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Jenna Paulette- Nashville Recording Artist & Country Music Singer-Songwriter  image

Jenna Paulette- Nashville Recording Artist & Country Music Singer-Songwriter

S1 E2 · Kick Your Boots Up | Ag, Western Fashion, and Rodeo Storytelling
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189 Plays3 years ago

Justin’s Taylor McAdams talks with country music’s cowgirl, singer-songwriter, Jenna Paulette. Jenna shares stories behind her songs, her music inspiration, and about her balance of cowboy/cowgirl ranch life and Nashville life. Born in Texas and grew up working on a ranch in Oklahoma, she identified with country artists who sang about the kind of lifestyle she experienced. She’s in the CMT’s New Women of Country Class of 2022 and her latest single, "Anywhere The Wind Blows" is playing on SiriusXM's The Highway. Jenna Paulette's debut album, "The Girl I Was", is on the horizon releasing on March 31, 2023. The album features songs co-written by Ashley McBryde, Rhett Atkins, Jessie Jo Dylan, Will Bundy, and others. Currently, on tour with Aaron Watson, she shares what it’s like behind the scenes on the road. For a full episode transcript, visit our website at https://www.justinboots.com/en/kick-your-boots-up.html

Pre-save her album here: https://ffm.to/jenna-paulette-the-girl-i-was

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Transcript

Jenna Paulette's Roots and Nashville Life

00:00:03
Speaker
You're listening to the Kick Your Boots Up podcast, where we swap stories of the West. Whether you're just waking up or getting in for the day, come on in and kick your boots up. In studio today on Zoom is none other than the 2022 next CMT Women of Country, Jenna Paulette. She's a well-known singer-songwriter, live in the dream in Nashville, but she resides in Louisville, Texas and grew up on the border, on the Texas-Oklahoma border in Thackerville, Oklahoma.
00:00:30
Speaker
We are so, so honored to have Jenna here on the podcast. And for all of you guys listening, I hope you guys learned something from this new opportunity with Jenna getting to hear her story. Jenna, we're so excited to have you here. Thank you for clearing your schedule and having just a moment with us. We appreciate it. Of course. Thank y'all so much for having me.
00:00:48
Speaker
Oh, without a doubt. And we have so many exciting things to talk about. You have some big news coming up that I'll let you reveal. But before we do that, I want to talk through your growing up. How did you grow up?

Ranching Influence on Music Passion

00:00:57
Speaker
What was it like on the border of Texas and Oklahoma and the ranch life there?
00:01:01
Speaker
yeah my family had a cow calf operation on the Oklahoma Texas line, we had mainly black Angus mama cows and. ended up crossing on Angus and then charley and I just love those little charcoal babies I just think they're so stinking cute and, of course, we had a few like.
00:01:19
Speaker
more, I don't know, but looking mama cows that just produced every year but we're kind of crazy. But we, I just loved it I think I fell in love with ranching and the lifestyle at a very young age, and that had a lot to do with my, my mom and my, my grandparents and the way that they value.
00:01:40
Speaker
that way of life. And my dad as well, my dad's more like that side of the family is more business oriented, which is why Lewisville was where we called home. So my dad needed to get to an airport. But we spent so much time on that ranch. I worked there in high school and college and just I fell in love with it. I fell in love with the lifestyle. And I think because of the lifestyle, I fell in love with country music. And it wasn't really the other way around, which I think for more people, it's that
00:02:06
Speaker
they fall in love with country music and then they want to dive into the lifestyle and for me it was like I was on the back of a four-wheeler checking cows and
00:02:14
Speaker
singing wide open spaces at the top of my lungs because it's where I was. And yeah, so for me, it it was just this perfect like hand in hand way to bring out what I really feel like God made me to do. And that is same country music and cowboy. And I think I just knew that from a very young age and in my experiences growing up or what kind of led me there.

Jenna on Terry Bradshaw

00:02:39
Speaker
Yeah, I think it's amazing when you get exposed to agriculture in any way, shape or form when you are growing up because it teaches you that life and death are very real things and you deal with it on a daily, weekly, monthly basis. And I think because you realize that life is precious, that you value it more and you see a lot of sunrises and a lot of sunsets and it just gives you this perspective on the world that
00:03:09
Speaker
I think is missing a lot in our culture today because we live in you know cities and and I mean I have an apartment in Nashville so I very much am experiencing that part of it too where you're living in a city your head's kind of buried in your phone and um and yeah I don't know I just felt like I was very blessed to have the opposite growing up and
00:03:31
Speaker
Really, my goal is to bring an aspect of the ranching lifestyle to the mainstream so that people can just get a feel of what they're missing in most respects, but they don't know they're missing.
00:03:45
Speaker
Oh yes. There's rural Oklahoma, rural America is the most beautiful places on the earth. And selfishly, I don't want to even tell people how wonderful it is because you want to keep it to yourself. But, but yes, I love how big of an advocate

Musical Beginnings with Dixie Chicks

00:03:57
Speaker
you are for that. And I'm going to kind of go off the track really quick. This is a little surprise question. I just thought of this. Zacharville, Oklahoma is also home to Terry Bradshaw. Have you ever interacted with him in his horse ranch? The funny thing is everybody asked me that question and we've never run into each
00:04:11
Speaker
each other. I think his daughter followed me a couple weeks ago on social media so I'm hoping we cross paths sooner than later but yeah they're there. Everybody asked me that question and I don't know we just kind of kept to ourselves. My my grandparents house was in Gainesville, Texas which is 15 minutes from Thackerville and my grandma always said I don't want to die anoke and so they planted their roots in Gainesville instead of living on the ranch and he just commuted every single day. So
00:04:39
Speaker
We knew a bunch of people obviously in Thackerville because they were our neighbors, but it wasn't the same as literally sleeping there and waking up being right there. I never met the Bradshaw's or I haven't yet, but I would absolutely love to. I just love how real they are in the world that we live in as well. I highly respect what they do and what they're about.
00:05:04
Speaker
I couldn't agree more and we've got to give Rachel a shout out. I had a really good friend with Rachel and in fact, she's getting married soon. I get the opportunity to go to her wedding and it's going to be a fun experience, but you're absolutely right for, for just like you very, very humble. And that's what I appreciate and respect about them and you as well. Um, even just having anything, anytime anyone mentions, Jenna Paulette, they say, wow, she's so talented and so humble. And so that's huge. That's, that's big, you

Balancing Ranch Life and Music Career

00:05:27
Speaker
know, right? But.
00:05:27
Speaker
I want to kind of go back to your humble beginnings a little bit. What about, tell us about your first memory that you remember having of like, wow, I can actually sing pretty good. I'm out here singing to these cows and I can actually harmonize and I can actually hit the notes. So what was your first memory there? They had to have been at a young age. Yeah, I think, uh, because my mom and my grandma both sang in church.
00:05:47
Speaker
My mom, we've never not had, that was terrible English. We've always had country music playing in our kitchen. There wasn't, I don't remember many nights that we didn't have music playing in our house. There was always music playing in the car, there was always country.
00:06:03
Speaker
And my mom has told me before that even when she was like nursing me and rocking me, she would sing songs to me and I would cue back on pitch. And so I think she recognized that there was potential for that in me and she had gotten it from her mom. So she just kind of paid attention when I was very young and then helped me kind of realize that as I was growing up, my first solo was in church at age three.
00:06:28
Speaker
And from there, I think my most core memory of thinking about country music as a career path was like eight years old, I was
00:06:39
Speaker
in our gold suburban that we had. And my siblings were all in there with me. I'm one of four kids and three girls and a boy. And my mom and dad were in the front and Dixie Chicks record was playing. And I was singing along to either Cowboy Take Me Away or Wide Open Spaces. And my dad turned down the music and turned it back up. And I was on pitch and on time. And I remember him saying, I remember like his lips in the rear view mirror being like,
00:07:05
Speaker
she could do this she's she could really do this and I think it just like clicked in me at that moment like there wasn't another option from then on it was just kind of like okay well
00:07:16
Speaker
These are the two things that I love and they go hand in hand. So everything in my life was to that purpose. And yeah, it took longer than I hoped, but it's going great. And yeah, it just, it started young and I'm glad that I could recognize that and that my parents could recognize that in me so that I could have intention in all of the goals that I set for myself in life.
00:07:42
Speaker
Oh, without a doubt. And that's what I respect about you. Again, going back to that respect is, um, I grew up singing Hannah Montana and thinking that I was going to be the next star, but like you actually are doing it. And that's what makes you, you you're taking the initiative to become something and work hard at it. Cause you know that it takes a lot of work and we'll get into that in a little bit, but kind of moving on to the ranch life and Nashville life. Is it true that, um, after you're done songwriting and getting the glamorous life, you can be seen at like friends cattle ranches, helping them work cattle.
00:08:12
Speaker
Yeah, in fact, like, so I used to, I went home during college every summer worked on our place and helped my granddad and my uncle fell in love with it there. And then during 2020, my granddad passed away. And so our ranch sold and I didn't have the ability to go home and work anymore. So I just started calling people that are friends of mine that have operations all over the place. And just said like, Hey, if y'all need a hand layer, I'm just trying to keep my chops up.
00:08:37
Speaker
Please, please use me don't you don't even have to pay me just let me come help y'all and so yeah i've worked all over the place i've worked in Colorado Utah lots of Texas and Oklahoma and yeah I think it's an honor and I love I think it's cool to see how people do it on other operations because.
00:08:57
Speaker
Every operations different the grass is different your way you set up your pins and your traps are different like it just makes you a better cowboy to experience a million different situations and be able to do it with. gosh what do they call those norforks and or calf tables or just roping and dragging them to the fire like there's just a million ways to do it now i've gotten to do it all kinds of ways and so it's just it's really helped me out and I love.
00:09:27
Speaker
getting to work with my friends too. So and the goal for me is to get our ranch back. I still have my brand and my name and registered in Love County, Oklahoma. And the guy that bought our ranch from us just told me to let him know when I'm ready. And that he said he was like, I got a feeling you're going to get it back. So keep your keys. I didn't change the locks. And so yeah, so I've got like, just all of his hope for where I'm headed. And like, as far as ranching goes as much as singing goes. And
00:09:57
Speaker
So for me, it's like getting to help out on other people's places and getting to work for whoever will let me come and help just makes me better for what the real goal is for

Songwriting Inspirations and Mentors

00:10:10
Speaker
me. And that is touring on a high level and reaching on a high level.
00:10:15
Speaker
And you're great at both. I mean, it's so cool to watch you from, to go on stage and live the glamorous life that everyone sees the city people live and then turn right around and live the humbling life. That's every day working cattle covered in dirt. That's what I'm thankful for because I never, ever, ever want to have a season of my life where my hands aren't dirty and that somebody can't tell me what to do.
00:10:39
Speaker
Because I think in like the glamorous life people so easy to get caught up in the attention of it all but when you are ranching when you are working for somebody it is their place, and you are under their authority, and it's just nice to have somebody to say, Jenna.
00:10:56
Speaker
get over there, you know, don't let that cow by, you know, and yell at me, you know, like, you just, I'm not perfect. And I've got so much to learn. And it's good to be in those situations. And, you know, I tell people that work with me in the music industry to like, hey, like, if something can be better, do not just tell me it's good, because you think that's what you should tell me I want to be the best. And it goes the same with ranching. And I think, because of that, like,
00:11:24
Speaker
it's my goal to keep both of my boots on the ground. And I think that's the way that God's given me a path to do that. And that's my prayer is that that would always be the truth.
00:11:36
Speaker
It's so evident that you're using that you're using his story for his or your story for his glory truly. And along the same lines, is that how you kind of get your inspiration for your songs? I know girl in the country, I mean, every song slow draw, bless her heart El Paso, everything comes back to you, the girl I was. So was that how you get your inspo?
00:11:55
Speaker
Yeah, it's interesting. And I've talked to so many people in Nashville about this recently because for me, I get inspired because I'm listening to people talk that grew up like I did that that are around people.
00:12:10
Speaker
that the kind of people that I love to be around all the time. And my best inspiration comes from not being in Nashville. I think there's a lot of good that's come from it because I think it's taught me how to write a great commercial country song, one that hopefully belongs on the radio.
00:12:27
Speaker
And it's given me all the relationships with people that know how to do that and know how to take an idea of mine and lyric of mine, and just drive it completely home. But I think there's a limit to how you can connect with real people. If you stay on the hamster wheel and you're doing the whole writing thing 11 to three every day in Nashville, and that's all you do, you're not living life.
00:12:52
Speaker
I've told my team, you know, like, I get to be out here with Ross in West Texas, and we're working on ranches and going to people's 40th wedding anniversary, two-step dances at the Civic Center. And, you know, I've got a rancher out here I was just talking to that Ross works for, and he was like, you know, Jen, out here, it's hard to make a living, but it's easy to make a life. And I was like, you can't hear that kind of thing in Nashville.
00:13:19
Speaker
in the hamster wheel and the commercial business aspect of it, you just can't hear those things that are true and real and right and that make my music worth anything at all. And so yeah, I try and stay, I go and I'm a part of it because that's where the best songwriters are, but I have to be living it for it to carry any weight to impact the world the way that I would love for it to impact the world. So yeah, I think
00:13:47
Speaker
those two things just they balance each other out. I think going back to the national side of it, you're a mentee of Ashley Gorley,

Upcoming Album: 'The Girl I Was'

00:13:56
Speaker
you got to sign with Seagull Music. You probably have lots of writing sessions, lots of rights as you would call them. What's it like to sit through a right? Because some of my friends have described it as quite literally, it's a bunch of talented people sitting in a room with just all their ideas and that's how the best songs are created.
00:14:12
Speaker
Totally yeah it's it's like that, and I think it goes two ways for me like i've got i'll give you two examples. Sometimes i'll hear somebody say you know it's hard to make living easy to make a life and i'll just write that into my phone and I don't know what it sounds like or feels like and that's one of those.
00:14:28
Speaker
You're going into a right and everybody's tossing around ideas to one lands, and like there's not much around it I didn't have a melody or anything it just became what it needed to be in the room that day because I was with the right people that know how to write that kind of song.
00:14:43
Speaker
And then I have moments like where it's more of a solo thing that I bring in that is more polished. And there's a song called Make the World a Small Town on The Girl I Was, my record. And I had just been in Thackerville shooting The Girl I Was music video and Lori, who owns the Front Porch Cafe,
00:15:07
Speaker
in Thackerville, which is where my family went to eat after working cattle. Our brand is on the wall in there. It's just so small town and so awesome. I called her because I knew they weren't open on Saturdays and Sundays and I was like, Lori, hey, this is Jenna Paula. I don't know if you remember me or not. My granddad was Pete Jones and she was like, oh my gosh, Pete Jones. He ordered a bacon and mustard
00:15:28
Speaker
And I was like, oh, gosh, I can't believe you remember that. She was like, it's a hard order to forget. And it's been, it had been two and a half years since he passed away. And she still remembered his order. And I was on my flight back to Nashville and I wrote, If I Could Make the World a Small Town, in my notes. And I just wrote a poem. And like I started out with like folks around here, they give you the shirt off their back, maybe simple how we talk, but our words a check you can cash.
00:15:58
Speaker
And I talk about the difference with like how I wish that London to Tennessee could feel like that for building me. And there's moments like that where it's just like this nugget of truth that resonates so deeply with my soul that poetry comes out and then I take it into a writing room and they help me drive the idea home. But the nuts and bolts of it, the skeleton of it was something that very much came from a raw place in my
00:16:26
Speaker
heart and became a song and I've learned to trust that side of me as a writer in the last year really because people have been like oh no I love that and I'm like oh it's good enough because I think being mentored by somebody like Ashley Borley who's got 65 number ones or more I don't even know right now he's just ridiculous.
00:16:45
Speaker
And he wasn't easy on me, but I was happy about it. Like I would send him an ID and he was like, well, that could have been good if, you know, like XYZ. And he was just like, beautifully like.
00:16:57
Speaker
brutal in the best way possible because I think that made me look at my songwriting critically and not just like this stream of thought feeling thing that, you know, I wanted people to feel with me because I think there's a way to articulate things that gets home more concisely than, you know, like the songs I wrote originally are way more watered down versions of what I can write now. And that's because he was very honest with me. But once you get that,
00:17:26
Speaker
structure down and you learn how to write a great song you have to learn how to trust the soul of what you've been trying to communicate that much more, so that the two can come together at that point, and I was talking to somebody on my team and they're like yeah Jenna you graduated from songwriting school now you need to
00:17:42
Speaker
settle in to who you are and what your voice is and what you have to say and trust yourself. And that stuff has started happening this year and really a big part of that was make the world a small town and realizing that most of that lyric was just what came out of my heart and it was just shaping it up with one other person that made it something that would resonate with a lot of people. And
00:18:06
Speaker
I can't wait for people to hear that song. It's that song and then a song called Stop and Smell the Horses, which I sent to Jess on the Justin team like the day after I got the demo back because I was so, I knew she'd get it, you know, and it's a playoff of Stop and Smell the Roses and
00:18:21
Speaker
the hook is because it ain't always roses remember to stop and smell the horses and it's just all these little things like taste the tequila before you kill it with that lime pick the blackberries off the vine listen to the crickets watch the sun rise and sunset you know like all these things that are very quintessential to um
00:18:39
Speaker
anybody that grew up in the heartland who gets caught up in the busyness of life and needs to slow it down. Anyway, those two songs on the record were just me and one other person and it was really fun to learn how to trust myself in that and learn what my voice sounds like in a writer room as much as having people that are just ridiculous songwriters and being like, no, let's see it your way. Because you want to make those people happy when you're in the room too. Anyway, it's been a learning experience.

Authenticity in Music and Western Lifestyle

00:19:09
Speaker
And since you brought up your album, I'll let you go ahead and share the details. It's coming up soon. Right. Yes. Oh my gosh. Uh, March 31st, the girl I was the title track. Um, honestly is what made me feel like I could even put a record out. I'm, I love our artists that put out albums. And I think for a long time, cause I was.
00:19:28
Speaker
in a relationship that really robbed me of who I was, he really shut my voice down and there's a million things I could go into but that's on the focus of where I am right now it's where I'm headed. And I think when I was in that, I couldn't just
00:19:45
Speaker
be who I am and so much of that felt like I needed to change and there was so much pressure on me from him and I really just only found joy in my career and now it's like I God set my feet on solid ground again and giving me the ability to recognize oh I've just always been that girl and that moment for me was
00:20:09
Speaker
I was on a writer's retreat last year and I'd had some time to process everything and it was like April or early May and I was going to get everybody pizza. I was with Jesse Joe Dillon, Will Bundy and Jeff Gibson and
00:20:24
Speaker
Will and Jeb are all over my record and Jesse Joe was my first weekend with her and she's Dean Dylan's daughter who wrote the chair for George Strait. So I just wanted to make sure that I had something valuable to offer. So I went, I had my dog and my truck and went to get pizza for everybody.
00:20:41
Speaker
The sun was setting in this picture of me as a little girl helping my granddad sell my uncle Hicks cattle popped into my head. And I just remember having this hot can of orange Gatorade freckles on my face the smell of dust and cows in the air.
00:20:56
Speaker
And I remember just feeling like like proud and at peace and good and my mom had taken this picture of me and it was at my grandma's house for the longest time. And every time I was there, I would look at that picture and think I love that girl like that's who I am it's like you know when you like see something in yourself and you're like it makes you.
00:21:19
Speaker
just proud and settled all at once. And that's how I felt every time I looked at that picture. And it popped into my mind on this pizza trip to go get dinner for everybody. And I was like, I'm just getting back to the girl I was. And I was like, if that's the only song we write this weekend, then everything will make sense. And we nailed it. I mean, like,
00:21:43
Speaker
It just felt so honest and so right. And it represented so many girls that we all get caught up in life. We all get caught up in motherhood or careers or relationships like me or just being busy and so easy to forget who we are. And I felt like it was a love song reminder to girls across the United States that grew up like I did who might have lost sight of that girl.
00:22:10
Speaker
When I got the demo back, I was on a trip to Wyoming with Boo Barn and it was so random. I got the song back right before I got on my flight and I was listening to it. My manager and I had been talking about me putting a record out and I was like, I know I want to do that. I just don't even know where to start. And getting that song back, when I landed in Wyoming, I called her, I said, the record's called The Girl I Was.
00:22:38
Speaker
The first thing people hear is going to be an intro instrumental version of Home on the Range and everything in between is going to be about people that grew up on the range and. It just made sense to me finally and it's like that was the missing puzzle piece that let me.
00:22:56
Speaker
have the freedom to say what I needed to say and it's got some songs that are already out on it like Country and the Girl because that I just felt like it was a people song and it is very much part of the story too like when you hear it from beginning to end you're gonna see you know just all the puzzle pieces come together and yeah so it's the first body of work that I felt like I could put my
00:23:26
Speaker
name on that actually felt worthy of being called an album to me because I have very high standards you know like I love you know Reba McEntire and um gosh George Strait and the Dixie Chicks and Miranda Lambert and these people that have put together pieces of art that I will forever listen to top to bottom and um so that's like the standard that I hold myself to and then
00:23:55
Speaker
you're trying to do something great. And this was the first time I felt like I could even approach a benchmark like that. And it's, obviously I've got a million ways to grow and I can already see the things that I want to be better on my next record, but I'm very proud of this work of art. And I feel like it is a step, a very right step in the right direction. And I think people will get it.

Brand Connections: Justin Boots

00:24:25
Speaker
Oh yeah. And you're, you're doing everything to make it look so easy too. So I commend you for that, but there's just something about the rawness and the realness of every song that you put out that, um, for instance, even my friend Ralph in Germany, who you actually got to randomly meet, he has listened to every song since meeting you. And as you're probably your biggest fan in Germany and knows, you know, the four songs by heart, the four songs that he's mainly listened to. And so I think that's really cool because people that are enthralled with the Western industry, they're automatically enthralled with you.
00:24:51
Speaker
because you live it. You're not like Nashville. You live it every day and you understand and appreciate the hard work that goes into it. But really quick before we go, I have one final question because one thing that popped out to me when I first heard the name, Jenna Paulette, before I was even with Justin, was how you sang about Justin Boots. And so I've got to ask, what was the story behind adding Justin Boots in Country and the Girl?
00:25:14
Speaker
Yes, so I. Yes, you're right. Country girl. So for me, I grew up working in Justin boots. Like, I don't know. It was a very obvious brand. I'm a Texas girl and Justin is a very Texan brand and no Kona, you know, like, you know, I just, I had Justin's like that. That was.
00:25:36
Speaker
the area that I grew up in, it was the most familiar brand to me, and I grew up working in ropers. So like the very traditional ropers, which is so funny, because like I ride in like the Clara booth, it's like super, I don't know, but they're like the high, like super tall, I don't know, two shaft. I don't know what you call it. The leg, is that right? The shaft, yeah. Oh, I thought I was just pulled off. Anyway, that
00:26:01
Speaker
Um, and cause I like it for out here cause there's rattlesnakes and stuff like that. But in Oklahoma, like we had snakes and everything, but we were on four wheelers. So I didn't need to worry about the toe or anything like that. And I just loved the way ropers looked. And so when we were writing that song, I was like, they were like, do you have a brand you love? And I was like, yeah, Justin boots. And they were like, sweet. And we just put it in song. And it's so funny because.
00:26:27
Speaker
obviously Justin has like a massive presence in the Western industry, the rodeo world, all of it. But I've loved hearing girls come up to me and be like, oh my gosh, like when I heard that, I was like, oh my gosh, I'm wearing Justin's right now. They felt like they were a part of the club. And I don't know, it just, it felt like the right
00:26:48
Speaker
It because I had been wearing them for so long that it just made sense to me that that was what we use plus like to me just ends a work brand as much as it is a fashion brand. And so that and that's what we're trying to talk about in song is like the difference between somebody who wears boots because they.
00:27:10
Speaker
you know, want to look the part versus people that wear it for utility and do have an ice bear boots, they were on the weekends, but they're wearing them because they have a job to do. And so, yeah, it just felt like.

Fan Engagement and Merchandise

00:27:25
Speaker
the right uh call to make and nobody had I wrote that song with two dudes and um one of them is my future brother-in-law which is a side note but like they were like that's so sick Jenna you know and like both of those guys like they they're country but they're not like western at all so um they had no you know weigh in at all they were just like yeah sounds sick get me a pair if you get sponsored by them
00:27:51
Speaker
Well, now we're happy to send them all some, right? Before we go, we literally have zero time left, but I want people to be able to buy your merch. I want them to be able to listen to your songs. Where, where can they hear you? Where can they find you? Tell us everything.
00:28:06
Speaker
Thank you so much. So yeah, jennapala.com is where you would be able to buy merch. We've got a bunch of stuff coming. We should be launching like the week of the record. And it'll be a lot of really fun stuff. We've got trucker hats that are modeled after the feed store in Gainesville, Texas, which is where my mom grew up and where my grandparents lived and commuted to and from the ranch. T-shirts and sweatshirts and
00:28:31
Speaker
koozies and all that good stuff and I cannot wait to reveal it all and designed them with a friend of mine and she knocked it out of the park so. that's where you can find that and then socials just Jenna Paulette's if you look on tiktok or pinterest or instagram or Facebook or anything just J E N N A P A U L E T T E and yes, that really is my last name people are always like is that your middle name is my last name.
00:28:58
Speaker
Well, very good. I appreciate you taking the time out of your busy schedule. I know you're on tour with Aaron Watson right now. So thank you again for carving out a little bit of time to talk with us. We love you so much. I love you so much. And I wish you the best in everything you do. And you guys heard it March 31st, get ready. That's all you're going to ever want to listen to for the next rest of your life. Thank you. All right. Thanks so much.
00:29:20
Speaker
Thanks for joining us on Kick Your Boots Up. I'm your host, Taylor McAdams, and we can't wait to share the next story of the West. Until then, feel free to like, subscribe, and leave us a review. Follow us on social media at Justin Boots to keep up with our next episode, and we'll see you the next time you kick your boots up.