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    Garth Brooks Concert Review

    Welcome back! Garth Brooks heats up Houston stage with rambunctious high-energy performance — and crowd loves it

    Eric Sandler
    Jun 27, 2015 | 9:33 am

    If absence makes the heart grow fonder, then more performers should wait 17 years between appearances in Houston. Or maybe that only works when a performer is as iconic as Garth Brooks — the high-energy country crooner whose at the top of just about every album sales record.

    Brooks and his wife Trisha Yearwood began a four-night, eight-show run at the Toyota Center Friday night in front of a capacity crowd. As Brooks noted early in the set, "When I come to a concert, I want to hear the old stuff," and play the old stuff he did. The only new songs consisted of set opener "Man Against Machine" and "All American Kid" from his recent performance at the ACM Awards.

    Other than that, the crowd knew every word to every number from second song "Rodeo" to Brooks' biggest hits like "The Thunder Rolls" and "Friends in Low Places." Brooks encouraged his fans to an ever more fevered response — running from one end of the stage to the other, leaning into people in the front row, and pointing at different sections of the crowd to scream in between songs. The audience responded with decibel levels that wouldn't have seemed out of place at a One Direction concert, leaving Brooks smiling.

    If it was all a little "Shameless," well, it was also really entertaining: exactly the sort of energy level and response that made the long wait worthwhile.

    Yearwood appeared about midway through, joining Brooks on a duet of "In Another's Eyes" before performing five songs on her own including classics like "How Do I Live" and "She's In Love With a Boy." Yes, the crowd knew all the words to her songs, too.

    Friday night's show was a multi-generational affair with lots of people Brooks' age (early 50s) and up along with their adult children and a few actual children. For many in attendance, the show looked like an excuse to bust out the Rodeo-wear in the summer with lots of people mimicing Brooks' trademark black cowboy hat.

    After a two hour-plus, 26-song set, the only question was how Brooks and his band would find the energy to do it all again for the folks lined up for the 10:30 p.m. second show.

    Set List
    Man Vs. Machine
    Rodeo
    Two of a Kind, Workin’ On a Full House
    The Beaches of Cheyenne
    The River
    Two Pina Coladas
    Papa Loved Mama
    Ain’t Goin’ Down
    Unanswered Prayers
    That Summer
    The Thunder Rolls
    All American Kid
    In Another’s Eyes (with Trisha Yearwood)

    Trisha Yearwood solo:
    American Girl
    How Do I Live
    PrizeFighter
    Georgia Rain
    She’s In Love With the Boy

    Brooks returns:
    Shameless
    Callin’ Baton Rouge
    Friends In Low Places
    The Dance

    Encore:
    Fever
    In Lonesome Dove
    Much Too Young
    Standing Outside the Fire

    ----------------

    Bonus reading: Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood tell CultureMap some surprising things in an in-depth interview.

    As Brooks noted early in the set, "when I come to a concert, I want to hear the old stuff," and play the old stuff he did.

    Garth Brooks RodeoHouston
    Photo by J. Thomas Ford
    As Brooks noted early in the set, "when I come to a concert, I want to hear the old stuff," and play the old stuff he did.
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    Movie Review

    Star TV producer James L. Brooks stumbles with meandering movie Ella McCay

    Alex Bentley
    Dec 12, 2025 | 2:30 pm
    Emma Mackey in Ella McCay
    Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios
    Emma Mackey in Ella McCay.

    The impact that writer/director/producer James L. Brooks has made on Hollywood cannot be understated. The 85-year-old created The Mary Tyler Moore Show, personally won three Oscars for Terms of Endearment, and was one of the driving forces behind The Simpsons, among many other credits. Now, 15 years after his last movie, he’s back in the directing chair with Ella McCay.

    The similarly-named Emma Mackey plays Ella, a 34-year-old lieutenant governor of an unnamed state in 2008 who’s on the verge of becoming governor when Governor Bill (Albert Brooks) gets picked to be a member of the president’s Cabinet. What should be a happy time is sullied by her needy husband, Ryan (Jack Lowden), her agoraphobic brother, Casey (Spike Fearn), and her perpetually-cheating father, Eddie (Woody Harrelson).

    Despite the trio of men competing to bring her down, Ella remains an unapologetic optimist, an attitude bolstered by her aunt Helen (Jamie Lee Curtis), her assistant Estelle (Julie Kavner), and her police escort, Trooper Nash (Kumail Nanjiani). The film follows her over a few days as she navigates the perils of governing, the distractions her family brings, and the expectations being thrust upon her by many different people.

    Brooks, who wrote and directed the film, is all over the place with his storytelling. What at first seems to be a straightforward story about Ella and her various issues soon starts meandering into areas that, while related to Ella, don’t make the film better. Prime among them are her brother and father, who are given a relatively small amount of screentime in comparison to the importance they have in her life. This is compounded by a confounding subplot in which Casey tries to win back his girlfriend, Susan (Ayo Edebiri).

    Then there’s the whole political side of the story, which never finds its focus and is stuck in the past. Though it’s never stated explicitly, Ella and Governor Bill appear to be Democrats, especially given a signature program Ella pushes to help mothers in need. But if Brooks was trying to provide an antidote to the current real world politics, he doesn’t succeed, as Ella’s full goals are never clear. He also inexplicably shows her boring her fellow lawmakers to tears, a strange trait to give the person for whom the audience is supposed to be rooting.

    What saves the movie from being an all-out train wreck is the performances of Mackey and Curtis. Mackey, best known for the Netflix show Sex Education, has an assured confidence to her that keeps the character interesting and likable even when the story goes downhill. Curtis, who has tended to go over-the-top with her roles in recent years, tones it down, offering a warm place of comfort for Ella to turn to when she needs it. The two complement each other very well and are the best parts of the movie by far.

    Brooks puts much more effort into his female actors, including Kavner, who, even though she serves as an unnecessary narrator, gets most of the best laugh lines in the film. Harrelson is capable of playing a great cad, but his character here isn’t fleshed out enough. Fearn is super annoying in his role, and Lowden isn’t much better, although that could be mostly due to what his character is called to do. Were it not for the always-great Brooks and Nanjiani, the movie might be devoid of good male performances.

    Brooks has made many great TV shows and movies in his 60+ year career, but Ella McCay is a far cry from his best. The only positive that comes out of it is the boosting of Mackey, who proves herself capable of not only leading a film, but also elevating one that would otherwise be a slog to get through.

    ---

    Ella McCay opens in theaters on December 12.

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