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Following singer-songwriter Zach Bryan‘s breakup with ex-girlfriend Brianna LaPaglia (aka Brianna Chickenfry), it seems some online users have been intent on trying to discover whether the Billboard Hot 100 chart-topper has a new girlfriend. And according to Bryan, some of those users have been “harassing” his friends in the process.
In a series of Instagram Stories on Jan. 9, Bryan railed against “f–kin weird couch warriors” whom he claimed have been “attacking and belittling my friends on the internet because you’re assuming I have a girlfriend.” Bryan added, “Everyone wonders why I quit touring and don’t want to be attached to music anymore, meanwhile you’re calling my friends ugly and harassing them?”
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He also clarified his current dating status, saying, “I don’t have a girlfriend and don’t plan on having a girlfriend however I do have normal friends that I love very much and would go to the ends of the earth for…you do not know me. You never will know me. Stop acting like you do.”
He continued, “I am allowed to have love, laughter and good people in my life. No matter how bad of a person you think I am, go ahead and come for me. I can take all the hatred because I’m not a child. But do not come for my friends who do nothing but love and care for me. Everyone wants you to have fun and make great music but you guys are making it really hard to do that with my friends getting insulted and death threats every day.”
Bryan also noted, “Every day I lose a little more faith in humanity and everyday I get closer to never being in the public’s [sic] eye again which is incredibly sad because I truly do really love humans and being happy and joking around and laughing a lot. I love my life. I’ve worked very hard for it. Whether you think I deserve it or not. Stop being such sad and fat fingered internet sleuths to my friends. We’re all humans and I’m so tired of people thinking social media is a way to have a high moral ground on people they’ve never met? Guess people aren’t humans anymore since they can hide behind screens? Weird a–holes man ok I’m done.”
His series of Instagram Stories entries continued as the former Navy member (he was honorably discharged following eight years of service), who also weathered the passing of his mother in 2016, spoke out against people trying to give him unsolicited advice about grief and coping with fame.
“Ahh, one more thing: I don’t need people telling me to hang in there, sympathizing with me, or giving me advice on how to handle something or things they’ve never coped with,” he wrote. “I lost my mother, I’ve been in war zones, and I’ve battled this whole fame thing for five years. Respectfully I don’t need your unsolicited advice. I’m a grown man. I promise I can get through some little bullies on the internet hahaha. I am so terrifyingly unphased [sic] by the fake s–t people say about me online but coming for people I love and care for is my line and my final straw. Okay have a good day everyone love you miss you.”
Bryan recently wrapped his The Quittin’ Time Tour, which played a slew of top venues, including numerous stadiums, throughout 2024. Last year, he also issued the album The Great American Bar Scene, which rose to No. 2 on the Billboard 200.
A month ago, when holiday shoppers were scrolling through websites for gifts and rockin’ around the Christmas tree, it was easy to miss the quiet release of a three-song EP by the developing sister trio The Castellows.
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But tucked onto the end of Alabama Stone, issued Dec. 6 by Warner Music Nashville (WMN), was an exquisitely melancholy song, “Girl That Boy,” that’s a bit of a mystery. Even though the listener doesn’t know it’s a mystery the first time through until the last few seconds.
At the end of its three-and-a-half-minute run, “Girl That Boy” employs a lyrical flip, unexpectedly changing its innocent meaning. It’s jarring, refreshing – and practically demands a second listen, if for no other reason than to figure out how the storyline ended up in such a surprising place. It’s such a fluid revision that the song’s conclusion can be seen in at least five or six nuanced ways, a scenario that’s entertaining to the group.
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“People will talk to me about our songs and be like, ‘Oh, I love what you meant when you did that lyric,’” says The Castellows’ Ellie Balkcom. “I’m like, ‘That’s not what I meant, that’s not what I was intending.’ But also seeing alternate meanings from what other people have [imagined] is so cool.”
The inverted finale in “Girl That Boy” isn’t just a surprise to the audience. All five writers were likewise shocked when the song’s narrative wrapped with an unplanned meaning. “It just turned into a completely different song,” says Kendell Marvel (“Either Way,” “Right Where I Need To Be”).
Marvel and The Highwomen’s Natalie Hemby (“Bluebird,” “Pontoon”) started building the mystery with all three of The Castellows – 20-something sisters Ellie, Lily and Powell Balkcom – on Nov. 29, 2023, in Nashville. Marvel didn’t know much about the group, but he was quickly impressed by their skill set and demeanor.
“They were super-smart, you can tell – very respectful and just talented musicians, so far ahead of their time for their age,” Marvel says. “I was really blown away by how grown up they were with their songwriting. And I just had that title, ‘Girl That Boy,’ and had this idea on what I thought it should be, and I thought they were the right artists for it. They were the right age to be saying something like this.”
He envisioned “Girl That Boy” as a mother warning her daughter about the pitfalls of dating a specific guy. But instead of drawing on The Castellows’ firsthand dating experiences, the writers instead focused on a long-established relationship. “They’re very close to their parents,” Hemby notes, “and we all started talking about what their mom would say about their dad. It was an interesting journey.”
Hemby started playing piano in the key of D, easing into a musical progression with a handful of major-seventh chords and minor triads that created a frail framework. She also launched into a melody that emphasized the moody notes in the chords. The text opened with a conversational line that incorporated the hook: “Mama said, ‘Girl, that boy will try to hold your hand.” They repeated the “Girl That Boy” title at the beginning of each successive section of verse – that boy would “try to kiss you” and “try to change your name.”
“We were using things we see in our parents to write that song,” Ellie says, “even if we weren’t [doing it] deliberately.”
But at the end of the last verse, as Mom tells her daughter that this guy is actually good for her, she suddenly changes the relationship: “Girl, that boy, he was your dad.” Suddenly, it was clear that “Girl That Boy” wasn’t really the romantic song it seemed; instead, it celebrated the protective nature of a typical father-daughter relationship. “We didn’t write the song thinking, ‘Oh, let’s flip it at the end,” Hemby recalls. “That was something we just ended on. It was kind of an accident.”
Though they’d written the verses in linear fashion, they struggled with the chorus that day and ultimately tabled it for another two weeks, meeting up again at 9 a.m. on Dec. 14 to tackle it again before they headed off to other writing sessions. “Just because you started that day doesn’t mean you’re supposed to finish it that day,” Hemby says. “It’s good to let it breathe for a minute.”
When they reassembled at Concord Music, the work went fairly quickly. They developed a chorus that suggested youth – “He’s gonna make you mad and act a fool/ ‘Cause he’s got a lot of growing up to do” – but would fit the eventual flip. To match it, the center of the chorus melody landed about six notes higher than the verses, providing a lift, though it concentrated on the related key of B-minor, emphasizing the mystery sonically. And that chorus never once included the hook.
Marvel recorded a gruff-but-emotional work tape, and the Balkcoms made their own work tape with three-part harmony that was, Ellie says, “rough around the edges.”
WMN tapped Durham, N.C.-based producer Brad Cook (Nathaniel Rateliff & the Night Sweats, Bon Iver) to produce two songs. But once they got into Sound Emporium, they expanded the work to five tracks, including “Girl That Boy,” which Cook hadn’t previously heard. After Ellie played it through, the studio group – including Cook on bass, Powell on banjo, Ellie and Mike Harris on guitar, and Eric Slick on drums – instinctively chased down the arrangement without any real planning. Not that they needed any.
“A big part of my job is reharmonizing things,” Cook says. “Maybe we can pull out a different emotion if we reharmonize a part of the song, or switch up the changes here and there. But that one was definitely as-is.”
The musicians applied a less-is-more approach, with minimal fills and swells while The Castellows’ parents watched from the control room. Once those spare instrumental parts – including Ellie’s piano overdub – were completed, the Balkcoms cut their vocals facing each other with three different mics in the center of the main studio with Lily on lead vocal, Ellie singing high harmonies and Powell on the low end. It created more of a unified dynamic than had they worked in separate vocal booths.
“I’ve had this happen with young people before, where most of their entire experience has been them hearing each other in proximity,” Cook notes. “To separate that can take out an element of what they understand at this stage. I hadn’t done that, frankly, in a very long time, trying to get isolated group vocals with minimal bleed in the same room.”
At a later date, Cook had Thomas Rhett’s steel guitarist, Whit Wyatt, put a little more melancholy on the track, and Cook overdubbed a cello part he wasn’t sure The Castellows would appreciate. “We told him to turn it up,” Ellie says.
The result is a gorgeous, haunting performance that sounds a tad harmonically like the Trio: Dolly Parton, Linda Ronstadt and Emmylou Harris. It may have made just a small ripple during the holidays, but some those who unwrapped “Girl That Boy” have flipped out over its flip, and its sweet vulnerability.
“I try not to pay attention to it too much,” Ellie says, “But people who know us personally [were] like, ‘I cried when I heard the end of the song.’ My cousin sent me a picture of her in tears. We’ve gotten a really positive reaction from it. I’m happy – really happy – it’s out.”
The TikTok Billboard Top 50 has a new No. 1 after the holiday season. Tyler, the Creator, M.I.A. and more battle for the top spot. Keep watching to see who is No. 1 this week! Tetris Kelly:A new year means a bunch of new top 10 hits and a return to No. 1. M.I.A.’s “Paper […]
Mandy Moore is one of the thousands of people affected by the devastating fires that continue to rage across Los Angeles, and the star took to Instagram to share videos and photos of the damage she and her community endured.
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“I love you, Altadena. Grateful for my family and pets getting out last night before it was too late (and endless gratitude to friends for taking us in and bringing us clothes and blankets),” she wrote on Wednesday (Jan. 8) alongside videos of her neighborhood, engulfed in smoke and flames. “Honestly, I’m in shock and feeling numb for all so many have lost, including my family. My children’s school is gone. Our favorite restaurants, leveled. So many friends and loved ones have lost everything too. Our community is broken but we will be here to rebuild together. Sending love to all affected and on the front lines trying to get this under control.”
She followed-up with another series of photos the next, this time from her property, much of which was left as rubble. “We were able to park and walk up our street to bear witness to all the loss. Miraculously, the main part of our house is still standing,” she wrote. “For now. It’s not livable but mostly intact.”
Moore continued, “Everyone we know lost everything. Every house on our street is gone. My in laws. My brother and sister in law- 6 weeks from welcoming their first baby. Our best friends. Feeling weird survivors guilt. We love this community and will do everything we can to help rebuild and support. Thanks for everyone for checking on us and offering us help. Altadena strong.”
See her post here.
She joins a number of celebrities who also lost their homes or sustained significant damage, including Jhené Aiko, Paris Hilton, Anna Faris, Spencer and Heidi Pratt, Leighton Meester and Adam Brody and Diane Warren, among others.
A series of wildfires broke out across Los Angeles this week, fanned by gust-like winds, leading to more than 200,000 evacuations. The Palisades Fire on the west side of the city has consumed more than 17,000 acres, while the Eaton Fire on the east burned more than 10,000 acres. Crews also fought the Sunset Fire on Wednesday night (Jan. 8) in the Runyon Canyon area of the Hollywood Hills, and the blaze led to the burning of dozens of acres of vegetation.
After dropping to No. 2 on the TikTok Billboard Top 50 for a week amid holiday-related gains (punctuated by the reign of Wham!’s “Last Christmas”), M.I.A.’s “Paper Planes” returns to No. 1 on the chart dated Jan. 11.
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The TikTok Billboard Top 50 is a weekly ranking of the most popular songs on TikTok in the United States based on creations, video views and user engagement. The latest chart reflects activity Dec. 30-Jan. 5. Activity on TikTok is not included in Billboard charts except for the TikTok Billboard Top 50.
“Paper Planes” nabs its second week at No. 1 after initially rising to the top of the Dec. 28, 2024-dated list. Its ascension is tied to a dance trend featuring the tune, which reached No. 4 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 2008. It earned 4.2 million official U.S. streams toward the Billboard charts in the week ending Jan. 2, according to Luminate, good for No. 9 on the Hot Alternative Songs chart.
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The song reigns over a previous TikTok Billboard Top 50 No. 1 in Djo’s “End of Beginning,” which roars back onto the tally at No. 2. Djo’s 2022 track exploded on TikTok in early 2024, eventually rising to No. 1 for two weeks in March of that year, though the tune hadn’t appeared on the ranking since July — until now.
Why is “End of Beginning” back? At the end of the song’s first verse, Djo’s Joe Keery asks, “Remember 24?” Though the lyrics in question reference being 24 years old, TikTok users flipped the script to refer to the year 2024, with some instructing viewers to start playing the song at a certain time on Dec. 31, 2024, so that they’d hear “Remember 24?” right as 2025 began.
“End of Beginning,” which peaked at No. 11 on the Hot 100 in March 2024, scored a 25% bump in chart-eligible streams in the week ending Jan. 2, earning 4.9 million listens.
Naughty Boy’s “La La La,” featuring Sam Smith, reaches a new peak of No. 3 on the TikTok Billboard Top 50 after leaping into the top 10 for the first time on the Jan. 4 ranking. The song remains driven by a trend featuring two or more people, with one creator lip-synching in the foreground and others dancing or acting out a scene in the background.
“La La La” concurrently debuts at No. 101 on the Billboard Global 200, and it sports a 12% jump in U.S. official streams to 3.7 million in the week ending Jan. 2. The tune peaked at No. 19 on the Hot 100 in 2014.
Three other songs round out the TikTok Billboard Top 50’s top 10, including one chart debut. Sam Austins’ “Seasons” leads the pack, leaping 16-7 after benefitting from an influx of year-end videos in which users recap their styles and looks throughout 2024, among other viral usages.
Tyler, the Creator’s “Sticky” — which features GloRilla, Sexyy Red and Lil Wayne — also makes it into the top 10 for the first time at No. 9, becoming the second song from the rapper’s St. Chroma to reach that region, after “Like Him” peaked at No. 3 in December (it ranks at No. 6 on the latest tally). Its rise comes in its ninth week on the survey, driven by a variety of uses that highlight the song’s different verses from its four rappers, with a more recent one including a dance involving twirling one’s hair to the “grab that mop” lyric.
And at No. 10, “I Always Wanted a Brother” from the new film Mufasa: The Lion King bows as the week’s top debut. The song went viral on TikTok at the tail end of 2024 (the movie was released on Dec. 20, 2024) as users highlighted the way that Scar (voiced by Theo Somolu as a cub) sings the word “brother” (as well as the animation of said singing). It’s since been utilized in lip-synching content as well.
See the full TikTok Billboard Top 50 here. You can also tune in each Friday to SiriusXM’s TikTok Radio (channel 4) to hear the premiere of the chart’s top 10 countdown at 3 p.m. ET, with reruns heard throughout the week.
The Los Angeles wildfires have wreaked havoc throughout the county, and we have updates on how the music industry has been affected. Keep watching for more details. Tetris Kelly:Iconic studios fall and concerts are canceled as wildfires wreak havoc in L.A. Los Angeles is currently rushing to contain an outbreak of massive wildfires across the […]
Stray Kids’ HOP spends a third week in a row at No. 1 on Billboard’s Top Album Sales chart (dated Jan. 11), as the set sold 27,000 copies in the U.S. in the week ending Jan. 2 (down 46%), according to Luminate. The effort debuted atop the chart dated Dec. 28 and has yet to […]
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Jhené Aiko is one of the thousands of people who lost their homes amid the devastating fires blazing across Los Angeles this week. The “Bed Peace” singer took to social media on Thursday (Jan. 9) to reveal that her home was “burned to the ground with all of our things inside,” but her two-year-old son […]
Wildfires have devastated thousands in the Los Angeles area this week. Kid Cudi revealed on Wednesday night (Jan. 8) that he and his family evacuated his L.A. home safely.
“Hey guys, had to evacuate my crib,” he began in a heartfelt Instagram Story. “Im safe, w my loved ones, dogs are safe. For all the folk who lost their homes, people that are dealing with this, my heart hurts for you and Im for praying us all and I send ALL my love to you and yours. if you have to evacuate, get out immediately. Dont hesitate. Be safe LA. Love you guys.”
Cudi’s update on his safety was his first post to social media this year since announcing he was taking a hiatus from the various platforms in December.
“I’ll keep y’all updated [through] my Stories, but I won’t be posting much on there either,” he wrote to X in December. “Just projects and things [that] I [have] goin’ on will be posted by my team… I see too much bulls–t on here… I think I’ve been too accessible. Now, when [you] hear from me, it’ll be through my art.”
The L.A. area wildfires have become the most destructive in the history of the city, per the Associated Press. The blazes have forced nearly 180,000 people to evacuate, according to CBS News, with CNN reporting that another 200,000 are under warnings to evacuate. Meanwhile, the east-side Eaton Fire has caused five deaths so far and burned more than 10,600 acres near Pasadena.
Many celebrities have attempted to spread awareness about the devastation and posted links to resources to help L.A. residents, including Ariana Grande, Billie Eilish, Shawn Mendes and Paris Hilton.
Hilton was among those who lost their homes to the blaze. “Heartbroken beyond words,” she wrote to IG. “Sitting with my family, watching the news, and seeing our home in Malibu burn to the ground on live TV is something no one should ever have to experience.”
For health alerts, evacuation updates and shelter information, check out Los Angeles County’s emergency website.