Last year’s Hurray For The Riff Raff album The Past Is Still Alive was widely hailed as a triumph for Alynda Segarra (don’t sleep on 2022’s Life On Earth, though). They took a victory lap of sorts by ...
In case you haven’t heard, Bob Saget (TV’s Danny Tanner) swears and talks about having sex with things these days. If that was news to you, you’ll have ’til the end of this paragraph to process the ...
Jimmy Carter loved musicians, and they loved him. He had decades-long friendships with Gregg Allman, Bob Dylan and Willie Nelson. When his longshot bid for the presidency was running out of money ...
The emotional, week-long public goodbye to former President Jimmy Carter is underway. Carter's body was transferred from his hometown of Plains, Georgia, to Atlanta on Saturday. The former ...
The week-long state funeral services honoring former President Jimmy Carter, who died at 100 last week, began Saturday morning. The ceremonies will honor Carter’s journey from his hometown of ...
Jimmy Carter, who died Dec. 29 at age 100, was well known as the 39th president, a former peanut farmer and the unofficial face of Habitat for Humanity. But who made up his family beyond Rosalynn ...
Carter saw a color-changing UFO in Georgia in 1969 As governor, he filed an official UFO report in 1973 Promise to reveal UFO files revoked over security concerns As a rising politician in Georgia ...
Jimmy Carter, the longest-living United States president, died on Dec. 29 at age 100 Drew Angerer/Getty Former President Jimmy Carter's funeral proceedings will take place over six days following ...
Jimmy Carter, the 39th President of the United States, earned the nickname "Rock and Roll President" for his genuine connection with music and musicians like Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson, and the ...
Jimmy Carter delivered a blistering Law Day address ... The other influence, Carter said, was “a great poet named Bob Dylan,” whom he called a friend. (The two had met three months earlier ...
Jimmy Carter “was a terrible president but an even worse former president,” thunders National Review’s Philip A. Klein. His “true legacy is one of economic misery at home and embarrassment ...