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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.
Four teams will meet on the ice for the 2024 NHL All-Star Star Game at Scotiabank Arena in Toronto, Canada on Saturday (Feb. 3). The game will air on ABC and stream live on ESPN+ at 3 p.m. ET/noon PT.

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ESPN’s NHL All-Star Weekend coverage launches Thursday (Feb. 1) with the NHL All-Star Player Draft airing at 6 p.m. ET on ESPN2 and ESPN+. The Player Draft, which will determine which four teams play in the All-Star Game, will feature Justin Bieber, Tate McRae, Michael Bublé and Will Arnett as celebrity team captains.

McRae is also slated to perform during the second intermission at the NHL All-Star Game on Saturday.

The NHL All-Star schedule includes the Alumni Man of the Year and Professional Women’s Hockey League (PWHL) Showcase airing Thursday at 7 p.m. ET on ESPN and ESPN+, followed by the All-Star Skills Competition at 7 p.m. ET on Friday.

Read on for ways to stream the NHL All-Star Game live without cable.  

How to Watch the NHL All-Star Game

The 2024 NHL All-Star Game will air on ABC and stream on ESPN+ in the U.S. The game will be broadcast on CBC, Sportsnet and TVA Sports in Canada. 

If you don’t have access to cable channels, streaming is your best bet. You can watch the 2024 NHL All-Star Game by subscribing to platforms such as Sling TV, DirecTV and ESPN+.

See below for more details.

Watch the NHL All-Star Game on Sling TV

SPONSORED

Sling

$20

$40

50% off

Sling TV is a great choice for sports fans on a budget. Plans start as low as $20 for your first month — 50% off the regular price. That means you can watch local and cable channels for half off for the first 30 days.

With Sling TV, you’ll get access to ESPN, ESPN2, USA, Disney, Freeform, TLC, HLN and other cable channels — plus local channels such as ABC, NBC and CBS in select cities.

Watch the NHL All-Star Game on DirecTV

free trial

DirecTV Stream offers locals channels like ABC, NBC, CBS and Fox, in addition to sports networks such as ESPN, ESPN2 and FS1 — and plenty of other cable channels (A&E, TLC, BET, Lifetime, VH1, Cartoon Network, E!, FX, etc.)

Streaming plans start at $69.99/month (with 24-month agreement) for 75+ channels and DVR. DirecTV Stream also offers a free trial for the first week.

Watch the NHL All-Star Game on Fubo

FREE TRIAL OPTION

Fubo

Want more ways to stream for free? Subscribe to Fubo TV and watch live TV for free for the first week. Stream ESPN, ABC, CBS, FS1, MSNBC, NFL Network, Fox News, E!, HGTV, MSNBC, FX and more on Fubo. Plans starts at $74.99/month.

For those interested in streaming internationally, ExpressVPN gives you access to multiple streaming platforms.

How to Watch the NHL All-Star Game on ESPN+

ALSO CONSIDER

ESPN+

The 2024 NHL All-Star Game will stream live on ESPN+ on Saturday at 12 p.m. PT/3 p.m. ET. The All-Star game will be available to stream in English and Spanish.

ESPN+ is $10.99/month for the basic plan and $14.99/month to bundle with Hulu and Disney+.

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.
Peacock is kicking off Black History Month with a documentary series chronicling the impact of Run DMC. Kings From Queens: The Run DMC Story premieres Thursday (Feb. 1) on Peacock.

Directed by Kirk Fraser, the three-part documentary highlights the rise of Joseph “Rev Run” Simmons, Darryl “DMC” McDaniels and “Jam Master Jay” Mizell — three friends from Queens, New York, who went on to became one of the greatest rap groups of all time.

In the series, Rev Run and DMC get candid about everything from their early days in the group to finding superstardom and the loss of Jam Master Jay, who was gunned down in his recording studio in 2002. The murder trial against Jam Master Jay’s accused killers started this week — more than 20 years after his murder and nearly four years after the men were arrested.

The documentary also features appearances from Ice-T, LL Cool J, MC Lyte, Jermaine Dupri, Ice Cube, Questlove, Beastie Boys, Chuck D., Tom Morello, Doug E. Fresh, Big Daddy Kane, Ed Lover and more.

The series is executive produced by Rev Run, DMC, William H. Masterson III, Brian Hunt, Dan Goodman, Michael Lehman and Erik Blamoville, and produced by Believe Entertainment Group.

Read on for details on how to watch Kings From Queens: The Run DMC Story on Peacock.

How to Watch on Peacock

Kings From Queens: The Run DMC dropped on Peacock on Thursday — and you won’t have to wait a week for new episodes to drop as all three episodes, “It’s Like That” “It’s Tricky” and Down with the King,” are streaming on the platform.

To watch the series, head to the Peacock homepage via the app or online at Peacocktv.com. Each episode has a runtime of 60-78 minutes.

Not subscribed to Peacock? You’re missing out on a huge selection of must-watch movies, TV series, sports, documentaries and more. Plans start at just $5.99/month for Peacock Premium, the ad-supported package that unlocks access to thousands of hours of entertainment. Peacock Premium Plus is $11.99/month to stream without commercials.

Peacock is packed with bingeworthy movies, TVs series and reality series such as The Traitors, Dr. Death, Ted, Love Island: Love Games, Couple to Throuple, Poker Face, The Holdovers, Five Night’s at Freddy’s and episodes of network favorites like Suits, Yellowstone, The Office and Saturday Night Live.

Looking for a free trial to Peacock? Xfinity offers free Peacock when you subscribe to NowTV ($20/month) and DirecTV Stream subscribers can add Peacock at a discounted rate of $3.99/month. Additionally, Peacock offers student discounts and annual plans that save you 17% off the regular price.

In honor of Black History Month, Peacock curated a collection of content starring Black leads. The “Amplifying Black Voices” hub features Peacock Originals such as The Best Man: The Final Chapters, Bel-Air, Praise This and Honk For Jesus: Save Your Soul; and other movies and TV shows such as Nope, Do Right Things, BlacKkKlansman, Found, Pearson, Grand Crew, Good Times, Sanford and Son, The Rebellious Life of Rosa Parks, The Lost Story of Emmett Till: Then and Now, I Am Not Your Negro, A Celebration of Tony Morrison and Woman in Motion.

Music fans will find classic documentary films such as The Night James Brown Saved Boston, Beats, Rhymes & Life: The Travels of a Tribe Called Quest, Wu: The Story of the Wu-Tang of The Wu Clan, Time Is Illmatic and more.

Watch the trailer for Kings from Queens: The Run DMC Story below.

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The “Man of the Woods” has finally emerged from the forest with a brand new album, which means Justin Timberlake is going back on tour. The singer’s 2024 Forget Tomorrow world tour is set to open in Vancouver, Canada, on April 29 and will continue across North America in major cities including Seattle, Las Vegas, Austin, Chicago, New York, Boston and more. Cheap tickets are still obtainable for those looking to see the “SexyBack” singer live in concert.

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Future tour dates for the U.K. and Europe are set to be announced at a later date, but for now you can get tickets to performances in the U.S.

Timberlake took to Instagram to officially announce the official dates for the first leg of his tour. “THE FORGET TOMORROW WORLD TOUR. Tickets on sale Friday 2/2. LEG 1… MORE TO COME,” the caption says.

Get your “Suit & Tie” ready as the presale for the 2024 tour began on Monday (Jan. 29) — but if you missed out on signing up, there are still plenty of chances to get tickets to the tour through general sale, which will take place Friday (Feb. 2) at 10 a.m. local time through Ticketmaster.

Ticket prices through the verified Ticketmaster sale will range from $124 to $355.

In case tickets sell out on Ticketmaster or you can’t find your desired section, you may still be able to purchase tickets through resale sites like StubHub, Vivid Seats and Seat Geek (get $10 off your first purchase of $250+ when you use the code BILLBOARD10 at checkout).

How to Get Justin Timberlake Tickets

Ticketmaster is the official seller of the Forget Tomorrow tour, but you may be able to find better or cheaper tickets through resale ticket sites.

StubHub is offering tickets for $84+ and this will also include VIP packages. Prices will most likely fluctuate and change based on demand, which means you won’t want to wait too long just in case ticket prices increase dramaticly.

Vivid Seats has a mix of tickets starting at $73+ and as a bonus, the website uses an interactive map to personalize your seats to a particular section, price range and more.

Seat Geek is offering tickets for prices starting at $106+, which are then rated on a scale of one to 10 based on how good of a deal the ticket is. 10 represents the best bang for your buck while a ticket ranked at a one is considered not the best deal.

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. Victoria Monét is expressing her feminine power through a new campaign with Khloe Kardashian and Emma Grede’s clothing brand Good American. […]

Cardi B is coming to a screen near you – and you best believe her lips will be shiny and plump. NYX announced Thursday (Feb. 1) that the rapper will star in its Super Bowl ad on game day, promoting one of the brand’s latest lip products in what will mark her first ever beauty […]

Sitting at a small workstation at his Nashville home, alt-pop artist Morgxn holds up a piece of white poster board. On it, he’s drawn a large circle, with scribbled words that have been crossed out, rewritten and crossed out again adorning the wheel’s outer edges. “You can see how chaotic it is,” he tells Billboard over Zoom, chuckling at his frenzied handwriting.
In contrast, the center of the drawn circle is calm, with three words featured front and center: “The Hero’s Journey.” Points surrounding the interior show a variety of steps, like “supernatural aid,” “abyss” and “atonement,” while a large line through the upper half of the circle separates these points into what is “known” and what is “unknown.”

The illustration Morgxn drew shows the cyclical structure of the monomyth, a blueprint for storytelling popularized by Joseph Campbell in which an archetypal protagonist sets out on a transformative journey, succeeds in a moment of climactic catastrophe, and returns home a changed person. The scrawling words outside of the structure, meanwhile, are Morgxn’s own songs, placed strategically to explain his own journey.

“I’ve thought a lot about how my music has always been about tracing the path of my own story,” he explains, gesturing to the the myriad titles he’s crossed out and replaced on the outer rim of the diagram. “Writing this out into my own hero’s journey just felt right.”

All that plotting resulted in Beacon, Morgxn’s latest album (due out Friday Feb. 2 via Nettwerk Music Group) that sees the singer-songwriter claiming his history for himself, and looking for a path forward. With a bombastic pop sound to accompany the lyrics’ unabashed self-assurance, Beacon stands out immediately when compared against the singer’s past work — much like its title would suggest.

Each of the albums 10 tracks — which were culled from “over 100 songs” written for the project, he says — emblematize a different step in the hero’s journey. Where album opener “Beacon” serves as a classic “call to adventure,” later tracks like “What We Could Be” examine the “challenges and tempations” faced throughout the trek, while “My Revival” takes the story to its turning point of “death & rebirth.”

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Yet it’s the song immediately following that turning point, the poignant “To Be Human,” that Morgxn points to as an example of the album’s importance — at the moment of “transformation” in his own journey, the songwriter placed a song about what happens when your life collapses around you. “There’s no journey that that doesn’t hit a peak, and then fall apart,” he says. “That is what happened to me in making music, in the music industry.”

That falling apart came shortly after the COVID-19 pandemic shut the world down in early 2020, when Morgxn learned that he had been dropped from Hollywood Records. No longer working with the label that served as his home through the release of his breakthrough single “Home” and his debut album Vital, the singer faced the prospect of continuing his music career on his own. “I remember the feeling where I asked myself, ‘I wonder if anyone will hear this. I wonder if I’ll go broke trying to keep on going,’” he says. “Spoiler alert; that didn’t happen.”

Morgxn did what songwriters do best and put those fears to good use. Releasing his single “Wonder” as an independent artist in July 2020, the singer didn’t expect much — but within a few months, the song picked up significant traction on TikTok, leading to a series of remixes and reimaginings, including a duet version of the track with Sara Bareilles that landed him a spot singing the track with her on Jimmy Kimmel Live.

“I kind of felt like Keanu in The Matrix; like, ‘Oh my goodness, this is not real,’” he recalls. “The things about the music industry that I had been taught were not happening the way [I was told] they would. I made six figures from my music independently, because I owned every part of the process for the first time ever. I was discovering this whole new side of the music industry, which changed the way that I that I went about doing deals. It changed everything, to be honest.”

In this time of rediscovery, Morgxn was approached by Marshall Altman, a producer and A&R representative from Nashville working with Nettwerk Music Group. He’d listened to the singer’s work, and noticed a pattern among his songs; “I’d been singing about home for a very long time, but the idea of moving back home was the most terrifying thing I had ever faced, because all of my trauma exists because of this town,” Morgxn says, referring to Nashville. “Marshall listened to my music and said, ‘I want to do this.’ Because of Marshall and Eric [Robinson, another A&R rep with Nettwerk], I said, ‘I’m going to make this album in Nashville.’”

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In facing his fear of returning home, Morgxn also decided to change his approach to recording. Where past albums saw Morgxn primarily using digital recreations of instruments, Beacon incorporates a live band and chorus throughout the project, creating maximalist soundscapes wherever possible to amplify the underlying message of growth on the LP.

“We stripped everything down to the piano at the beginning, and decided if it didn’t make me and my dog sing, we wouldn’t put it on the record,” he says, scratching his boxer mix Stevie behind her ears. “Once we put the rhythm section on the songs, I think we could just feel it. You can tell the difference between my last record and this record because I put a lot of actual humanity into making this album.”

Part of returning home to Nashville also involved “getting loud,” as he puts it, when things got dire for the queer community. After Gov. Bill Lee passed a batch of anti-LGBTQ laws criminalizing drag performances and gender-affirming care for minors in 2023, Morgxn regularly attended protests against the rise of transphobia and promoted politicians fighting against the wave of bigotry faced by Tennesseans. When progressive candidate Freddie O’Connell won his bid to become Nashville’s next mayor, the politician walked on stage to Morgxn’s track “My Revival.”

As he reflects on his last year in his hometown, Morgxn says that there was never any question that he would push back against the state’s anti-LGBTQ policies. “If you’re trans and you’re looking for trans healthcare, it’s a state that is genuinely scary to live in,” he says. “So, if you’re a white gay person, you should be loud and fighting for all of these people who need your help, and who deserve their rights. It’s not enough to celebrate gay pride if you’re not also standing up for the other marginalized communities that need your voice.”

The final stage of the monomyth is the “return,” where our hero, victorious after his trials in an unfamiliar world, comes back home a changed man. For Morgxn, that return came in the form of “Where I’m From,” a triumphant power-pop anthem that sees him not only accept Nashville as his home, but embrace it in all its vast complexity. “I’m livin’ on the edge, but I still know where I’m from,” he proudly declares on the closer.

Just as the singer’s voice fades away on the final track, listeners hear one final message; Morgxn’s father, leaving his son a voicemail before a show. “I love you, good luck tonight,” his voice says. “Break a leg, I hope it goes great.” It’s the last message he received before his father’s unexpected death eight years ago.

Closing the album on such a poignant note was important to his own healing, Morgxn says — after spending most of his career writing about his relationship with his dad’s death, he’s ready to end this particular chapter. “I wish so much that he could see every part of the journey I’ve been on,” he says, tears welling in his eyes. “I held on to that voicemail for so long, and it kind of feels like when you make an album and you release it; it’s no longer yours. So, for anyone who’s lost somebody, they’re still a part of your journey. And they helped shape who you are, for good and bad.”

Even in releasing Beacon and letting his audience finally take ownership of the music, Morgxn acknowledges that the beauty of the hero’s journey lies in its shape; the circle ensures that reaching the end of one story means arriving at the beginning of another. And even without knowing exactly what it holds, Morgxn knows that his next chapter will be glorious. “I’m breaking my whole idea of what it means to make music in the recording industry in 2024,” he says. “And I’m doing it successfully.”

Make it so! It’s Sir Patrick Stewart to the rescue with a little bit of help from Creed in Paramount+‘s 2024 Super Bowl ad, which arrived on Thursday (Feb. 1).
In the streamer’s third Super Bowl ad, Stewart, who is known for portraying Captain Jean-Luc Picard in Star Trek: The Next Generation and Star Trek: Picard — along with a host of other stars whose shows can be seen on Paramount+, including Drew Barrymore (The Drew Barrymore Show), Jeff Probst (Survivor), Arnold (Hey Arnold!) and Peppa Pig — find themselves stuck in a snow-covered canyon on Paramount Mountain. That’s when the boss of the USS Enterprise steps up to try to save the day.

When Barrymore shoots down Stewart’s idea to throw Arnold and his football-shaped head to the top of the cliff, the actor snipes in his impeccable English accent, “Barrymore! Shut your face … unless you prefer to freeze to death!”

“I’m not gonna throw a kid,” Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa insists.

That’s when Stewart takes matters into his own hands. He rips off his warm winter coat to reveal the old-school football uniform and declares he’ll throw Arnold himself. The music kicks in, and the camera pans over to none other than Creed, who are ready to rock out on a small ledge.

The Star Trek star then picks up Arnold as if the animated character were a football, and starts to mix up his sports. “We need a hole in one before the seventh stretch,” he says. As Creed frontman Scott Stapp begins to belt out the chorus to the band’s Billboard Hot 100 hit (it peaked at No. 7 in 2000), Stewart makes the throw — and begins singing along with Stapp.

“I just threw him hiiiigher,” the celebrated actor croons, “to a place where we won’t freeze.” (And that’s when a well-placed “Creed” tattoo makes its appearance!)

Arnold also joins in on the song, singing, “He just threw me hiii–” and slams face first into the side of the cliff. Watch the full Paramount+ Super Bowl ad above.

The Kansas City Chiefs are set to face off against the San Francisco 49ers on Super Bowl Sunday (Feb. 11) at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas. The game begins at 6:30 p.m. ET and airs on CBS, and also livestreams on Paramount+. Usher is set to perform during the Super Bowl Halftime Show, but Taylor Swift has been stealing the thunder as of late. The pop superstar may be in attendance at the big game to cheer on boyfriend Travis Kelce, who is the Chiefs’ tight end.

Son of a …! Jelly Roll‘s not too happy when he realizes he has a lot of permanent art on his face in Uber Eats’ 2024 Super Bowl ad, and Billboard has a first look at the “Need a Favor” singer’s spot set to debut on game day (Feb. 11). In the 15-second teaser, the […]

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Welp, it’s finally official: comedian Jess Hilarious will be the permanent new co-host at The Breakfast Club with Charlamagne tha God and DJ Envy. After spending much of 2023 rotating different co-hosts, including Jess Hilarious, to replace Angela Yee, who left the show in December 2022, it was announced Monday that Hilarious is finally on the show for good.

“I’m very excited to have Jess Hilarious join The Breakfast Club. She is a force in her own right, an actress, comedian, podcaster, and now, the co-host of The Breakfast Club,” Thea Mitchem, iHeartMedia executive vice president of programming, said in a published statement. “Jess was the standout choice to join Charlamagne and DJ Envy to build upon The Breakfast Club’s legacy of entertaining, informing and enlightening the community.”
Hilarious, born Jessica Robin Moore, also expressed gratitude for making the cut as permanent co-host.

“I’m looking forward to joining forces with one of the largest media platforms,” she said. “I’m confident that taking the third seat at The Breakfast Club will show people that Jess Hilarious is not just comedy, but culture.”
Things were looking pretty touch and go regarding Hilarious’ future on the popular radio show. The Wild ‘N Out star had already told her followers that she had been selected as The Breakfast Club’s permanent host last month, but Charlamagne disputed the claim telling TMZ that he was “not happy” with the fact that he was still in the dark regarding who the new host would be and that he’s “done with the rotating of the guest hosts,” which implied that Hilarious still hadn’t gotten the greenlight.
Chances of Jess joining the show seemed even slimmer last week when she went in on Charlamagne and Envy calling them “trash” for suggesting that R&B songstress SZA is this generation’s Mary J. Blige.
But all’s well that ends well, and now Jess Hilarious is officially a card-carrying member of The Breakfast Club. Congrats, Jess, and good luck.

Ayo Edebiri is taking over the Saturday Night Live stage for the first time this weekend (Feb. 10) and she had to give the less-than-energetic cast a little inspiration in a hilarious new promo released on Wednesday (Jan. 31). Explore Explore See latest videos, charts and news See latest videos, charts and news In the […]