Tim McGraw Says He Doesn't Feel 'Comfortable' Singing About 'Tailgates and Bikinis' at 58 Years OldNew Foto - Tim McGraw Says He Doesn't Feel 'Comfortable' Singing About 'Tailgates and Bikinis' at 58 Years Old

Tracy Lawrence/YouTube Tim McGraw said on theTL's Road Housepodcast that he doesn't want to "sing about tailgates and bikinis" at age 58 McGraw said he prefers songs that teach him a lesson He also said he's passed along songs that "skewed too young" for him to his nephew, singer Timothy Wayne Tim McGrawhas long been known for releasing music with heart — and that's something he plans on sticking to at this stage in his career. The country star, 58, opened up about recording what he calls "fun songs," and explained that he's no longer keen on singing about stereotypical country tropes. "I try to do fun songs every now and again. It's harder the older you get to find a fun song and feel comfortable with it. You don't want to sing about tailgates and bikinis when you're 58 years old," he said on singer-songwriter Tracy Lawrence'sTL's Road Housepodcast on Wednesday, May 21. "Occasionally you do, if the song's right." Still, McGraw said he was more focused on recording songs that could teach him a lesson, something he's demonstrated in hits like "Live Like You Were Dying" and "Humble and Kind." "What song's gonna make me learn something about myself? And what song can I sing that I interpret that's believable? That's the hardest thing," he said. "Because look, I've experimented with stuff, I've tried different things." He shouted out his 2014 track "Lookin' for that Girl" in particular, calling it "different and weird," as it features hip hop-style production and Auto-Tune. "I'm not always trying to experiment. But I think I have a base sound, a sort of base attitude about the kind of songs that I want to do," he said. "I'll throw a fun ditty song in every now and then, I'll throw a fun love song in every now and then, I'll throw a fun cheating song in every now and then. But I'm always looking for a life-affirmation song." Kevin Mazur/Getty McGraw — who has been married to fellow country starFaith Hillsince 1996 — added that he recently handed off a number of tracks he felt "skewed too young" for him to hisnephew Timothy Wayne, who is an up-and-coming country singer. The "Something Like That" singer and Hill are parents to daughtersAudrey, 23,Gracie, 28, andMaggie, 26, and the pair recentlystepped out to supportGracie as she appeared onstage inThe Great War & The Great Gatsbyat Carnegie Hall in New York City in April. A source told PEOPLE that the superstars were very supportive, and gave their eldest daughter a rousing standing ovation at curtain call, with Hill even wiping away tears at one point. Audrey, too, has followed in her parents' famous footsteps (She has a role in the Paramount+ seriesLandman, and is joiningBrandi Carlileon tour). Read the original article onPeople

Tim McGraw Says He Doesn't Feel 'Comfortable' Singing About 'Tailgates and Bikinis' at 58 Years Old

Tim McGraw Says He Doesn't Feel 'Comfortable' Singing About 'Tailgates and Bikinis' at 58 Years Old Tracy Lawrence/YouTu...
Jimmy Kimmel is a grandfather: Comedian reveals daughter Katie welcomed her first childNew Foto - Jimmy Kimmel is a grandfather: Comedian reveals daughter Katie welcomed her first child

Jimmy Kimmelhas begun his grandfather era. Thelate-night host, 57, announced on his May 20 show that his daughter Katie, 33, has welcomed her first child. Kimmel explained this was why he did not air a new episode the evening prior, as Katie and her husband Will welcomed a baby girl "right at the time we shoot our show." The baby's name is Patti, and she is "very healthy," he said. Her middle name is Joan, which is Kimmel's mother's name, and he recalled that there was an "army of family" at the hospital when she was born. Kimmel also apologized to the people who were supposed to be in the studio audience during his canceled May 19 show, as well as toSeth Rogen, who he said was scheduled to be the guest. "Luckily, he was totally high when I called him," Kimmel quipped. Kimmel shares two adult children, 33-year-old Katie and 31-year-old Kevin, with his ex-wife Gina Maddy. He also shares 10-year-old Jane and 8-year-old Billy withMolly McNearney, whom he married in 2013. McNearney also produces Kimmel's late-night show. Kimmel's son Billywas born with a congenital heart conditionand hasundergone three open-heart surgeries. In 2024, after Billy's third surgery, the late-night host wrote on Instagram that "we went into this experience with a lot of optimism and nearly as much fear and came out with a new valve inside a happy, healthy kid." In his May 20 monologue, Kimmel said it's a "big responsibility to be a grandfather," only to jokingly take a long pause while trying to think of what a grandfather does. "I have to figure out something weird to teach my grandkid," he said. He also reflected on how it's "kind of scary to bring a child into this world" today. "These kids have to worry about the climate going on fire, MAGA, AI," he said. "You know what we had to worry about? The most dangerous scenarios the future held when I was a kid (were) quicksand, the Bermuda Triangle and killer bees." This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Jimmy Kimmel kids: Comic becomes grandfather, daughter welcomes child

Jimmy Kimmel is a grandfather: Comedian reveals daughter Katie welcomed her first child

Jimmy Kimmel is a grandfather: Comedian reveals daughter Katie welcomed her first child Jimmy Kimmelhas begun his grandfather era. Thelate-...
Orson Welles Can Now Be Your AI-Generated Tour GuideNew Foto - Orson Welles Can Now Be Your AI-Generated Tour Guide

Nearly 40 years after his death, Orson Welles is back — as a disembodied AI-generated voice in location-based storytelling app Storyrabbit. Storyrabbit, from podcast company Treefort Media, inked a partnership with the Orson Welles Estate to launch "Orson Welles Presents." The app now features the unmistakable voice of Welles, digitally re-created using Storyrabbit's AI technology, as an option for users to hear stories about specific locations. Using the Welles voice is free in the app until June 1, after which it will cost $4.99/month. More from Variety 'Voodoo Macbeth' Review: This USC Student Project Earns a Passing Grade, Retelling an Early Orson Welles Triumph 'Hopper/Welles' Producer Filip Jan Rymsza on Next Film 'Object Permanence' (EXCLUSIVE) Who Wrote 'Citizen Kane'? It's a Mystery Even if You Know the Answer Here's how Storyrabbit works: The app uses your location (or a point of interest on the map you have selected) to generate a personalized audio story that lasts 60-90 seconds, delivered by the host of your choice. The company says "it's like having your own audio tour guide for the world in your pocket with unlimited stories to tell." Storyrabbit users who select Welles as their host will hear a dynamically generated narrative about the history of film, TV, history and culture for the "rabbit hole" you've selected. (Listen to a demo below.) Welles, director and star of cinema classic "Citizen Kane" who made a dozen other films, died in 1985 at the age of 70. Storyrabbit says it employs "ethical AI practices," using licensed audio from his estate, and ensures "all narratives are human-curated, authentic and responsibly produced." The company developed Welles' AI voice in collaboration with Younite.ai. "Orson was a relentless innovator, who worked effortlessly across multiple platforms during his long and storied career, so bringing his voice into this new medium feels like a continuation of that legacy," said David Reeder of Reeder Brand Management, the agency for the Orson Welles Estate. Kelly Garner, founder and CEO of Treefort Media and creator of Storyrabbit, said, "Integrating Orson Welles' voice gives our storytelling unmatched resonance. Having the opportunity to work with a voice of this caliber is extraordinary. His timeless perspective offers users a unique lens — simultaneously nostalgic and forward-looking — to experience the world as it speaks, revealing incredible true stories." Other hosts available in the Storyrabbit app include Dominic Monaghan ("Lord of the Rings" movies, "Lost") who hosts the "wild guide"; and author, podcaster and TV host Candice DeLong, who voices the "true crime guide." Treefort Media's portfolio includes nearly 50 original podcasts spanning nonfiction, investigative journalism and scripted audio drama. Titles include scripted drama "Moriarty" and true-crime series "Killing Hollywood: The Cotton Club Murder" for Audible; "Killer Psyche With Candice DeLong" for Wondery; talk show "Chinwag" hosted by Paul Giamatti and Stephen Asma; and docu-series "Collapse: Disaster in Surfside," created in partnership with the Miami Herald. Listen to a sample of Orson Welles' AI-generated voice: Best of Variety New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week Emmy Predictions: Talk/Scripted Variety Series - The Variety Categories Are Still a Mess; Netflix, Dropout, and 'Hot Ones' Stir Up Buzz Oscars Predictions 2026: 'Sinners' Becomes Early Contender Ahead of Cannes Film Festival Sign up forVariety's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us onFacebook,Twitter, andInstagram.

Orson Welles Can Now Be Your AI-Generated Tour Guide

Orson Welles Can Now Be Your AI-Generated Tour Guide Nearly 40 years after his death, Orson Welles is back — as a disembodied AI-generated v...
Canada to highlight deep US trading relationship in meeting with BessentNew Foto - Canada to highlight deep US trading relationship in meeting with Bessent

BANFF, Alberta (Reuters) -Canada's finance minister said on Friday he would raise the importance of the country's deep trading relationship with the U.S. in a discussion with U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent late on Wednesday. Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne will hold a bilateral meeting with Bessent on the sidelines of the G7 finance heads conference in Banff, Alberta. "There's a lot for Canada and the United States to discuss," Champagne said, referring to his meeting with Bessent. "Canada is the largest customer (of) the United States. We buy more from the U.S. than China, Japan, the UK and France combined. So we have a very, very deep trading relationship," he said. (Reporting by Promit Mukherjee; editing by David Lawder and Chris Reese)

Canada to highlight deep US trading relationship in meeting with Bessent

Canada to highlight deep US trading relationship in meeting with Bessent BANFF, Alberta (Reuters) -Canada's finance minister said on Fri...
Judge says Trump administration violated court order with deportation flight linked to South SudanNew Foto - Judge says Trump administration violated court order with deportation flight linked to South Sudan

After a deportation flight with eight migrants left Texas reportedly intended for South Sudan this week, a federal judge ruled Wednesday that the Trump administration had violated a previous order. U.S. District Court Judge Brian Murphy in Massachusetts said at a hearing that the Trump administration had failed to adhere to an injunction he issued in March preventing people from being sent to countries other than their own without opportunities to raise fears of persecution or torture. The Department of Homeland Security confirmed at a news briefing Wednesday morning that eight people from Myanmar, Laos, Vietnam, Cuba, Mexico and South Sudan were deported this week. According to DHS, many of them had violent criminal convictions, including murder and sexual assault. "The department's actions," Murphy said, "are unquestionably violative of this court's order." A State Department travel advisory warns Americans not to go to South Sudan "due to crime, kidnapping, and armed conflict" and notes that in March, because of conditions on the ground, it "ordered the departure of non-emergency U.S. government employees from South Sudan." Government attorneys said that the migrants are still in Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody and that the plane has since landed. They declined to share the location of the plane's final destination. Murphy, who relayed the sequence of events leading to the deportations after more than 30 minutes in a sealed proceeding, said the people were notified of their destination "sometime in the evening" Monday, outside business hours. He added that they left the ICE facility the next morning at the latest in the 10 a.m. hour and at the earliest before 9 a.m. Without sufficient time to consult an attorney or family members, the judge said, it was "impossible" for those people to "have a meaningful opportunity to object" to their deportations to a third country. Immigration attorneys told Murphy that at least two of their clients, from Myanmar and Vietnam, were deported Tuesday morning to South Sudan. It's possible one of the migrants, Nyo Mint, might have been diverted to his home country, Myanmar (formerly known as Burma), but his San Antonio-based immigration attorney, Jonathan Ryan, said that he is still in the dark about where his client and that he has been "disappeared." "I have not heard from my client," Ryan said. "How am I supposed to take their word that they sent him to Burma?" Ryan said the government is acting as if due process is a privilege, saying it is a problem "when we stop doing due process for unpopular people." At a DHS news conference before the hearing, spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin told reporters about the migrants that "no country on Earth wanted to accept them because their crimes were so uniquely barbaric." McLaughlin also criticized the court system. "Activist judges are on the other side, fighting to get them back onto the United States soil," she said. South Sudan could beheaded for another civil war.A 2018 power-sharing agreement between President Salva Kiir and Vice President Riek Machar ended five years of civil war. But earlier this year, violent clashes between the factions ramped up once again. Murphy this month blocked the Trump administration's attempt to deport people from the Philippines, Vietnam, Laos and other countries to Libya. Then, he reaffirmed his injunction on third-country deportations in response to an emergency motion from the migrants' lawyers.

Judge says Trump administration violated court order with deportation flight linked to South Sudan

Judge says Trump administration violated court order with deportation flight linked to South Sudan After a deportation flight with eight mig...

 

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