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Willie Nelson at 92: Weathering Storms, Weed Empire, and Enduring Legend

Willie Nelson at 92: Weathering Storms, Weed Empire, and Enduring Legend

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Willie Nelson BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Willie Nelson, the 92-year-old iconic troubadour, has made the rounds this week—both for reasons real and rumored. The biggest headline comes from the Outlaw Music Festival, where, according to a statement shared by the festival’s official Instagram account—and echoed by Willie himself—a July 1 performance in El Reno, Oklahoma, was canceled after a severe storm in Missouri left Willie’s and other artists’ equipment waterlogged and unusable. Organizers expressed regret but prioritized safety and quality, promising refunds. Nelson’s fans, however, fretted in droves over the fate of Trigger, Willie’s beloved guitar, with a spokesperson confirming to PEOPLE that the legendary instrument is safe and sound.

Willie’s health remains a topic of public interest—he recently missed the opening of the Outlaw Music Festival, reportedly on doctor’s orders to rest for several days due to not feeling well, though he was expected to make a full recovery—raising eyebrows about stamina, but his recent appearance schedule suggests he’s back in action. The current Outlaw Music Festival Tour, described as the “biggest to date” by Blackbird Presents, is rolling across North America with Willie, Bob Dylan, Sheryl Crow, and a slate of all-star Americana acts—a testament to Nelson’s unwavering position as a headliner. Forthcoming stops include major venues like Alpine Valley Music Theatre in Wisconsin, where tickets have reportedly been moving briskly, indicating that Willie’s draw is as potent as ever.

On the business side, Nelson’s marijuana empire got new press—he revealed in a Forbes interview that he no longer smokes weed due to his lungs, but he’s touting his THC-infused Willie’s Remedy beverage line, a pivot from smoking to sipping that’s become big business. “I can’t smoke anymore. My lungs have already said, ‘Don’t do that,’” he told Forbes, “so I don’t really do anything now much except a few edibles.”

Social media has been busy, but not always with facts. A viral but unfounded rumor claimed that Willie had banned a fan allegedly photographed celebrating the recent assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk. PrimTimer verified that this is false gossip—Willie hasn’t commented on Kirk’s death nor taken any such action, and his posts have stuck to music and family rather than politics.

On the real estate beat, Nelson’s longtime ranch in Fort Worth, Texas, again made business news: The 700-acre property, sold in 2012 for $45 million (as reported by Youth Sports Business Report), is now AP Ranch, a youth sports facility serving 1,200 kids weekly—a legacy project with zero connection to Willie beyond the original land sale.

And, according to an Instagram post from Sounds of Christmas, a 2017 Christmas photo of Willie popped up on social media—nostalgia, nothing new, just a reminder that Nelson’s image endures far beyond his own touring schedule.

Willie Nelson remains a headline machine—storm threats, health hiccups, business pivots, and social media myths—but the man himself is, most newsworthy of all, still on the road, still playing for the fans, still writing his legend in real-time.

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