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How Country Music Became the Soundtrack to the Show

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A primary arc in the second season of Landman, Taylor Sheridan’s Paramount+ series set in the Texas oilfields, focuses on the character Cami Miller, played by Demi Moore. Navigating the personal and economic fallout from the death of her oil tycoon husband, Cami is wracked by loneliness and stress and, in an intense scene late in the third episode, collapses on the marble patio of her mansion while holding a photo of herself and her late spouse. As she does, a heavy acoustic guitar gives way to Drayton Farley’s muted voice singing, “Everything about this place has changed.”

It’s a pivotal scene in the series. As it turns out, it’s also a pivotal scene in Farley’s career — and in those of Sunny Sweeney and Dani Rose, too. The three artists co-wrote “Touch and Go,” the song heard in the scene, in 2023 at a writing camp organized by Andrea von Foerster, the music supervisor who curates the music in Landman just as she has done for Sheridan’s juggernaut series Yellowstone. It was Farley’s first-ever co-write, and von Foerster held onto the song for more than a year before deeming it a fit for Cami’s emotional breakdown.

“We all talked about watching our parents growing older and how hard those emotions can hit you,” Farley says of the song. “There’s this one line, ‘Wish I could stop the age in my daddy’s eyes,’ that really stands out. That one, I believe, was born from Sunny. It’s the kind of line that keeps the song true and the writer on track. I’m really proud of this song, and honestly Andrea could not have placed it in a more fitting scene.”

Within a week, “Touch and Go” topped Shazam’s Top 200 U.S. chart for all genres. Out of nowhere, Farley, Sweeney, and Rose had a viral hit. In the month following its placement in Landman, the song received more than half a million streams on Spotify alone.

Such is the power of the alliance that Sheridan and von Foerster have forged in soundtracking Yellowstone and Landman with music from outside country’s mainstream. “The Taylorverse” as von Foerster calls it, has been instrumental in elevating Zach Bryan, Whiskey Myers, Shane Smith and the Saints, and Ella Langley — and just about any other artist whose song she picks to help develop Sheridan’s characters.

When Landman’s second season wraps up Jan.18, more than 100 songs will have been featured in the series. Iconic names like George Strait and Chris Stapleton blend with rising stars like Farley, Noeline Hofmann, and Danno Simpson on the series’ official Spotify playlist.

The Taylorverse is not the only streaming home for Red Dirt, Texas, and Americana artists — Sterlin Harjo’s FX projects Reservation Dogs and The Lowdown were instrumental in showcasing the music of Ken Pomeroy and Blaine Bailey, for example — but it’s the gold standard. There’s an argument to be made that nothing has played a greater role in the rise of independent country artists than being heard in one of Sheridan’s shows since Yellowstone premiered in 2018.

That’s the vision that von Foerster had from the outset.

“When you work on a hit, you get to help launch and further artists’ careers,” von Foerster tells Rolling Stone. “That’s amazing. When you’re choosing soundtracks for your characters’ emotional arcs and storylines, you get to take the audience along for the ride. The success of the music doesn’t change the show’s musical identity, but it’s a nice nod of approval.”

Before teaming up with Sheridan, van Foerster was already established as one of the top music supervisors in television and film, having overseen the song choices for movies like 500 Days of Summer and Air, among dozens of others. During the planning stages for Yellowstone, von Foerster says dozens of phone calls and a few in-person meetings with Sheridan made them realize they shared the same musical aesthetic. From there, she maintained a steady focus on Sheridan, taking her cues from how he creates his storylines.

“He writes very clearly,” she says. “It’s really just listening to what the page says it wants and the characters, and following that emotional arc. Sometimes, it’s a montage — but less so in Landman than Yellowstone. Sometimes it’s sourced from its location. Is the feeling over a scene at the end of the episode like ‘Touch and Go’? Are you playing to the emotion or are you trying to misdirect? It’s always just paying attention to what’s on the page.”

Still, even a well-curated selection does not automatically mean the songs are going to resonate beyond their accompanying scenes. Ryan Bingham, who had an acting role in Yellowstone, recalled having mild trepidation when he learned the series would skew heavily toward Texas, Red Dirt, and Americana. “At the time, you know, it could have gone either way. It could have been really cool for this music, or it could have been really bad for it,” Bingham told Rolling Stone in 2024.

For von Foerster’s part, though, the need to match the tone of Sheridan’s work rendered those concerns secondary. There was no reason to, say, fill the series with artists constantly at the top of the country music charts. Plus, she figured, if she and Sheridan liked a song, fans of their work would like it, too.

“We never said we were not going to do something,” von Foerster says of how she and Sheridan ended up steering largely clear of the mainstream. “It wasn’t that. It was that these stories don’t call for it. If we use music that’s everywhere, it makes it seem like the show is a playlist.

“We’re not matching the show to songs. We’re matching songs to the show.”

That process, she says, is mostly intuitive. “When you love something, you don’t try, you just do,” says von Foerster, who collects music on playlists and has an inbox overflowing with pitches from artist representatives. She and Sheridan both keep abreast of new artists who may be a fit. When Sheridan attends a concert in Texas and an artist catches his ear, he lets von Foerster know quickly. The songwriting camp that led to “Touch and Go” is one of many that van Foerster holds in hopes of finding music that will match the right moment in a script.

“Music is my first language,” she says. “It’s what I’ve dedicated my life to. I don’t have the talent to make it, but I have the talent to have it created, and matchmaking is my thing. Matching the audio to the visual is what I’m good at. When that’s the case, either you find it or it finds you, but somehow it just happens.

“I have been in line for a restroom at a restaurant in Nashville before, looked at a guy in a cardigan and said, ‘Great cardigan! What band are you in?’ And he was in a band of course. Then, I got to know that band, and I used that band in a show.”

Sweeney was already riding a high from the near-universal praise for her 2025 album Requiem for a Dream when “Touch and Go” had its viral moment. She was struck by the sheer speed at which the song resonated with Landman viewers.

“The show is solely responsible for introducing this song to a wider audience and shows how music can really travel when it’s paired with the right story,” Sweeney says. “Music supervisors have such a crucial job pairing their vision with what’s happening on screen. Suddenly, people are connecting their own moments to it, and to me, that’s been the most powerful thing to watch.”

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Says von Foerster: “We like Red Dirt country and outlaw country in the Taylorverse.”

Josh Crutchmer is a journalist and author whose book (Almost) Almost Famous will be released April 1 via Back Lounge Publishing.



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Airbus Hits Revised Plane Delivery Target

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The European plane maker said it dispatched 793 commercial aircraft to 91 customers last year, in line with company guidance of about 790 deliveries.



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George Kittle Injury: Christian McCaffrey says 49ers to play for injured tight end

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The San Francisco 49ers refused to let injuries stand in their way, as they went 12-5 in the regular season despite losing notable players such as Nick Bosa and Fred Warner. The 49ers overcame yet another major injury in their eventual 23-19 wild-card victory against the Philadelphia Eagles, as star tight end George Kittle was carted off in the second quarter after suffering an Achilles injury.

While the 49ers found a way to defeat the reigning Super Bowl champions on their home field, there is no getting around the fact that the loss of Kittle is a big one for this offense. Running back Christian McCaffrey described Kittle as the “heart and soul” of the team in his postgame press conference, and said that the 49ers are going to play for him as they attempt to make it back to the Super Bowl.

“This team has carried the character of George Kittle throughout the entire year, and since I got traded here, he’s the heart and soul of this team,” McCaffrey said. “And so, it’s a tough loss. When he’s not playing, it means a lot. But he’s somebody that, even going through something that he had to go through, and us finding a way to finish, he’s the first guy in the locker room smiling, bumping music, happy for his teammates.

“And when you lose a leader like that, you never really lose them because his presence is still in this locker room, his energy is still here, and he’s a leader, and heart and soul of this team. And so, we’re praying for him, love him, and we’re going to play for him the rest of the way.”

Kittle caught 57 passes for 628 yards and seven touchdowns in 11 regular-season games played this year. He recorded back-to-back 1,000-yard receiving campaigns in 2023-24. That earned him a four-year, $76.4 million extension this past offseason that made him the highest-paid tight end in NFL history. 

Coach Kyle Shanahan is going to have to again adjust his offensive game plan with Kittle out, but go ahead and doubt the 49ers at your own peril. They just defeated the Eagles without two First Team All-Pros in Bosa and Warner. They didn’t have their last two first-round picks in uniform with wide receiver Ricky Pearsall and pass rusher Mykel Williams, and didn’t have their top four linebackers active with Warner, Dee Winters, Tatum Bethune and Luke Gifford. The 49ers’ six highest-paid players have missed 60 games this season, including playoffs. But, it hasn’t stopped them yet.

Up next for the 49ers are the No. 1-seeded Seattle Seahawks, who defeated San Francisco in Week 18, 13-3, to earn the first-round postseason bye. The 49ers won four straight meetings in Seattle, and reached the NFC Championship game in each of their last seven trips to the playoffs.





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Police chase ends in crash, dog being ejected from windshield

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Deputies in Washington state attempted to pull over a vehicle last week, leading to a chase that ended in a crash. WARNING: The video above contains footage of dogs in a car crash that may be graphic to some viewers.Pierce County Sheriff’s Office deputies attempted to stop the vehicle around 12:45 a.m. on Jan. 6 for an expired registration. The driver accelerated and eluded deputies, triggering a brief pursuit that ended when the vehicle crashed into an embankment.A large dog was ejected from the front windshield and fled the scene. Another dog was later found in the vehicle behind the driver’s seat. Neither dog was injured in the crash.The driver, a 39-year-old man, was taken into custody on charges including eluding with endangerment, driving under the influence, driving while license suspended, unlawful possession of a controlled substance and animal cruelty.A passenger, a 28-year-old woman and the owner of both dogs, was released on scene with her smaller dog so she could retrieve the larger dog that fled to a nearby property.Officials said the incident underscores the dangers of drug use and operating a vehicle.

Deputies in Washington state attempted to pull over a vehicle last week, leading to a chase that ended in a crash.

WARNING: The video above contains footage of dogs in a car crash that may be graphic to some viewers.

Pierce County Sheriff’s Office deputies attempted to stop the vehicle around 12:45 a.m. on Jan. 6 for an expired registration.

The driver accelerated and eluded deputies, triggering a brief pursuit that ended when the vehicle crashed into an embankment.

A large dog was ejected from the front windshield and fled the scene. Another dog was later found in the vehicle behind the driver’s seat. Neither dog was injured in the crash.

The driver, a 39-year-old man, was taken into custody on charges including eluding with endangerment, driving under the influence, driving while license suspended, unlawful possession of a controlled substance and animal cruelty.

A passenger, a 28-year-old woman and the owner of both dogs, was released on scene with her smaller dog so she could retrieve the larger dog that fled to a nearby property.

Officials said the incident underscores the dangers of drug use and operating a vehicle.



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Swiss court orders 3 months of pretrial detention for bar manager over fatal fire

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GENEVA — A Swiss court on Monday ordered three months of pretrial detention for a manager of a bar that burst into flames during a New Year’s Eve celebration, killing 40 people — mostly young revelers — and injuring 116 others, many seriously.

The court of compulsory measures in the southwestern Valais canton, or region, ordered that Jacques Moretti, a manager of Le Constellation bar in Crans-Montana, be held because of a possible “flight risk” highlighted by prosecutors.

However, the court said in a statement it was inclined to lift the three months of pretrial detention if sufficient “security measures” — potentially including bail — are arranged. It said the manager should remain in custody until the measures are worked out.

The office of Patrick Michod, a lawyer for Moretti, did not respond to emailed requests for comment, and his secretary said the attorney was not immediately available.

A Swiss business register lists French couple Jacques and Jessica Moretti as the bar’s owners. Lawyers for Jessica Moretti, in a statement, said the court decision would allow her husband “to regain freedom” once conditions are arranged.

Swiss authorities have opened a criminal investigation into the owners, who are suspected of involuntary homicide, involuntary bodily harm and involuntarily causing a fire.

Investigators believe that sparkling candles ignited the fire when they came too close to the ceiling, which was outfitted with soundproofing material. Authorities were looking into whether the material conformed with regulations and whether the candles were permitted for use in the bar. Fire safety inspections hadn’t been carried out since 2019.

Swiss President Guy Parmelin said Friday that Switzerland was “appalled” by the tragedy.



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MYLES KENNEDY Discusses Why He Turned Down Audition For VELVET REVOLVER

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Before Alter Bridge locked in its lineup and momentum, Myles Kennedy stepped away from music for a stretch after tinnitus became a real problem. That health issue also shaped one of the bigger “what if” moments of the 2000s: an audition opportunity for Velvet Revolver.

Speaking to Metal Hammer, Kennedy says the decision to turn it down came with a cost: “It was very difficult to turn that opportunity down. Though my friends might have thought that I was crazy, I knew that I wasn’t mentally prepared, at least at that stage, to jump into something of that magnitude and do it justice.”

He describes the early mental hit of tinnitus in plain terms: “Very disturbing initially, especially mentally. The biggest concern was maintaining the hearing quality that I still had. Fortunately, since I’m very careful with how loud I listen to music, I’ve managed to keep it in check.”

Not long after, he took a different leap, joining Mark Tremonti in what became Alter Bridge, and he explains why that felt workable: “Enough time had passed. There was a limited amount of music written at that point, but I could recognize from the beginning that this was potentially something that would be appropriate for my voice and songwriting approach.”

Alter Bridge eventually launched with One Day Remains, and later, the story turned back around: Kennedy wound up collaborating with Slash on Slash and became his touring vocalist.

As for Velvet Revolver, vocalist Scott Weiland was fired from the band in 2008 and they never quite got back together. After Weiland‘s departure, Velvet Revolver entered a long, uneven period of searching for a new lead singer while frequently drifting in and out of activity.

Auditions were inconsistent, often interrupted by solo projects and hiatuses, and many well-known musicians were rumored or confirmed to have been considered over the years, including Myles Kennedy, Chester Bennington, Lenny Kravitz, Sebastian Bach, and others. Franky Perez was briefly hired as vocalist in 2008, though the arrangement did not last. Band members, particularly Slash and Duff McKagan, repeatedly emphasized that no candidate had fully met their expectations, and progress toward a stable lineup remained elusive.

The band reunited with Weiland for a one-off benefit performance in January 2012, sparking brief speculation about a permanent reunion. While Weiland publicly expressed interest in fully rejoining Velvet Revolver for touring and recording, those claims were quickly denied by Slash, and no long-term plans materialized.

By 2014, the band acknowledged continued auditions but remained inactive, with members focused on other commitments. Any possibility of a reunion definitively ended with Weiland‘s death in December 2015, after which Slash and McKagan rejoined Guns N’ Roses in 2016.

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UnitedHealth Used Aggressive Tactics to Boost Medicare Payments, Senate Report Finds

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Sen. Chuck Grassley launched an investigation last year following Wall Street Journal reports examining the company’s Medicare Advantage practices.



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Breakaway Roper Dowell Leads Odessa With a 1.5 Second Run

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Breakaway roper Makenzie Dowell wasted no time in making a statement at this year’s event, stopping the clock in a blistering 1.5 seconds. Dowell’s closest competitor heading into the final week of competition is Karmen Martin in a time of 2.2 seconds. Dowell is from Marlin, Texas, and is competing on her permit. A win in Odessa will easily help her fill her permit that she bought in October. This would be her first big win in ProRodeo.

Another permit holder, Maylee McCrary, is currently leading the barrel race in Odessa with a 14.46 second run. McCray, from Bryson, Texas, was a WPRA Junior member in 2022 and purchased her permit in 2024.



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Albuquerque father found guilty of abusing 2-month-old child

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ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (KRQE) – A jury on Friday convicted and Albuquerque man of abusing his 2-month-old baby. Jesse Levario was found guilty of two counts of child abuse resulting in great bodily harm and one count of child abuse. In September 2022, Levario brought his baby to the hospital for a leg injury and doctors discovered […]



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Same-sex sexual behavior seen in many primate species, suggesting evolutionary origin

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Humans are far from the only primates engaging in same-sex sexual activity.

A new study found instances in which 59 nonhuman primate species, including bonobos, chimpanzees and macaques, have taken part in same-sex behaviors.

Researchers observed repeated occurrences of the behavior in 23 species. The study, published Monday in the journal Nature Ecology & Evolution, is the most comprehensive review of same-sex behavior in primates to date (though humans are not included). The findings challenge some common assumptions about the purpose of sex in the animal world, suggesting it plays a broader social role.

The authors posit that same-sex behavior developed evolutionarily to help primates in complex social groups ease tension, reduce conflict and build bonds. A combination of genetics and external stress — from the environment or from social systems — appears to drive this behavior, they conclude.

“What we found shows that same-sex is not like something bizarre, aberrant or rare. It’s everywhere, it’s very useful, it’s very important,” said Vincent Savolainen, director of the Georgina Mace Centre for the Living Planet at Imperial College London and an author of the study.

For the research, Savolainen and his co-authors analyzed existing data from previous research and observations of 491 primate species, looking for documented instances of same-sex sexual behavior.

“This predominantly involved mounting, ventral-ventral or ventral-dorsal, as well as genital touching and fellatio. Both male-male and female-female interactions were included,” the study says. Same-sex interactions of a nonsexual nature were not counted to avoid ambiguity.

The resulting findings indicate that same-sex behavior is more common when animals need social cohesion to deal with harsh environmental conditions, when they’re at high risk of being eaten or when competition for resources is more intense. It’s also more common in social groups with strict hierarchies, where sex could help individuals manage competition, build alliances and avoid intergroup aggression.

“People haven’t realized same-sex, as a behavior, is as important for the functioning of a society as feeding, fighting, making babies, looking after your offspring,” Savolainen said.

He likened same-sex sexual behavior to a “currency” that some primate individuals might employ to better make their way in society, increase opportunities and share resources.

“What we see is that when there are social difficulties in a species, then same-sex is a currency to help,” Savolainen said.

He added that the behavior is likely common in more than 23 primate species, but the data on the subject is limited and some species haven’t been studied closely.

It can be difficult for scientists to observe and interpret same-sex sexual behaviors in field research. Plus, many researchers once viewed these behaviors as unusual and outside of their focus, so they might not have documented instances of it carefully. Additionally, Savolainen said, it’s difficult to secure funding to study same-sex sexual behavior in animals, particularly from government agencies, so that might have kept researchers from pursuing the topic, as well.

“We have lots of species where we don’t know whether it exists. It’s not documented,” Savolainen said. “Scientists have overlooked this, and you can’t understand how a society works well if you don’t integrate this as part of multiple behaviors you need to take into account. Hopefully, we’ll have a lot more data in the future.”

The new study does not attempt to relate the findings to modern human sexual behavior, but it does say that human ancestors were subject to the same environmental and social pressures that the researchers think drive same-sex behavior in other primates.

Previous research has shown that same-sex behavior in macaques is widespread, could be inherited and that certain behaviors could be traced to specific genetic bloodlines. Female bonobos are frequently observed rubbing genitals amid social tension. Same-sex behaviors have also been observed in chimpanzees.

Marlene Zuk, a University of Minnesota professor and evolutionary biologist who researches same-sex behavior in animals but did not work on the new study, said the new analysis was exciting because it covered such a broad range of primates.

“What’s really impressive is the breadth of data that they’ve pulled together here,” she said.

Zuk was not surprised by the authors’ conclusion that environmental and social influences appeared to play a role in primates’ same-sex behavior. The new study, she said, highlights a common misunderstanding about animal sexual behavior. It’s more nuanced than people assume, and not always about making babies.

“Sexual behavior is often about more than reproduction, and that’s certainly true in our species. But, people don’t tend to think that it’s also true in other species,” Zuk said. “They have this idea that in all animals, except for people, that they’re old-fashioned Roman Catholics and they can only have sex briefly when it’s going to result in an offspring and with the lights off, you know? And that’s just not how animals are either.”

She added that scientists long ago ruled out the idea that animals or humans might possess a particular “gay gene” responsible for driving same-sex behavior.

“There is not a single identifiable gene in people or any other animal that will irrevocably and in all cases mean that the animal exhibits solely same-sex behavior,” she said. “What is really clear to most of us who work in the field, but somehow seems to escape a lot of everybody else, is that pretty much all behaviors, and indeed pretty much all traits in general, whether they’re physical or psychological or whatever, are going to be the result of influence from genes and the environment.”



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