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He just turned 90, but age doesn't stop veteran singer Pat Boone from wearing the flashiest footwear in town.
For a visit to Beverly Hills the '50s heartthrob sported bright yellow Nikes to top off his casual look.
The visit came a month after Boone released his politically charged song Where Did American Go? – what he describes as a conservative version of Bob Dylan's Blowin' in the Wind.
He wore an aqua button-down shirt with dark blue buttons with a dark undershirt, as well as, a comfortable pair of loose-fitting gray pants. He accessorized with a pair of bright yellow Nike tennis shoes and a gold necklace and bracelet.
Boone, 90, sported a cozy outfit as he was seen exiting his black Rolls Royce on Monday while heading into an office building
He wore an aqua button-down shirt that had dark blue buttons with a dark undershirt, as well as, a comfortable pair of loose-fitting gray pants. He accessorized with a pair of bright yellow Nike tennis shoes and a gold necklace and bracelet
The elderly singer, who was Elvis Presley's closest rival in the early days of rock 'n' roll, is known for songs like Love Letters in the Sand, appeared cheery as photographers snapped his photo, a bright smile gracing his features.
Pat Boone in his 1950s heyday where he was the closest rival to Elvis Presley
The musician hosts a weekly SiriusXM’s show called ’50s Gold, where he plays some of the decade's best and gives listeners insight into his 68-year career in the entertainment business.
Ultra-conservative Boone is back in the news following the release of his new single, which he said is a 'wake-up call' for the country.
The classically-sounding American song with its guitar strums and old country sound was released after Boone became worried about the 'divided country.'
'I'm deeply concerned,' he told his fans on Facebook. 'Are you as seriously concerned about our country as I am?
'I don't see how America can keep going in this way,' he continued. 'I just felt I had to do something, like my friend Bob Dylan did when we were in similar states of confusion. I started feeling a song.'
The song features lyrics like: 'Where did America go / The land of the brave and the free / Can one generation erase a great nation? / Cuz we can't find a way to agree.'
Last month, Boone released a brand new song called Where Did America Go?, a politically charged song he called a 'wake-up call' for the country. 'I'm deeply concerned,' he told his fans on Facebook . 'Are you as seriously concerned about our country as I am?
The elderly singer, who is known for songs like Love Letters in the Sand, appeared rather cheery as photographers snapped his photo, a bright smile gracing his features
Boone has also stood up for other artists, who were being canceled for political statements.
Last year, Boone told Jason Aldean to ignore critics who called his Small Town music video a controversy.
Aldean's song was slammed for interlacing clips of BLM protestors vandalizing cities with lyrics endorsing traditional values.
Boone called the attempts to cancel Aldean sick, telling Fox News: 'It's gotten sick, I can't believe it is country music. I'm thinking about Trace Adkins, and of course, many of his songs were very supportive of opposing America's enemies.
Pat still gets about despite his advanced age. On August 20 he was at the premiere for the movie Reagan at the Chinese Theater in Los Angeles and he attended a book signing for Carol Connors's Elvis, Rocky and Me on July 15
Pat was one of the biggest heartthrobs of the 1950s and '60s. He and wife Shirley married when both were just 19 and stayed happily together until her death in 2019
He starred in the 1962 movie State Fair opposite Ann-Margret
Pat shocked with his look at the 1997 American Music Awards
'What we're not taking into account is that many of our enemies are in our own house and they're in our own countries and our own streets.'
During the Fox interview, he also held up a Colt-44 given to him by his grandfather Pritchard, telling host Jesse Watters it is exactly the type of weapon families used to defend themselves.
Boone continued: 'For anybody, country music or not, to take a stand against us taking a stand for our own rights is just sick.
'It's just moral sickness, I can't believe anybody is criticizing Jason.'