Tag Archives: Cowboy

Courtney Love Says Taylor Swift Is “Not Important,” Disses Beyoncé’s ‘Cowboy Carter’ – Hollywood Reporter

  1. Courtney Love Says Taylor Swift Is “Not Important,” Disses Beyoncé’s ‘Cowboy Carter’ Hollywood Reporter
  2. Courtney Love on Lana, Beyoncé, Madonna… and why Taylor Swift doesn’t matter Evening Standard
  3. Taylor Swift ‘is not important’: Courtney Love also bashes Beyonce, Lana Del Rey, others; incites furious hate train Hindustan Times
  4. Courtney Love Says Taylor Swift Is ‘Not Interesting as an Artist’ Billboard
  5. Taylor Swift Is “Not Important,” Chides Courtney Love; Hole Singer Also Takes Swipes At Beyoncé, Madonna & Lana Del Rey Deadline

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Michelle Obama says Beyoncé’s ‘Cowboy Carter’ album is a reminder to vote – Fox News

  1. Michelle Obama says Beyoncé’s ‘Cowboy Carter’ album is a reminder to vote Fox News
  2. Beyoncé “Jolene” cover: Why everyone is arguing about her changes to Dolly Parton’s song on Cowboy Carter. Slate
  3. Opinion | With ‘Cowboy Carter,’ Beyoncé demands respect and highlights travesty – The Washington Post The Washington Post
  4. Michelle Obama’s Shoutout To Beyonce Takes A Political Turn HuffPost
  5. Beyoncé Used Original Beatles Backing Track for ‘Blackbird’ on New ‘Cowboy Carter’ Version, With Paul McCartney’s Blessing Variety

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Beyoncé Used Original Beatles Backing Track for ‘Blackbird’ on New ‘Cowboy Carter’ Version, With Paul McCartney’s Blessing – Variety

  1. Beyoncé Used Original Beatles Backing Track for ‘Blackbird’ on New ‘Cowboy Carter’ Version, With Paul McCartney’s Blessing Variety
  2. Beyoncé’s ‘Cowboy Carter’ Is a Vivid Mission Statement. Let’s Discuss. The New York Times
  3. The Black History Story Behind One of Beyoncé’s ‘Cowboy Carter’ Song Covers Yahoo Life
  4. Beyoncé “Jolene” cover: Why everyone is arguing about her changes to Dolly Parton’s song on Cowboy Carter. Slate
  5. Beyoncé’s All-American Futurism The Atlantic

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June Carter Cash’s Daughter Carlene Questions Negativity Towards Beyoncé’s ‘Cowboy Carter’ Album: ‘In My Book, She’s One of Us Carter Women’ – Variety

  1. June Carter Cash’s Daughter Carlene Questions Negativity Towards Beyoncé’s ‘Cowboy Carter’ Album: ‘In My Book, She’s One of Us Carter Women’ Variety
  2. How Beyoncé answered Dolly Parton’s call and switched up the lyrics to ‘Jolene’ CNN
  3. Beyoncé Stands Her Ground The Atlantic
  4. Miley Cyrus Praises Beyoncé After Release of ‘Cowboy Carter’ Duet ‘II Most Wanted’ PEOPLE
  5. The inspirations behind Beyoncé’s genre-defying album ‘Cowboy Carter’ PBS NewsHour

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Cowboy Baseball Advances To Big 12 Tourney Title Game – Oklahoma State University Athletics – Oklahoma State Athletics

  1. Cowboy Baseball Advances To Big 12 Tourney Title Game – Oklahoma State University Athletics Oklahoma State Athletics
  2. Oklahoma State baseball defeats Texas Tech, forces Big 12 Tournament elimination rematch Oklahoman.com
  3. Saturday morning top stories: Texas Tech takes on Oklahoma State in Arlington KCBD
  4. Cowboy Baseball Victorious Over Texas Tech – Oklahoma State University Athletics Oklahoma State Athletics
  5. Texas Tech Men’s Golf vs. NCAA Championships Day One: Post-Round presser: Greg Sands | May, 26 2023 Texas Tech Red Raiders
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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How Pedro Almodóvar’s Gay Cowboy Short Film ‘Strange Way of Life’ Differs From ‘The Power of the Dog’: ‘They Didn’t F—’ – Variety

  1. How Pedro Almodóvar’s Gay Cowboy Short Film ‘Strange Way of Life’ Differs From ‘The Power of the Dog’: ‘They Didn’t F—’ Variety
  2. Pedro Almodóvar Makes a Gay Western With Pedro Pascal and Ethan Hawke The New York Times
  3. ‘Strange Way Of Life’ Review: Pedro Almodovar’s Short Is Homage To Classic Westerns, But With A Gay Twist Courtesy Of Ethan Hawke and Pedro Pascal Deadline
  4. Pedro Almodovar’s Cannes Short Film With Pedro Pascal Is So Hot The Daily Beast
  5. View Full Coverage on Google News

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‘Yellowstone’ Shocker: Kevin Costner Cowboy Drama Series Plots End As Taylor Sheridan Eyes Franchise Extension With Matthew McConaughey – Deadline

  1. ‘Yellowstone’ Shocker: Kevin Costner Cowboy Drama Series Plots End As Taylor Sheridan Eyes Franchise Extension With Matthew McConaughey Deadline
  2. ‘Yellowstone’ May Be Cancelled in Season 5 Amid Kevin Costner Dispute TVLine
  3. Is Kevin Costner Leaving ‘Yellowstone’? His Rigid Filming Schedule Causing Debate Over His Future Variety
  4. ‘Yellowstone’ Spinoff With Matthew McConaughey in Talks Amid Report of Kevin Costner’s Uncertain Future Hollywood Reporter
  5. Yellowstone to Reportedly End With Matthew McConaughey Starring in Franchise Extension ComicBook.com
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Amazon is bringing drone delivery to this California cowboy town

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LOCKEFORD, Calif. — Six months ago, Amazon contacted local authorities in this rural town to let them know it planned to launch its long-awaited drone delivery service here.

But as of last week — when Amazon made the news public — many of the residents of unincorporated Lockeford, with its vineyards, fruit stands, and ranches, still didn’t know about the plan.

An 82-year-old woman who lives directly across the street from the still under construction drone facility with her dog, horse, two ponies, and small herd of goats said no one had mentioned Amazon’s plans to her. The same went for two brothers busy converting the neighboring winery they recently purchased into a marijuana farm.

A man at a local archery shop commented jokingly, “Target practice!” when he found out.

Amazon drops plan to build headquarters in New York City

When Amazon announced last week that it would begin delivering packages via drones for the first time in the United States, the news took many residents of Lockeford by surprise. Amazon often embarks on its projects covertly, using code names and negotiating tax subsidies in secret, whether building data centers, corporate headquarters, or new fulfillment centers. But the big reveal sometimes comes as a shock to locals, triggering fights between the tech giant and the communities it aims to court.

In recent years, a Denver suburb, an island community on New York’s Canadian border and a small town in Massachusetts have all rallied to stop development by Amazon after the news became public. In 2018, after a hush-hush process to select New York City as one of its second headquarters sites, it nixed the plan due to major pushback. (Amazon is in the process of building its so-called HQ2 in Arlington, VA)

The team that chose Lockeford liked it because of its weather, rural topography, access to the highway and existing customer base, a former Amazon employee who spoke on the condition of anonymity out of concern for retaliation told The Washington Post. But the team also thought it was a good choice because there wouldn’t be too much red tape.

It “felt sort of cowboy and do what you will out there,” the person said.

The company said it started reaching out last week to locals within a four mile radius of the site to find out who is interested in trying the program. Those who sign up will be able to choose from a selection of items under five pounds being stored at a small nearby warehouse. The drones, which are 6.5 feet wide and almost 4 feet tall, are supposed to drop the packages on a predetermined spot from a height of about four feet.

There were some caveats: San Joaquin County, which houses Lockeford, is still processing its permits, and the company still needs to get sign off from the Federal Aviation Administration.

Google reaped millions in tax breaks as it secretly expanded its real estate footprint across the U.S.

But not all residents are ready to lay out the welcome mat.

“They’re invading our privacy,” said Tim Blighton, a cement contractor who lives near Lockeford and who said he once threatened to shoot down a neighbor’s drone flying over his house.

He’s worried about Amazon cameras seeing into his backyard. But Blighton added he wouldn’t be interested in any kind of delivery from Amazon, which he said is “going to destroy our mom and pop stores.”

“I’m not an Amazon guy,” Blighton said. “I think they’re going to wreck everything for us.”

Amazon is cooperating with local authorities in Lockeford, said company spokesperson Av Zammit, and is working to obtain permissions. The company’s drone “does not capture imagery from underneath when it is flying to its delivery destination and back” and doesn’t use that data for any other purpose. The drone project will add new jobs, too.

Some day, seeing Prime Air drones will be as normal as Prime delivery trucks, he said. “However,” he added, “if someone did shoot down a drone they would have broken the law.”

Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, who owns The Washington Post, made a big splash when he announced drone delivery on 60 Minutes in 2013. But the company has struggled to deliver on its promise, so far making just one drone delivery in Cambridge, England in 2016 before the team was disbanded. In March 2020, Bloomberg reported, Amazon hired David Carbon from Boeing to speed the project along, and some employees clashed with his approach. Former flight assistant Cheddi Skeete has spoken out publicly about his safety concerns regarding Prime Air, which has experienced multiple drone crashes during test flights, including one in Oregon that started a 25-acre fire.

German start-up creates a delivery drone capable of toting three separate packages

Amazon has tried to sidestep regulation and avoid FAA inspections following crashes, Business Insider reported last month. Asked whether the clashes between the agency and the company over its test site in Oregon could delay the drone launch, FAA spokesperson Ian Gregor said the agency “doesn’t comment on pending certification projects or discussions with companies.”

Amazon’s Zammit said the company’s drones are tested in a “closed, private facility” and that “no one has ever been injured or harmed as a result of these flights.” The Lockeford deliveries won’t be experimental, he added, and will be offered under an FAA air carrier certificate to ensure the program meets the agency’s “high safety bar.” The company is working closely with local authorities, too.

The former Amazon employee familiar with Prime Air said the team is under pressure to accomplish some deliveries this year, or the future of the project could be under threat. Amazon denies this.

Some Lockeford residents said it could make sense for them. “I’ve got a lot of room, why not?” said Tracy Clarke, a local Amazon customer who said she orders just about everything from the site.

Pam Coleman, who lives on a nearly 30 acre property not far from Lockeford, said the nearest town has only a few amenities. “It might be better in places like that,” she said.

Others were mixed. Greg Baroni is an Amazon customer who lives close enough to sign up for drone delivery. But he said Amazon delivers packages to his house fast enough as it is.

“I don’t think drones are needed,” he told The Post. “They’re taking jobs away from people who are looking.”

Like Blighton, the idea of drones made him uncomfortable. “I don’t want drones flying around my house — we live in the country,” he said.

Amazon makes its first drone delivery to a real customer

The property where Prime Air will be based, which Amazon is leasing from a local concrete producer, was already zoned for distribution, according to Stephanie Yoder, a spokeswoman for the county. The county said the company is currently in the process of getting the appropriate building and business permits, adding that it will also undergo an environmental review via the FAA.

Amazon has a team that interfaces with local governments to ensure the community is open to its presence, the former employee said. It can also be a challenge to convince customers to participate in a program that limits what they can order and requires coordination with Amazon.

“It’s a pain,” the employee added. Amazon spokesperson Zammit said customers will be able to order packages to be delivered by drones in the normal way.

Amazon has also announced plans to bring drone delivery to College Station, Texas, where city council is scheduled to vote on the plan on July 14. But at a zoning commission meeting last week, members of the public voiced concerns about safety and noise, including resident Amina Alikhan, who said if Lockeford was open to trying drone delivery first, College Station should “let them be the test site.”

But in Lockeford, many residents were surprised to hear their rural farming town had been picked for Amazon’s program.

“I have a large amount of livestock and horses, and a drone would easily frighten the animals,” said Naydeene Koster. “Horses will run straight through a barbed wire, or really any kind, of fence when they think they’re in danger. I’ve seen horses kill themselves over a flying balloon, I’d hate to see the damage a flying drone would cause coming into their area.”

“Lockeford is an old school farm town made up of mainly old ranches,” she continued. “So the idea of this newer technology invading your privacy while potentially scaring your animals is quite scary to many out here.”

Amazon’s Zammit said that the company has worked to reduce noise and will “work hard to minimize any potential disruption.”

Lockeford resident Joy Huffman said her daughters order so much from Amazon that she gets a package delivered almost every day. Still, she’s not sure she’d volunteer for the program. “I wonder how it’s going to work,” she said. “Hopefully, the drone puts it in the right yard.”

“I don’t like the taking people’s jobs away,” said Jennifer Hoy, who moved to Lockeford from nearby Lodi about a year ago. “But I do want to check it out — I’d like to see what it looks like.”

But there are also those for whom Amazon, whether delivered by human or by drone, is a nonstarter.

Amazon’s latest package delivery drone will fly itself

“My stepson worked for them, they don’t treat their employees right,” said Jay Jiminez, who stopped to pick up sausage in Lockeford on Wednesday afternoon. “If I go to order something and I see it says Amazon, I pass it by.”

A man watering his garden just down the road from Amazon’s soon-to-be drone launch site was also concerned about Amazon’s poor reputation as an employer.

The man, who declined to give his name, said his wife orders from Amazon regularly. Asked if he’d be signing up for the drone experiment, he shook his head.

“They have too much money and too much power already,” he added.

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Mickey Gilley, Country Star Whose Club Inspired ‘Urban Cowboy,’ Dies at 86

Mickey Leroy Gilley was born on March 9, 1936, in Natchez, Miss., to Irene (Lewis) and Arthur Gilley. Raised in nearby Ferriday, La., he grew up singing gospel harmonies with his cousins Mr. Swaggart and Mr. Lewis, and sneaking into local juke joints with them to hear blues and honky-tonk music.

Mr. Gilley’s mother bought him a piano when he was 10, shortly before he came under the boogie-woogie-inspired tutelage of his cousin Jerry. Mr. Gilley would not begin playing professionally, though, until he was in his 20s, several years after he had moved to Houston to work in the construction industry.

He released his first single, “Ooh Wee Baby,” in 1957, only to wait 55 years for it to find an audience: It ran in a television commercial for Yoplait yogurt in 2012. His first recording to reach the charts, “Is It Wrong (For Loving You)” (1959), featured the future star Kenny Rogers on bass guitar.

Settling in Pasadena in the early ’60s, Mr. Gilley began performing regularly at the Nesadel Club, a rough-and-tumble honky-tonk owned by his future business partner, Mr. Cryer. His recording career, however, did not gain traction until 1974, when Hugh Hefner’s Playboy label rereleased his version of “Room Full of Roses,” which had been a No. 2 pop hit in 1949 for the singer Sammy Kaye. Mr. Gilley’s iteration became a No. 1 country single.

Mr. Gilley subsequently enjoyed a decade at or near the top of the country charts. At the height of the Urban Cowboy boom, he had six consecutive No. 1 hits.

As the movement that Gilley’s had spawned gave way to the back-to-basics neo-traditionalism of mid-80s country music, Mr. Gilley increasingly turned his attention to his nightclub, where protracted conflict with Mr. Cryer, who died in 2009, had previously caused the men to dissolve their partnership. Mr. Gilley closed the honky-tonk in 1989, a year before a fire destroyed much of the building.

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Mickey Gilley, country star who inspired ‘Urban Cowboy,’ dead at 86

Mickey Gilley, country music star and owner of a famed eponymous Texas honky-tonk that inspired the movie “Urban Cowboy,” died Saturday at the age of 86.

Gilley “passed peacefully with his family and close friends by his side” in Branson, Missouri, a statement from Mickey Gilley Associates said.

The “Window Up Above” singer and piano player, who was a cousin of rock legend Jerry Lee Lewis, had performed as recently as last month but had been in declining health in the past week.

He opened Gilley’s, “the world’s largest honky tonk,” in the early 1970s in Pasadena, Texas. Several years later he hit the charts with “Room Full of Roses” and enjoyed follow-up success with a string of hits like “Don’t the Girls All Get Prettier at Closing Time” and “She’s Pulling Me Back Again.”

Gilley had 39 Top 10 country hits over the course of his career, including 17 No. 1 records. In addition, he was known for his acting roles in shows like “Murder, She Wrote” and “The Dukes of Hazzard.”

Mickey Gilley was known for his song “Window Up Above.”
Mike Stone/REUTERS
Mickey Gilley shows off his diamond rings during the 34th Annual Academy of Country Music Awards.
Kevork Djansezian/AP

An Esquire article about the nightspot Gilley’s inspired the 1980 John Travolta film “Urban Cowboy,” which was filmed at the bar and gave rise to a nationwide trend of pearl snap shirts, longneck beers and mechanical bulls.

The club was shut down in the late ’80s and was later destroyed in a fire. A high-end version of the honky-tonk opened in Dallas in 2003.

The Natchez, Mississippi, native grew up poor and learned boogie woogie piano by sneaking into Louisiana rhythm and blues clubs with Lewis and cousin Jimmy Swaggart, a future Pentecostal televangelist.

Mickey Gilley’s honkey-tonk venue inspired the movie “Urban Cowboy.”
MediaPunch / BACKGRID

“If I had one wish in life, I would wish for more time,” Gilley told The Associated Press in March 2001 as he celebrated his 65th birthday. Not that he’d do anything differently, the singer said.

“I am doing exactly what I want to do. I play golf, fly my airplane and perform at my theater in Branson, Missouri,” he said. “I love doing my show for the people.”

With Post wires

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