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OAK RIDGE BOYS ANNOUNCE FAREWELL TOUR

The Oaks are calling it a day. After eighty years as a band, and fifty with their current lineup, the legendary Oak Ridge Boys have announced they are embarking on their farewell tour.

They formed in 1943 as the Oak Ridge Quartet, and had many lineup changes before the current and longest running lineup got together in 1973: lead singer Duane Allen, tenor Joe Bonsall, baritone William Lee Golden, and bass Richard Sterban. 

Dubbed “American Made: The Farewell Tour,” the first set of dates have been announced. The tour will kick off today with two dates at the Mansion Theater For The Performing Arts in Branson, Missouri, before running through the rest of the year. Beyond that, even the band has no idea how long this final tour will run, with Allen saying, “I don’t know how long the tour will last, but we hope to return to as many parts of the country as we can. Thank you so much for these 50 years. For me, it’s 57 1/2 years. I have given you the best part of my life and you have rewarded me with a wonderful career.” See the updated list of show dates here.

Source: WhiskeyRiff

GRAND OLE OPRY BRINGING IN BIG NAMES FOR KEITH WHITLEY TRIBUTE

Keith Whitley was considered a generational talent – a superstar in the making whose career – and life – was cut far too short, like those of legends like Patsy Cline and Hank Williams before him.

Though he passed in 1989 at the age of 34, his career left a lasting impression on artists that have followed him, as well as fans. The Grand Ole Opry is set to honor the late singer with an evening of music and memories, and a roster of big names will be on hand to lend their talents.

Titled “I Wonder Do You Think Of Me: The Opry Remembers Keith Whitley,” the evening honors a man who ironically hever became a member of the Opry; Whitley passed just three weeks before he would have received the call for his induction. To celebrate the life and legacy of Whitley, the Opry is hosing two shows (7:30p and 9p) the night of October 14, featuring big names like Ashley McBrydeGarth BrooksTerri Clark, Whitley’s widow Lorrie Morgan and son Jesse Keith Whitley. Tickets for the event are available here.

Source: WhiskeyRiff

 

This day in Country Music History

  • Today in 1970, Crystal Gayle hit the country charts for the first time with “I’ve Cried The Blue Right Out of My Eyes.” Her sister, Loretta Lynn, wrote the song.
  • Today in 1981, Lee Greenwood made his chart debut with “It Turns Me Inside Out.”
  • Today in 1988, Patty Loveless released her “Honky Tonk Angel” album.
  • Today in 1990, Travis Tritt’s “Country Club” album was certified gold.
  • Today in 1991, George Strait’s “Greatest Hits” album was certified double platinum.
  • Today in 1994, BlackHawk’s self-titled debut album was certified gold.
  • Today in 1994, George Jones was released from the hospital just one week after undergoing triple bypass surgery.
  • Today in 1995, Tim McGraw’s “All I Want” album was released.
  • Today in 1996, Patsy Cline’s “Greatest Hits” album was certified for sales of 7-million.
  • Today in 1996, Reba McEntire’s “Merry Christmas To You” album was certified platinum.
  • Today in 1996, Vince Gill’s “When I Call Your Name” album was certified double platinum. The same day, his “I Still Believe In You” album was certified for sales of 4-million copies.
  • Today in 1997, Trace Adkins’ album, “Dreamin Out Loud,” was certified platinum.
  • Today in 1998, Eddie Rabbitt, Kent Robbins (“Straight Tequila Night”) and Merle Kilgore (“Ring Of Fire”) were inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame during ceremonies at the Loews Vanderbilt Plaza Hotel in Nashville.
  • Today in 2000, Trisha Yearwood was celebrating her induction into the Georgia Music Hall of Fame and getting ready to kick off her European tour in Dublin, Ireland.
  • Today in 2000, George Strait’s 27th album, which was also his first self-titled release, arrived in stores.
  • Today in 2000, Kenny Chesney visited his old stomping grounds of Luttrell, Tennessee, just outside of Knoxville. While in his hometown, Kenny also made an appearance at a Gibbs High School assembly — his alma mater. At the event, he was presented with a proclamation declaring September 19th “Kenny Chesney Day” in Lutrell.
  • Today in 2000, Terri Clark’s “Fearless” album arrived in stores.
  • Today in 2000, George Strait released his first self-titled album.
  • Today in 2001, Clint Black and his wife, Lisa Hartman Black, had more than a new baby to celebrate. The couple’s duet, “Easy for Me to Say” debuted at #56 on “Billboard’s” Hot Country Singles chart. It was also the first time that Lisa debuted on the magazine’s chart. But wait…what about…1999’s “When I Said I Do?” Of course, that was a huge hit, too, but Lisa wasn’t officially listed in the credits and therefore didn’t appear on the “Billboard” chart.
  • Today in 2002, Brad Paisley launched the inaugural “CMT Most Wanted Live” tour in Phoenix. While Brad was the featured headliner, the show’s opening acts varied throughout the schedule and included Steve Azar, Chris Cagle, Tammy Cochran, Andy Griggs, Steve Holy, Shannon Lawson, Rascal Flatts, Tommy Shane Steiner, Phil Vassar, Pinmonkey and Darryl Worley.
  • Today in 2003, Johnny Cash posthumously won three trophies at the Americana Music Awards in Nashville.
  • Today in 2007, Brooks & Dunn nab a platinum album for “The Greatest Hits Collection II.”
  • Today in 2009, the financial company TIAA-CREF began airing a television commercial that features Lady Antebellum’s “I Run To You” behind on-screen images of meerkats.
  • Today in 2015, the “CMT Crossroads” episode pairing Sara Evans and REO Speedwagon premiered. They team on Evans’ hits “A Real Fine Place To Start” and “Born To Fly,” as well as REO’s “Keep It On The Run” and “Roll With The Changes.”
  • Today in 2016, despite a doctor’s warning against performing, Jana Kramer fought through the pain of a rib injury on ABC’s “Dancing With The Stars,” performing to Gavin DeGraw’s live rendition of “I Don’t Want To Be.”

YouTube suspends Russell Brand from making money off the streaming site after sex assault claims

LONDON (AP) — YouTube said Tuesday that Russell Brand will no longer make money from the video streaming site after several women made allegations of sexual assault against the comedian-turned-influencer.

YouTube said monetization of Brand’s account, which has 6.6 million subscribers, has been suspended “following serious allegations against the creator.”

“This decision applies to all channels that may be owned or operated by Russell Brand,” the Google-owned video service said.

The suspension means Brand won’t be able to earn money from the ads that run within and alongside YouTube videos, which have titles including “What REALLY Started the Hawaii Fires?” and “Covid Tsar Admits Lockdowns Were NEVER About Science.”

Other channels associated with Brand’s main YouTube page include Awakening With Russell, which has 426,000 subscribers, Football Is Nice, which has some 20,000 subscribers, and Stay Free With Russell Brand, which has 22,200 subscribers.

Brand still has a presence on Rumble, a video site popular with some conservatives and far-right groups, where his channel has 1.4 million followers. He also has 11.2 million followers on X, formerly known as Twitter, and 3.8 million on Instagram.

Brand, 48, denies allegations of sexual assault made by four women in a Channel 4 television documentary and The Times and Sunday Times newspapers. The accusers, who have not been named, include one who said she was sexually assaulted during a relationship with him when she was 16. Another woman says Brand raped her in Los Angeles in 2012.

The four allegations date from between 2006 and 2013. London’s Metropolitan Police force said that since those claims were made public, it has received a report of a separate sexual assault dating from 2003.

Known for his unbridled and risqué standup routines, Brand was a major U.K. star in the early 2000s. He hosted shows on radio and television, wrote memoirs charting his battles with drugs and alcohol, appeared in several Hollywood movies and was briefly married to pop star Katy Perry between 2010 and 2012.

In recent years Brand has largely disappeared from mainstream media but has built up a large following online with videos mixing wellness and conspiracy theories. His YouTube channel has featured COVID-19 conspiracy theories, vaccine misinformation and interviews with controversial broadcasters, including Tucker Carlson and Joe Rogan.

He also has continued to tour as a comedian, performing to hundreds of people in a London venue on Saturday. He had been due to perform on Tuesday in Windsor, west of London, but promoters said the rest of the tour was being postponed following the allegations.

Brand also has been dropped by his talent agency and a publisher since the allegations became public.

Ellie Tomsett, senior lecturer in media and communications at Birmingham City University, said it was too soon to tell whether the claims would end Brand’s comedy career.

“I think there’s definitely a market for ‘outsider’ comedians … or people who want to position themselves as some way or alternative to current understandings of gender equality,” she said. “And so I think in the longer term, will it impact his career in the way that we may be expect it to? Possibly not.”

Harvest gets underway about one week ahead of last year

By Dar Danielson (Radio Iowa)

The corn and soybean harvest got underway last week in Iowa. The latest U.S.D.A. report says 5% percent of the corn crop has been harvested statewide, which is roughly one week ahead of both last year and the five-year average.

The report says the overall corn condition improved slightly to 48% reported in good to excellent condition. The condition of soybeans also rose slightly to 47% now reported in good to excellent condition.

And 3% of the soybeans have been harvested.

Pella Regional Hosting A Walk to Remember in October

PELLA — A memorial event for the Empty Cradle program at Pella Regional Health Center is on Sunday, October 15 at 3:00 pm at the Scholte Church in Pella Historical Village. Enter at corner of Franklin Street and East 2nd Street. The event will begin with a service at the Scholte Church, continue with a remembrance stroll through the Pella Historical Village, and end with a balloon release. As part of the stroll, memorial signs will be displayed remembering those precious babies that were lost.

Empty Cradle supports and connects families who have lost a baby due to miscarriage, stillbirth or infant death. Family and friends are invited to join the group for a time of remembering these babies.

For more information, and to get a memorial sign to be displayed during the remembrance stroll, call Leah Garland, Bereavement Coordinator at Hospice of Pella at 641-620-5050. Names must be received by Friday, September 29.

Mahaska County Board of Supervisors Discusses Airport Voting Options

By Sam Parsons

The Mahaska County Board of Supervisors met this morning and had another discussion about the proposed South Central Regional Airport. The board discussed options for a county-wide vote on the status of the airport after indefinitely tabling the issue of the closure of 220th street for the sake of the airport at its most recent meeting. 

County attorney Andrew Ritland said he looked into what options were available for the county to put the issue on the ballot, and said the results weren’t promising.

Ritland said such a vote would be best suited for the initiative and referendum process, which is a city-based process that only applies to charter cities. According to Ritland, Oskaloosa is one of 7 charter cities in the state of Iowa, but the city council recently passed an ordinance amending the city charter to remove the section pertaining to initiative and referendum. A petition was filed in response from the required number of voters in the city to put the issue of initiative and referendum on the ballot; but as for the airport itself, Ritland said he didn’t “see a legal way for the COUNTY to ask the question it wants to ask on the official ballot.” The county would be able to conduct a public opinion poll outside of the structure of the official ballot, but it wouldn’t have any direct effect on policy.

No official action on the matter was taken at the meeting today.

Oskaloosa Drops Heartbreaker to Ottumwa

By Sam Parsons

A game that saw the Oskaloosa faithful go through wave after wave of different emotions ended in heartbreak as the Indians lost in last-second fashion to the Ottumwa Bulldogs on Friday.

The game began with the two teams trading the ball on their opening possessions. Osky opted to try a fake punt on a 4th and 5 situation and they were unsuccessful, but Ottumwa fumbled the ball back to the Indians two plays later.

In their second offensive drive, the Indians picked up a pair of first downs to move deep into Ottumwa territory. But in the red zone, the offense stalled, and on 4th and 3 inside the 10 yard line, opted to go for it again. This time, sophomore QB Kayne Boender faced pressure from the interior and attempted a desperation pass that resulted in a 90+ yard pick-six from Brennan Flattery of the Bulldogs. A good extra point made it 7-0 Bulldogs, where it remained for the rest of the quarter.

At the start of the 2nd, Oskaloosa was in the midst of their third offensive drive, which again resulted in a 4th down decision to go for it; this time, on 4th and 5. In a similar play to the previous 4th down, Boender tried to get rid of the ball before pressure arrived and it was once again Flattery who was in the right place at the right time for Ottumwa. This interception wasn’t returned for a touchdown, but the Bulldogs moved the ball 62 yards in 6 plays after taking over, with a 29 yard touchdown pass from Matthew Mitchell to Javen Rominger putting the Bulldogs up 14-0. The Mitchell-to-Rominger connection was highly prolific for the Bulldogs on Friday night, and this was only the first taste.

The Indians, however, would not give up easily. Their next drive started with friendly field position, on Ottumwa’s 46, and Boender guided the offense down the Bulldogs’ half of the field to set up a 3rd and goal from the 4 yard line. The Indians dialed up a specialty play with sophomore RB AJ Walker lining up in the wildcat, taking the snap, and running a boot to the left, leading to him throwing his first pass of the season into the end zone, where senior Wyatt Grubb was waiting for the touchdown reception. Sophomore Linus Morrison tacked on the PAT and made it 14-7.

The second quarter fireworks continued on Ottumwa’s next possession. It took them only 2 minutes to drive the ball 80 yards down the field in 5 plays. A 28 yard pass to Rominger put the Bulldogs on the 4 yard line, where senior Cameron Manary punched it in to make it 21-7 with about 3:50 left in the first half.

And yet…the scoring was still not over in the quarter. Osky and Ottumwa traded punts and the Indians got the ball on their own 25 with 1:40 to go and no timeouts. Boender found his groove again, dialing up sideline passes to the likes of Max Roach, Heavon Knox, and Wyatt Grubb to put the Indians in Bulldog territory in the final seconds of the half. With about 8 seconds left, Boender escaped pressure and threw on the run to Jaden DeRonde, who was wide open down the sideline, and he hauled it in for a 31 yard touchdown with 0.2 seconds left in the half. The score put the Indians back in the game, 21-14 at halftime.

The second half was defined by Ottumwa penalties. Copious amounts of pre-snap motion led to several illegal shift penalties, and 3 different touchdown plays were all called back for holding. The Bulldogs did still find the end zone in the half on their first drive: a 9 yard run from Mitchell put the Bulldogs up 27-14 early in the 3rd quarter.

But the Indians offense continued to move and groove for much of the second half. Their second offensive drive of the half, which came after an Ottumwa 3-and-out, was 10 plays long and went 56 yards, culminating in a 21 yard touchdown hookup between Boender and Max Roach. Morrison again added a successful extra point to make it 27-21, which is where the score remained entering the 4th quarter.

More penalties doomed Ottumwa’s offense (the team finished with 17 penalties for 145 yards) early in the 4th, paving the way for Osky to take the lead. In the early part of the quarter, the Indians were once again able to trek down the field with the help of the passing game led by Boender and they finished their drive with a 7 yard passing connection from Boender to Wyatt Grubb. Morrison added the PAT to finish 4/4 on the day, and the Indians had their first lead of the entire game, 28-27 with under 8 minutes to go.

The Bulldogs started their next offensive drive with a lot of promise. They were able to pick up 3 first downs and chewed off much of the clock, but suddenly faced a 4th and short in Osky territory with about 1:30 left. After calling a timeout, the Indians clamped down and stonewalled Cameron Manary for a loss.

The game looked to be in Osky’s hands, but Ottumwa still had 2 timeouts remaining.

Oskaloosa opted to run the ball on 3 consecutive plays to wind the clock down as much as possible. The 3 run plays gained minimal yardage, leaving the Indians with 4th and long with about 30 seconds left, at which point Ottumwa had no timeouts remaining. The Bulldogs fair-caught Parker Lewis’ punt with 25 seconds remaining on their own 45 yard line.

At this point in the game, the Bulldogs had only completed 6 passes on the night; 5 of them had gone to Javen Rominger for 85 yards (including a touchdown). In desperate times, the Bulldogs turned to their #1 guy on back-to-back plays, and Rominger managed to pop open over the top on back-to-back deep passes. Mitchell put the ball where it needed to be both times, putting the Bulldogs on the doorstep with under 5 seconds left. After a long stoppage of play devoted to sorting out an illegal shift penalty, the Bulldogs were able to set up their field goal unit in the final seconds, and Joel Hallgren did the rest, knocking a 23 yard field goal through the uprights as the clock expired, winning the game for Ottumwa, 30-28.

The Indians (2-2) will travel to Clear Creek-Amana this Friday to open their district schedule.

Stats

Missing the Emmy Awards? What’s happening with the strike-delayed celebration of television

LOS ANGELES (AP) — In a normal year — if there is any such thing in Hollywood anymore — the 75th Emmy Awards ceremony would be Monday night, and the many nominees from shows like “ Succession ” and “ Ted Lasso ” would be claiming their trophies or happily clapping for the winners.

Instead, the actors and writers strikes brought a postponement until January.

Here’s a look at what’s happening, and what may happen, with the awards that have been thrown off course.

HOW THE STRIKES AFFECTED NOMINATIONS

A shadow hung over this year’s Emmys from the start. Writers, who are essential to the process both as nominees and the people who provide jokes and patter for the show, had been on strike for more than two months when the nominees were announced June 11. Then just three days after “Succession,” “ White Lotus,” “ The Last of Us ” and “Ted Lasso” were named as the top nominees, leaders of the actors union announced they would join writers in a historic Hollywood work stoppage.

With union rules allowing no interviews, panels or awards-show participation, acting nominees had just a few days to do the kind of media promotion that is usually rampant after a nomination. Writers couldn’t do it at all.

NEW DATE PUTS THE EMMYS IN PRIME AWARDS SEASON

The Television Academy and Fox TV, which was scheduled to air the show this year, initially kept the original Sept. 18 show date in place, with hopes the strikes would end quickly.

But with no realistic prospects for resolution, Fox and the academy decided in mid-August to change the show date to Jan. 15, 2024, Martin Luther King Day, at the Peacock Theater in downtown Los Angeles. No host has been announced.

The January date in many ways makes sense. Because they are still tied to the traditional fall-through-spring broadcast television season, the Emmys have been among the few awards shows held in September. That TV model, as the strikers know all too well, has been upended by cable and streaming structures that observe no such conventions. That traditional Emmy scheduling was starting to create odd situations. Voters were casting ballots for season one of the “The Bear” — which got 13 nominations — after season two had already aired. And now the results won’t be known until nearly a year after the second season premiere.

The January date will put the Emmys within the rest of Hollywood’s awards season, when red carpets rule and performers are on the promotional prowl. The show is slated for about a week after the Golden Globes and about six weeks before the Screen Actors Guild Awards — both ceremonies that honor television along with movies.

The date also puts it in line with the Emmys’ early years in the late 1940s and early 1950s, when they were held in January or February.

The delay is the first time the Emmys have been postponed since 2001, when the 9/11 attacks came just five days before the planned ceremony. Then the launch of the war in Afghanistan, which came hours before the rescheduled October show, prompted another postponement until November, when a small, restrained show hosted by Ellen DeGeneres finally ran.

The 2020 ceremony, dominated by “ Schitt’s Creek ” and dubbed the “Pandemmies” by host Jimmy Kimmel was seriously scaled back because of the coronavirus, with nominees accepting trophies and making speeches from remote locations, but the date was never moved.

THE VOTES ARE ALL IN

With nothing else normal about the Emmys, the Television Academy at least wanted the voting process to go on as planned, and for the results to be as close as possible to what they would have been without the upheaval.

The Emmys are decided by votes from the nearly 20,000 members of the Television Academy. The membership is divided into 31 peer groups including animators, performers, directors and writers. Members of each group vote for Emmy winners in those categories, and all eligible voters can cast ballots for the awards that go to entire shows, including best drama series and best drama series.

This year’s ballots went out as planned on Aug. 17 and had to be returned by Aug. 28. That means the winners are already decided, but it will be four months — at least — before the envelopes are opened revealing them.

WHAT HAPPENS NEXT?

The new date looked a long way off when it was scheduled, but Emmy organizers may have to face the prospect that the strikes could still be going on in January. Writers have currently been off the job for 4 1/2 months, the actors for two months. The stoppages spilling into next year would make them historically long, and go well past initial predictions.

Negotiations between writers and studio s have been slow in restarting. There have been no talks, and none are planned, between studios and actors.

Prolonged strikes could mean another Emmys postponement, or a show transformed into a glorified news conference, as happened with some awards during the pandemic.

It would also throw the Oscars, and the entire awards season, into doubt.

Iowa Democrats set January 15, 2024 as Caucus date

By O. Kay Henderson (Radio Iowa)

The Iowa Democratic Party’s 2024 Caucuses will be on the same day Iowa Republicans plan to hold their Caucuses.

The Democratic Party’s state central committee voted this weekend to hold their in-person caucuses on January 15th, but there’s no decision yet on when the results of the party’s mail-in presidential preference balloting will be announced. Gregory Christensen, vice chairman of the Iowa Democratic Party, is leading the party’s caucus planning.

“We are working to make sure that we have all the locations for the in-person element to our Caucuses ready to go by the time the new year rolls around,” he said during this weekend’s meeting, “and, of course, the earlier we can do that, the better.”

Both major parties have to find precinct-level sites to hold gatherings where party business will be discussed. However, Republicans will also take a straw poll that night to determine which G-O-P presidential candidates have the most support in Iowa. National Democrats have decided South Carolina’s Primary rather than the Iowa Caucuses should be the first event in their party’s 2024 presidential nominating processs. Christensen said Iowa Democrats’ 2024 Caucuses will focus on party building.

“We have to have very successful Caucuses that elect our precinct committee persons who become the backbone and the workforce for the Democratic Party in Iowa,” Christensen said.

Iowa Democrats announced last year they did not intend to conduct caucus night attendance counts to determine which presidential candidate wins their 2024 caucuses and will use a mail-in system instead, but party officials haven’t revealed how or when results will be tabulated and released.

“While Republicans continue to add barriers to the ballot box, the reimagined Iowa caucuses will be the most inclusive process in history,” Iowa Democratic Party chair Rita Hart said in a written statement. “…No matter what, Iowa Democrats will always do what’s good for Iowa, what’s good for our democracy and live up to Dr. King’s legacy.”

Monday, January 15, 2024 is the Martin Luther King, Jr. Holiday.

In July, the Iowa GOP’s state central committee voted to hold their party’s Caucuses on January 15.

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