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Garth Brooks Jokes His Closeness With Wife Is a ‘Blessing and a Curse’ on August 30, 2023 at 3:28 pm Us Weekly

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Garth Brooks is still blissfully in love with wife Trisha Yearwood after 17 years of marriage — but his dependence on her can be a problem at times.

“I was telling somebody the other day, I feel so helpless because there’s nothing I can’t do without her,” Brooks, 61, exclusively told Us Weekly while promoting the launch of his and TuneIn’s newest station, Tailgate Radio. “There’s nothing I can’t do with her and there’s nothing I can do without her.”

The country singer joked: “It’s a blessing and a curse that you feel so free and independent when she’s there and you’re so dependent when she’s not there.” Brooks confessed, “I don’t think she feels this way at all, but I know I do.”

Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood Theo Wargo/WireImage

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Brooks and Yearwood, 58, met in the ‘80s but it wasn’t until their respective splits from Sandy Mahl and Bobby Reynolds in 1999 that they got together. (Brooks officially divorced Mahl in 2001. The exes share daughters Taylor, 31, August Anna, 29, and Allie, 27.)

It’s been nearly two decades since Brooks and Yearwood tied the knot in December 2005 and Brooks told Us he still likes being around his wife.

“It’s just being together. That’s it,” he said of the couple’s date nights. “Just being in the same room with a woman breathing the same air. We don’t have to be doing anything together, but just knowing she’s there [is nice].”

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Related: Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood’s Relationship: A Timeline

Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood are one of the country music’s most famous couples, but they’ve definitely had their ups and downs. “People thought, ‘Well, two celebrities who are in the same business, they won’t last,’” Yearwood exclusively told Us Weekly in 2018. “I’m invested in this family, this is what I want for myself […]

Brooks loves to gush about his partner, but he played coy when asked what nicknames Yearwood has for him at home. “[There’s] none that I could repeat,” he teased.

Brooks, however, wasn’t shy about the newest lady in his life … NBC Sports’ Maria Taylor, who is the host of Tailgate Radio. The newest channel comes from Brooks’ SEVENS Radio Network and will be part of the TuneIn family, focusing on getting football fans ready to tailgate before the big game as well as give them songs to listen to after the event is over.

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Related: Country Music’s Biggest Couples

Country music is all about love! Whether high school sweethearts or second chances at love, these couples are in it for the long haul. Superstars Faith Hill and Tim McGraw have a love story for the ages — and their chemistry is still electric on stage after more than 20 years together. The twosome tied […]

“Anybody and Maria Taylor is a match made in heaven. So this is an easy thing for me,” Brooks told Us of the new venture. “I know it sounds really corny, but this radio station can unite us. We can be at odds from the time the kickoff goes to the time the end whistle blows, but [at the end of the day] we’re all on the same team. And I think that’s what this station is promoting.”

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The Grammy winner further explained: “Tailgate is going to be your radio station when you’re sitting out by the pool or you got the kids over for a soccer party with all their other guys barbecues. It doesn’t have to be just game day. And the game day so many times is in your own fricking house.”

Related: Nick Lachey! Alyssa Milano! Joe Manganiello! Celebs Who Love Football

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Football fanatics! It’s no secret that athletes such as Tom Brady, Jay Cutler and Aaron Rodgers love football, but there are also plenty of stars that enjoy rooting for their favorite teams from the sidelines, too — or from the comfort of their homes. Whether they’re suiting up in the jerseys of their favorite players […]

Taylor, 36, agreed with the musician, telling Us in a joint interview, “Tailgate radio is a feeling. It’s everyone coming together. It’s finally being like, ‘Oh, we’re all off of work. We can all celebrate this one team or hate each other because we’re going for different teams.’”

She added: “It’s an idea that it brings people together and that’s what college football Saturdays are [about]. It’s like a family reunion every single Saturday, and now we get to share that vibe consistently. That’s what the radio version of it is.”

Tailgate Radio will feature a weekly Tailgate Top 20 With Maria show, the Block Party segment on Saturday nights and Tailgate Takeover, which begins with Brooks himself and will later have guest celebrities and athletes on to set the “vibe” for each college football Saturday.

To listen to Tailgate Radio, download the TuneIn App on iTunes or Google Play. Listeners can also visit TuneIn for more details.

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With reporting by Mandie DeCamp

Garth Brooks is still blissfully in love with wife Trisha Yearwood after 17 years of marriage — but his dependence on her can be a problem at times. “I was telling somebody the other day, I feel so helpless because there’s nothing I can’t do without her,” Brooks, 61, exclusively told Us Weekly while promoting 

​   Us Weekly Read More 

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Ghislaine Maxwell Just Told Congress She’ll Talk — If Trump Frees Her

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February 9, 2026 — Ghislaine Maxwell tried to bargain with Congress from a prison video call.

Maxwell, the woman convicted of helping Jeffrey Epstein traffic underage girls, appeared virtually before the House Oversight Committee today and refused to answer a single question. She invoked her Fifth Amendment right against self‑incrimination on every substantive topic, including Epstein’s network, his associates, and any powerful figures who moved through his orbit.

Maxwell is serving a 20‑year federal sentence at a prison camp in Texas after being found guilty in 2021 of sex‑trafficking, conspiracy, and related charges. Her trial exposed a pattern of recruiting and grooming minors for Epstein’s abuse, and her conviction has been upheld on appeal. Despite that legal reality, her appearance today was less about accountability and more about negotiation.

Her lawyer, David Markus, told lawmakers that Maxwell would be willing to “speak fully and honestly” about Epstein and his world — but only if President Donald Trump grants her clemency or a pardon. Markus also claimed she could clear both Trump and Bill Clinton of wrongdoing related to Epstein, a statement critics immediately dismissed as a political play rather than a genuine bid for truth.

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Republican Chair James Comer has already said he does not support clemency for Maxwell, and several Democrats accused her of trying to leverage her potential knowledge of powerful people as a way to escape prison. To many survivors’ advocates, the spectacle reinforced the sense that the system is more sympathetic to the powerful than to the victims.

At the same time, Congress is now reviewing roughly 3.5 million pages of Epstein‑related documents that the Justice Department has made available under tight restrictions. Lawmakers must view them on secure computers at the DOJ, with no phones allowed and no copies permitted. Early reports suggest that at least six male individuals, including one high‑ranking foreign official, had their names and images redacted without clear legal justification.

Those unredacted files are supposed to answer questions about who knew what, and when. The problem is that Maxwell is signaling she may never answer any of them — unless she is set free. As of February 9, 2026, the story is still this: a convicted trafficker is using her silence as leverage, Congress is sifting through a wall of redacted files, and the public is still waiting to see who really stood behind Epstein’s power.

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What Epstein’s Guest Lists Mean for Working Filmmakers: Who Do You Stand Next To?

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Jeffrey Epstein was a convicted sex offender, but for years after his 2008 conviction, he still moved comfortably through elite social circles that touched media, politics, finance, and film culture. His calendars, contact books, and guest lists show a pattern: powerful people kept accepting his invitations, attending his dinners, and standing beside him, even when they knew exactly who he was.

If you make films, run festivals, or work in development and distribution, this isn’t just a political scandal on the news. It’s a mirror. It forces one uncomfortable question: do you truly know what – and who – you stand for when you say yes to certain rooms, collaborators, and funders?


The guest list is a moral document

Epstein didn’t just collect money; he collected people.

His power came from convening others: intimate dinners, salon‑style gatherings, screenings, and trips where being invited signaled that you were “important enough” to be in the room. Prestige guests made him look respectable; he made them feel chosen.

Awards‑season publicists and event planners played a crucial role in that ecosystem. For years, some of the same people who curated high‑status screenings and industry dinners also opened the door for Epstein, placing him in rooms with producers, critics, cultural figures, and politicians. They controlled the lists that determined who got close to money, influence, and decision‑makers.

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When those ties became public, companies that had long benefitted from those curated lists cut certain publicists off almost overnight. One day they were trusted architects of taste and access; the next day they were toxic. That whiplash exposes the truth: guest lists were never neutral logistics. They were moral documents disguised as marketing strategy.

If you’re a filmmaker or festival director, the same is true for you. Every invite list, every VIP pass, every “intimate industry mixer” quietly answers a question:

  • Who are you willing to legitimize?
  • Who gets to bask in the glow of your platform, laurels, and audience?
  • Whose history are you willing to overlook because they’re “good for the project”?

You may tell yourself you’re “just trying to get the film seen.” Epstein’s orbit shows that this is exactly how people talk themselves into standing next to predators.


“I barely knew him”: the lie everyone rehearses

After Epstein’s 2019 arrest and death, a familiar chorus started: “I barely knew him.” “We only met once.” “It was purely professional.” In case after case, logs, calendars, and emails told a different story: repeated meetings, trips, dinners, and years of social overlap.

This isn’t unique to Epstein. Our industry does the same thing whenever a powerful director, producer, or executive is finally exposed. Suddenly:

  • The person was “always difficult,” but nobody quite remembers when they first heard the stories.
  • Collaborators swear they had no idea, despite years of rumors in green rooms, writers’ rooms, and hotel bars.
  • Everyone rushes to minimize proximity: one film, one deal, one panel, one party.

Sometimes that’s true. Often it’s a script people have been rehearsing in their heads for years, just in case the day came when they’d need it.

So ask yourself now, before any future scandal:

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  • If every calendar entry and email around a controversial figure in your orbit were revealed tomorrow, would your values be obvious?
  • Would your words and actions show someone wrestling with the ethics and drawing lines, or someone who stood for nothing but opportunity and a good step‑and‑repeat photo?

Your future statement is being written today, in the rooms you choose and the excuses you make.

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Power, access, and the cost of staying in the room

People kept going to Epstein’s dinners and accepting his calls after his conviction because he was useful. He made introductions between billionaires and politicians, intellectuals and media figures, donors and institutions. Being in his network could mean access to funding, deals, prestige, and proximity to other powerful guests.

If that dynamic feels uncomfortably familiar, it should. In film and TV, you know this pattern:

  • A producer with a reputation for abusive behavior who still gets projects greenlit.
  • A financier whose source of money is murky but opens doors.
  • A festival VIP everyone whispers about but no one publicly confronts because they bring stars, sponsors, or press.

The unwritten deal is the same: look away, laugh it off, or stay quiet, and in return you get access. What Epstein’s guest lists reveal is how many people accepted that deal until the public cost became unbearable.

The question for you is simple and brutal: how much harm are you willing to tolerate in exchange for access to power? If the answer is “more than I’d admit out loud,” you’re already in the danger zone.


Building your own red lines as a filmmaker

You cannot control every person who ends up in your orbit. But you can refuse to drift. You can decide in advance what you will and will not normalize. That means building your own red lines before there’s a headline.

Some practical commitments:

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  1. Write down your “no‑platform” criteria
    Don’t wait until a scandal explodes to decide what’s unacceptable. Define the patterns you will not align with:
    • Repeat, credible allegations of abuse or harassment.
    • Past convictions for sexual exploitation or violence.
    • Documented histories of exploiting young or vulnerable people in professional settings.
      This doesn’t mean trial‑by‑rumor. It means acknowledging there are lines you simply will not cross, no matter how good the deal looks.
  1. Interrogate the rooms you’re invited into
    Before you say yes to that exclusive dinner, private screening, or “small circle of VIPs,” ask:
    • Who is hosting, and what are they known for?
    • Who else will be there, and what’s their pattern of behavior?
    • Is this room built on genuine artistic community, or on quiet complicity around someone with power and a bad history?
      When you feel that knot in your stomach, treat it as information, not an inconvenience.
  2. Bake ethics into your company or festival policy
    If you run a production company, collective, or festival, put your values in writing:
    • How do you respond to credible allegations against a guest, juror, funder, or staff member?
    • What is your process for reviewing partnerships and sponsorships?
    • Under what conditions will you withdraw an invitation or return money?
      This won’t make you perfect, but it forces you to act from a standard rather than improvising around whoever seems too powerful to offend.
  3. Use the “headline test”
    Before you agree to a collaboration or keep showing up for someone whose reputation is rotting, imagine a future article that simply lays out the facts:
    “Filmmaker X repeatedly attended private events hosted by Y after Y’s conviction and multiple public allegations.”
    If seeing your name in that sentence makes you flinch, believe that feeling. That’s your conscience trying to speak louder than your ambition.

The question you leave your audience with

Epstein’s guest lists are historical artifacts, but they are also warnings. They show what an ecosystem looks like when hundreds of people make the same small compromise: “I’ll just go to this one dinner. I’ll just take this one meeting. I’ll just look the other way one more time.”

One man became a hub, but it took a whole web of people choosing access over integrity to keep him powerful. His documents don’t only reveal who he was; they reveal who others decided to be around him.

You may never face a choice as stark as “Do I have dinner with Jeffrey Epstein?” But you are already facing smaller versions of that question:

  • Do I keep working with the person everyone quietly warns newcomers about?
  • Do I take money from the funder whose business model depends on exploitation?
  • Do I invite, platform, and celebrate people whose presence makes survivors in the room feel less safe?

You will not be able to claim you “didn’t know” about every name in your orbit. But you can decide that when you learn, you act. You can decide that your guest lists, your partnerships, and your presence in the room will mean something.

Because in the end, your career is not only made of films and laurels. It is made of the rooms you chose and the people you stood next to when it mattered.

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You wanted to make movies, not decode Epstein. Too late.

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That’s the realization hanging over anyone picking up a camera right now. You didn’t sign up to be a forensic analyst of flight logs, sealed documents, or “unverified tips.” You wanted to tell stories. But your audience lives in a world where every new leak, every exposed celebrity, every dead‑end investigation feeds into one blunt conclusion:

Nobody at the top is clean. And nobody in charge is really coming to save us.

If you’re still making films in this moment, the question isn’t whether you’ll respond to that. You already are, whether you intend to or not. The real question is: will your work help people move, or help them go numb?

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Your Audience Doesn’t Believe in Grown‑Ups Anymore

Look at the timeline your viewers live in:

  • Names tied to Epstein.
  • Names tied to trafficking.
  • Names tied to abuse, exploitation, coverups.
  • Carefully worded statements, high‑priced lawyers, and “no admission of wrongdoing.”

And in between all of that: playlists, memes, awards shows, campaign ads, and glossy biopics about “legends” we now know were monsters to someone.

If you’re under 35, this is your normal. You grew up:

  • Watching childhood heroes get exposed one after another.
  • Hearing “open secrets” whispered for years before anyone with power pretended to care.
  • Seeing survivors discredited, then quietly vindicated when it was too late to matter.

So when the next leak drops and another “icon” is implicated, the shock isn’t that it happened. The shock is how little changes.

This is the psychic landscape your work drops into. People aren’t just asking, “Is this movie good?” They’re asking, often subconsciously: “Does this filmmaker understand the world I’m actually living in, or are they still selling me the old fantasy?”

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You’re Not Just Telling Stories. You’re Translating a Crisis of Trust.

You may not want the job, but you have it: you’re a translator in a time when language itself feels rigged.

Politicians put out statements. Corporations put out statements. Studios put out statements. The public has learned to hear those as legal strategies, not moral positions.

You, on the other hand, still have this small window of trust. Not blind trust—your audience is too skeptical for that—but curious trust. They’ll give you 90 minutes, maybe a season, to see if you can make sense of what they’re feeling:

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  • The rage at systems that protect predators.
  • The confusion when people they admired turn out to be complicit.
  • The dread that this is all so big, so entrenched, that nothing they do matters.

If your work dodges that, it doesn’t just feel “light.” It feels dishonest.

That doesn’t mean every film has to be a trafficking exposé. It means even your “small” stories are now taking place in a world where institutions have failed in ways we can’t unsee. If you pretend otherwise, the audience can feel the lie in the walls.


Numbness Is the Real Villain You’re Up Against

You asked for something that could inspire movement and change. To do that, you have to understand the enemy that’s closest to home:

It’s not only the billionaire on the jet. It’s numbness.

Numbness is what happens when your nervous system has been hit with too much horror and too little justice. It looks like apathy, but it’s not. It’s self‑defense. It says:

  • “If I let myself feel this, I’ll break.”
  • “If I care again and nothing changes, I’ll lose my mind.”
  • “If everyone at the top is corrupt, why should I bother being good?”

When you entertain without acknowledging this, you help people stay comfortably numb. When you only horrify without hope, you push them deeper into it.

Your job is more dangerous and more sacred than that. Your job is to take numbness seriously—and then pierce it.

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How?

  • By creating characters who feel exactly what your audience feels: overwhelmed, angry, hopeless.
  • By letting those characters try anyway—in flawed, realistic, human ways.
  • By refusing to end every story with “the system wins, nothing matters,” even if you can’t promise a clean victory.

Movement doesn’t start because everyone suddenly believes they can win. It starts because enough people decide they’d rather lose fighting than win asleep.

Show that decision.


Don’t Just Expose Monsters. Expose Mechanisms.

If you make work that brushes against Epstein‑type themes, avoid the easiest trap: turning it into a “one bad guy” tale.

The real horror isn’t one predator. It’s how many people, institutions, and incentives it takes to keep a predator powerful.

If you want your work to fuel real change:

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  • Show the assistants and staffers who notice something is off and choose silence—or risk.
  • Show the PR teams whose entire job is to wash blood off brands.
  • Show the industry rituals—the invite‑only parties, the “you’re one of us now” moments—where complicity becomes a form of currency.
  • Show the fans, watching allegations pile up against someone who shaped their childhood, and the war inside them between denial and conscience.

When you map the mechanism, you give people a way to see where they fit in that machine. You also help them imagine where it can be broken.


Your Camera Is a Weapon. Choose a Target.

In a moment like this, neutrality is a story choice—and the audience knows it.

Ask yourself, project by project:

  • Who gets humanized? If you give more depth to the abuser than the abused, that says something.
  • Who gets the last word? Is it the lawyer’s statement, the spin doctor, the jaded bystander—or the person who was actually harmed?
  • What gets framed as inevitable? Corruption? Cowardice? Or courage?

You don’t have to sermonize. But you do have to choose. If your work shrugs and says, “That’s just how it is,” don’t be surprised when it lands like anesthetic instead of ignition.

Ignition doesn’t require a happy ending. It just requires a crack—a moment where someone unexpected refuses to play along. A survivor who won’t recant. A worker who refuses the payout. A friend who believes the kid the first time.

Those tiny acts are how movements start in real life. Put them on screen like they matter, because they do.

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Stop Waiting for Permission

A lot of people in your position are still quietly waiting—for a greenlight, for a grant, for a “better time,” for the industry to decide it’s ready for harsher truths.

Here’s the harshest truth of all: the system you’re waiting on is the same one your audience doesn’t trust.

So maybe the movement doesn’t start with the perfectly packaged, studio‑approved, four‑quadrant expose. Maybe it starts with:

  • A microbudget feature that refuses to flatter power.
  • A doc shot on borrowed gear that traces one tiny piece of the web with obsessive honesty.
  • A series of shorts that make it emotionally impossible to look at “open secrets” as jokes anymore.
  • A narrative film that never names Epstein once, but makes the logic that created him impossible to unsee.

If you do your job right, people will leave your work not just “informed,” but uncomfortable with their own passivity—and with a clearer sense of where their own leverage actually lives.


The Movement You Can Actually Spark

You are not going to single‑handedly dismantle trafficking, corruption, or elite impunity with one film. That’s not your job.

Your job is to help people:

  • Feel again where they’ve gone numb.
  • Name clearly what they’ve only sensed in fragments.
  • See themselves not as background extras in someone else’s empire, but as moral agents with choices that matter.

If your film makes one survivor feel seen instead of crazy, that’s movement.
If it makes one young viewer question why they still worship a predator, that’s movement.
If it makes one industry person think twice before staying silent, that’s movement.

And movements, despite what the history montages pretend, are not made of big moments. They’re made of a million small, private decisions to stop lying—to others, and to ourselves.

You wanted to make movies, not decode Epstein.

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Too late.

You’re here. The curtain’s already been pulled back. Use your camera to decide what we look at now: more distraction from what we know, or a clearer view of it.

One of those choices helps people forget.
The other might just help them remember who they are—and what they refuse to tolerate—long enough to do something about it.

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