logo
Blake Shelton's return to the music industry features new Gwen Stefani duet and TV series, "The Road"

Blake Shelton's return to the music industry features new Gwen Stefani duet and TV series, "The Road"

CBS News15-05-2025

Blake Shelton talks new music, life with Gwen Stefani and "The Road"
After two decades of hits, hairstyles and television appearances, Blake Shelton is back on top of the country music charts with "Texas," the lead single from his 13th studio album "For Recreational Use Only."
The country music star, who stepped away from NBC's "The Voice" after 23 seasons to focus on fishing and farming in Oklahoma, said that returning to the spotlight has been reinvigorating.
"As we sit here right now, it's been the number one country song in the U.K, which is not University of Kentucky like I thought," Shelton joked during an interview at Nashville's Ryman Auditorium.
The album includes a collaboration with his wife, rock star Gwen Stefani, on the track "Hangin' On." Shelton said both were immediately drawn to the song.
"We were both like, 'I'm in if you're in,'" Shelton said. "The song just has one of those choruses that just hits you and knocks you down."
While recording new music, Shelton has also been filming "The Road," a new CBS singing competition show. The project marks his return to television after leaving "The Voice" to spend time with family.
Social media posts have captured Shelton embracing rural life, singing about "corn in the truck, corn in the field" while farming, and fishing with Stefani. Now, he's balancing entertainment with family responsibilities, including being a stepfather to Stefani's sons.
"I never put them on the spot asking what they think about my music because I'm afraid they may hate it," Shelton said.
Shelton's career spans from his 2001 breakout hit "Austin" through "God's Country" in 2019. He's now expanding his musical collaborations, teaming up with rapper-turned-country artist Post Malone on the chart-topping "Pour Me a Drink."
"Anything that happens that's current and becomes a hit on the radio for one of the old guys that's left in the business, it's super exciting for me," Shelton said. "I just never know when the last album I make is the last album I make."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Macy's Fourth of July show to feature Jonas Brothers, Eric Church, Lenny Kravitz and Trisha Yearwood
Macy's Fourth of July show to feature Jonas Brothers, Eric Church, Lenny Kravitz and Trisha Yearwood

Washington Post

time10 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

Macy's Fourth of July show to feature Jonas Brothers, Eric Church, Lenny Kravitz and Trisha Yearwood

NEW YORK — Macy's will celebrate America's independence with a 4th of July fireworks show live on NBC featuring Jonas Brothers, Eric Church, Lenny Kravitz, Ava Max, Keke Palmer and Trisha Yearwood. The 49th edition of the nation's largest July 4th celebration in New York City will fire more than 80,000 shells in 30 vibrant colors and offer state-of-the-art projection mapping on the Brooklyn Bridge. The 25-minute fireworks show will be set to a musical score produced by Ahmir 'Questlove' Thompson and James Poyser. The celebration will be hosted by Ariana DeBose, a Broadway veteran who has hosted the Tony Awards three times. The fireworks will be fired from four barges on the lower East River and the pyrotechnics will reach 1,000 feet (305 meters). The light show will also celebrate the upcoming Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games. 'We light the sky and create tradition, bringing millions across the country together for shared experience and memory,' Will Coss, Macy's 4th of July Fireworks executive producer, said in a statement. TV viewers can tune in on NBC or see it simulcast live on Peacock at 8 p.m.—10 p.m. ET/7:00— 9:00 p.m. CT/MT. A Spanish language simulcast will air on Telemundo at 9 p.m. ET. Look for fireworks in the shape of crown jellyfish, atomic rings, yellow and green sunbursts and strobing lemon cascades.

Macy's Fourth of July show to feature Jonas Brothers, Eric Church, Lenny Kravitz and Trisha Yearwood
Macy's Fourth of July show to feature Jonas Brothers, Eric Church, Lenny Kravitz and Trisha Yearwood

Associated Press

time28 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

Macy's Fourth of July show to feature Jonas Brothers, Eric Church, Lenny Kravitz and Trisha Yearwood

NEW YORK (AP) — Macy's will celebrate America's independence with a 4th of July fireworks show live on NBC featuring Jonas Brothers, Eric Church, Lenny Kravitz, Ava Max, Keke Palmer and Trisha Yearwood. The 49th edition of the nation's largest July 4th celebration in New York City will fire more than 80,000 shells in 30 vibrant colors and offer state-of-the-art projection mapping on the Brooklyn Bridge. The 25-minute fireworks show will be set to a musical score produced by Ahmir 'Questlove' Thompson and James Poyser. The celebration will be hosted by Ariana DeBose, a Broadway veteran who has hosted the Tony Awards three times. The fireworks will be fired from four barges on the lower East River and the pyrotechnics will reach 1,000 feet (305 meters). The light show will also celebrate the upcoming Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games. 'We light the sky and create tradition, bringing millions across the country together for shared experience and memory,' Will Coss, Macy's 4th of July Fireworks executive producer, said in a statement. TV viewers can tune in on NBC or see it simulcast live on Peacock at 8 p.m.—10 p.m. ET/7:00— 9:00 p.m. CT/MT. A Spanish language simulcast will air on Telemundo at 9 p.m. ET. Look for fireworks in the shape of crown jellyfish, atomic rings, yellow and green sunbursts and strobing lemon cascades.

50 years after Marshal Matt Dillon's last draw, ‘Gunsmoke' is a streaming hit
50 years after Marshal Matt Dillon's last draw, ‘Gunsmoke' is a streaming hit

Los Angeles Times

time2 hours ago

  • Los Angeles Times

50 years after Marshal Matt Dillon's last draw, ‘Gunsmoke' is a streaming hit

When the classic western drama 'Gunsmoke' finished its 20-year run on CBS in 1975, Los Angeles Times critic Cecil Smith made a bold prediction. 'I have the feeling that the first moon colony we establish will be watching 'I Love Lucy,'' Smith wrote. 'And probably 'Gunsmoke.'' We're not quite there on the colonization front, but Smith's prognostication on viewing habits is right on track. 'Gunsmoke,' the western drama starring James Arness as Marshal Matt Dillon, has twice this year ranked among Nielsen's top 10 list of most-streamed acquired series alongside more contemporary favorites such as 'Family Guy,' 'NCIS' and 'Grey's Anatomy.' The program scored 646 million minutes viewed for the week of March 3-9 and 570 million for the week of April 28-May 4. 'Gunsmoke,' which is owned by Paramount Global, was recently added to NBCUniversal's streaming platform Peacock. It has also been a staple of Paramount+. But it gets the bulk of its audience from Pluto TV, Paramount Global's free advertising-supported streaming service. The enduring success of the series, set in the frontier town of Dodge City, Kansas, in the 1870s, demonstrates how every new evolution of video consumption can unlock the value of beloved vintage titles. Since wrapping production 50 years ago, 'Gunsmoke' has never gone away, finding fans on cable (currently on TV Land and INSP), home video formats and retro broadcast TV channels such as MeTV before it was discovered by the streaming generation. 'If there's a great show, people will seek it out wherever it is,' said Neal Sabin, vice chairman of Weigel Broadcasting, which has carried 'Gunsmoke' on MeTV since 2006. The network's daytime airing of the show regularly attracts more than 600,000 viewers. 'Gunsmoke' started as a radio drama on CBS in 1952 with William Conrad voicing the lead role. The series transitioned to television in 1955 as a half-hour show with Arness taking over as Dillon at the urging of his pal John Wayne, who turned down the role. 'Gunsmoke' became an immediate hit, ranking as television's most-watched series in four of its first five seasons and expanding to an hour in 1961. It outlasted the wave of westerns that saturated network TV schedules in that era and was still landing in Nielsen's top 10 prime-time shows in the early 1970s. When 'Gunsmoke' was left off the CBS schedule in 1967 — apparently due to rising production costs — the network's founding owner, Bill Paley, and his wife, Babe, insisted that it return. Before 'Gunsmoke,' most western TV shows were aimed at kid audiences. 'Gunsmoke' was for grown-ups. It was violent and often unflinching in depicting the harshness of life on the American frontier. The writers and producers of 'Gunsmoke' respected the show's period setting but also had a feel for the times they lived in. Episodes from the first half of the 1960s, which often featured a young Burt Reynolds as a half-Comanche blacksmith in Dodge City, play like allegories about racism as the civil rights movement was simmering. The show had remarkable consistency as Arness and Milburn Stone, who played Doc, were in their roles for the entire run. Amanda Blake, who played saloon proprietor Kitty Russell, appeared in 19 seasons. (Fans still debate whether the Miss Kitty and Dillon characters were an item.) Sabin believes 'Gunsmoke' may be seeing an uptick in viewing as audiences tend to look to familiarity and comfort during times of uncertainty. 'Gunsmoke' also provides a hero with a strong moral compass. 'Matt Dillon represents a lot of what we don't have right now,' Sabin said. Dan Cohen, chief content licensing content officer for Paramount Global and president of Republic Pictures, said he isn't surprised by the resilience of 'Gunsmoke,' as the audience for westerns is deeply loyal, even outside the U.S. Buyer demand for 'Gunsmoke' among international broadcasters has always been strong. The series currently airs in Australia, Germany, Switzerland, Austria, Canada, Norway, Sweden, Denmark and Israel. Cohen said the show has likely gotten a recent boost from the massive popularity of 'Yellowstone' and its stable of Taylor Sheridan-created spinoffs, which Paramount Global also sells around the world. 'There is a halo effect that westerns are seeing internationally,' Cohen said. 'When we license 'Yellowstone,' it leads to the conversation of, 'Do you have anything else kind of like it?' 'Gunsmoke' is our answer.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store