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Country Daypop

Sabrina Carpenter recruits Dolly Parton for ‘Please Please Please’ remix off ‘Short n’ Sweet’ deluxe

Sabrina Carpenter released the deluxe version of her album, Short n’ Sweet, including a new version of “Please Please Please” featuring the legendary Dolly Parton. The expanded version of ‘Short n’ Sweet’ features five new tracks, including “15 Minutes,” “Couldn’t Make It Any Harder,” “Busy Woman” and “Bad Reviews,” and Parton joining Carpenter on “Please Please Please.”

Upon debuting the video for their collab, Carpenter posted: “Dolly and me singing in a pickup truck!!!!!! I am so honored to have one of my biggest idols on a song that means so much to me.  Short n’ Sweet deluxe is out now!  Go watch and listen!!!! Love you forever @dollyparton 🤍🦋

Carpenter and Parton appear together in the black and white music video for ‘Please Please Please,’ which shows Carpenter behind the wheel of a pickup truck, while Parton reads the Nashville Banner in the passenger seat. The pair sing together and take turns driving, while viewers later see that a man is held hostage in the bed of the pickup.  Parton shared a behind-the-scenes look at the video on her social media, writing: “Turns out, two things can be short and sweet 😉 Listen to “Please Please Please (feat. Dolly Parton)” everywhere now! ❤ @sabrinacarpenter”

Take a look at the video for Please Please Please (feat. Dolly Parton) – HERE.
To stream Short n’ Sweet deluxe, head HERE.

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Thousands of California residents ordered to evacuate as heavy storm hits in burn zones

Evacuation orders were in effect Thursday for thousands of residents in areas of Los Angeles as forecasters warned that California’s most powerful winter storm this season may cause flash flooding in the land scarred by the massive wildfires last month. According to the National Weather Service, flash flooding risk is expected across the Los Angeles region with the highest risks “in and near recent burn scar areas in Southern California.”

According to NBC News, the operation is huge with 319,00 sandbags, over 240 fire engines and 400 personnel in eight counties; nearly 120 miles of flood barriers have been put up in an effort to mitigate flooding and stop or reduce or stop the expected runoff from burn scars into rivers and lakes.

The warnings, which come into effect at 7 a.m. PT (10 a.m. ET) and last until Friday afternoon, cover areas affected by the huge Palisades Fire last month, as well as the communities hit by the Eaton, Hurst, Franklin, Bridge and Sunset fires. Statewide preparations for the large storm include distribution of sandbags and clearing of storm drains.

Portions of the Palisades, Sunset and Hurst fire zones as well as burn zones parts of the Sierra Madre (affected by the Eaton Fire) were in the evacuations zones,  with warnings also in effect for parts of San Bernardino County affecting residents in the Bridge and Line fires burn zones as heavy rain was expected.

The Los Angeles Fire Department wrote in a statement: “Evacuation orders for specific addresses and evacuation warnings or several areas will be in effect from 7 a.m. PST Thursday to 2 p.m. PST Friday, due to high mudslide and debris flow risk. These areas are recently burned and especially susceptible to heavy rain.”

Los Angeles County Sheriff Robert Luna warned residents during a news conference: “remember, if you’re ordered to leave, you may be gone for several days. I cannot stand up here and tell you will be gone for 12 hours, 24 hours. We don’t know. It depends on the weather and the post-weather events that will impact your specific neighborhood.” 

Road closures included Malibu Canyon Road, Pacific Coast Highway and Topanga Canyon; with some schools in Malibu closed Thursday.  A voluntary evacuation warning also went into effect Thursday morning for parts of the Airport Fire burn scar in Orange County.

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Senate confirms Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as HHS secretary

The Senate voted on Thursday to confirm Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services secretary, a victory for President Trump after Kennedy faced weeks of scrutiny over his controversial views.

Senators voted 52-48 to confirm Kennedy, which fell largely along party lines, with only one Republican — Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky — joining Democrats in opposing the nomination.  In his statement explaining why he voted against Kennedy, McConnell cited his history with polio, saying that in his lifetime he’s “watched vaccines save millions of lives from devastating diseases across America and around the world… and will not condone the re-litigation of proven cures.”  McConnell added: “Mr. Kennedy failed to prove he is the best possible person to lead America’s largest health agency. As he takes office, I sincerely hope Mr. Kennedy will choose not to sow further doubt and division but restore trust in our public health institutions.”

The 71-year-old Kennedy — the nephew of President John F. Kennedy and the son of Robert F. Kennedy — is a longtime environmental lawyer and anti-vaccine activist, with no health care experience. As HHS secretary, he will now lead a wide range of federal health care agencies that include healthcare coverage for the elderly and poor, drug approval, food industry along with examining potential worldwide health threats such as outbreaks and pandemics. The HHS department includes the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the National Institutes of Health, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and the Food and Drug Administration.

Kennedy worked for two decades as president of the Waterkeeper Alliance, a nonprofit. He also founded Children’s Health Defense, which has launched legal challenges against vaccine requirements and approvals, and served as its chairman beginning in 2016. Kennedy is married to actor Cheryl Hines, and has six children.

Kennedy launched his own White House bid in 2023, initially seeking the Democratic nomination before changing his bid to independent. He later dropping out of the race to endorse President Trump in August 2024.

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Country Daypop

Beyoncé adds more stadium dates to ‘Cowboy Carter’ tour

Beyoncé has added a fifth stadium show in Los Angeles and New Jersey as part of her Cowboy Carter Tour. The newly added dates gives the superstar performer the new record for the most shows of any artist on a single run at MetLife Stadium, and most overall performances at SoFi Stadium by any band or artist.

Last week Beyoncé had also added five more stadium shows to her tour lineup, including a fifth/sixth night in London, and a third night in Chicago, Paris, and Atlanta.

Beyoncé first announced her Cowboy Carter and the Rodeo Chitlin’ Circuit Tour in support of her eighth studio album “Cowboy Carter” the night before the Grammy Awards, where she took home best country album and album of the year.

Beyoncé’s Cowboy Carter and the Rodeo Chitlin’ Circuit Tour will kick off April 28 in Los Angeles, wrapping up on July 13 in Atlanta.

Fans can purchase general-sale tickets starting Feb. 14 at 12 p.m. local time at beyonce.com.

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Billy Currington and Kip Moore to embark on 2025 summer tour

Billy Currington has announced his 2025 tour with Kip Moore. Special guests Marlon Funaki and Jade Eagleson will join on select dates.

Moore shared on his socials: “Me and @bccoconutman are hitting more cities this summer. All presale + on sale info below. Join my email list at kipmoore.net”

The 16-city tour kicks off on June 27th at St. Augustine Amphitheatre in St. Augustine making stops across the U.S. in Los Angeles, Austin, Raleigh and more before wrapping up in Gilford at BankNH Pavilion on September 20th.

For ticket info, head o LiveNation.com or visit Kip’s website here.

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Brad Pitt to star, produce new film from director David Ayer ‘Heart of the Beast’

Brad Pitt will portray a former Green Beret who becomes stranded with his retired combat dog in Alaska in the action-adventure movie Heart of the Beast.

Deadline reports that Pitt, 61, will also produce the film, which reunites him with director David Ayer. The pair previously collaborated on the 2014 film Fury, set during World War II.

This latest project will have Pitt playing an armed forces personnel, as he will be seen as a former Army Special Forces soldier and his retired combat dog who struggle to survive the harsh Alaskan wilderness after suffering a plane crash. A release date for Heart of the Beast has not yet been shared.

Pitt most recently starred with George Clooney in Wolfs, released in theaters and on Apple TV+ in September. Pitt will next appear in F1, portraying an ex-Formula 1 driver, set for release this June.

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‘The White Lotus’ renewed for Season 4 at HBO

HBO has ordered Season 4 of its hit series, ‘The White Lotus,’ with production eyed to begin in 2026. No casting or locale have been announced yet for the fourth chapter of writer-producer Mike White’s Emmy-winning show.

Season 3 of The White Lotus is set in Thailand and features Natasha Rothwell (who played the spa manager Belinda Lindsey in Season 1) as the only returning cast member.  Season 3 will premiere on Feb. 16, and joining Rothwell in Thailand will be a cast including: Parker Posey, Walton Goggins, Jason Isaacs, Michelle Monaghan, Leslie Bibb, Dom Hetrakul, Tayme Thapthimthong, Christian Friedel, Julian Kostov, Morgana O’Reilly, Lek Patravadi, Shalini Peiris, Carrie Coon, Scott Glenn, Francesca Corney, Nicholas Duvernay, Arnas Fedaravičius, Patrick Schwarzenegger, Aimee Lou Wood, Sarah Catherine Hook, Sam Nivola and BLACKPINK’s Lisa.

Season 1 was set in Hawaii, and Season 2 took place in Sicily – with both seasons following groups of troubled vacationers who unleash their worst, most privileged impulses at the idyllic ‘White Lotus’ resort, as their exploits intersect with hotel staff members. Both seasons also featured a mysterious death.

“The White Lotus” won 15 Emmys across its first two seasons, including for outstanding limited series for its first season.  The series is executive produced by White, David Bernad and Mark Kamine.

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Inspectors general watchdogs file suit over Pres. Trump’s decision to fire them

Eight U.S. inspectors general filed a lawsuit against President Donald Trump and his administration on Wednesday, alleging their firings violated federal law. The inspectors general asked the U.S. District Court in Washington to declare they remained lawfully in their roles at their agencies and asked the court to prevent the administration from obstructing their official duties.

The lawsuit (seen HERE) was filed by eight of the 17 inspectors general fired by Trump from the departments of Defense, Veterans Affairs, Health and Human Services, State, Agriculture, Education, Labor and the Small Business Administration.  The lawsuit states that “the purported firings violated unambiguous federal statutes — each enacted by bipartisan majorities in Congress and signed into law by the president — to protect Inspectors General from precisely this sort of interference with the discharge of their critical, non-partisan oversight duties,” adding that Trump’s “attempt to eliminate a crucial and longstanding source of impartial, non-partisan oversight of his administration is contrary to the rule of law.”

Per the lawsuit, the firings violated the Inspector General Act, which only allows a president to remove IGs after notifying Congress at least 30 days in advance and provide a substantive case-specific rationale. Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa and Sen. Dick Durbin said in a letter to Trump that IGs can be fired by presidents, but it must be done legally: “while IGs aren’t immune from committing acts requiring their removal, and they can be removed by the president, the law must be followed. IGs are critical to rooting out waste, fraud, abuse, and misconduct within the Executive Branch bureaucracy, which you have publicly made clear you are also intent on doing.”

That law amended the Inspector General Reform Act of 2008, according to the lawsuit: “Just four days into his current term, however, President Trump, acting through a two-sentence email sent by the director or deputy director of the Office of Presidential Personnel, purported to remove from office (supposedly on account of “changing priorities”) nearly a score of IGs (while retaining only two cabinet-level IGs). In the last four decades, no incoming President has attempted upon taking office to remove en masse the IGs appointed in prior administrations.”

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Senate votes to confirm Tulsi Gabbard as National Intelligence Director

On Wednesday, Senate Republicans voted to confirm Tulsi Gabbard to become the nation’s director of National Intelligence. The director of national intelligence oversees the 18 agencies that make up the U.S. intelligence community, including the Central Intelligence Agency and National Security Agency. The DNI also advises the president on intelligence matters.

The 52-48 vote was largely along party lines, with nearly all Republicans present voting in favor of Gabbard. Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky. was the only Republican who joined all Democrats in voting against Gabbard.

McConnell in a statement that he voted against Gabbard’s confirmation as it was apparent she was not prepared for the job and demonstrated a “history of alarming lapses in judgment. The Senate’s power of advice and consent is not an option; it is an obligation, and one we cannot pretend to misunderstand. When a nominee’s record proves them unworthy of the highest public trust, and when their command of relevant policy falls short of the requirements of their office, the Senate should withhold its consent.” (per ABC News).

Gabbard is a former member of Congress representing Hawaii in the House of Representatives from 2013 until 2021. Gabbard also is a former member of the Hawaii Army National Guard and was deployed to Iraq from 2003 to 2005 as a medical specialist. She also completed Alabama Military Academy’s officer training program in 2007. She left the Democratic Party after seeking its nomination for the presidency in 2020, and joined the Republican Party in 2024.

Gabbard’s confirmation is a win for the Trump administration, as Democrats and some Republicans voiced serious concerns about Gabbard – including her secret meeting in 2017 with then-President Bashar Assad of Syria, as well as her sympathetic comments about Russia, and her previous support for Edward Snowden – a former government contractor who leaked classified information to the press about those spying programs.

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Eric Church to headline 2025 Highways Festival in the UK

Eric Church will return to the UK this year to headline Highways Festival 2025, taking place at the Royal Albert Hall in London across the weekend of May 16-17.   On Friday, May 16, Molly Tuttle and Caylee Hammack will join Church, while Bella White and a yet to be announced act will join Church on May 17.

A social post reads: “Introducing your headliner for #HighwaysFestival 2025, @ericchurchmusic 🙌 Performing his exclusive To Beat The Devil solo show over two nights, expect to be taken on an intimate, electrifying journey through his phenomenal career. Joining him across the weekend will be the incredible @mollytuttle, @cayleehammack, @bellawhitemusic + more to be announced ⭐

Church’s To Beat The Devil residency debuted at the opening of his Nashville bar, Chiefs. The performance at the 2025 Highways Festival will be the only time that the residency show will be brought to Europe outside of Church’s bar.

Tickets for Highways Festival 2025 are available for purchase: here.

Editorial credit: Debby Wong / Shutterstock.com