Ray Stevens has had an illustrious career, spanning more than 50 years, and now he is sharing details of his rise to stardom in a new memoir, 'Ray Stevens' Nashville.'
Comedian Ray Stevens has been making people laugh for more than 50 years, and he's not about to stop anytime soon. The 75-year-old has just launched the first webisode of his new weekly web series, 'Rayality TV.'
Comedian Ray Stevens has his sights on the Duck Dynasty clan. The singer has released archived video footage, claiming to be the original Duck-a-Fone commander.
Ray Stevens may be from Georgia, but he wants everyone to know that he’s a Nashville man through and through. This week he released a new music video for his song ‘Nashville.’
Funny man Ray Stevens hams it up in his latest video, an unusual (to say the least) reworking of the classic holiday tune, "Blue Christmas." In the first part of the clip, Ray stands by a blue piano, wearing red pants and a Santa hat. We can't help but wonder if maybe somewhere along the way, the egg nog went bad, considering the interspersed footage of pigs featured throughout the video
They call him 'The Streak,' a.k.a. country funnyman Ray Stevens, whose 1974 No. 1 hit is finally reborn for a brand-new audience ... as a 99 cent phone app game. The grand tradition of competitive streaking lives on! Stevens' classic music video's "nude" cartoon alter-ego will be partaking in his exhibitionist antics through three levels of the game -- a grocery store, a gas station and
Kris Kristofferson says he had to leave the room the first time he heard a recording of his song 'Sunday Morning Coming Down.' Not Johnny Cash's version, but actually Ray Stevens' -- who was the first person to record Kris' mournful story of a man pulling on his "cleanest dirty shirt" and heading out to greet Sunday and a few memories and regrets along the way...
Funnyman Ray Stevens has always had his finger on the pulse of America. Just in time for Tax Day, he is resurrecting an old song, 'If Ten Percent Is Good Enough for Jesus (It Oughta Be Enough for Uncle Sam),' which takes a stand on the ever-increasing amount that the government takes out of our paychecks...