Listen to Jake Owen’s Eye-Witness Account of Mass Shooting in Las Vegas on “Today Show”

Listen to Jake Owen’s Eye-Witness Account of Mass Shooting in Las Vegas on “Today Show”

Jake Owen shared his eye-witness account of the mass shooting in Las Vegas on the Today show this morning (Oct. 2).

Jake was onstage at the Route 91 Harvest Festival when a gunman opened fire from the 32nd floor of the Mandalay Bay Hotel, killing more than 50 people and injuring more than 400.

“I just kind of ran like everyone else,” said Jake, in part, to Today host Matt Lauer. “At one point, I was crouched down behind a cop car with about 20 other people, that were people who had just come to the show,” Owen said. “Everyone’s asking if everyone’s okay. There was blood on people. You can see a couple of folks in the street that looked like they had been shot, lying there.”

Listen to Jake’s account via Today below.

photo by Jason Simanek

Keith Urban, Carrie Underwood, Reba, Thomas Rhett & More Post Prayers & Messages of Love for Victims of Mass Shooting

Keith Urban, Carrie Underwood, Reba, Thomas Rhett & More Post Prayers & Messages of Love for Victims of Mass Shooting

More than 50 people are confirmed dead and more than 400 injured after a “lone wolf” gunman opened fire during Jason Aldean’s set at the Route 91 Harvest Festival in Las Vegas last night (Oct. 1).

Many people in the country music community have been reaching out via social media to share their prayers and messages of love, hope and unity. We included some of the messages below from Carrie Underwood, Keith Urban, Reba McEntire, Thomas Rhett and more.

Keith Urban performance photo by Jason Simanek

Jason Aldean Releases a Statement After Mass Shooting: “Tonight Has Been Beyond Horrific”

Jason Aldean Releases a Statement After Mass Shooting: “Tonight Has Been Beyond Horrific”

More than 50 people are confirmed dead and more than 400 injured after a “lone wolf” gunman opened fire during Jason Aldean’s set at the Route 91 Harvest Festival in Las Vegas last night (Oct. 1).

The male suspect, a 64-year-old local resident, has been killed. The suspect fired on the crowd from the 32nd floor of the Mandalay Bay Hotel.

The shooting began on the final night of the three-day festival, forcing Jason and his band to flee the stage mid-performance.

Early this morning (Oct. 2), Jason released a statement via Instagram, saying: “Tonight has been beyond horrific. I still don’t know what to say but wanted to let everyone know that Me and my Crew are safe. My Thoughts and prayers go out to everyone involved tonight. It hurts my heart that this would happen to anyone who was just coming out to enjoy what should have been a fun night. #heartbroken #stopthehate”

https://www.instagram.com/p/BZvRZnogBrI/?hl=en

photo by Jason Simanek

Mass Shooting at Las Vegas’ Route 91 Harvest Festival, 59 Confirmed Dead, More Than 500 Injured

Mass Shooting at Las Vegas’ Route 91 Harvest Festival, 59 Confirmed Dead, More Than 500 Injured

More than 50 people are confirmed dead—59 is the most recent number—and more than 500 injured after a “lone wolf” gunman opened fire during Jason Aldean’s set at the Route 91 Harvest Festival in Las Vegas last night (Oct. 1).

The male suspect, a 64-year-old local resident, has been killed. The suspect fired on the crowd from the 32nd floor of Mandalay Bay.

The three-day Route 91 Harvest festival started Friday and is reported to have attracted 30,000 attendees. The shooting began on the final night, during a performance by Jason Aldean.

After 49 people where killed at Pulse nightclub in Orlando, Fla., in June 2016, this is thought to be the worst mass shooting in U.S. History.

Country music artists who were performing last night at the festival or attending, including Chris Young, Jason Aldean, Jake Owen and more, have posted messages on social media.

Now words other than I'm lucky to be alive… prayers for those who lost people they love

A post shared by Chris Young (@chrisyoungmusic) on

photo by JPA/AFF-USA

Jimmy’s blog: With East Division goal gone, what does UT play for?

Jimmy’s blog: With East Division goal gone, what does UT play for?

Oct. 1

 

By Jimmy Hyams

After Tennessee lost 41-0 to Georgia, the Vols could kiss the East Division good bye.

You can’t lose to Georgia and Florida with Alabama on the horizon and expect to win the division.

So what do the Vols play for?

“To win,’’ Tennessee coach Butch Jones said. “To win every game.’’

That’s not likely, either.

Things could change, but Tennessee is playing like a team that will struggle to post a .500 record by season’s end. Its offense is a mess. Its defense can’t play four solid quarters.

And its confidence has to be shaken, although players say otherwise.

Tennessee played Saturday like a team that had fallen on its helmet.

It couldn’t run against Georgia (62 yards on 29 attempts).

It couldn’t, after the first quarter, stop Georgia’s run game (55 for 294).

It couldn’t pass on the Dawgs – starting quarterback Quinten Dormady was 5 of 16 for 64 yards (one play went for 44) with two interceptions.

Tennessee’s totals: 142 yards, 1 of 12 on third-down conversions, 11 first-down plays that went for 2 or fewer yards, and no points. No points for the first time since a 31-0 shellacking against Florida in 1994.

“That’s as bad of an offensive performance as I’ve ever been a part of,’’ said Tennessee coach Butch Jones. “It’s inexcusable.’’

The bigger concern: Will it get better?

Answer: Maybe not.

I’m not sure Tennessee’s offense is salvageable.

For one, you can’t run a zone-read with a quarterback that can’t run or won’t run.

Secondly, Dormady isn’t the passer I thought he would be. Granted, he hasn’t gotten much help, but he throws off his back foot too often, stares down receivers, doesn’t see the field well, underthrows the deep ball and too often fires into coverage.

From what I’ve seen Tennessee can’t win against decent teams with Dormady at quarterback.

It can’t win with Jarrett Guarantano, either.

And there is no other option.

It’s not wise to overreact to one loss. But this isn’t about one loss.

It’s about looking like a junior college team against UMass.

It’s about blowing a game against an average Florida team.

It’s about an offense that is in dire straits.

Tennessee hadn’t lost this badly at home since 1905.

An angry Tennessee crowd booed the team at halftime and emptied the stands in the fourth quarter. By game’s end, the 15,000 or so Dawg fans that infiltrated Knoxville had come closed to outnumbering the Vol Nation.

Georgia is good, really good, especially on defense. Alabama might have a better defense. Auburn might have a better defense. But these Dawgs might be among the nation’s best.

Georgia’s defense is big, strong and fast and tackles brilliantly. They simply don’t give an inch.

It seemed fitting that on Tennessee’s biggest play of the game – a 44-yard pass to John Kelly – Kelly fumbled and Georgia recovered.

Tennessee was so inept, punter Trevor Daniel had a rugby-style punt blocked by the face mask of a Georgia rusher who didn’t even jump. Why in the world is Daniel, one of the nation’s best punters, trying a rugby-style punt?

Tennessee had four turnovers to Georgia’s one. But even without a turnover, UT wouldn’t have won this game.

“Right now, we’re being tested,’’ Jones said. “Our character is being tested.’’

Asked if he told his team again that the performance was unacceptable, which he did after the 17-13 win over UMass, Jones said: “They understand that. They don’t need to be told that again.’’

Jones said after the game that every position on the field is open during the open date week.

“It’s gut-check time,’’ Jones said.

After an open date, we’ll know more about Tennessee’s gut when it hosts South Carolina.


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Country Rising: Carrie Underwood, Garth Brooks, George Strait, Reba, Jason Aldean, Sam Hunt & More to Perform at Nashville Hurricane Benefit

Country Rising: Carrie Underwood, Garth Brooks, George Strait, Reba, Jason Aldean, Sam Hunt & More to Perform at Nashville Hurricane Benefit

Some of country music’s biggest stars—including Jason Aldean, Dierks Bentley, Garth Brooks, Sam Hunt, Lady Antebellum, Little Big Town, Martina McBride, Reba McEntire, Chris Stapleton, George Strait and Carrie Underwood—will be taking part in a benefit concert to support those affected by the recent hurricanes.

The star-studded lineup will perform on Nov. 12 at Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena as part of the Country Rising benefit.

Country Rising will benefit the Country Rising Fund of the Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee, which was established to support charitable initiatives to help victims of the September 2017 hurricanes.

Tickets and VIP packages for the event go on sale on Friday, Oct. 6 at 10 a.m. CT.

Additional artists and more details will be announced soon.

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