The life of a famous music superstar named Ryan James, who through her beautiful songs manages to achieve a great success and gain a huge popularity, has been changed completely when her fame begins to fade away, the thing that makes her struggle against restoring her fame. So, when her daughter decides to become an artist, she begins to warn her.
It's become somewhat of an outlier on a network that's invented a hashtag around Thursday night binge-watching, but returning to Nashville's slower-paced, unpretentious world is something like a comfort blanket, as well.
This may be a controversial opinion, but ABC's Nashville, which returned this week for its fourth season, is the greatest modern soap the world has ever seen.
Since the best parts of this show have always been about -- say it with me -- the music, hopefully the rest of this Nashville season can again find the joy in creation and composition and the melding of these wonderful country voices together.
First of all, a round of applause for Hayden Panettiere and her amazing range. She portrayed the full spectrum of emotion, from flirty to bitchy to carefree to decimated. She might be all over the board, but she owns every single scene.