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Make sure the door doesn`t close behind Seth! Seth Thorpe has been our intern from Belmont University for the past few months. It`s been great to see his skill sets grown while he has been in the newsroom. From digital stories to radio stories, he`s broadened his reporting and production skills.
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We expect that sports events have music, from the National Anthem to popular bangers that function as hype songs.
But from the performers’ perspective, especially at a time when our nation feels extremely polarized, fulfilling that function can be more than just a gig. It can serve as personal or political expression.
Think of Bad Bunny`s Super Bowl halftime show, performed in Spanish and rich in Puerto Rican imagery. The intensity of the uproar it generated was a reminder that sporting events function as shared, and sometimes contested, civic spaces.
A brand new queer country group called the CowGays will soon sing the national anthem at the Nashville Predators` Pride night. Thanks to the popularity of Heated Rivalry, there’s extra buzz around Preds Pride night this year, but it`s an even bigger deal that the trio`s making its official live debut by reframing what being patriotic can look like.
Then there’s the hype song that Nashville rapper Daisha McBride just created for the women’s basketball league Athletes Unlimited Pro. She says, "It was not only to be able to just provide the vibes, but I really am a women’s basketball fan. I’ve been waiting for something like this in Nashville."
Follow along for more Key Changes from Jewly Hight, and tap link in bio for the full story.
Photos: AP News, Ford Fairchild, IMDB, Jewly HIght
“Land use planning in Tennessee will become a thing of the past.”
This was said by George Nolan, the Tennessee director of the Southern Environmental Law Center. “There will be a cottage industry of lawyers who specialize in suing local governments on behalf of landowners that are upset about zoning restrictions.”
Tennessee lawmakers are considering a bill that would allow property owners to sue governments for enacting land use regulations.
The bill would work like this: A local government passes a zoning law or other restriction on land use on or after July 1, 2027. A property owner, likely a developer, can request an exemption to the law to change the use of their property. If the government says no, then the landowner can sue the government for lost property value and attorney fees.
The legislation is sponsored by Tennessee state Rep. Tim Hicks, R-Gray, a housing developer who owns Hicks Construction Company near Johnson City. He said the goal of the legislation is to protect property owners from losing financial opportunities to develop their land in the future.
Tap link in bio for the full story and follow along for more updates from our Environmental Reporter, Caroline Eggers.
Photo 1: Courtesy Nati Harnik/Associated Press
Photo 2: Pierce Gentry / WUOT
Photo 3: Courtesy Devin Schultz
Photo 4: Courtesy Richard R / Unsplash
Country music artist John Anderson had every intention of carrying on with his bluesy, downhome crowd-pleasers like “Black Sheep,” “Swingin’ ” and “I’m Just an Old Chunk of Coal (But I’m Gonna Be a Diamond Some Day)” among them.
Then hearing issues stopped him in his tracks.
Roughly 25 years ago, he first had an issue with an ear that had been scarred by numerous childhood ear infections. The doctor he initially saw was doubtful he could perform the procedure Anderson required. " ‘I’m afraid to do any work on this ear at all,’ ” the singer recalls, ‘but I have a colleague who, if anybody can fix it, he might can.’ ”
That colleague was Dr. David Haynes, professor of otolaryngology, neurosurgery, hearing and speech sciences at Vanderbilt Health, with the top anechoic chamber in the world.
Tap link in the bio for more on this story by Senior Music Writer Jewly Hight @jewlyhight
Photos: Jewly Hight
Wanna see David Byrne in his 2026 tour “Who is the sky?”
Thanks to generous local business partners who’ve donated prizes, Nashville Public Radio will have a drawing next Monday for tickets to see David Byrne.
Everyone who donates this week will be automatically entered in a drawing for a $250 gift card to Gardens of Babylon, PLUS the drawing for tickets to see David Byrne.
Your support means so much and we’re grateful for your partnership. You are not required to donate to be entered into the drawings.
Tap link in bio to donate or enter the drawing.
A Nashville journalist detained by ICE will remain in custody while her legal case moves forward. A judge granted her bond. But as Marianna Bacallao reports, immigration officials have appealed the decision to release Spanish-language journalist Estefany Rodriguez Florez.
During her time at a Louisiana detention center, lawyers for Rodriguez say their client has contracted lice and been kept in isolation. Immigration attorney Joel Coxander finally got a chance to speak with her this weekend after 10 days of silence. "That’s a very difficult situation when you`re trying to, you know, defend her rights as a journalist," he said.
ICE officials have said they arrested Rodriguez because she failed to appear for meetings at its Nashville field office. Rodriguez’s husband, Alejandro Medina, said they couldn’t make it to a late January hearing because of the ice storm, and his wife was arrested before she could make her re-scheduled appointment. "Our families belong together, and this broken immigration system has deeply harmed thousands upon thousands of families across the county. And I hope and I pray our families are back together soon," said Medina.
Follow along for more from Marianna Bacallao as she covers this story and the legislative session. Tap link in bio for full stories.
Video: Nashville Noticias
Brooke Vespoli proudly claims the pop genre. She is a pop musician in Nashville, a place not known for pop music.
"Claiming pop is important to me" she told Music and Culture reporter Justin Barney. Adopting the genre of pop is a bit of a turn, because for the past couple decades there has been an effort to get rid of music labels to broaden the industry and up inclusivity.
When she moved to Nashville she didn’t even know what a mix was or how to produce music at all. She started experimenting. “I wanted to do performance art in Nashville” she said. At the time she was trying to figure out the connection between her music and her body.
She focused on movement. It planted the seed. And then one day, the way she should make music clicked and the Dancer First Philosophy came to her.
Follow along for more music reporting and tap link in bio to subscribe to the NashVillager — our 5-day-a-week newsletter with local and national stories + ticket giveaways.
Photo 1: Elizabeth Marsh
Photo 2 & video: Justin Barney
Photo 3: Elizabeth Marsh
Sports, education, music — quotes of the week is back, bringing you the quotiest quotes from our local stories.
We had a lot of gems from @thisisnashville_wpln profiles including an Olympic Gold Medalist, a public school teacher who performs drag, one of the few Black artists to ever crack the Billboard country charts and a director from Music City Baseball.
Plus a quote from Nashville musician book NOT brooke, who proudly claims the genre of pop (and wants to make you dance).
Tap link in bio for more stories and to listen to This is Nashville.
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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.
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Tennessee bill would strengthen developer, property rights over local land use regulations
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