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Lainey Wilson, Cody Johnson and the Value of a CMA Nominations Breakout

The stars aligned on the current Country Music Association Awards ballot for two artists who may use this voting season to climb to the next level of stardom.

Lainey Wilson, who has never been a CMA finalist before, nabbed six nominations to lead the entire field of candidates for the Nov. 9 ceremony at Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena. Cody Johnson, who garnered only a single nomination three years ago, broke out with four this time, including a male vocalist of the year nod that surprised even his manager. It’s a tough category — 51 of the current 60 titles on Country Airplay feature solo male acts, operating on their own or as part of a collaboration. Making the final five is a big deal.

“To have Cody’s name on that list speaks volumes,” Durango Artists owner Howie Edelman says. “It shows that people recognize his craft and his natural-born ability.”

The leading nominees invariably make a big splash, though it’s particularly helpful to newer artists. Alan Jackson set the record with 10 nominations 20 years ago. It was a phenomenal accomplishment, though it wasn’t entirely surprising — he had collected 49 of them across the previous 12 years. Kenny Chesney snared a pace-setting seven nominations in 2008 — again, a major achievement, though he had already been listed 23 times.

But when a breakout CMA nominations moment happens early in a career, it’s essentially an announcement to the country world to pay attention. And historically, artists who pile up at least four nods early on tend to maintain success for long periods of time. Just look at a few examples: Glen Campbell, five nominations in 1969; Alabama, five, 1981; Ricky Skaggs, five, 1982; Randy Travis, six, 1986; Vince Gill, six, 1991; Brad Paisley, six, 2000; Kacey Musgraves, six, 2013; and Chris Stapleton and Maren Morris, five apiece, 2016. Then there’s 1990, when the leaders were mostly new acts: Garth Brooks, with five nominations, and Jackson, The Kentucky HeadHunters and Clint Black, who all notched four.

“It’s like the chicken and the egg,” says Black. “It’s really significant for your career, getting the nominations — but it’s because something significant has [already] happened in your career.”

Indeed, the makeup of the ballot guarantees that an artist has to create a compelling piece of work to rack up four or more nominations. 

The CMA ballot lists a dozen categories that could feed an artist’s nominations total:

• Musician of the year is rarely in play for recording artists.

• Two general categories, entertainer and new artist of the year, recognize different levels of accomplishment; it’s rare for an act to get nominated in both fields in the same year.

• Four categories parse artists into exclusive fields based on the act’s makeup. An artist can generally appear in just one of the following: male vocalist, female vocalist, vocal duo or vocal group.

•Five categories recognize specific titles: album, single, song, music video and musical collaboration.

Realistically, most artists will only score more than two nominations by releasing titles that their peers respond to, either because of their commercial achievement or their creative value. That’s how Wilson compiled her six nods. She picked up new artist and female vocalist, then another four entries associated with individual titles: song, for “Things a Man Oughta Know”; album, for Sayin’ What I’m Thinkin’; and music video and musical event, both for the Cole Swindell collaboration “Never Say Never.”

“I don’t know that I expected her to lead the nominations,” BMG Nashville president Jon Loba says, “but I did feel like she was going to have several, just based on the buzz in the community about her.”

With that expectation, the company scheduled the release of her latest album, Bell Bottom Country, for Oct. 28, knowing that her new role in season five of the Paramount+ drama Yellowstone, due Nov. 13, would create a trio of useful talking points. She received several print and online profiles that might not have occurred were she not a leading nominee. They include bookings from CMA’s broadcast partner, ABC, which slotted her in the Nov. 7 On the Road to the CMA Awards special, and as the musical guest on the Nov. 9 edition of Jimmy Kimmel Live! 

“I don’t think I ever saw an album rollout so cohesive around the CMAs,” says BBR Music Group senior vp of publicity Jay Jones, who worked at the CMA from 2013-2017. “A lot of that was completely unpredictable with her having so many nominations.”

The business itself is arguably better at converting early-career nominations bonanzas into major promotion. When the awards debuted in 1967, country radio was much more interested in that news than print media — and broadcasters, of course, only reached people who were listening when they mentioned the CMAs. Now, country gets more mainstream treatment, and artists’ ability to reach their fans directly in real time provides more ways to capitalize.

“When I was playing in the bars, I’d gather addresses and get a mailing list — and once a month, I’m printing out my calendar and licking stamps and envelopes and mailing those out just to try to get 50 people to show up at a bar,” Black recalls. “Now, you reach millions of people through a tweet.”

But the nominations aren’t just valuable in the moment. A major haul becomes part of the artist’s long-term marketing story.

“It goes into the Rolodex of tools that we utilize for all of our PR stuff,” Edelman says. “It’ll go into [Johnson’s] one sheet. If we’re lucky enough to win, then obviously, that’ll speak more volumes, you know. You don’t have to be the eighth person in line to get on the Today show.”

But even if they don’t win, snagging four nominations this early in Johnson’s national career — or six, in Wilson’s case — is legacy-level stuff.

“No. 1, it’s historical,” Loba says. “No. 2, it’s like a Super Bowl ring. You can never take that away.”

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New ‘Quad Swab’ Detects Four Respiratory Illnesses in One Swab

Hospitals and health departments in the Ozarks are using a new test that can detect four respiratory illnesses with one test. The test is called the Quad Swab.

Scott Allen of the Webster County Health Department says the technology comes out of DNA Laboratories in Springfield, and the results are available the next day.

Allen says the Quad Swab will quickly detect exactly which respiratory illness the patient has.

This article is provided by Ozarks News – 93.3 KWTO
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Olivia Culpo Thought She & Nick Jonas ‘Were Going to Get Married’

Once upon a time, Olivia Culpo was in a relationship with Nick Jonas. But contrary to what she expected at the time, she never did get a happily ever after with him. In the Nov. 7 premiere episode of her new TLC reality show The Culpo Sisters, the 30-year-old model opened up about how she struggled to recover after her breakup from the JoBro, revealing she once thought they’d tie the knot.

At first, Culpo was hesitant to share much about her old flame. “Do I have to talk about that?” she told her show’s producers, who’d asked her about her nearly two-year relationship with the “Jealous” singer. “I did date Nick and that was a very formative experience for me.”

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“I moved to L.A. with him,” she continued. “I had no brand, no money and I was in love. That was great, right? But when he broke up with me, I was kind of left with no sense of identity.”

The 2012 Miss Universe winner went on to say that after Jonas broke things off, she struggled to get back on her feet — emotionally and financially. “My whole identity was in him, which is a very common story of a young person in love,” she shared.

“I thought we were going to get married — I thought all the things,” she added. “I just remember night after night looking up at my ceiling in my apartment that I couldn’t afford, thinking to myself, ‘How am I going to pay my rent?’ I couldn’t even afford my groceries. It was a serious, pivotal moment for me, but it was something that taught me that you can’t give up.”

All’s well that ends well, though, and both Culpo and the Jonas Brothers star have gone on to find love with other people. Jonas is married to Priyanka Chopra — with whom he welcomed a daughter named Malti in January — and Culpo is now living it up with her boyfriend, 49ers running back Christian McCaffrey.

“He’s just the best, I feel like he is really everything that I could ever ask for,” she gushed to Entertainment Tonight ahead of the show’s premiere about the 26-year-old athlete. “So I never have to worry about anything.”

The Culpo Sisters airs Mondays at 9 p.m. on TLC.

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Jennifer Lopez Had No Problem Taking Ben Affleck’s Last Name: ‘I’m Proud of That’

You can keep calling Jennifer Lopez by her birth name, but as far as “Jenny From the Block” is concerned, she’s Jennifer Lynn Affleck from now on, thank you very much. “People are still going to call me Jennifer Lopez. But my legal name will be Mrs. Affleck because we’re joined together. We’re husband and wife. I’m proud of that. I don’t think that’s a problem,” the actress/singer tells Vogue magazine in a Dec. cover story about her decision to take the last name of husband actor Ben Affleck after their wedding this summer.

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When the writer joked that given her boss status as dancer-turned-singer-turned-actress-turned-mogul and female empowerment icon, wouldn’t it be more appropriate for Batffleck to take her name? “No! It’s not traditional. It doesn’t have any romance to it,” said Lopez, 53. “It feels like it’s a power move, you know what I mean? I’m very much in control of my own life and destiny and feel empowered as a woman and as a person. I can understand that people have their feelings about it, and that’s okay, too. But if you want to know how I feel about it, I just feel like it’s romantic. It still carries tradition and romance to me, and maybe I’m just that kind of girl.”

The news about Lopez’s name-change slipped out in a fly-by moment near the top of the profile, when the writer noted that on the set of her upcoming Netflix sci-fi drama, Atlas, they spotted a green neon sign in her on-set private tent that was a gift from the crew which read “Mrs. Affleck.”

The story also touches on the walls Lopez has had to build around herself over the past quarter century after initially charging into the spotlight with a Jenny From the Bronx attitude that made her believe she could say or do anything. But after the torrent of racist and sexist blowback she endured during her first go-round with Affleck, 50 — which ended in 2004 with their broken-off engagement — Lopez said round two came with some well-earned wisdom.

“We were so young and so in love at that time, really very carefree, with no kids, no attachments. And we were just living our lives, being happy and out there,” she said of their two-year run from 2002-2004, which came after the end of her year-long second marriage to former back-up dancer Cris Judd. “It didn’t feel like we needed to hide from anybody or be real discreet. We were just living out loud, and it turned out to really bite us. There was a lot underneath the surface there, people not wanting us to be together, people thinking I wasn’t the right person for him.”

Because of the intense scrutiny, Lopez said she put up a kind of “force field” around herself, which caused her to become “very guarded because I realized that they will fillet you. I really wish I could say more. I used to be like that. I am like that. But I’ve also learned.” The reunion was not a surprise, certainly not to Lopez, who suggested to the writer that she’d always secretly kept a love light burning for the actor. Their second take seemingly kicked off when she got an email from Affleck shortly after her busted engagement to baseball player Alex Rodriguez was announced in March 2021 in which the Tender Bar star gave her a head’s up that he highly praised her in a quote for a magazine about his ex-love.

That reach-out began a slow-rolling back-and-forth that rekindled their relationship, in private, of course. “Obviously we weren’t trying to go out in public,” she said. “But I never shied away from the fact that for me, I always felt like there was a real love there, a true love there. People in my life know that he was a very, very special person in my life. When we reconnected, those feelings for me were still very real.”

Her 12-year trip back to Affleck had begun before the reach-out, though, following the 2012 dissolution of her 10-year marriage to singer Marc Anthony — with whom she shares twin children — when she released a few poorly selling albums and took a gig as a judge on American Idol to pay her bills. The job turned out to be a prescient move that helped revive her career, even as it made Lopez realize what she’d been missing.

“It was like, Oh! That’s all I had to do this whole time was be myself? Although it was a competition, it was a reality show,” she said of her first time keeping it real on TV. “Up until then we only had what the media was telling you about me. I loved meeting the kids because I so identified with their dreams — I just loved it. There were a lot of things that people saw through that show, but more than anything I think they saw my heart, that I was a cool, funny person, that I was a nice person. No matter how many awards shows you do or late-night talk show couches you sit on, people feel like you’re putting something on. With a reality show, you can’t hide behind a script or a four-minute interview. You’re out there.”

To be clear, Lopez wouldn’t recommend her twisted romantic path with Affleck for everyone. “Sometimes you outgrow each other, or you just grow differently. The two of us, we lost each other and found each other,” she explained of their unpredictable path. “Not to discredit anything in between that happened, because all those things were real too. All we’ve ever wanted was to kind of come to a place of peace in our lives where we really felt that type of love that you feel when you’re very young and wonder if you can have that again. Does it exist? Is it real? All those questions that I think everyone has. You go through all these relationships, and you’re searching and you’re connecting and you’re disconnecting with people, and you’re like, God, is this just what life is? Like a carousel, roller coaster, carnival ride? And then it settles. But the journey to that is the mystery for everybody.”

In a rare public statement, Affleck said that the way Lopez has stayed the same over the years is almost as important to him as how she’s changed and evolved in the past two decades. “There is something innately, magically kind and good and full of love at the heart of who Jennifer is. That’s exactly the person I remember from 20 years ago,” he said. “Maybe she sees all the changes she’s made, whereas when I see her, mostly I just see someone who has retained, against the odds, the thing about her that always made her the most incredible to me: a heart that seems boundless with love. She is my idea of the kind of person I want to be.”

The piece also notes that Lopez is working on her first new album in nearly a decade, an as-yet-untitled work that is described as a “kind of bookend to This is Me … Then,” the 2002 album she released during the early days of her first Affleck romance. The collection is described by Lopez as the “most honest” work she’s ever done, “kind of a culmination of who I am as a person and an artist. People think they know things about what happened to me along the way, the men I was with — but they really have no idea, and a lot of times they get it so wrong. There’s a part of me that was hiding a side of myself from everyone. And I feel like I’m at a place in my life, finally, where I have something to say about it.”

The tracks on the album, whose release date has not yet been revealed, are described as “plaintive, confessional songs, reflections on the trials of her past, upbeat jams celebrating love and sex.”

Check out the Vogue cover below.

Jennifer Lopez Vogue
Jennifer Lopez on the cover of Vogue.
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Makin’ Tracks: Give ’Em Hill, ‘Billy’: Stephen Wilson Jr.’s Edgy Celebration of His Back-Roads Roots

In the opening hour of the 2019 PBS series Country Music: A Film by Ken Burns, Dolly Parton offered a primer on the use of the much-maligned word “hillbilly.”

“If you’re an outsider… and you’re saying it’s hillbilly music, because you don’t know any better, it’s almost like a racist remark,” she observed. “If we’re hillbillies, we’re proud of it. But you’re not allowed to say it if you don’t really know what you’re talking about.”

Singer-songwriter Stephen Wilson Jr., who was raised in Seymour, Ind., has enough backwoods cred to use the word properly. Or, to be more accurate, enough cred to pull the word apart properly. His song “billy,” released Sept. 16, centers on a hook that revels in its unsophisticated lifestyle choices: “You can call me billy, but the hills come with me.”

“The way hillbillies are generalized in mainstream media, they’re kind of lacking in intelligence, or they don’t think progressively,” Wilson says. “All the hillbillies I grew up with are actually really smart people; they just kind of chose a real simple life — and I kind of wanted to showcase the simplicity of that life without really taking a side.”

But it’s a performance with its own sound: a buzzing undercurrent, quasi-tribal drums and a fiery, futuristic-sounding lap steel with a touch of danger. The sound is, suggests Wilson, “Death Cab for country.”

Wilson developed “billy” in a half-hour fit of inspiration in his Nashville kitchen on Nov. 29, 2021, the Monday following Thanksgiving. He had spent the holiday in Indiana, hanging out with family and reconnecting with his roots. “I took a quick little swim in the hillbilly pool when I went home,” he says. “Maybe me writing that song was getting it off me.”

The “You can call me billy” hook may have been a reaction to his brief Indiana sojourn — he’s not entirely sure how it arrived — but he developed the lyrics first, starting with a chorus that mixes subversive imagery (“Half-mud blood”), hillbilly traits (“Got a strong Southern drawl”), mindless play (“Cannonball in the kiddy pool”) and a little good-guy grace (“Kind as the day is long”).

“It’s really more of an observation of a lifestyle and everything that comes along with it,” says Wilson. “It felt empowering to me when I was seeing it. It kind of made you feel tough, but not with all the typical tough-guy shit.”

The first verse embraced the outdoor aspects of that lifestyle, akin to Hank Williams Jr.’s “A Country Boy Can Survive” with its references to skinning bucks and cleaning fish. The last verse — owing, perhaps, to its post-Thanksgiving origins — served up collard greens, cornbread and “pig on the griddle.” Even a description of the conversation, “spoke slow and deeply fried,” took on a foodie’s viewpoint.

When the words came to sonic life, Wilson crafted verse melodies with long, held notes at the end of the lines, strung across a static, tonic E chord. Juxtaposed against that framework, the chorus feels quicker, with faster-paced phrasing and a chord structure that throws in a rare chromatic move, rising a half-step in a passing chord that provides an energetic lift.

With its singalong chorus, hooky melody and mysterious patchwork of images, “billy” caught the ear of Wilson’s wife, singer-songwriter Leigh Nash, formerly of the band Sixpence None the Richer. When they attended a Christmas party the next month, the musicians started sharing songs, and Nash suggested he do “billy.” Host Caylee Hammack and Ashley McBryde responded with enthusiasm, and Wilson figured he needed to record it.

He worked it up with his road band first, with drummer Julian Dorio banging stuttered rhythms on snare to carry much of the energy. Bassist Jon Murray anchored the chords beneath Wilson’s active acoustic guitar, and his brother, Scotty Murray, came up with a sneering lap steel part that enhances the song’s edgy quality.

“He plays it through a pedal board, like a Jonny Greenwood meets Duane Allman kind of thing, or Radiohead meets Paul Franklin,” Wilson suggests. “He’s a really great steel player, but he also adds a lot of cool, surreal effects.”

The band played “billy” several times during a spring concert run with The Cadillac Three, then added it to the set on a subsequent tour with Brothers Osborne. When producer Ben West heard “billy,” he wanted to skip some other material that was already in progress to focus on the new song. Wilson’s acoustic guitar part and scratch vocal provided the basic recording, and the other musicians worked around that at Farmland, a recording studio near Nashville’s Lipscomb University.

“It’s a very unassuming studio, and you could drive right past it and never know,” says West. “Jonny and Scotty, the brothers who play in his band, both live there. It’s really perfect. They just stumble out of bed, bring their instruments down and plug in and start recording.”

They had already honed in so much on the arrangement that West’s main focus was capturing the best iteration of their performances. “When we got around to recording it, the drum parts were probably 99%,” West says. “So my job at that point is just to basically make sure that nobody’s overshadowing the main character of the song, which is Stephen’s lyric and his gut-string guitars. Everybody’s supporting that character, but since they’re such big personalities, Julian could be the star of the show if you’re not careful, or Scotty on pedal steel.”

During concert performances, the band developed a Lumineers-like “hey” in the chorus; West and Wilson re-created it in the studio, inspired less by “Ho Hey” than by Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers’ “Don’t Come Around Here No More.”

“We just kind of did like a faux gang-vocal thing with a little slap back on it,” Wilson says. “Really, it’s more of the Tom Petty approach to a ‘hey.’ ”

The self-released “billy” is projected as one track among 22 possibilities for an album that’s currently being shopped around Nashville. Meanwhile, it has become a highlight of Wilson’s live set, speaking directly to fans who share his outsider disposition.

“When I first started playing it, I could see these hillbilly kids start singing it — like, they latched on to it real quick,” Wilson says. “And it means something to people, though they don’t know if they can exactly put their finger on it.” 

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Shania Twain Still Can’t Believe ‘Man! I Feel Like a Woman!’ Is Billboard’s No. 1 Karaoke Song: ‘I Would Never Have Imagined That’

Man! Shania Twain is still in disbelief that her signature hit, “Man! I Feel Like a Woman!,” took the top spot on Billboard‘s 100 Greatest Karaoke Songs of All Time list, so much so that on her Tuesday (Nov. 8) appearance on The Jennifer Hudson Show, she had to share a few more thoughts on earning the honor.

Hudson asked the country singer how it feels to crown the list, to which Twain replied, “I think that is so cool. Certainly I would never have imagined that, that I would ever have the best karaoke song in the world, but I enjoy the compliment and I can just imagine … every person in the world can sing that song with an exclamation mark. It’s just a statement, kind of feel-good song.”

Twain shared her initial reaction about being No. 1 on the Billboard list — in which she beat out hits from Billy Joel, Destiny’s Child, The Killers, Cher, Queen, Carrie Underwood and more — following its publication in October.

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“I think @billboard just crowned me the Queen of Karaoke?!” Twain tweeted on Oct. 6 along with surprised and crying-laughing emoji. “Seriously though, it’s really really cool to see the life that ‘Man! I Feel Like A Woman!’ has taken on and I’m just obsessed with you all…,” Twain added.

“Man! I Feel Like a Woman!” charted on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1999. The song went on to spend 28 weeks on the all-genre chart and peaked at No. 23.

Watch Twain talk about “Man! I Feel Like a Woman!” topping Billboard‘s list above.

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Ryan Reynolds Says Taylor Swift Isn’t in ‘Deadpool 3,’ But He ‘Would Do Anything for That Woman’

As of right now, Taylor Swift isn’t going to be making a cameo in the next Deadpool movie — but never say never. Ryan Reynolds, who stars in the franchise’s titular role, gushed about the pop star in a Tuesday (Nov. 8) interview and said that the door is always open for her to join the cast.

“Are you kidding me?” the actor told Entertainment Tonight at a red carpet event for his new film Spirited when asked whether he’d consider casting Swift. “I would do anything for that woman. She’s a genius.”

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Reynolds and Blake Lively, his wife and fellow Hollywood superstar, have been friends with the 11-time Grammy winner for years. Swift famously included each of the names of the couple’s three daughters — James, Inez and Betty — in her Folklore single “Betty,” and featured an audio clip of James’ voice in her Reputation track “Gorgeous.”

Last year, the “Anti-Hero” singer even went trick-or-treating with the Reynolds-Lively clan dressed up as a squirrel. And in 2016, she borrowed Reynolds’ actual Deadpool suit for her Halloween costume.

With Swift being such a close family friend, it’s basically a given that the Free Guy star, Lively and their three children (soon to be four!) are loving Midnights just as much as the rest of the world. Reynolds told ET that they’re “obsessed” with Swift’s newest record, which has sold nearly 2 million album units and has set unprecedented chart records since dropping Oct. 21.

“Oh my God, yes,” Reynolds said. “All of us, whole house, I’m not kidding. I love it so much. I do, Blake does, my daughters. We love it. Obsessed.”

He’d also spoken about his family’s love for Swift with SiriusXM’s Jess Cagle a day prior, confessing that he’d be joining Lively and the kids for a “Midnights dance party” on the porch right after the interview concluded. “That’s like a religion in our house,” he shared.

“I think what’s most exciting for them is that for the longest time, they just thought Taylor’s like an aunt, like a friend of Mommy and Daddy that’s very, very close, almost family,” Reynolds added. “And then they went to a concert one day and were like, ‘Oh, oh this isn’t a hobby.’”

Check out Ryan Reynolds’ SiriusXM interview below.

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Election Day Coverage and Sample Ballots

Voters across the Ozarks, and around the state and nation head to the polls Tuesday in a midterm election that will decide the balance of power in Congress.

We’ll have live election coverage Tuesday night on 93-3 A-M 560 KWTO from 8 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. with Don Louzader, Speakers Tim Jones and Elijah Haahr, Cass Bowen from the GOP watch party in Springfield, and news updates from Logan Weber and Brian Hauswirth from Zimmer News Network.

Click here for Greene County sample ballots:

Click here for Christian County sample ballots:

Click here for Webster County sample ballots:

In Missouri, Republican Attorney General Eric Schmitt is squaring off against Democrat Trudy Busch Valentine to represent the Show Me State in the United States Senate.

Missouri Senator Josh Hawley joined Schmitt on a barnstorming election eve tour across the state Monday.

Missourians will also elect a State Auditor Tuesday as Republican State Treasurer Scott Fitzpatrick goes up against Democrat Alan Green.

We’ll be following several U-S Congressional races in Missouri, including Republican State Senator Eric Burlison’s bid to become the first Congressman in southwest Missouri’s 7th District since Billy Long took office in 2011.

Burlison is opposed by Democrat Kristen Radaker-Sheafer.

Former Kansas City television anchor Mark Alford is the Republican candidate on the ballot for the 4th Congressional District seat in Missouri. He’s opposed by Democrat Jack Truman.

We’ll also follow the 8th District Congressional race, as GOP incumbent Jason Smith tries to keep his seat. He’s being challenged by Democrat Randi McCallian.

We have two State Senate races being contested in the Ozarks.

Republican Lincoln Hough will try to retain his seat in District 30. Hough is running against Democrat Raymond Lampert.

In District 16, representing Wright and Laclede Counties, Republican Justin Brown, who has held the seat since 2019, is up against Democrat Bethany Mann.

There are a number of contested races for State Representative in Springfield and southwest Missouri:

District 132: Democrat incumbent Crystal Quade is running against Republican Stephanos Freeman.

District 133: Republican Melanie Stinnett is running against Democrat Amy Blansit for the seat currently held by soon to be State Senator-Elect Curtis Trent.

District 134: Republican incumbent Alex Riley is up against Democrat Samantha Deaton.

District 135: Democrat incumbent Betsy Fogle is running against Republican A.J. Exner

District 136: GOP incumbent Craig Fishel is squaring off against Democrat Stephanie Hein.

District 140: Republican Jamey Ray Gragg is taking on Democrat Amy Freeland. The seat has been vacant since Tricia Derges resigned in July.

District 128: Republican incumbent Mike Stephens is running against Democrat Rich Horton.

District 156: Republican incumbent Brian Seitz is challenged by Democrat Ginger Kissee Witty.

District 125: Republican Dane Diehl and Democrat Robert E. Smith are squaring off for the seat currently held by Jim Kalberloh.

District 127: Republican incumbent Ann Kelley is taking on Democrat Marvin Manring.

Greene County has a contested race. Republican incumbent Cheryl Dawson-Spaulding is being challenged by Democrat Melissa Miller for the office of Recorder of Deeds.

There is one contested race for presiding county commissioner as Incumbent Republican John Bartosh takes on Democrat Joshua Shackles in Jasper County.

Statewide Ballot Issues:

Constitutional Amendment #1: Asks the state to give lawmakers the power to override the current constitutional restrictions of state investments made by the State Treasurer. It also allows state investments in municipal securities.

Constitutional Amendment #3: Recreational Marijuana—Removes state prohibitions on purchasing, possessing, consuming, using, manufacturing and selling marijuana for personal use for adults over 21. Also allows people with certain non-violent offenses to petition for release from incarceration. Opponents say there is potential mischief buried deep in the 39 pages of the proposal.

Constitutional Amendment #4: The entire state of Missouri is deciding state funding for the Kansas City Police Department. If passed, K-C would be required to increase funding for its police department to 25% of its general revenue budget. It is at the required 20%. The KCPD is one of only a few in the country controlled by the state. It goes back to the 1800’s.

Constitutional Amendment #5: Missourians are deciding whether the Missouri National Guard should be its own department in the state. It currently is under the Missouri Department of Public Safety’s supervision.

Constitutional Convention Question: The vote on this question is more of a formality than anything. Every 20 years, the Missouri Secretary of State must ask if the state should call a Constitutional Convention.

Local Ballot Issues:

City of Springfield Question 1: (Galloway Village—only voters in city limits of SGF decide). After a four-year battle, voters are deciding the future of a proposed development in the Galloway Village area. A yes vote would allow the rezoning for the development to take place.

City of Nixa Question: Shall the city impose a city general sales tax of 1% to fund public safety and recreation? A yes vote would improve the police station and parks.

Use Taxes: Cities of Ozark, Monett and Stotts City have use tax issues on the ballot. This would impose a local use tax related to online purchases.

Laclede County Surtax Rate Reduction: Laclede County voters are deciding an issue that would reduce the commercial property surtax on all utility, industrial, commercial, railroad and other real property that is not residential or agricultural from 1.03 per $100 assessed valuation to .51 assessed valuation effective September 1, 2023.

City of Fair Play (Polk County) sales tax issue: Shall the city of Fair Play impose a city sales tax of ¼ of 1% for general revenue, including for public safety and law enforcement purposes?

City of Hermitage (Hickory County) has 2 questions on the ballot: One involves making the position of City Marshal an appointed position from an elected position starting in April, 2023. The other would convert the position of City Collector from an elected position to an appointed position, also effective April, 2023.

City of Diamond (Newton County) is seeking the public’s approval of a $4.5 million dollar revenue bond that would go to wastewater infrastructure improvements

This article is provided by Ozarks News – 93.3 KWTO
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John Lennon’s Killer Admits There Was ‘Evil In My Heart’

The man who murdered John Lennon back in 1980 has admitted he knew his actions were wrong, he was seeking fame and that he had “evil in my heart” when he killed the Beatles great.

Mark David Chapman made the comments to a parole board in August, when he was denied for a 12th time, citing his ”selfish disregard for human life” among the reasons to keep him locked up.

Chapman’s comments were published in a transcript, released Monday (Nov. 7) under a freedom of information request and reported by the Associated Press.

His decision to shoot and kill the legendary songwriter was “my big answer to everything. I wasn’t going to be a nobody, anymore,” he told the board.

“I am not going to blame anything else or anybody else for bringing me there,” he added. “I knew what I was doing, and I knew it was evil, I knew it was wrong, but I wanted the fame so much that I was willing to give everything and take a human life.”

Chapman shot Lennon several times on the night of Dec. 8, 1980, as the British artist and his partner Yoko Ono were returning to their Upper West Side apartment. Earlier in the day, Lennon had signed an autograph for Chapman on a vinyl copy of his recently-released album Double Fantasy.

Lennon died from his wounds. He was 40.

The Liverpool singer, songwriter and peace activist posthumously won the 1981 Grammy Award for album of the year, was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1997 and elevated twice into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, as a member of the Beatles in 1988 and as a solo artist in 1994.

Chapman is serving a 20-years-to-life sentence at Green Haven Correctional Facility, north of New York City, according to state corrections records published online. He is expected to appear before the parole board again in February 2024.

The Fab Four are back in the charts with Revolver, widely regarded as one of the greatest rock albums of all time. Originally released in 1966, the collection was reissued on Oct. 28 in a new “special edition,” which landed at No. 2 on the latest albums charts in the U.K. and Australia, and at No. 4 on the Billboard 200.

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Drake And 21 Savage Set to Dethrone Taylor Swift on U.K. Albums Chart

After two weeks at the top of the U.K. albums chart, Taylor Swift’s golden run could come undone by Drake and 21 Savage.

The hip-hop pairing leads the midweek U.K. chart with Her Loss (via OVO/Republic Records), their first collaborative collection.

If it holds its position, Her Loss will become Drake’s fifth leader, after Views (from 2016), Scorpion (2018), Dark Lane Demo Tapes (2020), and Certified Lover Boy (2021), and Savage’s first.

Swift’s 10th and latest album Midnights (EMI) dips 1-2 on the Official Chart Update, after a two-week stint at the summit. Though nothing is certain as the race enters the second half. Swift, meanwhile, is en route to a third consecutive week atop the Official U.K. Albums chart with “Anti-Hero,” which leads the midweek survey.

Further down the albums chart blast, Swedish folk duo First Aid Kit eye third spot with Palomino (Columbia), their fifth studio album. If it maintains its course, Palomino will give the act (Johanna and Sara Söderberg) a second top 5 effort, after 2018’s Ruins peaked at No. 3.

Close behind is Welsh entertainer Luke Evans’ A Song For You (BMG), new at No. 4 on the midweek survey, for what would be a career best chart position.

The top 5 on the chart blast is completed by the Prodigy’s third album The Fat of the Land (XL Recordings), which is re-issued to celebrate its 25th anniversary. The set, which yielded the hits “Breathe,” “Firestarter” and “Smack My B**** Up” hit No. 1 on both sides of the Atlantic following its original release in 1997.

Veteran Irish crooner Daniel O’Donnell could bag his 20th top 10 album with I Wish You Well (DMG TV), new at No. 6 on the midweek survey, while Japanese-Australian singer and songwriter Joji (real name George Kosunoki Miller) could snag his second top 10, with Smithereens (12Tone Music) eyeing a No. 8 bow.

Finally, Girl Power is back, as Spice Girls’ 1997 album Spiceworld (UMR/Virgin) makes a splash on the midweek chart at No. 12. The pop group’s sophomore album debuted at No. 1 following its initial release, and enjoys boost thanks to the release of a 25th anniversary edition.  

All will be revealed when the Official U.K. Albums Chart is published late Friday (Nov. 11).