Country Music People December 2018 | Page 4
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DECEMBER 2018
Volume 49
Number 12
Issue 586
News
Walt Trott in Nashville
Duncan Warwick in London
California Bar Shooting: 12 Dead
Editor
Duncan Warwick
Contributors
David Allan, Janet Aspley,
Donnie Ayers, Craig Baguley,
Larry Delaney, Don Cusic, Julie Flaskett,
Kelly Gregory, Michael Hingston, Tony Ives,
Spencer Leigh, John Lomax III, ,
Roland Purdy, Adrian Peel, Paul Riley,
Alex Rossi, Wayne Smart, Chris Smith,
Tom Travis, Walt Trott, Dave Watkins, Jack
Watkins
New release consultant: Steve Tidbury
Assistant editor / Special projects
coordinator
Kelly Gregory
Photographers
Patricia Presley, Barry Dixon, Billie McAleer
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People or its editor.
4 cmp - DECEMBER 2018
A man in black shot the Borderline Bar &
Grill’s security guard, then proceeded inside
this Thousand Oaks, Calif., club, killing another
10 persons and a Ventura County deputy
sheriff answering the distress call, Nov. 7.
Later I.D.’d as Ian David Long, 28, a former
Marine, the troubled killer also took his own
life, after injuring another 23 people. This
Instagram message attested to his cryptic feelings:
“I hope people call me insane...(laughing emojis)... wouldn’t that just be a big ball of
irony? Yeah, I’m insane, but the only thing you people do after these shootings is ‘hopes
and prayers’... or ‘keep you in my thoughts’.... every time... and wonder why these keep
happening...”
Borderline is regarded as Ventura County’s largest country music venue and is
noted for its line-dancing. The Wednesday night shooting occurred on the weekly
College Country night. It was little more than a year following the infamous shootout
at the I-91 outdoor Harvest Country Music Festival in Las Vegas, site of the largest
mass shooting in the U.S. One of the Borderline fatalities had survived that Route 91
massacre. Country artist Michael Ray, who had played the Vegas festival, told a Chicago
reporter upon hearing of the Borderline killings, “It took me right back waking up
on my bus in the middle of the night after Route 91 happened...we were on our way
back home. My phone started buzzing on the table by my bed...when I finally picked
up, it was my buddy and the first thing he said was ‘Are you OK?’ He told me what
happened and was still happening and my heart broke. So today, it breaks again for all
the families of those young kids, as they’re trying to piece together why their loved one
just went out to have a good time, and then this!” Ray recalled he was starting the day
in Chicago with a cup of coffee when he heard of the Borderline tragedy: “That’s our
family. That’s where the country music family starts, those fans. They’re there having
country music be part of their life, whether it’s listening to the music, seeing a band,
or taking line dancing lessons. These were college kids. They are the future of our
country. They aren’t even that much younger than me. They’re unwinding, having some
wholesome fun...Those are our people, so this shakes us to our core.”