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Dave Matthews' Dave & Tim Riviera Maya 2026 Lineup Breakdown
Music

Dave Matthews’ Dave & Tim Riviera Maya 2026 Lineup Breakdown

by jummy84 November 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Come January, a beach’s worth of fans of Dave Matthews and his longtime collaborator/guitar virtuoso Tim Reynolds will be dancing on Mexico’s Caribbean shores  — eating, drinking, and being merry. Why? Well, we’re glad you asked: Dave & Tim Riviera Maya, the duo’s annual destination festival.

Going down from January 21st through January 24th at the beautiful Moon Palace Cancún resort, Dave & Tim Riviera Maya 2026 will mark the ninth edition of the sandy event. More than a simple music festival, the multi-night jubilee offers an all-inclusive experience complete with luxury accommodations, food and drink, access to world-class resort amenities, off-site excursions, and more. It’s a musical vacation set to Matthews’s life-affirming tunes.

Get Dave & Tim Riviera Maya 2026 Tickets

While the setting offers heaps of eye-catching opportunities and adventures, it’s all brought together by the music. Dave and Tim will perform three headlining sets, each acoustic, intimate, and under the stars. They have also seen fit to bring a host of other great artists to round out the fest, including Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats, Trampled by Turtles, Joy Oladokun, and Say She She.

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Die-hard Dave Matthews Band fan, but unfamiliar with one or more of these additional acts? Fear not — we’ve got your back. Here’s a complete breakdown of all of the artists performing at Dave & Tim Riviera Maya 2026, including what to expect from their respective sets, which songs to start out with, and their overall vibes.

Check out all of our recommendations below. You can also enter to win a festival package for two (2) here, or ensure your trip by exploring packages here.

Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats

Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats, photo by Ben Kaye

Vibes: Folky, soulful in a Southern way, gruff but with swagger

Pull Track for DMB Heads: “Still Out There Running,” which features carefree guitar lines, sweet as honey melodies, a soft but shuffling rhythm, and a sprinkle of woodwinds — all things DMB fans should be well familiar with.

What to Expect: Nathaniel Rateliff and his band The Night Sweats might have a little more Southern twang to them, as well as a little more swaggering soul baked into their full-band folk, but their core sound should be more than appealing to a majority of Dave Matthews fans. Rateliff’s songwriting often derives from a similarly tender place, and while he frequently takes his compositions in different directions, his sonic interests and timeless sensibilities ring similar to Matthews’. Expect a soulful performance that features both moments of quiet, folky introspection and dance-worthy, country-tinged jams.

Trampled by Turtles

Trample by Turtles

Trample by Turtles, photo by Zoe Prinds

Vibes: Bluegrass-ish, awesome mandolin playing, twangy vocals, crazy musical chops

Pull Track for DMB Heads: Even though it is kind of cheating to pick a cover, we’re going with Trampled by Turtles’ wonderful rendition of the Radiohead classic “Fake Plastic Trees.” Dave Matthews fans, especially those who like to catch the band in person or who have explored their extensive catalog of live recordings, know that nailing a cover is a thing of beauty, and TbT’s stripped-down, string-backed take is well worth a listen. Plus, call us crazy, but the soft wails of falsetto almost, almost sound Dave-esque.

What to Expect: Trampled by Turtles’ set is bound to paradoxically be both one of the more unique sets of the festival and one that makes complete and utter sense. Their bluegrass sensibilities and lineup of musicians make them stand out among the rest of the bill, but their approach to the style is heartfelt, fun, and squarely of the 21st century. So, get ready for flurries of mandolin solos, banjo breakdowns, and fiddle frenzies. For anyone who will be missing the rest of Matthews’ band during his acoustic performances, Trampled by Turtles’ set is not one to miss.

November 10, 2025 0 comments
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BBC director general Tim Davie and News boss Deborah Turness resign over edited Trump documentary
Music

BBC director general Tim Davie and News boss Deborah Turness resign over edited Trump documentary

by jummy84 November 9, 2025
written by jummy84

BBC director general Tim Davie and BBC News boss Deborah Turness have resigned from the corporation.

It comes following concerns about impartiality, including how a speech by US President Donald Trump was edited in an episode of Panorama.

The concerns were over clips spliced together from sections of Trump’s speech on January 6, 2021 to make it appear he told supporters he was going to walk to the US Capitol with them to “fight like hell” in the documentary Trump: A Second Chance?, which was broadcast by the BBC the week before last year’s US election.

Announcing his resignation Davie said: “In these increasingly polarised times, the BBC is of unique value and speaks to the very best of us. It helps make the UK a special place; overwhelmingly kind, tolerant and curious.

BBC’s director general Tim Davie and News CEO Deborah Turness quit after Trump speech edithttps://t.co/oxEamyDKD2

— ITV News (@itvnews) November 9, 2025

“Like all public organisations, the BBC is not perfect, and we must always be open, transparent and accountable.

“While not being the only reason, the current debate around BBC News has understandably contributed to my decision. Overall, the BBC is delivering well, but there have been some mistakes made and as Director-General I have to take ultimate responsibility.”

He said his departure will not be immediate and that he is “working through” timings to ensure for an “orderly transition” over the coming months.

Mr Davie, who had a career in marketing and finance before joining the BBC’s marketing team in 2005, was previously acting director-general from November 2012 until April 2013.

In her letter of resignation, Turness said the “ongoing controversy” around the edition of Panorama “has reached a stage where it is causing damage to the BBC – an institution that I love”.

She added: “As the CEO of BBC News and Current Affairs, the buck stops with me – and I took the decision to offer my resignation to the Director-General last night.

“In public life leaders need to be fully accountable, and that is why I am stepping down. While mistakes have been made, I want to be absolutely clear recent allegations that BBC News is institutionally biased are wrong.”

BBC Chair, Samir Shah said it was “a sad day for the BBC” and praised Davie for being an “outstanding Director-General for the last five years”.

Shah added: “He has had the full support of me and the Board throughout. However, I understand the continued pressure on him, personally and professionally, which has led him to take this decision today. The whole Board respects the decision and the reasons for it.

“Tim has given 20 years of his life to the BBC. He is a devoted and inspirational leader and an absolute believer in the BBC and public service broadcasting. He has achieved a great deal. Foremost, under his tenure, the transformation of the BBC to meet the challenges in a world of unprecedented change and competition is well underway.

“Personally, I will miss his stamina, good humour and resilience and I will miss working with him. I wish him and his family the very best for the future.”

He also said Turness had “acted with integrity in challenging circumstances and leaves a strong legacy from which to build for the many millions around the world who rely on and trust the voice of BBC News every day”.

During his time in charge of the BBC, Davie dealt with a number of high-profile controversies including a row over former Match Of The Day host Gary Lineker’s sharing of his political views, Huw Edwards being convicted of making indecent images of children, and the BBC’s broadcasting of Bob Vylan‘s controversial Glastonbury performance.

Bob Vylan at the BandLab NME Awards 2022. Credit: Zoe McConnell for NME

At this year’s event, the punk duo delivered a controversial performance on the West Holts Stage, using their platform to voice their support for the people of Palestine, call out the Israeli military and criticise the BBC, as well as the UK and US governments.

In the most provocative moment of the set, Vylan told the huge crowd, “have you heard this one?”, before leading a chant of “death, death to the IDF”. It led to a criminal investigation from Avon and Somerset Police, as well as the cancellation of multiple international shows and the revocation of their US visas.

Having recently given his first in-depth interview on the subject on The Louis Theroux Podcast, in which he said he was “not regretful” of his remarks, frontman Vylan hit back at British Airways after it pulled its Louis Theroux podcast sponsorship.

This is a developing news story.

November 9, 2025 0 comments
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Doc Series 'Tim Burton: Life in the Line' Trailer Profiling the Filmmaker
Hollywood

Doc Series ‘Tim Burton: Life in the Line’ Trailer Profiling the Filmmaker

by jummy84 October 20, 2025
written by jummy84

Doc Series ‘Tim Burton: Life in the Line’ Trailer Profiling the Filmmaker

by Alex Billington
October 20, 2025
Source: YouTube

“He’s a visionary. He’s an artist.” Wood Ent. has revealed the official trailer for a filmmaker documentary titled Tim Burton: Life in the Line, which debuts as a 4-part docu series for streaming online. “Celebrate this Halloween by stepping into the life and mind of Tim Burton – with never-before-seen footage, artwork, and personal moments from the world’s most beloved outsider. Uncut and unfiltered – according to Tim and his closest collaborators.” The doc is created by Tara Wood, the same filmmaker behind the other two docs 21 Years: Richard Linklater and QT8: The First Eight. The doc also features appearances by Johnny Depp, Winona Ryder, Helena Bonham Carter, Michael Keaton, Danny Elfman, Jenna Ortega, Christoph Waltz, and Mia Wasikowska, plus others. Tracing Burton’s journey from his early days at Disney to his defining works such as Edward Scissorhands, Batman, The Nightmare Before Christmas, and Wednesday. And examines how Tim Burton’s unique sensibility redefined gothic storytelling & has helped shape a creative community of artists, actors, and dreamers who continue to influence modern cinema. This looks like a comprehensive journey through his life and work. I want to watch it just to see all of his incredible drawings over the years.

Here’s the first trailer for Tara Wood’s doc series Tim Burton: Life in the Line, from YouTube:

Tim Burton: Life in the Line Doc Trailer

Tim Burton: Life in the Line Doc Trailer

Step inside the world of Tim Burton like never before. Follow Burton’s dream journey into the themes and relationships that shape his work, from the Misunderstood Monster to the dichotomy of dark vs light, and the magic of collaboration with fellow “outsiders” Johnny Depp, Winona Ryder, Helena Bonham Carter, and more. Featuring never-before-seen artwork and the untold stories of those who know him best. Tim Burton: Life in the Line is a doc series created and directed by filmmaker Tara Wood, director of the other filmmaker docs 21 Years: Richard Linklater and QT8: The First Eight previously, plus a producer on many others. It’s produced by Joe Clarke, Jake Zortman, and Tara Wood. This initially premiered at the 2024 Tribeca Film Festival last year. Wood’s Tim Burton: Life in the Line doc series will debut streaming online through her own company Wood Entertainment starting October 23rd, 2025 this fall. It will be available for $24.99 for a five day rental of all 4 episodes – head to the official website to watch. Is anyone interested?

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Find more posts in: Documentaries, Streaming, To Watch, Trailer

October 20, 2025 0 comments
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Tim Blake Nelson on His Book 'Superhero,' New Play, and FX's 'Lowdown'
TV & Streaming

Tim Blake Nelson on His Book ‘Superhero,’ New Play, and FX’s ‘Lowdown’

by jummy84 October 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Tim Blake Nelson is a busy man. Suddenly, the 61-year-old actor most folks recognize from Coen brothers movies like “O Brother, Where Art Thou?” and “The Ballad of Buster Scruggs” is hitting screen, stage, and book outlets with a spate of projects within a few months.

Before we sat down in late September for a Zoom conversation (we last spoke about his 2001 holocaust drama “The Grey Zone”), I watched Vincent Grashaw’s well-reviewed boxing indie “Bang Bang“, FX’s scruffy hit series “The Lowdown,” read large chunks of the dead-on accurate Hollywood depiction “Superhero: A Novel” (November 4, The Unnamed Press), and after we spoke, I checked out the La Mama production of his chilling and prescient dystopian play “And Then We Were No More,” starring the commanding Elizabeth Marvel.

Sul Kyung-gu in Good News

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Anne Thompson: Why are you suddenly so productive?

Tim Blake Nelson: Oh, it’s an oversubscribed year. I hadn’t planned it like this. I also directed a new movie this year that I wrote that I’m finishing right now.

The romantic prison drama “The Life and Deaths of Wilson Shedd,” starring Amanda Seyfried?

Yes. The performances by Amanda Seyfried and Scoot McNairy are extraordinary. It’s an ambitious movie. It’s not finished. We’ve locked picture, but we have a lot of work to do: sound and score and VFX. We’ll try to sell it next year.

“Superhero” is your second book, after “City of Blows.” What did you want to accomplish with this one that’s different from the first one?

I started writing “Superhero” in 2022. I like the way my wife describes it, because I think she’s right: “City of Blows” was in large part about the venality of the movie industry, whereas so much of “Superhero” is about what I love. It celebrates at the same time, even in its most ridiculously true moments that expose how myopic and selfish we can be [while] doing what we do and making movies. It’s also always loving that process. There’s more of a tenderness to “Superhero.”

The book felt accurate, like you’re trying to give us a sense of what’s going on. You focus on a movie star who accepts a superhero role that changes his life.

There is little in “Superhero” that I haven’t observed personally or heard from reliable sources who experienced it personally.

Was it easy for you to write that book, or hard? You got to do some firsthand research!

“Superhero” was easier to write than “City of Blows,” partly because “Superhero” is my second go at it, so I have more experience. “Superhero” is more of a celebration of moviemaking, and that made it more fun to write. I also knew earlier on where “Superhero” was headed, and so there was less anxiety in the writing of it as to whether or not it was going to amount to a full-fledged cohesive narrative. Also, while writing “Superhero,” I got cast in “Captain America” [“Brave New World”] as the villain [The Leader]. It became two months of paid research, being on that set and spending time with producers on that movie who were eager to share a lot of process stuff, of which, as an actor, I might otherwise have been unaware.

Your comic-book empire Sparta is run by Max Kleiner. Is he a version of Marvel CEO Kevin Feige?

It’s loosely based on my experiences. I don’t know Kevin well enough to have based a character on him. So he’s my own version of somebody running a comic book studio based on what I know of the comic book studios, and I’ve worked for several of them, so it’s not meant to be Marvel, but having worked with Marvel, and having worked on movies at Warner Bros. and all the studios and knowing studio heads, and hearing them talk about their work and studio executives, it’s all a stew.

You’ve written how many plays?

It’s my fifth. It’s directed by Mark Wing-Davey. In the near future, an algorithm has taken over the justice system, in addition to much of life in an unnamed country. The algorithm has determined that anyone who is deemed beyond rehabilitation should be dispatched [via] a machine that executes people in a manner that’s called “without pain.” You walk into this machine, and you’re gone. In the play, Beth Marvel plays a lawyer who’s been summoned to an incarceration facility to represent a young female inmate [debuting Juilliard grad Elizabeth Yeoman] who has elected to change the manner of her execution from “without pain” to “with pain.” The institution doesn’t want to. It was inspired by, not based on, Kafka’s “In the Penal Colony,” which I was reading with one of my sons. I set out to do my own version suited to our moment.

I first met your “Bang Bang” director Vincent Grashaw when he produced “Bellflower.” How did you two connect? He had some fighting background, but you did not?

Oh, I didn’t. I extensively trained, which was great. That’s part of what I love about acting. He had wanted me to [play the title role] in “What Josiah Saw,” and I couldn’t do it. But we had a good back and forth, and they asked a bunch of people to play “Bang Bang,” and actors kept saying no.

You take an irresponsible, drug-loving, down-on-his-luck once-great boxer, and make us care about him anyway.

'Bang Bang'
‘Bang Bang’Tribeca Film Festival

Eventually, they got around to me. It’s exactly the role I want to be playing: challenging, unfamiliar, arduous process in prep, arduous process making it. Why live life if you’re not going to take that kind of thing on? It’s truly what I wake up in the morning and want to do in whatever I’m pursuing, whether it’s writing a book or a play or directing a movie or getting to act in a role. And I said, “Absolutely, so long as the producers are going to support Vince’s vision.” And then the second one was, “I want six months to prepare.” And so they scheduled for that, and I went to work boxing, training five times a week, for several hours a day.

You were 59? It’s harder at that age, right?

Yeah, obviously. And also, I’m a scrawny Jew. I’m not a natural boxer, and I’m not a physically aggressive person. My default position isn’t: How do I take somebody apart? I needed the time to let the character seep in. And there was the Michigan accent and the fact that the guy doesn’t shut up. So it was a lot of lines to learn. When I go do a movie, I learn the whole part before I get on set. It’s something I learned from Daniel Day-Lewis, just a new level of prep that has been much better for me with these movies, especially as I’ve been getting to play larger roles, and the responsibility has increased. When the movies are severely under-resourced, you have to be ready to go in and get it in a couple of takes. I’ve learned that confidence. Vince is a great guy. He’s smart. He directs with no self-importance, no frills. He tells stories in the most beautifully basic way.

The movie felt gritty and authentic. It’s the kind of independent movie I admire. It’s hard to get them made.

The platform for seeing movies of that sort is now more and more the home television screen. So movies are made, you could even say, to a degree responsibly, not with a 14-foot-high screen in mind, but a small screen in mind. That makes for less interesting photography, sound, casting choices. Because the bar for recoupment becomes lower, and so there’s less money spent, but also the aesthetic bar becomes lower. You get fewer wide shots. You get less attention to text or sound design, because it’s all going to be compressed anyway, and it has slowly but surely chipped away at the artistic nature of so many of these films.

Well, “The Lowdown” is a fun example of something that you can get away with on television, right?

O BROTHER, WHERE ART THOU, Musetta Vander, John Turturro, Christy Taylor, George Clooney, Mia Tate, Tim Blake Nelson, 2000 © Buena Vista Pictures/courtesy Everett Collection
‘O Brother, Where Art Thou’©Buena Vista Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection

I’m delighted to be in “The Lowdown” and happy to work with Ethan [Hawke] and Sterlin Harjo, who is an incredible storyteller, not to mention that he’s loyal to my home city of Tulsa.

Next Up: Rookie filmmaker Ari Selinger’s Montauk true romance “On the End,” which is playing the Hamptons, Woodstock, Newport Beach circuit in search of distribution.

P.S. Like the rest of us, Nelson is rooting for the Coens to get back together. (Joel is currently shooting “Jack of Spades” in Europe with Lesley Manville, Damian Lewis, Frances McDormand, and Josh O’Connor.) The brothers have many unproduced scripts in their trunk. Let them direct one!

October 16, 2025 0 comments
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Tim Burton and Monica Bellucci announce separation
Celebrity News

Tim Burton and Monica Bellucci announce separation

by jummy84 September 19, 2025
written by jummy84

by Feeds-Bang |

19 September 2025

Tim Burton and Monica Bellucci have split.

Tim Burton and Monica Bellucci have announced their split

The Beetlejuice director and the Italian actress confirmed that their two-year romance is over in a joint statement issued on Friday (19.09.25).

The statement read: “It is with much respect and deep care for each other that Monica Bellucci and Tim Burton have decided to part ways.”

The duo first crossed paths back in 2006 but are believed to have reconnected at the Lumiere Film Festival in France in 2022 – with Monica revealing that the pair were an item the following year.

The 60-year-old star told Elle France: “What can I say… I’m glad I met the man, first of all.

“It’s one of those encounters that rarely happens in life… I know the man, I love him, and now I’m going to meet the director, another adventure begins.

“I love Tim. And I have great respect for Tim Burton.”

Monica even landed a role in Tim’s 2024 flick Beetlejuice Beetlejuice, the sequel to the 1988 comedy horror movie, as Delores – the ex-wife of Michael Keaton’s titular character.

She said: “I’m so honoured to be a part of this film and to come into Tim’s world.

“Tim is an artist and he knows how to make situations that are fantastic and horrific and comic and emotional all at the same time.

“He helped me so much to create this monster, more than a monster, she is a creature. She is mean but also charming. She is a metaphor of life. Tim told me about the character and said he thought of me, and he showed me what he thought.

“Tim loves Italy and he loves Italian films and he has showed me so many films. I have discovered Mario Bava (director of 1957 horror film I Vampiri) thanks to him.”

Meanwhile, Burton had described Bellucci as “very special” last year.

The 67-year-old director – who has children Billy, 21, and Nell, 17, from his relationship with former partner Helena Bonham Carter – told The Times newspaper: “[She is] a very special person.”




September 19, 2025 0 comments
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Tim Robinson & Lake Bell in 'The Chair Company' Kooky Series Trailer
Hollywood

Tim Robinson & Lake Bell in ‘The Chair Company’ Kooky Series Trailer

by jummy84 September 19, 2025
written by jummy84

Tim Robinson & Lake Bell in ‘The Chair Company’ Kooky Series Trailer

by Alex Billington
September 18, 2025
Source: YouTube

“You’re disgusting – these are my work clothes!” HBO Max has revealed the first official trailer for a kooky comedy series called The Chair Company, co-created by the comedy writers Tim Robinson & Zach Kanin (both worked for “SNL” for years). So this sees to be the spiritual sequel to the hilarious Friendship movie from earlier this year? The series stars Tim Robinson as a man who investigates a far-reaching conspiracy after an embarrassing workplace incident. The main cast includes Lake Bell, Sophia Lillis, Will Price, Joseph Tudisco, & Lou Diamond Phillips. With episodes directed by Andrew DeYoung, director of the film Friendship. So what did he discover? They don’t reveal in here – would could it be? This reminds me of a Charlie Kaufman comedy, it has very similar vibes to Being John Malkovich or even a bit of Boots Riley’s Sorry to Bother You. I hope it gets crazier & crazier as it goes on! Ready to watch and find out later this fall.

Here’s the official trailer (+ poster) for HBO Max’s series The Chair Company, direct from YouTube:

The Chair Company Series Trailer

The Chair Company Series Poster

“Ron witnessed a problem. It was a big problem.” The Chair Company tells the story of William Ronald Trosper (starring Tim Robinson from Friendship), who begins investigating a vast, elaborate conspiracy after an embarrassing workplace incident. The Chair Company is an 8-episode comedy series created and co-written by actor / comedian Tim Robinson (writer on “Saturday Night Live”, “Detroiters”, “I Think You Should Leave with Tim Robinson”) and writer Zach Kanin (also from “Saturday Night Live”, “I Think You Should Leave with Tim Robinson”). Featuring episodes directed by Andrew DeYoung and Aaron Schimberg. Made by Wolfmask, Inc., Zanin Corp, Hyperobject Industries. Executive produced by Tim Robinson and Zach Kanin, Adam McKay and Todd Schulman for HyperObject Industries, plus Andrew DeYoung, and Igor Srubshchik. HBO will debut The Chair Company comedy series streaming on HBO Max starting October 12th, 2025 with new episodes weekly through the end of November. Anyone interested in watching this?

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September 19, 2025 0 comments
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Tim McGraw, Nickelback Make Field of Dreams Concert Heaven
Music

Tim McGraw, Nickelback Make Field of Dreams Concert Heaven

by jummy84 September 3, 2025
written by jummy84

Field of Dreams is as emblematic of the state of Iowa as Grant Wood’s American Gothic painting. The film’s love letter to baseball delivered alongside a touching father and son reconciliation spawned the iconic exchange between Ray Liotta’s “Shoeless” Joe Jackson and Kevin Costner’s Ray Kinsella that still resonates with every proud Iowan: “Is this heaven?” “No, it’s Iowa.” The Dyersville, Iowa film site – where the baseball diamond and farmhouse still stand – attracts upwards of 100,000 annual visitors to the town of less than 5,000. It’s where cinematic history slides into home, capturing the nostalgia and tradition of baseball through little league games, “Ghost Player” reenactments, and even two MLB games (played in an adjacent field).

Over Labor Day Weekend, the film site, in cooperation with Dyersville and nearby Dubuque, brought U.S. Concert Agency’s festival experience to the small town, easily eclipsing all previous events with an estimated 33,000 concert attendees to see Tim McGraw on Saturday and Nickelback on Sunday. The all-day events were held in a former cornfield across from the Kinsella family home, with the Nickelback show being dubbed Velocity in anticipation of becoming an annual rock festival. The events were marketed separately, with tickets being sold for individual days instead of as weekend passes. Still, taken together, the day-fests proved the famed Field of Dreams quote Dyersville Mayor Jeff Jacque invoked on Saturday: “If you build it, they will come.”

Get Tim McGraw Tickets Here

The McGraw show featured Loess Hills, Dani Rose, Cody Lee, Timothy Wayne, Iowa-native Hailey Whitters, and rising country star Ty Myers as supporting acts. Crowds arrived slowly throughout the day to the sold-out event, eventually peaking between Myers and McGraw. Conversely, Sunday’s Nickelback-led lineup, featuring No Fly List, Lakeview, Fuel’s Brett Scallions, Buckcherry, Default, and Brantley Gilbert, saw both a convergence of rock and country sounds as well as a more enthusiastic crowd, which largely arrived in full by the time Buckcherry took the stage. If music does indeed help plants grow, the corn in Dyersville got an earful.

Related Video

Saturday’s concerts gave more attention to the Field of Dreams movie site itself – with good reason. Tim McGraw’s father, “Tug” McGraw, was a pitcher for the New York Mets and the Philadelphia Phillies, famed for delivering the pitch that won the Phillies their first-ever World Series in 1980. He also happened to be born on August 30th, 1944; for Tim, playing the Field of Dreams on his late father’s birthday was an emotional endeavor, and footage of that winning pitch played as the crowd sang “Happy Birthday” to the late All-Star.

As James Earl Jones’ Terence Mann said in the movie, there is something nostalgic about a site like this that “reminds us of all that once was good and could be again,” and some attendees were certainly surrounded by memories “so thick they’ll have to brush them away from their faces.” Concertgoer Scott West came from West Monroe, Louisiana to see McGraw, his college fraternity brother and former college baseball player. He’d stopped in Gattinburg, Tennessee to pick up another mutual friend, “Scoop” Maurice, whose nickname came from his time as a first baseman.

Ty Myers said of performing at the festival, “Baseball was such a huge part of my childhood. When I got the opportunity to open for Tim at [the] Field of Dreams, it was an immediate yes. I’ve been looking forward to this show all year. Tim is such an icon, and it was a real honor.”

September 3, 2025 0 comments
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