Opry’s 100th Anniversary Tribute is Perfect Time to Reinstate Hank

On January 10th, 2026, the Grand Ole Opry will be honoring the legacy of Hank Williams in a special show at the Opry’s original home, The Ryman Auditorium. The show is part of the Opry’s continued celebration of its 100th Anniversary, which was officially recognized back on November 28th. Though the Opry has produced many of these anniversary shows dedicated to certain eras or groups of performers over the past year, this is one of the few that is centered around one specific artist.
Along with citing the unprecedented six encores Hank Williams received upon his Opry debut, the Opry says, “Join us as we celebrate the enduring legacy of Hank Williams, whose heartfelt songwriting and unmistakable voice helped define the sound of country music … Few artists have left a mark as deep or as lasting as Hank Williams—a true original whose music still moves hearts nearly a century later.”
Scheduled to perform on the evening are the grandchildren of Hank, namely Hilary Williams, Holly Williams, and Sam Williams, with Opry member Terry Clark also slated to perform, and more artists to be announced. Hank Williams III who has not performed in public since 2014 is currently not scheduled to appear, though it remains uncertain if he would appear even if invited.
Hank Williams III founded the The Reinstate Hank movement back in 2003 in an effort to get the Grand Ole Opry to recognize his grandfather who was kicked out for drunkenness and missing rehearsals in 1952. Though nobody holds it against the Opry for not putting up with Hank’s behavior at that time, the Opry promised that if Hank could clean up his act, they would welcome him back with open arms. But Hank Williams never got that opportunity. The country legend passed away in the back of his Cadillac on New Years Day, 1953.
The Reinstate Hank online petition now has over 62,000 signatures on it, with even more signatures in the physical Reinstate Hank book that Hank3 would take around with him on tour. Holly Williams and Hilary Williams who are scheduled to perform during the Hank tribute on January 10th have also signed the petition. Hank Williams Jr. has been spotted wearing Reinstate Hank T-shirts, and has also voiced support for the movement. Kris Kristofferson, Charlie Louvin, and other top country artists have signed the petition as well.
But heretofore, the Grand Ole Opry has refused to give ground on the issue. The Opry manager who was in charge when Hank Williams III first made the request to have Hank reinstated was Pete Fisher. He responded with, “We’ll never reinstate a dead guy.”
In 2020 when current Grand Ole Opry manager Dan Rogers took charge, he said about the issue, “Had Hank Williams lived, there is little doubt in my mind that…I would hope he would have returned to the Opry and all would have been great and right in the world. Unfortunately, he didn’t.”
When the 100th Anniversary of the birth of Hank Williams came around on September 17th, 2023, Saving Country Music published an open letter to the Grand Ole Opry and Dan Rogers pointing out that this centennial moment would be the perfect opportunity to finally resolve the Reinstate Hank issue, and ceremoniously Reinstate Hank in accordance with the family’s wishes, and in concert with the other events around the world marking Hank’s 100th birthday. That did not happen.
Saving Country Music’s open letter stimulated much discussion about the matter many years after it had last been broached publicly. Many fans voiced their support, but others said, “The Opry’s right. Inducting a dead guy makes no sense.” But that entire argument was turned on its head less than a month after the Hank Williams 100th birthday.
On October 14th, 2023 as part of a Keith Whitley tribute at the Grand Ole Opry House involving Garth Brooks, Keith Whitley’s widow Lorrie Morgan, and other members of Whitley’s family, they ceremoniously inducted Keith Whitley into the Grand Ole Opry, citing how he was set to be inducted before he passed away on May 9th, 1989 due to alcoholism—eerily similar circumstances to the Hank Williams Opry story.
Keith Whitley was posthumously inducted as a Grand Ole Opry member, taking into consideration that his alcoholism get in the way of it happening in life—the same thing the Reinstate Hank movement, 60,000+ signatories, and Hank’s family have been saying for over 20 years now.
It was during an Opry tribute to Hank Williams on the 50th Anniversary of his passing in 2003 at a special tribute show at the Ryman Auditorium that Hank Williams III first spoke out about Hank Williams not being a member, and how the symbolic gesture would mean “a dream come true for a lot of people.”
How fitting would it be if during this 100th Anniversary tribute to Hank Williams at the Mother Church of Country Music—where Hank Williams reportedly took those six encores—Hank’s family’s wishes would be finally granted just like they were for Keith Whitley, and Hank Williams was ceremoniously reinstated into the institution to meant so much to him, that his legacy means so much to, and that broke his heart by kicking him out and aided his downward spiral leading to his death on New Year’s Day, 1953.
This is the moment during the Opry’s 100th Anniversary that Dan Rogers and the Opry could finally right this wrong, and use it as an opportunity to highlight how it’s a new day at the Opry, and how past grievances and previously-overlooked legends are finally getting their due.
Or, sit back and have to explain how Jelly Roll is a Grand Ole Opry member now, and Hank Williams isn’t.
– – – – – – –
If you found this article valuable, consider leaving Saving Country Music A TIP.

December 18, 2025 @ 9:18 am
I’m all for reinstating Hank to the Opry if it would get Hank III performing again. Doubtful, but one can hope.
Still, the Opry is showing class by dedicating a night to honor Hank.
December 18, 2025 @ 9:40 am
I’m guessing they’ll do it–reinstate Hank Williams–because the Opry will be able to turn it into an event–with a sold-out concert and video, streaming, etc.
But I’m hoping they don’t. To me, this “Reinstate Hank” is almost as silly as asking the Louvre to restore the arms to Venus de Milo or the town of Pisa to straighten out the Tower or the National Park Service to fix the crack in the Liberty Bell.
Hank Williams was fired from the Opry. That’s part of country music history and lore.
(Seems strange to me that a noted rebel hellbilly like Hank 3 would be begging for an imprimatur from the corporate execs who run the Opry now.)
December 18, 2025 @ 9:50 am
You’re right, there are financial and PR incentives to the Grand Ole Opry Reinstating Hank, and they only have these things to lose by not doing so. Look at all the headlines that came from Keith Whitley’s induction? But this also begs the question why it hasn’t happened yet. That’s what makes it feel personal against Hank.
That said, I do think there is a legitimate chance this could happen, especially if fans rise up and let their voice be heard that they want it to.
“To me, this “Reinstate Hank” is almost as silly as asking the Louvre to restore the arms to Venus de Milo or the town of Pisa to straighten out the Tower or the National Park Service to fix the crack in the Liberty Bell.”
Though I appreciate this comparison on an intellectual level, we’re not talking about altering a physical artifact. Hank Williams will always have been fired from the Opry. And if the Opry does the right thing, he will have always been reinstated as part of the Opry’s 100th birthday. To me, that makes the story even more picture perfect.
December 18, 2025 @ 11:36 am
The performance the Opry would put on for honoring Hank Sr would by like that person who wears band t-shirts of bands they don’t actually listen to. None of the performers they would select would have had Hank Sr songs in their setlists prior.
December 18, 2025 @ 2:21 pm
This is not a hypothetical. The Opry is honoring Hank Williams on January 10th. Hilary, Holly, and Sam Williams who are scheduled to perform all most certainly know who Hank Williams is, and have performed his songs. I would venture to guess Terri Clark does to, and can probably perform his catalog front to back.
December 18, 2025 @ 12:37 pm
I don’t have a dog in the fight, other than it seems important to Hanks family. Hank III had the petition in the early 2000’s, but Hank Jr brought it up all the way back in the mid 1980’s with” The Conversation” with Waylon.
December 18, 2025 @ 2:22 pm
Yes, the Hank3 petition mirrors the wording in “The Conversation” about this issue. Hank Jr. was complaining. Hank3 said, “I’m going to do something about it.”
December 18, 2025 @ 10:06 am
I think the Opry shows some balls by having a night to celebrate Hank Williams, while ignoring his family’s request to have him re-instated to years now
December 18, 2025 @ 10:50 am
One byproduct of this who impasse is the Opry has been discouraged from doing Hank tributes over the last 20 years due to the concern they will become drama funnels over the Reinstate Hank issue. They did end up doing a Hank segment on his 100th birthday, but didn’t really promote it publicly beforehand. This is far and away the biggest Hank tribute since 2003 when Hank Williams III first made a big deal about it.
Again, that’s all the more reason to put the issue in the past. Even if you don’t believe Reinstate Hank is a worthy cause, doing exactly what they did for Keith Whitley will be a promotional opportunity for the Opry, and put the issue to bed for good.
December 18, 2025 @ 12:25 pm
Yes I believe they painted themselves into a corner by inducting Whitley. I don’t understand their refusal to do it in the first place. We all know Pete Fisher wasn’t a fan of “the grey hairs”, just ask Stonewall Jackson. But what’s been the gold back since he’s been gone? Seems like a win/win situation. Appease your classic country loving base and make a few bucks in the process.
December 18, 2025 @ 2:54 pm
I believe the worst thing Mr. F. ever did to the Opry was getting rid of the sponsors. Companies were standing in line to get a portion of the show. Now who is the main sponsor? Humana.
December 27, 2025 @ 5:13 am
The worst thing Pete Fisher ever did was be associated with the Grand Ole Opry in the first place; he had ZERO respect or regard for the traditions that made the show what it was in the first place whether it was the long time artists, the sponsors, or the Opry star segments. Used to be an Opry star (Porter Wagoner, Bill Anderson, ect) would host a 30
minute segment with other members &/or guests appearing during those slots, each segment with a different sponsor; now it’s a straight through show sponsored by Humana (Dollar General was the lone sponsor prior to that)
December 18, 2025 @ 10:15 am
I’m torn on this. On the one hand it’s a travesty that Hank is not in the Opry given what a giant he is in country music. And the fact that they’re honoring him for his contributions to country music yet still won’t reinstate him is insulting.
But I do wish he was in simply because an organization dedicated to country music without Hank Williams simply makes no sense. It’s worse than the baseball hall of fame not including the all-time hits leader even with an asterisk or whatever for his violations. Honoring history includes the good and bad.
So while I’d love it if the Opry reinstated Hank because no one deserves membership more, I also think since they’ve gone this long keeping him out, they don’t deserve to be able to capitalize on his name with a celebration.
December 18, 2025 @ 10:44 am
Jelly Roll is in the grand ol opry and Hank Williams isn’t.
December 18, 2025 @ 11:46 am
It’s getting to be as legitimate as the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
December 18, 2025 @ 11:25 am
Why? They aren’t going to bring back Hank Jr and Hank III to honor Hank Sr. Is it really honoring Hank Sr’s legacy to have Jelly Roll, Post Malone, and Lainey Wilson perform his songs while leaving out his songs for being politically incorrect?
December 18, 2025 @ 2:24 pm
Strait,
Second time you’ve made this point, and it’s still wrong. Hilary, Holly, and Sam Williams, and Terri Clark have been announced as the people paying tribute, with more to be announced. This is the maximalist, cynical view you’re bringing to this before actually reading the article.
December 18, 2025 @ 3:04 pm
Ok…it’s completely reasonable and flat-out awesome that Hank Jr and Hank III will be excluded.
December 18, 2025 @ 3:45 pm
My assumption on Hank Jr is that he refuses to ever play The Opry because
A: They sacked his pappy
B: He doesn’t need the money.
C: Hes Hank Williams Jr
As for Shelton, he doesnt perform anymore. For various reasons.
December 18, 2025 @ 5:05 pm
Strait,
As it says in the article you didn’t read before commenting, Hank Williams III hasn’t performed publicly in 11 years. My guess is the Opry would love to have Hank3 be part of this, and if they were resinstating Hank Williams, it might be the moment he’s coxed out of hiding.
As for Hank Jr., like Kevin Smith said, he performs maybe a dozen times a year, and doesn’t leave the deer blind for under six figures these days. But who knows, maye even he would show up if they were to Reinstate Hank.
December 18, 2025 @ 11:32 am
I quite honestly think that Hank Williams remaining fired from the Opry is better for the Opry than reinstating him. I don’t mean this in some sort of point of principle. A big reinstatement event will draw attention for a few weeks. Hank being fired is perennial fodder for a news story lede or social media post.
In a world where the Opry is fighting for relevance, I think controversy is better than reconciliation.
And Hank is long dead; to the extent that any wrong was done (which I would question), the value in performative restoration is low.
December 18, 2025 @ 11:36 am
Amen Trigger! If they could do it for Keith Whitley, they can do it for Hank.
It would be a great lesson in forgiveness, overlooking the difficulties and honoring the genius that was Hank Williams.
Tormented yes, by pain and then the alcohol to try to soothe the pain, but the man wrote so many legendary songs and remains
greater than all other Country artists.
Do the right thing Opry while Hank Jr. can still appreciate it.
December 18, 2025 @ 11:45 am
Signed that petition 10 years ago and suppported hank3 at more than 15 shows …we miss shelton hope he is well….screw the opry after jelly ho got in …..the opry aint shit high prices for talent that pulls on heartstrings for 400 bucks a seat …go to the ryman the auditorium is the opry …not that kiosk they built at opry mills
December 18, 2025 @ 11:57 am
Is there a plaque backstage with Hank’s name on it? If not, it seems like a fair compromise would be to have a ceremony issuing him one to hang with the other current and past members’ plaques.
Short of that, though……. if you want to honor the history and traditions of the institution, and one of those traditions is that membership ends with death, I just don’t see how you justify reinstating a guy who isn’t living, no matter how great he was. Keith Whitley’s “induction” isn’t a reasonable comp because he wasn’t made a member, they just went through the motions and gave Lorrie Morgan a replica plaque. If there was some evidence that reinstatement was imminent at the time he died I guess they would do something similar, but I’ve never heard such a rumor.
The fact that Jelly Roll is a shitty pick for induction doesn’t move the needle either, but it is a pretty shitty pick IMHO.
December 18, 2025 @ 2:29 pm
All that’s ever been asked for, and all that’s being asked for now is for the Opry to do EXACTLY what they did for Keith Whitley, which is to ceremoniously reinstate Hank Williams as an Opry member. All members are removed after they’re dead? Fine, whatever. That’s never what’s been argued. The Hank Williams family just want the Opry to recognize the incredible contribution he made to the Opry in a gesture that would mean a lot to them.
December 18, 2025 @ 1:39 pm
If it wasn’t for Hank sr. And his heart rendering music and lyrics, both country and gospel there would be NO country music today PERIOD! Enough Said! The words begat the man. He was one of a kind. There will never be another, although Hank Jr. did his Daddy proud; Hank was watching over him when Hank Jr. fell from that mountain. Go Rest High On That Mountain,Son Your Work On Earth Is Through. God bless America, Country Music and President Donald Trump
December 20, 2025 @ 10:26 am
Uhm, if Hank sr. watched over his son when he fell face-first down that mountain, he’s undoubtedly a very lousy father.
December 18, 2025 @ 1:57 pm
Hank’s above all that pretentious bullshit. At this point , if they do, it’ll just be to fill a few non-deserving pockets.
December 18, 2025 @ 2:42 pm
Near the end of this article, it says “previously-overlooked legends are finally getting their duo.” It was likely meant to be due instead of duo.
December 18, 2025 @ 5:16 pm
I don’t agree with reinstating Hank while I appreciate his music and what he has done there is no guarantee he ever would’ve straightened himself out. He knew the rules. He was warned. He still broke them. Same reason Pete Rose never should’ve been reinstated even after death.
December 19, 2025 @ 5:30 am
Pete should have been suspended for life from MLB for gambling, but eligible for the HOF. Those were the rules at the time of his suspension, but MLB pressured the HOF to change their eligibility rules because there was a real chance that Pete would have been elected despite his suspension. That would have been embarrassing for MLB, so the rule was changed. Fact is, Shoeless Joe was eligible for the HOF and even got a few votes. In my opinion, changing the HOF eligibility rule after Pete’s suspension, then changing it back after his death is the most cruel, spiteful thing they could do to him.
December 19, 2025 @ 11:27 am
Just a reminder that the rules and requirements during Hank Sr.’s tenure were pretty stiff. It was a big deal for Hank to be an Opry member but trying to make it back to Nashville every weekend — or every other weekend — was costing him a bundle. Friday and Saturday nights were big paydays for working musicians across all genres, especially one who was as hot as Hank, Sr. It was costing Hank a tidy bundle in lost revenue to meet his Opry commitments. I think Hank was well aware of the consequences if he didn’t meet the Opry’s demands and chose to let the chips fall where they may. It was no big surprise to Hank when Jim Denny and Johnny Wright showed up at his house to break the news to him.
I seem to recall in the Sixties, the Opry management released other big acts from the membership roster because they weren’t making the required number of appearances and management wanted to update/refresh the show. If memory serves, CMHoF members Kitty Wells, Faron Young and Chet Atkins were among the artists released from the Opry’s clutch.
December 18, 2025 @ 6:35 pm
People who aren’t/weren’t opry members:
George Strait
Merle Haggard
Willie Nelson
Waylon Jennings
Buck Owens
Wynn Stewart
Dwight Yoakam
The Mavericks/ Raul Malo
Turnpike Troubadours
Bob Wills
Doug Sahm
Asleep at the Wheel / Ray Benson
Tanya Tucker
Hank Jr
Sturgill Simpson
Tyler Childers
Freddy Powers
Brent Mason
Hank Williams
Tommy Collins
Mickey Newbury
Paul Franklin
Keith Whitley
Yet jelly roll is and Hank isn’t. Sooo…it seems you’re in pretty great company if you’re not a member.
December 19, 2025 @ 9:54 am
I’m also not a member. How bout that!
December 18, 2025 @ 8:26 pm
“Reinstate Hank” is one of those topics that some people have a very strong opinion about. I love Hank Williams, the Opry, and country music. But Hank Williams cannot, and should not, be reinstated as an Opry member, because “reinstating” him makes no sense. Many people do not understand what the Grand Ole Opry is, and they make un-informed comments. The Opry is a musical radio program, performed in front of an audience. There is a cast of performers who have agreed to join the program and appear a certain number of times per year. This is what people do not understand. The Opry is not the Country Music Hall of Fame. It is not an award given to top artists. It is a group of living people who play concerts. When a member dies, he or she is no longer a member. Only living, breathing people can be Opry members. That is the way it has always been. Roy Acuff is no longer an Opry member. He died. George Strait is not a member. He was asked decades ago, but turned down the offer because he hardly ever is in Nashville. Willie Nelson used to be a member, but he quit. The Opry is a job, not an award. So many people do not seem to understand that. Johnny Cash, Earl Scruggs, Chet Atkins… they were members at one time, then they resigned from the cast. They were no longer members then, and they certainly did not become members again when they died. Hank was a member of the Opry, and that is a simple fact. Then he was fired from the cast (back when the Opry really meant something), due to his unreliability and drunkenness. At that point, he was no longer a member of the Opry cast. If that hadn’t happened, he eventually would have died, maybe in the 1990s, and he would no longer have been an Opry member at that point.
December 18, 2025 @ 9:17 pm
I agree that many people regard the Opry as an award or a “Hall of Fame” when it’s not about that at all. People also don’t understand that if you want to be a Opry member, you need to commit to playing multiple times a year. So when people scream, “George Strait is not an Opry member!” they don’t understand that’s because George doesn’t want that commitment, and doesn’t live in Tennessee to fulfill it.
All that said, that has NEVER been the point of Reinstate Hank. The point is to show respect to Hank Williams. It is a symbolic gesture. It is recognizing that at his death, Hank wasn’t a member. And as Hank Jr. said, that caused his dad “his greatest pain.”
For 22 years, people have been saying that “The Opry can’t induct/reinstate a dead guy.” That point is now completely irrelevant. In fact, there is now direct precedent to the contrary. This is what they did for Keith Whitley. It’s already happened. All that Reinstate Hank advocates have been requesting for 22 years now is that they do the same exact thing they did for Keith Whitley. The only difference is Whitley’s family hadn’t been asking for 22 years, they didn’t have an organized campaign to get it done, and their wasn’t a petition with 60,000 signatures on it.
The Opry created this dilemma. Now if they don’t Reinstate Hank, it truly does seem like they have a vendetta.
Just do what they did for Keith Whitley. It’s really not that hard. My goodness.
December 19, 2025 @ 5:22 am
“ The only difference is Whitley’s family hadn’t been asking for 22 years, they didn’t have an organized campaign to get it done, and their wasn’t a petition with 60,000 signatures on it.”
Trigger,
I’m with you where it counts in that I think reinstating Hank would be a good symbolic gesture that would make his family happy and be a good PR move for the Opry. Feels like an easy win-win.
That being said, I don’t think your claim about what the “only difference” is between Hank and Keith Whitley’s situations is accurate. Hank was a member, was fired, and subsequently died after having blown his chance as a member. Whitley was on the verge of being inducted and died in the time between announcement and induction. Those to me are actually fundamentally different situations. One man blew his chance; the other never got his.
Are they different enough that one man should receive symbolic posthumous recognition and the other shouldn’t? As I said, I join you in arguing no. But just because both situations should lead to the same outcome, it doesn’t mean there’s no difference. I think we can acknowledge that it’s not apples to apples while still arguing for the same outcome.
December 19, 2025 @ 8:09 am
So if we’re splitting hairs here, Keith Whitley did not die between announcement and induction. He died between being a non-member, and being invited.
Are the Keith Whitley and Hank Williams situations exactly the same? Of course not. Hank Williams meant way more to the popularity of the Grand Ole Opry than Keith Whitley ever could. Hank Williams has a whole campaign and petition behind him, while Lorrie Morgan twisted arms behind-the-scenes just like she did to get Keith Whitley in the Hall of Fame. By the way, you want something done, give it to Lorrie Morgan. She can move mountains.
But the point that you “can’t induct a dead guy” is now a dead one. The Opry itself set that precedent, and that was always the argument against Reinstating Hank.
To flip this argument around, how does it in any way HURT the Opry by Reinstating Hank? What is the downside? The answer is nothing. They ran more risk posthumously and ceremoniously inducting Whitley, because it kicked over the anthill that was Reinstate Hank.
Just do it. Grease the squeaky wheel.
December 20, 2025 @ 4:03 pm
I understand the commitment. My point in listing these names is the opry is overrated. Cains or acl or Billy Bob’s or the sagebrush could just as easily have an “opry” and it’d be an infinitely better opry.
December 19, 2025 @ 12:44 am
…aren’t drunkenness and no shows literally some of the embodiments of country music?
December 19, 2025 @ 2:02 am
Sam Williams is the no-talent DEI part of the show.
December 19, 2025 @ 8:09 pm
I thought he was pretty good (was skeptical at first on Family Reunion but liked The Lost Grandchild’s Plea) however since his Mum & sister passed he went off the rails. I saw the video he did Tilted Crown(?) and was utterly confused and disappointed as it was such a 180 musically and in content. Felt horrible for Jr. But when I heard him bastardize Honkytonkin and the dumb pseudo Country/hip hop crap he’s doing while dragging Hank’s name through the mud, he became the enemy. Totally against everything his family stood for. I feel bad for his losses but there’s no need to take it out on someone he never even knew
December 20, 2025 @ 10:29 am
Every family has a dud.
Henry IV was a great king.
Henry V was a magnificent king.
Henry VI was a friendly dud. His son was a bloodthirsty muttonhead.
December 19, 2025 @ 2:32 am
I once read that Bob Hope was once part of a package tour that also included Hank Williams. Hope refused to go on after Hank because the crowd wouldn’t calm down enough to listen to his jokes! That’s a lot of star power and charisma for a hillbilly!
December 19, 2025 @ 6:22 am
I’m the biggest Hank Sr fan alive but I don’t think he should be reinstated. It’s nothing on Hank. It’s the Opry itself. I don’t want a great man and the greatest country artist ever to be associated with the trash that the Opry has become. The Opry has always had issues with the way they treat artists and their silly rules, but they’re even worse now that they allow people in who’s not even country. It’s pathetic and disgusting. Hank is better off without them.
December 19, 2025 @ 6:41 am
Being a member of the opry isnt the same as the country music hall of fame so i dont really get it. The whole purpose of the opry membership is for the members to promote the opry by performing there. So i dont get it really and adding hank in there just after jelly roll is just a slap in the face to hank. But i get it, its a big deal to some. Comparing it to the baseball hall of fame is wrong.
December 19, 2025 @ 7:20 pm
I can remember watching the 2003 show with my Dad and Grandparents. It was a moment for sure. They should absolutely do it, as they should have done decades ago, and they better make sure Jr & III are there when they do
December 20, 2025 @ 5:28 am
Hank Williams is one of the true greats of country music and always worth a listen. However, I am not sure I disagree with the Opry in not reinstating him. I am not sure I see any real point in doing so. There are a number of greats who have never been a member. Hank Williams remains a legend whether he is a member or not.
December 20, 2025 @ 5:15 pm
I wonder if this was in the works before they decided to induct Jelly Roll (fucking embarrassing), or something being done now to appease the people who were outraged at Mr. Roll being inducted. Either way, I agree with David: The Duke of Everything, it would be a slap in the face to reinstate Hank now. The Opry has turned into a huge joke.
December 27, 2025 @ 8:24 am
How about having Hank IV and the Strange Band. A lot better than Sam Williams. Both of his CDs are great and highly under rated.
December 27, 2025 @ 10:11 am
Wouldn’t be opposed to that at all. My hope is that it becomes a big family affair, and they indeed Reinstate Hank. Would be a big moment for the Opry.
December 28, 2025 @ 5:13 pm
I get the feeling you still think the grand ole opry is relevant
The reality changed years ago. Time to update your paradigm.
Unless enough of the audience still has this false impression of the Opry meaning anything and playing along generates revenue. If that is the case, by all means carry on, gotta pay the bills.
There is no one currently paying proper respect to country music at an institutional level.
People like Marty Stuart tried but in the end sold out to CMHOF. And I get why he is still opry attached, it is honoring the great men and women he got to stand beside.
But from the outside looking in, CMHOF and Opry are defunct.
If I get rich I will start the County Music Hall of Fame Museum Museum – honoring the legacy of the institution prior to it being hijacked.