Wynonna Judd Gives Fans Update After Suffering ‘Really Dizzy’ Spell During Concert

Wynonna Judd gave fans an update on Tuesday after having what she called a “really dizzy” spell while on stage over the weekend during her concert series, “The Judds: The Final Tour.”

The 58-year-old country music star posted a message on Instagram saying she was doing fine after experiencing the issue during a show in Dayton, Ohio, on Friday.

“All is well, y’all,” Judd posted. “[littlebigtown] and [martinamcbride], you are SUCH a blessing to me. Thank you for holding me up, literally and figuratively!”

 

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In a video that surfaced on TikTok, Judd is heard telling the crowd, “Hang on a second, hang on a second.”

“I am really dizzy,” she added. “Can somebody come up here, please?”

Her crew immediately stepped in to help her out, and the “Why Not Me” hitmaker told the audience, “I’m really dehydrated and I’m having a hard time so hang on a second.”

“Hang on,” she added. “I’m just really dizzy, and this has never happened before, so of course it would happen in Ohio.”

Judd was eventually able to get things under control and continued her show. She then joked with fans, “If I faint, just take a lot of pictures, OK?”

The country star and her now-deceased mother, Naomi, announced the final tour of The Judds weeks before news surfaced about Naomi’s sudden death at age 76. On April 30, Wynonna’s mom took her life after a lengthy battle with mental health problems.

The 11-stop tour kicked off September 30 in Grand Rapids, Michigan. It comes to an end in Hollywood, Florida, on February 25.

“She obviously was suffering, and, as such, her days up until that moment were hurtful to her,” daughter Ashley Judd said in a “Good Morning America” appearance.

The National Suicide Prevention Lifeline is a free hotline for individuals in crisis or distress or for those looking to help someone else. It is available 24/7 at 1-800-273-8255.

Related: Country Star Naomi Judd’s Daughter Says ‘Hundreds Of Cards And Letters Continue To Pour In’ Following Her Mom’s Death

Georgia Lawmaker Calls Clarence Thomas ‘Uncle Tom’ — After Admitting He Doesn’t Know Who Uncle Tom Is

Georgia State Sen. Emanuel Jones (D-Decatur) admitted that he wasn’t sure whether “Uncle Tom” was a real person or a fictional character when he used the label to attack sitting Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas on Tuesday.

Jones took to the State Senate floor to argue against a Republican-led proposal to place a statue of Thomas – a Georgia native — on the grounds of the state Capitol, and he compared Thomas to a slave who had “sold his soul” to his white master.

WATCH:

The Left is so outraged by a proposal to build a statue of Clarence Thomas at the Georgia Capitol, that one unhinged lawmaker compared him to an “Uncle Tom” who “sold his soul to the slave masters.”

Watch for yourself: the hatred and radicalism of the far-Left on full display. pic.twitter.com/dt1F7bYzoJ

— Kelly Loeffler (@KLoeffler) February 14, 2023

“We cannot avoid that conversation so I’m not going to avoid it either,” Jones said of the discussion surrounding the statue.

“In the black community we have an expression — and I don’t want to use this label too deeply here because I’m just trying to tell you what we have in the African American community when we talk about a person of color that goes back historically to the days of slavery and that person betraying his own community — we have a term in the black community,” Jones began.

“That term that we use is called ‘Uncle Tom,'” he continued, adding, “And ‘Uncle Tom’ is a — either fictional or a non-fictional character, I don’t really know the origin of ‘Uncle Tom’ — but it talks about a person who, back during the days of slavery, sold his soul to the slave masters,” Jones continued.

The only explanation Jones gave — after first suggesting that white people would not necessarily understand his concerns — for accusing Thomas of such betrayal was a vague reference to his position on certain LGBTQ+ issues and the assertion that his decisions had outraged women.

“I don’t expect people of non-color to get the sensitivity that we feel about a person of color whose policies and practices and decisions and votes … we’ve rallied [to] fight against,” he said, adding, “Justice Thomas’ decisions have certainly sparked outrage [among] women and not just women of color, but all women. And certainly, when we look at the LGBTQ+ community, his votes and positions he’s taken have raised outrage in that community as well.”

The measure passed along party lines — 32-20 — and will be sent to the Georgia State House for consideration.