He was a prodigy who fell into addiction. Now KC musician lives for redemption
When you're born, born to be bad, the drugs come quick and the money comes real slow
Only took me 40 years, I finally learned how to just say no.
'Born to be Bad,' Brody Buster
Brody Buster played the blues — in front of millions of people — long before he lived them.
On Aug. 4, 1995, he performed on the 'The Tonight Show with Jay Leno.' He was 10 at the time.
After wailing away on his harmonica, he sat next to 18-year-old Alicia Silverstone, whose hit movie 'Clueless' had been released two weeks earlier, and cracked wise with Leno.
Leno: 'That was great. Now, you're 10 years old, right?'
Brody: 'Yeah.'
Leno: 'Do you ever get the blues? How is that working here?'
Brody: 'No, not me.'
Leno: 'Never been to prison?'
Brody: 'Nope.'
Leno: 'Never served any hard time?'
Brody: 'Nah, but some of my band members have.'
Jail and the blues would come in time, but in 1995 the kid from Paola, Kansas, was riding high in Los Angeles. He was represented by a big-time management company and making the rounds of TV shows: 'Full House,' 'Baywatch Nights,' 'Maury' with Maury Povich and 'Crook & Chase' in addition to the 'Tonight Show.'
He opened three nights for Jerry Seinfeld at Caesar's Palace in Las Vegas and recorded with the Four Tops. 'Dateline NBC' even did a story on him.
The kid had amazing talent on the harmonica. So amazing that blues legend B.B. King had called the then-9-year-old onto stage during a concert at the Universal Amphitheatre in Los Angeles and declared, 'Ladies and gentlemen, I'd like to introduce to you one of the greatest harmonica players of our time, despite his age, believe it or not.'
He was a certifiable child prodigy. Of course, his name didn't hurt. Brody Buster was the perfect moniker for a cute, blond 10-year-old harmonica phenom.
It may not be such a good fit for a 40-year-old with a meth addiction.
It's safe to say that Buster long ago lost the sheen of innocence that brought him fame as a child. But as of Easter, he had found redemption.
That's when he celebrated the release of his new blues-infused album, 'Redemption,' at BB's Lawnside Blues & BBQ.
With about 250 people crammed into the Kansas City landmark on 85th Street, most sitting at tables littered with remnants of their Easter barbecue dinners, Buster and his band played all nine tracks from the album. He wrote seven of the songs, sang on them all, occasionally played guitar and inserted plenty of harmonica licks.
The album and the redemption were more than 30 years in the making.
'In looking back at it now, I guess I really didn't appreciate what I had going as a blues musician,' he said. 'And I think in order to find that passion again, I had to leave.'
Buster's journey took him into some very dark places, but it started innocently enough.
His mother, a musician who played with Kansas City blues artist Cotton Candy among others, gave him a harmonica when he was 7. He blew on it constantly and quickly got so good he joined his mother's groups on stage.
'I was so young, man, they just threw me up there,' Buster said. 'I can play, and they threw me up there. I didn't know anything else. ... My parents asked if I enjoyed doing it, and I said yeah.'
Things got serious when his parents, Janet and Curtis Brooks, took their prodigy to Memphis for an extended vacation. He showed off his talent among the many performers seeking fame and a bit of cash on Beale Street sidewalks, and he was one of the lucky few to be discovered. The emcee at B.B. King's Blues Club was impressed enough that young Brody earned an invite to play at the club.
The connection to King led the family to Los Angeles, where he made his many TV appearances and performed with the house band at King's club there, earning the 'one of the greatest harmonica players of our time' praise from legend himself.
After about a year on the West Coast, the family returned to Paola, and Brody took his show on the road. He performed in clubs around the nation and beyond. Perhaps the highlight was the 1996 Montreux Jazz Festival in Switzerland, where Brody joined Quincy Jones and Chaka Khan on stage and was included on the album 'Quincy Jones: 50 years in music — Live at Montreux 1996.'
All this was heady stuff for a Kansas elementary school kid.
But his parents restricted Brody to gigs at reputable venues, made sure Brody got good grades and tried to keep him away from the kind of trouble that is almost a cliché among child performers.
'I'm sure they saw what had happened to other child entertainers and performers,' he said. 'But just like anybody else, 'That's not going to happen to me.' I'm sure that's what was in their heads. 'That's not going to happen to Brody.''
His mother, in fact, said almost exactly that during an interview with the Los Angeles Times.
'When he's 16 and his peers are cruising and out drinking, I don't think that will hold any attraction for him because he's seen what it really does,' Janet Brody said. 'We always point out the artists who ended their careers sadly and too soon by overdosing or drinking too much.'
Danielle Nicole, an internationally recognized blues performer from Kansas City, provided backup vocals on a couple of songs on 'Redemption' and joined Buster onstage at BB's Barbecue on Easter.
'In my musical opinion, he's one of the best harmonica players alive. Period,' she said. 'Not just for blues, not just for American, not just for regionally, just in general.'
Nicole has known Buster almost since the beginning of his career, when both were what she called 'blues kids' plying their trade at the Grand Emporium on Main Street.
'We always knew he was just insanely talented,' she said.
By the time Brody was 16, however, the national and international offers were drying up. The novelty of being a child phenom had worn off, and now he had the modifier 'former' attached to it.
Growing expectations replaced the fun, stress-free times of prepubescence.
'Coming out after being a child performer or a phenom or whatever you want to call it, even in your later years, people are looking at you to be top-notch,' he said. 'Anything short of that is reason for someone to say something negative. So there's definitely pressure there later on in life because you've got to meet the standard that everybody expects you to be at.'
His home situation didn't help.
Brody's parents had broken up, with his mother moving to Ireland and his father remarrying. Meanwhile, John Tvedten, a battalion chief with the Kansas City Fire Department who was Brody's uncle and one of his biggest supporters, died fighting a warehouse fire in 1999. (Brody's grandfather and Tvedten's father, John Sr., also a department battalion chief, had been killed in the 1981 skywalk collapse at the Hyatt Regency Hotel.)
After living briefly with little adult supervision at his stepmother's house, Buster returned to California with a friend when he was 17, finding gigs where he could. Within about a year, he was back in Kansas and graduated from high school, then attended Johnson County Community College.
That's when the lure of rock 'n' roll took over.
'I was just done with the blues personally at that point,' he said. 'I wanted to try other things.
'As any 18-year-old kid does, experiment with different things, I was experimenting with new music. Understandably, a blues festival wasn't going to hire a rock 'n' roll band. And I was OK with that. Unfortunately, during the time off, I got involved with bad people and drugs.'
For most of the next two decades, Buster lived in Lawrence, worked at Papa Keno's Pizzeria and played in a variety of bands that performed at bars around the region. He also fathered two children and twice spent a few days in jail.
In 2010, a bandmate made a documentary called 'How Did This Happen,' an account of what was then called The Brody Buster Band.
Buster's first words in the film: 'I was cursed. Look at this life I'm leading.'
Later: 'I was on 'Full House' and look where it got me.'
And, 'I must have murdered someone in my last life to deserve this ****.'
It was an honest, if not flattering, portrayal of a band of 20-something guys surviving at the very bottom of the music world. Among other things, Buster is shown doing cocaine and ranting about a barkeeper who refused to waive his beer tab.
But don't get the idea the documentary showed him at his lowest point.
'That wasn't even the worst of it,' Buster says now. 'The dark stuff happened after that.'
Before the worst of it came a brief resurrection.
In 2017, Buster developed a one-man-band act and qualified for the International Blues Challenge in Memphis, where he took first place in the harmonica category and second in the solo/duo category. That led to gigs on the West Coast and throughout the South, plus a date at the prestigious Montreal Jazz Festival.
'That got me going a little bit for a while,' he said.
He did drugs regularly at the time, but not when he was on tour.
'So I would use drugs when I was at home, and then I'd get on the road and I'd get clean. And then I'd get back home.'
When COVID hit, there was no more touring — and no more getting clean. Living in a trailer in Lawrence, he did drugs — mostly intravenous meth — and not much else. Buster's life was further battered by a bad relationship and the death of his brother Tom by suicide.
By the time the pandemic eased and gigs returned, he was in no shape to go onstage, showing up late or not at all.
'I never really gave up playing music,' he said. 'But I got to a point where no one would hire me because I was such a mess.
'At that point, you wonder about the decisions you made and choices you made. At that time in my life, too — and I think it's partially because my mom went to Ireland at such a young age — I was really looking to be loved by someone, and I wasn't finding it anywhere. I guess ultimately you've just got to learn to love yourself.'
On July 16, 2023, his girlfriend, Tania (pronounced ta-nee-a) Zagalik, issued an ultimatum: Give up drugs or say goodbye to her and his two kids.
'I told him I was willing to move overseas to get away from him,' she said.
Instead, Zagalik and her two daughters got a recovering addict for a roommate at their home in Lee's Summit. Buster went to Lawrence to retrieve his belongings and returned to Lee's Summit the next day.
'All he had was some old clothes, a beat-up guitar and his harmonica, and a cat named Huggie Bear,' she said.
He's been clean since living with Zagalik, her daughters and two cats, including a much heavier Huggie Bear.
'I didn't go to any programs or anything, I just moved away from Lawrence, Kansas,' he said.
'It's a great town. I can go there, and I play shows, no problem. I still have friends there. For me, I had to get away from people that were doing drugs. That was my way to do it, just leave that environment.'
He now regularly sees his own children, a 13-year-old son and an 11-year-old daughter, and has resumed a relationship with his mother, whom he had cut off for years. He and Zagalik flew to Ireland to visit her last year, and he's saving up to return with his kids.
Meanwhile, Buster is focused on staying clean — he's closing in on 700 days. Keeping busy helps, he says, so he's doing just that, playing almost nightly around the region with his band or as a one-man band. He also recently performed in Deadwood, South Dakota, and Oklahoma and has upcoming dates in Colorado and St. Louis.
'I'm on a push to do what I've always done, which is play music and play music for a living,' he said. 'I don't necessarily care if I ever get famous, but I want to be a working musician the rest of my life. And I'd like to be a touring musician.'
Buster has a lot of people pulling for him, including childhood buddy Danielle Nicole.
'When you hear him play harmonica, you know that he's meant to be a musician,' she said. 'So to be able to see him releasing music and feeling good about being sober and be in a good place, it just warms my heart.'
There's also the unwavering support of Zagalik, who continues to help him stay on track.
'His past is his past. I don't hold it against him,' she said.
'I have zero reason to think he'd go back. He also knows he'll always be an addict.'
I finally crawled out of the dark and back on stage
I feel the struggle but I done turnt the page.
'Can You Hear Me,' Brody Buster
Note: If you need help fighting addiction, call the free and confidential treatment referral hotline (1-800-662-HELP), or visit findtreatment.gov.
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Elle
9 hours ago
- Elle
The 'Squid Game' Season 3 Cast Is Full of Korean Megastars
Spoilers ahead. Squid Game has returned with its third and final season—and it's bloodier than ever. The deadly battle royale continues with the financially desperate characters we met in season 2, who are risking their lives for an opportunity to win millions of dollars (billions in Korean Won). Gi-hun (Lee Jung-jae), the winner of the last game, is determined to take down the sadistic organization behind it all. But that's not easy feat, especially after the last seasons's brutal finale. While creator and director Hwang Dong-hyuk had trouble finding A-list actors (besides veterans Lee Jung-jae, Lee Byun-hun, and Gong Yoo) for the first season because the show was relatively unknown at the time, he had no trouble with casting for season 2. 'After season 1, we saw the cast becoming huge global stars overnight,' Hwang told The Hollywood Reporter. 'Thanks to that, I was [now] able to cast the exact actor that I wanted for every role.' This season's ensemble contains many established Korean actors, theater icons, and former and current K-pop stars that fans outside of the Squid Game universe might recognize. Check out some of the actors and the characters they play below. Three years passed after Gi-hun won the Squid Game, but throughout that time, he has been obsessively searching for the people responsible for the deadly operation. He reenters the game hoping to go head-to-head with the man in charge, the masked Front Man (Lee Byun-hun). Since the global success of Squid Game season 1, Lee Jung-jae has won a Primetime Emmy Award, a Screen Actors Guild Award, and a Critics' Choice Award for his role as Gi-hun. Last year, he starred in the Star Wars series The Acolyte and the Korean film Revolver. Lee hopes fans will connect with the storyline this season, telling The Tonight Show, 'Because season 1 was so widely loved, we did feel the pressure about whether or not season 2 would be just as loved. 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After being shot by his brother In-ho (the Front Man) and falling into the sea in the season 1 finale, detective Jun-ho miraculously survived but was traumatized by the whole experience. In seasons 2 and 3, he searches for the island—and his brother. 'As a police detective and family member, you can look forward to his determination and drive,' Wi said during the Squid Game press conference. 'Also, anticipate Jun-ho's judgment and charisma.' Since Squid Game, Wi has appeared in Little Women, Gyeongseong Creature, The Worst of Evil, and The Midnight Romance in Hagwon. He can be seen next in Shark 2: The Storm and Que Sera Sera. Gambling addict Yong-sik enters the game in hopes of clearing his debts from dangerous loan sharks. He is shocked to find his loving mother, Geum-ja, participating in the game, but he does his best to protect her throughout the deadly trials. 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Lee Seo-hwan is a regular fixture in K-dramas, guest-starring in popular series like Fight for My Way, Extraordinary Attorney Woo, Daily Dose of Sunshine, and AppleTV's acclaimed drama Pachinko. The character actor is also a folk singer and actor in the Korean theater scene. He appeared briefly in season 1 of Squid Game as Jung-bae, Gi-hun's friend outside of the game who used to gamble alongside him regularly. By season 2, Jung-bae had fallen further debt, causing him to join the game, to Gi-hun's surprise. However, he tragically dies during the players' rebellion at the end of season 2. Choi plays Thanos, a famous retired rapper who lost all his money after listening to Myung-gi's cryptocurrency advice. He enters the game to pay off his massive debts and does whatever it takes to win. After seeing Myung-gi as a fellow player, Thanos is hell-bent on revenge by brutally tormenting the former YouTuber. But he meets his bloody end at the end of season 2. 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On Instagram, he thanked viewers for their support of Squid Game, writing, 'No words to express my gratitude to the people all over the world, who all are loving and blessing Ali and [Squid Game].' Often called Player 212, the mischievous Han Mi-nyeo is portrayed onscreen by Kim joo-ryoung. The actress' film credits date back to the 2000s, including Memories of Murder (2003) and Plum Blossom (2000), and, later, dramas like Sleepless Night (2012) and Texture of Skin (2007). Like her costars, Kim has shared a handful of behind-the-scenes glimpses from the Squid Game set on Instagram, making those barracks look a lot less miserable.


Fox News
13 hours ago
- Fox News
Candace Cameron Bure shares the unexpected way God shows up in her 'scariest moments'
In good times and bad, Candace Cameron Bure has always leaned on her faith. In an exclusive interview with Fox News Digital, the "Full House" alum, who released a new devotional, "100 Days of Joy and Strength: A Daily Devotional Journey" Tuesday, opened up about her personal journey of growth, shared the unexpected ways God has shown up for her and explained how her new book will offer guidance and encouragement to those seeking daily fulfillment. "I am always amazed because He always shows up, and it's sometimes in unexpected ways," Bure said. "Sometimes it's the way I want Him to show up, and sometimes it's the way I was hoping He wouldn't show up, but He did." "But what I've learned over the years in knowing Him and knowing His character is that He's always there, literally always there," she added. "So, sometimes, in the scariest moments, when I'm like, 'God, I need you with me. I need to feel your presence. Bring me through this.' And sometimes you want the win at the end, He brings you through, and you're like, 'Yes, I did it.' WATCH: CANDACE CAMERON BURE REVEALS THE UNEXPECTED WAY GOD SHOWS UP IN HER 'SCARIEST MOMENTS' "And sometimes you lose, sometimes you fail, but it's in those moments that I've realized, 'God, you were with me. You actually helped push me through, even if it ended up being a failure, even if I don't feel very courageous, and I feel like it just wasn't what I wanted it to be. The fact that I actually did it, I pushed through the fear, I had the courage, or I had the stamina to walk another step, that's because of You.'" Bure, who has authored multiple books throughout her career, said her latest devotional is a "very practical, easy way to guide you into reminding you that you're not alone." "It's literally a couple of minutes every day," Bure said. "So, it's like two little pages. There's a reflective story that I'll tell that's a personal story, either something that has happened in my life or something that I observed, and then there's a Bible verse that goes with it, and it applies to that Bible verse. "Then there's a little prayer that you can say, you can read, you can repeat, you can add to it and that's it," she continued. "And it's just a couple of minutes every day to remind you to renew your mind, to connect with God and what His word says and remind you that He is your joy, that your joy comes from Him and He also is your strength." "At the start of my day each and every day, if I don't ask God what he wants to do with me today, regardless of my plans, then I don't even know what I may miss, what God has in store for me." "You don't have to do it alone," she added. "We can't do it alone because we're not really equipped, and we're not ever good enough, but God is. And so we can draw from His strength and, in turn, that gives us our joy." The Great American Family star, who shares three children with husband Valeri Bure, said though she's a "doer," she has learned the importance of slowing down. "I think age and wisdom has helped me slow down. And I'm not a slow person," she said. "But at the start of my day each and every day, if I don't ask God what he wants to do with me today, regardless of my plans, then I don't even know what I may miss, what God has in store for me. "But if I'm so focused on my intention and my goals, I could miss something so wonderful or maybe even a detour that God has planned that could go a whole lot smoother than me just running into a brick wall, because God's going to get me where he wants me to go anyway," she continued. WATCH: CANDACE CAMERON BURE FEELS PEOPLE ARE 'LESS AFRAID OF BEING CANCELED' IN HOLLYWOOD FOR THEIR FAITH "So, that's one of my practices every day is to say like, 'God, I have my agenda today, and I have my to-do list. I know what I need to do, but can you guide me and tell me what it is that you'll have me do today? And open my mind and my heart to be at ease with those things that if it's not going the way I plan, that it's a reroute from you and not just a distraction or a roadblock in my plans today, so that I don't get frustrated with it.'" Bure has always been open about her spiritual journey and how it has afffected her life, especially as an actress in Hollywood. "I feel like people are just a little less afraid of being canceled now that they can share their faith openly or whatever their opinions are [even] if they're not congruent with some other people's opinions," she told Fox News Digital in February. "And, so, I love seeing this in our country, and I'm hopeful. I'm very hopeful."


Buzz Feed
a day ago
- Buzz Feed
Jeremy Allen White Reveals Why He Always Buys Flowers
Jeremy Allen White is a sucker for a beautiful bouquet, but the sentimental reason behind it even more alluring. If you've seen paparazzi photos of The Bear star out in the wild, then there's a strong chance he was spotted with flowers in his hands. He's been seen on numerous occasions buying an assortment of flowers, ranging in beautiful, bright colors. And it's happened so much that people have speculated what he does with them — gifting them to a significant other, fueling a hobby, etc. So, when he stopped by The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon on Thursday to promote the new season of the Emmy-winning series, the late night host made sure to ask Jeremy about it. "You're always carrying giant bouquets of flowers, everywhere you are," Jimmy said, while showing a collage of pictures of Jeremy holding pretty plants. "I love it. It's your your one else can take this move. That is your move. Do you work at a florist or what?" 'I have this farmer's market near my house," Jeremy replied. "It's on Sundays, and I just love going there, and I love flowers in my house. I like them in the house." "It's so strange, though, it's become this thing. I saw a friend a couple of weeks ago that I hadn't seen in a while, and she goes, 'What's up with the flowers?'" He jokingly remembered feeling like his friend might've thought he was doing something "sinister" or "strange" with the flowers. "I just like them," he continued. "I like them in the house. I give them to people. I arrange them with my daughters on Sunday, and it's like — it's a nice thing that we do." The audience erupted in a sea of "awws" at the sweet activity he does with his kids. Jeremy shares two little girls — Ezer, 6, and Dolores, 4 — with his ex-wife, Addison Timlin. And fans online proudly voiced their admiration for Jeremy's hobby: How adorable! You can watch Jeremy's full interview with Jimmy below: