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Demi Lovato and Jordan ‘Jutes’ Lutes are honeymooning in tropical paradise.
In an Instagram post shared Monday (June 16), the singer gave fans a look inside their post-wedding vacation. One photo shows the couple kissing while enjoying dinner on the beach, while other snaps find them smooching with bright turquoise water filling up the background behind them.

Lovato also shared a clip of herself and the music producer riding jet skis, as well as a number of photos in which the glowing Camp Rock alum models different bikinis. “Honeymoon dump,” Lovato wrote in the caption.

“Wifey,” Jutes commented on the post, along with: “I love u so much.”

Trending on Billboard

The honeymoon update comes a few weeks after the pop star and Jutes tied the knot in California in late May. Lovato has shared a number of photos from the ceremony, including many of the gorgeous Vivienne Westwood gown they walked down the aisle in.

Lovato and Jutes first made their relationship Instagram official in 2022 before getting engaged in 2023. “My love, I’m beyond excited to marry you … every day I’ve spent with you has been a dream come true and I can’t wait to love and cherish you forever,” the former Disney Channel star wrote at the time.

Lovato echoed those thoughts in February this year while sharing snaps from an Old Hollywood-themed Valentine’s Day photoshoot the couple did. “Jordan, I cannot WAIT to marry you!!” she wrote at the time. “The past 3 years have been the best 3 years of my life and I have you to thank for that. I’m obsessed with your heart, your love and your light. I can’t wait to grow old with you and start a family together. Happy Valentine’s Day to the love of my life. I love you honey!!!”

In addition to being life partners, Lovato and Jutes are also collaborators. The latter helped to write multiple songs on his now-wife’s 2022 album Holy Fvck, which reached No. 7 on the Billboard 200.

Lovato is now working on their next album, telling Jimmy Fallon last September that the next project will likely reflect the lovey-dovey phase of life the singer is in now. “I’ve been writing nothing but love songs and sexy songs, because I’m in this really good place,” she said at the time. “It feels good to be able to write coming from that place.”

“I don’t know when it’ll come out,” Lovato added. “But it’ll come out when I’m ready.”

THE BIG STORY: Years after it was first filed, the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday declined to revive a lawsuit claiming Ed Sheeran’s 2014 hit “Thinking Out Loud” infringed Marvin Gaye‘s famed 1973 jam “Let’s Get It On.”
The decision is the latest win for Sheeran in a nine-year legal odyssey over two songs that do, in fact, sound pretty similar to many listeners. Spin described “Thinking” as “an incredibly obvious successor” to Gaye’s song, and countless YouTube accounts mashed them up. Even Sheeran himself seemed to agree: In an infamous video clip, he was captured toggling between the two at a 2014 concert.

He was sued over those similarities in 2016 by the daughter of Ed Townsend, who co-wrote the 1973 tune with Gaye, but that case ended with a high-profile jury verdict that said Sheeran and his co-writers had independently created their song. He was sued again in 2018 by Structured Asset Sales (SAS), an entity owned by industry executive David Pullman that controls a different stake in Townsend’s copyrights. But in November, a federal appeals court tossed that case, too, ruling the songs share only basic “musical building blocks” that all songwriters are free to use.

Trending on Billboard

With Monday’s move by SCOTUS, which will allow that decision to stand, is Sheeran’s long copyright nightmare finally over? Not quite yet.

Back in 2020, Pullman’s company filed yet another case over “Thinking” — something of a creative gambit to get around shortcomings of the earlier lawsuits. A judge had ruled that Townsend’s copyrights covered only the basic sheet music to “Let’s Get It On,” and not Gaye’s famous recorded version you’ve heard countless times. So SAS’s lawyers filed for an entirely new copyright on the recorded version and then sued Sheeran for infringing it.

Can they do that? Unclear. The newer lawsuit has been paused for years while the earlier case played out in court, meaning a judge has not yet ruled on whether the get-a-new-copyright maneuver is legally viable in the first place. But after Monday’s move by the Supreme Court, the case will now be reopened for action.

Speaking to Billboard on Monday, each side previewed the battle ahead. Pullman said Sheeran and his co-defendants “fear” the sound recording and vowed that his newer case “will now go forward.” Meanwhile, Sheeran’s attorney, Donald Zakarin, stressed that his client had already been cleared by a jury of his peers.

“Pullman’s completely unauthorized and improper purported registration of the Marvin Gaye recording of ‘Let’s Get It On,’ 50 years after it was created, will not change that fact,” Zakarin said. “If he truly believed that the second case he filed was so compelling — which it is not — he would not have spent the last two years pursuing his failed first case.”

You’re reading The Legal Beat, a weekly newsletter about music law from Billboard Pro, offering you a one-stop cheat sheet of big new cases, important rulings and all the fun stuff in between. To get the newsletter in your inbox every Tuesday, go subscribe here.

Other top stories this week…

SMOKEY ROBINSON UPDATE – Facing a rape lawsuit from his former housekeepers, the Motown legend argued in new court filings that his accusers are trying to slow-walk the case to gain maximum leverage for an extortionate settlement payout, including by dealing a financial blow to his ongoing tour. His lawyers say attorneys for the housekeepers want to “let the lawsuit linger publicly while the Robinsons have to live every day under the unfair specter of public opinion.”

IT NEVER ENDS – Amid their bruising legal battle over the movie It End With Us, Blake Lively asked a federal judge to block Justin Baldoni’s continued efforts to see her texts with Taylor Swift, arguing her nemesis shouldn’t be allowed to drag the pop superstar into the court battle just to generate “sensational headlines.” Separately in the same messy fight, Lively moved to subpoena music executive Scooter Braun, seeking to find out what the HYBE America boss knows about Baldoni’s alleged smear campaign against her.

DIDDY TRIAL CONTINUES – The sex-trafficking trial of Sean “Diddy” Combs continued into a sixth week, as the prosecution nears the conclusion of its case. Week Five was dominated by testimony from “Jane,” a former girlfriend who says the star coerced her into taking part in the “freak-off” sex parties at the heart of the case — and by a brief moment where Ye (formerly Kanye West) stopped by the courthouse. Week Six kicked off with the judge dismissing a juror for giving inconsistent answers about where he lives — a ruling that rejected warnings by Combs’ attorneys that the dispute was a “thinly veiled effort to dismiss a Black juror.”

MORE AI LAWSUITS – Artificial intelligence music startups Suno and Udio were hit with new copyright lawsuits — this time, proposed class actions on behalf of independent artists who have been “left without a seat at the table” in the high-profile litigation filed by Universal Music, Warner Music and Sony Music. The cases, filed by a country singer named Tony Justice on behalf of “thousands” of indie artists, came weeks after news broke that the majors were negotiating potential settlements with the two tech firms that would see them license their music for AI training.

MEGAN GAG ORDER – A federal judge issued a gag order in Megan Thee Stallion’s defamation lawsuit against gossip blogger Milagro Gramz over the Tory Lanez shooting, barring both sides from talking about the case. The ruling cited warnings from the star’s lawyers that Gramz’s ongoing posts about Megan had sparked “severely critical and derogatory comments” about the star that could potentially “incite violence.”

R. KELLY WANTS OUT – The disgraced R&B star asked a federal judge to cut short his 30-plus-year sentence for racketeering, sexual abuse and child pornography, claiming jail officials tried to solicit a member of the Aryan Brotherhood prison gang to kill him. In later filings, Kelly’s lawyers claimed he’d been placed in solitary confinement as retaliation, and that he’d been rushed to the hospital after officials gave him a lethal quantity of his medications. Prosecutors denied the allegations, calling them “deeply unserious” and the “behavior of an abuser and a master manipulator” on full display: “This court should not allow Kelly to turn its docket into a grocery store checkout aisle tabloid,” prosecutors wrote.

50 CENT HORROR FIGHT – The producers of SkillHouse, a horror movie starring 50 Cent, responded to the rapper’s recent lawsuit aimed at blocking its premiere next month, blasting the case as “a baseless and last-minute shakedown.” Fifty claims he never signed off on the movie and hasn’t been paid, but the producers argued that they have “a mountain of documentary evidence” that he did, in fact, agree to appear in and promote the flick.

DOXXING DISPUTE – A Los Angeles judge ruled that the hip-hop powerhouse Top Dawg Entertainment must face claims that the company “doxxed” two women after they sued the record label for sexual harassment and assault. The judge refused to dismiss allegations that the company broke a newly enacted California law outlawing doxxing — revealing someone’s identity non-consensually — by including the names of the two “Jane Doe” accusers in a response statement that called the lawsuit a “shakedown.”

MANSLAUGHTER PLEA – The Atlanta rapper Silento, best known for his 2015 chart-topper “Watch Me (Whip/Nae Nae),” was sentenced to 30 years in prison after pleading guilty to fatally shooting his cousin in 2021. Facing a looming trial, the 27-year-old rapper avoided murder charges by admitting to voluntary manslaughter, aggravated assault, gun possession and concealing a death, crimes he said he’d committed while mentally ill.

THE SARCASM DEFENSE – Karol G and UMG fired back at a copyright lawsuit claiming she lifted key elements of “Gatúbela,” a track on her chart-topping album Mañana Será Bonito, from an earlier song. In the filing, they denied claims that one of the song’s producers effectively admitted to the theft in an Instagram comment — arguing that he posted it “sarcastically” and that it clearly wasn’t an admission of liability.

TORTIOUS REUNION? Música mexicana singer-songwriter Codiciado filed a lawsuit against his old record label, Rancho Humilde, and former bandmates in the ensemble Grupo Codiciado, claiming they stole his intellectual property by getting the band back together under the name Los Codicia2 after he went solo.

DISCRIMINATION DEAL – Nas’ record label and media company, Mass Appeal, inked a settlement with a white former executive, Melissa Cooper, who claimed that she was the target of discrimination and forced out because of her race. The deal, the terms of which were not disclosed, will resolve a lawsuit in which Cooper claimed that she had been subject to animosity because she was a “white woman working in hip-hop.”

PHOTO FIGHT – Robin Thicke was hit with a copyright lawsuit for allegedly posting paparazzi pictures of himself on Instagram without paying to license the images. The case, filed by celebrity photo agency BackGrid USA, is the latest in a string of such lawsuits over artists posting themselves to socials — cases that have targeted Jennifer Lopez, Miley Cyrus, Dua Lipa, Justin Bieber and others.

Machine Gun Kelly has revealed the name of his daughter, nearly three months after he and Megan Fox welcomed their first child together. On Tuesday (June 17), MGK hopped on Instagram to share a clip of him playing music for their daughter on a ukulele. He captioned the post, “Saga Blade Fox-Baker, thank you for […]

R. Kelly was reportedly hospitalized following claims of an alleged overdose while in prison. The singer is now seeking a pardon from President Donald Trump. Keep watching for the full story. Tetris Kelly: R. Kelly was reportedly hospitalized after what he is claiming was another attempt on his life inside prison. His defense attorneys are […]

Electronic dance music may have been born in America, emerging from the disco dancefloors of 1970s New York, the house hotbed of ’80s Chicago, and the techno frontier of ’80s Detroit, but it initially found a more receptive audience abroad. While the U.S. largely relegated it to the underground, Europe and Latin America embraced it wholesale, building ecosystems of clubs, festivals and media that treated dance as a cultural fixture.
Billboard launched its first “Disco Action” dance charts in the ‘70s and built a legacy of covering dance music well before the digital era, thanks to talented journalists like Larry Flick, Michael Paoletta and Brian Chin. When I joined Billboard in 2014, the genre lived in a column called CODE, with sharp contributing voices like Kerri Mason and Zel McCarthy keeping the beat alive.

Dance music was exploding in popularity in America, but the legacy media hadn’t entirely caught up. While Rolling Stone and SPIN gave deadmau5 and Skrillex cover stories during the early EDM boom of 2011–2012 and Billboard dedicated three cover stories to the genre’s explosion throughout 2012, most top-tier U.S. music publications weren’t offering dedicated coverage of the genre. Meanwhile, in Europe, outlets like Mixmag, Resident Advisor and DJ Mag were deeply embedded in the scene, offering both depth and consistency that was largely absent in the American press.

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As a result, the scene relied on a network of scrappy music blogs with their ear to the ground and finger on the pulse. Social media was reshaping the ecosystem. Artists were breaking online before they ever hit radio, and the direct line to fans was turning DJs into stars. At the same time, the democratization of digital tools gave rise to a new generation of bedroom producers, making tracks on laptops that could suddenly reach millions.

I was living in Berlin when Kerri gave me the opportunity to start freelancing for Billboard in 2014. My first feature was on a then-unknown kid named Kygo, before he’d ever played outside his native Norway. Soon after, I was covering European festivals like Tomorrowland and Sónar, and the doors that opened for Billboard made it clear we had a rare window to build something meaningful.

Feeling the winds of destiny at my back, I moved back to New York and delivered a 10-page proposal for a Billboard Dance vertical. Looking back, I probably could have been more concise. Nothing happens overnight at a legacy media brand, and this was no exception. I’ll always be grateful to Tye Comer and Mike Bruno for championing my vision and helping win over the higher-ups to get it approved.

When we announced Billboard Dance’s launch in 2015, the industry welcomed it as a much-needed step forward in the scene’s stateside maturation. One piece of feedback I often heard was that my hiring felt like the passing of a generational torch. I was seen as part of the blog-era generation, close in age to many of the artists we were covering and trusted by the community that had championed them early on. As a DJ and producer myself, I could speak their language and recognize the difference between innovative production and recycled presets when deciding which artists to spotlight.

With full-time focus, dedicated resources and standalone social channels, Billboard Dance’s coverage could expand beyond the charts and into the culture. These additions were buoyed by the launch of the Hot Dance/Electronic chart in 2013, with the team recognizing and responding to the genre’s explosion. The additions of passionate contributors like Dave Rishty and Kat Bein helped our lean team punch above its weight class and go toe-to-toe with much larger outlets.

We built a reputation for curation, spotlighting artists like Martin Garrix, Alison Wonderland and Black Coffee long before they became headliners. As a new wave of artists climbed the Billboard Hot 100, we put faces to the movement — The Chainsmokers and Marshmello as crossover juggernauts, Diplo and DJ Snake as global tastemakers, REZZ and TOKiMONSTA as rising voices from the underground — and gave them the covers they deserved.

It’s been really heartening to see Billboard Dance continue to thrive under Katie Bain’s leadership since she took over in June of 2019. She’s brought thoughtful editorial vision and a clear sense of where the scene is headed, helping the brand remain relevant for a new generation of dance music fans.  The Launch   Launching it as “Billboard Dance” was a victory in itself. At the time, there were some who pushed for “Billboard EDM,” but we held the line. History has smiled on that decision, as the term “EDM” has become synonymous with a very specific (and often reviled) subset of the genre, while “Dance” gave us the latitude to reflect the full spectrum of global, cross-genre electronic music. I remember getting coffee with Dutch house and techno DJ/producer Joris Voorn during one Amsterdam Dance Event, and he thanked me for using the term “dance,” saying it showed the broader scene was finally being taken seriously by American media. “With all due respect,” he quipped. “We wouldn’t be sitting here right now if you were Billboard EDM.”

It illustrated the rift that existed between mainstream dance music and the underground at the time, a divide I addressed in an early op-ed. We made a concerted effort to bridge that gap, spotlighting house and techno artists like Jamie Jones, Guy Gerber and Damian Lazarus with their first Billboard features through our “The Dance World According to“ series.

Shortly after we launched Billboard Dance, dance music entered a generational run of pop chart crossovers. In 2015, Major Lazer and DJ Snake’s “Lean On” debuted at No. 4 on the Hot 100, while Skrillex and Diplo’s “Where Are Ü Now” peaked at No. 8 and helped resurrect Justin Bieber’s career. The following year ushered in an unprecedented streak for The Chainsmokers, who landed five top-ten hits with “Roses” (No. 6), “Don’t Let Me Down” (No. 3), “Closer” (No. 1), “Paris” (No. 6) and “Something Just Like This” (No. 3). Some of the old rock heads at the publication still didn’t respect dance music, but they could no longer deny its relevance.

The cover stories always felt especially meaningful because dance music has long carried a bit of an underdog complex. The Marshmello cover in March 2018 was a standout. It was the masked artist’s first-ever interview and a testament to the trust we’d built by covering his rise from the start. Scarcely three years earlier, we’d published the first-ever photo of him wearing his now-iconic helmet — a true full-circle moment. In that short span, he had gone from a total unknown to a global hitmaker, and just a few months later, he would release his biggest hit to date, “Happier” (No. 2).

April 20, 2018, is a day I’ll never forget. Billboard broke the news of Avicii’s passing, sending shockwaves of grief and disbelief through the music world. I remember having to compose myself before stepping into a whirlwind of media appearances — Good Morning America, CBS, Reuters, The New York Times‘Popcast and more. It felt surreal, and honestly uncomfortable, to speak publicly so soon after his death. But in the days that followed, several people close to Tim reached out to express appreciation for how his story was told.

Looking back, I do think his loss changed the trajectory of dance music. As I wrote in his Billboard obituary five days later, Avicii’s loss marked the end of innocence for the scene. It forced the industry to confront the toll of nonstop touring and the elephant in the room: mental health. Conversations that had long been avoided were suddenly impossible to ignore.

Launching the Billboard Dance 100 in 2018 was a milestone. We became the first publication to secure full touring data from every major booking agency, going beyond hard ticket sales to deliver the most accurate snapshot of the global dance/electronic touring landscape and inform the rankings. But the most powerful statistic, in my view, was the 180,000 fan votes from 174 countries. That overwhelming response opened eyes both inside and outside the publication to the truly global reach of dance music’s fanbase.

Taking Billboard Dance from URL to IRL with the Dance 100 events at 1 Hotel South Beach during Miami Music Week marked a defining moment for the brand. In an industry built on live music and real-world connection, these events made it real. Everyone from Armin van Buuren and Nicky Romero to Marshmello’s manager, Moe Shalizi, and Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon came through to celebrate. Having Afrojack and Arty on the decks didn’t hurt either. 

Afrojack

World Red Eye/Courtesy of Matt Medved 

Dance Music’s Continued Evolution

One encouraging shift over the years is that the music industry has finally accepted that dance music is here to stay. I remember having to answer the same question ad nauseum in our early Billboard meetings: “When will the EDM bubble burst?”

A decade later, the numbers speak for themselves. According to the 2025 IMS Business Report, the global electronic music industry has reached a record value of $12.9 billion, marking a staggering 87% increase since Billboard Dance’s 2015 birth. That growth hasn’t come in a straight line. The industry was rocked by COVID, losing more than half its value in 2020 as festivals were canceled, clubs shuttered and touring ground to a halt. But the rebound has been swift and striking: a 34% surge in 2022, followed by another 17% climb in 2023.

When we launched Billboard Dance, TikTok didn’t exist. Soundcloud was still the first stop for discovery, and Spotify was just beginning to shift listening habits. Virality hinged on Hype Machine chart-toppers, not sped-up remix snippets blowing up overnight.

Today, discovery in dance music is a different beast. Spotify playlists are kingmakers, with premier placements critical to breaking a track. Social media has become the frontline where most listeners first encounter a song. A 20-second drop can ignite a worldwide trend. Keinemusik’s “Move” went parabolic even before its official release, buoyed by a wave of Instagram reels and TikTok edits that turned a live set highlight into a global hit. Viral Boiler Room sets have been career-making moments for artists like Fred again.. and Yousuke Yukimatsu. Tracks are breaking as much through content as they are through clubs.

Sonically, dance music has evolved significantly. The formulaic big-room drops that dominated the EDM era have given way to a broader, more dynamic spectrum. House and techno have taken over festival stages with a new generation of headliners like John Summit, Dom Dolla and Sara Landry. Of course, the real innovation remains on the side stages: in the rise of amapiano and Afro-house, the resurgence of jungle and drum and bass, and the creative cross-pollination of global sounds.

The Future

A decade after founding Billboard Dance, I believe we’re witnessing a new renaissance in dance music. Five years removed from a pandemic that shuttered the touring industry, we’re experiencing a boom driven by pent-up demand. From vinyl to CD-Js to digital, technology has always driven dance music forward, and today’s tools are accelerating that evolution.

One trend to watch is the rise of immersive audiovisual experiences. Just as modern dance music empowered producers to step out from behind the scenes and into the spotlight, we’re now seeing digital artists and audiovisual creators begin to take center stage. At Now Media, we’ve been covering the rise of Anyma long before his shows at the Sphere captured the world’s attention. Look at what Eric Prydz has done with HOLO, what Dixon is building through Transmoderna or how Max Cooper is merging sound with interactive installation art.

This movement is poised to go mainstream in a major way. Daft Punk’s pyramid set off an arms race in stage production, and I think Anyma’s Sphere shows will similarly be remembered as the spark for a new paradigm in dance music visuals.

Matt Medved 

Courtesy of Matt Medved 

The rise of AI-generated music is the biggest shift that not enough people are paying attention to. Tools like Suno and Udio can now turn a simple text prompt into a fully formed track within seconds. While we’re not quite at a Midjourney-for-music moment, the quality is improving at a remarkable pace. This is a seismic shift that’s going to impact everything from how music is made to how it’s valued. Dance music, with its reliance on repetition and structure rather than narrative or lyricism, is especially exposed. It’s a genre where AI can already mimic form convincingly, and that makes the stakes even higher for originality.

There’s disruptive creative potential here, especially for artists without access to traditional resources. Just as drum machines and DAWs once lowered the barrier to entry, AI tools are unlocking new creative workflows for electronic musicians to bring ideas to life. In my own productions, it’s been a game-changer — what used to take me weeks in the studio now takes hours. Producers can generate custom loops, build tailored sample packs on demand, create instant demos with AI vocalists, and use the tools as a dynamic sounding board to refine ideas in real time. The real value isn’t in simply pressing generate, but in how you select and shape those raw outputs into a sound that’s distinctly your own. As AI visual artist Claire Silver likes to say, “Taste is the new skill.”

But taste alone won’t be enough. Platforms are already flooded with AI-generated tracks, a relentless tide of indistinguishable output. As that volume becomes overwhelming in the years to come, the challenge shifts from production to curation. In a world where anyone can generate music instantly, listeners will gravitate toward what feels real. The artists who thrive in this new landscape will be those who can harness technology to create something meaningful and unmistakably human.  Matt Medved is the co-founder, CEO and editor-in-chief of Now Media. He previously served as the founding editor of Billboard Dance, editor-in-chief of SPIN and senior vp of content at Modern Luxury.   

Following the death of The Beach Boys’ Brian Wilson at age 82 on June 11, the group’s catalog surged 184% in equivalent album units earned in the United States in the week ending June 12, growing to 31,000, according to Luminate. Plus, the act’s classic 1966 album Pet Sounds reenters the Billboard 200 chart — and at its highest rank in nearly 60 years.

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Units comprise album sales, track equivalent albums (TEA) and streaming equivalent albums (SEA). Each unit equals one album sale, or 10 individual tracks sold from an album, or 3,750 ad-supported or 1,250 paid/subscription on-demand official audio and video streams generated by songs from an album.

On the Billboard 200, Sounds of Summer: The Very Best of The Beach Boys, released in 2003, jumps 180-52 (15,500 units; up 71%) and Pet Sounds reenters at No. 136 (11,000; up 1,335%). For the latter, it returns to the chart for the first time since July 2015, and to its highest rank since Feb. 18, 1968, when it ranked at No. 110. It peaked at No. 10 in 1966 and is one of 13 top 10 albums for the group.

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Overall on-demand official streams of the group’s songs increased by 126% to 26.7 million, while their collected songs sold 19,000 (up 1,132%). The act’s most-streamed song of the week was “Wouldn’t It Be Nice” (2.28 million; up 78%), while the top-selling song was “God Only Knows” (4,000; up 3,382%). On the Digital Song Sales chart dated June 21, “God Only Knows” debuts at No. 7, while “Wouldn’t It Be Nice,” the second-biggest-selling Beach Boys song of the week, debuts at No. 18.

“Woudn’t It Be Nice” reached No. 8 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1966, while its follow-up single, “God Only Knows,” hit No. 39 later that same year. Both are from Pet Sounds. In total, The Beach Boys boast 35 top 40-charted hits on the Hot 100.

The Beach Boys’ catalog also makes waves on the LyricFind U.S. and Global charts, where “God Only Knows” bows at No. 1. The LyricFind Global and LyricFind U.S. charts rank the fastest momentum-gaining tracks in lyric-search queries and usages globally and in the U.S., respectively, provided by LyricFind. The Global chart includes queries from all countries, including the U.S. The company is the world’s leader in licensed lyrics, with data provided by more than 5,000 publishers and utilized by more than 100 services, including Amazon, Pandora, Deezer, Microsoft, SoundHound and iHeartRadio.

According to LyricFind, lyric searches and usages of “God Only Knows” jumped 1,238% in the U.S. and 1,519 globally week over week (June 9-15 vs. June 2-8).

The U.S. chart features five Wilson-penned songs in all, with “God Only Knows” followed by “Wouldn’t It Be Nice” (No. 2), “Don’t Worry Baby” (No. 4), “Sloop John B” (No. 7) and “Good Vibrations” (No. 9).

Further increases for The Beach Boys catalog could occur in the tracking week ending June 19 (Luminate’s tracking week runs Friday through Thursday each week), after a full week of impact is felt following Wilson’s passing.

Additional reporting by Kevin Rutherford

Source: Getty / General

On Monday (June 16), jurors in the criminal trial against Diddy had an unorthodox respite from the usual witness testimony and evidence presentation, as they got to view portions of the videotapes of the sex parties that Diddy threw. Prosecutors for the federal government showed the jurors the footage of the alleged “freak offs” as they questioned a special agent for the Department of Justice on the witness stand.According to the New York Times, the footage jurors viewed was from 2012 and 2014, and involved Cassandra “Cassie” Ventura, Diddy’s former partner. The jurors viewed the footage while in the courtoom, wearing headphones as they looked at screens with privacy guards attached. One young juror was reported to have giggled audibly as the clips, 30 seconds in length, were first displayed. The remaining jurors were silent, with some wincing at what they saw and one snatching the headphones off after the first clip was done. According to TMZ, some of the audio from the video clips could be faintly heard as the courtroom went silent.Prior to the viewing of the videos, prosecutors presented a bevy of text and audio messages which involved Kristina Khorram, Diddy’s former chief of staff directing assistants to have luxury hotel rooms furnished with supplies for the “freak-offs”(which were also dubbed “wild king nights” and “hotel nights”). The messages are part of the prosecution’s case to prove that these assistants helped facilitate the sex trafficking run by Diddy, aka Sean Combs. Khorram has not publicly testified, but her phone was seized by the government last year.The jurors’ viewing of the clips came after the morning session, where Judge Arun Subramanian replaced Juror No. 6 citing that he was inconsistent about his place of residence, noting that it led him to believe that he was “shading answers” to get on the jury and stay on. “There’s nothing that the juror could say at this point that would put the genie back in the bottle,” Judge Subramanian stated after Diddy’s lawyers protested the move.

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Chappell Roan is one of the most outspoken artists of her generation, but that doesn’t mean she isn’t sensitive to the backlash she often receives when she speaks her mind.
While interviewing SZA for an Interview Magazine piece published Tuesday (June 17), the pop star — who has sparked heated public discourse on everything from toxic fan behavior to political endorsements in the past year alone — was candid when the R&B hitmaker asked whether she “gave a f–k about the backlash.”

“I didn’t until people started hating me for me and not for my art,” Roan replied. “When it’s not about my art anymore, it’s like, ‘They hate me because I’m Kayleigh, not because they hate the songs that I make.’ That’s when it changed.”

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“When things are taken out of context, people assume so much about you,” she continued. “I didn’t realize I’d care so much. When it comes to my art, I’m like, ‘B—h, you can think whatever you want. You are allowed to hate it with all your guts.’ But when it comes to me and my personality, it’s like, ‘Damn. Am I the most insufferable b—h of our generation?’”

Fortunately, Roan isn’t alone. SZA shared that she also feels hurt when she comes across tough criticism about herself, telling the Missouri native, “Maybe everybody secretly gives a f–k … I tried to tell myself that I didn’t care what people were saying about me, but it was so weird that I was being misperceived so far from who I am.”

“It makes me cry,” Roan added. “I don’t know if it will ever feel okay to hear someone say something really hateful about me.”

Roan has spoken before about how difficult it can be to feel misunderstood. While guesting with Sasha Colby on TS Madison’s Outlaws podcast in May, she reflected on being labeled a “villain” at different points in her career, sharing that she “cannot bear people saying I’m something I’m not.”

She also hasn’t let it stop her from voicing her opinions or speaking up when she feels mistreated — like when she confronted photographers at not one, but two events in 2024. “I think that I’m doing it the way I want to, but not everyone likes that,” she told SZA for Interview. “I will yell at a b—h on the carpet. I think that right now in my career, I’m just trying to see if the way I’ve been doing it is sustainable. Am I okay with the backlash of speaking my mind? That’s where I am right now.”

R. Kelly’s lawyer says the disgraced R&B star and convicted sex offender was recently hospitalized after overdosing on anxiety and sleep medication in prison, attributing the event to a supposed jailhouse murder plot that prosecutors have dismissed as entirely made-up.

Kelly, who’s serving a 30-plus-year sentence for two federal sex crime convictions, has been petitioning a Chicago court for release since last week. Defense lawyer Beau Brindley claimed in an eyebrow-raising June 10 court filing that Bureau of Prison officials had tried to solicit another inmate to kill the singer (Robert Sylvester Kelly) to stop him from uncovering prosecutorial misconduct in his trials. Prosecutors deny that there’s any murder plot against Kelly.

Now, Brindley claims prison officials have tried another method of killing Kelly: administering the singer an overdose quantity of his medications while he was in solitary confinement last Thursday (June 12).

“In the early morning hours of June 13, 2025, Mr. Kelly awoke,” Brindley writes in a court filing from Monday (June 16). “He felt faint. He was dizzy. He started to see black spots in his vision. Mr. Kelly tried to get up, but fell to the ground. He crawled to the door of the cell and lost consciousness.”

Brindley says Kelly was taken from the Federal Correctional Institution in Butner, N.C., to Duke University Hospital, where he was informed of the overdose. Kelly was hospitalized for two days to treat the overdose, according to the court filing.

To make matters worse, Brindley says, Kelly learned at the hospital that he had developed life-threatening blood clots in his lungs that required surgery. But Kelly was allegedly denied this surgery and taken back to Butner, where he was returned to solitary confinement without medical care.

“He could die from this condition, and they are letting it happen,” writes Brindley. “There is no legitimate explanation for that.”

Brindley’s court filing reiterates his request to have Kelly released to home confinement or temporary furlough, saying “his life actually depends on it.”

Prosecutors have called the allegations a “fanciful conspiracy” and “deeply unserious.” They also say the Chicago criminal court doesn’t have jurisdiction over the issue, and that it must be brought instead as a civil rights case or habeas corpus petition in North Carolina.

In response to Kelly’s latest claims about the alleged overdose and blood clot issue, prosecutors wrote late Monday, “This is the behavior of an abuser and a master manipulator on display.”

“This court should not allow Kelly to turn its docket into a grocery store checkout aisle tabloid,” prosecutors added.

Billboard reached out to Duke Hospital seeking to confirm the facts of Kelly’s hospital stay. A Duke spokesperson deferred to the Bureau of Prisons, which declined to comment on the matter.  

“For privacy, safety and security reasons, we do not discuss the conditions of confinement for any incarcerated individual, including medical and health-related issues,” said Bureau of Prisons spokesperson Scott Taylor in a statement to Billboard.

The motion to release Kelly from prison is scheduled to be heard by the Chicago judge on Friday (June 20). Meanwhile, Brindley has been publicly asking President Donald Trump to pardon Kelly.

Kelly was convicted in 2021 and 2022 at two separate federal trials, one in New York and one in Chicago, on a slew of criminal charges including racketeering, sex trafficking, child pornography and enticing minors for sex.

The former R&B star was sentenced to 30 years in prison for the New York conviction and 20 years in the Chicago case, although the vast majority of the second sentence will overlap with the first. Both convictions have been upheld on appeal.

Last week (June 11), the brilliant writer, producer, composer and singer Brian Wilson died at age 82. Wilson leaves behind a singular catalog of pop and rock music, which is of course headlined by his work in the ’60s and ’70s with The Beach Boys, alongside his brothers Carl and Dennis, cousin Mike Love and friend Al Jardine. The Beach Boys cruised to pop stardom from 1963 to 1965 with a string of smash hits about surfing, cars and girls that grew increasingly complex as Brian rapidly developed as a songwriter and studio wizard. In 1966, all the group’s artistic ambitions were realized, with perhaps both the Boys’ most beloved album and most beloved single — though it all came at a tremendous cost to Wilson, and to the band’s long-term future.

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On this week’s Vintage Pop Stardom episode of the Greatest Pop Stars podcast, host Andrew Unterberger is joined by Billboard executive digital director, west coast Katie Atkinson, to talk about the greatest year by the ultimate west coast pop band. We talk about everything that led up to the Beach Boys’ singular legacy year in 1966 — which ultimately resulted in the LP masterwork Pet Sounds and the unanimously acclaimed pop smash “Good Vibrations” — as well as why the group was ultimately unable to reach those commercial or artistic heights again.

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And of course, along the way, we ask all the big questions about the Beach Boys’ greatest (and in many ways last) year in the sun: Why did Brian Wilson enlist an ad man he barely knew as his primary collaborator on Pet Sounds (and why did that guy end up hating working with him so much)? Is “Sloop John B.” secretly the album’s perfect thematic centerpiece? Is “Good Vibrations” really more head than it is heart? Would 1966 Brian have dealt with f–kboy or industry plant allegations in 2025? And of course: Is this the greatest year in pop music that any American band has ever had?

Check it out above — along with a YouTube playlist of some of the most important moments from The Beach Boys’ 1966, all of which are discussed in the podcast — and subscribe to the Greatest Pop Stars podcast on Apple Music or Spotify (or wherever you get your podcasts) for weekly discussions every Thursday about all things related to pop stardom!

And as we say in every one of these GPS podcast posts — if you have the time and money to spare, please consider donating to any of these causes in the fight for trans rights:

Transgender Law Center

Trans Lifeline

Gender-Affirming Care Fundraising on GoFundMe

Also, please consider giving your local congresspeople a call in support of trans rights, with contact information you can find on 5Calls.org — and if you’re in the D.C. area this weekend (May 30-31), definitely check out Liberation Weekend, a music festival supporting trans rights with an incredible lineup of trans artists and allies.