Miranda Lambert is a passionate animal lover, so it should come as no surprise to fans that some of the members of her “farmily” are joining her as she heads to Las Vegas to begin her Velvet Rodeo residency.
The singer recently shared a photo of three of her rescue dogs — whose names are Cher, Bellamy and Delta Dawn — on the road with her. “Vegas here we come!” she wrote in the caption.
Of course, she likely had to leave some animal friends at home, especially the larger species: Earlier this summer, she and husband Brendan McLoughlin welcomed a rescue horse named Cowboy into their menagerie, and he’s joining five horses that already call Miranda’s farm home.
However, Brendan is planning to see Miranda perform at every single one of her shows. During a conversation with ET Online earlier this month, he said he’ll be there “every single night” to watch his country star wife “do what she does best.”
Miranda’s residency officially kicks off September 23.
Fletch is back, on screens big and small! The bumbling but talented investigative reporter made famous on film by Chevy Chase in the 80s is now reimagined by Jon Hamm, in Confess, Fletch out today in select theaters and video on demand.
Hamm tells ABC Audio that as much as he loved the original, the new version “was about redefining it and coming into it with fresh eyes.”
“[It was] really getting back to the source material of the book and understanding that all of the things that Chevy brought to it in the first film are very redolent of Chevy and very redolent of the 80s as well,” he continues. “So we wanted to make a movie that was much more about current times.”
Specifically, adds Confess, Fletch writer and director Greg Mottola, “There’s a certain, you know, bit of satire about the world we live in today and white privilege and influencers and tone deaf privilege behavior”.
As for any chance of a cameo from Chevy, Mottola admits “There’s a part of me that was very, very tempted to beg him to be involved because I’m such a fan.”
“But ultimately, I thought, you know, that movie is really quite perfect for what it is and it’s out there,” he continues. “And if anyone hasn’t watched it, they should because it’s great. And, you know, we just decided not to make a nostalgia thing.”
Roy Wood Jr., who plays a detective investigating Fletch for murder, loved the original movie, and 80s comedy in general, explaining, “I’m 43, so that was essentially my comedic foundation, was the Fletch stuff, the Zucker brothers, Martin Short and Steve Martin, Eddie Murphy of course, like those things were all large and big.”
It’s true: we’re suckers for Nicholas Jerry Jonas, born 30 years ago today in Dallas, Texas. And the Jonas Brothers star has definitely packed a lot into his three decades of life.
Discovered at age 6, Nick made his Broadway debut at age 7, and released his debut single at age 11 and his first album at age 12. The head of his record company decided he preferred Nick be part of a group with his brothers Joe and Kevin, and signed them as Jonas Brothers. The record company dropped them after their first album — but the best was yet to come.
The group got a new record deal and built their fan base with soundtrack and TV appearances, including on the Disney Channel. Their self-titled second album was a hit, reaching the top five and spinning off the top 20 hit “S.O.S.” Two years of best-selling albums, hit singles and Disney Channel appearances followed until the band took a hiatus in 2009 for solo projects.
In 2010, Nick released an album with his new group, Nick Jones & the Administration, returned to Broadway and did more acting. When a planned JoBros reunion fell apart due to “deep rifts,” they called it quits in October 2013.
Nick’s next step was becoming a solo star, scoring hits like “Jealous” and “Chains.” He continued to act, wrote songs for movies and dropped one-off collaborations with other artists. In 2019, Jonas Brothers returned with a #1 hit, “Sucker,” and a #1 album, Happiness Begins. Sold-out tours and a Vegas residency followed; a new album is close to being completed.
On the personal side, Nick’s been married since 2018 to actress and activist Priyanka Chopra. The couple welcomed their first child, Malti Marie, via surrogate in January 2022.
Artists from all generations and corners of the country genre flock to the stage to tribute Vince Gill in CMT Giants: Vince Gill, a concert event honoring the living legend of country music.
Ahead of the show — which was taped Monday in Nashville — stars like Carrie Underwood, Maren Morris, Chris Stapleton and Luke Combs filed in to perform Vince’s songs. Each singer had a personal connection to him and his discography, and most began listening to him when they were young children.
“I remember hearing ‘Don’t Let Our Love Start Slippin’ Away’ I think probably at four or five. My sister and I would choreograph dances to that song and ‘I Still Believe in You,’” recounts Maren, adding that Vince’s voice had a “magical resonance” with her from the start.
Luke says that he also had a formative early childhood experience with “Don’t Let Our Love.”
“That song is just seared into my brain — almost on a primal level,” the “Doin’ This” star explains, adding that Vince’s music was the soundtrack to his first experiences of loving music. “Vince was a monumental part of my entire musical existence, no doubt.”
For his tribute, Chris selected “Whenever You Come Around,” a song that’s special to him because he’s been covering it since his early days. “I’ve always loved it. Just one of my favorites,” he says. “…I used to sing it in bars, when nobody was listening.”
Meanwhile, Carrie praised Vince’s one-of-a-kind voice. “It’s just so beautiful, right? It’s pretty rare to have a male with such a gorgeous voice,” she offers. “He’s got some of the most beautiful ballads in country music ever.”
CMT Giants: Vince Gill airs Friday at 9 p.m. ET on CMT.
Coheed and Cambria has announced an acoustic concert in New York City, presented by the Grammy Museum.
The show will take place October 7 at the Leonard Nimoy Thalia Theatre at the Peter Norton Symphony Space. In addition to the unplugged performance, Claudio Sanchez and company will take part in a conversation about their career during the event.
Coheed and Cambria spent the summer on a fully electric tour supporting their new album, Vaxis II: A Window of the Waking Mind, which dropped in June. The group will head overseas for a European tour in October.
Creedence Clearwater Revival‘s live album and documentary film focusing on a previously unheard and unseen 1970 concert at London’s historic Royal Albert Hall both got their release today.
The album, titled At the Royal Albert Hall, is available on CD, cassette, 180-gram vinyl and digital formats.
The film, Travelin’ Band: Creedence Clearwater Revival at the Royal Albert Hall, premiered today on Netflix. As previously reported, the movie, which is and is narrated by Jeff Bridges, includes footage of CCR’s entire April 14, 1970, concert at the Royal Albert Hall. It also features archival interviews with all four Creedence members, scenes of the band touring Europe in 1970 and a look at the group’s history.
“Of the live performances that we have recorded, that was the best performance,” CCR drummer Doug “Cosmo” Clifford tells ABC Audio of the Royal Albert Hall show.
Clifford says he got a kick out of watching footage of the gig, noting that the movie is Creedence’s first and only concert film.
“It’s really a funny thing. I know that’s us and I know that’s me on the drums … but when I look at it, it’s like it’s another band,” Cosmo says. “You know, I’m watching somebody else pound away on the stage.”
Regarding Bridges’ participation in the film, Clifford says, “I’m a big fan of his, for sure … I can’t think of a better narrator than Jeff.”
Meanwhile, the Travelin’ Band film will be available on Blu-ray as part of a super deluxe At the Royal Albert Hall box set that will be released November 14. The package also will feature CD and two-LP vinyl versions of the album, a bonus CD containing music that’s featured in the movie, a booklet and more.
Here’s the album’s full track list:
“Born on the Bayou”
“Green River”
“Tombstone Shadow”
“Travelin’ Band”
“Fortunate Son”
“Commotion”
“Midnight Special”
“Bad Moon Rising”
“Proud Mary”
“The Night Time Is the Right Time”
“Good Golly Miss Molly”
“Keep On Chooglin'”
(WASHINGTON) — U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon on Thursday denied the Department of Justice’s request for a partial stay of her ruling that enjoined the FBI from using roughly 100 documents seized from Mar-a-Lago with classification markings in its ongoing criminal investigation of Donald Trump — and mandated they be handed over to a special master for review.
Cannon has also appointed Raymond Dearie, senior district judge for the Eastern District of New York, as special master.
In a filing last week that amounted to a line-by-line rebuke of Cannon’s ruling, DOJ prosecutors wrote that they would seek intervention by the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals if she declined to act on their request for a partial stay by the end of Thursday.
Prosecutors cited the potential for “irreparable harm” to national security — not just from the FBI having to halt their criminal investigation of the recovered records but from the uncertainty her ruling had separately caused, leading the intelligence community to pause its own separate review of whether the classified records, or any intel sources or methods, have been compromised.
“In order to assess the full scope of potential harms to national security resulting from the improper retention of the classified records, the government must assess the likelihood that improperly stored classified information may have been accessed by others and compromised,” the DOJ counterintelligence chief, Jay Bratt, wrote in the filing, specifically referencing the dozens of empty folders with classified banners on them taken from Trump’s estate and the need to assess whether documents that were previously in them were compromised or remain missing.
This is a developing story. Please return for updates.
(LONDON) — The life of Queen Elizabeth II, who died Sept. 8 at age 96, will be celebrated in a funeral service Monday after more than a week of tributes honoring the long-reigning monarch.
The queen’s funeral — which she played a large role in planning — will take place at Westminster Abbey.
Here are all the details we know so far.
When and where the funeral will take place?
A state funeral for the queen will begin at 11 a.m. local time (6 a.m. ET) on Monday, Sept. 19.
The funeral will be held at Westminster Abbey, making the queen the first sovereign to have a funeral there since 1760.
Westminster Abbey normally holds 2,200 congregants, but extra seating can be arranged to accommodate more than 8,000 people, as it did at the queen’s coronation.
The day of the queen’s funeral will be a public holiday in the U.K.
How the queen’s coffin will arrive at Westminster Abbey
Just after 10:30 a.m. local time on the day of the funeral, a procession will begin to transport the coffin from Westminster Hall to Westminster Abbey for the funeral.
The queen’s coffin will travel on the State Gun Carriage, which was also used for the funeral of the queen’s father, King George VI, as well as the funerals for King Edward VII, King George V and Winston Churchill.
The vast procession will include musicians, members of the military and members of the royal family, including King Charles III; Anne, the Princess Royal; Princes Edward, Andrew, Harry and William; and Peter Phillips, who will all walk behind the coffin.
Who is expected to attend the funeral?
Members of the royal family will all be in attendance at the funeral, including the queen’s four children, her eight grandchildren and their spouses.
It is not yet known whether the queen’s great-grandchildren, such as Princes George and Louis and Princess Charlotte, will attend with their parents.
Other mourners at the queen’s funeral will include heads of state and dignitaries from around the world, including President Joe Biden, who has confirmed that he plans to attend.
Also in the audience at Westminster Abbey will be some of the 15 U.K. prime ministers who served during the queen’s reign, including current Prime Minister Liz Truss, who was the last public official to meet with the queen in person before her death.
How the queen’s coffin will be adorned
The queen’s coffin is draped with the Royal Standard, the flag representing the sovereign and the U.K. During her reign, the Royal Standard was flown on her car and aircraft on official journeys and at royal palaces when the queen was in residence.
The wreath atop the coffin is a collection of white roses, white dahlias and foliage from the gardens at Balmoral and Windsor.
Also atop the coffin, on a velvet cushion, lies the Imperial State Crown, the crown the monarch wears upon leaving Westminster Abbey after the coronation.
The crown — which contains 2,868 diamonds, 17 sapphires, 11 emeralds, 269 pearls and four rubies — was made in 1937 for the coronation of the queen’s father, according to Historic Royal Palaces, the organization that oversees the Tower of London, where the crown jewels are held.
The 317-carat Second Star of Africa, also known as the Cullinan II, is the most valuable stone in the crown, which the queen wore at her 1953 coronation, along with the St. Edward’s Crown.
The queen’s coffin is also adorned with the Sovereign’s Sceptre with Cross and the Sovereign’s Orb, both part of the coronation regalia.
The sceptre has been used at every coronation since 1661 and features the 530-carat Cullinan I diamond, the largest gem-quality uncut diamond ever found. The diamond was discovered in a South African mine in 1905 owned by its namesake, Thomas Cullinan.
The orb, described as a “golden globe surmounted by a cross,” is given to the monarch when they are crowned to remind them “that their power is derived from God,” according to Historic Royal Palaces.
With the crown jewels back in the spotlight following the queen’s death, there have been renewed calls for some of them to be returned to their countries of origin.
The Cullinan diamond was purchased by the government in Transvaal, South Africa, where it was found, and “presented (1907) to the reigning British monarch, King Edward VII,” according to Encyclopedia Britannica
The Royal Collection Trust states that the diamond was presented to the king “as a symbolic gesture to heal the rift between Britain and South Africa after the Boer War.”
How long will the funeral last?
The tightly choreographed service is expected to last just over one hour. The service will be led by the Very Reverend Dr. David Hoyle, the dean of Westminster.
Among those reading and saying prayers at the service are the archbishop of York, the U.K. prime minister and the secretary general of the Commonwealth, and the cardinal archbishop of Westminster.
Justin Welby, the archbishop of Canterbury, will deliver the sermon.
Near the end of the service, at around 11:55 a.m. local time, two minutes of silence will be observed inside Westminster Abbey and throughout the U.K.
The service will end with the singing of the national anthem.
How to watch the funeral
The queen’s funeral will be broadcast by television networks around the world and livestreamed online.
What members of the royal family will wear at the funeral
As working members of the royal family, Charles, Anne, Edward and William will be dressed in military uniform at the queen’s funeral, according to Buckingham Palace.
Andrew and Harry, the queen’s son and grandson, respectively, will not be in uniform as they are no longer working royals.
Other members of the royal family, including Camilla, the Queen Consort; Kate, the Princess of Wales; Meghan, the Duchess of Sussex; and Sophie, the Countess of Sussex, will wear black, as they have since the queen’s death was announced.
Female family members will also likely follow tradition in wearing black veils, known as mourning veils, covering all or some of their faces.
Where the queen’s coffin will be taken after the funeral
Following the funeral, the queen’s coffin will travel in a procession from Westminster Abbey to Wellington Arch at Hyde Park Corner.
Charles will again join his siblings Anne, Andrew and Edward, and his sons William and Harry, as well as his nephew Peter Phillips, in walking in the procession.
From Wellington Arch, the state hearse will drive the queen’s coffin to Windsor, with members of the royal family following by car.
Once in Windsor, the state hearse will carry the coffin along the Long Walk, with Charles and royal family members joining the procession by foot at the Quadrangle.
The procession will take the coffin to the queen’s final resting place at St. George’s Chapel, on the grounds of Windsor Castle.
What the queen will be buried with
At St. George’s Chapel, a committal service will be held, attended by members of the royal family and personal staff who work or have worked for the queen.
During the final hymn of the service, the Imperial State Crown, orb and sceptre will be removed from the queen’s coffin and placed on the altar.
Charles will place the Grenadier Guards’ Queen’s Company Camp Colour — a smaller version of the Royal Standard — on the coffin.
Before the coffin is lowered into the royal vault, Lord Chamberlain Andrew Parker — the most senior official in the queen’s royal household – will “break” his Wand of Office and place it on the coffin, signifying the end of the reign.
Where the queen will be buried
The queen will be buried at the King George VI Memorial Chapel at St. George’s Chapel, alongside Prince Philip, her beloved husband, who died last year at the age of 99.
The burial service will be private, attended only by members of the royal family.
(JACKSON, Miss.) — Mississippi ended its boil water notice for all of Jackson’s residents on Thursday, the state’s health department announced.
The news comes nearly two weeks after water pressure returned to the state capital’s residents after days of a water shortage crisis that impacted thousands of Jacksonians.
A boil water notice was in effect in Jackson since July 29, with the city saying that it needed “two rounds of clear samples” before it could lift the notice, adding: “We will alert residents as soon as this happens.”
“On Tuesday, the Mississippi State Department of Health began officially conducting tests of the water quality. They collected 120 samples for two consecutive days,” Gov. Tate Reeves said at a press conference on Thursday. “We can now announce we have restored clean water to the city of Jackson.”
Last month, at least 180,000 people went without reliable drinking water in Jackson after pumps at the main water treatment plant failed.
Reeves declared a state of emergency on Aug. 30 to address the issue.
At Thursday’s press conference, Reeves touted Mississippi’s efforts in fixing the water issues in Jackson, including increasing how much water is produced, restoring water pressure and installing an emergency pump at the water treatment facility.
City and state officials have been helping to distribute drinkable and non-drinkable water to residents.
The state distributed nearly 12 million bottles of water, but distribution will end soon since the boil water notice has been lifted, Stephen McCraney, the executive director of the state Emergency Management Agency, said at the press conference.