21 Burst results for "Ryman Auditorium"

"ryman auditorium" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

01:58 min | 6 d ago

"ryman auditorium" Discussed on WTOP

"Israel became well known for his exceptional craftsmanship, his diamond cutting business flourished for decades, then his sons got involved and started selling these exceptional diamonds to upscale Julie stores here in America. Then after a few years these wholesalers changed the game and started selling these precious diamonds direct to the public at the same prices they had sold to the jewelry stores, the no middleman concept became an instant success and diamonds direct was born. Today, diamonds direct provides that extraordinary value to people all over America, leading the industry with the highest quality diamonds that still come straight from the best cutters offered at the guaranteed best prices period. Diamonds direct a truly revolutionary concept with a unique history rooted in quality committed to excellence and always focused on value. Diamonds direct your love, our passion, diamonds direct dot com. I was ashamed to smile my missing and decaying teeth affected my relationships. My career, my self esteem, and my health, with these implants, I feel like I have my life back. Doctor golda's dental implant procedure is a miracle. Thanks to the exclusive technology developed by doctor gopa, it is now possible to replace failing teeth or ill fitting dentures with beautiful permanent teeth in just 24 hours, and at half the cost. Go to your teeth dot com to learn more and schedule a consult at her new Tyson's corner office. That's your teeth dot com. While feeling lucky, Luke combs here and I have an exclusive opportunity for you to win a half a $1 million by joining me in the living lucky with Luke combs lottery experience. When it rains it pours for lucky fans and lottery players who enter to win a chance of a lifetime. Join me in Nashville for a private concert at the iconic ryman auditorium in 2024. One lucky winner will have the chance to walk away with a half $1 million at the end of the show. From the Virginia lottery, learn more at VA lottery dot com slash living lucky. Three 28. Traffic and weather on the 8s

"ryman auditorium" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

01:34 min | 2 weeks ago

"ryman auditorium" Discussed on WTOP

"Exclusive opportunity for you to win a half a $1 million by joining me in the living lucky with Luke combs lottery experience. When it rains it pours for lucky fans and lottery players who enter to win a chance of a lifetime. Join me in Nashville for a private concert at the iconic ryman auditorium in 2024. One lucky winner will have the chance to walk away with a half $1 million at the end of the show. From the Virginia lottery, learn more at VA lottery dot com slash living lucky. I want to break free. Ready to break free D.C.? Take your dream vacation with Norwegian cruise line to Europe, Alaska, the Caribbean and more. Both today and get 50% off all cruises all over the world. Plus, enjoy free airfare per second guest, free unlimited open bar, free specialty dining, and more. Visit NCL dot com call your travel adviser or one 88 NCL cruise offer and soon D.C., Norwegian cruise line, sales save, feel free, ships registry to Bahamas and USA and restrictions supply. 1122. That's the sound of knowing you've got a free ride home guaranteed. If you like carpooling or van Poole, but worry about getting stuck at the office. Relax, with commuter connections, you can get a free ride home for unexpected emergencies or unscheduled overtime, even if you're commuting just a few times a week. All free. Register or renew today for free at commuter connections dot org or call 807 four 5 ride. That's commuter connection dot org. Some restrictions apply. This is WTO news. Now 1122

"ryman auditorium" Discussed on SI Boxing with Chris Mannix

SI Boxing with Chris Mannix

02:06 min | Last month

"ryman auditorium" Discussed on SI Boxing with Chris Mannix

"Your partner meeting your parents can be nerve wracking. In Netflix's new comedy you people, things get down right uncomfortable. When Ezra, played by Jonah Hill, and Amira, played by Lauren London, are forced to navigate Ezra's pseudo woke parents, played by Julia Louis-Dreyfus and David Duchovny in Amir's unyielding and concerned parents, played by Eddie Murphy and Nia long. You people was written by Jonah Hill in Kenya barris and directed by Kenya bears. You people is rated R and is now playing only on Netflix. A good business is also a good member of the community. That's why it play it forward foundation, we're all about promoting social and economic growth in underserved communities. Excellence in education and mental health awareness. And you become a player forward foundation sponsor and help today's youth become tomorrow's leaders. Visit play it forward foundation at PIF, foundation, dot org. Be a part of the change at PIF, foundation dot org. Y'all feeling lucky. Luke combs here and I have an exclusive opportunity for you to win a half a $1 million by joining me in the living lucky with Luke combs lottery experience. When it rains it pours for lucky fans and lottery players who enter to win a chance of a lifetime. Join me in Nashville for a private concert at the iconic ryman auditorium in 2024. One lucky winner will have the chance to walk away with a half $1 million at the end of the show. From the Virginia lottery, learn more at VA lottery dot com slash lib and lucky. The volume.

"ryman auditorium" Discussed on The Ben Shapiro Show

The Ben Shapiro Show

01:42 min | 4 months ago

"ryman auditorium" Discussed on The Ben Shapiro Show

"When everyone in the audience is paid by you. The enthusiasm is really thanks everybody for being here. We haven't done one of these in a little bit. In fact, it's been four months since the last time that we were together. And a lot has changed in that period of time. Not just in the company, but in the country too. So it's good that we get together. The purpose of our town halls, as you know, is both to celebrate and inform. The company has gotten so big, one of the unfortunate consequences of that growth is that people who are working really hard in one part of the company don't know what people who are working really hard and another part of the company are actually doing. And so it's good that every now and then we get together so we can sync up so that we can reorient ourselves so that we can all be pointed at the same north star and that north star is working toward a future for conservatives in a future for our country. Also, since we started doing these events back in the beginning of the year, we've made it a practice to always invite in the audience. So live stream them. The reason is because, well, as much as we're working hard every day to create that future for conservatives as much as we're working hard every day, our audience is also a part of this journey. And in particular, our daily wire plus members, they're working alongside us every day, and they deserve some transparency so they can see what we're doing. So they can keep track so that they can make sure that we're still aligned with them. So the last time we were together, it was at the ryman auditorium, and we were refreshed on the hills of the most successful launch in the history of the company, Matt Walsh's masterpiece documentary, what does a woman? That night, we launched daily wire plus. We announced that we were expanding our partnership with PragerU. And we kicked off our collaboration with the premier public intellectual of our time, doctor Jordan B Peterson.

ryman auditorium Matt Walsh Jordan B Peterson
"ryman auditorium" Discussed on KOMO

KOMO

01:31 min | 6 months ago

"ryman auditorium" Discussed on KOMO

"You should have had this locked down jail back saying that well The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame is opening its first exhibit at Nashville's ryman auditorium. It's part of a multiyear partnership with Nashville's legendary venue, the exhibit called rock and roll at ryman and will open November 2nd featuring Elvis Presley suede code from the 1970s. A suit that belonged to James Brown and then that outfit that the late Foo Fighters drummer Taylor Hawkins war when he helped induct rush into the hall back in 2013 that exhibit focused on items from inductees who have performed at ryman during their careers. Our northwest news time now is 6 26. Mila Kunis, I'm Marina rockinger and here's what's going on. Let's go to the movies the to come with film festival is happening now. Look for showcases and movies from independent filmmakers mostly from the Pacific Northwest, and Amsterdam starring Margot Robbie and Christian Bale opens this weekend. Now, if you have a date with your couch like I do, the latest in the hellraiser franchise streams tonight on Hulu. Get ready to yell opa and enjoy Greek dancing and fantastic Greek food like yorgos and spanakopita. You don't want to miss the Greek festival on Capitol Hill in Seattle this weekend. The Seattle rock orchestra performs Led Zeppelin one and two at the more theater Saturday night and drags sensations tricks in metallic Katya are live tonight at the paramount in Seattle. Pumpkin farms all around the sound have started hosting their hay rides and corn mazes for the kiddos, and are you ready to scream the scariest haunted house in the northwest, the Georgetown morgue haunted house put on by our sister station star one 1.5

Roll Hall of Fame Nashville's ryman auditorium Taylor Hawkins Marina rockinger Margot Robbie James Brown Elvis Presley ryman Mila Kunis Nashville Seattle rock orchestra Christian Bale Pacific Northwest Amsterdam Hulu Seattle Capitol Hill Katya Georgetown
"ryman auditorium" Discussed on Broken Record

Broken Record

13:41 min | 7 months ago

"ryman auditorium" Discussed on Broken Record

"Weekends, and we'd stay in like a $26 crack motel and we'd boss in front of the grand old opry, and then our shift would end about 9 o'clock, we'd go downtown, we'd busk on lower Broadway. God, we were making like $800 on a Friday night. And we come back to that crack motel and we'd buy two cases of beer and a cart and smokes, and we would just feel like king. And we were the high rollers in those motels. And it was a different Nashville, like people weren't clamoring to move to Nashville. There was like the country music thing and there was healthcare, but you know, you could have bought those houses for nothing. Well, it was around that time that we stumbled into Marty Stuart when we found that the uncle Dave Macon days festival had a $500 prize without, well, let's go down there and win it. And we went down to Murfreesboro and we were busking there, making a big hoot and Marty Stewart walked in. He was the grand mason of the festival that year. And he brought us into his fold right away and made sure that we played the opry. He hosted our first opry debut at the ryman, which came just three months after that. And then had us open for him, had us out to the house, made us know that his Nashville was a place that we were welcomed. And what was your first performance like in the opera? It was in January when the opry would traditionally move from its home at the opry house down to its old home at the ryman auditorium. And we all got dressed up in suits. And we were all so nervous. Critter was so nervous he threw up in the trash can right there in the wings before we walked on. And we were all just sweating bullets. And we came out there and Marty had given us each little guy gauze to wear. It was really helpful, honestly, to Kevin, our get Joe player, he gave a pair of glasses that had belonged to some old Hollywood movie star. And to me, he gave a funny kind of velvety bow tie that had belonged to slim Whitman, and everybody had one little thing to borrow for the set because Marty's a collector. He's got all this crazy. Memorabilia. And we did some old time hokum songs that brought the house down. And when they asked for an encore, we didn't know what to do, so we just played the same song again. And then they wanted another encore. Honestly, it felt the closest that I've ever felt to feeling like Hank Williams must have felt. That time that he made his opry debut, or just to be Hank Williams, it was like there was no nothing digital about the world. It was like an analog moment. We were on a.m. radio. We were not on the Internet. It was the year 2000. We didn't have a cell phone, I was still carrying a spiral notebook in my back pocket. And the crowd in a 120 year old gospel union tabernacle all rose to its feet because we were playing hundred year old music that made them feel joy. We have to take one last quick break, but after that, we'll be back with more from Bruce hedley, catch C corps and Jerry Pentecost. What if you were a major transit system with billions of passengers taking millions of trips every year? You weren't about to let any cyberattacks slow you down. So you partner with IBM to build a security architecture to keep your data, network, and applications protected. Now you can tackle threats so they don't bring you to a grinding halt. And everyone's going places, including you. Let's create cybersecurity that keeps your business on track. IBM. Let's create. Learn more at IBM dot com. It's time to rebuild your credit card with Apple card. Apple card is designed to help you pay less interest. Unlike other cards, it estimates how much interest you'll owe and suggests moves to help you pay off your balance faster. Also you can keep more of your money. Apply now in the wallet app on iPhone and start using it right away. Subject to credit approval. Interest estimates on the payment wheel are illustrative only and may not fully reflect actual interest charges on your account. Estimates are based on your posted account balance at the time of the estimate and do not include pending transactions or any other purchases you may make before the end of the billing period. We're back with the rest of Bruce's interview with catch and Jerry of old crow medicine show. There's a song on your record I do want to talk about, which is the Ford Bailey rides again. Well, it's the Ford writes again, but it's about this incredible character to Ford Bailey. Can you talk a bit about that? When we were working on songs for the record, catch reached out to me and he was like, you know, I've been working on this idea of writing a song about D four Bailey. And so we got together. And we just kind of started talking about it, you know, like talking about him as an individual, you know, like what he stood for. And it kind of actually I never told you this, but it made me think back to in my early days of being this drummer for hire. And when I was starting to play country music, people would ask me, do you want to be in country music? And I was like, wow, there's no black people in country music. And every so often somebody would say, what about D four Bailey? And I never knew who he was. And you know, we played the opry for years now. They've been members since what 2012, 2013. There's not a really strong presence of him at the opry, so like an African American individual when I'm there. I'm sensing for a feeling of belonging. And so if you don't see representation, you know, like then it's kind of hard to figure. So yeah, so like I was really excited about resurrecting this legacy this wrongdoing because that's kind of like how I look at it. This fallen soldier or pioneer of the opry. Everybody knows about Roy Acuff and Minnie Pearl, but people seldom know about defort Bailey and he is a member of the country music Hall of Fame at only took them what 20 some odd years after he died for them to do it and you know him being on the show when the term or the name grand old opry was introduced for the first time being the first African American member like there's just there's a lot dismissing. So we wanted to tell the song about the legacy and the life of D four Bailey and it's actually kind of sad. He was the first performer was me on the radio show the grand old opry opened with an African American performer. He was a harmonica player. The harmonica wizard. They called him the harmonica wizard, and he would open up the shows on by playing the sound of the freight train called the Pan American that would blow that would blow as it went by the broadcast tower. And then he would sing a song and he did Fox chases and all this mimicry and he was the grandchild of slaves born in Smith county, Tennessee, 1899. He had polio when he was a kid as an adult. He was about four foot 9, and he became the very first African American recording artist in Nashville. And he did that in the 20s. His albums were released to both a white and black audience, his acclaim from the opry, he was so popular, he was a national touring act, and he would go out on the road with Bill Monroe. And they would have to put him in a suitcase to bring him into some of these hotels, where he wasn't welcome as a black man in the south. He was so small he could ride in a steamer trunk. It kind of makes me want to cry when I think about that. Did he perform on stage with white performers? Oh yeah. And so when the opry would go out on the tours during the weeks because, you know, the opry was a weekend show. But all through the weeks, Aubrey members could play anywhere that they could get a booking. And that's where they could really make money because the opera didn't pay. So he would tour with uncle Dave Macon, who was the biggest star of this era in which hillbilly music and vaudeville were sort of thick as thieves and before anybody even called it country in western. It was just called hillbilly music. D four Bailey was a hillbilly star. And the first black recording artist in Nashville. So we knew we wanted to resurrect the story. In the 1980s after the early 80s, after D four had been kicked off the opry, had his name dragged through the mud became a shoe shine, operator. Okay, let's back up, why did he get kicked off the operating? Well, the story is that in 1941, that BMI and a couple other songwriting performance royalty burying agencies determined that you could make more money if you did their catalog on the radio because of new broadcast, a copyright loss that would royalty bearing. And the opry says that they said to D Ford, if you're going to stay on the opry, you have to do a new catalog of songs, and defort said, well I only played the songs I play. And then after he was then dismissed, they said that he was sullen in his work ethic as attributed to men of his color. That was the quote from the honorable judge D hay, who was the longtime radio voice of the grand Ole opry. So they basically, you know, they blackballed him, and he lived another 40 years. And eventually moved into federal housing. He ran a successful shoe shine business, and then in the late 70s, they started bringing them back to the opry and kind of token roles, old timers show and there was a folklorist who discovered him who's since become a friend of mine named David Morton, who was working for HUD. And he was, you know, a college grad white kid, maybe at Vanderbilt or something, new employee, that summer for hud, and he's going around in the housing projects, checking in with residents, and somebody said he liked music and some old ladies said to him, well, if you like music, you need to go up to the 8th floor. Well, default Bailey lives there. And he comes back home and to his dad in Alabama. His dad was born in the teens or something. And he said, oh yeah, I just met this old black gentleman plays a harmonica. Oh, what's his name? D four Bailey, you met D four Bailey? He's still alive because this guy David Morton's father had listened to the opry in the 20s, and knew that D Ford was a legend. And so D Ford told David that he felt that God had called them together so that D four's story could finally be retold. And the D four could finally say his piece. And so he wrote a book. He made a record, all of these things happen in the year 1980. I think he died in about 1982. But I think the most moving thing for the whole story about me was I wanted to write a song about D four and ever since I came to Nashville. But I never felt like it would be appropriate for me as a white country guy to sing that song. And when Jerry and I got together, I mean, Jerry can write any song Jerry wants to write, but I thought that this might be a good song, and Jerry helped me finish it, and then tell him about our trip after we both got COVID over Christmas. Oh, yeah. So we got COVID three days before Christmas. And we were just constantly checking in on each other because we both had to be isolated. And I said, you know, it's kind of nice today. You want to go for a walk and he was like, yeah, let's go to a cemetery. And I had a cousin that had just passed three days before we had COVID. So I was like, I wanted to go out there and my mom's very Greenwood cemetery is second oldest African American cemetery in Nashville. So I've got a lot of family out there. And yeah, I said, how about Greenwood? And he was like, perfect. So we met at Greenwood and I said, you know, I looked up, you can do grape finder, found out where D four Bailey is great was. And first we went to D four Bailey junior and saw his grave, which is actually really close to one of my uncles, but then D Fords, it's right, kind of in the front, which is really like two feet over from an on a mine. It's a cross away from my mom and my granddad, you know, like, so there was just all this, there was this energy there that you know like all of a sudden it's like, even though we had to get COVID to experience it, you know, like we were right there. We were in the presence of country music, African American history like a legend, you know, like right there in such close proximity to my family and like potentially I haven't decided if I wanted to be buried, but if I did, that's where I would go, you know? So yeah,

Nashville Dave Macon Marty Stuart Bailey Hank Williams opry house IBM Bruce hedley Jerry Pentecost Marty Ford Ford Bailey ryman auditorium defort Bailey Murfreesboro opry Jerry
"ryman auditorium" Discussed on Broken Record

Broken Record

13:49 min | 7 months ago

"ryman auditorium" Discussed on Broken Record

"You to come to Nashville and do the same thing out in front of the grand Ole opry. So the summer of 2000 we all came down in Nashville on the weekends, and we'd stay in like a $26 crack motel and we'd boss in front of the grand old opry, and then our shift would end about 9 o'clock, we'd go downtown, we'd busk on lower Broadway. God, we were making like $800 on a Friday night. And we come back to that crack motel and we'd buy two cases of beer and a cart and smokes, and we would just feel like king. And we were the high rollers in those motels. And it was a different Nashville, like people weren't clamoring to move to Nashville. There was like the country music thing and there was healthcare, but you know, you could have bought those houses for nothing. Well, it was around that time that we stumbled into Marty Stuart when we found that the uncle Dave Macon days festival had a $500 prize without, well, let's go down there and win it. And we went down to Murfreesboro and we were busking there, making a big hoot and Marty Stewart walked in. He was the grand mason of the festival that year. And he brought us into his fold right away and made sure that we played the opry. He hosted our first opry debut at the ryman, which came just three months after that. And then had us open for him, had us out to the house, made us know that his Nashville was a place that we were welcomed. And what was your first performance like in the opera? It was in January when the opry would traditionally move from its home at the opry house down to its old home at the ryman auditorium. And we all got dressed up in suits. And we were all so nervous. Critter was so nervous he threw up in the trash can right there in the wings before we walked on. And we were all just sweating bullets. And we came out there and Marty had given us each little guy gauze to wear. It was really helpful, honestly, to Kevin, our get Joe player, he gave a pair of glasses that had belonged to some old Hollywood movie star. And to me, he gave a funny kind of velvety bow tie that had belonged to slim Whitman, and everybody had one little thing to borrow for the set because Marty's a collector. He's got all this crazy. Memorabilia. And we did some old time hokum songs that brought the house down. And when they asked for an encore, we didn't know what to do, so we just played the same song again. And then they wanted another encore. Honestly, it felt the closest that I've ever felt to feeling like Hank Williams must have felt. That time that he made his opry debut, or just to be Hank Williams, it was like there was no nothing digital about the world. It was like an analog moment. We were on a.m. radio. We were not on the Internet. It was the year 2000. We didn't have a cell phone, I was still carrying a spiral notebook in my back pocket. And the crowd in a 120 year old gospel union tabernacle all rose to its feet because we were playing hundred year old music that made them feel joy. We have to take one last quick break, but after that, we'll be back with more from Bruce hedley, catch C corps and Jerry Pentecost. What if you were a major transit system with billions of passengers taking millions of trips every year? You weren't about to let any cyberattacks slow you down. So you partner with IBM to build a security architecture to keep your data, network, and applications protected. Now you can tackle threats so they don't bring you to a grinding halt. And everyone's going places, including you. Let's create cybersecurity that keeps your business on track. IBM. Let's create. Learn more at IBM dot com. It's time to rebuild your credit card with Apple card. Apple card is designed to help you pay less interest. Unlike other cards, it estimates how much interest you'll owe and suggests moves to help you pay off your balance faster. Also you can keep more of your money. Apply now in the wallet app on iPhone and start using it right away. Subject to credit approval. Interest estimates on the payment wheel are illustrative only and may not fully reflect actual interest charges on your account. Estimates are based on your posted account balance at the time of the estimate and do not include pending transactions or any other purchases you may make before the end of the billing period. We're back with the rest of Bruce's interview with catch and Jerry of old crow medicine show. There's a song on your record I do want to talk about, which is the Ford Bailey rides again. Well, it's the Ford writes again, but it's about this incredible character to Ford Bailey. Can you talk a bit about that? When we were working on songs for the record, catch reached out to me and he was like, you know, I've been working on this idea of writing a song about D four Bailey. And so we got together. And we just kind of started talking about it, you know, like talking about him as an individual, you know, like what he stood for. And it kind of actually I never told you this, but it made me think back to in my early days of being this drummer for hire. And when I was starting to play country music, people would ask me, do you want to be in country music? And I was like, wow, there's no black people in country music. And every so often somebody would say, what about D four Bailey? And I never knew who he was. And you know, we played the opry for years now. They've been members since what 2012, 2013. There's not a really strong presence of him at the opry, so like an African American individual when I'm there. I'm sensing for a feeling of belonging. And so if you don't see representation, you know, like then it's kind of hard to figure. So yeah, so like I was really excited about resurrecting this legacy this wrongdoing because that's kind of like how I look at it. This fallen soldier or pioneer of the opry. Everybody knows about Roy Acuff and Minnie Pearl, but people seldom know about defort Bailey and he is a member of the country music Hall of Fame at only took them what 20 some odd years after he died for them to do it and you know him being on the show when the term or the name grand old opry was introduced for the first time being the first African American member like there's just there's a lot dismissing. So we wanted to tell the song about the legacy and the life of D four Bailey and it's actually kind of sad. He was the first performer was me on the radio show the grand old opry opened with an African American performer. He was a harmonica player. The harmonica wizard. They called him the harmonica wizard, and he would open up the shows on by playing the sound of the freight train called the Pan American that would blow that would blow as it went by the broadcast tower. And then he would sing a song and he did Fox chases and all this mimicry and he was the grandchild of slaves born in Smith county, Tennessee, 1899. He had polio when he was a kid as an adult. He was about four foot 9, and he became the very first African American recording artist in Nashville. And he did that in the 20s. His albums were released to both a white and black audience, his acclaim from the opry, he was so popular, he was a national touring act, and he would go out on the road with Bill Monroe. And they would have to put him in a suitcase to bring him into some of these hotels, where he wasn't welcome as a black man in the south. He was so small he could ride in a steamer trunk. It kind of makes me want to cry when I think about that. Did he perform on stage with white performers? Oh yeah. And so when the opry would go out on the tours during the weeks because, you know, the opry was a weekend show. But all through the weeks, Aubrey members could play anywhere that they could get a booking. And that's where they could really make money because the opera didn't pay. So he would tour with uncle Dave Macon, who was the biggest star of this era in which hillbilly music and vaudeville were sort of thick as thieves and before anybody even called it country in western. It was just called hillbilly music. D four Bailey was a hillbilly star. And the first black recording artist in Nashville. So we knew we wanted to resurrect the story. In the 1980s after the early 80s, after D four had been kicked off the opry, had his name dragged through the mud became a shoe shine, operator. Okay, let's back up, why did he get kicked off the operating? Well, the story is that in 1941, that BMI and a couple other songwriting performance royalty burying agencies determined that you could make more money if you did their catalog on the radio because of new broadcast, a copyright loss that would royalty bearing. And the opry says that they said to D Ford, if you're going to stay on the opry, you have to do a new catalog of songs, and defort said, well I only played the songs I play. And then after he was then dismissed, they said that he was sullen in his work ethic as attributed to men of his color. That was the quote from the honorable judge D hay, who was the longtime radio voice of the grand Ole opry. So they basically, you know, they blackballed him, and he lived another 40 years. And eventually moved into federal housing. He ran a successful shoe shine business, and then in the late 70s, they started bringing them back to the opry and kind of token roles, old timers show and there was a folklorist who discovered him who's since become a friend of mine named David Morton, who was working for HUD. And he was, you know, a college grad white kid, maybe at Vanderbilt or something, new employee, that summer for hud, and he's going around in the housing projects, checking in with residents, and somebody said he liked music and some old ladies said to him, well, if you like music, you need to go up to the 8th floor. Well, default Bailey lives there. And he comes back home and to his dad in Alabama. His dad was born in the teens or something. And he said, oh yeah, I just met this old black gentleman plays a harmonica. Oh, what's his name? D four Bailey, you met D four Bailey? He's still alive because this guy David Morton's father had listened to the opry in the 20s, and knew that D Ford was a legend. And so D Ford told David that he felt that God had called them together so that D four's story could finally be retold. And the D four could finally say his piece. And so he wrote a book. He made a record, all of these things happen in the year 1980. I think he died in about 1982. But I think the most moving thing for the whole story about me was I wanted to write a song about D four and ever since I came to Nashville. But I never felt like it would be appropriate for me as a white country guy to sing that song. And when Jerry and I got together, I mean, Jerry can write any song Jerry wants to write, but I thought that this might be a good song, and Jerry helped me finish it, and then tell him about our trip after we both got COVID over Christmas. Oh, yeah. So we got COVID three days before Christmas. And we were just constantly checking in on each other because we both had to be isolated. And I said, you know, it's kind of nice today. You want to go for a walk and he was like, yeah, let's go to a cemetery. And I had a cousin that had just passed three days before we had COVID. So I was like, I wanted to go out there and my mom's very Greenwood cemetery is second oldest African American cemetery in Nashville. So I've got a lot of family out there. And yeah, I said, how about Greenwood? And he was like, perfect. So we met at Greenwood and I said, you know, I looked up, you can do grape finder, found out where D four Bailey is great was. And first we went to D four Bailey junior and saw his grave, which is actually really close to one of my uncles, but then D Fords, it's right, kind of in the front, which is really like two feet over from an on a mine. It's a cross away from my mom and my granddad, you know, like, so there was just all this, there was this energy there that you know like all of a sudden it's like, even though we had to get COVID to experience it, you know, like we were right there. We were in the presence of country music, African American history like a legend, you know, like right there in such close proximity to my family and like potentially I haven't decided if I wanted to be buried, but if I did, that's where I would go, you know? So yeah,

Nashville Dave Macon Marty Stewart Bailey Hank Williams opry house IBM Bruce hedley Jerry Pentecost Marty Ford Ford Bailey ryman auditorium defort Bailey Murfreesboro opry Critter
"ryman auditorium" Discussed on KOMO

KOMO

03:01 min | 11 months ago

"ryman auditorium" Discussed on KOMO

"Night during a big music filled finale in Los Angeles George Pinocchio for ABC News With a 2022 Billboard Music Awards are in the books Get mad at myself 'cause I can't leave alone It's a big night for Drake named top artist and honored for best rap album Also a big night for Taylor Swift as well as she walked away with the most Billboard Music Awards in the country genre this year winning top country artist and top country female artist the BBMAs were hosted by diddy at the MGM Grand garden arena in Las Vegas Journey will be featured on the season four soundtrack of Stranger Things a remix of separate ways world's part is the first track available to stream ahead of the fourth season's first batch of episodes on May 27th collectors of physical music can look forward to the release of cassette and CD versions of the soundtrack in September a vinyl edition will arrive later in 2022 Country music legend Naomi jud remembered yesterday Michael castner reports A celebration of life was held at Nashville's ryman auditorium husband Larry Strickland and daughters Ashley and winona Judd were joined by an array of artists and officials last night for the Naomi Judd a river of time celebration billboard magazine says wynonna was honest about her troubled relationship with her mother saying you share a bus with your mother and see how that goes The event was shown commercial free on CMT Naomi took her own life April 30th she was 76 years old I'm Michael kassner And the judge final tour will go on the 2022 final tour winona judge made that announcement yesterday during the memorial service for her late mother and she said after a lot of thought I'm gonna have to honor her and do this tour It kicks off September 30th in Grand Rapids Michigan and wraps up in Nashville one month later Northwest newstime now 6 15 we check Wall Street and your stock charts dot com money update Here's dairy albinger From ABC News Wall Street now stocks closed most lilo were after wavering for most of the session the Dow rose 27 points but the NASDAQ gave up a 142 and the S&P closed down 16 The drop in tech stocks tempered gains elsewhere in the market ship maker invidious lip two and a half percent big tech companies which tend to have expensive stock prices often push the broader market more forcefully up or down especially with worries about record inflation and rising interest rates JetBlue is going hostile as it tries to buy spirit airlines It's going straight to the shareholders of the low cost carrier asking them to reject to propose $2.9 billion acquisition by frontier airlines Money news here at 20 and 50 passed every hour will get the latest on traffic and other update on the weather pattern change next Why.

Billboard Music Awards George Pinocchio MGM Grand garden arena Naomi jud Michael castner Nashville's ryman auditorium Larry Strickland winona Judd Naomi Judd billboard magazine ABC News Michael kassner Taylor Swift Drake wynonna Los Angeles Las Vegas Ashley winona Naomi
"ryman auditorium" Discussed on Typology

Typology

04:14 min | 1 year ago

"ryman auditorium" Discussed on Typology

"Hey folks and welcome to technology, the show on which we explore the story of you through the lens of the enne grand my name is Anthony skinner, producer of the show, and we are happy to have you here with us today. We've got a great guest Andy gula horn. He is an enneagram 9, Andy is one of our favorite singer songwriters here in Nashville, Tennessee. His songs are heartfelt, funny, really, really smart, and we get the extra added privilege of having Andy pull out his guitar and play a song for us today, so you're gonna get that here in just a minute. We had a little bit of technical difficulty along the way and Ian's Mike dropped out. So I'm gonna jump in here in a minute and help finish out his story that he's setting up before Andy plays. Before I turn it over to her host, I want to remind you that Ian dropped his brand new book the story of you on December 28. It's a really great read and chock full of stuff that is going to be transformative for you, so make sure you check that out. It's available anywhere find books or sold and the audio version is available as well as a matter of fact earlier this week on January, the 24th 2022, we dropped a bonus ty biology podcast episode with Ian reading chapter one. So make sure you check that out if you haven't already, or rolling lots of really fun things out this year. I'll be filling you in more about that as the year goes on. That's what I've got for you today. That's it for me, Anthony skinner and now. Here is the host of our show. Ian crumb. Andy Gallagher and welcome to typology. Thanks for having me. It is such a delight because, you know, I don't always get dear Friends on the show. You know what I mean? Like a lot of times the very first time I meet the person is like across the table. And here you are, my neighbor, a dear friend of ten years, and the honestly one of my favorite singer songwriters on the planet. Incredibly gifted and of course we go walking frequently and you're my therapist, but we wander around and I dump my life on to you and you graciously listen like a good enneagram 9 wood and one of my favorite memories was not this past year with the year before at the Christmas show. Behold the lamb Christmas show at the ryman auditorium. Those of you who don't know about the ryman, Ryan is the mother church of music here in Nashville, Tennessee. It's a gorgeous room. We got this 2000 people in the room. And you get up to do your portion of the show on stage. And you play a song I've never heard before. And I'm thinking, oh, listen to that. It's a saw I never heard before. Hey, folks, it's Anthony skinner. And as I said earlier, we had a little bit of audio difficulties and Ian's mic dropped, so I'm just stepping in here to finish Ian's thought as he was setting up Andy to play the song. So Andy is onstage at the ryman auditorium and he plays a song Ian has never heard before, and it is a song about the enneagram. And so, of course, it really grabbed Ian's attention. And when Andy came into the studio today, we have guitars hanging on the walls. And Ian asked. Andy, if he would sing this song for you all today and Andy graciously agreed. So now here is Andy go a horn. I think I figured out what I feel so alone I've grown too much and self awareness I'm sure that I'm right but the Friends that I know are involved enough to understand it I read all my.

Anthony skinner Andy Ian Andy gula Ian crumb Andy Gallagher Nashville Tennessee ryman auditorium Mike Ryan
"ryman auditorium" Discussed on CBS Sports Eye On College Basketball Podcast

CBS Sports Eye On College Basketball Podcast

07:58 min | 1 year ago

"ryman auditorium" Discussed on CBS Sports Eye On College Basketball Podcast

"That. I had not thought about this band. 15 years minimum? Dead eye dick? Yeah, I know the song I would have never been able to name the band. Okay, to anyone? That's under the age of 25. And wants to know what the 90s were like on the radio? This song charted. The song. But shower at the bone. How about that? How incredible is that? Dead eye dick shouts to dumb and dumber. This is now your opportunity, try and keep it under two minutes. I needed to bring it back. We have a lot of new listeners. Once upon a time, my wife and I were, I think, I believe we just started dating. We were certainly not married by now. We went to Nashville to see Ryan Adams, which apparently is something you can't do anymore. He's canceled. Poor guys canceled. Not poor guy. He did some awful stuff. Guys canceled. But before he was canceled, he was universally recognized as an amazing songwriter. And he was someone we enjoyed. First with whisky town, and then as a solo artist. So we went to Nashville to the ryman auditorium to see Ryan Adams. I did one of those tricks. I think a lot of people have done this trick. You buy your wife a present, girlfriend at the time? Hey, I got you tickets to Ryan Adams for your birthday. I can't wait for us to go. Is that how bad of a move is that? Someone acceptable. Yeah, like she wanted to go, but I also wanted to go. I turned her birthday present into something that benefited me as well. We've been there. Yeah. Yeah, okay. So what's got my wife a television for her birthday when we live together so it was basically for both of us. There you go, right? So it was me and my wife and Corey Brandon, my old roommate, who was a songwriter himself, and a handful of other people. So we drive up the Nashville get there like Loren lunchtime and now it's day drinking and eating and getting ready for the show. And you're not gonna believe this, but the drinking escalated, fairly quickly. We having a good time. I don't know why we were in the little pizza shop and slice this. I was eating boy. I don't know. I was more than four. I don't know if I got to be more than four, but. I wouldn't hide anything. If I was hungry, I was gonna eat. So we were there. And I have no idea, I don't even know how this came up. And it was like a, you know, authentic, whatever that means. But they had like they didn't have like jalapenos out of a jar. It was like freshly cut jalapenos. And we had them on the side because not everybody want them on the pizza, but I love them because I got Mexican blood running through my veins. And so I don't even know how this happens. I mean, we're all adults for crying out loud. And somebody said, you ever, I think this is what happened. Somebody said, if you ever touch jalapenos and then accidentally touched your eyes, you'd forgot your head, jalapenos on your fingers and then you go rub your eyes and I was like, I'll put a whole jalapeno right on my eyeball and somebody's like, no, you want that outrageous. And I was like, $5, I'll do it. And somebody was like, sure, I'll take that bet. Because what's the worst case scenario, you pay $5 to watch your friend put a jalapeno on his eyeball? That's the worst. Best case scenario, you won 5 bucks. So I took a freshly cut jalapeno and I put it directly on my pupil. And I thought I'd lost my eye. It hurts so bad. This for $5. For $5. Now 20 years later, I'm paying people to put together toys. But back then, I was willing to put a freshly cut jalapeno on my pupil for 5 bucks. So it was one of those things where, within seconds, you know, you go, I've made, I've made a bad mistake. This is a terrible decision. So my Friends, I mean, I'm really like, I'm hurting. I don't know that I'm ever gonna see again out of my right eye. Which would have been problematic for a lot of reasons. And so my Friends are like trying to alert the server or the kitchen. Daddy even say this. My buddy just stuck a jalapeno on his eyeball. Do you have anything to help him? Well, naturally, I'll never forget the poor lady, she seemed to be of Italian descent. Certainly didn't speak English very well. And she was so they're trying to say, hey, jalape he's got he put a jalapeno on his eyeball. Do you have anything that will help him? How do you even resolve this issue? This point probably should just call 9-1-1. And she said, she interpreted that as he's mouth is burning from the jalapenos. Because why would you assume somebody would put a jalapeno on their eyeball? So she says she gives us like some pita bread or something like that, some sort of doughy product. Intended for me to put it in my mouth and so there I am. I put it on my eyeball. Yes. I've just got like dough on my eye. It's doing nothing. But there's a picture of it somewhere. And after a while, you know, the pain subsided and you know I lived and we went to a Ryan Adams show and it is famously the show you can look this up on YouTube. Some guy because there's Brian Adams, summer of 69, and then there's lying in Adams. And for a while, they go through a stage at these shows. People be like, play summer 69. And like Ryan Adams on this night had clearly had enough of it. And he was like, yo, how much identifies the guy? How much did you pay to come to the show? It was like 50 bucks, whatever. He's like, here, he reaches into his pocket. He's like, here's your bunny back. Just leave. Just leave so the rest of us have a good time. He like made this guy Lee, gave him money and made him leave. And it was like a big deal. We were at that show. And then fast forward like ten years right out of the back at the ryman editorial and he referenced that. You can find this on YouTube too. And he said, you know, all these years later that I'm para I don't remember what he said exactly, but all these years later that doesn't bother me anymore. Summer 69 is actually a really great song. And I'd like to play it for you if you don't mind. Please play somewhere 69 there. But we were at the first show when he got when he kicked the guy out. I had to blurry I red eye, but I recovered nicely. Summer of 69. Also, one of the premier premarital sex anthems. Did you realize? All right. Yep. We have a couple of, I do want to incorporate just a couple of live ones here. I saw one earlier, not okay. Well, we know this one for. All right, honestly, believe the ACC gets more than three teams in the NCAA tournament. More than three, honestly at this point. Yes or no. I'm gonna say yes. I'm gonna say yes. One of the things people don't realize about the incident tournament. Of course. Is that you got to put 68 teams in it. Got it. And so yeah, I'm assuming you don't have to play. We learned that in 2021. Okay, do not have to play. But you have to put 68 in it and then 16 advance to the sweet 16. And then only four make it to the final four. Every year. That's right. And I'm going to assume that, yeah, four of the 68, at least for the 68 are going to be from the ACC. It'll be duke..

Ryan Adams Nashville Corey Brandon dick ryman auditorium jalape Loren Brian Adams YouTube Adams Lee ACC NCAA
"ryman auditorium" Discussed on Haunted Places

Haunted Places

03:06 min | 1 year ago

"ryman auditorium" Discussed on Haunted Places

"Said she checked the room. One more time they split up and janet walk down the aisle up the stage. She pulled herself back up again. And based the auditorium now with the lights on and this time she saw a man clearly he stood in the balcony dressed in grey staring at her somberly. Her breath klunder throat. She just been up there and he'd been hiding watching her before she could do anything. He called out his voice echoing around the room. He told her to sing. And then he vanished like he'd evaporated into thin air. Janet's pulse quickened. She must have imagined it people. Don't just hear this stage usually seemed to pull in but right now all she wanted to do was get out. Janet turn to leave and screamed. Gray man had appeared right beside her on the stage. He stood inches from her. Now is somber face staring into hers. He told her not to leave until she used what god had given her. In the right way chestnut trampled. She didn't know what that meant. Her lip quiver as she opened her mouth but no words came out. Her mind was a jumble of thoughts trying desperately to process what she was saying. Was this person a ghost. The grants insistent gays bore into hers. Again he ordered her to sing. She felt laugh bubble up on her chest at the irony of it. She was standing on the stage of her dreams with someone requesting performance. The man brought his hands up around janet's throat and started to squeeze she gas that the pain. She didn't know this thing wanted her to sing but she had no choice. She had to try. Janet stammered out the song she'd been singing the darkness just moments ago about driving past highway but as she sang she saw the gray man's face darkened that she wasn't allowed to sing. Her words were sinful. He tightened his grip around her throat. Janet gasped as she struggled. Tears sprang to rise. She choked out the only religious song she knew an old her mom used to sink to her his grip loosened and she fell to the stage floor choking heaving she could barely breathe but she kept singing until her breath returned to her when she looked up the old man was gone she slowly stood and then she ran for the door as she hurried out. She wondered if performing wasn't as easy as jumping on stage. Maybe she wasn't quite ready.

Janet One more time janet
"ryman auditorium" Discussed on Haunted Places

Haunted Places

05:13 min | 1 year ago

"ryman auditorium" Discussed on Haunted Places

"Had people left and then he noticed about the audience the ghostly gray man from its dressing room was leaning over the rail of the mezzanine balcony. Norm blinked against the glaring states lines. They must have been playing tricks with his eyes but no matter how many times he plagued the gray man remained watching him. The crowd grew fainter. Norm realized the audience was even emptier than it was just moments ago. His fans were literally disappearing one by one. What was once. Half-full was now only a third and then a quarter until the auditorium was completely empty. Enormous bathed in complete suffocating silence nor trampled is lies filled with tears. It had happened. It's fans by the abandoned him. He looked down at the only thing he had left his guitar. But the hand gripping strings while snarled with flaking thin skin and old hand he suddenly realized that hand was his norm cast and touched a space where there was once charming. Scruff were now deep sagging wrinkles. He'd somehow aged considerably since leaving his dressing room. That was why the audience had fled. He was no longer a middle aged country rocker. He was a withered corpse. Devastation seared through him and with a scream he smashed his guitar onto the stage floor. Just then a cough punctured the silence and then the sound of murmuring. The audience had returned to the normal packed crowd. That had been there just moments ago. But they weren't charing. They were staring at him. In silent. shock norm had imagined the ghost but screams have been real. He backed away and hurried off. The stage norm ran outside and jumped into his bleeding black car. His heart pounded cheers. Wet his cheeks though. We didn't remember crying. He needed a drink now. His trembling hands yanked the flask from his leg and he tossed back what was left. He closed his eyes relaxing as that warmth spread through him but when he opened his eyes he saw that he wasn't alone. The gray man from the dressing room sat beside him. He told norm that he couldn't use his voice for god's work he shouldn't use it at all. His misty hands reached forward to cover norms mouth and nose cutting off his air. Supply norm struggled but it was futile. His hands wouldn't move.

Norm one norms a third a quarter Half-full norm
"ryman auditorium" Discussed on Haunted Places

Haunted Places

06:53 min | 1 year ago

"ryman auditorium" Discussed on Haunted Places

"Nor report. Some whiskey into was coffee from a secret flask. The when he kept strapped to his ankle the one manager had no idea existed but it was the last five minutes before we went onstage enormous alone the always requested to be alone right before a show his manager thought it was so he could get in the right head space but really it was so he could sneak. A few drinks norm gloved shot from his flask and strapped it back on his ankle then. He sipped his bike to coffee. The whiskeys warmth spread through limbs all the way to his fingertips but his contentment faded when he stared at his reflection in the mirror aging country star in his fifties but truthfully he looked way older. He could thank his hard drinking for that. He tried to scale back a few years ago in seventy four but hadn't been able to get off the sauce. At least he'd improved the sixties had been a blur. His six were all. He had to remember back then he was what you call a good time singer. Each song was about one of his knights of debauchery. Someone is youth then some later than he'd care to admit he knew he should move on in singapore more wholesome age appropriate things something about the meaning of life or being wiser but truthfully he was scared to sing about anything else it would be like a signal to his fans that he was over the hill he'd heard about old singers ticket sales dwindling until they had to beg people to come to their shows the bodice standing on that stage hearing silence instead of deafening cheers. Made him nauseous. He'd stick with the old stuff. Tried and true norm felt up paying of sympathy as he stared at the dusty bulbs that line the mirror. The reimann had been built in the eighteen hundreds so everything was dusty but he bet that years ago. The place had been spic and span. He sipped his coffee reflecting that the rhyme and had seen better days just like him. Suddenly something hit his hand and his mug went flying. The cup exploded against the mirror. Sending a spider web of cracks across its surface norm stared at his splintered reflection and swore maybe he'd had more to drink any thought he hadn't destroyed the dressing room in ten years is manager was going to be furious. Normal is trying to think of a possible excuse but he was distracted by something moving behind him obscured by the cracked mirror. He whipped around just as a shadow disappeared behind a clothing rack. He's slowly rose. Someone else was in his dressing room maybe fan. He didn't know how they've gotten but he was worried that they saw him break the mug he didn't want someone claiming he had arthritis or something he could see. The headline norm bellows walled. He can't even hold a coffee cup. He approached the clothing rack and shoved one of the old castle vests to the side. But nothing was there. He took a breath he needed to focus. He was norm bello. And there were more than a thousand people gathered in the rhyming auditorium right now waiting to see him a knock on the door startled him but he relaxed when he heard the stage. Manager's voice he had one. Minute norm grabbed his guitar and plucked a few tombs and Some of the song living for the rush but when he looked up at the crack mirror a shadowy figure stood behind him. He whipped around. Just stare straight into. The white is of a very strange very gray man. He was clad in the color from head to toe. Even his skin had an ashes pallor to it. It was almost transparent making him. Look more like a whisper of smoke that a living breathing human being norm stared at him. Transfixed misty hand reached out and stroked norps throughout the icy cold. Touch sent goosebumps all over his body. He heard the figures speak and a snide gravelly voice saying that i was wasting his god given talent on sinful music and norm better not go onstage to pollute the tabernacle with this trash. Norm couldn't move. This couldn't be real. He was just trunk seen things but then the hand tightened around his throat. A norm couldn't breathe. He flailed but his hand passed harmlessly through the gray man's arm but door. The dressing room swung open and the hand released him. Norm looked around in a panic gasping for breath but the gray man had disappeared in his place. Was the raymond stage manager nervously. Asking him if he was ok norm jumped up grabbed his guitar. He was shaking like a leaf but he knew that he needed to get out of this room. Something was deeply wrong with it. Norm follow the stage manager through the bustle of the backstage. Like he was walking through a dream. The moments of the dressing room already felt like they'd happened years ago. But the voice of that thing still echoed in his mind calming out norm for his simple words norm. New at the reimann had been a church back in the day. Was this some kind of religious sign that he needed to change his music but he couldn't just the people in this building came to see dorm bello and his greatest heads if he stopped giving them what they wanted they realize he was an old has been. And then what was it. Good for norm strode out onto the dark stage clutching his guitar and strummed. A few chords relaxed does the crowd's cheers reverberated around him. All that garbage back in the dressing room was just his paranoid mind here. He was in his element and he knew just what to do. He began to crew in one of his crowd. Pleasers whiskey nights but as he got into it. The cheering began to fade. He squinted past the blinding spotlight. Trying to see the audience the auditorium which just moments ago had been filled with screaming fans was now only half full norm felted twins of.

six ten years Each song singapore fifties more than a thousand people Norm years eighteen hundreds few years ago last five minutes twins one seventy four one manager reimann norm sixties knights raymond
"ryman auditorium" Discussed on Haunted Places

Haunted Places

05:59 min | 1 year ago

"ryman auditorium" Discussed on Haunted Places

"Henry drop to the ground and christopher staggered to his feet panting. He stared at his old friend's body waiting for him to rise. Christopher nudged him with a foot. But henry's body was lamp. The only movement was a halo of blood slowly expanding around his head. The altars floor. Christopher dropped the cross at his whole body began to tremble. He looked around at the empty tabernacle his body. Surging with panic. What he just done was evil and now it was polluting. The house of god he had to get henry out of there and then he decide what to do. Christopher pulled. henry's body out the back door and into the rain. The road in front of the tabernacle was blessedly deserted. No one saw what he'd done. No one had to know. Cold rain pelted against his face as he looked up. Brick facade of the tabernacle. It's grand arched windows looked like is period down at him. He might not have to answer to man. but he'd have to answer to god. Christopher doug his hands into the wet ground and began to carve out a whole it was the better part of an hour before it was big enough by the time he was done. His hands were bleeding at his nails split shuttered as he pushed henry inside and stared at his old friend's dead wide open. Christopher felt guilt gnawing at his gut like poison. He built his knees hands clasped in prayer. He told god he was sorry. He had only been trying to protect the lord from hearing the builth bet. Henry spewed inside his holy walls. Christopher prayed is boys became a soft panicked bubble by and as he sang the rain stopped. Christopher looked up in awe the twinkling stars the night felt fresh like it had been cleansed. Christopher laughed it was a sign. God had heard him. He looked into. Henry's gray but this time is guilt was gone. He understood what god was telling him is mission hadn't been finished. When he built the church he had to make sure it remained sacred and anyone who defile the tabernacle was held accountable.

Christopher Henry christopher
"ryman auditorium" Discussed on Haunted Places

Haunted Places

04:16 min | 1 year ago

"ryman auditorium" Discussed on Haunted Places

"His hands wrapped around her throat..

"ryman auditorium" Discussed on Haunted Places

Haunted Places

01:48 min | 1 year ago

"ryman auditorium" Discussed on Haunted Places

"Helen's long gown billowed as she floated to center stage. She couldn't see the audience in the spotlight was too bright but she didn't eat too. She could feel them. They're energy made. The air seem thick with possibility with magic because she was about to sing the romantic. I act of the opera carmen. The violins cut through the client. Helen's body swayed and her hands caress her collar poem. As the song's first words floated from her lips words about music making girls feverish at toxic. It was a sentiment. She knew all too well. Music mater drunk. Sometimes she threw a leg up on a stool by centerstage to let her knee peek through a slit in her skirt. When the spotlight shut off plunging the auditorium into darkness islands. Voice died in her throat. She stood frozen on the stage as the auditorium broke out in a wave of concerned murmurs the light q. Wasn't until the end of the song. Helen wondered if there was a problem but no one came to her so she had no idea what to do. Just that a hand grabbed your arm and she relaxed. It must be the stagehand here to help her off. She thanked him and asked about the light. But the voice. That answered wasn't familiar it was graphically furious. It whispered that's he was polluting the stage and if she couldn't sing for god she shouldn't be allowed to sing at all. Helen wave panic. She pulled away from the stranger but his grip on her arm later. She tried to scream but her whale was cut off as.

Helen first words
ACM Awards Take Place for 2nd Time in a Year

AP News Radio

00:36 sec | 2 years ago

ACM Awards Take Place for 2nd Time in a Year

"The academy of country music awards will be handed out on Sunday in Nashville for the second time in less than a year I'm Margie is our letter with a preview when the it feels like it wasn't that long ago that the last ACM awards happen well that's true the last ones were in September because of the corona virus pandemic the ACM's traditionally are in April Marren Morris and Chris Stapleton leads the nominations with six each Mickey Guyton who is co hosting with Keith urban will be the first black woman to host the awards the ceremony will air on CBS from the grand Ole Opry house the Ryman auditorium and the bluebird cafe in Nashville

Academy Of Country Music Acm Awards Marren Morris Margie Chris Stapleton Nashville Mickey Guyton Keith Urban Grand Ole Opry House CBS Ryman Auditorium Bluebird Cafe
"ryman auditorium" Discussed on Newsradio 970 WFLA

Newsradio 970 WFLA

02:43 min | 2 years ago

"ryman auditorium" Discussed on Newsradio 970 WFLA

"To exercise their first Amendment right by going on instagram and posting conspiracy theories, namely, You know, go Trump American first or whatever it was Rolling Stone and others again. Apparatchiks of the shadow government came on said is the wake up call for country music, then Morgan Wallen. Did the guy that basically not on stage? Not in this song, not as part of a team, but during a drunken moment of reverie. And Jack is you and I know We? We don't know anything about that. Anybody who does that is just which is alien to us Drinking too much saying something. You don't believe it's just alien. It is. I can't believe people do that. But apparently he did. Somebody caught this. It went out. And of course they want to erase him, not canceled him A raise him now You know what the next thing is gonna be NASCAR NASCAR. Why is that? Think about it. What did the images of country music Nashville, the Ryman Auditorium, the operator? What are they? The flag? Richard Nixon. White women. A great picture of Roy Take up with Richard Nixon. The Rheiman unprompted. Thank God I'm I'm married. You know, Brown beat American Lee Greenwood. Skin crawl, but still Charlie Daniels Merle Haggard Okie from the Scobie. When you step over, you stepped on my flag. You fight your supper of the fight inside of me goes on and on and on and on and on. And what is it? Jack Dixie Dixie, South stars and bars. Not the Confederate flag. The battle flag Alabama Dixieland delight the outlaws Southern Rock South, the South will rise again. Ah, country boy can survive goes on and on. They are remember from taking this, Do you? Targeted next NASCAR. Remember that noose or was it a other latch to lift the garage door? I don't know that lesson. I would have thought a little full of tests. They do another Remember where it goes, But I'm telling you and now watch from now on pay very, very close attention. Whatever you see anything where everybody's watching Super Bowl. Academy Award Grammys Anything and look At what is presented as America today, the.

Jack Dixie Dixie Richard Nixon NASCAR us Morgan Wallen Charlie Daniels Merle Haggard America Ryman Auditorium instagram Rolling Stone Nashville Lee Greenwood Scobie Roy Brown
ACM Awards will kick off with an all-star medley

Charlie Parker

00:42 sec | 2 years ago

ACM Awards will kick off with an all-star medley

"Tonight Your favorite country stars take three stages for a historic Academy of Country Music awards. Thomas Rhett Mayor Mars and Old Dominion Lean the Academy of Country Music Awards With five nominations, each damage have four and even pop star Justin Bieber grabbed four for his collaboration with dual urban will be hosting the event from the grand old offering and will premiere a brand new song with paint. The awards moved to Nashville for the first time marking this one for the history books. The performances will also be spread out of three venues. Operate Bluebird Cafe in the Ryman Auditorium. Also performing Miranda Lambert Taylor Swift, Jimmy Allen came

Academy Of Country Thomas Rhett Mayor Mars Miranda Lambert Taylor Swift Ryman Auditorium Justin Bieber Jimmy Allen Nashville
Academy of Country Music Awards will broadcast from Nashville for first time

On The Edge With Thayrone

00:35 sec | 3 years ago

Academy of Country Music Awards will broadcast from Nashville for first time

"Them this is a first the academy of country music awards will take place in Nashville the annual event is usually held in Las Vegas in April however due to the corona virus pandemic the ACM's hosted this year by Keith urban were postponed to the fall Monday the academy along with Dick Clark productions announced the move to three different locations in Nashville the grand Ole Opry house Nashville's historic Ryman auditorium and the bluebird cafe Damon Whiteside the CEO of the academy said the move was made to ease the burdens of traveling large teams to insure the safety of the

Nashville Las Vegas ACM Keith Urban Dick Clark Productions Ryman Auditorium Damon Whiteside CEO Academy Of Country
Guests could get paid to stay at hotel, get flu

The Bobby Bones Show

01:29 min | 5 years ago

Guests could get paid to stay at hotel, get flu

"Would you suffer through the flu this different story for thirty five hundred bucks yes yeah scientists offer to pay guests at what they're calling hotel influenza in a desperate bid to develop some sort of axiom so it's a little more than just getting the flu it's also getting the flu and letting them do tests on you could be a part of helping people or you could grow thirty year on your chin whenever they're testing because that's all you're getting paid to lose five pounds you could be the cure in twenty years who cured the flu lunchbox yep you know that amy did one of those where she went in and had a wisdom teeth worked on yeah and i got paid she got paid but the thing was they didn't tell her whether or not she was going to be the one that got the placebo like you didn't know if the right medicine got a pill you didn't know if it was the placebo or the pain medicine until you were in pain or not and so how much did you get paid you remember seventy five dollars but i got my wisdom teeth out for free that was the more i didn't have dental insurance so i didn't so it was a study that i find up for and by the time it was all said and done i got a seventy five dollar check but i wasn't in the whole any money and i have all my teeth gone luckily you didn't get the placebo which means no drug at all i got the pain meds i was knocked out the majority of people now use their phone on the toilet now just by a share of sounds from the audience how many of you use the phone on your toilet.

FLU AMY Seventy Five Dollars Seventy Five Dollar Twenty Years Five Pounds Thirty Year