logo
Elizabeth Hurley embraces country life with Billy Ray Cyrus in new romantic snaps

Elizabeth Hurley embraces country life with Billy Ray Cyrus in new romantic snaps

Fox News28-04-2025

Elizabeth Hurley leaned into Billy Ray Cyrus' country roots one week after the couple went Instagram official.
Cyrus, 63, wrapped his arms around his new girlfriend in a series of photos shared on social media Sunday.
The "Austin Powers" actress appeared to be smitten with the country musician as they toured his Tennessee ranch together in an all-terrain vehicle.
Hurley, 59, looked completely at ease wearing a sheer white blouse and blue jeans as she posed for photos with the "Achy Breaky Heart" singer.
She added his 2009 song, "Back to Tennessee," to the post, a song which was released with the film, "Hannah Montana: The Movie."
Cyrus sings about leaving "fancy cars and diamond rings" behind to return to what he loves back at home, and his Tennessee roots.
"All this time I was chasing after dreams, it was right in front of me, I was lost without her," the lyrics state. "I'm on the road now, I know just what I need, to find my way back to Tennessee."
He continued, "I'm coming home now, to Southern, is so sweet, and find my way back to you and me, find my way back to Tennessee."
Cyrus debuted his new song "Ask (Honor Song)" on Friday, and told "The Ty Bentli Show" that their blossoming relationship is a gift from God, and he's the happiest he's been with his new romance.
"It's just been beautiful," Cyrus said, noting there are "no expectations of where we go from here other than her and her son. I do love him a lot, and it's great that God brought them into my life when he did. It's just a good thing.
"It's been a long time since I've been this happy."
The former co-stars reconnected over text, with Hurley making the first move nearly two years after they worked on the 2022 film "Christmas in Paradise."
"We did very few scenes together, but the couple times we were in the same scene, there was a chemistry there that felt … we just laughed, and it was at a time I wasn't laughing a lot. And I found out the oddest thing," he said of Hurley.
"I've obviously, I know all about her life and career and me, a kid from Flatwoods, Kentucky, going to sit and pretend I'm an actor with Elizabeth Hurley knowing that, wait, how did this happen? And the oddest part was first how much we laughed."
Cyrus was in the throes of divorce from his third wife, Firerose, when Hurley contacted him unexpectedly after not communicating for more than two years.
"I felt like, 'Wow, can life get any harder? Can it get any tougher?' For me, at a certain point, it was like, 'You can't get knocked down any flatter than laying on your back when life is kicking you,'" Cyrus said. "And, in this moment, this hand kind of reached out in a text message, not a physical hand, as in the one you saw in the picture. That'd be good. A friend reached out."
At the time, he "didn't even know the number" of the person who sent him a text along the lines of, "Hey, it looks like life might be a little bit tough and just wanted you to know I'm in your corner; you've got a friend in your corner."
"So, I text back, I go, 'Who is this?' And it's like, 'Elizabeth Hurley.' Of all the people to reach out to me in that second that maybe I needed most," Cyrus said. "This friend that made me laugh.
"If all we ever were [is] the friends that we are, I would take that. She's so impressively brilliant. She reminds me a lot of Dolly Parton. She's a very smart businesswoman. If you can laugh together, you can make it through everything."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Elton John says ‘we will not back down' in awards speech addressing AI concerns
Elton John says ‘we will not back down' in awards speech addressing AI concerns

Yahoo

time35 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Elton John says ‘we will not back down' in awards speech addressing AI concerns

Sir Elton John said 'we will not back down' in an awards speech where he pleaded with the UK Government to 'do the right thing' by strengthening copyright protections when artificial intelligence (AI) models learn from creatives' content. The Government has repeatedly rejected changes to the Data (Use and Access) Bill, proposed by the House of Lords, aimed at strengthening protections for the creative sector. Peers have attempted to amend the Bill by adding a commitment to introduce transparency requirements, aiming to ensure copyright holders are able to see when their work has been used and by who. Veteran rock singer Sir Elton, 78, who picked up the Creators' Champion Award at Billboard's Global Power Players Event on Wednesday, is among hundreds of creatives who have raised concerns over AI companies using copyrighted work without permission. In an Instagram post he thanked the US magazine for the award and said: 'Supporting the next generation of British artists is one of the major driving forces in my life. 'As everyone in that room was aware, the Data Bill is currently looming over our industries and the future livelihood of all artists. It is an existential issue. 'Earlier this evening, the Government was defeated for an unprecedented fifth time by the House of Lords who have backed the crucial amendment to the Bill. 'I am now calling on the Government to do the right thing and get transparency added to the Bill. 'Administration of copyright must be transparent. And it must have an artist's full permission. These two principles are the bedrock of our industry. They must be included in the data Bill as a backstop. 'Let's be clear – we want to work with the Government. We are not anti AI. We are not anti big tech. We are not against Labour. We want a solution that brings all parties together in a way that's transparent, fair and allows artists to maintain control of their work. 'We will not let the Government forget their promise to support our creative industries. We will not back down and we will not quietly go away. This is just the beginning. 'Thank you, Billboard. And thank you Baroness Kidron and The House of Lords for standing up for our world-beating artists, journalists, playwrights, designers and authors.' The prolonged impasse and the conduct of proceedings at Westminster now threatens the future of the whole Bill and its measures, including a crackdown on deepfake porn abuse. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Gay GB News host says Pride ‘doesn't show anything good about the gay community'
Gay GB News host says Pride ‘doesn't show anything good about the gay community'

Yahoo

time35 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Gay GB News host says Pride ‘doesn't show anything good about the gay community'

Alex Armstrong, a gay presenter, has come out against , saying the gay community doesn't need it anymore. Armstrong, who hosts The Saturday Five on the right-wing news channel, was participating in a debate with the topic 'Do we need Pride anymore', arguing against its existence. 'Things like Pride do the exact opposite to what Jonathan [a guest on the show] thinks they do. It turns people off,' Alexander said. 'What I see when I see some of those Pride events is fetishes being displayed on the street, men running naked around, thinking that's acceptable when there are children walking around. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Alex Armstrong (@alexharmstrong) 'It doesn't show anything good about the gay community. It stereotypes them, and there'll be millions of gay men, thousands of them watching tonight, who'll go: 'Actually, I don't want that representing us'.' Amrstrong went on to say go beyond criticising Pride, instead blasting the gay community writ large for its support of granting access to puberty blockers to trans children. He went on to say: 'They've advocated for for children. During the 2000s gay rights was being relatively accepted, people have got over the fear of it all and moved on. The public had moved on. Do you know what? We don't really care anymore. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Alex Armstrong (@alexharmstrong) 'It's the assimilation argument all over again, isn't it? Do you want to be part of society, or do you want society to look at you and think you are different?' Armstrong later shared a clip of his appearance on Instagram, posted with the caption: 'Millions of gay people are sick of having their sexuality weaponised, being told it's the most important thing about them. Then you get the far-left activist LGBT groups pushing their degenerate ideology down people's throats on top of it all.' The host received support from a number of his 14,000 followers, with one user commenting: 'Well said Alex, we wanted equality which we have. We didn't want to be part of a cult and for the movement to be hijacked, not only by what it is now but by corporations virtue signalling. There are still countries where you can be imprisoned or put to death for being gay, don't see them virtue signalling in those countries though.' The post Gay GB News host says Pride 'doesn't show anything good about the gay community' appeared first on Attitude.

I got married and started my career young. When I got divorced and quit my job, I compared myself to others.
I got married and started my career young. When I got divorced and quit my job, I compared myself to others.

Business Insider

time42 minutes ago

  • Business Insider

I got married and started my career young. When I got divorced and quit my job, I compared myself to others.

My parents always encouraged me to be myself. Still, I somehow picked up the belief that there's a "right" way and a "wrong" way to do life and that the right way means doing things in a certain order. I believed that your early 20s were the only time it was perfectly acceptable (and perhaps even adorable) to be a hot mess, while your late 20s were for taking the first steps toward getting "old and boring" — getting married, getting serious about a career, the whole nine yards. But even with this steadfast belief, I still did things out of order. Or so I thought. I got married and started my career by 25, but neither worked out By 25, I already had a full year of being "old and boring" under my belt. I was married and a project manager at a PR company. I was ahead of the curve of where I thought I should be in terms of stability and normality. However, I was also learning that life wasn't for me. Getting married quickly in my early 20s turned into getting an agonizingly slow divorce in my late 20s. It was only then that I finally started to understand what "forever" actually means, and that it would not be comfortable for me to spend that much time with someone I was fundamentally incompatible with. There I was, 28 and suddenly single, watching engagement announcements crop up all over my Instagram feed, like fungus after a rainstorm. I felt washed up, like Gloria Swanson in Sunset Boulevard, though I had yet to reach the age where you adopt a monkey and an all-caftan wardrobe. It turned out PR also wasn't for me, and I was both out of a job and a husband. Now single and living alone, my bills had doubled while my income was nonexistent. I had to Scotch tape together my living, like when I was fresh out of college — except this time, I was proficient in Microsoft Project (and burned out on using it). I needed both money and a change, so I answered a somewhat questionable call for hair models on LA Casting. Fortunately, it turned out to be legit. I didn't even know hair modeling was a thing until I did it. I thought you could only model clothes and hands. But there I was, stumbling into a modeling career in my late 20s, when most "real" models were hitting retirement. Another milestone hit in reverse. I often compared myself to my best friend The year before my divorce, my best friend from growing up had gotten married. At the same time that I felt as though I was doing things backward, she was hitting life milestones"the right way" with almost textbook-level precision. In fact, the weekend of her wedding was when I first started wondering about my compatibility with my own husband, and if we truly had to be bound by "I do" forever. Just after my divorce, she and her husband bought a house in the suburbs while I lived in a studio apartment I could barely afford. And at the beginning of my modeling career, I found out she was pregnant when I was on Bourbon Street, partying it up with other models after a giant hair modeling gig I had been flown out to New Orleans for. Next to my best friend, I felt as though I looked like a train wreck. Bleaching my hair and posting "hot modeling photos" on Instagram right after a divorce didn't scream stable. But that messy exterior was really a cocoon as I transformed into something more majestic than a butterfly — myself. I'm glad things happened the way they did It was hard for me not to compare myself to someone who seemed to have the perfect life, especially when I was fully submerged in the unavoidable chaos of change. But having every inch of my life explode was worth it. Now, I have a career that suits me, a great partner, and I live in an apartment with more than one room. But most importantly, I'm happy, because my life is what I want it to be, not what I arbitrarily feel it "should" be. If I had the choice to Freaky Friday with my best friend, I wouldn't trade places for anything. I had believed growing up that your early 20s are for making mistakes, before you finally figure out what you want your life to look like, and in some ways, that is what I did. Setting up a life that wasn't right for me — and then getting out of it — was a mistake, sure, but it helped me get to where I am now.

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