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New York Post
15 minutes ago
- New York Post
Widow Dolly Parton shares heartfelt advice for Kelly Clarkson after Brandon Blackstock's death
Dolly Parton gives the best advice. The country singer, 79, drew on her experience losing her husband, Carl Dean, earlier this year as she offered heartfelt words to Kelly Clarkson following Clarkson's ex-husband Brandon Blackstock's death. 'I think you just have to be grateful for the years that you've had with someone and you just try to remember the very best of all that,' Parton told Entertainment Tonight in an interview published Tuesday. Advertisement 10 Dolly Parton and Carl Dean. dollyparton/Instagram 10 Brandon Blackstock and Kelly Clarkson at the 2013 Grammy Awards. Getty Images for NARAS 'Take their energy that they have given you … and kinda just recycle that and let that become a part of you,' she continued. 'Just honor their memory and just know they're in a better place than we are these days.' Advertisement The '9 to 5' singer also said that while she has yet to reach out to Clarkson, 43, she plans to 'catch up with her' after she finishes doing press for her upcoming book, 'Star of the Show: My Life on Stage.' 10 Dolly Parton attends 'Dolly: An Original Musical' press conference in Nashville in January. Getty Images Parton became a widow in March after her husband of 59 years passed away at age 82. 'Carl and I spent many wonderful years together. Words can't do justice to the love we shared for over 60 years,' Parton shared after Dean's death. 'Thank you for your prayers and sympathy. The family has asked for privacy during this difficult time.' Advertisement 10 Carl Dean and Dolly Parton. dollyparton/Instagram 10 Dolly Parton with her late husband, Carl Dean. dollyparton/Instagram During an interview with Knox News in March, Parton opened up about how she was coping without her longtime significant other. 'I'm doing better than I thought I would,' she said. 'I've been with him 60 years. So, I'm going to have to relearn some of the things that we've done. But I'll keep him always close.' Advertisement 10 Dolly Parton poses at the Carnegie Medal of Philanthropy Ceremony in New York in 2022. AP Clarkson, for her part, suffered the loss of her ex-husband and the father of her two children last week. Blackstock died after a lengthy battle with melanoma, a serious form of skin cancer. He was 48. 10 Brandon Blackstock and Kelly Clarkson in 2017. Kevin Mazur 'He passed away peacefully and was surrounded by family,' a rep for Blackstock's family told The Post. 'We thank you for your thoughts and prayers and ask everyone to respect the family's privacy during this very difficult time.' Blackstock and Clarkson were married from 2013 until the 'Stronger' singer filed for divorce in 2020. 10 Brandon Blackstock and Kelly Clarkson. Instagram/@kellyclarkson 10 Kelly Clarkson and Brandon Blackstock. Instagram/@kellyclarkson Advertisement They settled their divorce in 2022 following a long and nasty legal battle and a fight for custody of their children. Clarkson has yet to speak out about Blackstock's death — but she's said to be 'devastated' for her kids River, 11, and Remington, 9, over the tragedy. 10 Kelly Clarkson kisses Brandon Blackstock at the 2018 Grammy Awards. WireImage Advertisement 'When she found out that he was sick, she remained protective of him for their sake,' an insider told People on Friday. Blackstock's obituary revealed that he was in a relationship with Clarkson's former assistant, Brittney Marie Jones, at the time of his death.


Forbes
16 minutes ago
- Forbes
Lana Del Rey Joins Adele In A Historic Chart Feat
Lana Del Rey has been teasing her upcoming album for more than a year now, but details about the project remain scarce. The singer-songwriter has mentioned multiple titles and then changed her mind with all of them. She also at first claimed that it would be a country record, and then decided it would be more in the vein of an American Gothic vibe. Several singles have emerged and even charted, but for the moment, fans still don't know what the project is called or when they'll get to hear the full-length. As they wait to learn more, Americans are continuously consuming Born to Die, Del Rey's breakout project. Well over a decade after its release, the title can still be found on multiple Billboard charts, and this week it hits a major milestone. Born to Die Reaches a Billboard 200 Milestone Born to Die dips two spots on the Billboard 200, landing at No. 117. The title, which Luminate reports moved another 11,400 equivalent units during the most recent tracking period, celebrates 600 weeks on the Billboard 200, the company's ranking of the biggest albums and EPs in the U.S. Lana Del Rey Joins Adele Only 18 albums have spent at least 600 weeks on the Billboard 200. Born to Die is just the second by a solo female artist to make it to that landmark figure. Del Rey comes in behind Adele's 21, which racked up 617 stays on the tally. Unlike Born to Die, however, 21 doesn't regularly appear on the Billboard 200, so in the coming months, Del Rey may pass Adele's globe-dominating full-length. Pink Floyd Continues to Lead The record for the longest stay on the Billboard 200 is still held by Pink Floyd's The Dark Side of the Moon. That title only needs 10 more stints on the list before it becomes the first 1,000-week charter. Next time around, when Billboard publishes its rankings again, Legend by Bob Marley and the Wailers will likely become only the second 900-week winner ever. Lana Del Rey Rises on Multiple Billboard Charts As Born to Die hits an incredible figure on the Billboard 200, the title climbs on the other two Billboard rankings where it can be found. Del Rey's breakout set lifts one spot to No. 13 on the Top Alternative Albums chart and three spaces to No. 27 on the Top Rock & Alternative Albums tally.


New York Post
an hour ago
- New York Post
I tried to be the perfect wellness influencer — and it almost killed me
Being a wellness influencer nearly killed Lee Tilghman. From 2014 to 2019, she shared her rainbow-hued smoothie bowls, eight-step skincare routine, #selfcare rituals and thirst-trappy fit pics on her Instagram, @LeeFromAmerica, which had more than 400,000 followers — a significant number for the time. At her height she made $300,000 a year via sponsored posts, and nearly every item in her light-filled Los Angeles apartment was gifted from a brand. Yet, behind the scenes Tilghman was not well at all. Advertisement 8 In her new memoir, Lee Tilghman opens up about the toll being a wellness influencer took on her health. Olga Ginzburg for N.Y. Post She suffered from disordered eating. She was anxious. She was lonely. A critical comment on a post could send her into a spiral of depression and paranoia. She spent 10 hours a day tethered to her iPhone 'It was soul-killing,' Tilghman, 35, told The Post, taking in the New York City skyline from the Brooklyn Heights Promenade. Advertisement She chronicles it all in her wild, self-aware, new memoir, 'If You Don't Like This Post, I Will Die' (Simon & Schuster, out now). Tilghman recalls growing up in suburban Connecticut, getting her first AOL username at 12 years old and downloading Instagram the summer before last year of college, in 2011. Her first photo — of herself at a flea market in London during study abroad — got zero likes. After college, she moved to Manhattan and became a 20-something party girl, documenting her exploits on Instagram. She worked as a waitress at the trendy Chalk Point Kitchen, but, for the most part, she opted for drugs over food. Advertisement Then, one morning, after waking up from a cocaine bender, she opened Instagram and came across an account from an Australian named Loni Jane. This gorgeous, fit specimen had 'ombre-blonde hair,' a 'year-round tan' and a vegan, raw diet. 'I wanted that life,' Tilghman recalls in the book. 8 Tilghman was initially a party girl, posting sexy snaps of nights out to Instagram. Lee Tilghman/ Instagram She stopped drinking and began exercising. One morning, after a run, she made a smoothie with avocado, banana, coconut and kale that was so thick, she couldn't drink it from a glass. She poured it into a bowl, sprinkled some seeds on top, and posted it on the 'gram. Advertisement The likes rolled in. She began posting these 'smoothie bowls' nearly every day, in every color of the rainbow, with a bounty of toppings arranged like works of art. The clothing brand Free People interviewed her about her culinary creations for its blog. 'I was like, 'Okay, this thing is popping off.'' Tilghman recalled. 'Every time I posted a smoothie bowl, my following would grow. The comments would be crazy. People had never seen them before.' She left NYC for LA, to chase Instagram stardom. The term 'influencer' had just begun bubbling, and savvy millennial brands had just started seeing pretty young women as inexpensive ambassadors for their products. 8 Then, after a cocaine bender, she changed her ways and focused on healthy content. She started posting images of colorful smoothie bowls that quickly took off. Lee Tilghman/ Instagram Tilghman went all-in. When a follower DMed her and told her that fluoride caused 'brain damage,' she stopped using toothpaste with it — and promptly developed six cavities. When her roommate told her that bananas had a ton of sugar, Tilghman cut them from her diet. (She still made her smoothie bowls with them, since the bananas helped make the liquid thick enough to hold all the toppings; she just threw it out after snapping a picture.) Tongue-scraping, dry-brushing, double-filtered charcoal water, body oiling, fasting: Tilghman tried it all. 'I did two twenty-one-day cleanses back-to-back,' she writes in her book. 'I got rid of gluten, dairy, soy, peanuts, and sugar. I paid [a Reiki-certified healer] the first half of an $8,000 coaching package, which included breathwork, moon circles, and unlimited text support.' The more she tried — and the realer she got, posting about her struggles with PCOS (a hormonal condition that can cause bloating and irregular periods) or her past struggled with anorexia — the more followers, and brand sponsorships, she got. And the more brand sponsorships she got, the more time she had to spend posting. And the more time she spent posting, the more time she spent on the app, and the more she hated herself. Advertisement 8 Soon, she was getting attention from brands and posting smoothie bowls daily. Lee Tilghman/ Instagram She would often take 200 photos before finding one where she looked thin enough to post on the grid — often with some caption about self-acceptance and self-love. Her self-absorption and food phobias eventually alienated her from the rest of the world. She was so terrified of gluten, of soy, of sugar that she couldn't go out to eat. She once dragged her mom all over Tokyo — during a sponsored trip — in search of a green apple, because the red ones in her hotel had too much sugar. She was so obsessed with getting the perfect Instagram photo that she couldn't have a conversation. Advertisement 'I put my health [and Instagram] above everything, including family and relationships,' she said. 'If your body is a temple and you treat it super well and you eat all the right foods and do all the things, but you don't have anyone close to you because you're trying to control your life so much, it's a dark place.' 8 She left NYC for LA to pursue wellness influencing. Lee Tilghman/ Instagram It all came crashing in 2018, after she announced she was hosting a wellness workshop — and charging $350 for the cheapest was accused of white privilege, and her apology post only elicited more scorn. Some sponsors pulled out. Shortly after, her apartment flooded. She looked around and noticed that with the exception of her dog, Samson, every single thing in her place — including her toothbrush — had been gifted by brands looking for promotion. Advertisement 'I was a prop too—a disposable, soulless, increasingly emaciated mannequin used by companies to sell more stuff,' she writes. 'We all were—all the billions of us who thought we were using Instagram when really it was the other way around.' 8 Followers loved her fitness content, but behind the scenes, Tilghman was struggling. Lee Tilghman/ Instagram 8 One day, she realized that every item in her apartment, save for her dog, had been gifted by a brand. Lee Tilghman/ Instagram In 2019, she got rid of it all, deleted Instagram and went to a six-week intensive treatment center for her disordered eating. There, she had to throw out all her adaptogens and supplemental powders. Advertisement 'I felt like an addict when they're so done with their drug of choice that they can't wait to throw it away,' she recalled of her first day without the app. 'It was amazing.' Though she did admit that she couldn't stop taking selfies. 'I would be at a red light and just take 15 selfies — it was weird!' During the pandemic, she moved back to New York and did social media for a couple companies, including a tech and a perfume brand. She sporadically updated her Instagram in 2021, but really came back in earnest this past year, to do promotion for her memoir. 'I've been gone for so long that I have this newfound creativity and appreciation for it,' she said of her new, goofy online persona. 'The whimsy is back.' She also has a Substack, Offline Time, and has just moved to Brooklyn Heights with Samson and her fiance, Jack, who works in finance. 8 Tilghman is no longer an influencer, though she has used Instagram to promote her new book. And, she says, she would consider doing sponsored posts in the future. Olga Ginzburg for N.Y. Post She says that her book feels even more timely now than when she started working on it four years ago. Despite all she's been through, she doesn't rule out influencing completely. 'I mean, listen, living is expensive,' she said. 'I'm not opposed doing a sponsored post in the future. I actually said that to my audience, a couple months ago. I was like, 'Guys, I know I just wrote a book about not influencing anymore. But, rent be renting.''