T Shirts 40th Birthday

**40th Shaped 1/2 sheet cake of your choice** 4 Sets of 3ft “4” and “0” shaped balloons** “Happy Birthday” sign** 40 customizable “40th Birthday” invitations with guaranteed VIP front-of-the-line access & complimentary entrance** 20 gift bags with signature 40/40 t-shirt or baseball cap** 4 souvenir photos of your night** a Tequila shot toast for 20 people** a 40/40 Shot Glass for the Birthday Boy/Girl!** TOTAL PACKAGE COST $1,500.00 (WITHOUT A PRIVATE ROOM) ; $3000 (WITH A PRIVATE ROOM) If you rent a room you will receive 5 complimentary platters of your choice. -- Please Select --White Red +$3.00Light blue +$3.00Orange +$3.00Blue +$3.00tan +$3.00Yellow +$3.00Ash +$3.00Brown +$3.00Black +$3.00Pink +$3.00 How do you rate "I'm not 40... I'm 39.95!40th birthday This design is printed on a 6.1 oz., 100% cotton pre-shrunk t-shirt with a seamless double-needle 7/8I got this for my 40th Birthday. (I hate this shirt) -- Please Select --White Red +$3.00Light blue +$3.00Orange +$3.00Blue +$3.00tan +$3.00Brown +$3.00Ash +$3.00Green +$3.00Yellow +$3.00Pink +$3.00

How do you rate "I got this for my 40th Birthday. I got this for my 40th Birthday. Happy Birthday This design is printed on a 6.1 oz., 100% cotton pre-shrunk t-shirt with a seamless double-needle 7/8June 18th is Blake Shelton’s 40th birthday. He’s spending it, appropriately, on the road. He’s playing Country Jam USA in Colorado. He talked about it with Country Countdown USA’s Lon Helton: “I don’t want to hear any complaints from people if that show is different. I’m celebrating the big 4-0 that night. I may need help that night.” Blake’s 40th birthday Country Jam show started late, and featured an appearance by his girlfriend Gwen Stefani, who joined him for their duet “Go Ahead & Break My Heart.” The song is on Blake’s new album If I’m Honest. Blake also talked about his 40th birthday a couple weeks ago when the Country Music Hall of Fame & Museum opened an exhibit of his personal items. Here’s a look at that exhibit, and a transcript of what he said:

Thoughts on exhibit: It’s crazy, the clothes part of it is more boring for me. I have to look at pictures because my stylist just hands me things to wear. The awards, it’s weird to see them all lined up like that.
Moving A Couch By YourselfI have them at my house but to see them displayed like you do, it’s overwhelming to me.
Teak Outdoor Furniture Maine You wear a different style than others: I don’t like myself in a t-shirt.
Sweetheart Dress For Wedding GuestI was rehearsing with the Oak Ridge Boys today for the CMT Awards, I realized I’m in between. I’m not in the new generation, and I’m not in the Oaks generation. I came out in 2001, and in 2001 you didn’t show up in a t-shirt and baseball cap. That’s just how I am.

I’m one of the last ones like that. I don’t like getting totally dressed up, but I wanna put on something nice. I’m just old I guess, I’m sorry. You were one of the last to wear a cowboy hat: The one thing that bothered me is I was from Oklahoma, and we wore cowboy hats. I always wore the black one because I liked it better. That was how you dressed then. I read I was a hat act, and didn’t know what that means. I’m just a country singer, my hat doesn’t define me. But then I started fixing my hair and stopped being a hat act. Some artists are pack rats: I’m the opposite of a pack rat. The trouble with this exhibit, but really cool sentimental things that I should have saved, it sucks now that I’m 40, getting older, it sucks to know there were things I didn’t hang on to. You get a lot of cool things when you do what you do. Artists need to know that they need to hold onto it, because someday you’re gonna wish you hung onto it. Was there anything that surprised you?

That notepad that has the first song I wrote, called That Girl Made a Fool Of Me, I can’t believe I held onto that. I remember having that little notepad, there a couple other ideas in there, but that’s the most impressive thing I saved. I don’t even have the first guitar I ever bought. Explain why Mae & Hoyt Axton are in the exhibit: I met Mae Axton, she was from Oklahoma, and lived in Ada. She was a teacher there. She wrote Heartbreak Hotel, so she was a name we all knew who she was, and Hoyt was her son. So I sang at the Ada Opry, and they gave her award, and I was 17, and told her I was moving to Nashville, and she told me to get in touch with her. If it wasn’t for her, I wouldn’t have known what to do. I made contacts because of her, and that’s how I did it. I see a lot of people here, and there were places people went to get found. Without Mae I could have fallen into the wrong hands. Bobby Braddock championed you, how’d you meet him? Met Bobby though a writer, who called Bobby, playing him our tapes, and he wanted to work with me.

Sony ATV wanted to do a writers deal with me. We went to Noshville one morning and they signed me. Thoughts on seeing your stuff in this building? I haven’t been through this building, but what I can see, it’s unbelievable that I have an exhibit that exists with all this history. I think when we’re talking about my generation, we’re the lamest one here. Those people are huge things in country music. Maybe in 20 years I’ll have something else, but this is so crazy to me to be a part of this building. It’s amazing when you think of how many people have tried to make a mark in country music, but to have something like this it’s crazy. How do you deal with the gossip? “You just have to accept it. People know the ins and outs, and what they don’t know, they make up. It is what it is. I’m lucky I get to do what I do, I asked for this, the gossip thing is because of the television side of what I do. My life is crazy, it makes sense they report on me. I don’t have any secrets.