Maren Morris On How Sheryl Crow Inspired Her Co-Parenting Style

TZR / Whitten Sabbatini Maren Morris is every mom figuring out life post-divorce. In an interview with Angela Melero for TZR, Morris shared how she’s navigating co-parenting, the dating scene, and sharing her sexuality with the world. Morris, 35, is making a sprawling new life for herself. It’s been over a year since she finalized her divorce from fellow musician Ryan Hurd, and she’s been busy, between co-parenting their 5-year-old son Hayes, dating, and working on her upcoming album, Dreamsicle. Morris and Hurd live only five minutes apart from each other, making drop-offs particularly easy — they spend alternating weeks...

12 Netflix Reality Shows You Haven't Seen Yet, But Will Be Totally Obsessed With

Listen, I enjoy a new season of Love Is Blind as much as the next person. The Ultimatum is always an interesting watch, and yeah, The Circle has its charms. But if you ask me, some of Netflix’s very best reality TV shows are the ones that somehow get absolutely no hype. So, here are some of the best Netflix reality TV shows you haven’t heard of yet, but won’t be able to stop watching once you start. Netflix’s romance and dating shows seem to get the most buzz, like LIB, Love on the Spectrum, and good old Too Hot...

How I'm Getting Through My First Mother's Day Without My Mom

Kelly Schremph Growing up, I always had a pretty great relationship with my mom. We may have gotten on each other’s nerves every so often, particularly during those teenage years when everything that your parents did was the most horrifying thing in the world. But at the end of the day, she was my safe place: a constant comforting presence I could always rely on for support, guidance, and unwavering love. As I grew into an adult, that bond only continued to get stronger. We talked every day, sometimes multiple times a day. Her distinct, boisterous laugh, which I remember...

Turns Out Parents Really Don't Like Reading To Their Kids

Isbjorn/E+/Getty Images For the first eight or so years of my children’s lives, every day concluded with a bedtime story. Sometimes I could get away with one book but, more often than not, they’d toddle over to me with a stack of Mo Willems, Sandra Boynton, and Dr. Seuss. Trips to the library were done on a weekly basis. It was just such a pleasant, happy memory from their early childhood days… and yet it seems I might just be in the minority here. Apparently, a lot of parents — like, a majority — really don’t enjoy reading to their...