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After the devastating Hurst fire impacted the community of Altadena, Calif., in January, The Game heads out to the community of Altadena where he interviews first responders, local high school coaches and more about their survival stories from the Hurst fire. 

Keep watching this Billboard News special to learn more about those impacted.

The Game:

This is some serious… It’s serious business, man, and after this experience, now, when I hear a fire truck coming down the street, I’m pulling over and I’m not annoyed because usually it’s like “agh I got to pull over.”

Firefighter 1:

Over there we have our kitchen.

The Game:

You know I like to eat. Is he a good cook?

Firefighter 2:

The best!

The Game:

So you guys went up?

Firefighter 1:

I mean, I was here the day that everything happened. 

The Game:

Wow. 

Firefighter 1:

It was myself and one of the partners. But unfortunately, he’s not here. 

The Game:

How was that? 

Firefighter 1: 

It was one event where we thought that something was gonna happen and it just led to something way out of our hands.

The Game: 

My like, my hat’s on, but it’s off to you guys, man.

DeAnthony Langston: 

These guys are personal friends of mine. They’re high school coaches here. This is actually Tony’s crib that he grew up in right now. His mom’s crib right there, but all of them have their unique stories about how they were devastated about that right there. But this was a predominantly African American neighborhood, and just to see this is terrible man, and you coming out says a lot about you, man. And so I’d like everybody to introduce themselves and tell them what school you coach at. 

Tim Tucker: 

Not only were these fires big for our basketball program, two of our players lost their homes, but I also have residential treatment centers for kids. So I have group homes for kids. And we lost our girl’s house.

Keep watching for more.

Time to head over to Bruno Mars and ROSÉ’s “APT.” for a celebration. The high-energy track has officially reached the one billion views mark on YouTube, the video platform announced this week. Explore See latest videos, charts and news See latest videos, charts and news Just 105 days after its release in October 2024, the […]

Nicky Jam sits down with Billboard to share details about changing record labels, a new album on the way and more!

Are you excited for Nicky’s new music? Let us know in the comments!

Nicky Jam:This new album is like a new Nicky Jam. 

Tetris Kelly:Nicky Jam has changed his record label, and we have the exclusive interview and announcement. 

Leila Cobo:Nicky, you are switching record labels after a long time with Sony. So where are you going, first of all? 

Nicky Jam:I’m going to Virgin Records. I went with my gut. I thought it was the best move to do. I have too much respect for AFO, the president of Sony Records, Sony Latin Records. It’s just sometimes you feel like you have to move. You know, it’s nothing personal, you know, it’s a mix of business and something that I just felt in my gut that it was the best move to do. I’m very spontaneous, and it’s just the way I am. I could say just, you know, I’m a bohemian. You know, I take my luggage and I go wherever I have to go, and it’s just the way I am. 

Leila Cobo: What were they offering you that you liked, or what did they bring to the table? 

Nicky Jam:A lot of things, man, family wise, their whole team and the creative part. This corporate way of coming out with music, to kill the buzz of the music, the momentum of the music, you have to wait four, five, six months to come out with a single. With these people at Virgin, I don’t have to wait. If I feel that a song’s gonna be a hit in a moment. They are not gonna mess with my creative part. And they’re gonna say, go ahead and come out. And that’s the way Bad Bunny works.

Keep watching for more!

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Source: Cole Burston / Getty / Drake
Drake still feels a way about everyone realizing he got his a** handed to him by Kendrick Lamar.
Not feeling the love stateside, Drake took his OVO Force 1 to Australia, where he is currently on his Anita Max Win Tour, showing his Australian fans some love because he hasn’t been down under in years.

Initially, Drake was supposed only to do seven shows, but due to popular demand, The Boy hiked that number up to 16 and will see him hit the stage in Perth, Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane, and Auckland.
On night one, Drizzy has folks talking because of the interesting way he decided to address the massive elephant in the room, his battle with Kendrick Lamar, who is coming off an epic night at the Grammys where he swept, winning all categories he was nominated, including Song of The Year and Record of The Year for what many are calling the greatest diss record of all time, “Not Like Us.”
The “God’s Plan” crafter stuck to his concert formula of walking through the crowd to begin the show, but this time, he wore a bullet hole-riddled hoodie that hilariously was emitting smoke from the back, signifying all the shots he took, but also adding that he’s still here, while walking out to “Over My Dead Body.”

By the end of his performance, Drake reminded everyone who he was and that he was still alive despite Kendrick Lamar bodying him. “My name is Drake. I started doing music in 2008. I come all the way from Toronto, Canada. The year is now 2025, and no matter what, Drizzy Drake is very much alive.”

Drake Is Still Salty About LeBron James Attending The “Pop Out”
During his performance, Drake also let us know he is still very salty about LeBron James being at Kendrick Lamar’s “Pop Out” concert and professing his love for “Not Like Us” during the Paris Olympics. 
While performing “Nonstop,” Drake changed the lyrics, “How I go from 6 to 23 but not LeBron, man.”
We are sure Drizzy will take more pot shots during his tour, until then you can see reactions to this stunt in the gallery below.

2. Pretty Much

4. Pretty Much

Reggaetón star Nicky Jam has signed a new global agreement with Virgin Music Group after spending more than a decade with Sony Music Latin.

Under the new agreement, Nicky Jam’s new music will be distributed by Virgin Music Group, which will also administer and supervise Nicky Jam’s catalog for YouTube and will work some material in digital platforms in different territories.

Nicky Jam (born Nick Rivera Camerino) disclosed the terms and impetus behind the deal during an exclusive interview with Billboard in Miami.

“I went with my gut,” he tells Billboard, noting that his contract with Sony had been up and he had met with several labels. “I thought it was the best thing to do. I have too much respect for Afo [Verde, chairman of Sony Music Latin Iberia] and my Sony family. I owe a lot to them and I love them very much. It’s just that sometimes you feel you have to move. I’m very spontaneous and that’s just the way I am. I could say I’m a bohemian. I take my luggage and I go wherever I have to go.”

In this case, Nicky Jam decided to go with a company that is giving him broad latitude. He’ll get to retain ownership of his masters, and will also have wide latitude in determining when he releases his music.

“It’s a distribution contract, but under that contract I can come out with music whenever I want. They are not going to mess with my creative part and that’s beautiful,” says Jam.

Nicky Jam’s new label deal coincides with a series of major changes in both his personal and professional life. Last year, he got married (to 22-yer-old model Juana Valentina Varón], split with his longtime manager Juan Diego Medina and spoke openly about his problems with alcohol and quitting drinking.

From left: Larry Gonzalez, David Daza, Michael Cantor (VMG SVP, Business Affairs and Development), Chi Orjiakor (VMG VP, Strategy), Victor Gonzalez (VMG, President of Latin America and Iberia), Nicky Jam (Artist), and Armando Rodriguez (VMG SVP/General Manager of Latin U.S.).

Courtesy of Nicky Jam

Now, a fit and trim Nicky Jam is readying to release new music that he says reflects his current, positive state of mind. “If you listen to my last album, it was called Insomnio. It was mostly what I was going through: Drinking, partying, it was all dark,” says the singer. “This is the new Nicky Jam,” he adds.

“Nicky has been a true pioneer in Latin music,” says Victor González, president of Virgin Music Group for Latin America and the Iberian Peninsula. “Having him choose Virgin Music Group for this new chapter of his career is incredibly rewarding for me and our entire team.”

Armando Rodríguez, general manager of Virgin Music Group for the U.S. Latin market adds: “Nicky is creating incredible music, and we are excited to work alongside him—not only on his upcoming releases but also in developing a strategic approach for his entire catalog.”

In the past couple of years, Virgin has notably expanded its Latin footprint, signing major names in Mexican music like Carín León, Pepe Aguilar, Angela Aguilar and Espinoza Paz. In the urban realm, Nicky Jam is their biggest get. The Puerto Rican star brings a legacy of hits, including the “El Perdón,” the 2015 smash alongside Enrique Iglesias that spent 30 weeks at No. 1 on Billboard’s Hot Latin Songs chart. All told, Nicky has charted nine songs on the Billboard Hot 100 and 58 on Billboard’s Hot Latin Songs chart, including five Number 1s. This week, he ranked at Nol 162 in streams globally on Spotify, a testament to his lasting appeal.

“This agreement with Virgin Music Group marks a new chapter in my artistic journey. I have always believed in the importance of evolution and adaptation, and I am confident that, together with Virgin Music Group, we will achieve incredible things,” says Nicky Jam.

The fallout from the Kendrick Lamar and Drake feud has been picked apart, and it will be further delved into as part of IMPACT x Nightline: Kendrick v. Drake: The Feud episode coming to Hulu on Thursday (Feb. 6). Ahead of its streaming premiere, Billboard exclusively shares a clip from the ABC News Studios program […]

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Source: Katelyn Mulcahy / Getty
The National Football League is removing the “End Racism” tag from its end zones for the upcoming Super Bowl.
The National Football League is moving to remove the “End Racism” phrase from its end zone at the Caesars Superdome in New Orleans, Louisiana, in time for Super Bowl LIX between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Philadelphia Eagles.

Unnamed sources revealed the decision, which was confirmed by NFL spokesperson Bryan McCarthy in a statement: “Teams have used on the field this year ‘Vote,’ ‘End Racism,’ ‘Stop Hate,’ and ‘Choose Love.’ This is part of the NFL’s Inspire Change,” adding: “Choose Love is appropriate to use as our country has endured in recent weeks wildfires in southern California, the terrorist attack here in New Orleans, the plane and helicopter crash near our nation’s capital, and the plane crash in Philadelphia.”

The “End Racism” phrase was present in the end zone during the NFC Championship Game held at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia.
The decision marks the first time since 2021 that the “End Racism” phrase will not be in one of the end zones of an NFL game. The “Inspire Change” campaign began after the murder of George Floyd by former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin which led to nationwide protests against police brutality. It was also inspired by former San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick and other players’ protests by kneeling on the field. The sources also said that the move, first revealed to higher-level NFL officials, could be seen as being conciliatory towards President Donald Trump, who is reportedly slated to attend the game next Sunday (February 9) as a guest of Gayle Benson, the New Orleans Saints team owner. Trump has been long opposed to efforts of inclusion and anti-racism in the league, particularly during his first presidential term.
The NFL has signaled that it wouldn’t be following the current trend of companies removing their DEI efforts, with NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell elaborating further at his Super Bowl press conference on Monday (January 3).  “We got into diversity efforts because we felt it was the right thing for the National Football League,” Goodell said. “And we’re going to continue those efforts, because we’ve not only convinced ourselves we’ve proven it to ourselves — it does make the NFL better.”

The Contenders is a midweek column that looks at artists aiming for the top of the Billboard charts, and the strategies behind their efforts. This week, for the upcoming Billboard Hot 100 dated Feb. 15, we look at the biggest threats to capture the No. 1 spot after Travis Scott’s “4×4” debuted atop the listing this week. 

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Morgan Wallen, “I’m the Problem” (Mercury/Big Loud/Republic): Perhaps the most consistent artist in the upper stretches of the Billboard charts the past two years has been Morgan Wallen, who has racked up three Hot 100 No. 1s since 2023 (with his own “Last Night” and “Love Somebody” and the Post Malone-led “I Had Some Help”) and another five top 10 hits. On Friday (Jan. 31), he returned with the new single “I’m the Problem,” a bitter song about a toxic relationship that will serve as the lead single and title track for his upcoming fourth album, his first since 2023’s behemoth One Thing at a Time (still in the Billboard 200’s top five nearly two years later). 

Unsurprisingly, “Problem” is off to a strong start on streaming, topping both the Spotify Daily Top Songs USA and the real-time Apple Music chart after its Friday release. The song has started to slide on both listings perhaps a little quicker than expected, with it being replaced by SZA’s Kendrick Lamar-featuring “30 for 30” atop the Apple Music chart and falling all the way out of the top 10 already on the Spotify listing. But it remains in the top 10 on iTunes even after getting passed by a number of Grammy-boosted songs, and it’s off to a hot start at country radio, with over eight million airplay impressions in its first four days of tracking (through Feb. 3), according to Luminate.

Trending on Billboard

“Problem” might not quite have the streaming start to be on the inside track for a No. 1 debut, but it should at least be another top 10 hit for the dominant country superstar.  

Lady Gaga & Bruno Mars, “Die With a Smile” (Streamline/Interscope/Atlantic/ICLG): Despite Lady Gaga being present and performing at the two most high-profile multi-artist gigs of 2025 so far – Thursday’s FireAid concert at the Intuit Dome, where she closed out the multi-hour fundraising event, and Sunday’s Grammys, where she actually performed with Bruno Mars – she did not play her and Mars’ four-week No. 1 at either show. (Gaga and Bruno instead covered The Mamas and the Papas’ ‘60s classic “California Dreamin’” at Music’s Biggest Night.) Nevertheless, the song could get a bump from its win for best pop duo/group performance, and for Gaga’s headline-capturing acceptance speech standing up for the trans community.  

In any event, “Die With a Smile” remains a monster on streaming, sticking in the top 10 on Apple Music and climbing back to No. 1 on Spotify’s Daily Songs Top USA chart. It also continues to threaten the reign of Shaboozey’s “A Bar Song (Tipsy)” on radio, though that 27-week Radio Songs No. 1 might not give up that spot so easily. Regardless, its continued strong showing across streaming, sales and radio, it should be a pretty strong contender to return to No. 1 for a fifth frame next week. 

The Weeknd, “Cry for Me” & “Timeless” (w/ Playboi Carti) (XO/Republic): The Weeknd had a pretty enormous weekend, appropriately, as he both released his new album Hurry Up Tomorrow on Friday and then made a surprise return to the Grammys stage on Sunday after essentially boycotting the awards for four years after his After Hours blockbuster was shockingly ignored by the Recording Academy in 2021. The two songs he performed at the Grammys are also the two leading early performers from Tomorrow: “Timeless,” the Playboi Carti teamup that has already reached No. 3 on the Hot 100, and “Cry for Me,” a newly released early-album highlight.  

Both songs should be a factor in the top 10 race next week. “Cry for Me” has the edge on Apple Music, while “Timeless” leads on Spotify – and “Timeless” is obviously ahead on radio, having a months-long head start building airplay (though “Cry for Me” should debut on Pop Airplay and Rhythmic Airplay this week). Neither is likely to be No. 1 next week, but The Weeknd always has tricks up his sleeve to give his hits a little extra boot, so they can’t be totally counted out in the weeks to come.  

Travis Scott, “4×4” (Cactus Jack/Epic): The current No. 1 song on the Hot 100 is likely to have a considerable drop in week two, as the gargantuan first-week sales number the song posted (167,000) inevitably recedes, and the streaming numbers continue to slide. (The song is already out of the top 50 on both Spotify and Apple Music.) Nonetheless, Travis Scott‘s “4×4” won’t disappear completely, and has started to make gains on radio, with the song expected to jump on Mainstream R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay in its second week, and possibly even make the top 20 on Rhythmic Airplay.  

Doechii, “Denial Is a River” (Top Dawg/Capitol/ICLG): It won’t be a top 10 contender just yet, but the breakout hit from Doechii’s now-Grammy-winning mixtape Alligator Bites Never Heal (which she performed, along with “Catfish”) should be the biggest beneficiary from her post-Grammy-night bump in streams and sales — and had already started to make pretty big waves on the charts, climbing to No. 55 on the Hot 100 this week. Radio is starting to kick in for the track as well, with “Denial” also a threat to make the top 20 on Rhythmic Airplay while shooting up Mainstream R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay. 

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Source: Universal Pictures / Jurassic World Rebirth
Just when it seemed like the Jurassic Park franchise might’ve wrapped up after the events of Jurassic World: Dominion, Universal Pictures has decided to revisit the world in which dinosaurs exist in modern times with a sequel to the Jurassic Park series but prequel to the Jurassic World trilogy. Yeah, exactly.

Source: Universal Pictures / Jurassic World Rebirth
According to Variety, Jurassic World: Rebirth is set to stomp into theaters this coming July and will be taking place five years before the events of 2015’s Jurassic World, which starred Chris Pratt and Bryce Dallas Howard. Universal Pictures released the trailer to the Gareth Edwards feature earlier today (Feb. 5) and from the looks of it, it’s going to be one prehistoric ride in modern times.

Starring Scarlett Johanson as covert ops specialist Zora Bennett, the film centers around a team’s mission to secure genetic material from three of the biggest dinosaurs roaming what was once known as Jurassic Park. With hopes of cracking a medical breakthrough to save millions of lives, Bennett leads a team of scientists and others to the abandoned island only to learn that dinosaurs aren’t exactly domesticated and rather, well, territorial.
Needless to say, things go left almost immediately as there’s no actual playbook on how to deal with deadly and carnivorous prehistoric beasts.
Per Variety:
The cast also includes Jonathan Bailey, Rupert Friend, Ed Skrein, Mahershala Ali, Manuel Garcia-Rulfo, Luna Blaise, Philippine Velge, David Iacono, Audrina Miranda and Bechir Sylvain.
Bailey plays paleontologist Dr. Henry Loomis; Ali plays Duncan Kincaid, Zora’s partner; and Friend plays Martin Krebs, a representative for the drug corporation financing the mission. Velge, Sylvain and Skrein are said to play team members reporting to Zora.
We got Blade linking up with Black Widow in the Jurassic Park franchise before we got to see him in a Marvel cinematic movie. What the hell, man?!
Check out the trailer for Jurassic World: Rebirth and let us know if you’ll be checking for the flick when it hits theaters this coming July in the comments section below.

One of the many benefits of the internet is one that 20-somethings likely take for granted: immediate access to song lyrics.
Prior to the advent of Google and Safari, consumers who wanted confirmation of a song’s words generally needed to buy the album – and hope that it contained the lyrics – or pick up the sheet music. A few publications, such as Country Song Roundup or The Tennessean, regularly printed the text to hit songs, but other than that, fans were left to debate if they were hearing things right.

Still, the lyric sites aren’t always spot-on. Songwriters regularly laugh about the misprints of their material, which get passed from site to site, correctly or not.

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One obvious example comes with the new Parmalee single, “Cowgirl,” where lyric sites include this verse-one line: “Drivin’ a Range, but now I wanna giddy hard.”

Trending on Billboard

Clearly wrong, right? Wrong, it’s right!

“It’s like, ‘giddy up hard,’ man,” says Parmalee lead singer Matt Thomas. “You want to get it, get with it, you know? Like, ‘giddy hard.’ It’s one of those things where it doesn’t make any sense, but it kind of does, if you think about it.”

The thing that stands out most, though, about “Cowgirl” is a hard, syncopated backbeat. It feels like a cousin to the Bo Diddley groove or, as Thomas suggests, the cheerleader rhythms of the 1982 Mickey Basil pop hit “Mickey.” That alone should have programmers paying attention: sports-based riffs formed the foundation of Shania Twain’s “Any Man Of Mine” and “Man! I Feel Like A Woman!”

Despite the Western motif of the “Cowgirl” title, the song’s drumbeat is imported from the United Kingdom, where four songwriters – James Daniel Lewis, Peter David Newman, Robbie Jay and Thomas Frank Ridley Horsley – fashioned the bulk of it before shipping it off to 33 Creative co-owner Tina Crawford, who found it intriguing. She shared the programmed demo with her co-owner, writer-producer David Fanning (“Take My Name,” “Tennessee Orange”), who in turn brought it to Thomas. And they played it for Parmalee on the band’s bus.

“I don’t think there was a bridge in there, but for the most part, it was pretty much there,” recalls the band’s bassist, Barry Knox. “It was a solid, solid idea.”

The group’s other members, drummer Scott Thomas and guitarist Josh McSwain, agreed. Parmalee’s first single, 2012’s “Musta Had a Good Time,” had set expectations for a career built on hard-hitting uptempos, but the group’s biggest successes have leaned toward midtempos and ballads. That includes their last four singles, three of which – the Blanco Brown collaboration “Just the Way,” “Take My Name” and “Gonna Love You” – reached No. 1 on Country Airplay. Matt and Fanning thought the time was right for a song that grooved like “Cowgirl,” if they could fit it to Parmalee.

“We needed something unique and fresh,” Fanning says. “Coming from the U.K. and everything, they’re trying to write towards country music and get into this genre. And they just send us something that we really were like, ‘Hey, that sounds fresh. How do we make this Parmalee?’”

Batting it around for much of May, they changed a few lyrics, made some melodic tweaks and wrote a bridge to generate a change of pace. “We needed something catchy, something fun in there,” Matt says. “We needed something to sing that’s going to be abstract, kind of like the ‘giddy hard’ thing, and we came up with the ‘24-karat palomino.’ I was like, ‘Yeah, man – palomino, golden horse. That’s it.’ Like, everybody’s yell that during the break.”

Matt brought in the “giddy hard” thing, and all told, the song struck a balance between the abstractions and more standard images from mainstream country. “It’s got a lot of clichés in it, too,” Fanning notes. “You’re talking about [trucks] and Levi’s and Bud Light, all the things that are country. But that’s the thing about country music. That stuff never does get old. It’s just, how are you gonna say it differently?”

Halie Welch, the “Hawk Tuah girl,” was recording at the studio across the hall when Fanning produced “Cowgirl” at Nashville’s Sound Stage in early July, building on top of the percussive loop from the original demo, for which Lewis received a co-producing credit. Fanning assembled a small studio band, better enabling them to get through all five of the day’s songs speedily. Parmalee, though, watched from the control room to guide the studio players to performances that captured some of the nuances of the band.

“We’ve been playing together for 25 years, so we call it the Parmalee groove,” Knox says. “It’s more of a laidback kick drum groove, as opposed to a heavy forward[-leaning] punk kick drum. There’s a little more space in the Parmalee groove.”

The band would overdub instrumental parts later to get more of the band’s imprint on the recording, around the time that Matt threw down the final vocal, working the upper part of his register. Knox and McSwain joined him for an intense day of harmonies intended to enhance the light nature of “Cowgirl.”

“We were working in the afternoon, and I was like, ‘Alright, this is the song. We got to have a party,’” Matt recalls. “The idea was to go down to the strip club and have some tequilas, spend a couple hours in there, and then come back to the studio. But that didn’t happen.”

“Plan A didn’t quite work out, but plan B was we were still gonna have a little bit of tequila,” Knox says.The guys chased down harmonies from multiple spots in the studio, creating perhaps 30 or more total voices to fashion a party atmosphere.

“You’re singing eight feet from the mic, two feet from the mic, right on the mic, just going all around the room to try to create that crowdy kind of effect,” Fanning says. And yet, listeners paying close attention will discern an additional voice on the final chorus, a high-harmony enhancement that Matt wasn’t sure he could do until he nailed it.

Parmalee considered several different tracks as the next single, though “Cowgirl” got the nod once Knox broke the ice. “Barry walked on the bus one night,” Matt remembers, “and he’s like, ‘What are we doing? What are we doing? Why are we listening to any of these other songs to be the first single? We’re crazy if we don’t go with “Cowgirl.” ’

As it turned out, the rest of the band agreed. Stoney Creek released “Cowgirl” to country radio via PlayMPE on Jan. 8. It ranks No. 50 on the Country Airplay chart dated Feb. 8 in its fourth week on the list.

Meanwhile, the odd lyric could prove to be one of its most beneficial traits.

“It’ll probably be the one word in the song that people hear and have no idea what it is, and it’s gonna make them Google it,” Knox says. “So I’m like, ‘Put it in there. I’m in.’ That’s kind of our go-to word now. Like, ‘Hey, man, we gonna giddy hard tonight.’”