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Ken Burns hits the road to promote new ‘Country Music’ doc

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — At 5 a.m. on a cold Sunday morning in Nashville, Tennessee, filmmaker Ken Burns climbed aboard a spacious, rumbling tour bus that that would become his home on wheels for the next four days, as well as a rolling advertisement for his upcoming PBS documentary “Country Music.”

He joked that if he had to pick a country song to kick of this promotional tour, it might be “Sunday Mornin’ Comin’ Down.”

“We don’t have the big budgets that the premium cables or the streaming services do to promote a film,” said Burns, who brought along his two longtime co-producers, Dayton Duncan and Julie Dunfey, as well as Ketch Secor of the Grammy-winning string band Old Crow Medicine Show. “It’s like country music: You don’t get above your raisin’. You get out into the country and meet people in little towns and you talk to them.”

Much like a touring musician, Burns preached the gospel of country music along the route. He was interviewed by local media outlets, showed clips from the film and soaked up the local music history at places like Sun Studio in Memphis and the Birthplace of Country Music in Bristol, Virginia. The 8-part, 16-hour long film will air Sept. 15-18 and Sept. 22-25.

As the bus chugged along Interstate 40, Secor brought out a fiddle once owned by Roy Acuff for an impromptu performance of “Wabash Cannonball” with one of the film’s apprentice editors, Rebecca Branson Jones, on banjo.

Burns wrapped up the bus trip at the so-called Mother Church of Country Music, the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville, on Wednesday with a concert featuring many of the film’s featured artists including Rosanne Cash, Dierks Bentley, Rodney Crowell, Rhiannon Giddens, Vince Gill, Ricky Skaggs, Marty Stuart, Dwight Yoakam and more. Burns hosted the show, which chronicled the evolution from hillbilly music to one of the nation’s most popular genres that spans radio, TV and film.

Burns and his production company, Florentine Films, are known for chronicling wide-ranging topics like the Civil War, baseball and the National Parks. “Many of our stories help illuminate things that are essential to understanding who Americans are,” said Duncan, who also wrote a companion book for the film. “And nothing does that better than country music.”

They conducted over 100 interviews with artists like Dolly Parton, Kris Kristofferson, Loretta Lynn, Willie Nelson, Garth Brooks, Trisha Yearwood, Reba McEntire, Jack White, Elvis Costello and many more. Twenty of the film’s interview subjects have since died, including Merle Haggard, Ralph Stanley, Little Jimmy Dickens and more. All their recorded interviews will be donated to the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum in Nashville.

Their team looked through 100,000 photographs and 700 hours of archival footage and there are 600 music cues in the film. Legacy Records will also release a comprehensive music set to accompany the film’s airing.

“This is one of the most complicated films we’ve ever had to wrestle because we knew we couldn’t tell every story. We’re not an encyclopedia,” Burns said.

The film starts with the earliest recordings of country music in Bristol by producer Ralph Peer, who saw the commercial viability of artists like Jimmie Rodgers with his songs like “In the Jailhouse Now” and the first family of country music, the Carter Family. From there, each chapter features larger-than-life personalities, including Hank Williams, Johnny Cash, Patsy Cline, Parton, Kristofferson and ending with the era of Garth Brooks.

“We knew we were going to deal with these large, compelling personalities, people who brought themselves up out of poverty, people of enormous creative gifts,” Burns said.

The film also shows how country music has reflected the social, economic and cultural movements within America as the genre grew and adapted, from Lynn singing about reproductive rights in “The Pill,” to Charley Pride addressing racism as a black country musician and the outlaw country artists in the ’70s responding to the counter-culture movement.

Secor, who also appears in the film, said that he trusted Burns to critically analyze the genre as a whole and not put it on a pedestal.

“I’m so glad that Ken and Dayton are doing this, because I don’t really trust country music to tell its own story,” said Secor, who appears in the film as one of the musical experts.

“Country music has always been in this commodification bit… Were they trying to create a genre of music or were they trying to capture the voice and champion the voice of America’s hardest working people? I really think it was a business plan that as an afterthought or a sidetrack was able to create this opportunity for Americans.”

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Online: https://www.pbs.org/show/country-music

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Follow Kristin M. Hall at Twitter.com/kmhall

Maple Syrup Festival Saturday in Oskaloosa

The Environmental Learning Center in Oskaloosa will hold its annual Maple Syrup Festival Saturday morning (3/30).  Mahaska County Conservation Board naturalist Laura DeCook talks about the festival.

“I will give a presentation about the process and history of maple syruping. And to end the event, we will be sampling maple syrup on ice cream.  It’s maple syrup that we have made ourselves at the conservation board.”

The Maple Syrup Festival is this coming Saturday from 10 to 11am at the Environmental Learning Center at 2342 Highway 92 East in Oskaloosa.  DeCook says this year’s festival is being held indoors because of wet weather and flooding around Eveland Access where the maple trees are.  For more information, call the Mahaska County Conservation Board at 641-673-9327, extension 2.

Bahena Rivera murder trial moved to Sioux City

A Mexican national charged with first-degree murder in the abduction and killing of 20-year-old Mollie Tibbetts will have his trial moved from Poweshiek County to Woodbury County in northwest Iowa.  A judge on Wednesday (3/27) approved a motion filed earlier this month to have Cristhian Bahena Rivera’s first-degree murder trial moved out of Poweshiek County. Rivera’s trial is now set to be held in Sioux City on September 3. His attorneys had argued the trial should be moved to allow for more minority representation in the jury pool.  Rivera is accused of killing Tibbetts, who disappeared while out for a run July 18 in Brooklyn. Investigators recovered her body a month later in a cornfield. Officials say she was stabbed to death.  Rivera, who is accused of being in the country illegally, worked at a dairy farm a few miles from where Tibbetts disappeared.

Osky boys track season starts

The Oskaloosa High boys’ track team opened its season Tuesday (3/26) with a new school record.  The Indians took on Albia, Centerville and Chariton at Statesmen Community Stadium.  Oskaloosa’s sprint medley relay team of Casey Hill, Aaron Blom, Brayden VanKampen and Carter Huyser took first in a school record 1:37.81.  Casey Hill also set a personal best when he won the discus with a toss of 145 feet.  Other firsts for Oskaloosa came from Aaron Blom in the long jump, Carter Huyser in the 800, Isaiah Haywood in the 400 and Brayden VanKampen in the 400 hurdles.  The next meet for the Oskaloosa boys is Saturday (3/30) at Knoxville.  Saturday’s meet will also be the first meet of the year for the Oskaloosa girls.

 

No Immunity for Vanhemert, Trial to Commence on April 9

Judge Lucy Gamon has denied Luke Vanhemert’s claim of immunity from prosecution under Iowa’s “Stand Your Ground Law”.   In overruling the Defendant’s Motion to Force Immunity, Judge Gamon distinguished the Iowa law from a similar statute in Florida holding that under Iowa Law, a Defendant is immune only for  a claim of damages, not from criminal prosecution for the use or threatened use of force.  Vanhemert, who is charged with second-degree murder in the stabbing death of William Penn student Marquis Todd on March 1, 2018, will stand trial as scheduled in Mahaska County District Court commencing on April 9.

Backlash, questions follow dismissal of Jussie Smollett case

CHICAGO (AP) — Prosecutors still insist Jussie Smollett faked a racist, anti-gay attack on himself in the hopes that the attention would advance his acting career. The “Empire” star still says he was assaulted by two men late at night in downtown Chicago.

But with little explanation, authorities on Tuesday abruptly dropped all charges against Smollett, abandoning the criminal case only five weeks after the allegations were filed. In return, prosecutors said, the actor agreed to let the city keep his $10,000 in bail.

The dismissal drew a swift backlash from the mayor and police chief and raised questions about why Smollett was not forced to admit what prosecutors had said they could prove in court — that the entire episode was a publicity stunt.

Among those sure to keep pressing for answers is Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, who appeared blindsided by the decision. His voice rising in anger at times, Emanuel called the deal “a whitewash of justice” and lashed out at Smollett. He said Smollett had exploited hate-crime laws meant to protect minorities by turning the laws “inside out, upside down for only one thing — himself.”

“Where is the accountability in the system?” Emanuel asked. “You cannot have, because of a person’s position, one set of rules apply to them and another set of rules apply to everybody else.”

Smollett has become a household name as a result of the case, but it’s unclear if the dropped charges will diminish the taint that followed his arrest last month. His insistence that he had been vindicated may make the entertainment industry cautious about fully embracing him.

Defense attorneys said Smollett’s record was “wiped clean” of the 16 felony counts related to making a false report. The actor, who also agreed to do community service, insisted that he had “been truthful and consistent on every single level since day one.”

“I would not be my mother’s son if I was capable of one drop of what I was being accused of,” he told reporters after a court hearing. He thanked the state of Illinois “for attempting to do what’s right.”

In a statement, a spokeswoman for the Cook County prosecutors’ office said the dismissal came “after reviewing all of the facts and circumstances of the case.” Tandra Simonton called it “a just disposition and appropriate resolution,” but said it was not an exoneration.

First Assistant State’s Attorney Joseph Magats said prosecutors “stand behind the investigation and the facts.”

When dropping cases, prosecutors will sometimes insist that the defendant accept at least a measure of responsibility. Outside court, neither Smollett nor his legal team appeared to concede anything about his original report in January .

Defense attorney Patricia Brown Holmes said Smollett was “attacked by two people he was unable to identify” and “was a victim who was vilified and made to appear as a perpetrator.”

Authorities alleged that Smollett, who is black and gay, knew the men and arranged for them to pretend to attack him.

Emanuel, who leaves office in May after two terms, said the hoax could endanger other gay people who report hate crimes by casting doubt on whether they are telling the truth.

Police Superintendent Eddie Johnson said Chicago “is still owed an apology.”

“I’ve heard that they wanted their day in court with TV cameras so that America could know the truth. They chose to hide behind secrecy and broker a deal to circumvent the judicial system,” he said.

Chicago’s top prosecutor, Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx, recused herself from the investigation before Smollett was charged, citing conversations she had with a Smollett family member.

Many legal experts were surprised by the dismissal, especially the fact that it did not include any condition that Smollett apologize and admit he staged the assault.

“This situation is totally bizarre. It’s highly, highly unusual,” said Phil Turner, a Chicago defense attorney and former federal prosecutor with no ties to the case.

Smollett reported that he was attacked around 2 a.m. on Jan. 29 on his way home from a sandwich shop. Investigators said he made the false report because he was unhappy with his pay on “Empire” and believed it would promote his career.

The actor plays the gay character Jamal Lyon on the hit Fox TV show, which follows a black family as they navigate the ups and downs of the recording industry.

Smollett said two masked men shouted racial and anti-gay slurs, poured bleach on him, beat him and looped a rope around his neck. He claimed they shouted, “This is MAGA country” — a reference to President Donald Trump’s “Make America Great Again” campaign slogan. He asserted that he could see one of the men was white because he could see the skin around his eyes.

Police said Smollett paid $3,500 to the two men, both of whom are black.

The men were brothers Abimbola “Abel” and Olabinjo “Ola” Osundairo, and one of them had worked on “Empire.” An attorney for them, Gloria Schmidt, has said the brothers agreed to help Smollett because of their friendship with him and the sense that he was helping their careers. They declined to comment.

Schmidt said in a statement Tuesday: “The Osundairo brothers were fully prepared to testify in any criminal proceeding in the Jussie Smollett case.”

On Wednesday, Smollett’s attorney told “Good Morning America” that the two brothers are lying. Tina Glandian said Smollett had hired one brother as a personal trainer, and that they discussed training and nutrition in the hours before the attack as Smollett’s flight to Chicago was delayed. But she said Smollett had no idea who attacked him until the brothers were later identified by police.

She said Smollett is a crime victim and “just wants his life back.”

Before the attack, police said, Smollett also sent a letter threatening himself to the Chicago studio where “Empire” is shot. The FBI, which is investigating that letter, has declined to comment.

Smollett said he wanted “nothing more than to get back to work.” But his future with the show was unclear. Shortly after the charges were filed, producers announced that his character would be removed from the final two episodes of the season.

Fox Television, which produces “Empire,” issued a one-sentence statement late Tuesday saying only that the company was “gratified” that the charges had been dropped.

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Associated Press Writer Caryn Rousseau contributed to this report.

Ritenour to be tried in Lee County

Citing media and social media coverage of the Ritenour proceedings, Judge Myron Gookin ruled yesterday that Alicia Ritenour’s defense team would be prejudiced by a Mahaska County jury pool and ordered that her trial be moved to Lee County.  Ritenour was re-charged after her convictions for first-degree murder and child endangerment for killing her two-year-old child Ava were overturned in December of 2018.   Ritenour’s new trial in Fort Madison is slated to begin on August 13, 2019.

Maren Morris’ Girl Debuts as Top Country Album

CMT – Women may be scarce on Billboard’s country charts, but this week one of them boasts the genre’s bestselling album. And it’s about damn time.

We’re referring, of course, to the debut of Maren Morris’ much-anticipated Girl. Apart from its country eminence, it also rolls in at No. 4 on the Billboard 200 all-formats rankings. The excitement surrounding the album boosts Morris’ previous collection, Hero, from No. 42 to No. 26.

Meanwhile, the unsinkable Luke Combs’ “Beautiful Crazy” crowns the airplay chart for the third week in a row.

No other albums debut this week, but The Essential John Denver comes back aboard at No. 36.

There are two new songs to celebrate — Travis Denning’s “After a Few” (arriving at No. 58) and Combs’ “Houston, We Got a Problem” (No. 60). Returning to action are Walker Hayes’ “90’s Country” (No. 55) and Zac Brown Band’s “Someone I Used to Know” (No. 59).

The No. 2 through No. 5 albums, in that order, are Combs’ This One’s for You (last week’s No. 1), Florida Georgia Line’s Can’t Say I Ain’t Country, the self-titled Dan + Shay and Kacey Musgraves’ Golden Hour.

Rounding out the Top 5 songs array are Chris Stapleton’s “Millionaire,” Riley Green’s “There Was This Girl,” Jason Aldean’s “Girl Like You” and Brett Young’s “Here Tonight.”

A tip of the hat to the newest additions to the Country Music Hall of Fame — Brooks & Dunn, Ray Stevens and retired RCA Records chief Jerry Bradley.

http://www.cmt.com/news/1804073/maren-morris-girl-debuts-as-top-country-album/

Statewide tornado drill Wednesday

This is Severe Weather Awareness Week in Iowa.  One of this week’s activities is a statewide tornado drill that will take place Wednesday morning (3/27) at 10:10am.  Meteorologist Allan Curtis with the National Weather Service office in Des Moines talks about the drill.

“We do the practice test, one, for us to make sure that everything is working.  But two, so the public is able to figure out and see the different ways they can get the information….make sure their cell phones and weather radios, other things of that nature, make sure that they’re all in proper working order. And in general, it’s just a great tuneup for severe weather season.”

Curtis also says it’s a good time for you to get together with your family and figure out what you’ll do this summer when school is out…..where you should take shelter.  Again, the statewide tornado drill is Wednesday morning at 10:10am.  The No Coast Network will broadcast warnings during the drill.

NEWSLETTER

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