Categories
Go Country 105

Kelsea Ballerini wants fans to honor the fact that she’s ‘protecting my peace’

Kelsea Ballerini wants fans to know that just because she isn’t sharing every detail of her life with them doesn’t mean she doesn’t love them.

While doing an “Ask Me Anything” session on her Instagram Story, Kelsea chose to answer the question, “How are YOU? You heal a lot of us. What do YOU need?” 

“Thank you for saying this and asking,” Ballerini replied. “I'm in a steady and happy place right now.” But, she added, “If I had one favor, it would be honoring that I'm trying to make my personal life personal for now. Unless it comes from me, it's not from me, and that is really important in protecting my peace right now.”

Kelsea also gave an update when a fan asked her about her dog Dibs, who is battling cancer.  

“Baby boy is hanging tough,” she wrote. “Leaving him this morning for our two-week Australia stint was *very* tough, but he's steady, still fighting the cancer and has incredible doctors and care (and grandma who is going to give him extra treats while I'm gone). All of the good, healing energy you can send his way is appreciated, as always.”

Copyright © 2025, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Categories
Go Country 105

Ring in the season Tuesday night with Jordan Davis, Lauren Daigle & ‘CMA Country Christmas’

If you still aren’t in the holiday mood, tune into ABC’s CMA Country Christmas Tuesday at 9 p.m. ET/8 p.m. CT for a dose of tinsel, mistletoe and festive music.

Filmed earlier this year in Nashville, the 2025 installment of the annual special is hosted by Jordan Davis and Lauren Daigle. It features performances by Megan Moroney, Riley Green, Parker McCollum, Lady A, Little Big Town, legendary New Orleans outfit Preservation Hall Jazz Band, gospel icon BeBe Winans, and husband-and-wife rockers Susan Tedeschi and Derek Trucks.

Among the performances you’ll see:
Jordan Davis and Little Big Town, “Go Tell It On The Mountain”

Lady A, “Wouldn’t Be Christmas,” “Angels (Glory to God)”

Parker McCollum, “Santa Claus Is Coming to Town”

Megan Moroney, “All I Want for Christmas Is a Cowboy”

Little Big Town, “If We Make It Through December”

Lauren Daigle, “Jingle Bells/What Child Is This/Winter Wonderland” medley

The show will be available Wednesday on Hulu and Disney+.

Copyright © 2025, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Categories
Go Country 105

Tucker Wetmore, Russell Dickerson, Jordan Davis to ring in 2026 on NYRE 2026

There are always a lot of musical performances on Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve with Ryan Seacrest, but this year’s edition of the ABC special is especially stacked.

The live special starts at 8 p.m. ET and will feature countdowns from New York, Las Vegas, Chicago, Puerto Rico and beyond. All in all, more than 85 songs will be performed before the show wraps up at 4 a.m. ET.

Country performers include Jordan Davis, Little Big Town, Maren Morris, Post Malone, Tucker Wetmore and Russell Dickerson.

The lineup also includes Mariah Carey, Goo Goo Dolls, Jessie Murph, BigXthaPlug, 4 Non Blondes and Chappell Roan, with the Times Square performances yet to be announced.

 

Copyright © 2025, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Categories
Go Country 105

Ashley McBryde is leaving the light on for a good cause

Ashley McBryde is switching on a new charity initiative.

The Light On Fund, named after her hit “Light on in the Kitchen,” will support causes close to Ashley’s heart, including mental health care for veterans, children in foster care, ASL interpretation at live music events and rehab resources for creatives.

Notably, Ashley is launching the initiative on Dec. 2, which is her mother Martha Wilkins‘ birthday. Martha recently auctioned off one of Ashley’s childhood dresses to raise money for the foster care system in Ashley’s home state of Arkansas. Now the singer is personally matching the amount of money raised from that sale to kick off the initiative.

“Leaving the light on for someone is the same as telling them you love them where I'm from,” Ashley says in a statement. “Folks are suffering in ways we'll never see or know about, and the same way I want someone to come to my show and know that for 90 minutes, they've got a safe haven, we hope the Light On Fund will be a place of support, care, and nurturing for causes that have touched my life and my history.”

“The women in my family have led by generous and humble example, living out that the most important gestures are the ones from one heart to another,” she continues.

“With the establishment of the Light On Fund, I hope that we're letting people know that we see them and we care. Wherever they may be or may end up on life's journey, we'll leave a light on for them.”

One way to be a supporter is to buy the official Ashley McBryde's Light On Fund hat from her online store, with all proceeds going directly to the initiative.

 

Copyright © 2025, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Categories
Go Country 105

Megan Moroney to be honored as Storyteller of the Year at ‘Variety”s Hitmakers gala

Megan Moroney will be getting a special honor at Variety‘s upcoming Hitmakers gala, which celebrates the artists who’ve broken through or achieved major success in 2025.

Megan will be named Storyteller of the Year at the Saturday event in LA, thanks to her CMA-nominated album Am I Okay? Other honorees announced Tuesday include Bailey Zimmerman‘s “All the Way” duet partner BigXthaPlug, who will be named Hip-Hop Disruptor of the Year, and Big Loud, the record label whose roster includes Morgan Wallen, HARDY and Ernest. The label’s executives will receive the Platinum Decade Award. 

Megan is the only country act to be honored as a Hitmaker this year. Previously announced honorees include Sabrina Carpenter, Tate McRae, Alex Warren and the three women who provide the singing voices of HUNTR/X, the animated group from KPop Demon Hunters.

 

Copyright © 2025, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Categories
Go Country 105

‘Wild Woman’ ‘Whirlwind’: Is Lainey Wilson about to duet with Aerosmith?

Worlds collide! The CMA entertainer of the year may be singing with a legendary Rock & Roll Hall of Fame band.

The bad boys of Boston, Aerosmith, are teasing a new version of a song that appears on their new top-10 EP, One More Time.  

“A ‘Wild Woman‘ feature coming soon,” they wrote on Instagram. “There was a cowgirl who loved this song so much that we had to add her on! Can you guess who?”

The post doesn’t name the cowgirl, but it includes a photo of a cowboy hat that looks an awful lot like the Charlie 1 Horse hat that Lainey designed as part of her collection with the brand.

The Aerosmith EP is a collaboration with rising British rocker Yungblud. He commented on Aerosmith's post, “Let's ride.” That could also be a Lainey clue: She recorded a song called “Let's Ride!” with The Wiggles for their March 2025 album, Wiggle Up, Giddy Up – With Friends!

So far, there's no word on when Aerosmith and Yungblud will be releasing the new take on “Wild Woman.”

 

Copyright © 2025, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Categories
Go Country 105

Lainey, Riley & Russell make Amazon Music’s Top Hits of 2025; Morgan dominates Apple Music’s list

Amazon Music has released its annual year in review, including a list of the most-streamed tracks by users in 2025, and plenty of country hits made the cut.

Amazon Music customers in the U.S. were streaming multiple Morgan Wallen tracks this past year, including the Tate McRae duet “What I Want,” “Just In Case” and “I’m the Problem.” Other favorites featured on the list are Shaboozey tracks “Good News” and “Amen” featuring Jelly Roll, as well as Riley Green‘s “Worst Way.”

Amazon subscribers were also playing the following country hits in 2025: Jelly Roll and Brandon Lake‘s “Hard Fought Hallelujah,” Lainey Wilson‘s “Somewhere Over Laredo,” Russell Dickerson‘s “Happen to Me,” Hudson Westbrook‘s “House Again,” Tucker Wetmore‘s “Wind Up Missin’ You” and Bailey Zimmerman and Luke Combs‘ “Backup Plan.”

Apple Music has come out with its own Top Songs of 2025 list, but the only three country artists on that list are Morgan Wallen, Shaboozey and Luke Combs. Luke and Shaboozey have one song each – “Fast Car” and “A Bar Song (Tipsy),” respectively – while Morgan has 12, including his Post Malone feature, “I Had Some Help.”

Copyright © 2025, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Categories
News Daypop

Appeals court upholds ruling preventing Alina Habba from serving as acting U.S. attorney in New Jersey

On Monday, the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a district court decision that disqualified Alina Habba, President Trump’s former personal attorney, from serving as the acting U.S. attorney in New Jersey – affirming that her appointment violated the Federal Vacancies Reform Act.

In a unanimous ruling, the court concluded that Habba was unlawfully elevated to the role of acting U.S. attorney. The panel found that the administration’s multi-step strategy to keep her in the job sidestepped both statutory limits and the constitutional requirement for Senate confirmation.

The dispute traces back to March, when Trump first named Habba interim U.S. attorney — a temporary appointment capped at 120 days unless extended by the district court or confirmed by the Senate. Her nomination stalled after New Jersey’s Democratic senators opposed her confirmation. As her interim tenure neared its end, district judges voted to elevate her deputy, Desiree Leigh Grace, instead. Attorney General Pam Bondi then fired Grace and placed Habba in a series of roles — including “Special Attorney to the Attorney General” and first assistant U.S. attorney — to position her to once again become acting U.S. attorney under the Vacancies Act. The appeals court concluded the maneuver was improper and that the FVRA’s “nomination bar” also prevented Habba, as a pending nominee, from serving in an acting capacity.

In its decision, the 3rd Circuit stressed that allowing the administration’s approach would “bypass the constitutional [presidential appointment and Senate confirmation] process entirely” and effectively nullify the limits Congress established on who may serve as a U.S. attorney.  Judge Michael Fisher, writing for the three-judge panel, said “It is apparent that the current administration has been frustrated by some of the legal and political barriers to getting its appointees in place,” adding that the steps taken to install Habba ultimately violated federal law. The court rejected the Justice Department’s argument that designating Habba as a “special attorney” allowed the attorney general to delegate her the full powers of the office, noting, “This delegation theory would create a means for the Department of Justice to circumvent the FVRA’s exclusivity provision, effectively permitting anyone to fill the U.S. Attorney role indefinitely. This should raise a red flag.”

Habba’s appointment became the subject of legal challenges after three criminal defendants in New Jersey argued that she had no lawful authority to oversee their cases and sought to have their indictments dismissed. The district court declined to throw out the charges but agreed she had been improperly installed.

In a joint statement, attorneys Abbe Lowell, Gerry Krovatin, and Norm Eisen said the ruling confirms that “Habba is unlawfully and invalidly serving as the chief federal law enforcement officer in New Jersey, marking the first time an appellate court has ruled that President Trump cannot usurp longstanding statutory and constitutional processes to insert whomever he wants in these positions.” Another defense lawyer, Thomas Mirigliano, added that “the panel issued a clear and carefully reasoned decision that recognizes the extraordinary power vested in U.S. attorneys and reinforces the limits Congress has set on who may occupy those positions.”

The ruling leaves the New Jersey post vacant until a lawfully appointed and confirmed U.S. attorney is installed.

Editorial credit: Joe Tabacca / Shutterstock.com

Categories
News Daypop

WHO releases first guidance on long-term use of GLP-1 drugs for obesity

The World Health Organization on Monday issued its first comprehensive recommendations on using GLP-1 medications to treat obesity, signaling a major shift in how the condition is addressed globally.

The guidance — published in JAMA — supports long-term use of drugs such as semaglutide, liraglutide and tirzepatide in adults when clinically appropriate, while stressing that medication must be paired with sustained lifestyle support.

More than 1 billion people around the world are currently living with obesity — a figure projected to double by the end of the decade. WHO estimates the condition contributed to 3.7 million deaths last year. The organization recently added GLP-1 drugs to its Essential Medicines List for high-risk type 2 diabetes patients but had not previously endorsed them for obesity alone.

WHO leaders emphasized that obesity is a chronic disease requiring ongoing care, not a short-term intervention. WHO Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said that “our new guidance recognizes that obesity is a chronic disease that can be treated with comprehensive and lifelong care,” noting that “while medication alone won’t solve this global health crisis, GLP-1 therapies can help millions overcome obesity and reduce its associated harms.”

The organization issued two conditional recommendations: prolonged use of GLP-1 therapies — except during pregnancy — and a requirement that treatment be paired with intensive behavioral support, including structured eating plans, physical activity and counseling. Officials described these drugs as “more than a scientific breakthrough,” writing that “They represent a new chapter in the gradual conceptual shift in how society approaches obesity—from a ‘lifestyle condition’ to a complex, preventable, and treatable chronic disease.”

Experts say the medications can help people more easily follow dietary guidance by reducing hunger and making food feel less compelling. Dr. Louis Aronne of Weill Cornell Medicine said, “Medicines work best when they go hand in hand with changes in eating habits and daily behaviors,” adding that reduced hunger often enables patients to follow steps they previously struggled to maintain. He also stressed the need for resistance training to limit muscle loss during rapid weight reduction.

The WHO noted ongoing challenges that may limit access, including steep prices, supply shortages and wide disparities in availability. The agency urged governments to create fair distribution systems focused on those with the most urgent medical need and called for “urgent action on manufacturing, affordability, and system readiness to meet global needs.” Even with production increases, WHO estimates that GLP-1 therapies will reach fewer than 10% of eligible patients by 2030.

The new recommendations, crafted by a panel of specialists in obesity care, pharmacology and public health, follow regulatory approvals in multiple countries, including the U.S. The guidelines encourage nations to “reboot” national obesity strategies by expanding prevention programs, strengthening treatment infrastructure and improving long-term care capacity.

WHO officials emphasized that while GLP-1 drugs can be effective, “medication alone cannot solve the global obesity burden.” They called for more long-term research on safety and outcomes, alongside efforts to reduce the cost of leading treatments such as Wegovy, Zepbound, Ozempic and Mounjaro — many of which currently exceed $1,000 a month in the U.S.

Editorial credit: KK Stock / Shutterstock.com

Categories
Go Country 105

Another take on ‘White Christmas’? Just hear Scotty McCreery out

If you think the world couldn’t possibly need another version of the Irving Berlin classic “White Christmas,” Scotty McCreery humbly asks that you let him plead his case. 

You see, Scotty’s take on the much-recorded tune takes inspiration from both The Drifters and Elvis Presley

“I was almost nervous to record the song because I love it so much during Christmastime,” he tells ABC Audio. “And I had this version in my head that I’ll sing out loud in the shower, I’ll sing when I’m doing dishes, and I didn’t want to lose that version in my head in the recording process and not get it [recorded].”

“But I went in there and I just sang it for the band: ‘This is what’s in my head. Let’s make the music around this,'” he explains. “And the band crushed it.”

“And I know it’s another version of ‘White Christmas,’ but it’s my version,” he adds. “I hope you like it.”  

The new recording joins 2023’s “Feel Like the Holidays” in Scotty’s collection of yuletide recordings that started with 2011’s Christmas with Scotty McCreery

Copyright © 2025, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.