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Hunter Hayes flips the script in new single “The One That Got Away,” debuts the song on 'Good Morning America'

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LP EntertainmentHunter Hayes is kicking off his next album cycle with “The One That Got Away,” an upbeat single with bouncy pop beats and a message of optimism to match.

Though the song’s about ending a relationship, Hunter doesn’t seem to be shedding many tears in the lyrics to his new tune. Instead, it’s about finding the good in a difficult situation, and feeling free as he looks to the future.

“I wrote ‘The One That Got Away’ after having a certain chapter in my life end abruptly,” says Hunter.  “At first, I saw that change as a bad thing, even though I’d played a part in the ending. The song came from realizing that certain things I was holding onto so tightly were destroying me.”

“I wanted to write something that people could get a speeding ticket to and feel so lucky that they’ve gotten away from whatever wasn’t good for them,” he adds. “Whether that be a town or a job or a relationship or whatever else.”

Hunter stopped by ABC’s Good Morning America Thursday to debut “The One That Got Away.” Following that performance, he released the song everywhere, along with a free-wheeling music video to go with it. 

“The One That Got Away” is the first single to come off of Hunter’s upcoming album, Red Sky (Part III).


By Carena Liptak
Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Devon Sawa jokes his new movie, 'Hunter Hunter', gave his lungs a workout

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IFC Midnight(NEW YORK) — As most actors do, Devon Sawa physically prepared and trained for his role as a rugged trapper and outdoorsman for his new thriller, Hunter Hunter

“We tried to learn as quickly as possible how to be authentic as possible, and then and then just did the whole acting thing to look as if…this is second nature,” he tells ABC Audio.

However, while the Nikita vet expected having to handle the tools of the trapping trade, one aspect of his character was a real commitment. “You know, the the skinning, the traps, even the smoking — I had to look like I had I was an old school smoker…and boy, was that a thing!” says the actor.

Sawa, who’d only smoked briefly in his late teens, recalls with a laugh, “Well, the director told me…’You smoke in this film.’ I’m like, ‘Oh ok.’ He goes ‘No, you smoke in this film…These guys that live out there…they they put one out and they put one in…”

Sawa says director Shawn Linden asked if he wanted milder clove cigarettes, but the actor refused — perhaps without thinking it through. “We’d be doing a take, I’d be like on take four, I’d be like, (gasping) ‘OK, ok…’ Like cigarette eight. Cigarette nine,” Sawa laughed. 

In the movie, his character Joe stalks a rogue wolf, but soon discovers there’s a different danger closer to his remote cabin, which he shares with his wife and daughter, the latter played by newcomer Summer H. Howell.

A former child star himself, Sawa says Howell has the goods. “I’m pretty good at telling who wants to be there and who doesn’t because that’s where I came from…On set, there’s always two types of kids: the kids who want to be there and the kids whose parents wanted them to be there,” he says.

Of Howell, he says, “She was asking me constantly what films she needed to watch, and…you could tell that she she really wanted to be there. And it shows. She’s she’s a phenomenal young actor.”  

Hunter Hunter is now streaming. 

By Stephen Iervolino
Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Zac Brown unites with dozens of Taylor Guitars artists for massive “I Know What Love Is” collab

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ABCZac Brown is among the 50+ acts taking part in a massive collaborative charity single called, “I Know What Love Is.”

Organized by Taylor Guitars, the sweeping, large-scale project calls on singer-songwriters of diverse backgrounds and genres who all work with the brand. Keith Goodwin, KT Tunstall, Jason Mraz, Daniel Donato and Alana Springsteen are just a few of the musicians participating.

Following a year that’s been difficult on everyone in the live entertainment industry, “I Know What Love Is” will benefit MusiCares, the Recording Academy’s charitable arm, which provides relief for industry members in need, including supporting those impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Keith Goodwin, who wrote “I Know What What Love Is,” explains that he hopes it will convey an uplifting message for those struggling.

“During lockdown, one of the most challenging things for me was trying to adapt to not having my friends around to play music with,” he reflects. “This project really helped keep me focused on making music when everything else in life had changed so drastically. I’m grateful for this opportunity to connect and collaborate with such great artists and for a good cause.”

“I Know What Love Is” will be available on January 21. You can register to see the song’s premiere and an exclusive performance of it at 9:30AM PT that day, as part of NAMM’s Believe in Music Week.

By Carena Liptak
Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Tilda Swinton says in candid new interview she "always felt I was queer"

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Rocco Spaziani/Archivio Rocco Spaziani/Mondadori Portfolio via Getty Images(WASHINGTON D.C.) — Tilda Swinton opened up in a new interview about her sexual identity and what it means to her.

Speaking to British Vogue on Wednesday for its February 2021 issue, the Doctor Strange star opened up about playing characters that identified as queer and says she shares something in common with them.

“I’m very clear that queer is actually, for me anyway, to do with sensibility,” the 60-year-old British actress stated. “I always felt I was queer – I was just looking for my queer circus, and I found it.”

Swinton, whose been in a romantic relationship with German/New Zealand visual artist Sandro Kopp since 2004, continued, “Having found it, it’s my world.”

She furthers that her circle has expanded to several new “family” members, which are all acclaimed filmmakers.

“Now I have a family with Wes Anderson, I have a family with Bong Joon-ho, I have a family with Jim Jarmusch, I have a family with Luca Guadagnino, with Lynne Ramsay, with Joanna Hogg,” the Oscar winner disclosed.

Also during the interview, Swinton confessed that her goals in life were anything but launching a successful movie career.

“I’ve never had any ambition as an artist,” she exclaimed. “That may sound crazy and transgressive, but it’s a fact. If you’d asked me when I was 10 or 20, I would have said my only ambitions were to live in a family, to have friends that made me laugh and laughed at my jokes, and to live in the Highlands of Scotland, by the sea with a lot of dogs and a kitchen garden. Seriously.”

The Snowpiercer star says she is “blessed” to have achieved those dreams of hers, adding, “Everything else is a bonus. Everything else is just icing and candles and flowers alongside.”

By Megan Stone
Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Kennedy Center Honors announces honorees, new date

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Honoree Debbie Allen — ABC/Mike Rosenthal(WASHINGTON D.C.) — The 2020 Kennedy Center Honors, which would have normally aired in December, has been postponed until May 2021 due to the ongoing effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, the organization announced on Wednesday.

This 2020 honorees at the 43rd annual national celebration of the arts include beloved Dick Van Dyke, choreographer and actress Debbie Allen, singer-songwriter and activist Joan Baez, country singer-songwriter Garth Brooks and violinist Midori.

In keeping with COVID-19 protocols, the event will feature “small, in-person events and re-envisioned virtual tributes” featuring “multiple events for physically-distant audiences in locations across the Kennedy Center’s campus.”

Each event will include performances and speaking tributes for the honorees.  Virtual events will also be held throughout the week beginning May 17, with additional in-person events still under consideration.

“This past year has taught us many things including the need to be flexible and adaptable,” Kennedy Center President Deborah F. Rutter said in statement on Wednesday.  “They say necessity is the mother of all invention.  The unusual circumstances inspired and opened up new ways for us to present a deeper experience, and hopefully understanding, of the art and lifetime work of our Honorees.”

“Each of the 43rd Kennedy Center Honorees and their work continues to speak to American culture and our national fortitude,” adds Rutter. “We are thrilled to be able to fete these cultural icons in a time where the world and the nation needs the arts more than ever.”

By George Costantino
Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.