Scotty McCreery & Lauren Alaina Interviews with K102 Minneapolis 8/3

Scotty McCreery and Lauren Alaina sat down with K102 in Minneapolis and covered a bunch of topics in individual 10 minute interviews before joining together for an entertaining throwdown to determine who knows more about the other. Check out video and audio of the interviews, after the jump!

Lauren’s interview came first. She discussed her ankle situation, discussed the possibility of writing with Carrie Underwood, talked about joining Martina McBride to sing “Anyway” for 70, 000 people at LP Field during CMA Fest, confirmed that she has recorded one of her cowrites as a possibility to make her album and that the Carrie cowrite she was tracking back in June is a possibility to make her album too, gave props to Miley Cyrus for giving such great advice both on and off camera, and gave hints about what we can expect from the video for “Like My Mother Does” which is set to premiere August 8th. She also answered a question about Scotty’s most annoying habit on tour.
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When it was Scotty’s turn, he talked about meeting Keith Urban and Tim McGraw, how his deep voice somewhat saved him from getting made fun of in middle school, how American Idol was “crying time” for him and how “Crying Time” should be a country song, how he did his research so he could butter up AI judge Randy Jackson, and how he naps and “goes rogue” before it’s his turn to perform at the AI concerts this summer. He also discussed getting closer to his parents because of this experience and fielded a question from Lauren about her most annoying habit on tour.
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Then, it was time for Scotty and Lauren to come together to determine who knows more about the other person. It turned into a pretty hilarious Mars/Venus session with Scotty and Lauren playing their roles to the hilt.
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About Deb B 432 Articles
Also known as Windmills, I cover country music news and live televised country events, in addition to recapping ABC's 'Nashville.' Additionally, I occasionally do long-form chart analysis that has been cited by Entertainment Weekly, Pitchfork, The Guardian, The New Republic, NPR, and more.