
Reba McEntire Brings Down the House With ‘Golden Girls’ Tribute at the 2025 Emmys
Reba McEntire did not just show up at the Emmys, she took the stage and reminded Hollywood what happens when country gets ahold of a classic.
The 77th Primetime Emmy Awards went down on September 14 at the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles, and the real spotlight did not belong to some streaming service or an overhyped new drama. Instead, it belonged to Reba McEntire, who teamed up with Little Big Town’s Karen Fairchild and Kimberly Schlapman to honor The Golden Girls on its 40th anniversary. Reba turned “Thank You for Being a Friend” into something that felt like a country revival.
Before the night even kicked off, Reba walked the red carpet with her fiancé and Happy’s Place costar Rex Linn, already making headlines with their engagement news. When an E! reporter asked her which Golden Girl she related to most, Reba gave an answer only she could deliver. She claimed Blanche, while pointing out that Karen lined up with Dorothy and Kimberly, made a perfect Rose. That was not just red-carpet banter. That was Reba being Reba—funny, bold, and unashamedly Southern.
When the moment finally came, host Nate Bargatze introduced the tribute with a wink to the audience, joking about how The Golden Girls was a little too edgy for some households back in the day. Then the stage lit up with a full replica of the show’s iconic Miami living room set, and in walked Reba, Karen, and Kimberly like they owned it. And the truth is, they did.
The women launched into “Thank You for Being a Friend,” the Andrew Gold song made famous by Cynthia Fee in the show’s opening credits. What could have been a corny nostalgia stunt turned into a soaring country harmony that had the audience clapping and singing along. Reba’s unmistakable twang cut through the Hollywood polish and brought something real to the Emmy stage. The crowd knew it too. You could feel the energy shift from just another awards show segment into a moment that actually mattered.
It was not just a fun performance. It was a full-on cultural crossover. Country music rarely gets more than a polite nod at the Emmys, but here was Reba, standing center stage with two powerhouse voices by her side, showing how country can take a TV theme song and give it heart, grit, and soul. For one shining moment, Nashville and Hollywood stood together, bound by a song about friendship that everybody knows by heart.
And because Reba is never just there to sing and walk offstage, she kept the spotlight rolling by announcing the winner for supporting actress in a comedy series. The trophy went to Hannah Einbinder for Hacks, but no one was talking about that when the credits rolled. Social media blew up with clips of Reba’s performance, fans calling it “the most fun Emmys have been in years,” while others joked that the whole show should have just been a Reba concert.
What made it so powerful was not only the nostalgia for Dorothy, Rose, Blanche, and Sophia. It was Reba’s ability to take a piece of pop culture and inject it with the sincerity country music thrives on. She did not need pyrotechnics or overproduced gimmicks. She stood there with two friends, delivered a heartfelt performance, and reminded America that sometimes the simplest things, like thanking your friends, are what hit hardest.
Reba McEntire has been in this game for decades, but she is still finding new ways to make herself unforgettable. She honored The Golden Girls, but she also brought down the house in a way only a country legend could. Hollywood better get used to it, because Reba is not fading into the background. She is still the redheaded queen who can walk into any room, sing her truth, and leave everyone standing on their feet.