A Saint from Texas bemoans resembling a “cow” next to the waifish movie star.
21.07.2020 - 22:37 / foxnews.com
Country singer Clayton Gardner claimed a fan coughed on him at his concert Friday night after he asked her to socially distance from him. Gardner was performing at a venue in Iriving, Texas, when a woman came on stage as she requested a song.
In a video he shared on social media, the “Buy You A Drink” singer responded: “OK, cool. You could [request a song] from, like, 7 feet away.That’d be cool.” Instead, she got closer to him.
“Are you for real right now? Please get away from me. Please,”
.A Saint from Texas bemoans resembling a “cow” next to the waifish movie star.
Kristin Robinson Forrest Frank, 25, and Colin Padalecki, 23, who make up rising duo Surfaces, are the unlikely hitmakers behind one of the hottest songs of the summer, “Sunday Best.”While it seemingly came out of nowhere, the song was, in fact, made in a dorm room — more specifically a closet — belonging to Padalecki at Texas A&M University. It’s hard to believe that, from there, “Sunday Best” would begin its slow build to ubiquity, now closing in on half-a-billion plays on Spotify alone.
Hurricane Hanna over the weekend.Video taken from Rockport Beach in Texas shows the unnamed man’s long hair getting blown furiously in the nearly 100-mph wind, as waves lap up onto his feet.Shirtless, he braces himself against the gusts of wind while resolutely holding up the American flag. Metal licks play in the background.The extreme weather-turned-music video was filmed by Texas man John Flu on July 25.
Singer-songwriter Clayton Gardner was playing a show in Texas while trying to social distance and a woman invaded his personal space “proceeded to grab me by my bandana and cough on me.”
Singer-songwriter Clayton Gardner had a scary experience with a fan during a performance this week.
On March 10, 2003, The Chicks (formerly known as the Dixie Chicks) lead singer Natalie Maines nearly ended her and her bandmates’ careers when she said these twelve famous words during a London concert: “We’re ashamed that the President of the United States is from Texas.” For a little context, Maines – a Texas native – made the comment just 18 months after 9/11, and just days before the United States went to war with Iraq.
season 2 star Melyza is finally introduced to viewers in her own words on this Monday's episode.
Anyone who thinks country music occupies a narrow band in the stylistic universe would do well to check out some of the new artists on the way in the last half of 2020.
her friend told multiple media outlets. TheWrap has reached out to representatives for Gilois.Along with “McFarland USA,” Gilois co-wrote the film “Glory Road” about Texas Western college basketball team of the 1960s, and “The Lost Wife of Robert Durst,” a 2017 Lifetime TV movie that starred Katharine McPhee.
WASHINGTON -- Guest lineups for the Sunday news shows: ABC's “This Week" — Stephen Hahn, commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration; Phoenix Mayor Kate Gallego; Miami Mayor Francis Suarez; Judge Lina Hidalgo of Harris County, Texas. ——— NBC's “Meet the Press” — Govs.
Vanilla Ice has finally thawed his stone-cold stance on hosting a concert amid the coronavirus pandemic.
Bruce Haring pmc-editorial-managerRapper and DIY Network home renovator Vanilla Ice has decided not to go forward with a planned July 4 concert in Austin, Texas.The show, planned for the Emerald Point Bar & Grill, is located on the shores of Lake Travis and touted its outdoor restaurant and extensive grounds as safety features.But Texas, as well as several other states, has seen a strong resurgence of coronavirus cases.
Vanilla Ice cooled off plans for a concert in Texas after taking considerable heat for an event that sought to gather hundreds of fans in one of the nation’s coronavirus hot spots.The 1990s rapper with the hit single “Ice Ice Baby” had been scheduled to play a lakeside show just outside Austin on Friday (July 3), but on Thursday he announced it was being postponed.“Due to the increase in COVID-19 numbers in Austin we’re gonna move the concert to a better date,” Vanilla Ice tweeted.
Against all odds, Marc Rebillet mounted a national concert tour in June 2020. Performing at drive-in venues from Maryland to Colorado and Texas to Ohio, the Dallas-based dance music star did some of the strongest business of his career, despite fans not being able to properly dance at his shows.
1990s-themed 4th of July concert in Austin, Texas, because of the coronavirus pandemic.“Due to the increase in COVID-19 numbers in Austin we’re gonna move the concert to a better date,” he wrote in a caption for a video posted Thursday on Twitter.
Vanilla Ice is listening to the concerns of his fans. The 52-year-old performer took to Twitter on Thursday ahead of his scheduled Fourth of July performance in Austin, Texas, to reveal that he had decided to cancel following backlash.Writing that he was moving the show to «a better date,» the «Ice, Ice, Baby» rapper told fans in a video message, «Basically, I'm not going.
Vanilla Ice has cancelled his Fourth of July concert after drawing extensive criticism over his disregard for social distancing. The 52-year-old “Ice Ice Baby” rapper was originally slated to perform at the “Independence Day Throwback Beach Party” at the Emerald Point Bar & Grill in Austin.