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Morena Baccarin Teases CBS Spinoff and 'Fire Country' Crossovers (Exclusive)
TV & Streaming

Morena Baccarin Teases CBS Spinoff and ‘Fire Country’ Crossovers (Exclusive)

by jummy84 October 17, 2025
written by jummy84

The actress details her personal journey from ‘Fire Country’ to darker police-drama spinoff ‘Sheriff Country’

Before strapping on the holster of Sheriff Mickey Fox for CBS‘s Fire Country spinoff Sheriff Country, Morena Baccarin was, to say the least, gun-shy. “I had told my agent I’m not doing a network show,” the Gotham and Deadpool favorite readily admits while casually chilling on a comfy chair inside TV Insider’s Midtown Manhattan office. “I don’t want to work for 10 months out of the year. It’s going to be shot in a different country. I can’t do this. I have three little kids!”

Undaunted, her agent urged the actress to “just have a meeting with” Tony Phelan and Joan Rater, the exec producers who had cocreated Fire Country with series star Max Thieriot. She had already done a pair of guest spots on the show, so she agreed and that’s when the spark was first lit. “They literally made me fall in love with this character. In the first five minutes of the conversation, they pitched such a complicated, interesting, vulnerable, hard-ass woman that you just don’t see out there.”

During her first appearance, in 2024’s Season 2 episode “Alert the Sheriff,” it became clear to Baccarin that Mickey was designed to be more than a one-shot deal. Not only did the deputy sheriff of the fictional Edgewater, California, share ties to some Country folk — she’s the stepsister of Cal Fire chief Sharon Leone (Diane Farr) and aunt of firefighting ex-con Bode (Thieriot) — but CBS was also hot to capitalize on the popularity of its runaway hit. “I knew when I went in to play Mickey,” she continues, “not that [a spinoff] was officially picked up, but that was a potential thing that was happening. So I had to really wrap my mind around it, [the] possibility of something becoming your own show that may or may not happen, but you have to be ready for it.”

To make sure she was locked and loaded, Baccarin did her research via a ride-along with officers in her upstate New York hood. “It’s a small town, so it’s kind of perfect,” she recalls. “There’s not a lot going on sometimes, but then it changes on a dime. But I was more fascinated by the little things when there’s not much going on. Do you take your belt off when you sit in your office? Things you wouldn’t think about, like when you are writing endless reports, do you take a coffee break? Do you go break it up with, oh, an eviction notice? If you want to make something happen, do you search for people to pull over?”

Another weapon in her arsenal was husband Ben McKenzie‘s past gigs as an LAPD cop on Southland and Gotham‘s Detective Jim Gordon. “Oh, he had a lot of tips,” she slyly quips, adding that she now reminds him that she’s playing the sheriff and not just a future police commissioner “all the time.”

Baccarin returned to Fire for a second appearance in Season 3, and it was that episode, “Dirty Money,” that really set the stage for Sheriff, with the introduction of the Leone ladies’ marijuana-farming father, Wes (W. Earl Brown), as well as references to Mickey’s rehab-frequenting daughter, Skye (Amanda Arcuri). Not exactly the family tree one would expect from such an ethical officer of the law.

“They’ve surrounded this woman that is fiercely black-and-white about what’s right and wrong with these characters who are very gray. Skye is struggling with drug addiction, and to have a mom who’s a cop, I can’t imagine anything worse for a child that age with the troubles that she’s having. And then Mickey’s dad grows weed illegally. It’s like you can’t make this stuff up!” Baccarin laughs. “It gives such a complex dynamic to all of her relationships.”

As Sheriff kicks off several months after her last visit to her Fire stepsister, we see that Mickey is more than the capable cop who helped catch their dad’s homicidal cannabis buddy. She’s also incredibly lovable (showrunner Matt Lopez likens Baccarin’s ability to be comedic, dramatic, and drop-dead gorgeous to Ava Gardner), at times inspiring and unapologetically enmeshed in the lives of her Edgewater neighbors, which lends the show a cozier vibe than its often incendiary forebear.

“It is very much a salute to small towns,” agrees Lopez. “One of the things we talk about is, I live in Los Angeles, and if I call the police and they come to my house, they don’t know me, and I don’t know them. It’s a very transactional sort of exchange. So what is it like to police a community in which you know everyone and everyone knows you? In part, that’s Mickey’s superpower. But we’ll also see that it can be a little bit of a blind spot for her.”

So don’t expect a Mayberry P.D. meets She’s the Sheriff. “I don’t discount the focus on community, but starting in Episode 2, one of the things we will do in Sheriff Country is show viewers some of the darker corners of Edgewater that [viewers] may not have seen before on Fire Country. It is a crime show, it is a police drama. In Fire Country, the enemy or the adversary, if you will, is the elements, right? It’s fire. It’s fire and nature in many ways. Here, it is human beings. And as soon as you enter that into the equation, it takes you to some very interesting places.”

Despite not having previously worked on Fire, Lopez was well aware that he’d need to import some aspects of the O.G. to make sure the two shows felt like they existed in the same universe. That meant coordinating production schedules that would allow for an array of crossovers — Thieriot’s Bode pops up in the premiere and Lopez promises “some really fun crosses coming up” — and scouting out spots in Toronto, where Sheriff shoots, that match the look and feel of the Vancouver-based Fire‘s locations. Thankfully, Lopez reports that they were able to find a “pretty good match” in some “little towns around Ontario, kind of at the fringes of Toronto.”

And of course, he’d have to infuse the series with a similar appreciation for the unsung heroes who happen to live outside of major metropolitan areas. “I had seen Fire, obviously I had been a fan, and so I was very excited when they reached out to me about Sheriff Country,” he admits. With only two prior TV shows under his belt and one unsold pilot (starring Ben McKenzie!), the writer of theatricals like Race to Witch Mountain and The Sorcerer’s Apprentice raves that it’s been a “wonderful experience” working with Fire‘s exec producers to “create this show that, on the one hand is very much part of the Edgewater–Fire Country universe and delivers what people love about that universe—the hope of community, all that great stuff—but at the same time carves out its own identity. And that’s kind of what we’re in the process of in Season 1.”

The series premiere hits the ground running with a crisis that leans into the small-town vibe as Mickey, currently the interim sheriff, and her partner Nathan Boone (Matt Lauria) attempt to de-escalate a deadly face-off between two brothers who have just buried their mom.

“To use a phrase that they used to use in the Old West, your six-shooter was called a ‘peacemaker.’ And Mickey Fox is perfectly willing and able and prepared to use a peacemaker, but she’s also, when the situation calls for it, able to be a peacemaker,” notes Lopez. “We see that in that first scene.”

The sequence also illuminates the differences between Mickey and the more trigger-happy Boone. “Our tech adviser, who’s a retired Sonoma County sheriff, was telling us, that first encounter you see in the pilot where she’s confronting those two grieving brothers, he said basically that most cops, the verb he used is ‘would vaporize those guys,’” says Lopez. “And that’s Boone.” He reveals that we’ll later learn that the character is “actually from big city Oakland, where policing is very different” and that their conflicting approaches to enforcement help foster “the part odd-couple, part dynamic-duo thing they’ve got going on…that push-and-pull between them as we get deeper into the season will be really exciting.”

Exciting romantically? Baccarin doesn’t see that happening. Yet. “We’re going to find out stuff about Boone, even more stuff that creates another wall between them,” she teases. “They really are great partners at work, and you get the sense that there’s something else underneath, but neither of them, no…it’s just not even on the table.”

Hugh Tull/CBS

That’s probably a good thing, since Mickey has enough on-the-job drama as it is. In addition to dealing with the Boone of it all, she has taken Edgewater P.D.’s deputy sheriff Cassidy (Michele Weaver) under her wing. A young woman who, like Mickey, spent some time in the foster care system, “Cassidy really looks up to Mickey,” Baccarin explains. “I think Cassidy had a rough past, and Mickey gave her confidence and gave her purpose. And she’s female, and there aren’t a lot of females at the station.” But if you think that means the Girl Code will be enforced, think again.

Off duty, Mickey’s life is just as hectic. The pilot reveals that her father Wes has finally gone legit, and with that comes his newfound interest in reconnecting with his daughter and granddaughter. What the hour doesn’t reveal, but Lopez does confirm, is that Wes may be finding a new drug in Edgewater P.D.’s comic-relief administrator Gina (Caroline Rhea) after moving in with Mickey. “We’ll find out she and Mickey’s dad have a little bit of a history in Episode 2, and those two are so fun together.”

Less fun: The fact that Mickey must convince the good people of Edgewater (and even herself) that she deserves to be the town’s full-time sheriff, while coparenting a troubled kid with her ex-husband, Travis (Christopher Gorham), a well-connected lawyer from Edgewater’s first family. “Travis is a Fraley and the Fraleys are the old money in town,” Lopez confirms. “They made a fortune in lumber.” At first glance, it seems that the former couple is on the same page, but “they have their little differences,” previews Baccarin. “We get in some pretty drag-out fights as the season goes on. There’s a lot of resentment there [because] she wanted to keep working on the marriage, and he’s the one who wanted it to end. There’s a lot of wounds that are still kind of left open.”

Expect some new ones, as well, once Mickey realizes that she and Skye aren’t the only women in Travis’s life, and that someone very close to her has committed a massive betrayal. Someone, it turns out, who will be vital to the future of Mickey’s family after Skye is implicated in a shocking situation in the premiere’s final moments.

“The first four episodes are really about that story,” hints Baccarin, who relished the chance to explore just how principled Mickey can be when it’s her own child at risk. And even though the huge smile on her face reflects a burning desire to spill the deets, she knows not to shoot off her mouth when it comes to spoilers. “I guess I can’t give too much away, but it gets much more complicated.”

Guess even the sheriff has the right to remain silent.

Sheriff Country, Series Premiere, Friday, October 17, 9/8c, CBS

October 17, 2025 0 comments
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How Old Is Dolly Parton? See the Country Music Star’s Age Now – Hollywood Life
Hollywood

How Old Is Dolly Parton? See the Country Music Star’s Age Now – Hollywood Life

by jummy84 October 8, 2025
written by jummy84

Image Credit: Getty Images

Dolly Parton has long been an icon—not just for her contributions to country music and her unforgettable stage presence, but also for her resilience and spirit. Even in 2025, she continues to engage new generations, collaborating with Sabrina Carpenter on “Please Please Please” in February.

Tragically, Dolly’s personal life took a painful turn when her husband of nearly six decades, Carl Thomas Dean, passed away on March 3, 2025. In an Instagram post, she shared, “Carl and I spent many wonderful years together. Words can’t do justice to the love we shared for over 60 years. Thank you for your prayers and sympathy.” The statement continued, “The family has asked for privacy during this difficult time.”

Now, on top of grieving, Dolly is confronting her own health challenges. In 2025, she postponed her Las Vegas residency and missed several appearances due to issues with kidney stones and infection, citing the need for medical procedures and recovery time.

Learn more about her net worth, age, and Carl’s age below.

Dolly Parton’s Net Worth

Dolly has a net worth of $650 million, according to Celebrity Net Worth. 

How Old Is Dolly Parton?

Dolly is 79 years old. She will celebrate her 80th birthday on January 19, 2025, as she was born in 1946. 

How Old Was Carl Thomas Dean?

Carl was 82 at the time of his passing. He and Dolly had been married since 1966, keeping their relationship mostly private over the years.

Does Dolly Parton Have Children?

Dolly never had children. In a 2020 interview with Oprah Winfrey for The Oprah Conversation on Apple TV, she explained her decision. “I didn’t have children because I believed that God didn’t mean for me to have kids so everybody’s kids could be mine, so I could do things like Imagination Library because if I hadn’t had the freedom to work, I wouldn’t have done all the things I’ve done,” Dolly said. “I wouldn’t be in a position to do all of the things I’m doing now.”

She added, “Since I had no kids, and my husband was pretty independent, I had freedom.” The singer continued, “So I think a big part of my whole success is the fact that I was free to work.”

October 8, 2025 0 comments
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Molly Tuttle 2025
Music

Molly Tuttle Dives Headfirst Into Entertaining Country Pop » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 8, 2025
written by jummy84

So Long Little Miss Sunshine

Molly Tuttle

Nonesuch

15 August 2025

On singer Molly Tuttle’s newest album, So Long Little Miss Sunshine, the country rising star is letting bluegrass take a bit of a backseat this time. A light, infectiously optimistic collection of songs, primarily fitting snugly within the cozy confines of country pop, Tuttle‘s latest album allows her to flex her musical muscles beyond bluegrass and the folksy Americana of her previous work.

Tuttle, who’s widely credited with bringing bluegrass closer to the mainstream following her Grammy nomination for Best New Artist in 2023 alongside musicians like Samara Joy and Anitta, grew up on bluegrass in the Palo Alto area. While the San Francisco Bay Area might not be the most obvious place of origin for bluegrass’s ingénue in residence, Tuttle’s Northern California roots creep through the Appalachian overgrowth of the genre, evident in influences like the Grateful Dead and Jefferson Airplane.

Tuttle grew up on bluegrass, joining her family’s band, the Tuttles, with AJ Lee when she was just 15 years old. When we asked Tuttle what it felt like to have been recognized as one of the greats in a genre she grew up on, she told us, “It’s an amazing feeling. When I see my name placed with this new generation of bluegrass musicians, it’s such a cool feeling. Ever since I was eight years old and picked up a guitar, it’s been a dream of mine to make my life centered around music. It’s just so cool that this music has had this resurgence and reached this new fan group. There are so many more people here now, and it’s great to see the music is rising.”

Although flavors of Tuttle’s bluegrass roots are evident in So Long Little Miss Sunshine, the album represents a definite departure from Tuttle’s previous work. Being that bluegrass is a very “tradition-minded” genre, we asked Tuttle how she decides when to push the boundaries of the genre a bit and when to honor its more “traditional” aspects. Tuttle tells us it’s a fine line she has to walk. Elements of her trademark guitar picking and bluegrass flair shine through on some tracks.

Still, Tuttle wanted to create something that felt wholly “her” and not necessarily centered around the structures of a more traditional bluegrass album. Tracks like “Rosalee”, a spunky bluegrass ballad, would be right at home in Tuttle’s older work, like her Grammy-winning album Crooked Tree, while others, like the lead single ‘That’s Gonna Leave a Mark”, feel like they could be plucked right from the airwaves of country pop radio.

By giving herself a bit more freedom with production design, many of the confines Tuttle was accustomed to working within seemed to slip away, allowing for more rip-roaring live performances with heavy drumlines punctuated by more traditional bluegrass-sounding tracks. Moving away from the more storytelling, folksy aspects of bluegrass, Tuttle could break away and tell her own story in a way that felt authentic to both her and the music that influenced her.

In an Instagram post promoting the record’s release, Tuttle encouraged listeners to experience the tracks in the order in which they appear on the album (a foregone art lost to streaming and shuffle play supremacy). Of how she chose to order the LP, Tuttle said it was arranged both thematically and sonically. Tracks near the end of the album, like “No Regrets”, hark on notions of acceptance and moving on, while songs like “Story of My So Called Life” show Tuttle reflecting on the blank page, deciding where her music will take her next.

The Grammy-winning singer notes, “Kicking it off with a song like ‘Everything Burns’ that’s kind of dark and restless starts off the arc of the album with a bang. There were just certain interludes we came up with to weave the songs together. Certain things happen at the end of songs that weave into the next one. It was really fun to record the album this way. We were pretty diligent about going in with the track order and recording to work out those interludes.”

Smack in the middle of the album, a cover of Swedish pop duo Icona Pop‘s 2012 hit “I Love It” makes a surprise appearance. On her decision to include the cover, Tuttle said, “It came about in a very funny and random way. I had just heard that song, and it popped back into my head. Probably because of Charli XCX blowing up. We were in the studio doing pre-production and coincidentally Jake Joyce [her producer] said, ‘I really wanna do a cover of that song, but make it really spacey and kind of trippy.’”

Molly Tuttle went home and learned the song that night, recording it the next day in an hour. By the time the album was nearing completion and Joyce sent her a tracklist, she’d almost forgotten they’d recorded it. While a Swedish pop song more than a decade old might seem incongruous to an upbeat collection of country tracks, the song seamlessly slips into the rhythm of the album, almost entirely disguised by Tuttle’s stripped-down and more melodic iteration of the track.

With much of So Long Little Miss Sunshine harkening to the act of letting go, we asked Tuttle if there were any themes in music she felt she was ready to say “so long” to. “I feel like musically I don’t know what I’d like to let go of, except for feeling like kind of a fraud in a way. Since I’m not from the South, sometimes I feel like I have a little bit of imposter syndrome. But I feel like for me I want to move forward to a more expansive vision of who I am as an artist, which I think I did a little more on this record, and I’m excited for whatever I do next because I feel like I’ve gotten a clearer vision of who I am and where I’m going.”

With bluegrass having a definitive geographic association, we asked Molly Tuttle how location influenced this album. The country singer told us that while the Bay Area still very much feels like home to her, Nashville (where she’s lived for the last decade) left its mark on this album more than it has on any of her past work.

For all its love of freedom and family, bluegrass (and country more broadly) finds itself in a precarious position as unbridled patriotism moves from “love of country” to often bordering on fascistic nationalism. With much of country music being co-opted by conservatism, we asked Tuttle if the political climate has changed her relationship to the genre.

“I do feel like, for me as a woman in this male-dominated industry. It was hard for me to find my voice within that. There was a shift I noticed in my early 20s. When I moved to Nashville, people became more curious about ‘What is it like for a woman in the music industry?’ and people weren’t really asking those questions.”

October 8, 2025 0 comments
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Dolly Parton
TV & Streaming

Dolly Parton’s Sister Requests Prayers as Country Legend Faces Health Challenges – Fans React

by jummy84 October 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Freida Estelle Parton is asking fans of her sister, Dolly Parton, to pray for the country music legend’s recovery after the “Jolene” singer was forced to postpone a series of Las Vegas shows due to health issues.

“Last night, I was up all night praying for my sister, Dolly,” wrote Freida in a Facebook post. “Many of you know she hasn’t been feeling her best lately. I truly believe in the power of prayer, and I have been led to ask all of the world that loves her to be prayer warriors and pray with me.”

“She’s strong, she’s loved, and with all the prayers being lifted for her, I know in my heart she’s going to be just fine,” continued Freida. “Godspeed, my sissy Dolly. We all love you!”


On Sunday, September 28, Dolly revealed in an Instagram post that she would be postponing her Las Vegas residency dates by nearly a year to focus on her health.

In the post, Parton wrote: “I want the fans to hear it directly from me, that unfortunately, I will need to postpone my upcoming Las Vegas concerts. As many of you know, I have been dealing with some health challenges, and my doctors tell me that I must have a few procedures.”

She concluded the message with, “He is telling me to slow down right now so I can be ready for more big adventures will all of you. I love you and thank you for understanding.”

 

Dolly Parton’s recent health concerns and the cancellation of several appearances come after weeks of ongoing struggles. In September, the country legend had to cancel an in-person event at Dollywood during the grand opening of its newest attraction, the Night Flight Expedition ride. She later sent fans a video message explaining her health issues at the time.

“I had a kidney stone that was causing me a lot of problems, turned out it’d given me an infection,” said Parton in the pre-recorded message. “The doctor said, ‘You don’t need to be traveling right this minute, so you need a few days to get better.’”

As the “9 to 5” singer recovers, fans and friends swarmed to her social media pages to wish her well and offer their support.

“Currently googling ‘how to donate my organs to Dolly Parton,’” wrote one fan on her Instagram page.

“We love you Dolly! You’re an inspiration to humanity 💞,” wrote country singer Margo Price.

9-1-1: Nashville star Jessica Capshaw wrote: “Love you, Dolly!! Rest up. ♥️”

Singer-songwriter Brandi Carlile posted: “Beyond reproach ❤️🙌”

“I can’t even imagine what this world would be like without her in it. She is the last shining hope for humanity,” wrote a fan on Facebook.

 

 

October 7, 2025 0 comments
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bitchy | Angelina Jolie: ‘I love my country, but at this time, I don’t recognize my country’
Celebrity News

bitchy | Angelina Jolie: ‘I love my country, but at this time, I don’t recognize my country’

by jummy84 September 22, 2025
written by jummy84

Angelina Jolie was in Italy over the weekend for the San Sebastian Film Festival. She premiered her latest film, Alice Winocour’s Couture, and Angelina will also receive the festival’s Donostia Award, which is sort of a lifetime achievement award. While Angelina’s film festival appearances always make news, this time, Jolie is making news for something she said during the press conference. She was asked about the state of America at this time, especially as an American artist.

Oscar-winning actor Angelina Jolie, who is at Spain’s San Sebastián Film Festival with Alice Winocour’s “Couture,” was asked a timely question at the festival’s press conference: What do you fear as an artist and an American? The actor sighed deeply and took a few moments to answer before saying, “It is a very difficult question.”

“I love my country, but at this time, I don’t recognize my country,” said Jolie. “I’ve always lived internationally, my family is international, my friends, my life… My worldview is equal, united, and international. Anything anywhere that divides or limits personal expressions and freedoms from anyone, I think, is very dangerous. These are such serious times that we have to be careful not to say things casually. These are very, very heavy times we are living in together,” concluded the actor.

It’s important to note that Jolie’s comment on freedom of expression comes just days after Disney’s ABC took Jimmy Kimmel‘s popular late-night show off its schedule “indefinitely.” The decision came after one of the biggest owners of TV stations in the U.S., Nexstar Media, said it intended to preempt airings of the program following remarks the host made about the killing of conservative activist Charlie Kirk.

[From Variety]

She’s right. I don’t recognize my country either. It’s like sane, normie Americans are the proverbial lobsters in gradually boiling water. One day, we’re just looking around and wondering when everything changed. It changed in 2016, btw. When a minority of American voters got that orange demon in office. Nothing has ever been the same since then. Angelina is lucky in a sense – she has other places to go and the means to take her family out of America. Reportedly, Angelina is waiting until her twins turn 18 and finish high school (next year) to move out of America permanently. Reportedly, she’s looking to move to the UK, but she also has a home in Cambodia and she does a lot of work in Ethiopia and Namibia.

Photos courtesy of Cover Images.

Premiere of the film ‘Couture’ at the 73rd San Sebastian International Film Festival at the Kursaal

Featuring: Alice Winocour, Louis Garrel, Anyier Anei, Angelina Jolie, Ella Rumpf, Garance Marillier
Where: San Sebastian, Spain
When: 21 Sep 2025
Credit: Clemens Niehaus/Future Image/Cover Images

**NOT FOR PUBLICATION IN GERMANY**

Premiere of the film ‘Couture’ at the 73rd San Sebastian International Film Festival at the Kursaal

Featuring: Angelina Jolie
Where: San Sebastian, Spain
When: 21 Sep 2025
Credit: Clemens Niehaus/Future Image/Cover Images

**NOT FOR PUBLICATION IN GERMANY**

Premiere of the film ‘Couture’ at the 73rd San Sebastian International Film Festival at the Kursaal

Featuring: Angelina Jolie
Where: San Sebastian, Spain
When: 21 Sep 2025
Credit: Clemens Niehaus/Future Image/Cover Images

**NOT FOR PUBLICATION IN GERMANY**


Premiere of the film ‘Couture’ at the 73rd San Sebastian International Film Festival at the Kursaal

Featuring: Angelina Jolie
Where: San Sebastian, Spain
When: 21 Sep 2025
Credit: Clemens Niehaus/Future Image/Cover Images

**NOT FOR PUBLICATION IN GERMANY**

Press conference for ‘Couture’ at the 73rd San Sebastian International Film Festival at the Kursaal

Featuring: Angelina Jolie
Where: San Sebastian, Spain
When: 21 Sep 2025
Credit: Clemens Niehaus/Future Image/Cover Images

**NOT FOR PUBLICATION IN GERMANY**


September 22, 2025 0 comments
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Dasha Talks 'Cutthroat' Women, Men Who 'Can Do No Wrong' in Country
Music

Dasha Talks ‘Cutthroat’ Women, Men Who ‘Can Do No Wrong’ in Country

by jummy84 September 20, 2025
written by jummy84

When it comes to men and women in country music, the playing field is far from level. During this week’s episode of Rolling Stone‘s Nashville Now podcast, singer-songwriter Dasha shares her firsthand experience with the uneven balance of power in Nashville, especially when it comes to what artists can and cannot say.

“Especially in the country world, men, for the most part, can do no wrong. The more they’re outspoken and the more they express their opinions and go outside the lines, the more someone’s like, ‘Oh, he’s so cool,’” Dasha says.

But were a woman dare to be outspoken, she’d expect blowback, often from the genre’s very fans.

“Women are so cutthroat. If I saw a woman breaking the rules online a bit, in the country world, wearing some shorts that her cheeks are out, I’d be like, ‘Go queen!’ But they’re like, ‘You stupid bitch,’” Dasha says of online commenters.

After some therapy, Dasha says she’s able to better deal with the comments she receives. In the past, she’s read them and tear up. “Now, when I see those comments, I’m like, ‘Thanks, Karen from Minnesota, you’re feeding my algorithm. Appreciate you, girl.’”

Trending Stories

Dasha, who broke out with the viral hit “Austin (Boots Stop Workin’),” is gearing up for the release of her new EP, Anna, on Oct. 10th. On Friday, she dropped the latest track from the project, “Train.”

Download and subscribe to Rolling Stone’s weekly country-music podcast, Nashville Now, hosted by senior music editor Joseph Hudak, on Apple Podcasts or Spotify (or wherever you get your podcasts). New episodes drop every Wednesday and feature interviews with artists and personalities like Charley Crockett, Gavin Adcock, Margo Price, Dusty Slay, Lukas Nelson, Ashley Monroe, Old Crow Medicine Show’s Ketch Secor, and Clever.

September 20, 2025 0 comments
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List of Films by Country
TV & Streaming

List of Films by Country

by jummy84 September 19, 2025
written by jummy84

Now that the dust has settled, and the majority of film festivals that are influential on the Oscars race, like Sundance, Cannes, and Venice, have already occurred, countries around the world are finalizing which film they will be submitting to represent them in the Best International Feature category.

While the films do not need to be in the official language of the submitting country, they cannot be in English for a majority of the film, nor can they have been produced inside the United States.

The most controversial part of the submission process is that the films have to have been chosen by a national organization, jury, or committee composed of people from the film industry. In practice, that has led to government interference in the selection process, meaning award-winning Iranian films like “No Bears” and “The Seed of the Sacred Fig” or acclaimed Indian films like “All We Imagine as Light” and “RRR,” for example, are overlooked in favor of films more palatable to officials than to the Academy voters the submissions are meant to impress.

THE LIMEY, Terence Stamp, Lesley Ann Warren, 1999, (c) Artisan Entertainment/courtesy Everett Collection

Last year, there were 89 submissions for Best International Feature. Countries have until Wednesday, October 1, 2025 to make their submissions. Preliminary voting for Best International Feature, as well as nine other categories, will occur from December 8 through 12. The following week, on December 16, the Academy will announce its Oscars shortlists, and voters will later choose the five Best International Feature nominees from a list of the 15 submissions that received the most votes. The 2026 Oscar nominations will be announced on January 22, and the 96th Academy Awards will occur on Sunday, March 15, 2026.

See the full list of 2026 submissions for Best International Feature category below, organized alphabetically by country, and updated regularly as more selections are made.

Armenia: “My Armenian Phantoms” (Tamara Stepanyan)
Austria: “Peacock” (Bernhard Wenger)
Azerbaijan: “Taghiyev: Oil” (Zaur Gasimli)
Belgium: “Young Mothers” (Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne)
Bosnia and Herzegovina: “Blum: Masters of Their Own Destiny” (Jasmila Žbanić)
Brazil: “The Secret Agent” (Kleber Mendonça Filho)
Bulgaria: “Tarika” (Milko Lazarov)
Cambodia: “Tenement” (Inrasothythep Neth and Sokyou Chea)
Canada: “The Things You Kill” (Alireza Khatami)
Chile: “The Mysterious Gaze of the Flamingo” (Diego Céspedes)
Colombia: “A Poet” (Simón Mesa Soto)
Costa Rica: “The Altar Boy, the Priest and the Gardener” (Juan Manuel Fernández)
Croatia: “Fiume o morte!” (Igor Bezinović)
Czech Republic: “I’m Not Everything I Want to Be” (Klára Tasovská)
Denmark: “Mr. Nobody Against Putin” (David Borenstein)
Dominican Republic: “Pepe” (Nelson Carlo de Los Santos Arias)
Ecuador: “Chuzalongo” (Diego Ortuño)
Egypt: “Happy Birthday” (Sarah Goher)
Estonia: “Rolling Papers” (Meel Paliale)
Finland: “100 Litres of Gold” (Teemu Nikki)
France: “It Was Just an Accident” (Jafar Panahi)
Georgia: “Panopticon” (George Sikharulidze)
Germany: “Sound of Falling” (Mascha Schilinski)
Hungary: “Orphan” (László Nemes)
Iceland: “The Love That Remains” (Hlynur Pálmason)
India: “Homebound” (Neeraj Ghaywan)
Indonesia: “Sore: Wife from the Future” (Yandy Laurens)
Iran: “Cause of Death: Unknown” (Ali Zarnegar)
Iraq: “The President’s Cake” (Hasan Hadi)
Ireland: “Sanatorium” (Gar O’Rourke)
Israel: “The Sea” (Shai Carmeli-Pollak)
Japan: “Kokuho” (Lee Sang-il)
Jordan: “All That’s Left of You” (Cherien Dabis)
Kyrgyzstan: “Black Red Yellow” (Aktan Arym Kubat)
Latvia: “Dog of God” (Lauris Ābele and Raitis Ābele)
Lithuania: “Southern Chronicles” (Ignas Miškinis)
Montenegro: “The Tower of Strength” (Nikola Vukčević)
Morocco: “Calle Málaga” (Maryam Touzani)
Nepal: “Anjila” (Milan Chams)
Netherlands: “Reedland” (Sven Bresser)
North Macedonia: “The Tale of Silyan” (Tamara Kotevska)
Norway: “Sentimental Value” (Joachim Trier)
Palestine: “Palestine 36” (Annemarie Jacir)
Panama: “Beloved Tropic” (Ana Endara)
Papua New Guinea: “Papa Buka” (Bijukumar Damodaran)
Paraguay: “Under the Flags, the Sun” (Juanjo Pereira)
Peru: “Motherland” (Marco Panatonic)
Philippines: “Magellan” (Lav Diaz)
Poland: “Franz” (Agnieszka Holland)
Portugal: “Banzo” (Margarida Cardoso)
Romania: “Traffic” (Teodora Mihai)
Singapore: “Stranger Eyes” (Yeo Siew Hua)
Slovakia: “Father” (Tereza Nvotová)
Slovenia: “Little Trouble Girls” (Urška Djukić)
South Korea: “No Other Choice” (Park Chan-wook)
Spain: “Sirāt” (Óliver Laxe)
Sweden: “Eagles of the Republic” (Tarik Saleh)
Switzerland: “Late Shift” (Petra Volpe)
Taiwan: “Left-Handed Girl” (Shih-Ching Tsou)
Thailand: “A Useful Ghost” (Ratchapoom Boonbunchachoke)
Tunisia: “The Voice of Hind Rajab” (Kaouther Ben Hania)
Turkey: “One of Those Days When Hemme Dies” (Murat Fıratoğlu)
Ukraine: “2000 Meters to Andriivka” (Mstyslav Chernov)
Uruguay: “Don’t You Let Me Go” (Ana Guevara and Leticia Jorge)

September 19, 2025 0 comments
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Country singers Zach Bryan, Gavin Adcock face off in music fest altercation - National
Celebrity News

Country singers Zach Bryan, Gavin Adcock face off in music fest altercation – National

by jummy84 September 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Country singers Zach Bryan and Gavin Adcock got into a heated confrontation during the Born & Raised Festival in Oklahoma over the weekend.

Several videos posted online show Bryan, 29, yelling at Adcock, 26, through a fence while at the festival on Sept.13 in Pryor, Okla.

“Hey, do you want to fight like a man?” Bryan yells in the video. “Come open the gate. Want me to throw a beer too?”

Once Adcock gets closer to the fence, Bryan appears to push it in his direction, which resulted in a security guard stepping forward to get involved.

“When you get death threats from Sack Cryin before you headline in his hometown,” Adcock wrote in text over clip.

“Eat a snickers bro,” Adcock wrote in the post’s caption.

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In another video posted online, Bryan can be seen climbing the fence — topped with barbed wire — to get to Adcock, but he’s held back by security once he gets over the fence. A bodyguard can also been seen escorting Adcock away from Bryan.

Adcock shared a video on Instagram, talking about the incident with the caption, “Rotten fruit falls on its own.”

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“Well, like I already said, I don’t think Zach Bryan’s a very good person. He wasn’t locked out of the festival. He had been there all day with his multiple security guards. He saw me standing between my buses when he got here,” Adcock began.

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“He had plenty of opportunity between the whole day to do whatever he wanted to do but decided he was going to wait like an hour before my set while I was standing out there.”

Adcock said that “no artist who cares about their fans is going to fight right before their set, missing going on (stage) and disappointing fans that spent way too much money to be there.”


“I wasn’t even mad I didn’t even have a single reason to fight him. After he had already left before my set I was standing outside. He pulls up in a pick-up truck outside the gate and starts giving out threats,” Adcock continued. “So I just decided to stir him up to the point where he jumped over the fence.”

“I don’t think anybody’s scared of Zach Bryan. I’m just an adult and fighting him would only mean going to jail, missing my set and falling into a Zach Bryan lawsuit. And we all know he likes to manipulate people with money,” Adcock said.

He told his fans that Bryan knew where he was all day and “knew my set time, knew where I’d be standing.”

“He created this whole ‘I’m a badass,’ jump over the fence narrative just to try to make himself look bigger or tougher even though he could have just walked on in the gate. He’d been in there all day. At the end of the day I know my decision I made was right. I didn’t take the Zach Bryan bait,” Adcock concluded.

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Adcock and Bryan have been in an ongoing feud since July.

Adcock had previously criticized Bryan as a young fan claimed he waited hours after a show in New Jersey in the hopes of getting an autograph from Bryan. The fan took to TikTok and wrote, “We waited 3 hours outside to meet Zach Bryan… he completely blew everyone off and drove away like a jerk.”

In a since-deleted response to the TikTok, Bryan wrote, “You’re not entitled after someone plays two and a half hours to a picture or a hello.” Bryan also added the acronym “GOMD,” meaning “Get off my d—.”

Adcock then fired back on X and wrote, “If you can’t handle the criticism of a 14 year old why do people idolize you? The kid was head over heels to meet you and spent/parents spent a ton of money to see you. He’s got feeling[sic] too and you’re a ‘grown man’ nearly 30. They’re the only reason you are around.”

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If you can’t handle the criticism of a 14 year old why do people idolize you?

That kid was head over heels to meet you and spent/ parents spent a ton of money to see you. He’s got feeling too and a you’re a “grown man” nearly 30

They’re the only reason you are around.

— Gavin Adcock Music (@GavinAdcock) July 22, 2025

Adcock addressed his post on Rolling Stone’s Nashville Now podcast in August, saying, “It wasn’t about not wanting to sign autographs after a show, it’s like letting a 14-year-old kid rant, without saying, ‘Get off my d—.’ You’re bigger than that.”

He also accused Bryan of wearing “a big mask in his day-to-day life.”

“Sometimes he can’t help but rip it off and show his true colours,” Adcock added. “I don’t know if Zach Bryan’s really that great of a person.”

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&copy 2025 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

September 16, 2025 0 comments
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Kat Velasco
Hollywood

Kat Velasco Is Turning Chaos into Country Pop Gold – Hollywood Life

by jummy84 September 13, 2025
written by jummy84

Image Credit: Kat Velasco

Kat Velasco has a talent for finding beauty in the unpredictable. The rising country-pop star doesn’t shy away from life’s chaos. She turns it into music that feels both deeply personal and instantly relatable.

Born and raised in Columbia, South Carolina, Velasco grew up in a home where music was always present. At just eight years old, she signed with a small agency and began performing in musical theatre and pageants. These early experiences taught her stage presence long before she ever stepped into a studio.

Whether it is small-town drama, heartbreak, or the thrill of chasing big dreams after moving to Nashville on her own, Velasco transforms it all into songs that stick. Her lyrics hit with the honesty of a late-night conversation, wrapped in melodies that belong on repeat.

“The best songs come from the real stuff,” she explains. “The good, the bad, the parts you think you will never get through — that is where the gold is.”

Kat Velasco
Image Credit: Kat Velasco

Her catalog shows a writer unafraid to take risks. The breakout single “Kitchen Sink,” inspired by growing up with three older brothers, taps into the unspoken rules of small-town life. “Burning Man” leans darker without losing its heart, “Paper Boy” turns personal moments into cautionary tales, “Leave Me Wild” reads like a mission statement, and “Let It Ride” confronts her own insecurities head-on.

Most recently, she released “Breaking My Own Heart,” a raw and emotionally charged anthem about self-sabotage and bracing for disappointment even when everything feels right, showcasing her powerhouse vocals and a bold step into darker territory.

Velasco’s life offstage carries the same spirit as her music. She embraces the unfiltered and the magical in equal measure, finding stories in late-night writing sessions at home, long beach days, and nights that turn into mornings. She says she writes best when she is surrounded by the little pieces of life that remind her of home.

That blend of authenticity and star power is why her fan base keeps growing. People see their own lives reflected in her music, and they connect with the way she tells her story.

Kat Velasco
Image Credit: Kat Velasco

Hollywood loves a personality who owns their narrative, and Kat Velasco is doing just that. With each song, she is proving that chaos is not something to hide. It is the secret ingredient that makes her shine.

September 13, 2025 0 comments
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Animal Kingdom - Shawn Hatosy
TV & Streaming

Shawn Hatosy Spotted on the Set of CBS’s ‘Fire Country’

by jummy84 August 28, 2025
written by jummy84

Shawn Hatosy seems to be everywhere these days. But what is he doing on the set of Fire Country?

Recently, the actor starred on HBO’s The Pitt as Dr. Jack Abbot, a role that earned him his first Emmy nomination for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series. Before the medical series, he starred on TNT’s Animal Kingdom, where he played Andrew “Pope” Cody. He also appeared in a handful of episodes as Deputy Chief Charlie Reid on Chicago P.D. and did a stint on Rescue: HI-Surf, just to name a few.

Now, if that isn’t enough, the actor seems to be heading over to Northern California to lend a hand to the California Conservation Camp Program.

In a social media post on X (formerly Twitter) from user @theroyaImess, the actor was shown palling around with the cast and crew of CBS’s Fire Country. Shawn was seen tossing a medicine ball in a short video that was paired with the caption: “Today I give you a little game of “catch” of @firecountrycbs ’cause our stories are always more intense than your average tv show.”

SHAWN?? pic.twitter.com/KgcIO4qwQB

— tina 💜 (@theroyaImess) August 28, 2025

Though nothing has been confirmed by either the actor nor reps of the show, it has sent fans into a tizzy has why the good doctor is on the set.

“It is! Kicks feet giggling,” wrote one fan in response.

“hello mr fireman,” wrote another.

The Max Thieriot-led drama follows the journey of Bode Donovan, a young ex-con who must earn redemption by volunteering for a prison-release firefighting initiative. Cocreated by Thieriot, the series stars Kevin Alejandro, Jordan Calloway, Jules Latimer, and Diane Farr. And not Hatosy.

Fire Country, Season 4 Premiere, Friday, October 17, 8/7c, CBS

August 28, 2025 0 comments
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