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Go Country 105

Look stylish and hungover: Ella Langley selling her tour looks for charity

Forget about a tour T-shirt or cap: now you’ve got a chance to actually own the outfits that Ella Langley wore onstage during her recent Hungover tour.

Over 100 pieces, including dresses, denim and shoes, will be sold online during a “closet auction” that starts Dec. 8 at 9 p.m. ET and runs through Dec. 10 at 9 p.m. ET. You can get the details by signing up at the link on Ella’s Instagram Story.

A portion of the proceeds will go to Pawsitive Rescue Division, a dog rescue group in Tennessee; Ella is a founding board member. The group shared the news of the auction on its Instagram Story and wrote, “So grateful to have this incredible woman on our board!!! Now go shop her closet and help us save some pups!”

In other Ella news, she acknowledged on Instagram that Kelly Clarkson covered her hit “weren’t for the win” during the Kellyoke segment of her talk show Tuesday. Ella shared the performance, wrote “Insane” and added the “mind blown” emoji. Ella also commented “Insane” on Kelly’s original post.

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Go Country 105

‘Wild’ collab confirmed: Lainey Wilson joining Aerosmith and Yungblud on new version of song

After several very, very obvious hints, it’s now been confirmed that Lainey Wilson is the “cowgirl” who’ll be joining Rock & Roll Hall of Famers’ Aerosmith and British singer Yungblud on a new version of their song “Wild Woman.”

On Instagram, all three acts posted video of Yungblud FaceTiming Lainey and chatting about how she’s going to approach her part of the song. At one point Yungblud, who has a thick British accent, told Lainey, “I love your accent, man, it’s epic.”

Lainey, who has an extremely thick accent herself, replied, “Back atcha.” “I’m telling you, man, battle of the accents,” Yungblud added.

“Wild Woman” will be released Friday. The original version appears on Aerosmith and Yungblud’s top-10 EP One More Time.

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Go Country 105

Dustin Lynch’s annual charity benefit raises thousands for kids & families

Dustin Lynch went back to his old school on Tuesday night to help out the folks in his hometown of Tullahoma, Tennessee.

The 10th edition of his annual Dustin Lynch and Friends Benefit Concert, held at Tullahoma High School, raised over $32,000 for local kids and families. Specifically, the money will be used to build an inclusive playground for special needs children and support Isaiah 117 House, where kids awaiting foster placement can feel safe and at home. Donations were also collected for Toys for Tots during the show.

Dustin wraps up his stint on the Two for the Road tour with Scotty McCreery on Saturday; he’ll be finished with touring for the year on Dec. 13. In January, he’ll return to Luke Bryan‘s Crash My Playa destination festival in Cancun. As the unofficial “mayor” of Crash My Playa, he’ll host his now-legendary Pool Situation pool party.

 

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Go Country 105

Kelsea Ballerini and HARDY tracks among ‘Rolling Stone”s 100 Best Songs of 2025

If you saw Kelsea Ballerini perform her song “I Sit in Parks” during November’s CMA Awards and thought, “That’s one of the best songs I’ve heard all year” – well, you weren’t alone.

The song has been chosen as one of Rolling Stone‘s 100 Best Songs of 2025, and it’s one of the very few country tracks on the list; it comes in at #90. The publication notes, “Kelsea Ballerini dropped the most honest country song of the year with this just over two-minute diary entry about all that she's sacrificed in pursuit of her career. … [H]er bare emotion makes the song a must-hear for anyone who's set aside life in favor of work.”

Coincidentally, or perhaps not, Kelsea actually mentions Rolling Stone in the lyrics of “I Sit in Parks.”

HARDY also has a song on the list: “Luckiest Man Alive,” from his Country! Country! album, comes in at #87. While Rolling Stone notes that the song isn’t a single, it adds, “That doesn't mean it wasn't one of the most feel-good sing-along pop country songs of the year.”

Calling it a “three-minute earworm,” the publication writes, “It may contain just about all the Music Row tropes the genre gets ridiculed for (jacked-up truck, SEC football, and a Hank [Williams] Jr. quote? Check, check, and check), but it sure works.”

Much higher up on the list is Hailey Whitters‘ “High on the Hog,” coming in at #64. Rolling Stone describes it as a “whip-smart, fiddle-heavy travelogue about the trials and travails of being an aspiring heartland country star” and praises its “throwback earworm arrangement that conjures everyone from Miranda Lambert to Alan Jackson.”

By the way, Rolling Stone‘s #1 song of 2025 is Lady Gaga‘s “Abracadabra.”

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Go Country 105

Megan Moroney floats Cloud 9 tour dates for 2026

Megan Moroney is ready to take her fans to Cloud 9.

The “Six Months Later” singer has just announced The Cloud 9 tour, to go along with her new album of the same name. The international headline tour begins May 29 in Columbus, Ohio. After the North American leg wraps at Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena on Aug. 21, Megan will float on over to Europe for a set of dates that start Sept. 13 in Norway. The tour is set to conclude in Belfast on Oct. 1.

All tickets go on sale Dec. 12 at 10 a.m. local time at MeganMoroney.com.

Megan’s new album, Cloud 9, will be out Feb. 20.

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Go Country 105

Riley Green, Keith Urban, The Red Clay Strays to headline Country Thunder Wisconsin

Country Thunder Wisconsin returns for its 2026 edition in July with a star-studded lineup.

The festival, scheduled to run July 16-19 in Twin Lakes, will feature Riley Green, Keith Urban, Gavin Adcock and newly minted CMA Vocal Group of the Year The Red Clay Strays as headliners.

Also part of the lineup are Shaboozey, Nate Smith, Ian Munsick and Gretchen Wilson, while George Birge, Dasha, Corey Kent, Zach John King, Annie Bosko and ’90s stars Lonestar and Mark Chesnutt round out the bill. Many more artists will be playing throughout the weekend as well.

Tickets and packages are now available at CountryThunder.com, and you can secure your spot for just $20 down. There are also camping options available, including the opportunity to rent your very own private port-a-potty for your campsite.

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News Daypop

Federal agents expand immigration operations to New Orleans, Minneapolis

Federal immigration authorities have launched a sweeping enforcement push in New Orleans and Minneapolis, broadening the Trump administration’s ongoing crackdown in cities with policies limiting cooperation with federal immigration officials.

The Department of Homeland Security confirmed Wednesday that the New Orleans operation—officially named “Catahoula Crunch”—is aimed at locating immigrants who were released after arrests for violent offenses, including home invasion, armed robbery, grand theft auto and rape.  According to DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin, the initiative targets “violent criminals” and accused local “sanctuary” policies of keeping federal agents from taking custody of people they believe should have been detained.

Officials have not disclosed how many agents are being sent, though earlier planning documents indicated DHS sought to deploy around 200 Border Patrol personnel and requested armored vehicles. Two U.S. officials confirmed the agency has asked the Defense Department for permission to use Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base New Orleans as a staging site. The FBI’s New Orleans office said it will work with Louisiana State Police to help protect deployed immigration agents and prevent interference with their enforcement activities.

New Orleans is one of several Democratic-led cities to see similar federal deployments; the administration has already carried out operations in Los Angeles, Chicago, Washington, D.C., and Charlotte. Despite the stated focus on “the worst of the worst,” past sweeps have drawn scrutiny. In Chicago, for example, Justice Department records show that out of more than 600 people detained during a previous blitz, only 16 had prior criminal convictions.

Local officials and community groups in New Orleans expressed concern about the scale and impact of the operation. Mayor-elect Helena Moreno said she had reviewed reports of due-process issues in other cities and created a tool for residents to report questionable encounters with agents. “My first priority is to keep our community safe,” she said, noting the need to ensure residents know their rights.

In Minneapolis, federal officials also began a crackdown. A senior law enforcement official told NBC News that ICE agents are not specifically targeting Somali immigrants, though some may be arrested if authorities allege immigration violations.  The administration has paused immigration applications from 19 countries, including Somalia.

With federal agents now active in New Orleans and Minneapolis, the administration’s immigration campaign continues to expand well beyond the U.S.–Mexico border, intensifying tensions in cities where local officials and community advocates remain wary of federal overreach.

Editorial credit: William A. Morgan / Shutterstock.com

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News Daypop

Trump will grant pardon to Democratic Rep. Henry Cuellar and his wife amid bribery case

President Donald Trump announced Wednesday that he will grant a full pardon to Rep. Henry Cuellar, D-Texas, and Cuellar’s wife, Imelda, wiping away the federal bribery and money-laundering case filed against them last year.

Trump revealed the decision on Truth Social, accusing Democrats of targeting the couple for political reasons and claiming they sought to “attack, rob, lie, cheat, destroy, and decimate anyone who dares to oppose their Far Left Agenda.  Because of these facts, and others, I am hereby announcing my full and unconditional PARDON of beloved Texas Congressman Henry Cuellar, and Imelda,” later telling the congressman, “Henry, I don’t know you, but you can sleep well tonight — Your nightmare is finally over!”

Trump’s announcement included a letter written by the Cuellars’ daughters, Christina and Catherine, who urged the president to show mercy, saying they “believe that our father’s independence and honesty may have contributed to how this case began.” They referenced Trump’s own legal battles, writing that they prayed for him because “behind the headlines, there are real people who hurt, who love, and who still hope for better days.”

Cuellar expressed gratitude in a post on X, thanking the president “for his tremendous leadership and for taking the time to look at the facts. I thank God for standing with my family and I during this difficult time” adding that the pardon “gives us a clean slate” and allows him to return his focus to serving South Texas: “The noise is gone. The work remains. And I intend to meet it head on. Thank you Mr. President, God bless you, and God bless the United States of America.”

The allegations against Cuellar spanned 2014 to 2021, and two political operatives connected to him — former campaign manager Mina Colin Strother and associate Florencio “Lencho” Rendon — pleaded guilty last year to conspiracy to commit money laundering and agreed to cooperate with federal prosecutors.

The pardon follows a lengthy case in which federal prosecutors accused the Cuellars of accepting at least $598,000 in bribes from two foreign entities — an oil and gas company tied to the Azerbaijani government and a Mexican bank — and laundering the payments through shell companies linked to Imelda Cuellar. Prosecutors alleged the payments were routed through sham consulting contracts and that Imelda “performed little or no legitimate work” for the money. The indictment claimed the congressman agreed “to use the power and prestige of his office to advance” the interests of Azerbaijan and the foreign bank, including influencing legislation, adding favorable report language, and delivering a House floor speech.

The coupe pleaded not guilty, with a judge dismissing two charges last August, though a trial had been scheduled for next year. In September, a federal judge rejected an effort to dismiss the indictment under the Constitution’s Speech or Debate Clause.

Cuellar, first elected in 2005, stepped aside from his appropriations leadership post after being charged. He has won reelection repeatedly, though his South Texas district grew slightly more Republican after mid-decade redistricting. As of this week, he has not yet filed for reelection despite signaling plans to run before Monday’s deadline.

Editorial credit: DCStockPhotography / Shutterstock.com

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Go Country 105

Lainey Wilson wishes you ‘Peace, Love and Cowboys’ this Christmas

“Peace, Love and Cowboys” is the closing track on the deluxe edition of Lainey Wilson‘s CMA Award winner Whirlwind. But it’s also the title track of the entertainer of the year’s holiday album. 

While the Christmas version adds sleigh bells to the beginning of the track, the message of the song Lainey co-wrote remains the same. 

“‘Peace, Love & Cowboys’ is my way of saying that a little wild and a little tame can live in the same heart,” she explains. “It’s about finding freedom in the chaos and knowing that sometimes the cowboy way is the only way.”

Lainey’s yuletide EP also includes “Christmas Cookies,” perhaps best known as a George Strait song. There’s also a posthumous duet with Christmas crooner Bing Crosby on “Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow!”

Look for Lainey to cue up those tunes as she plays Opry Country Christmas on Dec. 10. 

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Country Daypop

Jason Aldean, Lainey Wilson, Bailey Zimmerman to headline 2025 Nashville’s Big Bash

Jason Aldean, Lainey Wilson and Bailey Zimmerman will headline the iconic New Year’s Eve Live: Nashville’s Big Bash taking place downtown in Music City.

The five-hour event will see the trio of headliners joined by special guests CeCe Winans and the Fisk Jubilee Singers. A press release states that New Year’s Eve Live: Nashville’s Big Bash is slated to air live on Wednesday, Dec. 31  on the CBS Television Network, and streaming on Paramount+.

Deana Ivey, President and CEO of NCVC, said in a statement: “New Year’s Eve in Music City is always something special, and this year will be no exception. With some of the biggest names in Nashville’s diverse music scene…we’re proud to showcase Music City at its very best.”

The night will again end with Nashville’s famous red Music Note, dropping from the 138-foot tower, as the crowd counts down to midnight. The event is free to attend in person, with gates to the Bicentennial Capitol Mall State Park opening at 5:30 p.m.

For more information regarding Nashville’s Big Bash, head here.

Editorial credit: Debby Wong / Shutterstock.com