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Tim McGraw Shares Candid Health Update Following Canceled Tour Dates

Tim McGraw Shares Candid Health Update Following Canceled Tour Dates

Yahoo5 days ago

says he's "getting there" after undergoing several surgeries in less than a year.
During a recent interview on The Bobby Bones Show, the "Live Like You Were Dying" singer opened up about some issues with his health recently that led to cancelled concert tours and skipped award shows.
In the last "six, eight months," the country crooner has required three back surgeries and double knee replacements, but now, things are looking better as he prepares to get back at it.
As the musician gears up for his first concert in nearly a year thanks to his health conundrums, he said he's "getting there" after having "three back surgeries [and] double knee replacements."
It all started with a back surgery before kicking off his Standing Room Only Tour on March 14, 2024, which he said "sort of went south on me right at the beginning of the tour." Then, just three weeks in, his "knees went out."
He powered through "my knees completely gone and my back gone," ultimately canceling the rest of his 2024 dates to "[go] in and [have] the surgeries done."
"I had my knee surgeries done, and then in the process of recovering from my knee surgeries, my back went out again and I had to have another back surgery," he explained.
The musician maintained a positive attitude about his multitude of surgical procedures, laughing as he addressed the final surgery of the batch—despite the fact it cost him a big Netflix gig, which is sure to come as disappointing news to his loyal fanbase.
He was meant to star as a champion bull rider who "oddly enough had back injuries and wasn't supposed to ride again."
Luckily he's "feel[ing] better" now, though "some mornings are better than others."Tim McGraw Shares Candid Health Update Following Canceled Tour Dates first appeared on Parade on May 26, 2025

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What to Watch This Week: Political Laughs, High-Stakes Action & Heartfelt Connections

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‘The biggest mistake of my life': 6 actors on typecasting, comedy idols and more
‘The biggest mistake of my life': 6 actors on typecasting, comedy idols and more

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time2 hours ago

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‘The biggest mistake of my life': 6 actors on typecasting, comedy idols and more

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Walter: My dad used to let me stay up and watch 'The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour' and 'Laugh-In.' I got to see Ruth Buzzi, rest in peace, and Goldie Hawn and Lily Tomlin. Jo Anne Worley. All these funny women. That's what made me think, 'You can get a job doing this, the thing that I get in trouble for at school?!' Grier: My comedy hero was Richard Pryor. I was this Black little boy in Detroit, and George Jessel would come on 'The Mike Douglas Show' and he might as well have been speaking Russian. I'm like, 'How can this be comedy?' Then I saw Richard Pryor, and he was the first comic who I just went, 'Well, this guy's hilarious.' Downs: I remember one of the first comedies that my dad showed me was 'Young Frankenstein.' I remember Teri Garr, Cloris Leachman and Madeline Kahn. All of these women. I was always like, 'They're the funniest ones.' Hudson: My era growing up was Steve Martin, Martin Short, Albert Brooks, Mel Brooks. But women were, for me, the classics. Lucille Ball. Walter: There was a time when I was growing up where women really dominated comedy. They were your mom [nods at Hudson, Hawn's daughter], Whoopi [Goldberg], Bette Midler. The biggest stars of the biggest comedies were women, and then that all went away for a really long time. I think it found its way back with Judd Apatow and then he made 'Bridesmaids.' Hudson: I tried really hard to make edgy comedy and studios wouldn't do it. They wouldn't. It took Judd to convince the studio system that women are ready. That we can handle rated-R. In the '70s and '80s, there was a ton of rated-R comedy with women. But for some reason, it just all of a sudden became like, 'Oh, there's only 1½ demographics for women in comedy.' I always felt like it was an uphill battle trying to get them made. Then I remember when Jenji [Kohan] came in with 'Orange Is the New Black.' That was really awesome. Lane: Above all, it was always Jackie Gleason for me. He was such an influence. He was hilarious, and of course, very broadly funny, but then there was something so sad. It was such pathos with him. ... He was this wonderful, serious actor, as well as being Ralph Kramden. Everett: There's nobody that taught me more about how to be funny than my mom. She just had this way of being that I have used in my live shows. It's led to where I am now. She used to wet her pants [laughing] so she had to put towels down on all the chairs in the house. She just didn't care. That shows you to not care, to go out there. I live in fear, but not when I feel like she's with me. Grier: That's the edge. You're either going to weep or you're going to [laugh] until you urinate.

Target's Stunning $40 Beverage Tub is The Perfect Summer Party Upgrade
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Yahoo

time3 hours ago

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Target's Stunning $40 Beverage Tub is The Perfect Summer Party Upgrade

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