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Millie Bobby Brown isn’t standing for any misconceptions about how meticulously Taylor Swift curates her albums, not even from The Electric State costar Chris Pratt.
In a new video posted by Netflix and the Jurassic World star on Instagram Wednesday (March 5), the two actors debate who had it better: teenagers in the ’90s or modern-day adolescents. Their biggest disagreement came, however, when it came to music, with the Enola Holmes leading lady aghast to find that teens had to listen to songs in the order they appeared on albums three decades or so ago.
“If I didn’t want to listen to ‘It’s Your Thing,’ I would have to fast-forward through all of ‘It’s Your Thing’ to get to ‘Dreams to Remember’?” she said while inspecting a cassette tape loaded into a Walkman. “That’s horrible!”
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Pratt then mused pointedly, “There was once a time where artists who made tapes, they curated their music into a very intentional list.”
“No, that’s not true, Chris,” the Stranger Things actress vehemently interjected. “Taylor Swift curates her album from start to finish.”
“You don’t have to listen to her album that way,” Pratt countered. “You can go on Spotify and hit shuffle and listen to it however the AI decides.”
Brown then finished the argument by insisting passionately, “A true Swiftie wouldn’t.”
“You don’t understand,” she added to the Parks & Recreation alum.
In the clip, Brown and Pratt also compared and contrasted Polaroid cameras with iPhone selfies, as well as inspected a 30-year-old answering machine. The inspiration for the video came from the 1990s setting of The Electric State, which arrives on Netflix March 14.
The spirited debate is also far from the first time Brown has demonstrated her fandom of the “Anti-Hero” singer. While on The Kelly Clarkson Show in March last year, the actress dubbed herself a “hardcore Swiftie to the point of knowing “exactly where [Swift] is at all times.”
“I went to the Eras Tour and it was just … it was the most amazing experience,” she gushed at the time. “So when I went to my show — I went to Ohio, I flew there solely for Taylor — and she played ‘Evermore’ and I collapsed to the ground. It was pretty crazy.”
Watch Brown and Pratt discuss Swift’s album-curation skills below.
Jesy Nelson is overjoyed to be expecting identical twins, but in a video, she and boyfriend Zion Foster revealed that the pregnancy has also come with some scary complications.
In the emotional clip posted to Instagram Wednesday (March 5), the Little Mix alum opened up about the medical concerns she’s currently facing when it comes to her babies, who, she revealed, are monochorionic/diamniotic twins — meaning they share a placenta while having separate amniotic sacs, according to Columbia University. “Normally, most twins will have two placentas that they feed off of, but when you have mono/di twins, that means your twins live off one placenta, which can lead to lots of complications,” Nelson explained, addressing the camera while sitting next to her partner.
“One baby might take all the nutrients, the other might, which — really awful to say — could lead to both babies dying,” the singer continued, fighting back tears as Foster comforted her by rubbing her arm affectionately. “At the moment, I am currently pre-stage TTTS, which is twin-to-twin transfusion. I’m being monitored very closely, I have to go be scanned twice a week.”
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John Hopkins Medicine defines twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome, or TTTS, as a rare pregnancy condition that affects identical twins when their shared network of blood vessels in the placenta is imbalanced. One twin might give away more blood than it receives, risking malnourishment and organ failure, while the other twin might receive too much blood and become “susceptible to overwork of the heart and other cardiac complications.”
In Nelson’s case, she says the condition has “gotten a little bit worse” every time she’s gone to the doctor for a scan. “But we are just hoping and praying for the best,” she added as Foster nodded. “We feel really blessed that we’ve been given twins. It’s just really sad that, unfortunately, it comes with these complications, which we had no idea about.”
She added, “We just really want to raise awareness about this, because there’s so many people that don’t know about this.”
The couple’s update comes close to two months after the “Boyz” artist first revealed on Instagram that she was expecting not one, but two babies with Foster. In a joint post showing off Nelson’s baby bump, the pair wrote, “She’s eating for 3 now.”
Nelson and Foster have reportedly been dating on and off since January 2022. In August, they released a song together titled “Mine.”
Watch Nelson open up about her pregnancy complications below.
Duane “Keffe D” Davis is speaking out from behind bars as he faces a murder charge for the 1996 shooting death of Tupac Shakur.
Davis, who pleaded not guilty, has remained at Clark County Detention Center in Las Vegas since his September 2023 arrest, and he has now given ABC News his first-ever interview since being arrested.
“I’m innocent,” he said in the sit-down, which aired Thursday (March 6) on Good Morning America. “I did everything they asked me to do. Get new friends. Stop selling drugs. I stopped all that. I’m supposed to be out there enjoying my twilight at one of my f—ing grandson’s football games and basketball games. Enjoying life with my kids.”
2Pac’s murder remained a cold case until Davis’ 2023 arrest nearly 27 years after the legendary Death Row rapper was gunned down in Las Vegas. Still, the former Crips gang member, who prosecutors believe was the “shot caller” to orchestrate the hit on Pac, is confident he’ll be found not guilty.
“I did not do it,” he insisted during the interview. “They don’t have nothing. And they know they don’t have nothing. They can’t even place me out here. They don’t have no gun, no car, no Keffe D, no nothing.”
Davis claims he was hundreds of miles away when the 2Pac shooting took place, and said he’ll have about “20 or 30 people” coming to court to corroborate his alibi.
He spoken about his alleged involvement in Pac’s murder in the past, as he’s given his account in numerous interviews as well as his 2019 Compton Street Legend memoir. However, back in 2008, Davis allegedly agreed to a proffer agreement with authorities connected to an L.A. task force, which would have granted him immunity from being prosecuted in the case.
Per ABC News, he once again admitted his alleged role in Pac’s murder a year later to detectives in Las Vegas, but they were not required to honor any previous agreements.
A Clark County District Court judge ruled in January that Davis had not shown proof of any immunity deals. He’s repeatedly been denied bail.
Shakur was shot on Sept. 7, 1996, in a drive-by shooting in Las Vegas. Authorities believe Davis orchestrated the hit with others in the car following a brawl at the MGM Grand casino.
Davis was arrested in September 2023 and has been charged with first degree murder. He will head to trial in February 2026.
Watch Davis’ interview with ABC News above.
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Roy Ayers, the towering jazz legend whose songs reverberated throughout the entire scope of music, passed away this week at 84, leaving behind a massive library of sounds. Throughout his long career, Roy Ayers’s music has been sampled several times, and we have ## essential songs from Ayers that were sampled by Hip-Hop and R&B stars.
Roy Ayers passed away on Tuesday (March 4) after dealing with a long illness, according to reports. In the early 1970s, Ayers and his group, Roy Ayers Ubiquity began to find footing in the music scene. In 1973, Ayers soundtracked the film Coffy, which starred the legendary Pam Grier. The latter half of the decade was fruitful for Ayers with hit albums such as Mystic Voyage and Everybody Loves The Sunshine among them.
Countless artists have sampled Ayers, including Mary J. Blige, Naughty By Nature, The Notorious B.I.G., Pete Rock & C.L. Smooth, A Tribe Called Quest, and more.
Below, we’re sharing these eight essential Roy Ayers songs sampled by Hip-Hop and R&B below.
“Everybody Loves The Sunshine”
“Searching”
“You Can’t Turn Me Away” – Sylvia Striplin (Ayers produced this track)
“Running Away”
“The Third Eye”
“Ooh”
“Mystic Voyage”
“Shining Symbol”
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Photo: getty
Music branding” does not involve stamping horses with band logos (at least not yet). But it does apply to just about anything else in which a commercial entity — from Taco Bell to JPMorganChase — partners with an artist or music company.
Which is why, at the beginning of last year’s Brat Summer, Charli xcx appeared as a 3D hologram activated by White Claw drinkers who aimed their phones at a product logo; why Nike spent in the low seven figures to license Led Zeppelin’s “Whole Lotta Love” for a Super Bowl LIX commercial; why Will Ferrell sang a PayPal jingle set to Fleetwood Mac’s “Everywhere”; and why Pinterest set up Coachella “manifest stations” filled with beauty products curated by singer Victoria Monét.
“It can be a tour sponsorship, a social media campaign, a tie-in with a brand’s philanthropic endeavor,” says Marcie Allen, president of MAC Consulting, who has been connecting artists with brands for 30 years and was one of 15 music industry experts who helped Billboard compile its first Branding Power Players list since 2019. “Brand partnerships are bigger than they have ever been because they give companies the ability to break through the noise.”
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There are no metrics that quantify the overall music-branding market, because it’s so multifaceted — from the multimillion-dollar advertising synch business to singer-songwriter RAYE performing intimate concerts at Hilton hotel rooms, footage of which appeared in commercials and social media posts. That said, a hint of its scale can be found in the financial filings of the industry’s largest concert promoter, Live Nation, whose worldwide sponsorship revenue has grown from $590.3 million in 2019 to $1.2 billion in 2024. (Advertising and sponsorship amounted to just over 5% of Live Nation’s total revenue last year.)
“We’re seeing brands spending more in music than ever before,” says Russell Wallach, the promoter’s global president of media and sponsorship. He adds that Live Nation research shows 80% of its customers are “interested” in participating with brands at live events. “What brands are doing from an experiential standpoint has been significantly elevated over the last few years.”
Post-pandemic, according to Allen, brands have returned aggressively to the live space — like T-Mobile sponsoring this summer’s Post Malone-Jelly Roll tour.
The synch business, too, has more than rebounded since the pandemic: Global revenue amounted to $400 million in 2020, mostly due to production shutdowns, but it hit $632 million in 2023, according to IFPI. That’s an increase of 58%, from 0.4% of global recording-industry revenue in 2020 to 2.2%. (These numbers don’t include publishing, but they do include film/TV synchs in addition to advertising.) For this year’s Super Bowl, licensed songs cost between $400,000 and $2.5 million on the publishing side alone, music industry sources say, not counting the separate fees for licensing master recordings. According to Brian Monaco, Sony Music Publishing’s president/global chief marketing officer, 50% of this year’s Super Bowl ads, which cost brands a reported $7 million to $8 million apiece, employed synchs.
In the streaming era, brands and music companies are more efficient than ever in using data to align artists’ fan bases with companies’ target demographics, says Rich Yaffa, Universal Music Group’s executive vp of global brands: “When we partner with a brand, our goal is to make fans of our artists fans of their brands.”
Stephanie Miles, Wasserman Music’s head of music brand partnerships, says brands recently have become more willing to work on elaborate activations with artists. One act she declines to name spent months negotiating a fashion shoot and a live event to ensure both artist and brand emphasized the same regional market. “The days of receiving an opportunity that has been completely conceptualized by a brand, and the artist taking it as is, are long gone,” she says.
“Deals are definitely becoming more complicated and sophisticated,” adds Andrew Klein, managing director of AEG’s global partnerships. “It used to be [when] Coca-Cola’s coming out with a new product, [it would] just hand out the can [at concerts] and do a sampling program. They’re now trying to get a lot more return on investment. Yes, they want to sponsor the tour, but they also want to use the music for that artist in a campaign, use [their] name and likeness or tap into their social media.”
Will the good times in music branding continue? It’s hard to say, given President Donald Trump’s unsettling of the economy with layoffs, deportations, tariffs and threats of tariffs in the first weeks of his administration. “We’re starting to see a bit of a spend slowdown,” says Toni Wallace, partner and head of music brand strategy and partnerships at UTA. “There’s no question the demand and opportunity is there; it’s just ‘Let’s see how this first quarter goes.’ ”
It wasn’t long ago that artists, fearing claims of “selling out,” avoided collaborations with major corporations: In the late ’80s, after Pepsi landed Michael Jackson, Madonna and David Bowie in commercials and Whitney Houston sang a Diet Coke jingle, Neil Young responded with the scathing “This Note’s for You”: “Ain’t singing for Pepsi/Ain’t singing for Coke/I don’t sing for nobody/Makes me look like a joke.”
But things have changed: In 1999, Sting refashioned his “Desert Rose” music video into a Jaguar commercial; Bob Dylan licensed “Love Sick” to a Victoria’s Secret spot in 2004; an instrumental portion of Vampire Weekend’s 2019 “Harmony Hall” — an upbeat-sounding tune that nevertheless is about antisemitism — was used in a Choice Hotels TV plug; and last year, Megan Thee Stallion’s colorful 2024 Amazon Music ad included the original track “It’s Prime Day.”
“You had rockers who never wanted to be seen associated with anything: ‘It’s too commercialized,’ ” says Jeff Straughn, Primary Wave’s senior partner/chief brand officer. “Today, it’s ‘How can I sell it?’ ”
This story appears in the March 8, 2025, issue of Billboard.
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Source: iOne / iOne
Philly’s own D4M Sloan is on fire right now, and he’s bringing that heat with an exclusive performance of his latest track “CUDI” for Hip-Hop Wired.
The song’s been blowing up on TikTok, and it’s not hard to see why — the track’s got a catchy vibe and a dance that’s got everyone locked in. If you’ve been scrolling through TikTok, you’ve probably seen the viral moves that go with it. The streets are buzzing, and Sloan’s definitely got the city rocking with his sound.
It’s not just the music that’s got people talking. You might’ve seen him on Bel-Air, where he plays a low-level drug dealer and former basketball player who had his dreams of going pro crushed after a stint in juvie. That role hit home for a lot of people who’ve faced struggles trying to make it out.
Before “Cudi” took over, Sloan already had the city talking with hits like “Drive Who Crazy” and “Swagg Talk.” His unique voice, those signature adlibs, and his raw delivery set him apart from the rest. Sloan’s got a style that’s undeniable, and his rise in Philly rap is well-earned. With “Cudi” taking over the scene, it’s clear that D4M Sloan is just getting started. Check out his exclusive performance below and see why he’s next up in the game.
Check out D4M Sloan’s performance of his newest single “CUDI’ below:
There are a few things you can count on from former and once-again Oasis singer Liam Gallagher: a sneering deliver and jokes. So many jokes. Just 120 days until the July 4 kick-off of one of the most anticipated rock reunions in ages, Gallagher hopped on X on Wednesday (March 5) to finally reveal who […]
Winnie Holzman, best known for her work on Wicked and My So-Called Life, will be honored by her alma mater, New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts, at its annual gala on April 7 at Cipriani South Street. Holzman wrote the book for the blockbuster stage musical Wicked, with music and lyrics by Stephen […]
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Source: Prince Williams / Getty
Kanye West’s X, formerly Twitter, posts have been out of control for the past few weeks now, with the College Dropout artist doing everything from attacking the Jewish community (again) to proudly proclaiming himself a Nazi and a racist, but now, Ye seems to be going a different route as he’s extended an olive branch of sorts to a former rival in the King of the North, Drake.
After years of animosity between the two men, Kanye seems to have grown a soft spot for the embattled Canadian crooner/rapper as of late, and in a recent X post, Ye not only gave Drizzy a little love for his writing skills, but even went so far as to say he wants Drake to speak at his funeral.
In a random X post Kanye wrote, “I SAW A VIDEO OF DRAKE WALKING THROUGH HIS HOUSE AND SHOWING HE HAD A LIBRARY OF RYHME BOOKS MAN I WISH I COULD HAVE SEEN AND REMEMBERED THIS WHEN MY JEALOUSY OVERTOOK ME,” before adding, “I LOVE DRAKE IMA SAY THIS WHEN I DIE I NEED YOU TO SPEAK AT [MY] FUNERAL.”
The post comes after a video of Drake kicking it at an empty club all by himself while gambling began circulating social media. While some said Drizzy is showing how big ballers play out in the field, others felt this was a sign of just how lonely Drake is feeling right now, as Kendrick Lamar did to him what 50 Cent did to Ja Rule in the mid 2000s.
Obviously, these two men are going through some things right now. Given their history of beefing with each other, maybe a reconciliation would help them heal at least a small piece of themselves that they need to in order to move forward. While there’s still hope for Drake to once again be the music darling he once was at the height of his popularity, the same can’t be said for Kanye West who’s proudly stating his allegiance to the Nazi movement at a time where fascism seems to be engulfing America thanks to the Racist-in-Chief and his administration.
We can’t call it, man.
What do y’all think about Kanye West requesting that Drake speak at his funeral? Why is Kanye even thinking about his dying day? Sound off in the comments section below.
Ingrid Andress is ready to move on from her controversial national anthem performance.
In her first interview since going to rehab after her botched take of the “Star-Spangled Banner” at the 2024 Home Run Derby served as a wakeup call to her issues with alcohol, the country singer-songwriter opened up to Rolling Stone about everything that led up to her “worst moment” — and how she’s grown from it since. “I am sorry you had to witness that horrific rendition of our nation’s anthem,” she began in a piece published Thursday (March 6) .
“Whoever that was is not an accurate representation of who I am at all,” she continued. “You got to see me in my worst moment, so now, everything from here will be great.”
Andress went on to explain that, by the time she stepped onto the field in Arlington, Texas, last July, she’d already been accustomed to drinking before gigs to numb unresolved feelings about her career and a certain breakup — and that day was no exception. Up until then, however, she’d “never let it get in the way of my performance,” she told the publication. “I liked the numbness … That’s part of how it got out of control.”
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This time around, the “More Hearts Than Mine” singer said she was too “blacked out” to hear the anthem’s starting pitch in her in-ear monitors, which contributed to the pitchiness and questionable melodic choices viewers witnessed that day. “If you don’t start on the note that it gives you, you’re screwed,” she explained. “It was my voice fighting with the tuner, which is a losing battle.”
Andress didn’t immediately realize how badly the performance went, but the online vitriol that followed quickly opened her eyes to how serious the issue was. She quickly drafted a statement at her team’s suggestion — “I’m not gonna bulls–t y’all, I was drunk last night … That was not me last night,” she wrote — and was on a plane to a rehab facility outside of her home state of Tennessee mere hours later.
“I didn’t run that statement by anybody,” she said in the interview, adding that she received messages of support from fellow women country artists such as Elle King, Kelsea Ballerini and Little Big Town’s Karen Fairchild in the aftermath. “I needed to let people know that it’s not just this one incident that I messed up. ‘I need to get better. I’m at such a low place, I’m not gonna lie about it.’”
The four-time Grammy nominee has since completed treatment and, after spending months reconnecting with herself in her native Colorado, redeemed herself with a second national anthem performance at a recent Colorado Avalanche hockey game. On Monday (March 3), she also released her first song since the debacle: “Footprints,” a musical “reminder to all the people I love the most, and also to myself, that I’m out here trying my best at this ‘life’ thing,” she wrote on Instagram this week.
Of what her redemption arc has taught her, Andress told Rolling Stone, “I learned to not ever let your past dictate what you can do in the future.”
She added, “Sometimes it takes a little public humiliation to turn your life around.”
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