Tank tops, gym bags, american flag pants, official Gold's Gym bodybuilding clothes, workout gear and accessories. Top names in quality gym clothes for men.
Kentucky BBQ business getting heat for 'LGBTQ' shirts.
WILLIAMSTOWN, Ky. (WTHR) – A local barbeque business in Kentucky is getting a lot of heat after advertising T-shirts on social media with a play on the LGBTQ acronym.
The owner ofBelle's Smokin BBQ, Jamie Smith, took the LGBTQ acronym and changed it to Liberty, Guns, Bible, Trump and BBQ.
Some people are now calling the message insensitive and hateful.
The original post on the business' Facebook page, which has since been taken down, said "We are going to stock up on some Swag. Hat and shirts. Let me know what yall want via text message. We are going to have our traditional Belles shirts, trucker hats. We will also have our LGBTQ shirts as well Belle’s logo on the back. For those who said (wtf)”
Kentucky BBQ restaurant slammed for 'LGBTQ' shirts deemed offensive.
A Kentuckybarbecue jointis facing serious blowback after some of their merchandise has been deemed inappropriate and offensive to the LGBTQ community.
Belle's Smoking BBQ, which operates out of afood truckbased in Williamstown, Ky., promoted their new t-shirts on social media this week, which are emblazoned with the slogan, "I support LGBTQ - Liberty, Guns, Bible, Trump, BBQ."
Many were quick to respond in the comments, calling the misappropriation of the "lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer" slogan bigoted and harmful.
“I posted the shirt for new swag and it just went out of hand and it got blowed up,” Belle's Smoking BBQ owner Jamie Smith toldFox 19. He added that even before advertising the shirts on Facebook, he had sold about 100 of the shirts.
During an interview on The Ellen Show, Lil Dickymedi revealed the track features over 30 artists, with each of them taking on the roles of a different animal. For example, Justin Bieber plays on the role of a Baboon, Ariana Grande takes on the role of a Zebra and Ed Sheeran plays a Koala Bear.
The last time country music produced the most popular song in America was 2005, whenAmerican Idolcatapulted Carrie Underwood’s “Inside Your Heaven” to the peak of the Hot 100. Nashville’s drought at pop’s top will continue this week, technically, even though Ariana Grande’s reigning No. 1was overtakenby a banjo-laden song about horses, cowboys, and porches.
That song,Lil Nas X’s “Old Town Road,” has profited from the very question of whether it is, in fact, country. In mid-March, the track by the then-19-year-old Atlantan appeared at No. 19 on the Billboard country charts, prompting certain Nashville pundits to protest; this was rap, not country, they argued. Billboard was convinced andkicked the song offthe country charts. Publicity over that episode, the continued simmering of a social-mediamemerelated to the song, and last week’s release of a remix featuring Billy Ray Cyrus has helped the song surge 14 spots on the Hot 100. Also contributing: “Old Town Road” has a nutty-sweet catchiness, and it represents the latest amazing performance of one of pop’s most reliable magic tricks.
Lil Nas X is bothmeme-makerand rapper, and the “Old Town Road” phenomenon drew on both skills. Over a loop of plucked banjo (sampled from a Nine Inch Nailsinstrumental), grounded with electronic claps and bass rumbles, and in a rolling, folksy cadence, he brags of his Buffalo Bill swag: “Cowboy hat from Gucci / Wrangler on my booty.” The music video,such as it is, is all clips of the Wild West–set video game Red Dead Redemption 2. On the app TikTok, teens have played the song over edited footage of themselves transforming from street wear to denim, plaid, and cowboy hats. Watch acompilationand the wacky routine takes on a dreamy rhythm.Poof—you’re George Strait, you’re Dolly Parton, you’re Paris Hilton inThe Simple Life.