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    Luke Bryan review

    Luke Bryan closes out RodeoHouston with a tequila toast and legend status

    Craig Hlavaty
    Mar 23, 2025 | 8:22 pm

    On Sunday, March 23, just hours before closing out the 2025 season, Luke Bryan officially became the 11th inductee into the Star Trail of Fame, the highest honor that the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo can bestow on an artist.

    And with good reason, as Bryan has four shows in RodeoHouston’s list of the Top 25 most-attended shows of all time and Sunday afternoon’s show -- his 12th since 2012 -- had an attendance of 71,103, proving that he’s a magnet for ticket sales.

    The 48-year-old Bryan joins Alan Jackson, Brooks & Dunn, Charley Pride, Elvis Presley, Gene Autry, George Strait, Reba, Roy Rogers, and Selena into the hallowed wall of fame on NRG Center’s second floor. The last artist to be inducted into the club was Brad Paisley back in 2023.

    Bryan kicked the final night of RodeoHouston’s 2025 musical campaign just after 6:45 pm with

    “That’s My Kind Of Night” from 2012, one of the songs that cemented his status as rodeo royalty. Even pushing 50, Bryan’s swiveling hips and skinny jeans still elicit screams from a Houston crowd. Since 2012, he played for over 1 million Houstonians. His record concert attendance remains 75,242 in 2013.

    Speaking of screaming, Bryan lead tequila communion just before kickstarting “One Margarita,” wielding a tiny red Solo cup. Like any self-respecting celebrity in 2025 he of course has a partnership with a tequila brand — in this case Casa Azul.

    “Love You, Miss You, Mean It” came from his latest LP Mind of a Country Boy, which was released in September 2024. Like Paisley earlier this season, Bryan’s cuts are beginning to turn nostalgic as the years and decades add up. Next up was “What Makes You Country,” which was his response to the backlash against so-called bro-country back in 2017. On Sunday night, Bryan helped lead the twin-guitar and banjo attack.

    The mourning ballad “Drink A Beer,” which was written by Chris Stapleton, gave Bryan a chance to commune with the crowd by himself. Bryan and Stapleton debuted it together in 2013. It was written during a flurry of hit songwriting activity just a couple of years before Stapleton put the industry in his back pocket with his own Traveller album. When Bryan gets contemplative, like on “Buy Dirt” or “Huntin’, Fishin’ And Lovin’ Every Day,” he can win over even the most grizzled traditionalist.

    Bryan closed out the 93rd edition of RodeoHouston with his genre-defining “Country Girl (Shake It For Me),” taking a victory lap on the rodeo dirt, pressing the flesh, signing cowboy hats, making core memories, and tipping his baseball cap to the crowd.

    Let the citywide RodeoHouston hangover commence.

    Setlist

    That’s My Kind Of Night
    Rain Is A Good Thing
    One Margarita
    Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye
    Love You, Miss You, Mean It
    What Makes You Country
    Knockin’ Boots
    Drunk On You
    Country Song Came On
    Drink A Beer
    Buy Dirt
    Huntin’, Fishin’ And Lovin’ Every Day
    Play It Again
    I Don’t Want This Night To End
    Country Girl (Shake It For Me)


    Luke Bryan RodeoHouston

    Courtesy of Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo

    Luke Bryan closed out the 2025 Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo in front of more than 71,000 fans.

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    Movie Review

    Margot Robbie ignites provocative new take on Wuthering Heights

    Alex Bentley
    Feb 12, 2026 | 3:31 pm
    Jacob Elordi and Margot Robbie in Wuthering Heights
    Photo courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures
    Jacob Elordi and Margot Robbie in Wuthering Heights.

    Emily Brontë’s 1847 novel Wuthering Heights is one of those classic books assigned in high school English classes, and it has received a number of film adaptations over the years — each of which differ in numerous ways from the source material. Purists won’t receive any reprieve from Emerald Fennell’s 2026 adaptation, with a title that is stylized as "Wuthering Heights” for good reason.

    Cathy (played as an adult by Margot Robbie) and Heathcliff (Jacob Elordi) have known each other their entire lives, with Cathy’s alcoholic and inveterate gambler father (Martin Clunes) taking in Heathcliff on a whim when he was a boy. The two bond as they grow up together, although Cathy always seems to have an eye on moving up in society from their relatively impoverished lifestyle.

    Cathy finally gets her wish when the rich Linton familyled by Edgar (Shazad Latif), moves in down the road, Despite discovering she has feelings for the now grown-up Heathcliff, Cathy sees Edgar as her way out and agrees to marry him. A scorned Heathcliff flees, returning years later as mysteriously wealthy. His reappearance ignites something in Cathy’s soul, and the two engage in a perhaps unwise affair.

    Fennell (Promising Young Woman, Saltburn) infuses the dusty material with an energy that’s not typically present in stories set in this particular time and place. Aside from the occasional Charli XCX song (the singer created a whole concept album for the film), the film looks and feels like a period piece, albeit one that doesn’t get bogged down in the drudgery that can sometimes come from films set in the distant past.

    Much of that has to do with the lust the filmmaker puts into the story. Even if you’re not familiar with Brontë’s book, you can rest assured that Fennell has strayed far from the text, giving Cathy and Heathcliff thoughts and actions unthinkable in the 19th century. Fennell plays with expectations by opening the film with audio featuring creaking noises and a man grunting, conjuring up a situation far different than what is actually happening, and she also makes liberal use of rain, sweat, and tears to make the actors enticing.

    What she can’t do, however, is make the two lead characters compelling. Cathy is a striver who never seems to know what she wants out of life, and Heathcliff goes from a bore to a brute over the course of the film, with no clear indication that he likes anybody, much less Cathy. Anyone expecting some kind of grand romance will be disappointed as Fennell is much more interested in making the film weird, like having the walls of Cathy’s room look like her skin, complete with freckles.

    Robbie and Elordi do well enough with the material, and it’s clear that both of them are committed to bringing Fennell’s vision to life. Their styles tend to balance each other out, and if the story had been committed to their characters’ relationship, they might be lauded for their chemistry. In the end, though, the supporting actors feel more interesting, including ones played by Hong Chau, Alison Miller, and Clunes.

    This version of Wuthering Heights should never be construed as an alternative to reading the book for any high schoolers out there. While Fennell makes the film interesting with her technical filmmaking choices, the story never finds its footing as it fails to sell the one thing that it seems to promise.

    ---

    Wuthering Heights opens in theaters on February 13.

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