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“Without James Brown, the whole trajectory of culture goes somewhere else” … “He’s authentically and unapologetically Black” … “He marched to the beat of his own drum — literally.”
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Those declarations from LL Cool J, Morehouse College’s Dr. David Wall Rice and Rev. Al Sharpton, respectively, are just a few of the illuminating comments peppering the first two hours of A&E’s James Brown: Say It Loud which premiered Monday (Feb. 19). The second half of the network’s four-hour docu-series bows Tuesday (Feb. 20) at 8 p.m. ET.
Three days prior to the docuseries’ premiere, a never-heard Brown song was also released through Republic/Universal Music Enterprises. “We Got to Change” follows in the vein of Brown’s other message songs like “Don’t Be a Dropout” and “Say It Loud – I’m Black and I’m Proud.”
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Recorded on Aug. 16, 1970, at Miami’s Criteria Studios, “We Got to Change” features the invigorating presence of Brown’s then-new band The J.B.’s. The driving force behind songs such as “Get Up (I Feel Like Being) a Sex Machine” and “Super Bad,” The J.B.’s included bassist William “Bootsy” Collins and his guitarist brother Phelps “Catfish” Collins. The newly discovered vault gem — a mirror reflection of today’s social climate some 54 years later — also boasts the presence of Brown’s longtime No. 2 Bobby Byrd and one of Brown’s well-known sidemen, Clyde “The Funky Drummer” Stubblefield.
Directed by Deborah Riley Draper, James Brown: Say It Loud presents an unvarnished look at Brown’s uphill climb from seventh grade dropout, shoeshine boy and buck dancer to soul/funk pioneer, business mogul and civil rights activist. It’s also a success story riddled with setbacks: his endorsement of President Nixon, physical and verbal abuse of women and drug use. Overall, however, the documentary underscores how Brown’s legacy as a top-flight showman with dazzling footwork, his sixth sense musically and entrepreneurial hustle skills have continued to inspire and influence a host of acts from Parliament-Funkadelic and Michael Jackson to Usher, Bruno Mars and Janelle Monae.
The first hour, titled “Making a Life for Myself,” takes viewers from Brown’s 1933 birth in Barnwell, S.C., to his poverty-ridden childhood in Augusta, Ga. (He was nine years old when he got his first pair of underwear from a store.) Also spotlighted: the future legend’s early career traveling the chitlin circuit and game-changing 1963 live album with the Famous Flames, Live at the Apollo (which Brown financed himself). Outlined in between are Brown’s gospel and jazz influences, his detention stint for car theft, fortuitous meeting with Byrd (who’d earlier founded the Flames) and his first two R&B hits, 1956’s “Please, Please, Please” and 1958’s “Try Me.” As Brown states matter-of-factly in one interview clip, “I had to have determination … my determination was to be somebody.”
“The Most Powerful Black Man in America,” the documentary’s second hour, chronicles Brown’s still-evolving career, beginning with his and the Flames’ cameo in the 1965 film Ski Party starring then-pop heartthrobs Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello. That same year, Brown unleashed his R&B chart-topper and first Billboard Hot 100 top 10, the rhythm- and horn-driven “Papa’s Got a Brand New Bag.” That song, in turn, sparked a run of top 10 hits — including “I Got You (I Feel Good),” “It’s a Man’s Man’s Man’s World” and funk escalator “Cold Sweat” — while simultaneously forging the James Brown sound alongside that of Motown, Stax, Memphis and Muscle Shoals.
Of note as well in the second hour: Brown’s personas as a perfectionist (fining musicians $50 for a missed note), civil rights activist (keeping the peace at an already scheduled Boston Garden concert the day after Dr. Martin Luther King’s 1968 assassination; the origin of his Black empowerment anthem “Say It Loud”) and savvy businessman (owner of three radio stations, a restaurant chain and his own jet) whose misstep in endorsing Republican president Nixon led to backlash from the Black community. Rounding out the segment are Brown’s collaboration with new band The J.B.’s, as well as his pivotal deal with Polydor Records after a long association with Syd Nathan’s King label.
In addition to Collins, the documentary features a diverse range of artists, songwriter-producers, executives and family members sharing their perspectives on Brown’s influential legacy. Among them: Public Enemy’s Chuck D, Jimmy Jam & Terry Lewis, Dallas Austin, jazz bassist Christian McBride, female rap pioneer MC Sha-Rock, Brown’s tour director Alan Leeds, Universal Music Group’s general counsel Jeff Harleston, Mick Jagger and Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson (both of whom executive produced the documentary with Tariq “Black Thought” Trotter) and Brown’s children Deanna, Yamma and Larry. Even more compelling in relaying Brown’s story are the archival performance footage, interview clips and photos that Draper and her team put together.
James Brown: Say It Loud, concludes Tuesday (Feb. 20) on A&E. The documentary’s final two hours address the late singer’s personal life; his global status as a headlining performer at Zaire 74, a three-day festival in Africa conceived to help promote the 1974 boxing match between Muhammad Ali and George Foreman; and Brown’s major role in laying the foundation for hip-hop amid the advent of sampling.
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At the end of 2023, Sony released a newly designed PlayStation 5 Slim, a handheld PlayStation 5 Portal remote player, an accessibility controller kit and a pair of true wireless earbuds to round out the PlayStation experience for gamers. For 2024, the tech and entertainment company just released a new accessory that brings games to life with precision and immersive audio.
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Priced at $149.99 at Walmart, the Sony Pulse Elite is a new true wireless gaming headset that’s specifically designed for the PS5 and PS Portal. In fact, it even connects to two devices at the same time.
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And since it’s from Walmart, you’ll get it shipped to you for free if you’re a Walmart+ member.
Not a member? You can sign up for a 30-day free trial to take advantage of everything the retailer’s rewards program has to offer, including free delivery; fuel savings at Exxon, Mobil, Walmart or Murphy gas stations; streaming access to Paramount+ to watch hit originals such as Halo, Fatal Attraction and Star Trek: Lower Decks; early deals access and much more. Learn more about Walmart+ here.
Sony
Sony PS Pulse Elite Wireless Gaming Headset
Also available at Amazon, Best Buy and Target, this accessory delivers excellent gaming audio that’s clear, rich and completely immersive with deep and rumbling bass. It comes with a USB “PS Link” dongle that connects directly into the back of the PS5 to give you a low-latency wireless audio connection with virtually zero lag. It even has a long battery life of up to 30 hours per charge.
Meanwhile, the wireless gaming headset has a clever hidden microphone design, which slides out of the left earcup to let gamers chat with teammates and opponents online. In addition to the PS5, it’s Bluetooth-enabled with Mac and PC, as well as Apple iPhone and Android mobile devices.
The Sony PS5 Pulse Elite Wireless Gaming Headset comes out on Wednesday, Feb. 21. It’s available for $149.99 at Walmart, Amazon, Best Buy, Target and PlayStation Direct. (You can also find them on resale sites such as StockX.)
In the meantime, watch Sony’s innovation video for the gaming headset, below.
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Want more deals? For more product recommendations, check out our roundups of the best Xbox deals, studio headphones and Nintendo Switch accessories.
Oscar-winning director Sam Mendes (1917, Spectre) has gotten the green light to begin work on four separate feature films that will tell the individual stories of all four Beatles. According to a release from Sony Pictures Entertainment announcing the project on Tuesday morning (Feb. 20), Mendes will direct the films focused on George Harrison, John Lennon, Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr due out in 2027.
The project will mark the first time the band’s Apple Corps Ltd. and the group — McCartney and Starr and the families of Harrison and Lennon — have given full access to life story and music rights for a scripted film. “I’m honored to be telling the story of the greatest rock band of all time, and excited to challenge the notion of what constitutes a trip to the movies,” said Mendes in a statement.
Mendes will direct the four stand-alone theatrical movies — with each one told from one band member’s point of view — as well as intersecting to tell the full story of the Fab Four. SPE, which will finance and distribute the movies conceived by Mendes, will share the details of the roll-out, which it promised will be “innovative and groundbreaking.”
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The director’s Neal Street Productions partner, Pippa Harris, added, “We intend this to be a uniquely thrilling, and epic cinematic experience: four films, told from four different perspectives which tell a single story about the most celebrated band of all time. To have The Beatles’ and Apple Corps’ blessing to do this is an immense privilege. From our first meeting with Tom Rothman and Elizabeth Gabler, it was clear that they shared both our passion and ambition for this project, and we can’t think of a more perfect home than Sony Pictures.”
One of the most scrutinized and studied groups in popular music history, the Fab Four have been the subjects of hundreds of books and docs, including Peter Jackson’s acclaimed 2021 four-part documentary series, Get Back, which incorporated previously unseen and unheard audio and video.
Apple Corps Ltd. CEO Jeff Jones said the company is “delighted to collaborate with Sam, Pippa and Julie to explore each Beatle’s unique story and to bring them together in a suitably captivating and innovative way. Sony Pictures’ enthusiastic support, championing the project’s scope and creative vision from the start, has been invaluable for all of us.”
Sometimes the stars align and magic happens. But this leap year, the heavens have misaligned and robbed St. Patrick’s Day revelers of the first chance in six years to paint the town green on a Saturday because of the leap year.
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So when a nation needs brave heroes to do the right thing and save them from having to shake their shamrocks on a Sunday, Saturday Night Live “Weekend Update” co-anchors Michael Che and Colin Jost have bravely stepped up to the challenge with a brand-new holiday celebration.
“We’re not making up a holiday, this is a freak occurrence,” Che explains about the decision by the duo to team up with Jameson Irish Whiskey to create a new, totally fabricated holiday they’re calling “Jameson St. Patrick’s Eve.” The faux festival will take place on March 16, complete with a St. Patrick’s Eve countdown in New York’s Times Square hosted by the duo.
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“Why not St. Patrick’s Eve? You’ve got Christmas Eve, you’ve got New Year’s Eve,” Che says. While acknowledging that New Yorkers don’t really need an excuse to start the party before 10 a.m., Che says he and Jost are not recommending that revelers start that early, but “we do recommend you have one or two at, say 10:30 a.m.,” with Jost adding, “if you work until 9 a.m. it’s a very reasonable time to have a drink… [like if you’re a ] longshoremen.”
“Or short shoremen,” Che quipped, with Jost chiming in, “yeah, we don’t discriminate… I’ve always through I really want to start a religion for tax purposes, so starting a holiday is a first step.” The pair, both native New Yorkers, say they take their St. Patrick’s day celebrations very seriously, with the always-on-message Che noting that the holiday reminds him of “friendship, fellowship, and of course, Jameson.”
“When Leap Year skipped over a Saturday St. Patrick’s Day, we did exactly what a Jameson would do: we created a completely new holiday so people can start celebrating St. Patrick’s Day a little early,” says the brand’s VP of marketing Johan Radojewski in a statement announcing the hokum holiday party that will also include a guest appearance from an as-yet-unnamed DJ. “We teamed up with Colin Jost and Michael Che to help us seize this moment and encourage everyone to embrace St. Patrick’s Eve, because they’re a duo who appreciates a smooth Irish Whiskey, good company, and a brand-new holiday – just like any Jameson would.”
The St. Patrick’s Eve party Times Square takeover will also feature the first-of-its-kind “rock drop,” Jameson’s spin on the famous New Year’s eve ball drop, which will take place at 8 p.m. ET (midnight in Ireland). Che says he’s so excited about the party, in fact, that he’s considering his first stage dive. “I’ve been saving it, now is the time I feel,” he says, with Jost, as usual, perfectly yes-anding his co-anchor’s bit by comparing the scene he expects to the one in The Thomas Crown Affair “where they’re all walking around in bowler hats at the end? Except it will be a sea of green plastic hats.”
The real holiday evokes fond memories for Jost, who often marched with firefighters in two St. Patrick’s Day parades as a kid, in Manhattan and Staten Island, alongside his mother and grandfather, both of whom worked for the fire department. Che, on the other hand, jokes that he doesn’t have any specific memories of the holiday, because “it’s St. Patrick’s day and if you have memories after St. Patrick’s Day you’re doing it wrong.”
The one thing the “Update” anchors could not reveal was the name of the DJ, though Che teases that “no it’s not a British guy name ‘Prize’ who was knighted. It’s a surprise!”
Starting today, fans can enter a chance to get a spot on the guest list for the Jameson St. Patrick’s Eve party and anyone 21+ can check out a livestream of the rock drop here. The party will take place between 43rd and 44th Streets from 6-10 p.m. EST. In addition, Jameson will light up the Sphere in Las Vegas in Jameson green, wrap ferries and water taxies in the dyed-green Chicago River and do a digital takeover at L.A. Live to mark the holiday.
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. Beauty lovers, it’s time to celebrate one of your favorite makeup essentials: mascara. National Lash Day will be taking place Monday […]
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Queen Latifah is back as Robyn McCall in season 4 of The Equalizer. The latest season of the crime series premieres Sunday (Feb. 18) on CBS and Paramount+.
“We are so happy to be back… and we are going to give the people what they need,” Latifah shared in a recent interview with Entertainment Tonight explaining what fans can expect from the new season.
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“You will get the family, the love [and] all the action you can handle,” she said before adding that viewers will see “explosions, people diving and ducking and all that good stuff.”
Read on for ways to watch and stream The Equalizer.
What Time Does The Equalizer Season 4 Premiere?
Season 4 of The Equalizer premieres Sunday, Feb. 18, at 8 p.m. ET/PT on CBS. The series premiere will also stream live on Paramount+ with Showtime.
Where to Watch The Equalizer for Free
If you don’t have cable (or a digital antenna to watch CBS and other local channels), streaming is the easiest and most affordable way to watch your favorite shows. And there are plenty of ways to watch The Equalizer — without spending money up front. For example, you can get a free trial through Paramount+, Fubo or DirecTV to stream the season premiere.
Keep reading for more details on how to watch The Equalizer on Paramount+ vs. Paramount+ with Showtime, DirecTV and Fubo.
How to Watch The Equalizer on Paramount+
What is Paramount+ with Showtime? It combines two streaming platforms for one low price: $11.99/month after a 7-day free trial (use code: GOAT to extend the free trial for 30 days). The plan gives you access to the live stream shows via your local CBS affiliate in addition to on-demand streaming.
With the Paramount+ Essential, $5.99/month, you can stream The Equalizer on demand a day after the episode airs.
From movies to TV to sporting events, Paramount+ is stacked with bingeable content available only to subscribers. Some of Paramount+ Originals streaming now include Halo, The Family Stone, Ink Master, Mayor of Kingstown and Seal Team, and movies such as Good Burger, Mission Impossible Dead Reckoning, Transformers Rise of the Beast and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Turtle Mayhem.
Paramount+ with Showtime combines both platforms, which essentially gives you more bang for your buck. You’ll get to stream Paramount+ Originals alongside Showtime Originals such as The Chi, Yellowjackets, Dexter, The Affair, Couples Therapy and other TV series and movies streaming exclusively on the platform.
How to Watch The Equalizer on DirecTV
Say goodbye to cable chords. DirecTV Stream gives you instant access to live television — local and cable channels — for one low price.
Watch CBS, NBC, ABC and other local networks in addition to cable networks such as AMC, A&E, FX, Bravo, Cartoon Network, ESPN, ESPN2, FS1, FS2, VH1, Fuse, CNN, Food Network, Lifetime, CNBS, BET, MTV, Paramount Network and dozens of other channels on DirecTV.
DirecTV offers a 5-day free trial and streaming plans starting at less than $80.
How to Watch ‘The Equalizer’ on Fubo
Fubo Pro is $75 per month to stream over 100 channels including local and cable channels. Plus, a 7-day free trial.
Get live access to local channels such as CBS, NBC and Fox and a ton of cable channels including Bravo, TLC, TNT, TBS, E!, FS1, MTV, CMT, FX, ID, Ion, OWN, Paramount Network, TV Land, and VH1.
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New episodes of The Equalizer will also be available to stream on The Roku Channel, Apple TV and Prime Video.
If you’re streaming internationally, VPNs such as Express VPN, NordVPN and PureVPN let you access a number of streaming platforms.
The Equalizer TV series, which is adapted from the film franchise and executive produced by Latifah and Richard Lindheim and Michael Sloan, premiered after Super Bowl LV in 2021. The show’s cast includes Adam Goldberg, Liza Lapira, Laya DeLeon Hayes and Lorraine Toussaint.
A special teaser from Season 4 premiered after Super Bowl LVIII.
Watch the sneak peek below.
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The 2024 BAFTA Film Awards will take place at London’s Royal Festival Hall on Sunday (Feb. 18), hosted by Dr. Who actor David Tennant.
The BAFTA awards will air live on BBC One and BBC iPlayer in the U.K. and on BritBox for those streaming from the U.S. The ceremony will broadcast at 2 p.m. ET/7 p.m. BST.
TV hosts Clara Amfo and Alex Zane will helm the red carpet on Sunday. Coverage will stream live on the BAFTA’s YouTube page.
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Keep reading for more details on the BAFTAs and how to watch live from the states.
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How to Watch the BAFTAs in the U.S.
BritBox landed streaming rights for the 2024 and 2025 BAFTA Awards. That means movie fans in the U.S. have more ways to watch the awards.
How much does BritBox cost? Right now, BritBox is running a limited promo for just $9 for three months — 67% off the usual price of $8.99 per month, or $89.99 for the annual plan.
BritBox carries a variety of British TV series, movies and documentaries such as Luther, Downton Abbey, Dr. Who, Archie: The Man Who Became Carry Grant, Father Brown, Payback, Bay and Prime Suspect.
Amazon Prime members can subscribe to Britbox through Prime Video (free trial included).
How to Watch the BAFTAs With a VPN
Need more ways to watch the 2024 BAFTAs? You can stream the BAFTAs on ExpressVPN (or NordVPN) to access BBC iPlayer and other international streaming platforms. ExpressVPN is currently offering a promo deal of $6.99/month for a year, plus three months free.
NordVPN is offering 67% off when you subscribe to a two-year plan, plus you’ll get an Uber Eats voucher. Plans start at $3.39/month (reg. $8.29) with the limited promo (offer ends tonight).
Read on for more details about the 2024 BAFTA Film Awards.
BAFTAs 2024: Nominees & Presenters
Dua Lipa, Idris Elba, David Beckham, Cate Blanchett, Taylor Russell and Indira Varma are among the presenters for this year’s BAFTA awards.
Nominees for leading actress include Fantasia Barrino, Margot Robbie, Emma Stone, Sandra Huller, Carey Mulligan and Vivian Oparah.
Emily Blunt, Danielle Brooks, Claire Foy, Sandra Huller, Rosamund Pike and Da’Vine Joy Randolph are the nominees for best supporting actress.
Bradley Cooper, Colman Domingo, Paul Giamatti, Berry Keoghan, Cillian Murphy and Teo Yoo are up for leading actor. Robert DeNiro, Robert Downey Jr., Jacob Elordi, Ryan Gosling, Paul Mescal and Dominic Sessa landed nominations for best supporting actor.
Anatomy of a Fall, The Holdovers, Killers of the Flower Moon, Oppenheimer and Poor Things are nominated for best picture. Best director nominees include Andrew Haigh (All of Us Strangers) Justine Triet (Anatomy of a Fall), Alexander Payne (The Holdovers), Bradley Cooper (Maestro), Christopher Nolan (Oppenheimer) and Jonathan Glazer (The Zone of Interest).
See the full list here.
With biopics of Whitney Houston, Freddie Mercury and Elvis in the cultural rearview and blockbusters based on the lives and careers of Michael Jackson, Amy Winehouse and Linda Ronstadt on the way, the film industry is firmly in its musical biopic era. Armed with an enduring global legacy and a timeless catalog of culture-shifting reggae classics, Bob Marley: One Love – which hit theaters on Feb. 14 — enters the playing field as the latest offering from Reinaldo Marcus Green, director of the Acadamy Award-nominated King Richard.
Starring Kingsley Ben-Adir (Barbie, One Night In Miami…) as reggae legend Bob Marley, the film covers the dynamic between Marley, his backing band The Wailers and his family in the year immediately following an assassination attempt on his life. Rounded out by a cast that includes BAFTA Award winner Lashana Lynch as Rita Marley, Bob’s widow (and a member of his backing vocal group the I Threes) and BAFTA nominee James Norton as producer and Island Records founder Chris Blackwell, One Love aims to humanize a man whose talent and message caused him to, in many ways, transcend mortality. Bob Marley’s songs have garnered a whopping seven billion official on-demand U.S. streams, per Luminate, while his Legend compilation is the second-longest charting album in Billboard 200 history (821 weeks).
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With Rita – alongside children Cedella and Ziggy Marley – acting as co-producers, a commitment to a sincere and respectful portrayal of Bob Marley’s musicality, reggae history and Jamaican culture anchored the film’s journey to the silver screen.
Rather than attempting to document the entirety of Marely’s life, One Love focuses on the years between 1976 and 1978 – and two pivotal Marley music milestones receive key showcases. The first, the legendary Smile Jamaica concert, was an extremely ambitious undertaking – one that was only possible through the care taken by the film’s producers and Jamaican cast and crew members. Although Ben-Adir is not Jamaican — “[It] was okay as long as the family was in support of it,” he says — both Jamaican-born actors and performers of Jamaican descent make up the lion’s share of the film’s cast. Important secondary characters include Jamaican singer Sevana as reggae legend and I Threes member Judy Mowatt, Hector Roots Lewis as Wailers drummer Carlton “Carly” Barrett and Aston Barrett Jr. as his father, the late Wailers bandleader Aston “Family Man” Barrett.
Held on Dec. 5, 1976, at National Heroes Park in Kingston, Jamaica, the Smile Jamaica Concert was a massive benefit intended to counter political violence and unrest in the country during its tumultuous election cycle. Marley was shot in his home in an assassination attempt just two days before the performance, but he recovered in time to play a historic 90-minute set alongside the Wailers for an audience of over 80,000 people.
Given that Smile Jamaica is one of the most famed music concerts in history, recreating the performance for One Love was a painstaking process for which the cast rose to the occasion. “It was fun! It was long though,” says Lewis about filming major performance scenes like the Smile Jamaica concert. “At first, you’re excited to play music — that’s what me and Sev do, and we know we know the vibe of that. We have the endurance fi it. It was fun until after a while it wasn’t. You have to shoot from the front [and] the back a million times, I mean I felt sorry for [Sevana] because she had to go in whole dresses and whole headwraps and stuff!”
Bob Marley: One Love marks the feature film debuts of Sevana, Lewis and Barrett Jr., but as longtime musicians and performers they looked to their own experiences to help inform their portrayals of their respective characters. As Jamaicans, the three artists also scored opportunities to get intimately familiar with the people whose stories they were bringing to the big screen. Sevana, who first auditioned for Rita Marley, spent valuable one-on-one time with Mowatt.
“I was able to meet Judy Mowatt in person, and she’s an angel, a divine woman,” Sevana gushes. “I was able to sit with her and hear her perspective. She brought me through her house. She showed me pictures of things that meant a lot to her. This is a part of history to be recollected through film. Understanding that Judy Mowatt was a woman of principle and integrity and understanding what this story means to greater Jamaica, I couldn’t say no.”
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As a member of the I Threes, alongside Rita Marley and Marcia Griffiths, Mowatt served as one of the backing vocalists for Bob Marley & the Wailers. As a soloist, she released Black Woman (1979) — widely considered to be one of the greatest albums in reggae history – and became the first woman to land a Grammy nomination for best reggae album (Working Wonders, 1986). “Myself, Lashana Lynch (who plays Rita Marley) and Naomi Cohen (who plays Griffiths), we did a lot of separate rehearsals,” says Sevana. “We had choreography that we had to practice. We had to make sure that we got the harmonies right for each section. We had to basically become a group and get the body movements and mannerisms of each character without mimicking them. We became them.”
Like Sevana, Barrett. Jr, the nephew of the late Carlton “Carly” Barrett, also had a very intimate preparation for his role. “We had a whole day together talking about his uncle, talking about certain things that made him who he is — like the way he walked, the way he talked, the way he did not talk!” Lewis says. “There was a lot of similarities I saw between myself and him that helped me to really bring out the role.”
One of the key instrumentalists in popularizing the one drop rhythm, an authentic recapturing of Carly’s drum playing proved to be a microcosm of the One Love cast’s commitment to taking pride in every detail of the film’s music scenes. “They told me from the beginning that the drums are something you can’t hide in a film,” explains Lewis. “You have to learn it. From the chop to the bop, everything.” Highly respected across Jamaica and the world as a multi-instrumentalist and vocalist, Lewis also served as a guiding light for his fellow castmates in terms of embodying their respective roles.
“He barely hung out with the cast!” jokes Sevana, who previously acted in local productions before her feature film debut in One Love. “He was just learning the things over and over again, and I definitely saw that reflected across everybody and how seriously they took their craft. I was studying [Judy’s] movements on stage like, was she more spirited than the others? What was her energy like? It’s kind of like she wanted to crawl inside of the music, so I really took that to heart.”
For Aston Barrett Jr., his relationship with One Love more closely mirrored that of Ziggy Marley than either Sevana or Lewis. After all, he was tasked with portraying his father in the strong-opening biopic, and he had multiple family members whose likeness would be brought to life in the film. “My father has been ill for a while, and before he got really ill, told him that I was going to play him in [One Love],” Barrett Jr. says. “He said ‘Yeah, man, you’re the rightful one.’”
Unfortunately, Aston Barrett Sr. would pass shortly before the film opened in theaters (Feb. 3), echoing a similar moment that occurred during filming. “We went to [shoot in] England right before Uncle Tyrone passed, and it really was bothering me because I couldn’t go to the funeral because I had to the acting class,” says Barrett Jr. of his late uncle, a keyboardist for Marley & the Wailers. “I don’t know if Uncle Tyrone in heaven just picked this guy, but there couldn’t be no other guy to play Uncle Tyrone. The man [Tosin Cole] literally reminds me of Uncle Tyrone and he never even met him. The man, when him smile, Uncle Tyrone. Same vibes.”
As much as Bob Marley: One Love is a meditation on the everlasting power of music, it is also an ode to the concept of family in all its iterations. From Ziggy and Julian Marley to Skip and YG Marley (who recently scored his first Billboard Hot 100 hit with “Praise Jah in the Moonlight”), the world has been well acquainted with the constantly evolving legacy of the music of Bob Marley’s children. The metaphysical synergy of music and family also courses through the Barretts. Shortly before Uncle Tyrone passed, Barrett Jr. toured alongside him as part of The Wailers Band – the present-day configuration of The Wailers, in which Barrett Jr. has succeeded his father as bandleader. That innate knowledge of the artistry and musicality of Bob Marley & the Wailers allowed Barrett Jr. to pick up some slack on minor details which also doubled as incredibly consequential components of the film’s major music scenes.
“Aston made sure the right drum set was there for the right concert,” explains Lewis. “It was very important, and it actually [shifted] the game of how things look like, what bass he was using for that concert as opposed to the other concert. What he was wearing. He got people to change my wardrobe!”
For Ben-Adir, an actor who notably did not grow up in the throes of Bob Marley’s musical expeditions, going back to basics was key. Over six months before filming began, Ben-Adir got himself a guitar and learned how to play basic chords while listening to Bob Marley’s music and watching his performances, particularly his rendition of “War” at Smile Jamaica. The BAFTA nominee rehearsed for hours each day, playing every song in Bob’s sprawling discography. “I performed all of the songs live on set,” says Ben-Adir. “I was always singing into the microphone. Anyone who was on set could always hear me, but our understanding was that the concert scenes and Bob’s vocals were always going to be what the audience was going to hear.”
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While the Smile Jamaica concert is the film’s largest showcase of live performances, the film also heavily focuses on the making of Bob Marley & the Wailers’ Exodus album. The now-classic record — which prioritizes explorations of faith, religious politics, love and peace – arrived in 1977 and featured classic tracks such as “Three Little Birds,” “Jamming” and “Turn Your Lights Down Low.” Crafted in the months immediately following the December 1976 assassination attempt on Marley’s life, Exodus is a landmark record that further bolstered the reggae legend’s commercial success and status as a sociopolitical symbol of peace and unity. Ben-Adir says filming the Exodus recording scenes was “really special because everyone around [him] played music… I could always just look to my left or my right and someone was there to put my hands in the right position or correct me on a chord.”
The Exodus recording scenes provided an invaluable opportunity for musicians like Sevana, Lewis and Barrett Jr. to help One Love capture a depiction of Marley beyond the weed iconography and tri-color Rastafarian flag that his likeness has been boiled down to in certain cultural spaces. Carrying their own music-making experiences onto set, the One Love cast uses these scenes to re-center and emphasize the goal and message of Marley’s Exodus album. As he sings in the bridge of the album’s title track, “Jah come to break down ’pression/ Rule equality/ Wipe away transgression/ Set the captives free.”
“When you listen to ‘Exodus,’ it’s an epic song. With all the challenges we gave today, we were definitely able to connect with it,” says Lewis. “We had to have composure while [filming those scenes] and not get too lost in it. It definitely showed me that we have to keep up with the times, we haffi mek music like this if we really love music as pure people.” Sevana adds: “Nina Simone said, ‘How could you be an artist and not reflect the times,’ right? This is music for all times, because it was reiterating the truth — and truth doesn’t have an expiration.”
Although Exodus contends with some of Bob’s headiest and most taxing lyrical themes, the cast understood these scenes as a window into the childlike sibling dynamic between Bob and the Wailers. Moments showcasing those relationships were imperative to making a biopic that didn’t completely rest on the laurels of Marley’s staggering cultural cachet. “So many things happened during this Exodus time, but you can tell that they all have an inner child,” muses Barrett Jr. “They all act like kids! That’s why you can mek music suh nice, even though them serious at the same time. As Bob said, [his] music is so simple that even a baby can understand it.” As such, the cast always remained in character on set, at times, calling each other by their character’s name instead of their given names.
While the movie and its cast do a commendable job trying to get the music right, its soundtrack EP has caught some warranted flak for including just one Jamaican recording artist (Skip Marley). Alongside Marley, the EP features covers of Bob Marley & the Wailers biggest hits by a range of singer-songwriters from all over the map, geographically and musically, including Kacey Musgraves, Leon Bridges, Daniel Caesar, Wizkid, Jessie Reyez, and Bloody Civilian. The full project hit digital streaming platforms the same night One Love opened in theaters (Feb. 14). Billboard could not reach producer Ziggy Marley for comment regarding the EP.
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Outside of the cast and accompanying soundtrack, composer Kris Bowers did his due diligence to effectively convey the sounds of Jamaica and roots reggae through the film’s original score. Like Ben-Adir, Bowers – who also scored recent major motion pictures such as Blitz Bazawule’s The Color Purple (2023) and Ava DuVernay’s Origin (2023) — is not of Jamaican descent, but his trust in director Reinaldo Marcus Green (with whom he previously collaborated on 2021’s King Richard) and respect for Bob Marley’s legacy drew him to One Love.
“The one thing I was excited about with this being the story is how much [Bob’s] introduction to the score for [Otto Preminger’s Exodus (1960)] made him feel inspired to make this album that had the scale of a movie and this cinematic gravitas,” says Bowers. “This movie focuses largely on his personal exodus, leaving and returning and being in London. This exposure to a different culture helped me create a rule for myself that I could play with different instrumentation that is a bit more orchestral in nature [given that] he was inspired by that sound, even if the album Exodus doesn’t have an orchestra on it.”
While Bowers was unafraid to inject the film’s score with the cinematic bombast of the film that inspired the Exodus album, he also made sure to tap Jamaican Rastafari musicians to respectfully emulate the roots reggae foundation of Bob Marley & the Wailers’ sound. “The choice to incorporate Nyabinghi percussion came from [Bob’s] relationship with that music,” explains Bowers. “In all of his music and live shows, he would always have a Nyabinghi percussion ensemble with him; it’s connected to the Rastafarian religion. Ziggy and I talked a lot about how those drums might be able to represent different ideas in the score and be a part of the palette in a way that connects it to that culture,” he says.
According to Bowers, all of the Nyabinghi percussion was recorded at Tuff Gong studios during on-location filming in Jamaica; both Ziggy and Steven Marley were present for those sessions, helping Bowers produce and direct each movement. In addition to the Nyabinghi percussion, Bowers also notes “Redemption Song,” “Turn Your Lights Down Low” and “Running Away” as three Marley songs that directly inspired the score in some capacity.
“It’s almost a different language, right? They were almost translating for me, where I would say, ‘This is what I want energetically,’ and they were able to articulate to this ensemble what it was that we might be able to,” says Bowers. “I’m a novice when it [comes] to that type of music. It was so fascinating for me to watch them explain how to evoke a certain feeling based on tempo or certain aspects of the instrumentation.”
As audiences pack into theaters to take in One Love, the cast hopes viewers will come away from the film with a truly nuanced understanding of Bob Marley, reggae and Jamaica. “It’s about understanding what it means to be a Jamaican with a dream, with a purpose,” muses Lewis. “We need the inspiration today and Bob is our foundation. We can listen to reggae music [because] it has that functionality of inspiration and upliftment. It went to the world, but he sang the struggles of our people. He sang the struggles of all people. One love, one heart.”
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You don’t have to leave home to enjoy a perfectly relaxing spa day, just get a portable sauna.
Home saunas come in handy when you need to relax after a long day or an intense workout session. If the idea of buying a home sauna feels intimidating, it’s not as scary as you might think. In fact, you don’t need a ton of space to fit one comfortably in your home and there are several options on sale for Presidents’ Day.
See below for more information on the benefits of home saunas and brands that we recommend.
Feel the Heat: Here’s What Makes Home Saunas Worth It
Investing in a sauna means that you’re putting health and wellness first, and that’s always a good thing. Aside from stress relief and pain relief, saunas offer a range of health benefits. According to the National Institute of Health, using a sauna has anti-aging benefits and can help with weight loss, skin rejuvenation, improve sleep habits and increase blood circulation.
And you can use them indoor or outdoors, including in the backyard, basement, home gym or a large bathroom. Not all saunas are created equal though, so while you might find saunas for under $500 such as this portable steam sauna from Amazon, they won’t be as sturdy and don’t look as good as wooden saunas from retailers such as Sun Home Saunas, Home Depot and other options on our list.
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See below for a collection of the top 4 outdoor saunas to buy right now.
best overall
Sun Home Saunas Equinox 2-Person Full-Spectrum Infrared Sauna
$6,299
$6,999
10% off
Sun Home Saunas Equinox 2-Person Infrared Sauna is our best overall pick. The two-person sauna reaches up to 165-degrees and it’s made from solid wood (like all Sun Home Saunas). Equinox II also boasts a sleek, two-toned design.
The outdoor sauna features six heaters, including four FIR heaters (far infrared heaters) and two, full-spectrum 500W infrared heaters. Additional features include chromeotherapy LED lighting and EMF/ELF blocking technology, which blocks harmful radiation.
Equinox II also earned a perfect, 5-star rating on the Sun Home Saunas website.
“Our new Sun Home sauna is exactly what we hoped it would be, and it feels equivalent to those we have used at nice spa’s in every way,“ reads one customer review.
The gorgeous sauna opens into a mini oasis for relaxation. It stands 77.7-inches tall and 50.9 inches wide (45.9 inches in depth) and weighs 520 pounds.
Save up to $700 off on saunas and plungers during the Sun Home Saunas Presidents’ Day sale. Offer ends Feb. 21.
toP rATED
Thermodwood 6-Person Barrel Sauna
Looking for a round sauna? The Thermwood Barrel Sauna from Redwood Outdoors fits up to six people and will definitely stand out in any backyard.
The sphere-shaped sauna features Harvia’s electric heater with a wooden heater guard, along with sauna rocks, a water bucket, ladle and plenty of seating. Redwood Outdoors saunas heats up to 195-degrees in less than an hour. The barrel sauna feature digital Wifi heating controls and manual controls, which you can preheat up to eight hours in advance — making it great for cold temperature as one customer review notes. “I love everything about this sauna,” reads the review. “It’s soooooo awesome. All in all 5/5, I highly recommend getting one. First time in my life I can’t wait for the cold weather to come, so I can get lots of use out of this sauna.”
The exterior of the sauna measures around 6 feet 3 inches tall and 6 feet wide, and it weighs 900 pounds.
sponsored
Sun Home Luminar 5 Outdoor- 5-Person Full-Spectrum Infrared Sauna
$8,999
$9,699
7% off
Beauty meets brains! If you’re looking to enjoy a beautiful view of the outdoors while relaxing in a state-of-the art, smart sauna — the Luminar 5 is the perfect choice.
The smart sauna brings the outdoors inside, by way of a double pain, glass exterior. It features a whopping 15 heaters – 10 full spectrum heaters and 5 FIR heaters – that are placed all over the sauna to heat from every direction. It also has Bluetooth technology, Wifi, LED lights, built-in speakers with premium surround sound and a control panel that you can adjust using the mobile app.
The Luminar 5 “heats up fast and works great,” according to one of several customer reviews. The customer added that it “provides an excellent sweat session” and raved about the Bluetooth feature. “I like to listen to podcasts to get the most out of my time in there. It even looks beautiful in the garden, the lights and the wood make it really luxury. I’m happy we got the [five] person sauna, its spacious and its fun with friends.”
best deal
Somubi 2-Person Bluetooth Compatible FAR Infrared Sauna in Hemlock
$2,923.39
$3,709.63
21% off
This portable outdoor sauna is our choice for best sale option under $2,000 — and it’s 21% off during Wayfair’s President’s Day sale.
Made from Canadian premium hemlock wood, this compact sauna features LED lighting with Bluetooth compatibility. The single-seat sauna reaches a maximum temperature of 149-degrees.
The sauna measures 6 feet 9 inches high and around 5 feet wide. It weighs close to 270 pounds and you’ll need at least two adults to put it together, per the customer reviews.
“Super great sauna,” reads one customer review on Wayfair.com. “Works perfect. Looks great. Came together fast with [two] adults. Really helping my aches and pains melt away. Best purchase of the year.”
Somubi Infrared Saunas has a 4.8-star out of 5-star rating at Wayfair and it’s on sale for a limited time.
For over a decade now, Ariana Grande has been known as one of the biggest and best voices in contemporary pop music. From “Dangerous Woman” and “Bang Bang” to “Yes, And?” and “7 Rings,” the two-time Grammy-winning Boca Raton-bred vocalist has dominated radio and streaming playlists alike with her trademark riffs and genre-blending catalog. Before […]