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Morgan Wallen Appears In New Drake Video

Morgan Wallen appears in the new music video for a track from Drake’s Scary Hours 3, called “You Broke My Heart.” Morgan plays a close friend who helps him through…

Morgan Wallen in a maroon suit on the CMA red carpet and Drake on a red carpet in a black shirt and brown blazer
Jason Kempin, Frazer Harrison/Getty Images

Morgan Wallen appears in the new music video for a track from Drake's Scary Hours 3, called "You Broke My Heart."

Morgan plays a close friend who helps him through a breakup. Drake's video starts with a conversation between the rapper and the country singer, drinking wine in a luxury restaurant. Wallen says, "I gotta tell ya..." he pauses, and Drake says, "I know you want to say it." Wallen shakes his head, "I didn't like her. I think she might have been the wrong girl anyway."

"Well, what now?" the rapper asks, then says, "I'm kind of glad she's gone."

After the two cheer on one another, they decide to hit the town. Drake says, "Let's see what else is out there. That's what we need to do."

See that NSFW video here.

The video is Morgan's latest foray into hip-hop. He expressed that he is a fan of the genre and previously reached No. 1 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop chart for his 2021 collaboration with Lil Durk, "Broadway Girls."

Wallen has opened up in a recent interview in Billboard, and among the many subjects he touched on was the now infamous where TMZ published a video of a drunk Morgan using a racial slur.

Morgan told Billboard of the 2021 incident, "There's no excuse. I've never made an excuse. I never will make an excuse." Morgan said, as a result of the incident, he's talked to many people and heard "stories about things" that he would have never thought about because "I wasn't the one going through it." He said that in his heart, he was "never that guy that people were portraying me to be." Wallen also noted that the whole thing made him "mad a little bit" because he knew he shouldn't have said it, but he was "really not that guy.'"

He admitted putting himself in a "s--- spot" and really "messed up." He noted that if he was that guy, "I wouldn't have cared" and "I wouldn't have apologized."

Country music often focuses on small-town people and their love of the land and fellow people in their hometowns. There have been many songs in the country over the years paying homage to the small town and hometowns, including Miranda Lambert's 2007 song "Famous In A Small Town." Eric Church scored a hit in 2014 with "Give Back My Hometown."

Miranda's 2007 song's lyrics include, "Whether you're late for church / Or you're stuck in jail / Hey, word's gonna get around / Everybody dies famous in a small town / Well, baby, who needs their faces in a magazine? / Me and you, we've been stars in this town since we were seventeen."

Carrie Underwood also sings of the charm of small towns in her 2012 chart-topper "Thank God For Hometowns," and it is hard to forget one of Montgomery Gentry's biggest hit over twenty years ago in 2002, "My Hometown."

The Cambridge Dictionary defines small towns as "small social groups where ordinary people live." The US Census Bureau determines a small town with a population between 25,000 and 50,000. It is slightly smaller than the average suburb, which is defined as a community within an urban area with between 30,000 and 70,000 residents.

What is fun in country music today is that many of today's big stadium headliners, like Luke Combs and Morgan Wallen, play for crowds bigger than the populations of the towns they were born in. As we pay tribute to hometowns, we look at five country superstars playing to audiences each night bigger than their hometowns.

Luke Combs - Born in Huntersville, North Carolina

As of 2021, Huntersville has a population of roughly 60,000. That is just a bit less than the crowd size Luke plays for each night on his stadium tour. Combs is now in New Zealand playing for big crowds overseas.

Morgan Wallen - Born in Sneedville, Tennessee

Morgan is playing for audiences each night on his stadium tour for crowds more than forty times the size of his hometown. In 2020, the population of Sneedville was just 1,315.

Lainey Wilson - Born in Baskin, Louisiana

Lainey's hometown is tiny, with a population of just 211 reported in 2021. Wilson is now on her own headling arena tour playing for crowds of more than 10,000 people, and she just wrapped Luke Combs stadium tour as an opener playing for crowds over 60,000 each night.

Eric Church - Born in Granite Falls, North Carolina

Eric is from a very small town with just under 5,000 (4,927) as of 2021. Church is currently on his "Outsiders Revival Tour," playing outdoor arenas with more than twice his hometown's population at each stop.

Carrie Underwood - Born in Muskogee, Oklahoma

Carrie often talks about her hometown being Checotah, Oklahoma, which has a population of 2,043 as of 2021, but she was actually born in Muskogee, Oklahoma, with a population of 36,790 (2021). Either way, opening for Guns N' Roses on their "World Tour" like she has last week (8/6) and a few more times this month, she is playing for packed rock crowds of over 60,000.

Nancy Brooks has been working in the country music industry for almost 30 years. She has interviewed pretty much any country star you can think of. In the late 1990s, she started working with Dolly Parton. And yes, Nancy reports that Parton is as sweet as you would think. She loves her life in country music and has been backstage at every CMA Awards show since the late 1990s. Many of her stories are from her one-on-one interviews. She was there at the beginning of the incredible careers of many music superstars today, including Taylor Swift, Shania Twain, and Blake Shelton, and has interviewed them multiple times throughout the years.