Country singer Sheryl Crow is slamming Tesla founder Elon Musk and having her own version of the electric car towed, donating the funds to NPR.
Sheryl Crow sparked debate online Friday after she posted a video of her Tesla being towed away, saying she no longer wanted to support Elon Musk. The nine-time Grammy winner shared the video on social media of the vehicle being hauled away.
Singer-songwriter Sheryl Crow slammed “President Musk” and shared a video showing her Tesla car driving away on a truck bed.
Sheryl Crow has just sold her Tesla Model S, the one that Elon Musk helped her with a couple of years ago when her screen had gone black
Sheryl Crow won't be taking her Tesla down any more winding roads. The "All I Wanna Do" singer tired of the electric automaker's unshakable association with Donald Trump 's unofficial co-president Elon Musk and opted to sell her Tesla and donate the proceeds to NPR .
Sheryl Crow dramatically bid adieu to her black Tesla in protest of “President Musk.” The Rock and Roll Hall of Famer took to Instagram Friday to reveal she had sold the electric car and is donating the money to NPR, which Musk has repeatedly called to defund as his Department of Government Efficiency looks to slash federal funding.
Sheryl Crow announced on Instagram that she had gotten rid of her Tesla over Elon Musk's involvement in President Donald Trump's administration, and that she donated money to NPR.
Sheryl Crow had once been a proud Tesla owner, even interfacing with Elon Musk on social media about her car. But whatever support the environmentally minded singer formerly had for the EVs has been superseded by her alarm at the rightward political turn taken by the man she now calls “President Musk,
The Grammy-winning singer sold her Elon Musk-manufactured Tesla because she's no longer "willing to align" herself with the billionaire following his move into the Trump administration.
(CNN) – Singer Sheryl Crow is going to need a new car. Crow shared a video to Instagram over the weekend which showed her Tesla being driven away on a flatbed. In the caption, she wrote, “My parents always said … you are who you hang out with.
Carr, who is investigating NPR for allegedly operating as a commercial entity while receiving public funds, had no shortage of snark for the singer.