A decade after being signed to a major label, Mickey Guyton will release her debut album in 2021. Titled Remember Her Name, the project follows Guyton’s 2020 Bridges EP and will be available via Capitol Nashville on September 24th.
Remember Her Name spans 16 tracks and includes a handful of previously released songs including the Grammy-nominated “Black Like Me,” as well as “What Are You Gonna Tell Her?” Additionally, the album features a new version of Guyton’s 2015 single “Better Than You Left Me” and a cover of Béyonce’s “If I Were a Boy.
Remember Her Name spans 16 tracks and includes a handful of previously released songs including the Grammy-nominated “Black Like Me,” as well as “What Are You Gonna Tell Her?” Additionally, the album features a new version of Guyton’s 2015 single “Better Than You Left Me” and a cover of Béyonce’s “If I Were a Boy.
- 7/12/2021
- by Jon Freeman
- Rollingstone.com
The most recent in a series of missteps hit California Governor Gavin Newsom on Thursday.
Mistakes by California officials have delayed data to the state’s coronavirus reporting system. Newsom’s administration has seen the recent resignation of top officials after the data reporting errors and an an ethics complaint about a $1 billion state deal.
After the data delays, Newsom held a press conference at which he said plainly, “I’m Governor. The buck stops with me.”
But now the Sacramento Bee reported that Newsom — who promised to cut his own pay as he ordered state workers’ checks to be cut by 10 percent — has been drawing his full monthly salary of $17,479.
That, with Californians suffering after Newsom closed all but essential businesses in March, shuttering film and TV production in the state. Newsom’s Plumpjack winery, however, was open until early July. PlumpJack, received a loan worth between $150,000 and $350,000 from the Paycheck Protection Program,...
Mistakes by California officials have delayed data to the state’s coronavirus reporting system. Newsom’s administration has seen the recent resignation of top officials after the data reporting errors and an an ethics complaint about a $1 billion state deal.
After the data delays, Newsom held a press conference at which he said plainly, “I’m Governor. The buck stops with me.”
But now the Sacramento Bee reported that Newsom — who promised to cut his own pay as he ordered state workers’ checks to be cut by 10 percent — has been drawing his full monthly salary of $17,479.
That, with Californians suffering after Newsom closed all but essential businesses in March, shuttering film and TV production in the state. Newsom’s Plumpjack winery, however, was open until early July. PlumpJack, received a loan worth between $150,000 and $350,000 from the Paycheck Protection Program,...
- 8/20/2020
- by Tom Tapp
- Deadline Film + TV
Whether it’s coming out of Nashville, New York, L.A., or points in between, there’s no shortage of fresh tunes, especially from artists who have yet to become household names. Rolling Stone Country selects some of the best new music releases from country and Americana artists.
Elizabeth Cook, “Bones”
The Americana badass gets her Mad Max on in the apocalyptic video for “Bones,” a smoke-show of a song off her upcoming album Aftermath. “I wear your bones around my neck/I am the keeper of the flame,” she moans,...
Elizabeth Cook, “Bones”
The Americana badass gets her Mad Max on in the apocalyptic video for “Bones,” a smoke-show of a song off her upcoming album Aftermath. “I wear your bones around my neck/I am the keeper of the flame,” she moans,...
- 7/13/2020
- by Jon Freeman and Joseph Hudak
- Rollingstone.com
Exclusive: At a time when every segment of our industry is struggling with layoffs and furloughs because of the coronavirus pandemic, the $9.3 billion owed to many that is just sitting there in a California state Unclaimed Property fund might well come in handy.
The state of California owes the Motion Picture & Television Fund $24,025 – money the Mptf could sorely use right now in its efforts to provide assistance to the industry’s suddenly unemployed workforce, while itself dealing with the first Covid-19 outbreak at its skilled nursing facility in Woodland Hills.
The money owed is part of the State Controller’s $9.3 billion Unclaimed Property fund, which includes some 48 million separate accounts.
The state of California owes the Motion Picture & Television Fund $24,025 – money the Mptf could sorely use right now in its efforts to provide assistance to the industry’s suddenly unemployed workforce, while itself dealing with the first Covid-19 outbreak at its skilled nursing facility in Woodland Hills.
The money owed is part of the State Controller’s $9.3 billion Unclaimed Property fund, which includes some 48 million separate accounts.
- 4/1/2020
- by David Robb
- Deadline Film + TV
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