pplpod
Married at fifteen, a mother of six before she was old enough to vote, and raised in a remote Kentucky hollow, Loretta Lynn had every reason to stay invisible. Instead she wrote songs so honest about women's real lives that radio stations banned them, then turned that defiance into the most decorated career in country music history. This episode digs into the raw mechanics of how she survived and conquered: the baffling fifty-year marriage to Oliver Doolittle Lynn, the man who pushed her onto the stage while making her life a battlefield; the censorship she met head-on; and the grit that let a coal miner's daughter rewrite what a woman was allowed to say in Nashville. * From a Kentucky hollow to country royalty: married at 15, six kids, and a guitar * The songs Nashville radio banned for telling women's truths * Her complicated 50-year marriage to Doolittle, her champion and her chaos * How she became the most awarded woman in country music history
300 episodes
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