Apple Fitness+ is getting a dose of Dolly. The iPhone maker’s relatively new subscription exercise service, which requires the use of an Apple Watch, is expanding to include outdoor walking exercises guided by celebrities, one of whom is country music star and philanthropist Dolly Parton. The walks will range from 25 to 40 minutes, will only be available to people who have subscribed to the $10-per-month Fitness+ service, and will incorporate Apple Watch in an interesting way: The wearable will display photos, curated by the guide, throughout the walk.

The move is part of an effort by Apple to build out the new Fitness+, which is competing with a plethora of guided workout apps during a time when a lot of people have ditched their gym memberships in favor of home workouts. The subscription service, like Apple’s other cloud-based offerings, is also a way to get more customers locked into Apple’s hardware and software ecosystem.

The feature, called “Time to Walk,” is launching with four celeb-guided walks: one led by Parton, another by Golden State Warriors power forward Draymond Green, one by musical artist Shawn Mendes, and one by Emmy-winning actress Uzo Aduba, who starred in Orange Is the New Black. The programs are a mixture of talk and music (the latter of which is powered by Apple Music, natch).

Dolly Parton’s episode, for example, includes 12 minutes of Parton telling stories about her family; when she talks about her 11 siblings and rattles off their names, a photo of young Dolly pops up on Apple Watch. Birds chirp in the background. Parton taps her acrylic nails, and talks about how the sound of her nails against a typewriter supplied the inspiration for “9 to 5.” Then the episode transitions to the actual song “9 to 5,” followed by two more Parton tracks. In Draymond Green’s episode, the three-time NBA champion recounts a story of tough love from his mother, and eventually tosses it to Drake’s “Big Rings.” Uzo Aduba even walks with her dog.

It’s an enjoyable listening experience so far, though getting started requires an almost-humorous handoff from Apple product to Apple product. You’ll have to go into Fitness+ on the iPhone, indicate that you want to download the episode to Apple Watch, find the walk in the Workout app in Apple Watch, and pair the Watch with headphones. If you’ve paired your Watch with AirPods before, it will suggest pairing AirPods.

But more notably, this is the first Apple Fitness+ product that actually lets users ignore their screens—well, most of them—and isn’t tied to indoor workouts. Fitness+ first launched in mid-December 2020, charging users a monthly fee to access high-intensity interval, strength, yoga, cycling, and dance classes lead by exuberant instructors. (“Close those rings!” they shout regularly, a nod to Apple Watch’s feature that gamifies daily activity goals.) It’s very Peloton-esque, with more integration between and promotion of Apple gadgets. However, one obvious omission from the Fitness+ app was any kind of outdoor workout experience, which many other fitness apps offer.

Walking is an obvious choice for expanding Fitness+; it’s the most popular form of exercise in the world, and also one of the most popular activities in the Apple Watch workout app. What’s interesting is that this first batch of walks is a kind of blend of podcasting content and music, instead of fitness instructors breathlessly giving commands to speed it up or slow it down. By using this formula, Apple is setting the production bar pretty high for itself, and also tapping into a broader trend of audio experimentation.

You May Also Like

iPhone 14 Plus Review: Big Screen, Big Battery, Not-as-Big Price

Listen to article (1 minute) Previously on “iPhone 14 Reviews”: The Pro…

You have the ‘eyes of a magpie’ if you can spot hidden rings in 77 seconds from flowery brain teaser

YOU could have the eyes of a magpie if you’re able to…

Facebook down updates — Thousands of users are unable to post and get error message on social media website and app

Previous Facebook outages There have been other reported Facebook outages in the past, including:…

Artemis I: Everything you need to know about NASA’s moon mission

The dawn of a new era in moon exploration has been put…