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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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Grace Van Patten Dives Into Amanda Knox Finale, Teases 'Tell Me Lies'
TV & Streaming

Grace Van Patten Dives Into Amanda Knox Finale, Teases ‘Tell Me Lies’

by jummy84 October 3, 2025
written by jummy84

[This story contains spoilers from the season finale of The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox, “Libertá.”]

The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox intentionally kept the camera pointed away from the person who is heard in the Hulu miniseries’ final scene. After eight episodes of a dramatic retelling of Amanda Knox’s harrowing legal journey to freedom, the final two episodes followed Knox, played by Grace Van Patten, as she tried to reclaim her life following her murder conviction being overturned on appeal and regaining her freedom after years spent in prison and in the courts. Part of that journey was Knox traveling back to Italy to confront her former prosecutor, Giuliano Mignini (which happened in real life), but the series stops short of confirming that it is Mignini who steps into the confessional booth to end the series; the show leaves the person’s identity a mystery, and ends before that person speaks.

“I’m so obsessed with that ending. I think it’s so smart,” Van Patten tells The Hollywood Reporter. “It’s so common that shows and movies are wrapped up in a bow for the audience, and the fact that this gives space for an interpretation, I think, is so smart. I am curious to hear what people think: Who that is, what are they about to confess?” She adds, “Everything’s out in the open now. Amanda’s side is out in the open.”

Below, Van Patten dives into her process to play Knox — her first role embodying a real person — to explain how her firm belief in her innocence brought a newfound depth to the series, and shares set stories of her relationship with Knox herself. She also teases her other Hulu series Tell Me Lies, which just wrapped production on its highly anticipated third season: “Buckle up,” she says. “Buckle. Up.”

***

Where were you in Tell Me Lies world when this show about Amanda Knox first came to you?

I was in between seasons two and three. I had first heard about it while we were filming, and I knew it was going to be a Hulu show, and I was like, “Does that mean maybe I could be considered?” But then I didn’t hear anything about it for months and months, and completely forgot about it until I saw that Amanda Knox had started following me on Instagram. That’s when my stomach dropped, and I reached out to my agents right away like, “What does this mean?!” That’s when the process began.

Did the timing line up with scheduling so you could film both series?

It worked out perfectly. It was a couple of months after we wrapped season two [of Tell Me Lies] when I found out about Amanda, so it was: go, go, go. I left for Italy two months later. Then, when I wrapped, I had about two and a half weeks and went right into Tell Me Lies, and we just finished filming a few days ago. So now I’m a free woman!

Tell me everything you just filmed.

You don’t want to know. It’s scary. For different reasons, both of these shows are terrifying!

What was that adjustment like, to go back into Tell Me Lies mode two weeks after absorbing yourself in the world of Amanda Knox?

I was really nervous at first. Since I’ve started Tell Me Lies, it’s only been Tell Me Lies. I haven’t had to go from another character to Lucy, so I didn’t know what to expect. But that’s the beauty of doing something for three seasons, which I didn’t know, but it’s just kind of in your body more and something you can switch on as opposed to having to find every time and every season. Lucy, unfortunately, is in my body! So it was more about igniting her, as opposed to figuring out who this person is again.

Jackson White as Stephen DeMarco here with Grace Van Patten as Lucy Albright in Tell Me Lies.

Josh Stringer/Hulu

When it came to figuring out Amanda, from what I’ve read, you had an awareness but were not the expert that I imagine you are now. Would you say you had an opinion about her innocence or guilt going in?

I remember it being controversial. I know people felt very strongly about if she was innocent or if she was guilty, and there were both existing opinions. But I didn’t have one. I just didn’t know. And then, as soon as I started doing research, I gathered a very factual opinion, which is: No, this girl did not do this. And that it’s a way deeper and more complicated story than what I realized, and I think what people realize. Doing that research made me even more motivated to help tell her side of the story.

At what point in that research process did you then get to meet Amanda and have the choice to collaborate closely or keep some distance? How did you approach that relationship?

I was figuring it out as I went along. I had no plan. I had never played a real person before, so everything was new to me. I didn’t know how involved she wanted to be. The first time I met her was really discovering all of these things; discovering that she does want to be involved and that she is willing to speak to me, and that was so reassuring. The fact that she was so open and vulnerable with me and I felt like I could ask her a million questions and she was willing to give me the answers. I felt so thankful that I could use her, as opposed to guess. I had two months before we went to go shoot, so that was filled with speaking to her and learning Italian as much as I could.

I was going to ask if you had spoken any Italian before the show.

No. None. That was the main skill I had to work on. Those two months were definitely crammed with talking to her, and learning Italian and doing as much research as I possibly could.

You read her book, so you had read her perspective before doing the show, but as you were going through the filming process and asking questions, was there anything that stood out to you as a misconception or something the public didn’t know?

What’s crazy is that the whole thing was a misconception. Learning the details were shocking, like the amount of the lack of evidence. It’s not like there was a little bit of evidence — there was no evidence, which is crazy that two people are being accused of murder with zero evidence. But I would say the most surprising thing and the most beautiful thing I learned was who Amanda was as a person who went through this thing, and how still, to this day, after going through something so horrible and tragic, she has maintained positivity and hope and compassion for people. I could imagine that after going through something like that it could be very easy to slip into a life filled with a lot of resentment and anger, and she did not let that defeat her. She really is such a strong woman. I’m really inspired by her mentality.

Showrunner K.J. Steinberg said the show could have ended at episode six, but that going beyond the verdict and following Amanda home was always part of the plan. Why did you think it was key to tell that after story, especially with these final two episodes?

It’s so important to see her readapt to normal life. She was still only 24, and so to watch the discomfort of that reentry and figure out how to navigate real life again… I know I’ve never seen that play out in a show. That was so fascinating to me to talk to her about and read in the scripts. The build of watching Amanda decide how to regain control of her life — whether that’s writing the book or writing that first letter to her prosecutor, and how this whole show up to this point is leading up to her regaining control of a life that has been completely out of her control. It gives it a hopeful end. It shows a continuation of an existing person who actually went through this, and that that’s not the story — the story is who she is now. That’s what I hope people take away from it.

With Amanda co-writing the last episode, “Libertá,” viewers get a lot of insight into her via her inner monologue in your finale scenes. What was that experience like, and was she on set for any of that final episode?

She was. She was there the last two or so weeks of filming, so she was there with the big Mignini scene at the end, which was super emotional and shot over two or three days. It was a scene we all really wanted to get right. It’s a very long, complex scene with so much going on between two people. So that one was tedious and emotional, and the fact that she was there for that made me feel very emotional doing it.

Were there any big questions you had for her when making the finale?

Any time she gave me validation that I was portraying her emotions authentically meant the world to me. She said that a few times throughout, and it made me feel so good that I was able to give her that. That was my main goal through all of this — to help her feel understood and for people to hopefully, by watching this, understand her more. To feel seen by her was really flattering and such an honor for me.

Grace Van Patten as Amanda Knox in The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox.

Disney/Andrea Miconi

The final words from Amanda in the show are that there will be some people who will believe her and think she’s innocent, and some who still won’t. Do you feel Amanda has an acceptance that even after you release this show and put it all out there that there might still be people who think she’s guilty?

I don’t want to speak for her, but I do know from getting to know Amanda that she’s very confident in who she is, and has never strayed away from who she is, which unfortunately, in the time of her being accused for murder, was used against her. But she is so true to who she is, and I am so inspired by that. Making this show, and having a platform to help somebody tell their story, was so meaningful to me. But I’m sure this helped her. Everything’s out in the open now. Her side is out in the open. So knowing her, she’s approaching it with positivity and acceptance.

Have you been following along with the viewer response and engaging on social media?

No. It’s probably partly a defense mechanism! But what’s helped is that I’ve been shooting Tell Me Lies as the show has been coming out, so it’s been a nice distraction of not reading things. It’s the first thing I’ve ever been a part of where I’m just so proud of what we did. Not even necessarily the outcome; it’s such a great show. But I’m so proud of the actual product and of everyone who came together to make this, and the reason we all made this. So I’m kind of with Amanda where people can hate it or love it, but I feel like we did something really important and good. There’s less weight to the response because of that.

In the final scene of the series, we don’t see who has arrived to confess. We only hear them breathe and see that it’s someone the priest recognizes. Do you all want people to make their own opinions about who’s in that confessional booth?

I’m so obsessed with that ending. I think it’s so smart. It’s so common that shows and movies are wrapped up in a bow for the audience. And the fact that this gives space for an interpretation, I think, is just so smart. I am curious to hear what people think: Who that is, what are they about to confess? I’m curious for that reaction.

What do you hope people take away from that final scene?

I hope that through watching this show, they really see who Amanda is, and can gather and form an opinion based on understanding her more and based on the facts. I really think it’s a story about this young girl regaining control of her life and never giving up, and being extremely resilient through it all and not letting a bad thing define and destroy her. That’s really inspiring to anybody, no matter what scale of tragedy you’ve gone through, or trauma. You can take that and use that mentality through any aspect of your life. I think that’s so beautiful.

This story also brings both Raffaele Sollecito and Meredith Kercher into the forefront. KJ has called them both the “oft-forgotten” victims in this story. What was it like to be a part of getting their stories out?

There is no doubt that this story involves so much pain and so much tragedy from multiple people and families, and that’s why we approached it with as much sensitivity as possible. I hope people see this was a tragic story on so many different levels, and that it is not one person’s story. It’s, unfortunately, the pain and tragedy of a lot of people involved.

What was it like working with Monica Lewinsky [who is a producer] on this project, and how did she help steer what you all hope to accomplish?

I look up to her so much. I think she’s so extremely smart and cool, and what she’s doing with her life, reclaiming her own story in her own way, is so inspiring. The team of Amanda and Monica is so badass. Honestly, just being able to talk to Monica about not only this show but her life and life in general, I learned so much from every conversation.

Looking ahead to what’s next for you, what is the most non-spoiler tease you can share about season three of Tell Me Lies?

Buckle up. (Laughs.) Buckle. Up. I mean, it’s absolute chaos in the purest form, with everybody. People can get excited about the drama for every character — everyone’s going through it.

***

The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox is now streaming all episodes on Hulu. Read THR’s recent cover story with Amanda Knox and Monica Lewinsky.

October 3, 2025 0 comments
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Alice + Olivia Spring 2026 Dives Into Americana Motifs
Fashion

Alice + Olivia Spring 2026 Dives Into Americana Motifs

by jummy84 September 15, 2025
written by jummy84


Since Lady Liberty was booked and busy on Saturday afternoon, Alice + Olivia created the next best thing: a 20-foot-tall floral gown draped over the entrance to its Spring 2026 presentation worn by a model mirroring the Statue of Liberty’s iconic pose. In celebration of the United States’s upcoming …

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September 15, 2025 0 comments
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