![]() ![]() She was encouraged to broaden her focus through her experience with fellow survivors and the involvement of director Jeff Zimbalist and veteran producers Susan Zirinsky and Terence Wrong. Hoff, already in the film business, thought that made an intriguing subject. Nine months later, an FBI agent was at Hoff’s door with her boots - part of a little-known unit that returns property left behind by people caught in these incidents. More than 850 people were hurt before the gunfire stopped. They alternated ducking to the ground for cover and running away, depending on when they could hear the gunshots.Īt one point, she kicked off her cowboy boots because it was too slippery to run in them, eventually escaping the killing field where 58 people died that night, and two more later of their injuries. She turned to look at her husband and saw someone just behind him struck in the face by a bullet. 1, 2017, four rows from the stage as Jason Aldean sang “Any Ol’ Barstool.” Hoff heard popping sounds that she and her husband, Shaun, first dismissed as fireworks - not the work of a gunman firing from a nearby hotel window. It seems like a strange sentiment given that Hoff was at the show on Oct. “I’ve never felt more useful or more like the universe put me exactly where I was supposed to be,” said Hoff, an executive producer of “11 Minutes.” More than three hours long, the four-part documentary debuts Tuesday on the Paramount+ streaming service. The resulting film, “11 Minutes,” is an inside account of the 2017 massacre at a country music festival in Las Vegas and, more importantly, about how it reverberated in the lives of those who were there. Schumann, Senior Director of Programming for SiriusXM.NEW YORK - A pair of cowboy boots that Ashley Hoff never thought she would see again helped unlock a powerful story about the worst mass shooting in modern U.S. “Going through Kelleigh’s new music, it became clear almost immediately that picking a ‘first single’ was going to be really tough…so we decided since all of the music is this great, why not just go with all three songs? So that’s exactly what we did” adds J.R. SiriusXM’s The Highway Finds program was developed as a tool for not only new music discovery but also as a platform to champion and, in turn, help break new artists through early airplay on a national level. She continues, “After I was dropped from my major label deal, a fearlessness set in as I really didn’t have anything else to lose.” Kelleigh Bannen | Photo Credit: John Shearer “The pressure was really off when we wrote and recorded these songs,” Bannen reflects of her three singles, “John Who,” The Joneses” and “Happy Birthday” that are simultaneously spinning on the mainstream country channel. “I guess part of me didn’t want to jinx it?,” says the female powerhouse AXS calls “Nashville’s most underrated singer-songwriter.” “When you’ve been at it for over a decade like I have been, it’s almost unheard of to get this kind of support as an unsigned female in Country… three songs and this much airplay out of the gate? It’s powerful. – Kelleigh Bannen’s news announcing a simultaneous three-song SiriusXM’s The Highway Finds music premiere did not go out in advance of her appearance yesterday on the Storme Warren Show as the Nashville native couldn’t believe it was all really happening. Kelleigh Bannen's The Joneses makes digital debut SiriusXM The Highway premiers all three new songs: "John Who," "Happy Birthday" and "The Joneses" | Photo Credit: Alexa Kinigopoulos | Label: Whiskey Rain ![]()
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