
Age: 64
male
Tracy Darrell "Trace" Adkins (born January 13, 1962) is an American country music artist. He made his debut in 1996 with the album Dreamin' Out Loud, released on Capitol Records Nashville. Since then, Adkins has released seven more studio albums and two Greatest Hits compilations. In addition, he has charted more than twenty singles on the Billboard country music charts, including the Number One hits "(This Ain't) No Thinkin' Thing", "Ladies Love Country Boys", and "You're Gonna Miss This", which peaked in 1997, 2007, and 2008, respectively. "I Left Something Turned on at Home" went to #1 on Canada's country chart. All but one of his studio albums have received gold or platinum certification in the United States; his highest-selling to date is 2005's Songs About Me, which has been certified 2× Multi-Platinum for shipping two million copies. He has also made several appearances on television, including as a panelist on the game shows Hollywood Squares and Pyramid, as a finalist on The Celebrity Apprentice, as the voice for recurring character Elvin on King of the Hill, and in television commercial voice-overs for the KFC restaurant chain. In addition, Adkins has written an autobiography entitled A Personal Stand: Observations and Opinions from a Free-Thinking Roughneck, which was released in late 2007. Description above from the Wikipedia article Trace Adkins, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Trace Adkins

Woody’s Father
for Woody’s Father in Sheriff Woody
Suggested by autobotsonicfan2007

In the Gilded Age of America, there was a man named Woodrow Pride, but everyone called him Woody. Woody came all the way from New York to look for a paying job in California, where it landed him in the not-so-lucky Luckey Valley, where the only job available was being their new sheriff. Woody's met some friends in Luckey Valley like Jessie, a singer at a local saloon, Stinky Pete, a prospector looking for gold in California, and Bonnie "Bo" Peepers, a shepherdess whom he saved her flock from rustlers. But what Woody didn't know is that he was living in the regular spot for a criminal known as One-Eyed Bart, the cruelest criminal in the West. Woody stood up to Bart, but he sent Woody up the river, yet the cowboy survived thanks to his friends. Although hope seemed lost for Luckey Valley, the cowboy wouldn't give up on a town he just came to. Woody and his new roundup gang will have to tread through mountains, avoid bears, encounter rattlesnakes, all sorts of danger before he reaches Luckey Valley, and take down One-Eyed Bart once and for all!
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