Chester Marlon Hanks (born August 4, 1990), professionally known as Chet Hanks, is an Americanactor and musician, the eldest son of actors Tom Hanks and Rita Wilson.[1][2] Born in Los Angeles, California, he debuted in film with a minor role in Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (2008), directed by Steven Spielberg, and later appeared in projects such as Larry Crowne (2011), Project X (2012), a cameo in Greyhound (2020), and recurring roles on television series including Shameless (2012) and Empire (2018–2019).[3] Initially pursuing hip-hop music under the stage name Chet Haze, Hanks has released tracks and videos, including the 2021 "White Boy Summer" clip that drew attention for its cultural commentary, and more recently formed the country duo Something Out West, featuring collaborations like a 2025 music video remake of Forrest Gump scenes with his father.[3]Hanks' public profile has been shaped by personal struggles, including attendance at the Oakley School, a therapeutic boarding school for adolescents facing behavioral issues, and past substance abuse challenges that led to legal encounters such as a 2010 marijuana possession charge in Pennsylvania. In 2021, he faced significant scrutiny from a civil lawsuit filed by ex-girlfriend Kiana Parker, who alleged physical and emotional abuse, battery, theft, racial slurs, and threats involving a gun during their relationship, culminating in a $1 million claim for assault and intentional infliction of emotional distress; a Fort Bend County judge granted her a temporary protective order in January of that year.[4][5][6] Hanks has denied the accusations, attributing media coverage to sensationalism amid his family's prominence, and the disputes highlight ongoing patterns of relational volatility reported in court documents.[4]
Early Life and Background
Family Origins and Childhood
Chester Marlon Hanks was born on August 4, 1990, in Los Angeles, California, to actors Tom Hanks and Rita Wilson, who had married on April 30, 1988.[7][1] Hanks is the couple's eldest child and first son, preceding his full brother Truman Theodore Hanks, born December 26, 1995.[1][8] He also has two older half-siblings from his father's prior marriage to Samantha Lewes (divorced 1987): Colin Hanks, born November 24, 1977, and Elizabeth Ann Hanks, born May 17, 1982.[1][9]Raised primarily in Los Angeles amid his parents' rising prominence in Hollywood—Tom Hanks having earned consecutive Academy Awards for Best Actor in 1994 and 1995—Chet Hanks experienced a childhood marked by the privileges and pressures of familial fame.[10] His parents, both of Greek Orthodox faith through Rita Wilson's heritage, instilled values of faith and normalcy, though public scrutiny often intruded; for instance, the family navigated high-profile events like Tom Hanks' film premieres and Rita Wilson's producing work.[11]In later reflections, Hanks has described his early years as lacking a "strong male role model" and fostering feelings of worthlessness, attributing this to the emotional distance he perceived from his father despite material abundance.[12] During a July 23, 2024, episode of MTV's The Surreal Life, he elaborated on a "toxic" dynamic in the household, claiming it contributed to his personal struggles, though these accounts represent his subjective perspective without independent corroboration from family members.[13][14] By high school, behavioral issues prompted his parents to enroll him in a therapeutic boarding program, signaling early interventions in his development.[15]
Education and Formative Struggles
Chet Hanks encountered behavioral difficulties during high school, prompting his parents to intervene by enrolling him in a wilderness therapy program for troubled teens in 2008; he later recounted awakening to two men at the foot of his bed, assigned to transport him to the remote facility as part of an unannounced intervention.[16]Subsequently, Hanks attended the Oakley School, a therapeutic boarding school in Oakley, Utah that has since closed, where he played lacrosse amid a structured environment aimed at addressing adolescent challenges.[17]He then pursued higher education in theater at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois, joining the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity during his time there as a sophomore in 2011 and continuing as a senior by 2014.[18][19]These experiences were shaped by formative struggles, including a perceived absence of strong male role models and the psychological pressures of his parents' fame, which Hanks has linked to feelings of worthlessness; a stable school environment from preschool through middle school gave way to worsening issues upon entering high school with a new peer group, coinciding with the onset of mental health and early substance-related problems.[20][21][22]
Professional Career
Acting Endeavors
Chet Hanks began his acting career with a debut role as Dexter in the 2007 live-action film Bratz, securing the part at age 16.[23] Early film appearances included uncredited or minor parts in Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (2008), directed by Steven Spielberg, and Larry Crowne (2011), a comedy starring and directed by his father, Tom Hanks.[3] He also featured in Project X (2012), a party-themed comedy, and portrayed Jimmy Grimm, the brother of the Thing, in the 2015 reboot Fantastic Four.[24] These roles established Hanks in supporting capacities within ensemble casts, often leveraging family industry ties for initial opportunities.[25]Transitioning to television, Hanks gained recurring visibility as Blake, a rapper character, on the Fox series Empire from 2018 to 2019 across multiple episodes.[3] He appeared in additional recurring capacities on Showtime's Shameless and CBS All Access's Your Honor (2020–2021), playing Joey Maldini in the latter legal thriller.[26] Guest spots included an episode of HBO's Curb Your Enthusiasm and the role of Curtis on FX's Atlanta.[25] In 2020, Hanks had a brief cameo as Bushnell in Greyhound, a World War II naval drama led by Tom Hanks.[24]More recently, Hanks starred as Travis Bugg, an unruly point guard, in the 2025 Netflix comedy series Running Point, created by Mindy Kaling and co-starring Kate Hudson, marking a lead role in a high-profile project.[27] Other credits include Dead Wrong as Jacko Stern and appearances in procedural formats like NCIS.[26] His filmography reflects a pattern of character-driven supporting work across genres, with career progression tied to persistence amid personal challenges.[3]
Music Pursuits
Hanks initially pursued music in the early 2010s under the stage name Chet Haze, releasing hip-hop tracks while attending Northwestern University. In January 2011, he dropped "White and Purple," a remix of Wiz Khalifa's "Black and Yellow," which garnered attention due to his family ties.[28] That same year, he issued a mixtape featuring original songs, as discussed in contemporaneous interviews.[29] Follow-up singles included "Hollywood" in 2011, "Do It Better" in 2012, and "Finest Girl" in 2013, maintaining a hip-hop style with themes of Los Angeles life and personal bravado.[30]Transitioning to acting roles, Hanks contributed rap verses to the soundtrack of the television series Empire. Notable appearances include "Hakeem + Blake Battle" and "Rock the Party," both featuring Yazz and released in 2015 as part of the show's episodes.[31]In 2021, performing as Chet Hanx, Hanks independently released the single "White Boy Summer" on April 13 via DistroKid, accompanied by a music video that emphasized beach and party aesthetics.[32] The track, produced in a hip-hop vein, peaked in viral discussions but did not chart on major Billboard metrics.[33]By 2025, Hanks shifted toward country music, forming the duo Something Out West with musician Drew Arthur. Signed to Big Machine Records, they debuted with "Leaving Hollywood" on February 28, a track critiquing entertainment industry pressures.[34] This was followed by "You Better Run" on March 28, with a video incorporating footage of Tom Hanks on a bench, later clarified as an unscripted family cameo rather than formal collaboration.[35][36] The duo's sound blends country instrumentation with narrative lyrics on relocation and reinvention.[37]
Personal Challenges
Addiction History and Recovery
Chet Hanks first developed issues with substance abuse at age 16, initially involving alcohol and progressing to cocaine and other drugs.[38][39] At 17, his parents enrolled him in a wilderness therapy program in an attempt to address the problem.[40]Hanks entered rehabilitation for cocaineaddiction during the summer of 2015, later reporting 50 days of sobriety by February of that year and 60 days by October.[41][42][43] Despite these efforts, he experienced multiple relapses over the subsequent years, with his addiction intensifying to the point where, as he later described, even fellow heavy users advised him to moderate his consumption.[44][45]A pivotal low point occurred in August 2022, when Hanks engaged in a three-day cocaine binge in Las Vegas, during which he neither ate, slept adequately, nor hydrated properly, resulting in a 27-pound weight loss from 190 to 163 pounds.[46][47] This episode prompted him to voluntarily re-enter rehabilitation immediately afterward.[48][49]Hanks marked two years of continuous sobriety on August 14, 2024, attributing his sustained recovery to personal accountability, family support from his parents and daughter, and recognition of the disease's severity.[46][47] By March 2025, he reported exceeding three years sober, emphasizing the role of rigorous self-discipline in maintaining abstinence.[50]
Family Relationships
Chet Hanks, born Chester Marlon Hanks on August 15, 1990, is the eldest son of actors Tom Hanks and Rita Wilson, with whom he shares a full younger brother, Truman Theodore Hanks, born in 1995.[9] He also has two half-siblings from his father's first marriage to Samantha Lewes: half-brother Colin Hanks, born in 1977, and half-sister Elizabeth Ann "E.A." Hanks, born in 1982.[51] Growing up in the shadow of his parents' fame, Hanks has described feeling disconnected and lacking a strong male role model early on, attributing this to the demands of their careers and the pressures of celebrity life.[52]Hanks' struggles with addiction significantly strained his family ties, particularly during his teens and early adulthood, when his parents intervened by sending him to a therapeutic boarding school in Utah and, according to his own account, effectively staging a "kidnapping" for rehabilitation purposes amid escalating substance abuse.[53] This period fostered resentment among his siblings, who were affected by the family disruptions caused by his behavior, though Hanks has since reflected that these challenges ultimately strengthened familial bonds through shared adversity.[14] Despite the tensions, his parents provided consistent emotional and practical support, with Rita Wilson often serving as a source of comfort and understanding during his relapses.[53]In recent years, particularly following his achievement of three years of sobriety by early 2025, Hanks has publicly expressed profound gratitude toward his parents for their steadfast presence "through thick and thin," crediting their refusal to abandon him as pivotal to his recovery.[54] He highlighted this support in a March 2025 appearance on The Drew Barrymore Show, noting, "I'm really, really grateful for both my parents," and emphasizing their role every step of his journey without taking it for granted.[55] Professional collaborations, such as Tom Hanks' cameo in Chet's 2024 music video "You Better Run," further illustrate improved dynamics, with Chet describing his father's involvement as affirming and fun.[56] Hanks has one daughter, born around 2017, but has shared limited details on that parent-child relationship amid his personal growth.[57]
Controversies and Cultural Debates
Public Incidents and Media Backlash
In October 2015, Chet Hanks publicly admitted to a severe cocaine addiction that began at age 16, describing instances of smoking crack, injecting the drug when unable to snort it further, and associating with heavy users at clubs where even they could not match his consumption.[43] He detailed selling drugs to sustain his habit and entering rehab multiple times, framing these confessions in low-light Instagram videos as a humbled acknowledgment of his "rock bottom."[58] Media outlets, including TMZ, reported a February 2015 fender-bender involving a car registered to his parents shortly before one rehab stint, amplifying perceptions of his struggles as emblematic of nepotistic entitlement despite family support.[59]Earlier that year, on June 4, 2015, Hanks faced criticism for defending his use of the N-word in a song's promotional description, arguing his immersion in Black culture from youth justified it, which drew accusations of racial insensitivity from online commentators and entertainment press.[60] In January 2020, a red carpet video from the Golden Globes awards showed Hanks adopting Jamaican patois, prompting viral backlash on social media for cultural appropriation; he responded via Instagram, asserting authenticity from personal relationships and travels rather than mockery.[61]In August 2021, Hanks posted Instagram stories questioning COVID-19 vaccine efficacy and mandates, labeling them as potentially harmful and government overreach, which elicited widespread disapproval from users and media for promoting unverified claims amid public health campaigns.[62] Coverage often highlighted his celebrity lineage as exacerbating scrutiny, with outlets like BuzzFeed noting the posts' alignment with fringe narratives despite his lack of medical expertise.[62] These episodes contributed to a media narrative portraying Hanks as a volatile figure, frequently critiqued in tabloids for leveraging fame while embodying self-destructive patterns, though some reports acknowledged his sobriety efforts post-2022.[63]
"White Boy Summer" and Appropriation Claims
In late March 2021, Chet Hanks posted an Instagram video declaring the onset of "White Boy Summer," framing it as a lighthearted, confidence-boosting period for white men to enjoy music, style, and leisure in a manner similar to Megan Thee Stallion's "Hot Girl Summer," explicitly excluding any association with racism or prejudice.[64] Hanks, speaking in Jamaican patois and dubbing himself the "white don dadda," promoted the concept through subsequent posts, merchandise sales, and a self-produced song released in April 2021, which featured hip-hop influences and visuals of partying.[65]The use of patois and dancehall-inspired terminology in Hanks' promotions sparked immediate claims of cultural appropriation, particularly from Jamaican dancehall artists and online commentators who accused him of commodifying black and Caribbean cultural elements for personal gain despite his upbringing as the son of white actors Tom Hanks and Rita Wilson.[66] Critics argued that Hanks, lacking deep-rooted ties to the cultures he emulated, was engaging in performative adoption often labeled "culture vulture" behavior, with some pointing to his prior public use of similar speech patterns as evidence of inauthenticity rather than organic affinity from past relationships or travels.[67] Mainstream media coverage, including from outlets with documented left-leaning editorial slants, amplified these critiques by linking the phrase to broader concerns over white entitlement, though such analyses frequently prioritized narrative over Hanks' stated intent of playful inclusivity for hip-hop enthusiasts regardless of race.[64][67]Additional backlash targeted Hanks' merchandise, which employed a Gothic-style font akin to those historically used in white nationalist propaganda, leading to assertions that the branding inadvertently or recklessly evoked extremist symbolism and undermined claims of harmless fun.[68] Hanks countered these appropriation charges by emphasizing in interviews and social media that "White Boy Summer" celebrated "fly white boys who love hip-hop" as a counter to self-deprecation, not supremacy, and positioned it as anti-racist by design, though he did not directly address the patois usage beyond defending his personal cultural exposures.[69]By July 2024, the phrase had been repurposed by far-right and white supremacist groups in online memes and rallies as a coded signal of racial pride, prompting Hanks to publicly denounce such adaptations as "deplorable" and a distortion of his original, non-bigoted vision, thereby highlighting ironic reversals in appropriation dynamics.[70][71] This evolution underscored tensions in cultural signaling, where a phrase born from individual expression faced scrutiny from multiple ideological angles, with empirical adoption patterns showing broader meme proliferation beyond Hanks' control.[72]
Political Interpretations and Rebuttals
Chet Hanks' "White Boy Summer" phrase, popularized in a 2021 music video and Instagram posts, has been interpreted by organizations monitoring extremism, such as the Global Project Against Hate and Extremism, as a rallying cry adopted by white supremacist and far-right groups for promoting racial separatism and anti-immigrant sentiments, with documented usage in online propaganda across Europe and the U.S. as of July 2024.[73][71] Reports from outlets like The New York Times highlighted its mutation into a symbol for transnational hate campaigns, including neo-Nazi memes and violence glorification, detached from Hanks' original context.[71][74]In response, Hanks issued a July 3, 2024, Instagram statement clarifying that the phrase was "created to be fun, playful, and a celebration of fly white boys who love beautiful queens of every race," emphasizing inclusivity given his biracial daughter and personal relationships across racial lines, while explicitly condemning its "twist[ing] into... hate or bigotry against any group of people" as "deplorable."[75][76] He reiterated this non-exclusivist intent in prior clarifications, rejecting supremacist appropriations and aligning the concept with cross-racial appreciation rather than division.[77]Hanks' August 2021 Instagram video dismissing COVID-19 as "the m— flu" (motherfucking flu) and opposing vaccine mandates—suggesting the immunocompromised "stay inside if you're scared"—drew interpretations as aligning with conservative anti-mandate rhetoric amid politicized pandemic debates.[78][79] Critics framed it as minimizing public health risks, contrasting with his parents Tom Hanks and Rita Wilson's publicized COVID hospitalizations earlier that year. Hanks did not issue a direct rebuttal to these characterizations but maintained the stance in later comments, including a 2023 podcast appearance retracting prior positive remarks about President Joe Biden and critiquing policy failures.[80]In a May 2022 interview on Ziwe, Hanks rejected calls to apologize to "marginalized communities" for past cultural controversies, stating "social justice warriors can kick rocks," which some viewed as a dismissal of progressiveaccountability norms and emblematic of anti-woke sentiment.[81][82] This unapologetic response was interpreted by detractors as reinforcing insensitivity, particularly given his history of defending non-Black use of racial slang in personal contexts. Hanks framed it as resistance to performative virtue-signaling, prioritizing authentic interpersonal bonds over institutional demands for contrition.[81]A November 2020 video post-election rant, delivered in patois and urging "respect" for then-President Donald Trump, was seen by some as tacit endorsement of Trump-era politics, though Hanks immediately clarified it as a joke to troll reactions.[83] This, combined with his broader pattern of challenging left-leaning orthodoxies—like skepticism toward Black Lives Matter-era cultural policing—has led to portrayals of Hanks as culturally conservative or reactionary, despite his lack of formal political affiliation.[67] Hanks has rebutted such framings by emphasizing personal lived experience over ideological labels, consistently denouncing actual bigotry while rejecting what he sees as overreach in social justice enforcement.[82]
Recent Developments and Reflections
Sobriety Milestone and Career Resurgence
Chet Hanks achieved sobriety in August 2022 following a severe relapse involving a three-day cocaine binge in Las Vegas, during which he lost 27 pounds and described reaching "rock bottom" before entering rehabilitation.[46][84] He publicly marked two years sober in August 2024 on MTV's Surreal Life: Villa of Secrets, crediting a Twelve Steps app for tracking his progress and emphasizing the "gnarly" nature of his addiction.[47] By early 2025, Hanks reported maintaining sobriety without formal meetings since his second year, integrating recovery into daily life while avoiding relapse triggers.[85][86]This milestone facilitated a professional turnaround, as Hanks attributed sustained sobriety to enabling reliable participation in acting commitments, stating it eliminated barriers to consistent work.[54] In a March 2025 Men's Health interview, he linked recovery to embodying disciplined roles, including Travis Bugg in Netflix's Running Point, a series depicting chaotic Hollywood figures, which he approached through sober method acting informed by personal history without reliving excesses.[86][87] The project, released amid his three-year sobriety mark, highlighted his shift toward portraying "media liability" archetypes with self-aware distance, drawing on family acting heritage while prioritizing stability.[88]Parallel to acting gains, sobriety supported a pivot in music from prior rap efforts to country, forming the duo Something Out West with Drew Arthur and releasing an EP in July 2025.[89] Their March 2025 video for "You Better Run" featured Tom Hanks reprising his Forrest Gump role, blending nostalgia with new material and signaling collaborative family reconciliation post-recovery.[90] Hanks teased a full countryalbum at the September 2024 MTV Video Music Awards, framing the genre shift as authentic expression unhindered by substance interference.[91] Additional 2024 credits, such as the film Dead Wrong opposite Rob Schneider, underscored broadened opportunities tied to demonstrated reliability.[92] Overall, these developments reflect sobriety's causal role in restoring professional viability, with Hanks noting parental support through relapses as key to long-term adherence.[54]
2025 Projects and Public Statements
In early 2025, Chet Hanks formed the country music duo Something Out West with Drew Arthur, releasing their debut single "Leaving Hollywood" on February 28 via Big Machine Records.[34] The duo, drawing on rock-influenced country sounds, followed with a music video for "You Better Run" on March 28, featuring Hanks' father Tom Hanks recreating scenes from Forrest Gump, including a bench-sitting monologue and a running sequence.[90][93] Their debut EP arrived on July 25, with Hanks describing the project as a shift from his prior rap work toward Nashville's scene.[89]On television, Hanks took a recurring role as Travis Bugg in Netflix's Running Point, a comedy series starring Kate Hudson, which premiered in March 2025.[94] He signed with Paradigm Talent Agency for representation around this time, crediting the character as a "slightly exaggerated version" of himself in a March 5 interview.[95] Hanks disclosed receiving acting advice from Tom Hanks, emphasizing preparation through repeated script readings to internalize dialogue, as shared on March 11.[96]In film, Hanks joined the cast of the AI-themed horror thriller Ed, directed by Christopher J. Scott, entering production in Atlanta on September 9 alongside John Travolta and Crystal Reed.[97]Hanks made limited public statements in 2025, primarily tied to his projects, avoiding the controversies of prior years. In promotions for Running Point, he highlighted family support in his career recovery without detailing personal struggles.[94] No major political or social commentaries emerged, with focus remaining on professional milestones like his music duo's output and sobriety's role in enabling consistent work.[89]
Filmography and Discography
Film Roles
Chet Hanks began his acting career with minor roles in feature films during the late 2000s. In 2007, he portrayed Dexter in the teen comedy Bratz, a film adaptation of the popular doll line that followed four friends navigating high school social dynamics.[98] His role was a small supporting part amid the ensemble cast.The following year, Hanks appeared uncredited as a student in the library scene of Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, directed by Steven Spielberg and starring his father, Tom Hanks, in a non-speaking cameo that marked one of his earliest Hollywood exposures. In 2011, he played the pizza delivery boy in Larry Crowne, a romantic comedy also starring Tom Hanks as the titular community college student reinventing his life after a layoff; the role involved brief interactions highlighting everyday service work.Hanks continued with small parts in 2012's Project X, a found-footage style party film where he appeared as a partygoer amid chaotic teen revelry that escalates into destruction.[99] In 2015, he took on the role of Jimmy Grimm, the younger brother of Ben Grimm (The Thing), in the superhero reboot Fantastic Four, contributing to scenes depicting family tensions and origin story elements before the team's formation.[100] The film received mixed reviews and underperformed commercially.A notable cameo came in 2020 with Greyhound, a World War II naval thriller directed by Aaron Schneider and starring Tom Hanks as Commander Ernest Krause; Hanks played Bushnell, a crew member on the USS Keeling during intense Atlantic convoy battles against U-boats.[98] The Apple TV+ release earned praise for its tense action sequences and historical accuracy. In 2024, Hanks starred as Jacko Stern in Dead Wrong, an independent thriller alongside Rob Schneider, where his character becomes entangled in a narcissist's violent get-rich scheme; the film holds a 3.8/10 user rating on IMDb, reflecting polarizing reception.[101]
Hanks' film work has primarily consisted of supporting or cameo roles, often in genres like action, comedy, and thriller, with limited lead opportunities to date.[3]
Television Roles
Hanks began his television career with minor guest roles, including Trey on the IFC series Maron in 2013 and Liam McCall on NCIS: New Orleans in 2014.[102] In 2017, he appeared as Victor Chesnick, the fiancé of Sammi Greene, in two episodes of Curb Your Enthusiasm's ninth season: "Fatwa!" and "Thank You for Your Service."[103][104]He achieved recurring status on Shameless from 2016 to 2018, portraying Charlie, the recovering addict boyfriend of Sierra Morton and father of her child, across seasons 7 and 8.[105] On Empire, Hanks played the hip-hop artist Blake Sterling, initially recurring in season 4 (2017–2018) before promotion to main cast in season 5 (2018–2019), for a total of 17 episodes.[106][107]In the 2020 Showtime miniseries Your Honor, he depicted Joey Maldini, the close associate and best friend of crime figure Carlo Baxter, across six episodes.[108][109] Hanks guest-starred in the 2022 Atlanta season 3 episode "Trini 2 De Bone," performing in a Trinidadian accent amid a funeral sequence exploring cultural displacement.[110]More recently, in the 2025 Netflix comedy Running Point, Hanks leads as Travis Bugg, the erratic Los Angeles Waves point guard who doubles as an aspiring but ineffective rapper, drawing from his own public persona in a role described by creators as a "slam dunk" fit.[111][27] He also appeared as Jacko Stern in the 2024 series Dead Wrong.[26]
Chet Hanks initially pursued a career in hip-hop under the stage names Chet Haze and Chet Hanx, beginning with the single "Hollywood," released on December 13, 2011.[112] This track, characterized by frat rap influences, was followed by "Do It Better" in 2012 and "Finest Girl" in 2013, marking his early independent releases amid his time as a theater student at Northwestern University.[30] Additional early singles included "#1 Love" and "Another Chance," recorded in early 2011 but with limited commercial distribution.[113]In the mid-2010s, Hanks contributed guest vocals to the Empire television series soundtrack, appearing on tracks such as "Payroll," "Rock the Party" (with Yazz), and "One More Minute" (featuring Yazz, Serayah, and the Empire Cast).[31] These features aligned with his acting roles but represented sporadic musical output during a period focused on personal challenges and sobriety struggles.Hanks shifted toward alternative rock and pop as part of the duo FTRZ with collaborator Drew Arthur, formed in 2016. The pair released singles "Models" on June 11, 2018, and "NowhereLand," ahead of their debut EP The Ocean Park EP on August 24, 2018.[114] FTRZ followed with standalone tracks "Harley" and "Ticket Out My Head" in 2020.[115]Reverting to rap under Chet Hanx, Hanks independently released the single "White Boy Summer" on April 13, 2021, via DistroKid, which garnered attention for its provocative title and video but faced backlash over cultural appropriation allegations.[116]In 2025, Hanks and Arthur rebranded as the country rock duo Something Out West under Big Machine Label Group, releasing the single "You Better Run" with a music video on March 28 that recreated scenes from Forrest Gump, including a cameo by Tom Hanks at the film's iconic bench.[117] This preceded their debut EP Leaving Hollywood on June 20, featuring five tracks: "You Better Run," "Bipolar Heart," "Already Won," "This Ain't Heaven," and the title track "Leaving Hollywood."[118] The EP draws from influences like the Eagles and Blink-182, reflecting Hanks' transition to country-infused rock.[119]