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  • Lady Gaga wrote the best song on new album ‘Mayhem’ with her fiancé

    Lady Gaga wrote the best song on new album ‘Mayhem’ with her fiancé

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    “Mayhem” is Lady Gaga’s glorious return to her dark dance-pop roots, featuring the snarling single “Disease” and bewitching viral sensation “Abracadabra.”

    But the very best song on her dazzling new album, out Friday, just might be the more downtempo “Blade of Grass,” an evocative piano ballad about undying, unvarnished love. The anthem is sure to become a future wedding staple, with its poignant lyrics about how “forever’s not enough,” and forgoing a diamond ring when you have “the air that I’m breathing.”

    Gaga, whose real name is Stefani Germanotta, says it was “very special” co-writing the track with her fiancé, venture capitalist Michael Polansky. The couple got engaged early last year after four years of dating.

    “We started working on that song after we got engaged,” Gaga tells USA TODAY. “A long time ago, we were in the backyard and he said, ‘If I ever propose to you, what should I do?’ I said, ‘You can just wrap a blade of grass around my finger and I’ll say yes.’”

    Despite its amorous sentiment, “Blade of Grass” paints a more nuanced portrait of romantic love, with gloomy imagery of a burned-down church and wearing a makeshift ring like a cast. In that sense, the song is about healing and closing the book on past relationships ‒ ideas that Gaga believes everyone can relate to.

    “It’s a love song between the two of us, but sometimes when we find love in our lives, it can also help us reflect on what it took to get there,” Gaga says. “Standing in my backyard, looking out at the ocean, I was thinking about all the people I’ve left behind or lost along the way. It was this incredibly happy moment and also bittersweet, which is why that record is haunting and beautiful.”

    Lady Gaga says she ‘wasn’t really happy with life’ when she met fiancé Michael Polansky

    Throughout her more than 15 years in the spotlight, Gaga, 38, has been candid about her struggles with mental health, substance abuse and debilitating chronic pain. It’s why her fans on social media have been moved to see the Oscar and Grammy winner so contented and creatively energized in recent months. So for someone who once believed she needed to suffer for her art, when did Gaga realize she deserves to be happy?

    “I really appreciate you asking me that question and asking it so kindly,” Gaga says. “It was recent, actually – it was in the last five years. I decided I wanted better for myself. But also, Michael and I became friends about a month before we started dating, and he basically said to me, ‘I want you to know that you could be a lot happier.’ It was hard to hear that from him; I felt a lot of shame that he could see I was unhappy. I was trying to show him I was OK, but I wasn’t really. And I think he wanted me to know that it was OK to be honest with him that I wasn’t really happy with life.

    “He did a lot with me over the past five years, through friendship and love, to support me,” she adds. “He really helped me be the boss and I can’t thank him enough for that. I feel in charge of my life.”

    Gaga reveals how one of the most memorable songs on new album ‘Mayhem’ came to be

    “Mayhem” is, in many ways, the most adventurous album of her already iconic career. The 14-track project ping-pongs sonically between sparkling synth-pop (“How Bad Do U Want Me”), funky psychedelia (“Killah”) and guitar-blazing confessionals (“Perfect Celebrity”). The tune that Gaga is perhaps most eager to perform live is “Shadow of a Man,” a disco-infused tongue-twister that she says is “one of my favorite songs on the record,” as well as her mom’s.

    Gaga worked with producers including Andrew Watt, Cirkut and Gesaffelstein on her seventh studio album, which closes out with her hit Bruno Mars duet “Die With a Smile.” The project’s infectious third track, “Garden of Eden,” is destined to be a favorite among Little Monsters, her fandom. Equal parts sexy and sing-songy, it’s a Gwen Stefani-meets-Nine Inch Nails banger, whose throbbing bass and handclaps would feel right at home at a demonic pep rally.

    “This record was about celebrating bringing industrial music and grunge together, but also with these super-pop sensibilities and 2000s influences,” Gaga says. “‘Garden of Eden’ is a song about the temptation of being in the club and all the bad decisions you’re seduced into making. It’s kind of like Level 3 after ‘Disease’ and ‘Abracadabra’ right before we get to ‘Perfect Celebrity’ on the album when the night starts to turn a little bit.”

    Gaga will promote “Mayhem” in a Q&A with fans on Spotify’s official Instagram, TikTok and YouTube at 6 p.m. EST on Thursday. She’ll be on NBC’s “Saturday Night Live” on Saturday, pulling double-duty as host and musical guest. She’ll also headline both weekends of the Coachella music festival in Indio, California, in April.

  • Gabby Windey, Robby Hoffman wedding: Ex-Bachelorette ties the knot

    Gabby Windey, Robby Hoffman wedding: Ex-Bachelorette ties the knot

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    It’s a Bachelor Nation love story − well, kind of.

    Gabby Windey, a one-time lead of the reality dating show, tied the knot with partner Robby Hoffman earlier this year. Windey announced the Jan. 11 wedding, which she and Hoffman had kept under wraps, in an Instagram post Wednesday.

    “Husband and wife!!” she captioned a shot of her and Hoffman sharing a kiss in front of a white rose-adorned altar.

    Windey, 34, co-starred alongside Rachel Recchia on Season 19 of “The Bachelorette,” ultimately picking contestant Erich Schwer and sharing a brief engagement.

    The two split in December 2022, just two months after the show’s finale, but Windey’s star has only continued to rise. Beloved to fans for her comedic timing, she took her signature humor from “Dancing With the Stars,” to the podcast circuit and now to “The Traitors” − an entirely different type of reality competition show.

    Windey began dating Hoffman, 35, a successful standup comedian, in 2023 and the two have been inseparable ever since.

    Then, when the pair evacuated their Los Angeles home amid raging wildfires at the start of the year, and wound up in Vegas − marriage seemed like the natural next step.

    Windey was the first to broach the idea, the ex-“Bachelorette,” told Cosmopolitan in an interview published Wednesday.

    “It was nice, it being my idea,” she told the outlet. “Robby was literally ready to propose three weeks in and I’m always the one pumping the brakes, but when something feels right, it just feels right. I think it was better for the both of us that it was my idea.”

    The couple was cautious not to make light of tragedy, but with the fires threatening their home, tying the knot felt like a way to stay together even if the world was ending.

    “It’s giving Jessica Simpson and Nick Lachey when they divorced and came back together after 9/11,” Windey joked. The two were engaged for a day, they tell the outlet, with Hoffman proposing over a custom-made crossword puzzle and the soon-to-be newlyweds sharing a meal at an all-you-can-eat crab buffet.

    Windey walked down the aisle in a dress she bought that day to Chappell Roan’s “Hot to Go.”

    “It was the best,” Windey told Cosmo. “In a weird way, it was giving ‘Bachelor’ because there were roses everywhere. I never envisioned my wedding as a kid or anything, but that’s part of what made this feel so right. Actually being there and feeling it, it was so us.”

    “We had no expectations. We just had love and openness,” Hoffman said.

    Recchia, who also ultimately ditched her “final rose” recipient Tino Franco, sent love Windey’s way, commenting on the post: “Congratulations to you both I’m in tears.”

  • 'Picture This' is full of rom-com cheese. You should watch it anyway.Movies

    'Picture This' is full of rom-com cheese. You should watch it anyway.Movies

    ‘Picture This’ is full of rom-com cheese. You should watch it anyway.Movies

  • Release date, how to watch

    Release date, how to watch

    STARZ’s action crime-drama “Power Book III: Raising Kanan” is back for an adrenaline-pumping fourth season.

    This season, the protagonist, Kanan Stark (Mekai Curtis), will continue to try to make a name for himself in a drug game where his mother, Raq (Patina Miller), is widely respected. A resurrected Unique (Joey Bada$$) is ready to settle the score against those he thinks crossed him.

    “There’s a lot of truth being revealed. There’s a lot of answers to questions that are being presented,” Curtis said during an interview with PIX11 News. “Kanan is coming into even more of himself. He’s getting even more of an understanding of the world that his mother kind of built for him.”

    Here’s how to watch “Power Book III: Raising Kanan.”

    Release date and where to watch ‘Power Book III: Raising Kanan’ Season 4

    Season 4 premieres on Friday, March 7. New episodes are released weekly at midnight ET on the STARZ app, and the show airs on television at 8 p.m. ET.

    How many episodes will Season 4 have?

    This season will have 10 episodes. The first episode, “Gangstas Don’t Die,” is directed by Mario Van Peebles and written by Sascha Penn and Albert Minnis.

    Season 4 trailer

    Main Cast

    • Mekai Curtis as Kanan Stark
    • Patina Miller as Raquel “Raq” Thomas
    • Malcolm Mays as Lou-Lou
    • London Brown as Marvin
    • Hailey Kilgore as Jukebox
    • Joey Bada$$ as Unique
    • Antonio Ortiz as Famous
    • Omar Epps as Howard
    • Tony Danza as Stefano Marchetti
    • Wendell Pierce as Snaps
    • Erika Woods as Pop

    Taylor Ardrey is a news reporter for USA TODAY. You can reach her at [email protected].

  • Robert Pattinson leads thoughtful sci-fi movie

    Robert Pattinson leads thoughtful sci-fi movie

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    Robert Pattinson dies so many times in “Mickey 17,” you’d swear it was a “Twilight” haters convention.

    Director Bong Joon Ho (“Parasite”) plumbs the worst possible version of immortality, and a bunch of other deep thoughts, in his futuristic dark sci-fi comedy (★★★ out of four; rated R; in theaters Friday). His adaptation of Edward Ashton’s 2022 novel mixes political satire and “Monty Python”-style silliness in the story of a hapless space worker who keeps getting killed and then printed out again like a sheet of paper. He’s also the awkward guy who has to save the day ― alongside himself.

    Mickey Barnes (Pattinson) is a macaron chef who owes a lot of money to a nasty loan shark. He and his slippery business partner Timo (Steven Yeun) need to get off Earth pronto and volunteer for a colonizing expedition to a snowy distant planet. Mickey, a lovable loser and not the brightest fellow, signs up to be an “expendable,” not knowing what that entails. 

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    Ever been in a terrible job you can’t leave? That is Mickey’s gig to the nth degree. In a spaceship on the way to their cosmic destination, he’s put in assorted hazardous conditions and every time he dies, a new Mickey gets rolled out via a human printer ― using organic waste, though, so yay for recycling ― and with his memories intact (they’re stored in a brick). 

    The 17th Mickey gets stuck in an icy cave and is left for dead by Timo, so it’s only a matter of time before he’s printed out again. But a group of Creepers, the planet’s indigenous centipede/mammoth hybrid species, recues Mickey 17. He returns home, goes to bed and finds Mickey 18. Multiples of the same person are a huge no-no, so 18 first tries to kill 17, but the Mickeys have to work together when the expedition’s banally evil leader, talk-show host/wannabe dictator Kenneth Marshall (Mark Ruffalo), wants to exterminate them along with the Creepers.

    “Mickey 17” isn’t as memorable an outing as 2019’s “Parasite,” the Oscar best-picture winner that introduced Bong to American audiences, but the director’s ability to weave high-concept narratives and thought-provoking themes is consistently impressive.

    Like Bong’s 2013 dystopian effort “Snowpiercer,” “Mickey 17” tackles classism in the spaceship, divided between the haves and have-nots. The grimly gray area where Mickey and his peers live feels like an office, prison and military barracks in one, while Marshall and his equally narcissistic, sauce-obsessed wife Ylfa (Toni Collette) stay mostly in the ornate, posh section.  

    But Bong also deftly handles elements of colonialism and identity, the disappearing line between church and state and the dehumanization of others, which is where the Mickeys come in. Whether meeting a bad fate while trying to fix the ship or dying several times in vaccine trials (RIP Mickeys 12 to 16) our hard-luck main man navigates it all while being held in contempt by everyone around him besides his steely girlfriend Nasha (Naomi Ackie).  Mickey 17 even believes he’s worthless, until the more forceful 18 snaps him out of it ― a literal example of having to face one’s self to understand his own power and agency.

    Pattinson lends a squeaky voice and melancholy to Mickey 17, making him an easy guy to root for, but provides a contrast with 18’s unhinged personality, and each enjoys a hefty character arc. Pattinson’s physical comedy is sublime here: Emerging from the human printer never gets old, and there’s one exceptional bit of slapstick where 17 is poisoned (on purpose, of course) at a fancy dinner.

    Bong tries to pack a lot into 2 hours and 17 minutes, yet some good stuff is left unexplored. Mickey’s co-workers lack needed character development, though Ackie has arguably the movie’s most powerful moment, and there aren’t nearly enough Mickeys. Pattinson’s so good, the movie begs for a full 18 variations on a theme.

    If this is Bong’s take on a Hollywood space blockbuster, it’s better than most. “Mickey 17,” led by a quirky underdog, offers a timely escape where empathy can overcome cruelty on the other side of the galaxy.

  • The 1975, Neil Young, Olivia Rodrigo, more

    The 1975, Neil Young, Olivia Rodrigo, more

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    From “Guts” to “Brat,” a star-studded lineup of musicians is headed to Glastonbury.

    The 1975, Neil Young and Olivia Rodrigo will headline this year’s Glastonbury Festival, performing on Friday, Saturday and Sunday, respectively.

    Rodrigo most recently performed at Glastonbury in 2022, when she made headlines for speaking out against the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade days earlier. She was also joined on stage by Lily Allen. The 22-year-old pop star received rave reviews, with NME describing Rodrigo’s Glastonbury set as a “career and festival defining moment” and awarding it a perfect score.

    Other artists set for this year’s festival include Alanis Morissette, Busta Rhymes, Gracie Abrams, Charli XCX, John Fogerty, Brandi Carlile, Weezer and Rod Stewart.

    This will be the first Glastonbury performance for Abrams, 25, who opened for Taylor Swift on her Eras Tour. Morissette, Carlile and Shaboozey are among the artists also performing at the festival for the first time.

    Young briefly pulled out of Glastonbury late last year, before the festival’s lineup had officially been announced. In a New Year’s Eve post on his website, he said the event is “now under corporate control,” writing, “We were told that BBC was now a partner in Glastonbury and wanted us to do a lot of things in a way we were not interested in.”

    But Young quickly backtracked, following up that his decision was made “due to an error in the information” he received and that the “festival is now back on our itinerary.” It was unclear what error in information drove the original announcement. Young previously headlined Glastonbury in 2009.

    The festival was headlined in 2024 by Dua Lipa, Coldplay and SZA, with artists including Cyndi Lauper, Janelle Monáe and Shania Twain also performing.

    Glastonbury 2025 is set to take place from June 25 to June 29. Tickets went on sale in November, and the event is now sold out.

    Glastonbury 2025 lineup of performers

    Friday

    • The 1975
    • Loyle Carner
    • Biffy Clyro
    • Alanis Morissette
    • Busta Rhymes
    • Maribou State
    • Gracie Abrams
    • Four Tet
    • Wet Leg
    • Anohni and the Johnsons
    • Badbadnotgood
    • Blossoms
    • Burning Spear
    • CMAT
    • Denzel Curry
    • En Vogue
    • English Teacher
    • Fatboy Slim
    • Faye Webster
    • Floating Points
    • Franz Ferdinand
    • Glass Beams
    • Inhaler
    • Lola Young
    • Myles Smith
    • Osees
    • Pinkpantheress
    • Self Esteem
    • Supergrass
    • Vieux Farka Touré
    • Wunderhorse

    Saturday

    • Neil Young and the Chrome Hearts
    • Charli XCX
    • Raye
    • Doechii
    • Deftones
    • Ezra Collective
    • John Fogerty
    • Amyl and the Sniffers
    • Amaarae
    • Beabadoobee
    • Beth Gibbons
    • Bob Vylan
    • Brandi Carlile
    • Caribou
    • Father John Misty
    • Gary Numan
    • Greentea Peng
    • Jade
    • Japanese Breakfast
    • Kaiser Chiefs
    • Kneecap
    • Leftfield
    • Lucy Dacus
    • Nick Lowe
    • Nova Twins
    • Pa Salieu
    • Scissor Sisters
    • The Script
    • TV on the Radio
    • Weezer
    • Yussef Dayes

    Sunday

    • Olivia Rodrigo
    • Rod Stewart
    • The Prodigy
    • Noah Kahan
    • Nile Rodgers & Chic
    • Wolf Alice
    • Jorja Smith
    • Overmono
    • The Libertines
    • AJ Tracey
    • Black Uhuru
    • Celeste
    • Cymande
    • Danilo Plessow
    • Djo
    • Future Islands
    • Girl In Red
    • Goat
    • Joy Crookes
    • Kae Tempest
    • Katy J Pearson
    • Parcels
    • Pawsa
    • Royel Otis
    • Shaboozey
    • Snow Patrol
    • Sprints
    • St. Vincent
    • The Big Moon
    • The Brian Jonestown Massacre
    • The Maccabees
    • The Selecter
    • Turnstile

    Contributing: Jay Stahl

  • Who will replace Lester Holt as ‘NBC Nightly News’ anchor?

    Who will replace Lester Holt as ‘NBC Nightly News’ anchor?

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    Lester Holt’s replacement at “NBC Nightly News” has been revealed.

    Tom Llamas will succeed Holt as anchor and managing editor of the nightly news broadcast, NBC News announced on Wednesday.

    The network said Llamas will take over after Holt signs off in early summer, but no specific date for the transition was shared.

    Llamas, who has more than 25 years of experience in broadcast journalism, has served as fill-in anchor for Holt at “NBC Nightly News” since 2021, and he anchors the streaming newscast “Top Story with Tom Llamas.” He is a senior national correspondent for the network and also reports for the “Today” show. Llamas previously worked at ABC, where he anchored “World News Tonight” on weekends and served as fill-in anchor for David Muir.

    Llamas will continue to anchor “Top Story” for NBC News NOW on weeknights.

    “Anchoring ‘NBC Nightly News’ is a profound honor and one that carries tremendous responsibility,” he said in a statement. “I look forward to working with the world class journalists at ‘Nightly News’ and ‘Top Story’ to bring viewers the most important stories every night.”

    Llamas added, “Lester Holt is a great man and one of the most trusted broadcasters of our time. Just likeLester, I promise to be devoted to our viewers and dedicated to the truth.”

    In a note to staff, NBC News Executive Vice President of Programming Janelle Rodriguez said Llamas has “consistently demonstrated the integrity, experience, and passion needed to carry on the tradition of ‘Nightly News.’” She also thanked Holt for “his leadership and for helping us chart a new path forward following his signoff this summer.”

    Why did Lester Holt step down from ‘NBC Nightly News’?

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    Lester Holt, Joy Reid leave TV anchor gigs amid shuffling lineups

    Joy Reid and Lester Holt are the latest to leave their positions as television news adjusts to changing audience habits.

    The news comes just over a week after Holt announced he would step away from “NBC Nightly News,” although he will remain with NBC and move into a full-time role at “Dateline.”

    In a previous note to staff, Holt said the “time has come for me to step away from” the role after 10 years, adding, “It has truly been the honor of a lifetime to work with each of you every day, keeping journalism as our true north and our viewers at the center of everything we do.”

    Holt also said he was excited to be “expanding my footprint on the broadcast and crafting ‘Dateline’ hours on subjects I care deeply about” in his new full-time role there, noting it would allow him to “work more closely with my enormously talented friends at ‘Dateline’ as the broadcast continues to grow and attract new viewers in new places.”

    Holt is one of numerous news anchors stepping away from their positions in recent months amid changes in the television news landscape. The list of departing broadcasters also includes Joy Reid, whose show was recently canceled at MSNBC, and the “Today” show’s Hoda Kotb, who said she decided to leave her role to spend more time with her children.

    Norah O’Donnell also signed off as anchor of the “CBS Evening News” in January. She announced her decision in July, saying that after spending “12 years in the anchor chair here at CBS News, connected to a daily broadcast and the rigors of a relentless news cycle,” it was “time to do something different.” CBS replaced O’Donnell with John Dickerson and Maurice DuBois.

  • See the schedule of when new episodes come out

    See the schedule of when new episodes come out

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    The second season of smash-hit series “Severance” is in full swing on Apple TV+.

    According to the streaming platform, the series follows Mark Scout (Adam Scott), who leads a team at Lumon Industries whose employees have undergone a severance procedure that surgically divides their memories between their work and personal lives.

    In the second season of the Emmy Award-winning series, Mark and his friends learn “the dire consequences of trifling with the severance barrier, leading them further down a path of woe,” the series description on Apple TV+ reads.

    Here’s what you need to know about Season 2 of “Severance,” including how many episodes the season has and when new episodes come out.

    Watch Severance on Apple TV+

    When does the next episode of ‘Severance’ come out?

    Season 2 premiered on Friday, Jan. 17 and new episodes will come out every Friday through March 21, according to Apple TV+.

    The next episode, titled “Sweet Vitriol,” is set to be released on Friday, March 7.

    Apple TV+ said in a statement to Today.com last month that new episodes will be available at different times around the world.

    “It would be safe to assume that the first episode of Season 2, as well as new episodes of ‘Severance’ thereafter, will become available to stream Thursday evenings PT and ET, and Friday around the world,” the statement obtained by Today.com read.

    How many episodes are in ‘Severance’ Season 2?

    The second season will contain 10 episodes, according to the streamer. Season 1 had nine episodes.

    ‘Severance’ Season 2 episode schedule

    The ninth episode is scheduled to debut on March 14, while the season finale will be available beginning March 21.

    We occasionally recommend interesting products and services. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. USA TODAY Network newsrooms operate independently, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

    Gabe Hauari is a national trending news reporter at USA TODAY. You can follow him on X @GabeHauari or email him at [email protected].

  • Premiere date, cast; where to watch, stream

    Premiere date, cast; where to watch, stream

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    The second part of Season 8 of “9-1-1” is set to premiere this week.

    The network says the mid-season premiere, titled “Sob Stories,” will see the 118 respond to a fire at a local animal shelter and race to evacuate all the animals. “Meanwhile, Maddie takes a 9-1-1 call that sets her on a quest for answers,” the episode’s logline reads.

    The first part of Season 8 premiered on Sept. 26 with new episodes airing weekly on Thursday nights. The eighth and final episode of Season 8, Part 1 aired on Nov. 21.

    Here’s what to know about Season 8, Part 2, including when it premieres and how you can watch.

    When does ‘9-1-1’ Season 8, Part 2 premiere?

    ABC announced in November that “9-1-1” would return for its midseason premiere on Thursday, March 6 at 8 p.m. ET/PT.

    How to watch ‘9-1-1’ Season 8, Part 2 premiere

    “9-1-1” Season 8 will air on ABC. New episodes will premiere every Thursday at 8 p.m. ET. They will also be available live on the ABC app and ABC website.

    Those without traditional cable can use streaming services with live television options like Hulu + Live TV, FuboTV, YouTube TV or Sling to watch.

    All new episodes will also be available to stream on Hulu the next day.

    ‘9-1-1’ Season 8 cast

    • Oliver Stark as Evan “Buck” Buckley
    • Jennifer Love Hewitt as Maddie Kendall
    • Kenneth Choi as Howie “Chimney” Han
    • Angela Bassett as Athena Grant
    • Peter Krause as Bobby Nash
    • Aisha Hinds as Henrietta “Hen” Wilson
    • Ryan Guzman as Eddie Diaz
    • Corinne Massiah as May Grant
    • Marcanthonee Jon Reis as Harry Grant
    • Lou Ferrigno Jr. as Tommy Kinard
    • Gavin McHugh as Christopher Diaz

    We occasionally recommend interesting products and services. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. USA TODAY Network newsrooms operate independently, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

    Contributing: Mary Walrath-Holdridge, USA TODAY

    Gabe Hauari is a national trending news reporter at USA TODAY. You can follow him on X @GabeHauari or email him at [email protected].

  • Dates, how to get tickets

    Dates, how to get tickets

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    This summer, Music City will embrace rodeo culture with more star power than ever before.

    Country music luminaries Reba McEntire, Tim McGraw and Jelly Roll are set to perform at Music City Rodeo, Nashville’s first-ever Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association rodeo.

    The three-day festival will feature bull riding, barrel racing, team roping and broncs, with cowboys and cowgirls competing for over $200,000 in prizes. Music City Rodeo founding members McEntire, McGraw and Jelly Roll will headline a concert at the venue each night.

    Additionally, Music City Rodeo is joining Nashville’s Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt to benefit the patients and families it serves. A portion of all event proceeds will support their mission of providing world-class pediatric healthcare and research. 

    Here’s everything you need to know about Music City Rodeo.

    When is Music City Rodeo?

    Music City Rodeo will come to Bridgestone Arena in Nashville on May 29, 30 and 31.

    The artist lineup is as follows:

    • Reba McEntire: May 29
    • Jelly Roll: May 30
    • Tim McGraw: May 31

    How to get tickets to Music City Rodeo

    Tickets for Music City Rodeo go on sale Friday. Concertgoers can make their purchase via the official Music City Rodeo website or Ticketmaster.

    A select amount of presale tickets, including VIP packages, will be available beginning Wednesday, starting at $50.

    Reba McEntire to co-headline Music City Rodeo

    For lifelong rodeo cowgirl McEntire, the “Fancy” vocalist has often noted that performing the National Anthem at the 1974 National Finals Rodeo launched her mainstream country music career.

    “The rodeo is in my blood. My daddy and grandpap were world-champion steer ropers. I dreamed of being a barrel racer, but I wasn’t that great at it,” McEntire told The Tennessean, part of the USA TODAY network. “Instead, I found my place singing at the rodeo. … Being a part of this historic event in Nashville feels like coming full circle.”

    McEntire’s fellow headliner Jelly Roll, a Nashville native, said having a role in Music City Rodeo’s debut “felt like a chance to be a part of a history-making event for the city.”

    Joining McEntire and Jelly Roll is country icon McGraw. Over the past three decades, the “Don’t Take the Girl” singer has played at nearly two dozen rodeo events nationwide.

    “Country music and rodeo go hand in hand,” McGraw said, adding that it “was time to bring the magic of the rodeo home to Nashville.”