Miranda Lambert & MuttNation Reach Out to Help the Texas Hill Country
9 Articles
9 Articles
They pray for the families, remember the victims and raise donations: after the flood in Texas, many stars react with consternation – and power.
Miranda Lambert & MuttNation reach out to help the Texas Hill Country
Disney/Eric McCandless Lindale, Texas, native Miranda Lambert is doing what she can to help those affected by the devastating floods in the Lone Star State, and she’s doing it through her pet charity, MuttNation Foundation. “I just want to jump on here and say how devastated we are to hear about the floods in South and Central Texas,” she says in a video posted on her socials. “I can’t even come up with any words for the loss that everybody’s su…
Miranda Lambert & MuttNation reach out to help the Texas Hill Country - Everett Post
Disney/Eric McCandless Lindale, Texas, native Miranda Lambert is doing what she can to help those affected by the devastating floods in the Lone Star State, and she’s doing it through her pet charity, MuttNation Foundation. “I just want to jump on here and say how devastated we are to hear about the floods in South and Central Texas,” she says in a video posted on her socials. “I can’t even come up with any words for the loss that everybody’s su…
Miranda Lambert & MuttNation reach out to help the Texas Hill Country – 98.9 THE BULL
Lindale, Texas, native Miranda Lambert is doing what she can to help those affected by the devastating floods in the Lone Star State, and she’s doing it through her pet charity, MuttNation Foundation. “I just want to jump on here and say how devastated we are to hear about the floods in South and Central Texas,” she says in a video posted on her socials. “I can’t even come up with any words for the loss that everybody’s suffering.” Wearing a ha…
Miranda Lambert’s MuttNation Foundation Launches Fundraiser To Help Animals Impacted By Texas Floods
Helping her home state. Over the Fourth of July weekend, torrential flooding affected the Central Texas Hill Country and parts of South Texas. The Guadalupe River rose more than 20 feet in an hour and a half. The flash flood swept through an area filled with summer camps and small towns about 70 miles west of San Antonio. One of the camps seriously impacted by the floods was Camp Mystic, a Christian girls’ camp. Cabins on the grounds were swept …
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