Brooks & Dunn have a nifty hit single out now called “Put a Girl  in it,” and I only wish the country music industry would take that  advice more often. I thought about it as the nominees for the 42nd  annual CMA Awards were announced today. Country insiders often bemoan  the fact that female artists seem to generally have a tougher time of it  at radio than male artists do, or that they at least seem to have fewer  slots open to them. That is perennially reflected in the nominations  for the CMAs’ highly coveted Entertainer of the Year prize. How long has  it been since a woman was even nominated in the category? Here’s a  clue: The last female nominee was the then-superstar/now-pariah Dixie  Chicks! (You can find a historical list of nominees dating back to 1967  here.) So I was stunned and amazed today when into this reliably  vagina-free zone walked Sugarland, who would initially seem, on the face  of it, to be half-ineligible.
 It is no secret by now that the duo are  an EW-Approved ™ Country Act (their biggest fan, Whitney Pastorek, found  new ways to advocate Sugarland in this very space just yesterday), and  thus no surprise that we would endorse this encouraging development on  all sorts of levels. Go, “Stay"...etc.
Yet you know I wouldn’t be posting if I hadn’t found some reason to  carp, and so here we go: Where is Taylor Swift? If you are an average  reader or fan, you are echoing me at this moment and saying, “Yeah,  where is Taylor Swift?” If you are in any way connected with  the country music industry, you are saying, “Willman, we knew you were  an imbecile, but must you so flagrantly trumpet your complete and utter  ignorance of the way the world works?” So let me assure you that I had  every understanding going in that Swift’s chances of picking up an  Entertainer of the Year nomination were roughly less than zero. The  category really doesn’t have anything to do with who had a particularly  artistic year; it’s largely an ongoing Career Achievement award for  performers who are still active superstars. You have to “earn” your way  into the category through years of headlining amphitheaters and arenas —  I get that, even if I don’t agree with it. And yet, year after year,  when Kenny Chesney wins the award (as he will again this time), he comes  back to the press room afterward and talks about how good it feels to  get the trophy that the industry bestows upon the guy who has been the  best or most visible ambassador of country music to the outside world.  If that’s really the standard, then, with all due respect to Chesney’s  unparalleled live drawing power, wasn’t Swift undeniably country’s  Ambassador of the Year in 2008?

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