Larios has been swapping out some of Jelly Roll's favorite meals for some healthier options while the artist has been staying on top of his workouts. "He's been walking the arenas, playing basketball, boxing," Larios shares. "He's just surpassed a 100-pound weight loss." Before a show...
Jelly Roll didn’t exactly get clean and sober after prison. He’s been honest about using cocaine when he would drink until very recently, but before that, he did not discriminate. Where did he get the drugs? In the Save Me documentary he talks about how wild he and Bunnie were early...
Jelly Roll always talked about dropping out of school before he could legally drive, so when he told Bobby Bones that not only did he get his GED in jail, he got an associates degree afterward, it was shocking. The singer has an associates in sociology from Volunteer State University. Go ...
Jelly Roll always talked about dropping out of school before he could legally drive, so when he told Bobby Bones that not only did he get his GED in jail, he got an associates degree afterward, it was shocking. The singer has an associates in sociology from Volunteer State University. Go ...
“Twisted Sister wasn’t going for a kids' crowd either,” he explained. “We were playing fucking biker bars. It was like I was fighting for my life every night. It wasn’t about little kids -- even though little kids wound up getting into what we did. The same was true for Pee...
“Twisted Sister wasn’t going for a kids' crowd either,” he explained. “We were playing fucking biker bars. It was like I was fighting for my life every night. It wasn’t about little kids -- even though little kids wound up getting into what we did. The same was true for Pee...
“Twisted Sister wasn’t going for a kids' crowd either,” he explained. “We were playing fucking biker bars. It was like I was fighting for my life every night. It wasn’t about little kids -- even though little kids wound up getting into what we did. The same was true for Pee...
“Twisted Sister wasn’t going for a kids' crowd either,” he explained. “We were playing fucking biker bars. It was like I was fighting for my life every night. It wasn’t about little kids -- even though little kids wound up getting into what we did. The same was true for Pee...
The morning Jelly Roll walked in for an interview, he learned he had the No. 1 song on the radio — and not country radio. It's part of how he represents what's next in country music.
“I was so nervous,” Jelly continued. “It definitely wasn’t my best performance — you could see the nerves on my face. This song did a lot for me in dark moments of my life, too. I’m a lifelong fan. There’s not a white kid in the world who didn’t listen to...