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Go Country 105

Brad Paisley plays Santa in a ‘Snow Globe Town’

More than 1,000 kids now have Christmas presents under the tree after Brad Paisley and Kimberly Williams-Paisley hosted their third annual Toy Store in Nashville. 

The yuletide event, which also included gift wrapping and other holiday festivities, is part of The Store, the “free referral-based grocery store” the celebrity couple founded in Music City. Six hundred volunteers helped distribute more than 5,000 toys this holiday.

A second location of The Store set to open at Nashville’s TriStar Centennial Medical Center in mid-January. 

It’s been a busy season for Brad, as he just released his new Snow Globe Town album and worked on Hallmark Channel’s A Grand Ole Opry Christmas movie. Meanwhile, Kimberly’s currently starring in 9-1-1: Nashville, which airs Thursdays on ABC. 

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Go Country 105

‘Dreams to Dream’: Jake Owen to showcase album in its entirety on tour

Jake Owen will be dreaming his dreams on the road in 2026.

The “Barefoot Blue Jean Night” hitmaker will set out on a 12-date tour of intimate venues starting Feb. 26 in Washington, D.C. He’ll play a stripped-back version of his new Dreams to Dream album in its entirety each night.

“All my friends who have heard my stuff have gone, Dude, Jake, this is you man. This is who you’ve always tried to be,'” he says of the record that was produced by Shooter Jennings. “Sometimes you need to get outside what’s comfortable, what people think you are, or think you should be, and take a risk.”

Tickets for Jake Owen’s Dreams to Dream Tour go on sale Friday.

Copyright © 2025, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

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Go Country 105

Die from a Broken Heart? Maddie & Tae go separate ways as a duo

At least for now, country duo Maddie & Tae is coming to an end, Maddie Font and Tae Kerr announced via People.

“We're leaving this so open-ended because, you know, we might make another record one day,” Maddie says. “We might go do some tour dates one day.”

In fact, the duo still has concerts on the books, primarily in February and March 2026. 

“Even though we're not gonna go on this journey as Maddie & Tae together, we're still walking and doing life together outside of it,” Maddie tells People. “And I think I'm really excited to just be best friends and nurture our friendship and not have to worry as much about the work and still get to raise our babies together. None of that changes.”

Tae plans to focus on her family, which includes her husband, songwriter/producer Josh Kerr, and their two kids: Leighton Kerr, who’ll be 4 in January, and son Chapel Kerr, who is 13 months.

Maddie’s in the process of launching her solo career, while also raising her 2-year-old son, Forrest Font, with husband Jonah Font.

“Thank you for all the love as we step into this new bittersweet chapter,” the duo wrote on Instagram. “We both feel overwhelmed with gratitude for what we've built with y'all the last 12 years. Thank you for making our wildest dreams come true and we hope you stay close by to watch us chase some new dreams. We love you so much and hope you still come shake ya booty with us on tour next year.”

Maddie & Tae launched their career with 2014’s chart-topping “Girl in a Country Song,” before visiting the top spot again in 2019 with “Die from a Broken Heart.”

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Go Country 105

‘3,2,1’: Tucker Wetmore has his second #1

Tucker Wetmore‘s enjoying the second #1 of his career as “3,2,1” tops the Mediabase country radio chart. 

That makes him the 14th artist in chart history to collect his first two number ones in the same calendar year, following in the footsteps of Post Malone, Jelly Roll, Luke Combs and Carrie Underwood.

Tucker’s debut single, “Wind Up Missin’ You,” made it to the top the first week of January 2025.

He’s set to ring in 2026 with a performance on Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin Eve with Ryan Seacrest on Dec. 31. The show kicks off at 8 p.m. ET on ABC and streams the next day on Hulu. 

In February Tucker will set out on The Brunette World Tour, which takes its name from his new radio single. 

Copyright © 2025, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

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Go Country 105

‘3,2,1’: Tucker Wetmore has his second #1

Tucker Wetmore‘s enjoying the second #1 of his career as “3,2,1” tops the Mediabase country radio chart. 

That makes him the 14th artist in chart history to collect his first two number ones in the same calendar year, following in the footsteps of Post Malone, Jelly Roll, Luke Combs and Carrie Underwood.

Tucker’s debut single, “Wind Up Missin’ You,” made it to the top the first week of January 2025.

He’s set to ring in 2026 with a performance on Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin Eve with Ryan Seacrest on Dec. 31. The show kicks off at 8 p.m. ET on ABC and streams the next day on Hulu. 

In February Tucker will set out on The Brunette World Tour, which takes its name from his new radio single. 

Copyright © 2025, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

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Go Country 105

Trisha Yearwood plans acoustic tour & adds more to ‘The Mirror’ in 2026

Trisha Yearwood will drop an expanded digital edition of her self-penned The Mirror album in 2026, with an acoustic tour to follow in the spring. 

The Mirror (Deluxe) will arrive Jan. 23 and add four new tracks – “You’re Gonna Love It Here,” “Different Kind of Hard,” “Undone” and “Country Music HerStory” – as well as “Put It in a Song,” which she debuted at the 2024 CMT Music Awards. 

“When we recorded The Mirror, I had such a hard time narrowing it down,” Trisha says. “I'd co-written so many songs for this project, and I just didn't want any of them to get lost.”

“This whole writing portal opened for me,” she explains, “and these songs were too important to leave behind. The deluxe really feels like an extension of the album, every track could have lived on the original record because they're all part of the same story.”

Singer/songwriters and Mirror collaborators Leslie Satcher and Bridgette Tatum will join Trisha on the 15-date tour, which kicks off March 4 in Santa Rosa, California.

“The Mirror Tour is really about bringing these songs to life in the way they were written, with just a guitar and a story,” Trisha adds. “It's intimate and stripped down, which is how I love to share music. I can't wait for folks to hear The Mirror in this setting, alongside the songs that have been part of my career all along.”

Tickets for the trek go on sale Friday. 

Trisha’s currently on her 12 Days of Christmas Symphony Tour, which features music from her new Christmastime album.

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News Daypop

Judge halts DOJ use of key evidence regarding new charges against ex-FBI Director James Comey

A federal judge has temporarily blocked the Justice Department from accessing or using materials taken from a longtime associate of ex-FBI Director James Comey, adding a significant hurdle as prosecutors consider reviving a dismissed criminal case.

U.S. District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly issued the emergency order Saturday in response to a lawsuit brought by Columbia law professor Daniel Richman, a close friend and former attorney for Comey. Richman argues the government violated his Fourth Amendment rights by holding on to—and continuing to search—a full copy of his computer despite the limits of earlier warrants.

In her four-page ruling, Kollar-Kotelly wrote that “Richman is likely to succeed on the merits of his claim that the government has violated his Fourth Amendment right … by retaining a complete copy of all files on his personal computer … and searching that image without a warrant.” She instructed prosecutors to “identify, segregate, and secure” the data, bar access without court approval, and comply with her directives by Monday morning. The order is in effect through Dec. 12 unless modified.

Richman’s devices were imaged under warrants obtained between 2017 and 2020 during a separate leak inquiry opened after President Donald Trump fired Comey. That investigation ended in 2021 with no charges, but according to both Richman’s lawsuit and court filings reviewed by Magistrate Judge William Fitzpatrick, the government appeared to have kept the full computer image instead of only the material authorized under the warrants. Fitzpatrick warned last month that prosecutors conducting this year’s renewed investigation into Comey seemed to have accessed that data again—this time without obtaining a new warrant—potentially exposing attorney-client communications and other protected material.

The DOJ’s first indictment accused Comey of misleading and obstructing Congress regarding whether he had authorized Richman to share information with reporters. That case collapsed in late November when U.S. District Judge Cameron Currie dismissed it without prejudice after finding that lead prosecutor Lindsey Halligan’s appointment was “invalid.”  The Justice Department had since signaled plans to pursue another indictment, reportedly within weeks, prompting Richman’s emergency request to block any further use of the seized materials. Prosecutors must now respond to his lawsuit by Tuesday, while the restraining order prevents the department from touching the data until at least Friday unless the judge lifts it.

Editorial credit: mark reinstein / Shutterstock.com

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News Daypop

Pres. Trump slams Texas Rep. Henry Cuellar for ‘lack of loyalty’ after issuing pardon

President Trump is sharply criticizing Rep. Henry Cuellar, expressing anger that the Texas Democrat chose to run for Congress again under his party’s banner just days after receiving a presidential pardon that cleared him and his wife, Imelda, of federal bribery and related charges. Cuellar formally filed for reelection soon after the pardon was issued last week, ending speculation that he might switch parties after years as one of the House’s more conservative Democrats.

Trump’s frustration was evident in a post on Truth Social, where he wrote that shortly after granting clemency, Cuellar announced he would be “‘running’ for Congress again… as a Democrat, continuing to work with the same Radical Left Scum that just weeks before wanted him and his wife to spend the rest of their lives in Prison – And probably still do!” The president went on to denounce “Such a lack of LOYALTY, something that Texas Voters, and Henry’s daughters, will not like,” before adding, “Oh’ well, next time, no more Mr. Nice guy!”

Speaking Sunday on Fox News’s Sunday Morning Futures, Cuellar defended both his decision to run again and his longstanding party affiliation. Citing the late President Lyndon Johnson, he said, “I’m an American, I’m a Texan, and I’m a Democrat, in that order.” He added that “anybody that puts party before their country is doing a disservice to their country.”

Cuellar told reporters last week that “nothing has changed” about his political identity following the pardon, and described himself as a “conservative Democrat” who intends to work with the president where possible: “If I can work and find common ground, then I certainly want to do that.” He said he prayed that morning for Trump and his family, explaining, “if the president succeeds, the country succeeds.”

Cuellar and his wife were indicted in May 2024 on 14 federal counts, accused of accepting hundreds of thousands of dollars from an Azerbaijan state-run energy firm and a Mexican bank in exchange for actions benefitting both entities. Two counts related to foreign-agent registration were dismissed months later. The couple pleaded not guilty. A separate House Ethics Committee inquiry remains open.

The Justice Department originally alleged that Cuellar agreed to influence legislation and deliver a favorable congressional speech. Cuellar has maintained his innocence, insisting prosecutors tried — unsuccessfully — to ensnare him in a sting operation.

Trump has repeatedly suggested that the case stemmed from Cuellar’s vocal opposition to President Biden’s border policies. In Sunday’s post, he argued that Democrats “mercilessly went after Henry with everything they had!” and sought to “destroy him, his lovely wife, his two young daughters, and anyone close to them.”

He said his decision to pardon Cuellar was influenced by a letter from the congressman’s daughters, Christina and Catherine, who urged him to “show mercy and compassion to our parents.” In that letter — which Trump reposted — they cited their father’s willingness to “speak his mind” about border security.

Despite Trump’s public rebuke, Cuellar reiterated that he intends to work with the administration, expressing interest in meeting border officials and saying, “I’d love to sit down and see where we can find common ground.”

Editorial credit: DCStockPhotography / Shutterstock.com

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Go Country 105

Trisha Yearwood recorded her wedding song on ‘Christmastime’

A Charlie Brown Christmas premiered December 9, 1965, on CBS, complete with a now-classic soundtrack that includes “Christmastime Is Here” by Vince Guaraldi and Lee Mendelson.

Fast forward to 2005, and that song would play a major part in the Tulsa, Oklahoma, wedding of two country superstars: Trisha Yearwood and Garth Brooks.

“I actually walked down the aisle to that song at my wedding,” Trisha says. “Garth and I got married on December 10th, so we had a Christmas wedding.”

It’s only fitting the classic tune plays a central role in Trisha’s new yuletide collection, Christmastime.

“I just always wanted to sing it,” she explains. “So a lot of people are like, ‘I don’t even remember that it had words,’ but it has beautiful lyrics. And so I just, I knew it had to be on this record.” 

Christmastime is Trisha’s first yuletide collection since 2016’s Christmas Together with Garth. More than two decades earlier, she released her first, 1994’s The Sweetest Gift.

Garth and Trisha may have to put off celebrating their 20th anniversary for a bit since Trisha will be busy playing with the Atlanta Symphony on her Christmas tour Dec. 10. 

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Country Daypop

Chris Stapleton, Brooks & Dunn to headline largest outdoor honky-tonk ‘Two Step Inn Festival’ in 2026

 

Chris Stapleton and Brooks & Dunn are set to headline the 2026 Two Step Inn Festival — the world’s largest outdoor honky-tonk — taking place on April 18–19 in San Gabriel Park in Georgetown, Texas (about 30 miles north of Austin).

Two Step Inn will showcase more than 30 artists across three stages, with multiple dance floors, making it “the ultimate outdoor honky-tonk,” according to a release. Set against the San Gabriel River alongside live oak trees, in one of Texas’ most beautiful parks, the fourth-annual Two Step Inn will also feature “thoughtfully curated Central Texas fare,” including “vintage, artisan, and craft vendors that celebrate the true spirit of Texas.”

Each day has one main stage headliner: Brooks & Dunn are slated to take the stage on Saturday, following additional performances from Goo Goo Dolls, BigXthaPlug, Tracy Lawrence, Wyatt Flores, Wade Bowen, Muscadine Bloodline and more. Chris Stapleton will close out the festival in the evening on Sunday, with performances from Randy Travis: More Life, Randy Rogers Band, Clay Walker and many more.

Ticket information can be found on the Two Step Inn website.

Editorial credit: Sterling Munksgard / Shutterstock.com