Hundreds of cherry trees were given away for free today at the Nashville Cherry Blossom Festival.
The festival, held downtown in Public Square Park, across the river from the Nissan stadium, was full of sound, art, and commerce. There were food vendors. Taiko drumming and bamboo flute performances. Tea ceremonies. Bonsai trimming. Sumo suit wrestling. And of course, Japanese Elvis - an Elvis impersonator who flew in from Japan..
Music and culture reporter Justin Barney gives the festival highlights and a bit of the economics that connect Tennessee and Japan. For instance, there are 200+ Japanese businesses statewide that employ over 50,000 Tennesseans, and Bridgestone has had a headquarters in Nashville since 1983,. The Nashville - Japanese ties are undeniable, and maybe correlates to the fact that the FIFA soccer team from Japan chose Nashville as its base camp before the World Cup.
There`s more more to come after the Cherry Blossom Festival. Follow us for coverage on the Japanese soccer team`s base camp here in Nashville.
Even if your knowledge of classical music comes from listening in dentist waiting rooms, you know the music of Yo-Yo Ma.
He`s been famous since he was five years old when he played for President John F. Kennedy as a child prodigy. He`s 70 now and this Sunday at the Grand Ole Opry, he will play a 293-year-old cello and give his, "report card on life," in a show titled "Reflections in Words and Music."
Ma told our reporter Justin Barney: "I will share with you everything that I have learned in my 70 years of life. Here`s my report card — this is my report to you on what I`ve seen and what some of my conclusions are. We have it within us to be hopeful. To be collaborative, and to constantly renew ourselves so that we can actually keep our American experiment going strong."
Tap link in bio for more.
Tennessee will be one of the first states to pilot the White House’s immigration agenda, reports Marianna Bacallao (@ba.marianna). Statehouse Republican leadership collaborated with U.S. Homeland Security Advisor Stephen Miller and the Justice Department to craft the legislation.
The package of bills focuses on increasing verification for legal residents and requiring local law enforcement to work with Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
“Nobody in Tennessee is asking for this. Everybody`s asking for affordable housing, right? Everybody`s asking ... to be able to afford the groceries,” said Cesar Bautista, member of the Tennessee Immigrant and Refugee Rights Coalition.
Tennessee already has laws against sanctuary city policies that may shield immigrants from ICE, but House Speaker Cameron Sexton said the city’s Democratic-leaning cities are using a “loophole.”
Tennessee will be one of the first states to pilot the White House’s immigration agenda, reports Marianna Bacallao. Statehouse Republican leadership collaborated with U.S. Homeland Security Advisor Stephen Miller and the Justice Department to craft the legislation.
The package of bills focuses on increasing verification for legal residents and requiring local law enforcement to work with Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
Tap link in bio and follow along for more. Subscribe to the NashVillager, our 5-day-a-week newsletter with local and national news.
Photos: Bruce Newman (AP) George Walker IV (AP), Marianna Bacallao (WPLN)
America’s rural hospitals are closing at an alarming pace. And Tennessee has the highest closure rate. It’s a Healthcare Hollow.
In a series of reports this month, WPLN takes an in-depth look at the crisis and what is being done to reverse this course.
“There was something definitely wrong somewhere. Some red tape, some bureaucracy, something that was causing the closure of so many — I mean, it wasn`t just a coincidence that all these small communities lost their hospital at one time,” said Wess Ward, mayor of Linden, Tennessee, whose hospital closed and then re-opened in September, 2025.
Health Reporter Catherine Sweeney takes us to Linden — a rural Tennessee town that watched its hospital go dark but is now on the path to recovery.
Tap link in bio for more and follow along for more rural healthcare coverage from Nashville Public Radio`s series Healthcare Hollow.
Photo credits: LaTonya Turner, Catherine Sweeney
It’s that time of year when music halls of fame make their big announcements. And since everyone has their own definition of musical greatness and who embodies it, people have OPINIONS.
Senior Music Writer Jewly Hight is accustomed to hearing fellow writers, artists and fans make a case for performers they feel are overlooked by these institutions.
She`s looking at three halls: the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, the Country Music Hall of Fame and the Musicians Hall of Fame.
And she`s learned from the discourse swirling around the nominees and inductees that a lot of people don’t really know how the processes work.
In this edition of Key Changes, Jewly will give you the background and the current lowdown on these halls and how they work in a side-by-side comparison.
Follow along for more, and head to YouTube for the full breakdown.
After nine months of closure, Nashville’s Main Library reopened Monday.
The downtown library closed in June after a fire erupted in the adjoining parking garage. NPL had initially targeted an opening date one month later, but the closure was soon prolonged after improvements to the building’s fire safety systems were identified during cleanup.
The garage, which is operated by the Nashville Downtown Partnership, will remain closed. Instead, library patrons can park for 90 minutes at the McKendree Parking Center on 6th Avenue for a discounted rate of $4.
NPL Director Terri Luke said the library is working with Nashville Yards on 9th Avenue to reach a similar parking agreement.
Still, on reopening day, many patrons expressed their excitement.
Tap link in bio for more stories and to subscribe to the NashVillager newsletter for local and national stories Monday - Friday.
Data centers comprised about 10% of the Tennessee Valley Authority’s total power load in 2025.
And demand from data centers could double by 2030, according to TVA, the utility that covers nearly all of Tennessee and parts of six other states. That may impact the cost of electricity.
In response, a Tennessee lawmaker proposed a bill to protect rate-paying citizens from subsidizing data centers.
“We don`t want what`s happened in some other states where data centers have come in and rates have gone up $20 to $30 a month,” said the bill’s sponsor, state Rep. Ed Butler, R-Rickman.
But as WPLN’s Caroline Eggers reports, the bill could have an entirely different impact: It would allow data centers to produce their own power or buy from an independent company without needing approval from a state regulator.
“This bill would open the door to a massive influx of unregulated methane gas plants across the state,” said Trey Bussey, an attorney with the Southern Environmental Law Center.
One example is already playing out in Memphis. Elon Musk’s data center called xAI has set up dozens of mini gas turbines, which research shows could significantly worsen regional air quality.
Follow along and tap link in bio for more.
Image Credits: Steve Helber/Associated Press, Steve Jones, Flight by Southwings for SELC., David Goldman/Associated Press (flaring oil and gas facility)
Were remains of ancient Mississippian people found during construction of the Brentwood Library? We got this question from one of our Curious Nashville audience members.
The answer is yes. In the late 1990s, despite protests, remains were relocated and artifacts collected from the site.
In revisiting what happened, WPLN’s Cynthia Abrams also finds the property was the site of an archaeological dig — described by some as a "plundering" — in the 1880s.
Flash forward to today, and the repatriation movement is still pushing for museums and universities to return items to the tribes. You can learn more at curious.wpln.org.
Tap link in bio for Curious Nashville and more.
✍️ and 📹 : Cynthia Abrams & Tony Gonzalez, WPLN News
🗣️: Tom Kunesh, Tennessee Ancient Sites Conservancy
📸: ProPublica, Newspapers.com, TDEC
Thanks to our fund drive business partners:
Zeitlin Sotheby’s International Realty
FBT Gibbons Law
Acme Feed and Seed
Etch
Frist Art Museum
Gardens of Babylon
Omni Nashville Hotel
SailNashville
The Southern
Turnip Truck
Wildwood Resort


Curious Nashville Returns!
Back by popular demand, the WPLN fan favorite series Curious Nashville is here to investigate oddities, share local history, tell stories of interesting people, and explain how local institutions operate.
You ask the questions, and we answer.
More Headlines
NashVillager Podcast: Visit Music City
NashVillager Podcast: Stadium roofs come full circle
Press Forward Middle Tennessee launches to strengthen local news
AI music platform launched in Nashville puts songwriters in control
Nashville water bills won’t get ice storm discounts after Metro Council rejects idea
NashVillager Podcast: From Tech to NASA
Topics

































