family back, but the landmarks he once used to locate his apartment were all gone. He eventually found it, still standing, but stripped of anything of value.
âLiving here, you had such a strong connection to Palestine, and yet we never felt like foreigners in Syria,â Ghannam said.
1
2
3
1.Years of warfare have devastated most streets in Yarmouk, Syria. 2.A construction worker labors in Yarmouk. Few of the former residents have returned to the camp. 3.A girl and her mother visit the grave of a relative in the Yarmouk cemetery amid the devastation caused during the Syrian civil war.
He wonât be leaving Sweden. âI was planning on staying [here]. But with kids, it would be very difficult.â His 16-year-old, he added, hoped to study aeronautics â an impossibility in Syria.
Many others were forced back to Yarmouk by sheer economics, including Wael Oweymar, a 50-year-old interior contractor who returned in 2021 because he could no longer afford rent in other Damascene suburbs. He spent the last four years fixing up not only what remained of his apartment, but its surroundings.
âWhat could I do? Just give up and have a heart attack?â he said, cracking an easy smile.
âYou see this street?â he said. âI swept this whole area myself. There was no one here but me â me and the street dogs. But when people saw things improving, it encouraged them to return.â
Oweymar counted that a victory.
âIt was systematic, all this destruction. The intention was to make sure Palestinians donât return,â he said, echoing a common suspicion among Yarmoukâs residents, who believe the Assad-era government planned to use the fighting to displace Palestinians and redevelop the area for its own use.
âBut they destroyed and we rebuild,â Oweymar said. âWe Palestinians, weâre a people who rebuild.â
Oweymarâs words were a measure of the uneasy relationship the Assad family maintained with Palestinians. Compared with Palestinian refugees in Jordan and Lebanon, those in Syria â now estimated to number 450,000 â were treated well. Though never granted citizenship, they could work in any profession and own property. Under the rule of Assadâs father, Hafez, Palestinians enlisted in a special corps in the military called âThe Liberation Army.â
1
2
3
1.In Yarmouk, itâs common to see buildings missing walls or roofs. Many are pockmarked by bullets or scrapnel. 2.Yarmouk once had 1.2 million residents. Estimates say about 28,000 people live there now, 8,000 of them Palestinians. 3.Amid some rubble lies the burnt and torn image of Ahmed Jibril, the onetime secretary general of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine – General Command.
Factions, such as the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine and Hamas, opened training bases in the country and administered camps. At the same time, Syrian security services pursued Palestinians with the same diligence they showed toward homegrown dissidents.
Assad continued his fatherâs policies and aligned Syria with the so-called Axis of Resistance, an Iran-backed network of factions arrayed against the U.S. and Israel that championed the Palestinian cause. Yet more than 3,000 Palestinians were imprisoned during the civil war â only a few dozen emerged alive.
âAssad became the standard bearer for Palestinian resistance, putting it above anything he did for Syrians. But he also slaughtered Palestinians in huge numbers. We never knew where we stood with him because of that duality,â Ayoub said.
When the civil war began, a miniature version played out in Yarmouk. Some factions insisted on neutrality, while others sided with Assad or the rebels against him. The Syrian military laid siege while the factions duked it out inside Yarmouk.
Neighborhoods became run-and-gun front lines; fighters punched holes through buildingsâ walls to avoid ubiquitous sniper fire. In 2015, jihadists from the Islamic State seized the camp. As the battle stretched on, so did the siege, with rights groups estimating at least 128 people died of starvation. Ayoub, now a portly scriptwriter with an avuncular smile, weighed a mere 66 pounds during the siege.
âWe had more people die here because of hunger than Gaza,â Ayoub said, referring to the enclave where Israel has mounted a blockade that aid groups warn has resulted in famine.
âOur ultimate dream was to eat our favorite food before we died. One neighbor, I remember, he was craving a French fry â just one,â Ayoub said, a wan smile on his face at the memory.
Mohammad Ali, 63, is one of the engineers working to survey the damaged buildings and assess their needs for future reconstruction in Yarmouk.
Islamic State was finally pushed out in 2018, but Assadâs forces, including regular military units and allied factions, pillaged whatever hadnât been destroyed, even setting fires inside homes to pop tiles off of walls. They ripped out toilets, window frames and light switches and sold the copper wiring.
Eight months since Assadâs ouster, there is little clarity on what stance Syriaâs new authorities will take regarding the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Many officials say Syria is in no condition to engage in a fight with Israel, and that it has already paid enough for its advocacy for Palestinians. The U.S., meanwhile, has brokered high-level contacts between Israeli and Syrian officials, and conditioned assistance on the new government suppressing what the U.S. classifies as âterrorist organizations,â including a number of Palestinian factions.
There are already signs Damascus has moved to fulfill those demands.
Abu Bilal, a member of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine who gave his nom de guerre because he was not allowed to speak to the media, still minds the party headquarters in Yarmouk. Though the group remained resolutely neutral during the civil war, after Assad fled, gunmen affiliated with the new authorities confiscated the groupâs weaponry and training camps.
âTheir message was clear: No political activity or military displays. We can only engage in social work or academic research,â he said.
Palestinian factions aligned with Assad came for harsher treatment, he added. Many of their leaders have left the country, and institutions linked to the groups â such as hospitals, newspapers and radio stations â have been seized.
A building damaged during the 14-year Syrian civil war forms a backdrop for a cemetery in Yarmouk, once a thriving Palestinian camp.
None of that elicits sympathy from Al-Khatib and Ali, both of whom served in their younger days in the Liberation Army.
âAll the [Palestinian] factions should have stayed neutral and blocked any side, Assad or the rebels, from entering. Had they stayed united, they would have protected the camp,â Al-Khatib said.
He waved at the landscape of destruction before him.
âNow Palestinians are more impoverished than ever. All the factions did was destroy the economic infrastructure in Yarmouk,â he said.
He paused before the fire-scorched carcass of what appeared to have once been a furniture shop.
âSee the burns here?â Ali said. âYou can tell theyâre from looting, not war damage. But since we donât know how long it burned, we donât know if the concrete is affected.â
Al-Khatib looked at the scorch marks on the ceiling then shook his head at the ruins before him.
In recent weeks, more nations have said they would recognize a Palestinian state, but here there are more immediate worries.
âWhat time do we have now to think about or fight for a state?â Al-Khatib asked. âOur only concern is securing our homes.â
A decade ago, Jesus Adan Rico breathed a big sigh of relief. That was when the Chino High School student, a Dreamer, learned an immigration judge had effectively shelved his deportation proceedings. Maria Torres, who came to the U.S. at 2 years old, also had her deportation proceedings paused by an immigration judge because she recently married a U.S. citizen.
Yet just eight weeks ago, Adan Rico â now 29, married with a new child â discovered that the Trump administration had revived his deportation case, even though he has renewed his DACA status at least four times. Torres learned the government wants to bring back her case just as she was preparing for her green card interview.
âNo matter what we do, no matter how far we go in school, in our jobs and with our families, it doesnât matter. It is all hanging by a thread,â he said.
Adan Rico and Torres are among thousands of immigrants who have built lives around the assumption they are safe from being detained and deported. Now they face that threat at the hands of the Department of Homeland Security, which is giving new life to administratively closed cases in a bid to step up immigration enforcement.
Some lawyers have received dozens of motions to recalendar â the first step to reopen old cases. If lawyers donât succeed in opposing those motions, the immigrants could wind up back in courthouses that in recent months have become a hub for arrests.
âIt has been 10 years,â Adan Rico said. âAnd all of a sudden our lives are on hold again, at the mercy of these people that think I have no right to be here.â
DHS Assistant Secretary for Public Affairs Tricia McLaughlin, flanked by Madison Sheahan, left, and Todd Lyons, speaks during a news conference at ICE headquarters in May.
(Jose Luis Magana / Associated Press)
When asked about the governmentâs push to restart old proceedings, Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin declined to address questions about the administrationâs change in policy or respond to attorneysâ complaints about the process. She released a statement similar to others she has offered to the media on immigration inquiries.
âBiden chose to release millions of illegal aliens, including criminals, into the country and used prosecutorial discretion to indefinitely delay their cases and allow them to illegally remain in the United States,â she said. âNow, President Trump and Secretary Noem are following the law and resuming these illegal aliensâ removal proceedings and ensuring their cases are heard by a judge.â
Attorneys handling these proceedings say the government is overwhelming the courts and immigration lawyers by dredging up cases, many of which are a decade or more old. In several of these, clients or their original lawyers have died. In other cases, immigrants have received legal status and were surprised to learn the government was attempting to revive deportation proceedings against them.
Since the 1970s, immigration judges have administratively closed deportation proceedings in order to ease the massive backlog on their dockets and prioritize more urgent cases. The maneuver essentially deferred a case, but didnât completely dismiss it, giving both the court and the immigrant wiggle room. The idea was that immigrants could pursue other forms of relief such as a hardship waiver or deferred status. The government could reopen the case if needed.
Across the country, immigration attorneys have received a flurry of requests by Homeland Securityâs Office of Principal Legal Advisor to revive cases. The motions, attorneys say, appear similar in language, and lack analysis or reference to a change that prompted the decision. In their motions, Trump administration lawyers argue that the targeted immigrants have not been granted green cards and therefore do not have legal status to be here.
The motions urge immigration judges to use their discretion to revive cases and consider whether a person has been detained or the pending applicationâs âultimate outcome or likelihood of success.â
What distinguishes immigration proceedings from cases in federal or state courts is that both the lawyers and the judges are part of the executive branch, not the judiciary branch. They answer to Secretary Kristi Noem and Atty. Gen. Pam Bondi, respectively.
Attorneys and clients are racing against the clock to submit opposition to these motions. Many have become in essence private investigators, tracking down clients they havenât seen in years. Other attorneys, who have retired, are looking to other immigration attorneys to pick up their clientâs case.
âThe court is drowning in these motions because weâre trying to resist these,â said David L. Wilson, an immigration attorney at Wilson Law Group in Minneapolis. He first received a batch of 25 government motions at the end of May â and then they kept coming every few weeks. One case involved a client from El Salvador who had been granted Temporary Protected Status, and whose case was administratively closed in 2006.
Adan Rico, a new father who is studying to be an HVAC technician in the Inland Empire, was stunned that the government was seeking to revive deportation proceedings.
The attorney who originally represented him has since died. âIf it wasnât for his daughter calling, I would have never found out my case was reopened,â he said. âThe Department of Homeland Security never sent me anything.â
Attorney Patricia M. Corrales speaks at the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights Los Angeles office in April.
(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)
His new attorney, Patricia Corrales, said Adan Ricoâs Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status doesnât come up for renewal until 2027 and it defers deportation proceedings. But Corrales, who has received about a dozen motions, said it appears the government isnât even checking whether the individuals are alive, much less their immigration status.
One of her cases is that of construction worker Helario Romero Arciniega. Seven years ago, a judge administratively closed deportation proceedings for Romero Arciniega, after he was severely beaten with a metal sprinkler head and had qualified for a visa for crime victims.
This year, government officials filed a motion to bring back the deportation proceedings against the construction worker, even though he had died six months ago.
âThey donât do their homework,â Corrales said of the government lawyers. âTheyâre very negligent in the manner in which theyâre handling these motions to re-calendar.â
Some attorneys have reported delays in their ability to file their opposition motions because the court is so overwhelmed.
When asked about the backlog, Kathryn Mattingly, a spokesperson for the federal immigration court known as the Executive Office for Immigration Review, confirmed that the court âmust receive the underlying initial motion before it can accept a response to that motion.â
Some immigrants now in legal limbo were just steps away from finalizing their green card applications.
Maria Torres, an L.A. County resident and mother of two, said she was only 2 years old when she was brought to the U.S. by her family. She grew up undocumented, and when the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program became available, applied to gain work authorization.
But in 2019, at 21, she was arrested on suspicion of a misdemeanor DUI, which put her into deportation proceedings. She took the classes and paid her ticket. With deportation proceedings open against her, she was able to get her case closed in 2022 while she sought a visa through her husband, a U.S. citizen.
Her visa was approved, and with just one interview appointment left, Torres felt blindsided when she received a call from her attorneyâs office, saying the government wanted to restart deportation proceedings against her.
âI just felt my heart sink and I started crying,â she said. Her attorney submitted a motion opposing the recalendaring of the case, and they are waiting to hear how a judge will rule. In the meantime, she said, sheâs hopeful sheâll have her final interview for her approved visa before then.
âPeople arenât getting due process,â said attorney Mariela Caravetta. âItâs very unfair to the client because these cases have been sleeping for 10 years.â
(Carlin Stiehl / Los Angeles Times)
Mariela Caravetta, an immigration attorney in Van Nuys, said that, since early June, about 30 of her clients have been targeted with government motions to reopen their cases.
By law, she has to reply in 10 days. That means she has to track down the client, who may have moved out of state.
âItâs bad faith doing it like that,â said Caravetta, who accused the federal government of flooding the immigration courts in an effort to meet its deportation quotas.
âPeople arenât getting due process,â she said. âItâs very unfair to the client because these cases have been sleeping for 10 years.â
Caravetta has convinced some judges to deny the government motions because the clients are seeking ways to legally stay in the country. In a handful of cases, she hasnât been able to reach her clients.
The government isnât making an effort to reach out to attorneys to discuss the cases, as is required, she added. âThat would save a lot of time for everybody,â she said. Her clients may have U-visas, which give relief to migrants who have been victims of crime and who help investigators or prosecutors. But the governmentâs motions say, âThese people have not done anything to legalize their status, we need a final resolution.â
Matt OâBrien, a former federal immigration judge and deputy executive director of FAIR, which advocates for stricter immigration laws, said the Trump administration is âenforcing the Immigration and Nationality Act the way that Congress wrote it.â
He questioned why attorneys are complaining about cases being recalendared, saying âitâs akin to a motion of reopening a case in any other court.â
Yet for many immigrants whose cases are being revived, the risks are high. Judges have discretion to deny motions to reopen cases, and have done so in some situations, attorneys say. But judges have also approved the governmentâs request if there is no opposition from the immigrant or their attorney.
At that point, cases are put on the calendar. If it gets scheduled, and the immigrants do not show up to court, they could eventually be ruled âin absentia,â which would make them vulnerable to immediate deportation and bar them from entering the country legally for years.
It all fits with the Trump administrationâs goal of increasing deportation numbers, say many immigration lawyers and former officials.
âThey are getting the largest pool possible of people that they can remove, and removing them from the country,â said Jason Hauser, the former chief of staff of Immigration and Customs Enforcement. âAnd what stands in the way from that is a working due process of an immigration system.â
In April, Sirce E. Owen, acting director of the Executive Office for Immigration Review, issued a memo criticizing the use of administrative closure, referring to it as âa de facto amnesty program with benefitsâ because it offers work authorization and deportation protections. Owen, a former immigration judge, rescinded previous Biden administration guidance that offered a more proactive approach to administrative closures.
Owen stated that, as of April, about 379,000 cases were still administratively closed in immigration court and cited them as a contributing factor to the court systemâs backlog of 4 million cases.
In immigration courts in Los Angeles and San Diego, attorneys are already seeing these cases come before immigration judges. Many clients have expressed shock and despair at being dragged back into court.
Sherman Oaks attorney Edgardo Quintanilla has seen about 40 cases recently, including some dating back to the 2010s. Clients, he said, are alarmed not only by the governmentâs legal maneuvers but by the prospect of entering a federal building these days.
âThere is always the fear that they may be arrested when they go to the court,â he said. âWith everything going on, it is a reasonable fear.â
This article is part of The Timesâ equity reporting initiative,funded by the James Irvine Foundation, exploring the challenges facing low-income workers and the efforts being made to addressCaliforniaâs economic divide.
SEOUL â For many Americans, the apartment where 29-year-old IT specialist Lee Chang-hee lives might be the stuff of nightmares.
Located just outside the capital of Seoul, the building isnât very tall â just 16 stories â by South Korean standards, but the complex consists of 36 separate structures, which are nearly identical except for the building number displayed on their sides.
The 2,000-plus units come in the same standardized dimensions found everywhere in the country (Lee lives in a â84C,â which has 84 square meters, or about 900 square feet, of floor space) and offer, in some ways, a ready-made life. The amenities scattered throughout the campus include a rock garden with a fake waterfall, a playground, a gym, an administration office, a senior center and a âmoms cafe.â
But this, for the most part, is South Koreaâs middle-class dream of homeownership â its version of a house with the white picket fence.
âThe bigger the apartment complex, the better the surrounding infrastructure, like public transportation, schools, hospitals, grocery stories, parks and so on,â Lee said. âI like how easy it is to communicate with the neighbors in the complex because thereâs a well-run online community.â
Apartment blocks are the predominant housing format in Seoul.
(Universal Images Group via Getty Images)
Most in the country would agree: Today, 64% of South Korean households live in such multifamily housing, the majority of them in apartments with five or more stories.
Such a reality seems unimaginable in cities like Los Angeles, which has limited or prohibited the construction of dense housing in single-family zones.
âLos Angeles is often seen as an endless tableau of individual houses, each with their own yard and garden,â Max Podemski, an L.A.-based urban planner, wrote in The Times last year. âApartment buildings are anathema to the cityâs ethos.â
In recent years, the price of that ethos has become increasingly apparent in the form of a severe housing shortage. In the city of Los Angeles, where nearly 75% of all residential land is zoned for stand-alone single-family homes, rents have been in a seemingly endless ascent, contributing to one of the worst homelessness crises in the country. As a remedy, the state of California has ordered the construction of more than 450,000 new housing units by 2029.
The plan will almost certainly require the building of some form of apartment-style housing, but construction has lagged amid fierce resistance.
Sixty years ago, South Korea stood at a similar crossroads. But the series of urban housing policies it implemented led to the primacy of the apartment, and in doing so, transformed South Korean notions of housing over the course of a single generation.
The results of that program have been mixed. But in one important respect, at least, it has been successful: Seoul, which is half the size of the city of L.A., is home to a population of 9.6 million â compared with the estimated 3.3 million people who live here.
For Lee, the trade-off is a worthwhile one.
In an ideal world, she would have a garage for the sort of garage sales sheâs admired in American movies. âBut South Korea is a small country,â she said. âIt is necessary to use space as efficiently as possible.â
Apartments, in her view, have spared her from the miseries of suburban housing. Restaurants and stores are close by. Easy access to public transportation means she doesnât need a car to get everywhere.
âMaybe itâs because of my Korean need to have everything done quickly, but I think itâd be uncomfortable to live somewhere that doesnât have these things within reach at all times,â she said. âI like to go out at night; I think it would be boring to have all the lights go off at 9 p.m.â
A general view shows steam rising from office and apartment buildings that define the Seoul skyline. (Ed Jones / AFP via Getty Images)
Apartment buildings light up in the evening as people return home from work in Seoul on March 25, 2021. (Marcus Yam / Los Angeles Times)
::
Apartments first began appearing in South Korea in the 1960s and 1970s, as part of a government response to a housing crisis in the nationâs capital â a byproduct of the eraâs rapid industrialization and subsequent urban population boom.
In the 1960s, single-family detached dwellings made up around 95% of homes in the country. But over the following decade, as rural migrants flooded Seoul in search of factory work, doubling the population from 2.4 to 5.5 million, many in this new urban working class found themselves without homes. As a result, many of them settled in shantytowns on the cityâs outskirts, living in makeshift sheet-metal homes.
The authoritarian government at the time, led by a former army general named Park Chung-hee, declared apartments to be the solution and embarked on a building spree that would continue under subsequent administrations. Eased height restrictions and incentives for construction companies helped add between 20,000 to 100,000 new apartment units every year.
They were pushed by political leaders in South Korea as a high-tech modernist paradise, soon making them the most desirable form of housing for the middle and upper classes. Known as apateu, which specifically refers to a high-rise apartment building built as part of a larger complex â as distinct from lower stand-alone buildings â they symbolized Western cachet and upward social mobility.
âAround the late 1990s and early 2000s, almost every big-name celebrity at the time appeared in apartment commercials,â recalled Jung Heon-mok, an anthropologist at the Academy of Korean Studies who has studied the history of South Korean apartments. âBut the biggest reason that apartments proliferated as they did was because they were done at scale, in complexes of five buildings or more.â
Essential to the modern apateu are the amenities â such as on-site kindergartens or convenience stores â that allow them to function like miniature towns. This has also turned them into branded commodities and class signifiers, built by construction conglomerates like Samsung, and taking on names like âcastleâ or âpalace.â (One of the first such branded apartment complexes was Trump Tower, a luxury development built in Seoul in the late 1990s by a construction firm that licensed the name of Donald Trump.)
All of this has made the detached single-family home, for the most part, obsolete. In Seoul, such homes now make up just 10% of the housing stock. Among many younger South Koreans like Lee, they are associated with retirement in the countryside, or, as she puts it: for âgrilling in the garden for your grandkids.â
::
This model has not been without problems.
There are the usual issues that come with dense housing. In buildings with poor soundproofing, âinter-floor noiseâ between units is such a universal scourge that the government runs a noise-related dispute resolution center while discouraging people from angrily confronting their neighbors, a situation that occasionally escalates into headline-making violence.
Some apartment buildings have proved to be too much even for a country accustomed to unsentimentally efficient forms of housing. One 19-story, 4,635-unit complex built by a big-name apartment brand in one of the wealthiest areas of Seoul looks so oppressive that it has become a curiosity, mocked by some as a prison or chicken coop.
Apartment complexes in Seoul on Oct. 5, 2024. Apartments first began appearing in South Korea in 1960s and 1970s, as part of a government response to a housing crisis in the nationâs capital.
(Tina Hsu / Bloomberg via Getty Images)
The sheer number of apartments has prompted criticism of Seoulâs skyline as sterile and ugly. South Koreans have described its uniform, rectangular columns as âmatchboxes.â And despite the aspirations attached to them, there is also a wariness about a culture where homes are built in such disposable, assembly line-like fashion.
Many people here are increasingly questioning how this form of housing, with its nearly identical layouts, has shaped the disposition of contemporary South Korean society, often criticized by its own members as overly homogenized and lockstep.
âIâm concerned that apartments have made South Koreansâ lifestyles too similar,â said Maing Pil-soo, an architect and urban planning professor at Seoul National University. âAnd with similar lifestyles, you end up with a similar way of thinking. Much like the cityscape itself, everything becomes flattened and uniform.â
Jung, the anthropologist, believes South Koreaâs apartment complexes, with their promise of an atomized, frictionless life, have eroded the more expansive social bonds that defined traditional society â like those that extended across entire villages â making its inhabitants more individualistic and insular.
âAt the end of the day, apartments here are undoubtedly extremely convenient â thatâs why they became so popular,â he said. âBut part of that convenience is because they insulate you from the concerns of the wider world. Once youâre inside your complex and in your home, you donât have to pay attention to your neighbors or their issues.â
Still, Jung says this uniformity isnât all bad. It is what made them such easily scalable solutions to the housing crisis of decades past. It is also, in some ways, an equalizing force.
âI think apartments are partly why certain types of social inequalities you see in the U.S. are comparatively less severe in South Korea,â he said.
Though many branded apartment complexes now resemble gated communities with exclusionary homeowner associations, Jung points out that on the whole, the dominance of multifamily housing has inadvertently encouraged more social mixing between classes, a physical closeness that creates the sense that everyone is inhabiting the same broader space.
Even Seoulâs wealthiest neighborhoods feel, to an extent that is hard to see in many American cities, porous and accessible. Wealthier often means having a nicer apartment, but an apartment all the same, existing in the same environs as those in a different price range.
âAnd even though we occasionally use disparaging terms like âchicken coopâ to describe them, once you actually step inside one of those apartments, they donât feel like that at all,â Jung said. âThey really are quite comfortable and nice.â
::
People pose for photos among a field of cosmos flowers in front of high-rise apartment buildings in Goyang, west of Seoul.(Ed Jones / AFP via Getty Images)
None of this, however, has been able to stave off Seoulâs own present-day housing affordability crisis.
The capital has one of the most expensive apartment prices in the world on a price-per-square-meter basis, ranking fourth after Hong Kong, Zurich and Singapore, and ahead of major U.S. cities like New York or San Francisco, according to a report published last month by Deutsche Bank. One especially brutal stretch recently saw apartment prices in Seoul double in four years.
Part of the reason for this is that apartments, with their standardized dimensions, have effectively become interchangeable financial commodities: An apartment in Seoul is seen as a much more surefire bet than any stock, leading to intense real estate investment and speculation that has driven up home prices.
âBuying an apartment here isnât just buying an apartment. The equivalent in the U.S. would be like buying an ideal single-family home with a garage in the U.S., except that it comes with a bunch of NVIDIA shares,â said Chae Sang-wook, an independent real estate analyst. âIn South Korea, people invest in apateu for capital gains, not cash flow from rent.â
Some experts predict that, as the country enters another era of demographic upheaval, the dominance of apartments will someday be no more.
If births continue to fall as dramatically as they have done in recent years, South Koreans may no longer need such dense housing. The ongoing rise of single-person households, too, may chip away at a form of housing built to hold four-person nuclear families.
But Chae is skeptical that this will happen anytime soon. He points out that South Koreans donât even like to assemble their own furniture, let alone fix their own cars â all downstream effects of ubiquitous apartment living.
âFor now, there is no alternative other than this,â he said. âAs a South Korean, you donât have the luxury of choosing.â
One of the oldest movie studios in Los Angeles is up for sale, perhaps to the newest generation of content creators.
The potential sale of Occidental Studios comes amid a drop in filming in Los Angeles as the local entertainment industry faces such headwinds as rising competition from studios in other cities and countries, as well as the aftermath of filming slowdowns during the pandemic and industry strikes of 2023.
Occidental Studios, which dates back to 1913, was once used by Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks to make silent films. It is a small version of a traditional Hollywood studio with soundstages, offices and writersâ bungalows in a 3-acre gated campus near Echo Park in Historic Filipinotown.
Kermit the Frog above the Jim Henson Company studio lot in Hollywood.
(AaronP/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images)
The seller hopes its boutique reputation will garner $45 million, which would rank it one of the most valuable studios in Southern California at $651 per square foot. A legendary Hollywood studio founded by Charlie Chaplin in 1917 sold last year for $489 per foot, according to real estate data provider CoStar.
The Chaplin studio, known until recently as the Jim Henson Company Lot, was purchased by singer-songwriter John Mayer and movie director McG from the family of Muppets creator Jim Henson.
Occidental Studios may sell to one of todayâs modern content creators in search of a flagship location, said real estate broker Nicole Mihalka of CBRE, who represents the seller.
She declined to name potential buyers but said she is showing the property to new-media businesses who donât present themselves through traditional channels such as television shows and instead rely on social media and the internet to reach younger audiences.
Occidental Studios, which dates back to 1913, was once used by Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks to make silent films.
(CBRE)
New media entrepreneurs may not often need soundstages, âbut they like the idea of having the history, the legacyâ of a studio linked to the early days of cinema, she said. It might lend credibility to a brand and become a destination for promotional activities as well as being a place to create content, she said. Mihalka envisions the space being used for events for partners, sponsors and advertisers as well as press junkets for new product launches.
Entertainment businesses located nearby include filmmaker Ava DuVernayâs Array Now, independent film and production company Blumhouse Productions and film and production company Rideback Ranch.
Neighborhoods east of Hollywood such as Los Feliz, Silver Lake, Echo Park and Highland Park have become home to many people in the entertainment industry, which Mihalka hopes will elevate the appeal of Occidental Studios.
âWeâve been seeing film and TV talent heading this way for a while,â she said, including executives who also live in those neighborhoods.
The owner of of Occidental Studios said itâs gotten harder for smaller studios to operate in the current economic climate that includes competition from major independent studio operators that have emerged in recent decades.
âOnce upon a time, you did not have multibillion-dollar global portfolio companies swimming in the waters of Hollywood,â said Craig Darian, chief executive of Occidental Entertainment Group Holdings Inc., citing Hudson Pacific Properties, Hackman Capital Partners and CIM Group. âThey are not content producers, but have a long history of providing services for multiple television shows and features.â
Competition now includes overseas studios in such countries as Canada, Ireland and Australia, he said. âWhen production was really robust and domiciled in Los Angeles, it was much easier to remain very competitive.â
Another factor threatening the bottom line for conventional studios is rapidly changing technology used to create entertainment including tools as simple as lighting.
âYou used to know that equipment would last for decades,â Darian said. âThe new tools for production are becoming obsolete in far shorter order.â
Writersâ bungalows at Occidental Studios.
(CBRE)
Nevertheless, Darian said, the potential sale âis not motivated by distress or urgency. Nothing is driving the decision other than the timing of whether or not this remains to be a relevant asset to keep within our portfolio. If we get an offer at or above the asking price, then weâre a seller.â
Darian said he may also seek a long-term tenant to take over the studio.
Occidental Studios at 201 N. Occidental Blvd. comprises over 69,000 square feet of buildings including four soundstages and support space such as offices and dressing rooms.
Itâs among the oldest continually operating studios in Hollywood, used by pioneering filmmakers Cecil B. DeMille, D.W. Griffith and Pickford, who worked there as an actor and filmmaker in its early years. She reportedly kept an apartment on the lot for years.
More recently it has been used for television production for shows including âTales of the City,â âNew Girlâ and HBOâs thriller âSharp Objects.â
Local television production area declined by 30.5% in the first quarter compared with the previous year, according to he nonprofit organization FilmLA, which tracks shoot days in the Greater Los Angeles region. All categories of TV production were down, including dramas (-38.9%), comedies (-29.9%), reality shows -(26.4%) and pilots (-80.3%).
Feature film production decreased by 28.9%, while commercials were down by 2.1%, FilmLA said.
For nearly a quarter-century, voters in Clallam County, Wash. â a lush green dot in the far corner of the country â have gone with the winner in 11 straight presidential elections. Thatâs an unmatched level of precision among more than 3,000 counties nationwide.
But the streak, dating to 1980, ended on Tuesday as voters favored Vice President Kamala Harris over former President Trump, by a decisive 53% to 44% margin. While there are still votes to be counted, Harrisâ lead appears certain to hold.
That means there are no bellwether counties left in America; heading into the 2020 election there were nearly 20. After that, Clallam County â roughly balanced politically between its three small population centers and sparsely populated rural reaches â stood alone.
(Yours truly visited the county and took the measure of voter sentiments in September, just after the Trump-Harris debate: At the time, neither candidate was running away with the contest and virtually everyone was firmly dug into their positions.)
Marc Abshire, director of the Port Angeles Chamber of Commerce and a Harris supporter, said he was proud the county went for the Democratic ticket âbut also disappointed weâre losing our bellwether status because of it.â
âOut here, we just didnât have the grievance vote that most of the rest of the country seemed to have,â Abshire said.
Setting aside any bruised pride, he said there are plenty of reasons to visit the region, beyond its former political prescience.
âWeâre lucky to live in one of the most beautiful places in the nation, if not the world,â Abshire said. âWe have the sea and mile-high mountains all in our front and backyards. Our weather is always temperate.â
People will just have to start looking elsewhere for a political barometer.
Featuring new single “CAN’T CHANGE ME” with accompanying music video taking the spotlight
ATLANTA, November 1, 2024 (Newswire.com)
– Hailing from the legendary Shoals area of Northwest Alabama, Austin Bohannon of Bo Music is the soundtrack of the New South, powered by the distribution and strategic infrastructure of Sony/Orchard through UPD. Prepare to clap your hands and stomp your feet to the irresistible charisma and contagious melodies of Austin Bohannon, the rising star who is taking the country music scene by storm. Known to mesmerize audiences with his distinct fusion of country music and high-energy anthems, Austin has firmly established himself as a formidable presence in the music industry.Â
3 – Hand Me A Beer (Gary Nichols, Brad Kuhn, Sol Philcox-Littlefield, Austin Bohannon)
4 – Me At 23 – Live (Austin Bohannon)
5 – Higher – Live (Austin Bohannon)
Austin’s exceptional musical talents are deeply rooted in his diverse background. He sings about his life stories that include his time as a pre-med student and his successful career as a D1 baseball player at the University of Alabama (Birmingham). Through his experiences on the baseball field, he cultivated the ability to command the grandest stages and deliver awe-inspiring performances. With every show, Austin delivers unforgettable musical experiences that move fans to share his hit music with new listeners. All while sharing the spotlight with many renowned acts along the way.
Austin has solidified his reputation as an authentic entertainer, setting the stage ablaze and igniting the party wherever he goes. His infectious style and dynamic musicality create the perfect ambiance for celebration and revelry. With his popularity skyrocketing, Austin has amassed an impressive following, with his music amassing over half a million streams and counting. As a musician, his collaborations and his writing resume are sure to gain global attention. Itâs time for Austin Bohannon.
Post Malone F-1 Trillion Tour The Woodlands, Texas October 22, 2024
Since the beginning of his career, Post Malone has been a mystery. The skinny white kid who started rapping on Soundcloud with “White Iverson” is now an almost 30-year-old father releasing country albums. He lives somewhere in between the genres of rap, rock, pop, and country, and does a damn fine job of combining all of those sounds into a fun, loud, and exciting live show.
A few years back, Post delivered the following on X (formally Twitter):
âWhen I turn 30 I’m becoming a country/folk singerâ
His predictions came true a little early, delivering his F-1 Trillion country album to the world in August of this year. He has always performed covers of country and country-adjacent songs throughout his career, my favorite being his cover of Brad Paisley’s “I’m Gonna Miss Her” which he posted on YouTube in 2021.
Post’s set in The Woodland began with the songs “Wrong Ones” and “Finer Things’” the two opening tracks of his latest album. The stage was lit with a wall of lights behind the band, and two large spotlights on each end resembling prison guard towers. It was clear that Malone wanted a more down to earth vibe for this tour, ditching the LEDs and lasers for one large platform that supported his band while he walked around barefoot in jeans and a Bud Light T-shirt.
Post Malone lives somewhere in between the genres of rap, rock, pop, and country, and does a fine job combining those sounds into an exciting live show.
Photo by Cody Barclay
“Its so wonderful to be back in Texas!” declared Post as he waved to his fans, holding a blue Solo cup of Bud Light in his hand. “Cheers motherfuckers!”
He spend most of the first half of the night showcasing the new music from his country album, but he would pepper the evening with pop hits such as “Circles” and “Chemical,” each sounding extra cool with the slide guitar adding some country twang to the background of each song.
Malone took a break to intro his band, which included a fiddle player and a slide guitarist, which kept the show mostly grounded in the country genre. He also covered Toby Keith’s “Wish I Didn’t Know” and shouted out his friends Jelly Roll, Morgan Wallen, Chris Stapleton and Luke Combs.
Mid-show, Post invited a young fan named Courtney to play acoustic guitar on stage with him for the song “Stay.” She was visibly nervous, but Malone calmed her down with a genuine smile and encouraging words of support.
Post Malone delivered several motivational messages to his fans.
Photo by Cody Barclay
“I hate to keep beating you guys up with sad songs, but I need to sing this one!” he said as the notes to “I Fall Apart” rang out. It was super emotional and a powerful performance, which he did while kneeling down, almost in a prayer position while singing. This mini emotional set ended with “Better Now” and “Psycho”.
Post then had these words for his fans:
“Before I leave I just want to say…. You are loved, don’t give up! If you think that you are a loser, well that makes two of us! Keep going!”
The evening came to a close with a now shirtless Postie performing his hits “Rockstar,” “Congratulations” and “Sunflower.”
“Do whatever you want to do in life,” he told the crowd. “Because no one can fucking stop you!”
Post Malone ladies and gentlemen: Rapper, Country Singer, and Motivational Speaker.Â
On Saturday night, Morgan Wallen lit a cigar before going on stage in Charlotte, North Carolina for the 87th and final show of his One Night at a Time world tour. For the last two years, the 31-year-old country musician has traveled the world with a life-sized replica of his grandmotherâs small-town Tennessee front porch as a set in his stadium show, a reference to the cover of his third album, One Thing at a Time. On the tourâs debut night, March 15, 2023, in Auckland, New Zealand, Wallen was a genre favorite whose crossover to pop wasnât assured. Heâs since become one of the USâs biggest music stars and one of Nashvilleâs best bets, recently smashing his own record for historyâs highest-grossing country tour.
Now, Wallen is planning for whatâs next. Last week, he released his first new single, âLove Somebodyâ and announced the Sand in My Boots festival, in partnership with concert promoter AEG, scheduled to run May 16â18 in Gulf Shores, Alabama. Naturally, the three-day festival will include sets from his friends and collaborators Post Malone,Ernest Keith Smith, who performs as ERNEST, and Michael Hardy, better known as HARDY, and other big names in country music, including Brooks & Dunn, Bailey Zimmerman, and Chase Rice. But Wallen also handpicked performers from beyond his original music scene, with rapper Wiz Khalifa joining Three 6 Mafia, T-Pain, 2 Chainz, and Moneybagg Yo, and indie-rock band the War on Drugsâone of Wallenâs longtime favorite actsâheadlining a list of bands that includes Future Islands, Real Estate, and Wild Nothing.
Working with Wallen on the festival has been âa dream come true,â said Stacy Vee, vice president of festival booking for Goldenvoice, the production company behind the Coachella and Stagecoach festivals. She added that the lineup is âone of the most eclectic and electricâ experiences sheâs put on.
The festival is the bow on a few years of Wallenâs rapid rise to pop stardom. âThereâs no way when they signed Morgan that they were like, heâs going to be the one, heâs going to be the next Taylor Swiftâtype person in the genre,â Hardy told VF. He acknowledged Wallenâs talent as a singer and songwriter, but compared the total package to a small-town entrepreneur with the Midas touch. âI knew a guy from my hometown, heâs a business owner, and everything he touched turned to gold. He was a hard worker and a really smart guy, but some of it was just pure luck.â
Wallenâs current industry stature is a far cry from where it was in February 2021, when the artist and his longtime label, Big Loud, came to a fork in the road. They had the number-one album in the nation, a few songs banked for a follow-up, and a raging controversy after TMZ published a video of Wallen saying a racial slur to a friend in his driveway. Condemnation from inside and outside of Nashville was swift. His music was pulled from the biggest radio stations, Spotify removed promotion of his recent release, Dangerous: The Double Album, from its playlist, and other popular musicians, including Maren Morris,Jason Isbell, and Kelsea Ballerini, spoke out against Wallen. The singer had to prove he either wanted to be an entertainer for all, or embrace the âcanceledâ label and consign himself to the worst type of second act.
He made his choice quickly, and it seemed like an easy one. After filming a hangdog apology video, he went to a San Diego rehab facility for a 30-day stay to address his relationship with alcohol. He even told his fans that they shouldnât be supporting him. âI was never that guy that people were portraying me to be,â Wallen said in an interview with Billboard in December 2023 regarding the video. âIf I was that guy, then I wouldnât have cared. I wouldnât have apologized. I wouldnât have done any of that if I really was that guy that people were saying about me.â
Curiously, or not, the album stayed affixed to the top of the charts for over a year. Had the scandal actually helped his career? Fearful that it had, Wallen and his team did some back-of-the-envelope math and settled on $500,000 as the rough value of all the press heâd received, however negative, and promised it to Black-serving organizations, including the Black Music Action Coalition. And then, Wallen was left in an odd placeâtoo popular to be ignored but seemingly too toxic to remain mainstream.
The only head-to-head debate in Californiaâs high-stakes U.S. Senate race between Rep. Adam B. Schiff and former Dodger Steve Garvey was dominated Tuesday by contentious exchanges on a host of national political issues â from immigration to the economy, expanding conflict in the Middle East, reproductive healthcare and global warming.
The sharpest exchanges, however, related to the two candidatesâ vastly different stances on former President Trump.
Schiff, a Burbank Democrat with more than 20 years of experience in the House and a commanding lead in the polls, cast Garvey as an inexperienced Trump backer who would push conservative rather than Californian values in Washington.
Californians, Schiff quipped, are ânot looking for some MAGA mini-me in a baseball uniform.â
Garvey, a Palm Desert Republican with no political experience but high name recognition from his days as a Major League Baseball star, suggested Schiff was too caught up in party politics and his vendetta against Trump to focus on the issues most important to California voters.
âHow can you think about one man every day and focus on that when youâve got millions of people in California to take care of?â Garvey said. âI think itâs unconscionable.â
The debate was testy from the start. When Schiff in his first remarks accused Garvey of turning a blind eye to the worst impulses of Trump â who Schiff said wants to âbe a dictator on Day Oneâ â Garvey replied, borrowing a famous Ronald Reagan line used in a 1980 presidential debate, âThere you go again.â
During a separate exchange on immigration, in which Schiff accused Garvey of supporting Trumpâs plan for mass deportations, Garvey said, âOne of the two of us is honest and straightforward.â
âI would agree with that,â Schiff shot back.
The debate offered a final chance for the two candidates to square off in public before voters decide between them in the November election. Californians will be asked to vote twice in the Senate race: First, to choose Schiff or Garvey to serve out the remainder of the late Sen. Dianne Feinsteinâs final term, which ends in early January, and, separately, who should serve a subsequent six-year Senate term.
Tuesdayâs debate was the first since Garvey and Schiff won the two highest totals of votes in a more crowded primary field, in which Schiff bested Democratic rivals Reps. Katie Porter of Irvine and Barbara Lee of Oakland. Polls show Schiff with a substantial lead over Garvey.
Trump loomed over immigration debate
Moderators of the fast-paced, hour-long debate â hosted by KABC-TV in partnership with Univision and the League of Women Voters â asked Schiff and Garvey multiple questions about immigration and border security.
Schiff said the country needs to âget control of the borderâ with more personnel and technology to interdict people and drugs. But it also needs a âcomprehensive immigration policyâ that treats people humanely and provides relief for farmworkers and undocumented people who arrived in the U.S. as children.
And he blasted Garvey for backing Trump, saying Trumpâs plan is for mass deportations that will devastate the country and immigrant communities.
âYouâre voting for mass deportations when you say youâre for Donald Trump,â Schiff said.
âWhat we have to do is secure the border. We have to finish off the wall. We have to reinstate âremain in Mexico,ââ Garvey said. âWe have to reinforce our border patrol. We have to get back to building facilities at the border that will detain these illegal immigrants, then a judicial system that will will try them.â
A record number of people have been stopped at the U.S.-Mexico border during the Biden-Harris administration, and Republicans across the country â including Garvey â are pushing to make border security a campaign liability for Democrats.
âA lot of Americans are concerned about immigration,â said Mindy Romero, the founder of the Center for Inclusive Democracy at USC. âThe reason why Republicans are talking about it so much is because it works.â
While Garveyâs chances of winning the Senate race are low given how deeply blue California voters are overall, Romero said, he is still the highest-ranking Republican on the ballot after Trump â and what Garvey says about immigration could still matter for Republicans.
âIn California, weâre not a monolith and weâre not all in sync on this issue,â Romero said. âWhat Garvey says and does could help motivate and mobilize Republicans.â
Garvey struggled to state a clear position on abortion
The moderators sought, without success, to bring clarity to Garveyâs position on abortion rights.
He has said that he personally opposes abortion and would not support a federal ban on abortion.
âI am a Catholic,â Garvey said Tuesday night. âI believe in life at conception. I believe that God breathes a soul into these fetuses. So I am steadfast in terms of my policies on abortion, and also pledge to support all the people of California.â
But Garvey also pledged to âsupport the voice of Californians.â He said he supported the amendment enshrining a right to abortion in the state Constitution that two-thirds of Golden State voters supported in 2022 after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade.
If Garvey is âlistening to the voices of Californians like he claims, he would hear their voices loud and clear,â Schiff said. âCalifornians want a national right to reproductive freedom and they donât want the government in the business of making that decision for women.â
Schiff has been a longtime vocal advocate for access to abortion services, and said Tuesday that he supports establishing a national right to abortion access.
A UC Berkeley Institute of Governmental Studies poll in early August, co-sponsored by the Los Angeles Times, found that more than half of likely California voters surveyed â 52% â said electing someone who âwould be a strong voice in defending abortion rights in the Senateâ was very important to them.
Differences on governmentâs role on the economy
The differences in how Schiff and Garvey see the role of government was fully on display when they were pressed on how to address the rising cost of goods and housing.
âWeâre much worse off than we were four years ago,â Garvey said. He said he supported more free-market policies, and knocked Schiff for what he described as âSchiff-flation.â
Housing is a local issue and more federal regulation could lead to the government being âoverinvolved,â Garvey said.
Asked how he would help renters, he said heâd do so by getting the U.S. economy âroaring again.â
Schiff said he would support more direct federal spending on housing, and as well as an expansion of Section 8 vouchers, a government subsidy that enables eligible tenants to find housing with private landlords. He also proposed a ârenterâs tax credit,â akin to the tax deduction that allows homeowners to write off their mortgage interest payments.
Garvey said he would support tariffs on imported goods shipped by âa company that threatens the success of an American company.â But, he said, he would prefer to see lower domestic taxes to foster more small businesses and reduce the need to import foreign goods.
Schiff said he doesnât support Trumpâs âacross-the-board tariffs,â which he said would lead to higher prices for consumers. He said he would support âtargeted tariffsâ when China dumps cheap goods into the country âto try to drive American businesses out of business.â
Right out of the gate, KABC anchor and moderator Marc Brown brought up Feinstein having authored an assault weapons ban in 1994, and asked Garvey whether he would take any action on guns were he elected.
âI believe in the Constitution, I believe in the Second Amendment. I believe it will never be overturned, nor should we attempt to overturn that,â Garvey said. âI do have sympathy for all of those who may have been victims of shootings, but I think that the most important thing is a stringent background check that goes much deeper than it is today, in order to to preserve the integrity of the Second Amendment and to be able to provide for people to defend themselves.â
Schiff said Californians need leaders like Feinstein who are willing to âstand up toâ the National Rifle Assn.
âI would support an assault weapons ban. I would support extended and universal background checks. I would support a ban on extended ammunition clips and my own bill, which would strip away the NRAâs immunity from liability,â Schiff said. âMr. Garvey was asked just a couple weeks ago if he would support any gun control measure, and his answer was unequivocal, no, that is not what Californians are looking for. Californians want a leader like Dianne Feinstein, who will stand up to the NRA.â
Later in the debate, Feinstein came up again, on the issue of environmental regulations â and whether Schiff would ease water restrictions on farmers.
Schiff said he would not âsupport evisceratingâ regulations, but would do what Sen. Feinstein did, which is âlook for those opportunities where we can have a win, both for our farms, our cities and our environment.â
Garvey said environmentalists in the state need to work with farmers, and that he is a âconsensus builderâ who can help make that happen. He called water the âplatinum issue in California,â and one Schiff doesnât know how to fix.
Schiff would later evoke Feinsteinâs name on the economy, saying he realizes many in California are struggling financially and that he will work with âcommunity leaders and stakeholders in every part of this Golden Stateâ in âFeinsteinâs model.â
âMr. Schiff, youâre no Dianne Feinstein,â Garvey said. âI remember when this state was the heartbeat of America, and now itâs just a murmur.â
Schiff, in response, said Feinstein was a friend of his, and would never âpretend to be the equalâ of hers, because she was a âgiant.â But he suggested he is far more similar to Feinstein than Garvey.
âWhile Mr. Garvey was signing baseballs for the last 37 years, I was seeing presidents of both parties and governors of both parties sign my bills into law,â Schiff said.
Back to Trump
After the debate, in small gaggles with reporters, both Schiff and Garvey came back to another politician not in the room: Trump.
Schiff said it was clear from the debate that Garvey is âfor Trumpâ and his agenda.
âHeâs for states being able to ban abortion. Heâs against any form of gun safety legislation. Heâs for opening up the oil spigots. These are views right out of Project 2025 and Trump, but they are not in sync in California,â Schiff said.
Garvey said he felt he had been unfairly tied to Trump.
âPeople know that weâre two entirely different people,â he said.
He said Schiffâs attempt to âpaint me far-rightâ wouldnât stand up, because âpeople know Iâm conservatively moderate.â
Garvey declined to say whether he would vote for Trump in November, but confirmed that he voted for Trump for a third time in this yearâs primary.
Carin LeĂłn Boca Chueca Tour Toyota Center October 6, 2024
In Spanish, the word sorono is an adjective that means “imposingly deep and loud.” Carin LeĂłn is from the Northern Mexican state of Sonora, which is absolutely perfect because that man is loudness personified. From his big, imposing body structure and swagger, Carin uses his voice as a tool of celebration, honoring the musical traditions of his country and his city of birth, which is Hermosillo.
On Sunday evening at Houston’s Toyota Center, Carin LeĂłn and his banda took the stage for an after-party celebration. This crew played the main stage at ACL Music Festival on Friday, then taped an episode of Austin City Limits on Saturday. Now I’m not saying that Toyota Center isn’t as special as those other two stages, but I would have understood if Carin would have performed a more subdued show here in Houston.
However, the exact opposite occurred. It seems that after the pressure-filled shows in Austin, Houston received a show full of special surprises and an abundance of energy. LeĂłn appeared on stage with his customary cowboy hat tilted to the side, a brown jacket with fringe, and enough energy to rival the sun. He strolled and danced his way across the stage to the opening track “Frene Mis Pies” which opens with a funky guitar riff that repeats throughout the song.
And then the bottle of Claze Azul tequila made an appearance. Leon took a few drinks and it fueled his vocals, which he needed in order to complete his extensive set list. “Quien quiere llorar esta noche?!” he asked the audience (who feels like crying tonight?). This question led into the Colombian vallenato song “Si Tu Amor No Vuelve,” which was a welcome and interesting selection.
Halfway through the concert, LeĂłn changed into a personalized Houston Rockets jersey. He continued to thank Houston for all the support declaring that he will carry Houston in his heart with him until the day he dies. He then picked up an acoustic guitar, sat on a bar stool, and sang a beautiful cover of “You’re Still The One” by Shania Twain. Unexpected but really beautiful.
Carin LeĂłn thanked his Houston fans throughout the evening, declaring to hold Houston in his heart until the day he dies.
Photo by Violeta Alvarez
And the covers kept coming! Songs by Bobby Pulido, Los Cadetes de Linares, Chalino Sanchez, and Cheyenne made the crowd stand up and dance in their seats and in the aisles of the nearly full arena. I especially loved the medley of Banda music from the ’90s, including “Nina Fresa,” “La Noche Que Murio Chicago” and “Ramito De Violetas.” And of course, we can’t forget “La Boda Del Huitlacoche,” which was definitely a highlight of the night.
But by far, the most sentimental tribute was the set in honor of the late Joan Sebastian, who Carin has previously called one of his heroes.
As the night came to a close, we were serenaded with “Tennessee Whiskey” and then Carin’s biggest hit “Primera Cita.”
LeĂłn is a spectacular talent with a sincere love for music of all genres, and we are lucky to celebrate this love together during his performances. Viva Mexico, viva Carin LeĂłn!
Amid relentless criticism from former President Trump that she is responsible for out-of-control illegal immigration, Vice President Kamala Harris on Friday made her first visit to the U.S.-Mexico border since 2021, announcing more stringent measures she would take as president to restrict border entry.
âThe United States is a sovereign nation, and I believe we have a duty to set rules at our border, and to enforce them,â Harris told a crowd in Douglas, Ariz., gathered in a small auditorium at Cochise College Douglas Campus, where the stage was flanked by large signs that read, âBorder security and stability.â âWe are also a nation of immigrants. The United States has been enriched by generations of people who have come from every corner of the world to contribute to our country and to become part of the American story.â
Harris said she would go beyond Biden administration policies to further restrict border access outside of official ports of entry.
Earlier in the afternoon, Harris visited a port of entry less than 10 miles from the campaign event. Two Border Patrol agents walked with her along the towering fence, which was built during the Obama administration. Harris later told reporters that she had thanked them for their work.
âTheyâve got a tough job and they need, rightly, support to do their job. They are very dedicated,â she said. âAnd so Iâm here to talk with them about what we can continue to do to support them.â
She advocated for hiring more officers and adding more fentanyl detection systems at border entry points.
âI reject the false choice that suggest we must either choose between securing our border or creating a system of immigration that is safe, orderly and humane,â Harris said. âWe can and we must do both.â
Immigration reform has bedeviled presidents of both parties for decades.
A bipartisan proposal earlier this year that combined increased funding for border security and foreign aid for Ukraine appeared to be the first breakthrough until it was derailed when Trump urged Republicans to oppose it.
Kamala Harris speaks at Cochise College Douglas Campus in Douglas, Ariz., on Friday.
(Carolyn Kaster / Associated Press)
That deal fell short of comprehensive plans discussed for decades that would revamp the asylum system and the legal immigration process and provide a pathway to citizenship for an estimated 11 million people in the country without legal authorization, including those who arrived as children. Harris on Friday mentioned farm workers and immigrants who arrived as children, known as âDreamers.â
âAs president, I will put politics aside to fix our immigration system and find solutions to problems which have persisted for far too long,â Harris said.
In advance of Harrisâ visit to the border, Trump pointed to reports that there are more than 425,000 convicted criminals who are in the country illegally but not detained by federal authorities, according to data provided by Immigration and Customs Enforcement in response to a lawmakerâs request.
That includes more than 13,000 convicted of homicide and more than 15,800 convicted of sexual assault, according to the ICE data shared on X, formerly Twitter, by Rep. Tony Gonzales (R-Texas).
Trump said Thursday that 21 million people entered the country illegally in just the last four years. He framed the bipartisan effort that he helped defeat as âher atrocious border bill.â
âIt was not a border bill. It was an amnesty bill … ,â he said at a news conference in Manhattan. âFortunately Congress was too smart for it.â
The bill would not have provided a path to citizenship for people who lack legal status.
The GOP nomineeâs appearance at Trump Tower was reminiscent of his 2015 campaign announcement there, notably his references to other nations purposefully sending criminals to the United States.
His remarks included multiple falsehoods, such as saying Harris approved a raft of changes to the nationâs immigration policies that as vice president she had no control over, and that she was the Biden administrationâs âborder czar.â She had been charged with trying to improve conditions in Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras to stop those nationsâ residents from fleeing their homelands.
That assignment has been a political headache for Harris â drawing criticism from the left and right.
In a 2021 visit to Central America, Harris told would-be migrants that they would be deported if they crossed the border, angering allies of immigrants who said they were fleeing poverty, corruption and violence.
âDo not come,â she said at the time. âYou will be turned back.â
On the same trip, Harris laughed off questions in a nationally televised interview about why she had not yet visited the border as vice president, inflaming critics on the right.
Border stops hit a record in December, with agents making nearly 250,000 arrests. As the political problem raged, Biden signed an order in June to heavily restrict asylum claims, prompting a sharp drop in border encounters, to fewer than 60,000 in July and August.
Republicans have been hammering the issue, with GOP members of Congress filing a resolution that âstrongly condemns the Biden Administration and its Border Czar, Kamala Harrisâs, failure to secure the United States borderâ one day after the president announced he would not seek reelection.
While some of the former president and his alliesâ claims are demonstrably false and have been denounced by GOP elected officials, such as allegations that Haitian migrants are eating pets in Springfield, Ohio, concerns among some voters about the impact of an insecure border on the economy, crime and the fentanyl crisis are palpable in many communities.
Fridayâs visit was Harrisâ second to Arizona since she became the Democratic presidential nominee, according to the Harris-Walz campaign. While Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff and others have swung through the southwestern battleground state, Harris has focused much of her in-person campaigning in critical states farther east, such as Pennsylvania, Michigan and Georgia.
Hours before the vice president landed in Arizona, Republicans held a press call featuring two mothers whose daughters were raped and killed by immigrants who were in the country illegally and the mother of a teenage son who overdosed on fentanyl. The women lambasted Harris for the administrationâs immigration policy and for visiting the border so close to the election.
âIâm trying very hard not to cry. We live 1,800 miles away from the border,â said Patty Morin, the mother of Rachel Morin, a mother of five who was brutally attacked while walking a bucolic and well-traveled public trail in Maryland. Her body was discovered in a drain pipe.
âNo one is safe in America, no one is safe. If you have a sanctuary city in your state, youâre not safe,â she said. âThey have bused, flown, trained illegal immigrants to literally every nook and cranny and every tiny town in the whole of the United States.â
Such fears are among the reasons the Harris campaign released an ad about immigration in Arizona on Friday, and visited the Southern border less than a month and a half before election day. As vice president, she previously visited the region once in 2021, when she toured the port of entry and border operation in El Paso.
Mehta reported from Phoenix and Pinho reported from Douglas. Times staff writers Noah Bierman and Andrea Castillo contributed to this report from Washington, D.C.
Vice President Kamala Harris has never met Maria Rodriguez. She probably never will. But the Democratic presidential nominee should be worried about Rodriguez, and voters like her.
The single mother of three from Henderson, Nev., is a onetime Democratic voter who frets about the economy (meaning: the price of just about everything) and says she plans to vote for former President Trump.
Rodriguez cast her ballot for Joe Biden four years ago, hoping for better times. But, regardless of what government statisticians might say about the economy, the 36-year-old finds itâs harder to pay the bills today, even though she is working two or three jobs as a nurse and home healthcare worker.
âGoing to the market is really hard right now,â Rodriguez said as she pushed a mostly empty cart up an aisle of a Dollar Tree discount store last week. âSometimes, before, you would go in with 100 bucks and come out with a full cart. It was pretty OK. Now, with 100 bucks, you can get maybe 10 things. Itâs living paycheck to paycheck.â
âI was potentially a Democrat,â she said. âBut I have changed my way of thinking [because] this country is going downhill.â
Views like Rodriguezâs go a long way in explaining why Nevada, which Democrats have won in the last four presidential races, remains up for grabs in the 2024 election. Harris holds a narrow 0.6% advantage in recent polls, according to an aggregate by Real Clear Politics. Thatâs a marked improvement for the Democrats, given that Trump led in the high single digits in polls before President Biden left the race in July.
The Silver State is one of seven states thought to hold the key to victory in 2024. And it usually picks the candidate the rest of America favors.In the 28 presidential elections since 1912, the winner of Nevada has won the presidency all but two times. The exceptions occurred in 1976, when Nevada chose Republican Gerald Ford over Democrat Jimmy Carter, and in 2016, when Nevada and its six electoral votes went to Hillary Clinton over Trump.
Trump will count heavily on Nevadansâ discomfort with the economy to help him grind out a victory in a state that most experts expect to be closely contested through the Nov. 5 election.
The former president has a rally scheduled Friday night in Las Vegas. He has anad on Las Vegas television stations that features another former Republican president, Ronald Reagan.
âI think when you make that decision, it might be well if you would ask yourself, are you better off than you were four years ago,â Reagan says in video of his closing 1980 debate against President Carter. âIs it easier for you to go and buy things in the stores than it was four years ago?â
That question might serve Trump well this year, as national and state polls continue to show that the economy remains the top issue for voters. The party in power usually pays the price for such sentiments. In an Emerson College poll in August, 37% of likely Nevada voters surveyed named the economy as the top issue, with the related topic of housing affordability second, named by 15% of those surveyed.
âThat large bloc of independent voters makes the state unpredictable,â said Thom Reilly, a former public official in Nevadaâs Clark County and now an academic. âThey were supporting Trump by 10% in January, and now the polling is all over the map, and they might be in Harrisâ camp. I think those voters make it more volatile.â
Frustrating to Democratic stalwarts is the fact that not all voters have been moved by improving economic indicators, with the buying power of âreal wagesâ growing nationally over the last year.
The stateâs unemployment rate of 5.5% in August put it higher than the national average of 3.7%, but the Las Vegas metropolitan regionâs 4% jobless rate nearly matched the U.S. as a whole. Those figures pale in comparison to the 31% unemployment that devastated the state during the 2020 onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Annual inflation peaked in 2022 at about 9%, and haddeclined to 2.6% for the American West (including Nevada) by this summer, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported. Prices even dropped in some categories, including dairy, fruits and vegetables.
And although gasoline in Nevada is costing an average of $3.98 per gallon this month, above the national average of $3.27, that represents a substantial drop from the $4.62 one year ago,according to AAA.
The boom-bust cycles that Nevadans know too well â with particularly deep holes during the Great Recession and early in the pandemic â have been particularly painful in the housing market.
Apartment rents jumped dramatically in 2022, with the typical rental rate of $1,805 in the Vegas metro area marking a nearly one-third increase from just two years prior. Only three other metropolitan areas experienced bigger leaps. The median rent today stands at $2,070, so increases have slowed but still leave some people struggling to pay their rent.
::
An intake worker at a senior center in the working-class northwest section of Las Vegas said that her clients have been forced to rely on family members, while others have been evicted and forced to move into their cars. Or onto the streets.
âThe rent has gone up since Bidenâs been in office. It went up when Trump was in office,â said the worker, who asked to go only by her first name, Karen. âWe donât know where the blame lies.â
She said she hadnât known much about Harris but liked what she saw at the Democratic National Convention.
âShe has a lot of new ideas, things that would help,â including proposals for an expanded child-care tax credit, Karen said.
In interviews with 17 people in Henderson and Las Vegas last week, six said they intended to vote for Harris and five for Trump, while six others werenât sure they would vote at all. Half of those who havenât committed said they tended to favor the former president; the other half the current vice president.
Donald Trump was leading in state polls during this Las Vegas rally in June, before President Biden quit. An ad for him on Vegas TV stations shows Ronald Reagan telling voters in 1980 to ask whether theyâre better off than they were four years ago.
(John Locher / Associated Press)
Trump backers tended to stress his background as a businessman and to focus on the bottom line. Prices for most things were lower when the Republican was in the White House, so itâs time to bring him back, they said.
Some also seconded Trumpâs frequent complaint that immigrants crossing the border illegally from Mexico are harming the U.S. (Border crossings have decreased in recent months.)
Most Harris supporters said they trusted her to make the kind of changes she promised; such as imposing sanctions on retailers and others determined to be engaged in price gouging. Those who like the Democrat said they were sick of the demonizing of immigrants.
Rodriguez, a mother of three, said her parents came from Mexico legally. She complained about those who come without authorization and then get government benefits.
âYou have people coming into this country, and basically everything is handed to them,â said Rodriguez, who grew up in Orange County. âTo me, I donât think thatâs fair.â
One aisle over at the Henderson Dollar Tree, Monica Silva expressed a different view. She said Trump âis always talking about the Mexican issue.â
She added: âHe is always criticizing them and blaming them. And that is not true. That is not the problem in our country.â
Silva, 77, who immigrated more than half a century ago from Chile, sees Harris as someone who will rein in price gouging.
âI think sheâs just powerful, and she has the experience as the lawyer, you know?â Silva said. âI think she can get things done, more than most people can.â
Shara Rule, who works for an electric scooter business, doesnât feel Harris or the Biden White House are to blame for higher prices. And she sees prices coming down.
âTrump is just greedy. He is helping himself,â said Rule, 61. âSheâs smart and got a good head on her shoulders. I think sheâs going to lead us in the right direction, economically.â
Susan Kendall, a director of medical records for a nursing facility, felt that Trump got more done, while the Democrats mostly talked.
She fondly recalled the âeconomic impact paymentâ of $1,200 in COVID-19 relief she got when Trump was still in office.
âThat made a big difference for people, and Biden didnât even try any of that,â said Kendall, 56. (Actually, Biden signed the American Rescue Plan shortly after taking office, sending payments of $1,400 per person to middle-class families.)
âI donât know exactly what Trump did. But whatever he did, it worked,â Kendall said. âI feel like Trump focuses inside the country and helping people here inside the country and not helping people from the outside.â
The ad featuring Reagan really hit home with her. âI saw it and thought about how things were four years ago,â she said. âI think that will make it easy to make your decision.â
Mandy, a 35-year-old stay-at-home mom, said prices have gotten so high that she no longer grabs all of the snacks and extras she would like in the supermarket.
âI canât afford that right now,â she said.
âI just think that the country needs to be run like a business,â said Mandy, a two-time Trump voter who declined to give her last name. âNot so much like Biden is running it now. Heâs not like a businessman. Heâs a politician.â
Shopping for yarn to crochet hats for friends and family, Kathleen Clark said she sees both political camps as misguided in thinking any president can change economic conditions in the short term.
The 66-year-old Clark, a day trader on the stock market, said long-term micro- and macro-economic forces control the economy. She also doesnât believe campaign promises, like Trump and Harris promising to eliminate taxes on tips. (âThey canât do it,â she said, âuntil they figure out how to replace that money.â)
Clark also questioned those who say how much they are suffering. She knows from her retail days, she said, that the kids who started back to school in recent weeks were wearing some pretty pricey outfits.
âThose kids are going out there with $600 tennis shoes and backpacks. They got $1,000 on their backs,â she said with a chuckle. âTheyâre not hurting.â
One of those ubiquitous Nevada independents, Clark said her vote will be guided by one factor that is beyond argument.
âIâm voting for Harris. Why? Strictly because sheâs a woman,â she said. âI donât believe in Biden. I donât believe in Trump. I donât believe in any of the rest of it. But itâs about time [for a female president]. There is nothing else.â
On a stage festooned with American flags and Fraternal Order of Police banners in North Carolina on Friday, former President Trump accepted the backing of the countryâs largest police union.
National Fraternal Order of Police President Patrick Yoes said the âenthusiastic endorsementâ reflected the âoverwhelming collective willâ of the groupâs more than 375,000 members nationally.
âWe stand with you, and we have your back,â Yoes said, promising the groupâs members would âmake the caseâ for Trump to Americans across the nation over the next two months.
âThis is a big endorsement for me,â Trump said. âBoy, thatâs a lot of protection.â
Prior to Trumpâs event, the campaign of Vice President Kamala Harris held a call with her own law enforcement supporters. First to speak was former U.S. Capitol Police Officer Harry Dunn, who was at the Capitol when a mob of Trump supporters attacked the building on Jan. 6, 2021.
Dunn said Trumpâs promised support for law enforcement was nothing but a play for votes â and a lie.
âHeâs going to tell my fellow officers that heâs their ally, heâs their friend, and heâs [the] candidate of law and order,â Dunn said. âAfter what I experienced on Jan. 6, I can assure you that he is not.â
Dunn said he knows many officers who are âappalled by the FOP even entertaining endorsingâ Trump, given his felony convictions, his actions on Jan. 6 and his recent promise to pardon the insurrectionists who attacked police officers that day.
âHe abandoned us,â Dunn said. âLaw and order and the democracy I vowed to protect â he abandoned that.â
With two months until the election, both the Trump and Harris campaigns are trotting out their law enforcement backers as a means of attracting voters in a race in which crime â along with the economy and immigration â has become a major issue.
Despite downward trends in many crime categories nationally, voters are nonetheless weary of retail crime, drug offenses and violence, and looking for solutions. A recent UC Berkeley Institute of Governmental Studies poll, co-sponsored by The Times, found that a majority of voters in liberal California support stiffer penalties for crimes involving theft and fentanyl.
Both Trump and Harris have said they take such issues seriously and would bring solutions as president, while their opponent would only exacerbate the problems.
Trump has cast Harris, a former prosecutor and California attorney general, as soft on crime and anti-police, including by pointing to persistent crime issues in cities like San Francisco, where she once served as district attorney. Trump has advocated for more aggressive policing, and for less federal oversight and more military equipment for local police departments.
U.S. Capitol Police Sgt. Harry Dunn listens during a session of the House Jan. 6 committee in 2022.
(Jacquelyn Martin / Associated Press)
Harris has cast Trump, a felon, as a fraud who solicits law enforcement support when it is convenient for votes, but is otherwise hostile toward law enforcement â especially when theyâve been investigating him. She has advocated for responsive but constitutional policing and for stronger federal oversight and less military equipment for local police departments, and has touted the Biden administrationâs record funding for law enforcement through COVID-19 relief funds.
Trumpâs event Friday was not his first with law enforcement, but it was a major one, as the police union has members all across the country â including some 17,000 members in California. The group does not represent the biggest law enforcement agencies in Los Angeles. A spokesman for the Los Angeles Police Protective League, the union that represents rank-and-file LAPD officers, said it is not weighing in on the national race and is instead focused on ousting progressive L.A. County Dist. Atty. George GascĂłn.
After being introduced by Yoes, Trump spoke for nearly an hour. He said law enforcement officers face âmore danger and threat than ever before,â and that âwe have to give back the power and respect that they deserve.â
He said crime was the No. 1 issue that people ask him about, and that he would bring back âstop-and-friskâ and âbroken windows policingâ to bring it to an end.
He also repeated many of his stump speech lies and grievances â some aimed at Harris, many to applause from the gathered law enforcement officers. He claimed violent and other crime is âthrough the roof,â when data show the opposite is true in many parts of the country.
He falsely alleged Harris made it so that âyou can steal as much as you want up to $950â in San Francisco and ânothing happens to you, no matter what the hell you do.â He mocked the 2022 attack on Rep. Nancy Pelosiâs husband, Paul, at their home in San Francisco, to laughter in the crowd.
The event followed a Trump campaign call where campaign officials and law enforcement officials in swing states praised Trumpâs record, blamed Harris for crime problems in California and accused her of being âpro-crimeâ and âcoddling criminals.â
The Harris campaign this week has also touted law enforcement support, including by releasing an endorsement letter from more than 100 former and current law enforcement officers and leaders.
The letter cited a spike in homicides during Trumpâs presidency and a sharp decline during the Biden administration. It described Harris as someone who has âspent her career enforcing our laws,â and Trump as someone âwho has been convicted of breaking them.â
On the call with Dunn, Sheriff Clarence Birkhead of Durham County, N.C., said there that Trump tries âto portray himself as a friend of law enforcement, but we know itâs not true.â
He said Trump would use federal law enforcement to go after his political enemies instead of investing resources in local law enforcement, and use plans set out in the conservative Project 2025 to withhold even more â âmaking it nearly impossible for us to keep our communities safe from violence.â
He said Harris, by contrast, âhas spent her entire career fighting for people and standing with local law enforcement like me,â which is why officers like those who signed the letter are âlining upâ to support her.
Sheriff Javier Salazar, of Bexar County, Texas, said he was confused by the Fraternal Order of Police endorsement of Trump, whom he called âa person that wouldnât qualify to be a law enforcement officer,â given his felonies.
Salazar said Trump âuses cops as nothing more than a photo opp, or a television prop,â and that he âpurports to support law enforcement until we get in his way â until we stand in the way of him doing exactly what he wants to do. He proved it on Jan. 6.â
Dunn said Trumpâs only allegiance is to himself.
âThe truth is that he doesnât care that he put my life and the lives of my fellow Capitol Police officers in danger on Jan. 6,â Dunn said.
Charley Crockett $10 Cowboy Tour 713 Music Hall September 3, 2024
Have you ever met a stranger and been completely amazed by their entire demeanor? The kids these days would call it “swag” or “vibes,” which is something magical and intangible about the person’s attitude. That’s exactly how I feel about Charley Crockett. His chiseled jawline and piercing green eyes attract your attention, and then BOOM!… His voice and southern twang grabs a hold of your soul and doesn’t let go.
Crockett began his set at 713 Music Hall with $10 Cowboy, where he sings “people always ask me, if I’m a rodeo star / doubt if I got 8 seconds / but I can sing you a song!” He definitely fits the casting call for a vintage cowboy film: leather jacket, Stetson on his crown, wranglers and boots. He carries his guitar around the stage like dancing partner, flashing his pearly-white smile with the precision of a heart surgeon.
The singer-songwriter is a native of San Benito, Texas – the same hometown as Freddy Fender of Texas Tornados fame. He later moved to Dallas and also spent time with family in New Orleans, no doubt absorbing every character and experience he encountered into his repertoire of inspiration.
Crockett is a native of San Benito, Texas – the same hometown as Freddy Fender of Texas Tornados fame.
Photo by Violeta Alvarez
The amber colored accent lights that flanked him and his band on stage added to the warm feel of the show. This wasn’t a modern country set with pyro, lasers, and songs about your dog dying in your truck down by the river. This was more subdued, classic country music with heavy blues influence. “I used to think I was a folk singer” he told the audience. “But then I realized this ain’t nothing but The Blues!”
Crockett mostly sings in a low baritone voice, almost like Johnny Cash or Kris Kristofferson. But peppered in between verses and jam sessions with his band The Blue Drifters, he sometimes allows a yelp and a yee-haw ring out, shifting from serious to rowdy in a split second. In that regard, he reminds me more of Waylon Jennings and Hank Williams Jr.
“Some publication once called me a stylistic man” Crockett told the crowd. “The way I see it, I’m always just myself… and I’m the only person that can do that!” A lady named Juliet, who was enjoying the show next to me, said “He definitely looks like a character from the movie Giant (1956) starring Rock Hudson, James Dean, and Elizabeth Taylor. I quickly added the film to my “must watch” list.
Crockett mostly sings in a low baritone voice, like Johnny Cash or Kris Kristofferson, but his stage presence is that of Waylon Jennings or Hank Williams Jr.
Photo by Violeta Alvarez
By the time the set list arrived at “The Man From Waco,” Crockett was in total control. There were couples two-stepping around the venue, friend groups drinking beer and singing along to the tracks, and girlfriends holding their boyfriends tight around the waist. I go to a lot of shows, but outside of Rodeo season, this was the most Houston show I’ve seen in a very long time.
There were 2 large, old school neon letters on the stage behind the band, and they read “CC.” It was so cool to see them glow behind Crockett throughout the performance, and they added to the western theme of the tour. As the evening came to a close, the crowd chanted “Charley! Charley! Charley!”
Outside of Rodeo season, this Charley Crockett concert was the most Houston show I’ve seen in a very long time.
Photo by Violeta Alvarez
Of course Charley and his band returned for an encore, offering Jamestown Ferry before bringing out opening act Vincent Neil Emerson for an awesome cover of Good Hearted Woman by Waylon and Willie.
“But she never complains of the bad times Or the bad things he’s done, Lord / She just talks about the good times they’ve had And all the good times to come“
I hate to say itâŠI hate to even acknowledge itâŠbut itâs the truth: the summer is ending. Sure, the solstice technically goes until late September, but we know the real summer ends after Labor Day.
And while we soak up these last few peaceful weeks of Summer Fridays and vacations on the beach, the looming threat of the fall and colder weather is quickly approaching. We avoid the very thought of it like the plague.
But, I want to make the most of the end of summer 2024. When you look back at it, weâve had a crazy summer in terms of pop culture: the rise of Chappell Roan, the reign of Taylor Swiftâs The Tortured Poetâs Department, Charli XCX teaching us what it means to have a BRAT Summer, Billie Eilishâs enormous hit, âBIRDS OF A FEATHER,â and of course, Sabrina Carpenterâs âEspressoâ and âPlease, Please, Pleaseâ to soundtrack our summer.
Yes, the pop girlies have ruled the scene this summerâŠalongside major country vibes with albums from Zach Bryan, hit songs like âThe Bar Song (Tipsy)â by Shaboozey, and even fresh country additions from Lana Del Rey and Quavo with their single âTough.â
The Song of Summer 2024 may forever be up for debate, with a few top contenders already mentioned. Former President Barack Obama just released his Summer Playlist, and it got us thinking.
What Iâm looking for are songs that are perfect for closing out the summer. Different from my usual Weekend Playlist, these songs arenât necessarily newâŠbut theyâre still astonishing.
Some were released this year, and some just perfectly embody the end of the summer. If youâre already feeling a tad nostalgic and blue about summer 2024, hereâs a playlist thatâll help you feel better:
âEspressoâ by Sabrina Carpenter
Letâs start it off with Sabrina, who is becoming one of the biggest pop stars in the world as we speak. Her new album â Short ân Sweet, out August 15 â and sheâs somehow still eligible for Best New Artist at the Grammyâs this year?
âEspressoâ is an awesome start to the playlist because it also kicked our summer off with a bang. With fun little lyrics like âthatâs that me espresso,â we canât help but hit replay each time the song ends.
Spotify says, âSince June, the song has spent 20 days at #1 on Spotifyâs global charts â topping 25 regional charts in countries like Australia, Malaysia, Jordan and Singapore.â
âHOTTOGOâ by Chappell Roan
Itâs the summer of Chappell Roan, we canât even lie. Her insane rise to superstardom deserves to be marked in history books. Thousands flock to see her perform at festivals before it gets too tough to buy her tickets on Ticketmaster.
With hit songs like âGood Luck, Babe!â and âHOTTOGOâ from her album, The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess, have certainly soundtracked our summer. Sheâs one of the most exciting artists weâve seen in forever, so of course we had to include this banger.
Spotify data says, âThe song saw its biggest spike of the summer on June 10 (globally), the day after her Gov Ball set in New York City.â
âBack On 74â by Jungle
This song is viral on social media because of its feel-good vibes. I love any Jungle song this summer because they keep it lighthearted, with a bit of a nostalgic, retro feel to their sound.
Itâs an exceptional mix of modern and classic, and âBack On 74â delivered fantastic energy all summer long. If thereâs anything weâve learned, itâs that Jungle can make a cohesive album throughout.
âGuess (Remix)â by Charli xcx and Billie Eilish
We are totally having a BRAT Summer, and when Charli and Billie collabed on this âGuessâ remixâŠthe world felt it.
When two representatives of todayâs culture and music industry come together to create a fun, sexy track that combines pop and electronic music in the best wayâŠit just works. This remix is like a shock of energy to the system from the second you turn it on.
Especially with Eilish and Charli having such huge summer albums, this feels like an acknowledgement that the music industry is going to be okayâŠand theyâre in complete control.
âBIRDS OF A FEATHERâ by Billie Eilish
Obviously, we had to mention Billie Eilishâs solo work: her third album, HIT ME HARD AND SOFT, is a complete masterpiece. A how-to on production and high-quality vocals, Billie Eilish and her brother, FINNEAS, are up there with the best â and youngest â singer-songwriter-producers in the industry.
âBIRDS OF A FEATHERâ is one of the singles on the album. A viral success that constantly tops charts and breaks records, this song is nothing short of sensational. Itâs proof that Billie gets better with age, using all of her knowledge so far and channeling it into her latest album.
According to Spotify, âBillie had a refreshing return to tempo this summer with this breezy summer hit. A leading track from her third studio album, the song reached a fever pitch after a poignant performance at the summer games closing ceremony â quickly rising to #1 on Spotifyâs global charts with over 678M streams and counting.â
âSheâs Gone, Dance Onâ by Disclosure
Year after year, Disclosure gives us countless dance tracks to highlight our summers. Theyâre highly regarded in the house industry as juggernauts who know how to get people up and dancing.
âSheâs Gone, Dance Onâ was previewed at Coachella by Dom Dolla, as the American Royal Couple â Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift â danced in the crowd. Shortly after, the song was released to the public and we havenât stopped listening to it since.
â360â by Charli xcx
Again, we canât mention a Charli remix without an original BRAT song. â360â is an introduction to what it really means to have a BRAT Summer. Itâs carefree, fun-loving, and club-ready.
It makes us want to let loose and forget about our problems for a while. Charli XCX has started a movement, and solidified herself as our fearless BRAT leader.
âA Bar Song (Tipsy)â by Shaboozey
There seriously hasnât been a time this summer when Iâve been out at a bar and this hasnât played. I would be biased if I didnât include Shaboozeyâs song in this playlist, because it truly has been everywhere. âA Bar Song (Tipsy)â is his follow-up after a massive feature on Beyonceâs COWBOY CARTER.
Spotify data suggests that since June, the song has hit #1 on Spotifyâs Charts in Australia, Canada, Ireland, Norway, Sweden, and the US and has been #1 on Billboard for six weeks so far. It reached #1 on Spotifyâs US Chart for the first time on July 4th, proving it to be the perfect summer holiday anthem.â
What the song does well is capturing everyoneâs attention early on and opening up into a full-out stomp-and-holler country song that we all love. Itâs a summer of country for a reason, and this is great for country fans and non-fans alike.
âI listen to everything but country,â is a phrase that might go extinct soon. Weâve all encountered that one person who adamantly declares theyâre allergic to twang, but in 2024, this once divisive style of music has charged its way into the mainstream.
The rise of country music into the wider cultural sphere wasnât all so sudden. Within the last 10 years, country-rooted acts like Kacey Musgraves, Lainey Wilson, Kelsea Ballerini, and Elle King have paved the way for the genre to thrive in popularity. It made people realize that country music can transcend its problematic past, one thatâs historically made some communities feel alienated. âThere are some fundamental problems in the history of country music,â Ballerini admitted to StyleCaster in a past interview, but sheâs determined to carve out a new space where everyone is welcome. âI can always do better, we can all always do better. The power of conversation and community is really important.â
Of course, there have been those pop icons like Shania Twain, Dolly Parton, and Taylor Swift that have cemented themselves beyond mainstream success over the years. This summer, Spotify held its âYear of the Cowgirlâ activation on August 7, and the room was filled to the brim with appreciation for the fashion and the music that inspired it all, but what really caused the boom lately?
âGenre-bendingâ artists are pioneering their own sound
Everyone these days wants to dip their toes into country. With Post Maloneâs new album and his monumental headlining slot at Stagecoach (arguably, the Coachella of the genre), music acts that are usually tied down or associated with another style, like rap, are embracing new sounds.Â
âIf youâre more of a coastal cowgirl, youâve got great new albums from Kacey Musgraves and Zach Bryan that released this year, and if youâre looking for a little more Yee-Haw, youâve got barnburners from Post Malone and Shaboozey to dance to,â Spotifyâs country editor Claire Heinichen says. âCountry music of past decades was much more homogenous, but in the last five to 10 years, we have seen so much sonic diversity that welcomes everyone to join in on the fun.âÂ
âFor a lot of people, country music was never a part of their lives and it feels new,â musician Carter Faith says. âEspecially with what is happening in the country music genre right nowâa lot of people are trying to mix a lot of worlds together, like rap and country and pop and country. So I think that has opened peopleâs eyes to what country music can be.â
Brandi Cyrus, who has played festivals like EDC, has witnessed the emergence of electronic music blending seamlessly with country musicâa rising genre called YEEDM. âTo see places like that really embrace country and see so many electronic artists want to dabble in country and play around with it and play country music, and make these remixes, has been amazing,â she says.
When was the last time that you went to a party and someone wasnât wearing a fun and flirty cowboy hat? It seems like cowboy hats are everyoneâs favorite quirky accessory, but it didnât come out of the blue. Western fashion and music listening go hand-in-hand. And the more people listen, the more they want to dress according to their music choices. Itâs more than a lifestyleâitâs a whole identity.
Music and micro-niche trends have only propelled the popularity of Southern staples. Since the release of Cowboy Carter, Klarna reported a 331% increase in cowboy purchases, and fringe jacket sales have increased by nearly 45%. For those who donât want to go into the nitty gritty of traditional country fashion, coastal cowgirl is the perfect way to flaunt your Southern and Western flair. The trend pairs casual West Coast colors and light dress wear with cowboy boots and hats to put a healthy balance of party and trendy.
Three-time CMA winner and Year of the Cowgirl winner Carly Pearce feels like country fashion has seeped into the mainstream. âI see so many of my favorite brands doing Western lines with fringes and more cowboy hats, more suede and more patterns, more belts, more jewelry, and more boots,â she says, âI think country is just getting started as far as being as big as it is.â
Cyrus observes that people who are usually stuck in their own personal aesthetics are now feeling confident enough to experiment. âSometimes to take a risk and to step outside of what youâre comfortable with it takes something to inspire that,â she says. âSo in a way I almost feel like Western fashion, cowgirl fashion, has maybe opened up peopleâs mind to listening to the music.â
The trend has sparked many people to find out that their Daylists (Spotifyâs autogenerated playlists based on time and vibe) have been set to âCoastal Cowgirl.â âCountry Love Songs Coastal Cowgirlâ is the most likely Daylist title in the U.S., while as many as 220,000 users on the streaming service have a playlist with the title âCowgirl.â
As for the future of country music and the cowgirl aesthetic, itâs certainly not going anywhere. âCountry music is expanding in every direction sonically,â Heinichen says, noting that lots of artists âgot some really exciting releases coming later this year, so I think weâre going to keep watching this phenomenon grow.â