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A$AP Rocky‘s grandma is definitely in the Navy. In the rapper’s new Vogue cover story celebrating his upcoming stint as a Met Gala co-chair published Tuesday (April 15), his father’s mother gushed about Rihanna — and more specifically, the impact the Fenty mogul has had on her grandson.
Telling the publication that she’s always known Rocky was destined for big things, Grandma Cathy shared that she’s especially proud of her grandson’s partnership with Rihanna, with whom he shares two young sons. “She loves her some RiRi,” the “F–kin’ Problems” musician said of his grandmother.

“I’m glad that he settled down, and I’m happy with who he settled down with,” said Cathy. “[Rihanna’s] a down-​to-​earth person.”

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Ri and Rocky first sparked dating rumors in early 2020, welcoming first son RZA two years later. Little Riot Rose came along 15 months later.

Describing his love for the “Umbrella” singer as “internal, external, infinite, the past, the future,” the Harlem native also shared an update on his kids with Vogue. “The older one, he stays to himself — he likes his books,” he told the publication, adding that Riot, on the other hand, loves attention. “He likes to take stuff from his brother so his brother can chase him.”

The interview comes just a few weeks ahead of the 2025 Met Gala, which Rocky will spearhead alongside co-chairs Colman Domingo, Lewis Hamilton and Pharrell Williams — all of whom are also gracing different Vogue covers this month. This year’s theme — “Superfine: Tailoring Black Style” — will celebrate dandyism and the evolution of Black menswear dating back to the 18th century. (By the way, Ms. Cathy is a big fan of the Euphoria actor. “My grandma got a crush on Colman Domingo,” Rocky told Vogue, with the matriarch confirming, “I love him.”)

Rocky has long been a fashion-first hip-hop star and even designs his own clothing, premiering a collection titled American Sabotage last year. In his 2024 Billboard cover story, the hitmaker called the moment “surreal” while also opening up about his relationship with Ri, saying, “It’s crazy how we find balance with our chaotic schedules.”

“[The relationship] is going great,” he continued at the time. “I don’t think there’s a more perfect person because when the schedules are hectic, she’s very understanding of that. And when the schedule’s freed up, that’s when you get to spend [the] most time together. It’s all understanding and compatibility.”

During a pivotal moment of Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club on Broadway, country virtuoso Orville Peck makes a bold choice. And no, it has nothing to do with his mask. 
It has to do with “If You Could See Her,” a critical song for his impish, unreliable narrator, the Emcee. After an entire act of vaudevillian, entertaining antics from Peck’s host-with-the-most, “If You Could See Her” seems like another such farce at the start of Act II; after all, he’s dressed as a clown and singing a love song to a gorilla. They dance, he taunts the ape with a banana, and he asks the audience why the world cannot seem to “leben und leben lassen” — live and let live — when it comes to his relationship. “If you could see her through my eyes,” he sings, before twisting the knife, “she wouldn’t look Jewish at all.”

In other iterations of this production, the Emcee sings this line almost as a pitying lament, or as a whisper, like he’s letting the audience in on a secret. But Peck holds nothing back in his version. There is no softened sentiment in his voice, only vitriol; he practically spits out the word “Jewish” as though it were a slur. As he skips around the stage to the song’s jaunty outro, he mimes a handgun with his fingers, and on the song’s final musical sting, fires it into the gorilla’s head. 

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“My job is to win the audience over for most of the first act, and to make them feel like this is a comedy and it’s light and to have a laugh,” Peck tells Billboard. “It’s also then my job to betray you.”

Peck takes that job very seriously throughout his performance in Cabaret, and manages to wring incredible pathos out of the iconic character. Balancing the Emcee’s whimsical exterior with a malevolent darkness lurking underneath throughout the show, Peck utterly transforms from his well-established stage persona into something entirely new.

In order to properly assist that transformation, Peck knew from the get-go that he wouldn’t wear his signature mask during the production. After years of obscuring his face, Peck instead greets the audience face-to-face in Cabaret. “Whether I would wear the mask or not was never a question,” he admits. “The real trepidation came when the offer came in, and I knew I had the opportunity to say ‘yes’ or ‘no’ to doing this. I definitely had a lot of thinking to do. I asked the people in my life if this was the right thing to do, and the right moment for it. But it became an easy ‘yes.’”

The reason that “yes” was so easy is because Peck cites Cabaret as “one of my favorite musicals,” and the Emcee as “the role I’ve wanted to play since I can remember.” For the uninitiated, the show — which made its original Broadway debut all the way back in 1966 and was adapted into the 1972 film of the same name — follows the stories of multiple characters living at the end of Weimar Germany, embracing the hedonistic, impoverished lifestyles of Berlin while ignoring the Nazi party’s rise to power.

Orville Peck in Cabaret

Gina Manning

Where other roles in the show — like the vivacious cabaret star Sally Bowles (played in this production by Tony nominee Eva Nobelezada) — interact primarily with one another, the Emcee is most interested in speaking directly to the audience. Most of his time on the stage is spent encouraging those watching to “leave your troubles outside” while slowly luring you in to the lurid lifestyles of his seedy nightclub. Eventually, he holds a mirror up to your complicity; while you were having fun at the Kit Kat Club, the Nazis took over.

“It’s a role that’s not necessarily fleshed out in the script; there’s very little dialogue, it’s a very open-ended character,” Peck explains. “You kind of have to color outside the lines and make decisions for yourself.”

When it came time for Peck to find his version of the Emcee, he was well equipped for the task — a graduate of the London Academy of Music & Dramatic Art (LAMDA), Peck dove headfirst into building an iteration of the character that made the most sense coming from him. “My Emcee has a sort of grit, and an almost punk attitude to him that I think is probably from that part of my life,” he explains, referencing his early career as a drummer in a punk band. “I draw on a lot of themes of what it’s like to be queer, or to grow up with internalized issues, with fears, with questions of feeling empowered in society.”

While the acting aspect of the role wasn’t an adjustment for Peck, the Broadway schedule has been — performing in eight shows every week, the singer says it took two weeks for him to properly adjust to the reality of this style of performance. “It’s a different thing being 37 and coming back into this medium and working with these incredible performers who’ve devoted their lives to this type of performance,” he says with a laugh. “It’s sort of like running a marathon with people who have been training for years and years, and I’m trying to compete at the same level.”

What he found, though, is that his career as a headlining country performer actually provided benefits of its own for his new gig. Where other Broadway newcomers might blanch at the sheer amount of stage time the Emcee has (he performs in half of the show’s songs and remains on stage even longer), Peck is used to the toll of live performance. “In my regular live show, I am kind of carrying and leading the show for sometimes two hours straight, so that experience actually came in handy for this,” he says.

The other main challenge for his Broadway debut came from his voice — Peck garnered a reputation for his smooth baritone as a country star, with a rich chest voice that has drawn comparisons to the likes of Merle Haggard and Johnny Cash. Yet the character of the Emcee is a bright tenor with an airy falsetto, who very rarely dips into the low-end of his range, presenting a challenge for Peck.

“It took a lot of work. But I wanted to do it, because I really wanted to disappear into this role,” he says. “I didn’t want people to come, and as soon as I started singing, be like, ‘Oh, well, there’s Orville Peck crooning as usual.’ So I worked really hard with a vocal coach [Chris York] at the characterization of different placement for where I sing and how I sing.”

With a new look, a honed voice and a character built from the ground up, Peck joined the cast on March 31 to rave reviews from audiences. His interpretation of the role brings a far more sinister energy than the more sexually charged version of the part by his predecessor Adam Lambert, or the almost-alien portrayal by Eddie Redmayne. And that was the point: “I wanted to build this character my own way, very differently from Eddie and Adam,” he says. “I’m having the best time of my life.”

Part of why Peck felt so strongly about being a part of this production has to do with the timing. With the show telling a cautionary tale about the perils of ignorance in the face of fascism, Peck cannot help but draw a direct parallel to our current political situation. As Donald Trump and his administration continue to push the limits of presidential power, Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club feels more relevant than ever.

“Yeah, it’s frightening, and it’s very much the elephant in the room for us,” Peck says. “It’s depressing, of course, but I also think I’m really grateful that this show is running during a time like this — if even one person leaves that theater with a light bulb having gone off, or feeling any more compassion or empathy for what is going on for people right now, then that is all I can ask for.”

Which brings us back to “If You Could See Her” — while audiences are currently stunned into silence after Peck’s hostile performance, just a few months ago, they were having a very different reaction: laughter. Lambert recounted a story from his run during an appearance on The View, saying he confronted an audience member who laughed when he sang his line about the gorilla being Jewish. “No, this isn’t comedy,” Lambert told the audience member. “Pay attention.”

Joel Grey, who originated the role in 1966 and in the 1972 film, even wrote an op-ed for the New York Times, urging audiences to heed the show’s warning. “History is giving us another chance to confront the forces that Cabaret warned us about,” he wrote. “The question is: Will we listen this time, or will we keep laughing until the music stops?

Peck has yet to experience laughter during his “If You Could See Her,” but says he’s had a few surprising moments in the part. In one recent show, during his rendition of “Tomorrow Belongs to Me” — a fake German folk song that quickly devolves into a Nazi anthem — he noticed a few members of the audience “cheering” as he raised his arm into a Nazi salute. “I think may have just been very big fans of mine who were excited that I was singing a really big note,” he says.

But even if those audience members weren’t just fans of his, Peck says he wants to create space for people to experience the feeling of discomfort that Cabaret is designed to create. “I don’t know what drives that laughter or that cheering, necessarily, but I do know that I have been in situations in my life where I have laughed at something that I shouldn’t have because I was uncomfortable,” he says. “The impact of these moments within the show are supposed to make people uncomfortable, they are supposed to pull the rug out from under you.”

He pauses for a moment, considering his next words carefully. “The idea is, shortly after that, they might go, ‘Oh, s–t. We probably shouldn’t have been cheering,’” he says. “The hope is we’re also enlightening, and confronting, and providing something more than just a musical.”

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Harvard University publicly rebuked the Trump administration’s demands for the school to eliminate diversity efforts and screen international students.
On Monday (April 14), Harvard University responded to a letter it received from the Trump administration on Friday (April 11) which demanded that the university eliminate its diversity, equity, and inclusion programs as well as to screen international students for potential support of antisemitism, terrorism, and “the American values and institutions inscribed in the U.S. Constitution and Declaration of Independence.” Harvard emphatically rebuked the demands, writing in a post on X, formerly Twitter: The university will not surrender its independence or relinquish its constitutional rights. Neither Harvard nor any other private university can allow itself to be taken over by the federal government.”

“No government — regardless of which party is in power — should dictate what private universities can teach, whom they can admit and hire, and which areas of study and inquiry they can pursue,” Harvard President Alan Garber wrote in a statement detailing his reasoning as to why he wouldn’t comply. “Although some of the demands outlined by the government are aimed at combating antisemitism, the majority represent direct governmental regulation of the ‘intellectual conditions’ at Harvard,” he continued. In response, the Department of Education and the U.S. General Services Administration issued a statement saying that they would freeze $2.2 billion in multi-year grants and $60 million in multi-year contract value to the school.
President Donald Trump wrote a scornful reply on his Truth Social media platform on Tuesday morning (April 15): “Perhaps Harvard should lose its Tax Exempt Status and be Taxed as a Political Entity if it keeps pushing political, ideological, and terrorist inspired/supporting ‘Sickness?’ Remember, Tax Exempt Status is totally contingent on acting in the PUBLIC INTEREST!”
Harvard’s stance has compelled other schools to fight back. “This is of momentous, momentous significance,” said J. Michael Luttig, a former federal court judge and prominent conservative. “This should be the turning point in the president’s rampage against American institutions.” The Massachusetts Institute of Technology issued a statement detailing its intent to sue the government in the wake of nine international students having their visas revoked. Many applauded the school’s response. His view was echoed on social media by many, with a user named Lincs on X, formerly Twitter writing, “It’s great to see some institutions with backbone.”

All products and services featured are independently chosen by editors. However, Billboard may receive a commission on orders placed through its retail links, and the retailer may receive certain auditable data for accounting purposes.
If you aren’t able to make it out to weekend one or two of Coachella 2025, Meta Quest’s virtual reality headset is coming to your rescue.

Having just launched the Meta Quest 3 and the 3S, the brand has two ways to make it incredibly easy to get that festival feel from the comfort of your couch. Specializing in “mixed reality,” both headsets make it easy to scroll and do multiple things at once — whether that’s scrolling on Instagram or watching a sporting event at the same time as you’re catching, say, Lady Gaga performing “Abracadabra.” For Coachella, the headset makes it easy to arrange your screen to either feel like you’re in the theater or at the festival while watching it live on YouTube.

The entire experience is much more elevated than simply watching a YouTube video on your phone. The YouTube app that you download from the Meta Quest allows you to explore all of the videos in 8K resolution. This also goes for 3D and 360-degree content, so it’s truly like being there in the crowd.

The headset itself is super comfortable and the visuals can be adjusted very specifically to your preferences so that you’re seeing it as clearly and as vibrantly as possible. You’ll also be seriously impressed by the huge field of vision, which really makes it feel like you’re there.

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If there’s a particular artist who you and your friends love, you can even invite them to watch with YouTube Co-Watch. This allows you to view the same content at the same time as friends, so it’s like you’re there together — even if you couldn’t afford the price or time off for a ticket to go to Coachella together this year. The co-watch feature allows you to invite up to seven people to watch content with you.

If you’re wondering what it will be like before weekend two, check out all of the playlists of performances on YouTube, but make sure you download the app from the Meta Quest for the full experience.

Here are both versions of the Meta Quest — both of which are cheaper than a ticket to Coachella.

Meta Quest 3

Meta Quest 3

$499.99

$499.99

If you’ve tried the Meta Quest 2, you’ll be super impressed with the upgrades, especially in terms of visuals. In fact, the resolution is nearly 30% better than it was in the Quest 2, and this version also features 4K and Infinite Display.

This headset is also equipped with a high-quality pancake lens that offers improved sharpness for all visuals. The display is super enhanced, which is great for Coachella — you’ll feel like you’re there in the desert. It has a 110-degree horizontal display and a 96-degree vertical display.

There are also improved comfort features such as the new headset and strap design. The strap is soft and adjustable to avoid putting pressure on your face while you’re wearing the headset. The sound is incredibly loud and crisp — even bass notes — which is particularly exciting for Coachella viewing.

Finally, it has 512GBs of storage space, so whether you want to game or watch movies on your headset in the future, it has the capacity to display and store them without interruptions.

Meta Quest 3S

Meta Quest 3S

$269.99

$299.99

10% off

$269.99

$299.99

10% off

If you’re not looking to invest fully in the 3, the 3S is still a truly solid option. It offers 128GB or 256GB storage options, so you’ll be able to accommodate any games or apps you want. For resolution, it offers 1832×1920 pixels per eye, and it has an adjustable fresnel lens.

It also has a 96-degree by 90-degree field of view, which means you’ll still be able to feel like you’re there in the moment.

It has been nearly eight months since disgraced hip-hop mogul Sean “Diddy” Combs was arrested and sent to New York’s notorious Metropolitan Detention Center to await trial on sex trafficking and racketeering charges. And while the formerly high-flying Bad Boy Records CEO and billionaire entrepreneur was used to the finest things in his former life, according to the New York Times, his life in the communal, dorm-style unit segregated from the rest of the inmates is a study in contrasts from his previous life.

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For starters, the typically dapper MCs hair and beard have gone grey, since hair dye is not allowed in the Brooklyn jail that has long been the source of complaints over its decrepit state, including reports of mold and vermin, extended lockdowns and understaffing. As part of his daily routine, Combs, 55, is woken up for breakfast at 7 a.m. and afterwords has time to exercise in a room with yoga mats and a small basketball hoop, or to hang in a communal space with a ping-pong table and a TV.

Combs’ lawyers have tried, and failed, three times to get their client released on bail on the charges that, if he’s found guilty of, could land Diddy in prison for the rest of his life. While Combs has pleaded not guilty to the charges he awaits opening statements in the trail slated to begin on May 5 over allegations that the rap impresario oversaw a violent criminal conspiracy that allegedly included kidnapping, arson and drug crimes in service of his alleged sexual abuse of multiple men and women to satisfy his need for “sexual gratification.”

For now, Combs is in an area of the jail called 4 North, a fourth floor space where around 20 men are housed. Fellow high-profile inmates on the unit included, until recently, crypto boss Sam Bankman-Fried, along with government informants, including former gang members who have been segregated for their safety from the general jail population; accused United Health Care CEO murderer Luigi Mangione who shares a lawyer with Combs, is housed in the same jail, but in a different unit.

While Combs’ lawyers at first thought their A-list client would be housed in the restrictive Special Housing Unit where inmates spend 23 hours a day inside their cell, he was instead sent to the less harsh 4 North Unit.

A former Mafia informant, Gene Borrello, told the paper that compared to other units in the jail “you have nothing to worry about” on 4 North. As described by the Times, inmates in Combs’ unit are free to move around the space decked out with rows of bunk beds, TVs and a microwave where they are subject to repeated mandatory check-ins of their bunks by correction officers every day.

Inmates, who are issued brown jail clothes, are able to eat their meals in a common area and use a bathroom that has stalls, as well as listen to music or watch movies on a tablet for sale at the commissary, though they do not have any internet or wi-fi access. Diddy meets often with his team of lawyers in a conference room off the common area and has a non-wi-fi enabled laptop to pore over evidence in the case that he can use between 8 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. each day in one of the unit’s visiting rooms.

While Diddy dined on the finest meals provided by private chefs in his former life, the menu in lock-up is decidedly less glamorous, with a rotating menu that includes lasagna or “pasta fazool” for vegetarians on the second Friday of each month. There are also Snickers bars and bags of Cheez-Its for sale in the commissary, along with toiletries, radios and watches. Inmates can spend up to $180 at the commissary every two weeks from funds provided by friends and family, with one crucial item, $1 packets of mackerel (“macks”) serving as a key bartering tool among the incarcerated.

Combs is allowed to have visitors on Tuesdays and while he can make phone calls — such as a recent one to rapper Ye — the conversations are capped at 15 minutes and they are subject to monitoring by authorities. The story noted that during a pre-planned sweep of the jail in search of contraband last year, prosecutors claim an investigator took photos of some of Combs’ personal notes. The pictures allegedly included birthday reminders, as well as notes the government claims were evidence that Diddy was trying to obstruct the prosecution, including one in which he allegedly directed a staffer to find “dirt” on two of his alleged victims.

The rapper’s lawyers claimed that was proof the government was trying to “spy” on their client and eavesdrop on confidential communications with counsel. Prosecutors denied that claim and said none of the notes would be used in their case and a judge agreed that Combs’ rights had not been violated.

But according to the Times, the incident revealed that Combs had engaged in the widespread practice of buying other inmates’ phone time by having his team put money in their commissary accounts, with prosecutors claiming that on some of the calls he talked about using public statements to help influence the jury pool’s perception of him. He also allegedly used three-way calling to try and contact potential witnesses to avoid blocks on calling people outside of his approved contact list.

While the current accommodations are, as expected, spare and somewhat harsh, they likely pale in comparison to the federal prison Combs could be sent to convicted on the charges in the eight-week trial. Even as he awaits his upcoming trial, Combs was hit with an updated indictment earlier this month that added new charges to the sweeping case against him. The superseding indictment added a new sex trafficking count, accusing Combs of using force, fraud or coercion to compel a woman to engage in commercial sex acts as recently as last year. It also added a new count of transporting that victim and others to engage in prostitution. The updated charges increased the total counts against Diddy from three to five.

Combs is also facing dozens of civil lawsuits from a number of men and women who claim the rap impresario allegedly sexually abused, sex trafficked and threatened them with violence.

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Source: Jordan Brand / Jordan Brand

Golf may not be thee most popular sport in the culture, but regardless the good folks over at Jordan Brand are doing what they can to help golfers take their game to the next level. The house that Air Jordan built has introduced their latest footwear tech to give players a new advantage out on the green whenever swinging that 9-iron.

Source: Jordan Brand / Jordan Brand

On Monday (April 14) Nike unveiled their Jordan Brand Air Rev silhouette, which was made specifically for the golfers of the world. It boasts their innovative Flight Lock technology, which promises to help players take their game to another level. Will it turn the average man into Happy Gilmore overnight? Of course not, but if you’re already familiar with the sport and know your way around the Front Nine, you may appreciate what Nike and Jordan Brand have to offer next time you hop out that golf cart and get things popping.

Per Nike:

Designed to promote efficiency and consistency for a full day on the course, the Air Rev’s Flight Lock technology debuts a moveable Air Zoom unit that pairs with an interchangeable Formula23 foam insert, dial lacing system and leno weave strap to help golfers go the distance like never before.

The Air Zoom unit is intended to be inserted into a pouch in the sidewall of the golfer’s trail (back) foot, providing appropriate pressure with every swing, while the Formula23 foam is to be used on the lead (front) foot, delivering cushioned stability. This customizable system allows both left- and right-handed golfers to use the same model of shoe, swapping the Air Zoom unit and Formula23 foam to meet their needs.

Sounds like a helluva unit, but unfortunately we don’t know much about golfing so we may never find out how amazing these joints are to wear on the golf course.

Still, the NBA GOAT is excited about his brand’s latest product, and if he’s excited, his fellow golf buddies should be too.

“The future of golf isn’t tied to its past,” says Michael Jordan. “For the next generation, it’s bolder and more modern. Jordan Brand Golf blends performance, innovation and iconic style, building a future where the players, not the past, define what’s next.”

Might have to cop a pair just to walk around a park and see what the fuss is all about.

Will you be copping the Jordan Air Rev on May 14 to help you up your game next time you hit the golf course? Maybe even miniature golfing? Let us know in the comments section below.

Source: Jordan Brand / Jordan Brand

04/15/2025

Our staff’s favorite songs from a year that confirmed that hip-hop and R&B were now at top 40’s center, but also had plenty of great rock, country and dance-pop to go around.

By&nbsp

Rania Aniftos, Katie Atkinson, Katie Bain, Eric Renner Brown, Anna Chan, Hannah Dailey, Stephen Daw, Kyle Denis, Griselda Flores, Paul Grein, Jason Lipshutz, Joe Lynch, Heran Mamo, Rebecca Milzoff, Taylor Mims, Gail Mitchell, Melinda Newman, Isabela Raygoza, Kristin Robinson, Jessica Roiz, Dan Rys, Michael Saponara, Andrew Unterberger, Christine Werthman, Kristen Wisneski

04/15/2025

Where’s the beef? Fans think it’s cooking between Kesha and Katy Perry, especially after the former posted an interestingly timed selfie with a plastic Wendy’s cup just hours after the fast-food chain penned a shady comment on X about the latter. 
In the photo uploaded Monday night (April 14), the “Tik Tok” singer, wearing a pair of sunglasses, smiles innocuously while sipping on a Wendy’s cup with the logo clearly facing the camera. Forgoing a caption, Kesha let the picture speak for itself — and in turn, people online have interpreted it as the pop star throwing a subtle jab Perry’s way. 

That’s because Wendy’s had earlier in the evening spoken negatively of the “Firework” singer, who was one of six passengers on Blue Origin’s all-women flight crew who landed safely back on earth after a brief trip to space Monday. Under a post announcing that Perry had returned from her expedition, the brand’s official account replied, “Can we send her back.” 

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In another X message, the fast-food chain shared a photo of the “Firework” singer planting a smooch on the earth after landing, captioning it with a nod to her lyrics, “I kissed the ground and i liked it.” When one X user quipped that Perry had only been in space for about 10 minutes, the brand shot back, “Don’t short change her it was 11 minutes.”  

Billboard has reached out to reps for Kesha, Perry and Wendy’s for comment.

Though it remains unclear why Wendy’s might have an issue with the former American Idol judge, fans are sure that Kesha’s seemingly snarky selfie is all to do with the two women’s respective histories with Dr. Luke. In 2014, Kesha alleged that the Kemosabe Records founder drugged and raped her in 2005, after which he sued her for defamation while vehemently maintaining that her claims were “false and shocking.” Their ensuing legal battle continued for nine years before the two parties finally reached a settlement in 2023. 

Before the settlement, however, Perry’s name was brought up in the lawsuit when Dr. Luke’s lawyers claimed that Kesha had at one point told Lady Gaga via private text messages that the producer had previously raped Perry. In a deposition dated July 2017 and released in August 2018, however, Perry denied that Dr. Luke ever assaulted her, leading Kesha’s team to issue a response saying that a major label CEO had been the one to share that allegation with Kesha and Gaga. 

But despite Kesha’s allegations against Dr. Luke, Perry still made the controversial decision to work with him on her 2024 single “Woman’s World” — something she later defended on a September episode of Call Her Daddy. “He was one of many collaborators that I collaborated with,” she said of the producer, who worked on her older hits “California Gurls” and “Teenage Dream.” “But the reality is, it comes from me. The truth is, I wrote these songs from my experience of my whole life going through this metamorphosis, and he was one of the people to help facilitate all that — one of the writers, one of the producers.” 

Even so, countless people online are now cheering Kesha on for appearing to support the Wendy’s diss. “Kesha is HILARIOUS for this,” one person wrote of the situation on X, while another fan said, “KESHA IS SO SHADY LMAOOO.” 

“I think Wendy’s was stupid to do this, but Kesha is absolutely justified in hating a person who continues to platform the man who raped her,” another person added.

Explained one X user to another who was confused by what the shade may be about, “Katy Perry worked with Dr Luke. Wendy’s trolled Katy yesterday so Kesha ran to post with Wendy’s.”

See Kesha’s Wendy’s selfie below.

Thomas Rhett‘s surprise appearance at Contemporary Christian Music artist Forrest Frank’s recent sold-out Bridgestone Arena show in Nashville on Sunday night (April 13) didn’t quite go as planned. The eight-time ACM award winner surprised fans by joining Frank for a performance of their recent collaboration “Nothing Else” — and ended up leaving the arena in […]

EMPIRE Publishing has hired !llmind as a senior vp of A&R. As part of his duties, the tech entrepreneur and Grammy-winning producer, who has worked with Drake, The Carters, Eminem, Ye, Nicki Minaj, Nathy Peluso, Romeo Santo and more, will screen songs and provide feedback, based on his production expertise. !llmind will also act as a bridge between EMPIRE’s publishing and label arms.

Along with !llmind’s appointment, the independent music giant is also promoting Al “Butter” McLean to executive vp of global creative, where he will keep co-leading EMPIRE Publishing with senior vp of global head of business Vinny Kumar. Over McLean’s 30-year career as an artist, producer, street promoter, manager and A&R, he’s inked deals for names like Yung Bleu, Childish Gambino, Alicia Keys, Daddy Yankee, Lecrae, Mint Condition, KEM and Kirk Franklin. As part of his elevation, McLean will now be responsible for overseeing all global deals and signings. He will also provide internal leadership to ensure EMPIRE Publishing continues to grow.

“I’ve worked with !llmind for years and have seen firsthand how his passion, taste, and commitment to excellence inspire everyone around him,” says Kumar. “He’s a true visionary—constantly evolving, embracing new technology, and defining the future of music and culture. We’re beyond excited to officially welcome him to the EMPIRE Publishing family.”

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“I was fortunate to have signed the amazing !llMind to a publishing venture years ago – so now this is full circle not only re-signing him as a writer, producer, and publisher, but to work alongside him as a colleague,” says McLean. “He is a legend and what he brings to our entire EMPIRE Publishing and Creative team is immeasurable”.

Adds !llmind: “My entire career I’ve always felt like an outsider because I like to dive head first into innovation, solving things in unique ways and pushing the sound of music forward. I can’t wait to contribute to this movement and learn more in the years ahead!”