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A new book celebrating the late Jimi Hendrix’s 80th birthday (Nov. 27) hit shelves on Tuesday (Nov. 8). Jimi, by the guitar legend’s sister Janie Hendrix and John McDermott of Experience Hendrix L.L.C., is described as a visual ode to “the greatest guitar player in rock n’ roll history.
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The 320-page book retails for $50 (but it’s on sale for $42.40) and features rare and never-before-published photographs of Hendrix, personal memorabilia, lyrics, and more. Quotes from Paul McCartney, Ron Wood, Jeff Beck, Lenny Kravitz, Drake, Dave Grohl and others who have spoken about Hendrix’s lasting musical impact are included in the book, which is available at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Target and Chronicle Books.
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Jimi
$42.50
$50.00
15% OFF
Despite being in the mainstream for only four years, Hendrix built an unbreakable legacy that turned him into one of the most influential artists in music.
The Seattle native, born on Nov. 27, 1942, got his first guitar at age 15. He entered the military before embarking on a musical career and became known for classics like “Purple Haze” and “Voodoo Child (Slight Return).” Hendrix headlined the first Woodstock Festival in 1969 before his life was tragically cut short at age 27.
To celebrate the music icon, Montblanc launched limited-edition pens as part of their Greatest Characters collection. The Great Characters Jimi Hendrix Special Edition Collection features three new writing instruments with unique design elements honoring some of Hendrix’s most iconic eras.
Three new editions to the collection retail for $1,195 up to $37,000 for the Limited Edition 99 Fountain Pen. Each pen pays tribute to one of three albums: Are You Experienced, Electric Ladyland, and Live at Woodstock. The collection is available at Montblanc.com and in stores.
In addition to the release of JIMI, Hendrix’s estate announced a live album, The Jimi Hendrix Experience Los Angeles Forum: April 26, 1969, out Nov. 18 and an all-star tribute concert scheduled for next month. The Jimi Hendrix 80th Birthday Celebration will be held at ACL Live at The Moody Theater in Austin, Texas on Sunday, Dec. 4 at 8 p.m. Purchase tickets to the tribute concert below.
Jimi Hendrix 80th Birthday Celebration
$55
During its time on air, Glee had a slew of superstar guest appearances by people like Britney Spears, Gwyneth Paltrow, Kate Hudson, Idina Menzel, Kristin Chenoweth, Neil Patrick Harris and more.
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Turns out, one icon who was also supposed to appear on the show was Whitney Houston. In a new episode of Glee stars Kevin McHale and Jenna Ushkowitz’s podcast And That’s What You Really Missed, the duo shared a conversation they had with the popular series’ creator, Ryan Murphy.
Murphy revealed that Houston initially agreed in 2009 to play the part of Grace Hitchens — a choir director at a school for female juvenile delinquents — over the phone. The season one role ended up going to Eve. “She just loved that it was about kids in choir, and she was like ‘This is phenomenal. Like, that you’re doing a show about show choir,’” he recalled of Houston’s enthusiasm for the role.
“She didn’t end up doing it, and Eve was phenomenal,” Murphy continued, noting that he didn’t think Houston “was in the right place and time” to play the role. Houston died just a few years later in 2012.
In a new Billboard cover story, Houston’s longtime manager and sister-in-law Pat discussed a string of events that aim to put the public image surrounding Whitney focused back on her voice and not the tabloid drama. Earlier this year, Pat and music publisher and marketer Primary Wave announced a partnership giving the company a 50% stake in Whitney’s assets and since then, Primary Wave says it has quadrupled the estate’s fortunes.
“With everything that’s going on right now, she’s still touching lives, and that’s what I want to do in a very positive way,” Pat told Billboard. “She should be remembered by her music and the work that she’s done in the community, not by her relationships. And the fact that all these things are happening proves that. It’s a clear path without any distractions to make things continue to happen for her legacy.”
Listen to the full conversation with Murphy and more on the latest episode of McHale and Ushkowitz’s And That’s What You Really Missed podcast below. Listen to more episodes here.
Racers, start your engines — and may the best world leader win!
In a new trailer for the forthcoming inaugural season of Canada’s Drag Race: Canada Vs. The World, fans of the franchise got a sneak peek of the upcoming competition and just a few of the special guests set to appear on the show. One of them just so happens to be the Right Honorable Justin Trudeau, Prime Minister of Canada.
This marks the first time in the history of the RuPaul’s Drag Race franchise where a world leader has been featured as a guest star on the show. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi appeared on the latest installment of RuPaul’s Drag Race All Stars, where she implored viewers and the contestants to vote in the midterm elections.
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The new trailer also unveils a bevy of other guest stars set to appear on the show — Canada’s Drag Race: Canada Vs. The World will feature guest judges including Anjulie, Gary Janetti, Hollywood Jade, and even past winners from the franchise like Monét X Change and Priyanka.
Much like its predecessor UK Vs. The World, the new season will see queens from across the international iterations of the show coming back to duke it out for the crown. Queens from RuPaul’s Drag Race (Ra’Jah O’Hara & Silky Nutmeg Ganache), Canada’s Drag Race (Icesis Couture, Kendall Gender, Rita Baga & Stephanie Prince), RuPaul’s Drag Race UK (Vanity Milan & Victoria Scone) and RuPaul’s Drag Race Down Under (Anita Wigl’it) are set to appear.
Canada’s Drag Race: Canada Vs. The World premieres Friday, Nov. 18 at 9pm ET/6pm PT, on WOW Presents Plus. Check out the full trailer below:
Gwen Stefani has made some solid choices in season 22 of NBC’s The Voice, and on Monday night (Nov. 7), she had some tough choices to make.
One of those solid choices is Justin Aaron, who impressed with a performance of “Glory” by Common and John Legend. Aaron, a paraeducator from Junction City, Kansas, lifted the spirts once again during the Battles, when he faced off against Destiny Leigh with a rendition of Mary J. Blige’s “No More Drama.”
The competitors are now at the Knockouts stage. As the name suggests, there are no second chances.
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Aaron went up against fellow Team Gwen performers Cara Brindisi and Kayla von der Heide, for what panned out to be an impressive round. And a tough choice for Gwen.
“I’m so emotional right now, we had so much fun together,” she explained, stifling tears. “Just to be able to share and to, like, watch you grow, is just so unbelievably fulfilling to me,” she added. “I’m just proud, can you tell I’m proud right now.”
There could be only one, and it was Aaron who progressed to the Live rounds.
When Aaron performed for Stefani during rehearsals, she explained, “I was like, ‘there was no swag. And it was, like, 10 times flirtier on this stage right now. It was so good.”
What he’s got, it’s a “gift,” she remarked, and he took it to “another level.”
There’s so much more to come, the former No Doubt singer reckons. “He doesn’t fully realize how gifted he is. He’s so coachable. There’s no way that America’s not going to fall in love with him. We’re just getting started.”
Watch below.
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Selena Gomez gets raw and real in her new Apple TV+ documentary, which debuted last Friday (Nov. 4). As of Monday (Nov. 7), Selena Gomez: My Mind & Me was front and center on Apple TV+’s roster of most popular releases ahead of the new psychological drama, Causeway, starring Jennifer Lawrence, Brian Tyree Henry and Linda Emond.
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Directed by Alek Keshishian, Selena Gomez: My Mind & Me spans six years of Gomez’s life. The film gives viewers an intimate look into her years in the limelight, reaching superstardom and “an unexpected turn that pulls her into darkness.”
Missed the film’s premiere? Don’t worry, the magic of streaming means that you can watch Selena Gomez: My Mind & Me on Apple TV+ anytime and from anywhere. Read on for details on how to join Apple TV+ for free.
Selena Gomez: My Mind & Me: How to Watch for Free
Selena Gomez: My Mind & Me is streaming exclusively on Apple TV+. Those who already have subscriptions can simply navigate to Apple TV+ (via the app or online at tv.apple.com) and sign in to begin streaming the film.
Not subscribed? Apple TV+ is $6.99 a month, but you get a free trial for the first week. You can extend your free subscription if you’ve recently purchased Apple hardware that includes a year, 6-month or 3-month trial.
Enjoy Apple Originals such as Loot, Severance, Ted Lasso, Carpool Karaoke: The Series, The Problem With John Stewart, Bad Sisters, Schmigadoon!, The Morning Show, Pachinko, Central Park, They Call Me Magic and The Greatest Beer Run Ever. Other Apple Original films streaming now and headed to the platform this month include Louis Armstrong’s Black & Blues, Raymond & Ray, Sidney, Luck, Finch and Spirited (starring Will Ferrell, Ryan Reynolds and Octavia Spencer).
Apple TV+
$6.99/month after 7-day free trial
Stream Apple TV+ on the Apple TV app, or an iPhone, iPad, computer or laptop, smart TVs such as Samsung, LG, Sony, VIZIO, TCL, Toshiba and others, along with Roku and Amazon Fire TV devices, Chromecast with Google TV. Apple TV+ is available on PayStation and Xbox gaming consoles as well.
Watch the trailer for Selena Gomez: My Mind & Me below.
Throughout the course of what’s become a legendary career, Danny Elfman has cultivated a reputation as a singular composer who decidedly doesn’t shy away from the fantastical and eccentric. From his long partnership with Tim Burton (Batman and The Nightmare Before Christmas among them) to recent projects ranging from Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness to Justice League, Elfman’s filmography is a case study in creative experimentation.
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It’s a vibrant legacy that continues with the upcoming release of White Noise, director Noah Baumbach’s adaptation of Don DeLillo’s cult classic 1985 novel, which explores themes of consumerism and hysteria. Starring Adam Driver and Greta Gerwig, the movie marks Elfman’s first collaboration with Baumbach, with the acclaimed director fully embracing Elfman’s penchant for the sonically adventurous. “Noah has a sense of, ‘Let’s get in the playground,’” Elfman tells Billboard. “It becomes a wonderful creative process.”
Ahead of the film’s Nov. 25 theatrical release, followed by its Netflix premiere Dec. 30, Billboard caught up with Elfman to discuss creating a soundscape for the project with Baumbach’s guidance.
White Noise is a very unique film. What made you say yes to collaborating with Noah on this project, and what makes you say yes to prospective projects in general?
First off, it was like “Can Noah Baumbach call you? He’s interested in talking about his new film.” So automatically, there’s a factor of “yes, I’d love to engage in that conversation,” even if I didn’t know what the movie is. Frequently when I say yes to a project it’s about the filmmaker; if it’s one I admire, I’m happy and excited to even find out what it is they’re working on. So Noah is a smart and interesting filmmaker, and adapting White Noise sounded like a hard, interesting project that I’d love to see how he’d tackle.
The first thing I did was read the script, and then I read the book. I was so excited because it was completely obvious to me that it was one of those projects that come along every now and then where there’s no genre to indicate what type of music it should be. When I started out as a film composer doing these films for Tim Burton like Pee-wee’s Big Adventure, Edward Scissorhands, Batman and The Nightmare Before Christmas, all of these films were virtually without a template with absolutely nothing to say as to what type of score it should be. I didn’t realize until later how lucky I was for that.
I would think that would make it harder for a composer. When you have a blank page and are given no guidance, isn’t that more difficult than when you have a certain direction to go in?
No, it’s the opposite. When there’s no clear idea of how it’d sound, that’s when it’s most exciting. If there’s a clear idea of the genre, it’s much harder work to work on something where [the director] is set on a certain type of music while at the same time giving it a personal identity of my own. A clean slate is what I love.
Have there been moments in your career where a director says “I need this kind of sound” but you’re hearing something else? How do you compromise between the two?
That’s the tricky navigation that every composer faces all the time. It’s a delicate dance of presenting your music and options and trying to gear the director’s brain away from this target and over to this one. There’s no magic way to do that; you do it with just presenting lots of options and ideas. You look at what can work for the film and [directors] start to go “Oh yeah,” and you lull them over to a slightly different direction veering off from whatever they’ve been focused on. Any composer with a vast repertory behind them has done it many, many times. Some directors are really just locked into something and it’s incredibly hard to move them off, and some aren’t. Even Tim Burton, who I’ve worked with so many times, it takes awhile to pull him into where I’m recommending where we go with a score.
So then how did you construct White Noise’s soundscape from the ground up?
Noah started throwing me all of the challenges immediately, by our second phone call even before I saw any footage. He’d say, “What would it sound like if you combined Aaron Copland with edgy Giorgio Moroder ’80s-based synthesizer?” Even though I was working on other stuff at the time, I’d hang up the call and couldn’t focus on anything else because the challenge was so enticing to me that I couldn’t help it. It makes the challenges become a bit of an odyssey. “Can you do that? Can you combine this and this and this?” I love that; for me that’s just fun, it’s not even work. That evolved slowly into the tonal basis of what we’re working on with the score. On one hand, we go from a noir-based ’80s-influenced sound, to the other side being really theatrical and classically based, and a third side over the Babbette character [played by Greta Gerwig], which is very simple and minimalist; straightforward with no winking at the audience. Tying them all together was my final challenge.
You have a few directors you frequently collaborate with, but I assume that working with someone for the first time can be a risk because you really don’t know how you’ll jell creatively and with the process. Do you have a specific way of working or do you go with the flow?
Honestly, I have no way of working other than first being as fluid as I possibly can, and by fluid I mean to try to keep my mind open from going in very different directions. When I start a score, there’s lots of experimentation; like, I’m just going to try this and it’ll probably get laughed at or thrown out, but why not?
But like you said, it’s always a risk. On one hand, I love starting a project with a new director because I love risks. Occasionally you find yourself up against a brick wall like, “I can get through this but I don’t want to repeat this experience.” Noah, similar to Gus Van Sant, is open to trying all kinds of different things. In fact, Gus pushes me by saying, “That works really well, now do something really different.” Noah is different but has a similar sense of, “Let’s get in the playground,” and it becomes a wonderful creative process.
What does experimentation look like for you? Are you at a guitar, piano or software like Pro Tools?
I’m at a keyboard, and on there I have a template which has a full orchestral range of sounds, as well as a full range of synthetic sounds, and my own personal percussion instruments, as well as sounds I’ve squeezed out of things like broken pianos. So I’ll start to play around. For White Noise, I was thinking purely synthesizer-based, so I was programming and programming and coming up with sounds I thought were really fun and cool. Other moments I’d think it’d be just strings, piano and a solo clarinet.
You’ve said “Composers lose themselves in a film they’re working on.” How does that happen for you?
To me, it’s a different version of what happens to an actor. When they take on a part, they hope to lose themselves in the role and get lost in the story to become part of it. As a composer, we frequently hope to do the same thing; just lose ourselves in the feel and the tone, rhythm and pace of the movie. If you do that, every part of it ceases to become a struggle; you just embrace it and flow with where it’s going. I’m not going to plan out where each scene goes; I want to get pulled along and often I don’t even block out where I’m going each 10, 15, 20 seconds. If it takes a turn, then I’ll turn with it. Just like an actor who understands their character and is not trying to find it constantly.
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Walmart is kicking off Black Friday early! The mega-retailer will launch Black Friday Deals for Days online starting Monday (Nov. 7) at 7 p.m. ET and in stores on Wednesday (Nov. 9) at 6 a.m. local time.
Want first dibs on Walmart’s hottest deals? Walmart+ members get early access to shop online Black Friday deals seven hours before the sale officially begins. Online early access ends at 7 p.m. ET.
Walmart+ is $12.95/month or $98 for the annual membership. Besides early access to Black Friday sales, Walmart+ members get free shipping with no minimum cart requirement, free Paramount+, free deliveries on groceries and other essentials from your local Walmart ($35 minimum requirement, groceries included), and savings on gas.
For a limited time, eligible Walmart+ subscribers can also enjoy a free, six-month subscription to Spotify Premium, and more benefits.
Walmart+
$12.95/month
Walmart’s early access sale gives shoppers a chance to get a head start on buying holiday gifts, Christmas trees and other seasonal necessities before the post-Thanksgiving, Black Friday and Cyber Monday rush starts at the end of the month.
Below, find tech, toys, phones, accessories, fashion and more markdowns to shop during Walmart’s Black Friday Deals for Days events.
Walmart
Google Nest Mini (2nd Gen)
$18
$49
This second generation Goole Nest Mini is available in four colors, including charcoal, coral, gray and sky.
Walmart
Apple AirPods Pro with MagSafe Charging Kit
$158
$214
Shopping for AirPods? Cop them on sale at Walmart! These first generation, Apple AirPods Pro with MagSafe charging kit, provide Active Noise Cancellation for immersive listening.
Walmart
Chromecast with Google TV (4K) Streaming Media Player – with Funko POP! TV Stranger Things Eleven with Eggos
$39.98
$49.98
Need a cool stocking stuffer? This Google TV Chromecast media player comes with a Stranger Things Funko Pop! collectible vinyl figure of Eleven holding her signature Eggo Waffles.
Walmart
Monopoly: Fortnite Edition Board Game
$10
$24.99
For fans of Fortnite, the Monopoly edition of the popular game is on sale for just $10 at Walmart.
Walmart
Pokemon Cards: Darkrai VSTAR Premium Collection Box Pokémon TCG
$20
$39.98
Gift the gift of Pokemon Cards this holiday season with this Darkrai VSTAR Premium Collection Box. The set includes Darkrai VSTAR in both playable and jumbo sizes, Darkrai V foil card, VSTAR marker, and eight Pokemon TCG booster packs.
Walmart
Encanto Three Interlocking Jigsaw Puzzles
$10
$12.83
Get a three-for-one deal with this adorable puzzle set. The Ceaco Encanto Jigsaw Puzzle is recommended for ages 12+ and includes a 750-piece, 700-piece and 550-piece puzzles recreating scenes from the animated movie.
Walmart
Avengers assemble! Marvel’s Avengers Titan Hero Series trio set includes Black Panther, Thor and Iron Man action figures (designed for ages 4+).
Marvel Avengers Titan Hero Series Black Panther Thor Iron Man 3-Pack Action Figures
$20
Walmart
TCL 55-Inc Class 4-Series 4K UHD HDR Smart Roku TV
$188
$298
If you’re been waiting all year to find deals on TV’s, Black Friday sales are a good way to go. Access over 250 live TV channels, award-winning Roku Originals, in-season shows, hit movies, kids’ TV and more in stunning 4K on this TLC 55 inch TV.
Walmart
LG 65-Inch Class UP7050 Series LED 4K UHD Smart webOS TV
$398
Looking for something bigger? This LG 65-inch 4K TV is less than $400. The TV is equipped with a processor that enhances color, contrast, clarity and detail for theater-quality viewing. This 4K smart TV is compatible with smart assistants like Google Home for convenient voice control.
Walmart
ROCONIA 5G WiFi Bluetooth Native 1080P Projector
$99
$369.98
The holiday movie season is here! Stream movies and more on this Rocini 5G Wifi Bluetooth Projector.
Walmart
WEMAX Go Advanced Portable Smart Laser Projector
$539.99
$999.99
For the movie buffs with a larger budget, the WeMax Go Advanced Portable Smart Projector provides a rich viewing experience no matter where you are. This one-inch thick, portable projector lets you stream content from YouTube, Netflix, HBO Max, Hulu, Disney+, and many other platforms.
Walmart
SAMSUNG 170W 2.1ch Soundbar with Wireless Subwoofer
$99
Adding a soundbar to your theater system is a quick and easy upgrade. Get a Samsung Soundbar and wireless subwoofer combo for $99 at Walmart.
Walmart
Keurig K-Express Essentials Single Serve K-Cup Pod Coffee Maker
$35
$54.96
But first, coffee! You might have noticed a Keurig, single-serve coffee maker on the third season of Netflix’s Love Is Blind dating series and on social media sites like TikTok. The Keurig K-Express Essentials Single-Serve K-Cup Pod Coffee Maker is available in four colors, including black, red, tropical blue, and pacific blue.
Walmart
Contixo V8-2 Kids Learning Tablet
$54.99
$89.99
In need of a low-cost portable tablet for kids? The Contixo V802 Learning Tablet features 20+ chart-topping, educator approved academic apps, 16GB of storage and it’s available in seven different colors including sky blue, dark blue, pink, purple, red, green, and orange.
Walmart
IZOD Men’s Classic Puffer Jacket Midnight Medium
$66.67
$125
Puffer season is here! This midweight, water resistant, men’s puffer from Izod is available in sizes M-2X (colors: midnight blue, onyx, and cobalt.
Walmart
Mark Alan Women’s Teddy Coat
$34.99
$59.56
From puffers to teddy coats. The coat pictured above is available in black, blue or brown (sizes S-3X).
Walmart
SLM Men’s Bedroom Slippers
$11.99
$13.99
Treat your feet! Available in sizes 7-12, the SLM Men’s Bedroom Slippers feature short-haired synthetic fabric on the outside, luscious faux fur on the inside, and an EVA foam outsole.
Walmart
Women’s Fox Union Onesie
$13
$22.98
Another cozy clothing item for the season, this multi-purpose onesie can be used for lounging around the house, bedtime or a costume party. It’s on sale for $13 and available in sizes XS-3X but it’s almost out of stock in select sizes (colors include coral whisper, brown, completely pink, and cow print).
The Kelly Clarkson Show will continue to sing through 2025.
NBCUniversal has renewed the syndicated daytime talk show for two additional seasons, taking the series fronted by the former American Idol breakout through its sixth season in 2025.
“Kelly Clarkson is one of the brightest stars of our time,” said Tracie Wilson, exec vp syndicated studios and E! News at NBCUniversal. “With more than 500 hours viewed on broadcast, cable and digital platforms since its launch, The Kelly Clarkson Show has been a home for stories that entertain, inspire important conversations and connect with loyal viewers across multiple generations in meaningful ways. Together, with our best-in-class producing team, we’ll continue to build on the show’s success and legacy.”
In its fourth season, The Kelly Clarkson Show has its largest station lineup yet as it airs in all 211 local markets in premier time periods across the country. The series is averaging 1.3 million viewers since its September return. That makes it the only syndicated talk show to grow in consecutive seasons — a feat not accomplished since 2014. The show is posting year-over-year double-digit gains in adults 25-54 in many top markets.
“As the fourth season reaches new heights of critical acclaim and viewership, Kelly has used her genuine warmth and natural curiosity to create an engaging, fun show. The Kelly Clarkson Show is a treasured part of our programming lineup, and we’re enthusiastic about its continued longevity,” said Valari Staab, chairman of NBCUniversal Local.
Clarkson hosts and exec produces the Daytime Emmy-winning series, with Alex Duda as showrunner.
The renewal comes amid a new wave of syndicated talk shows entering the market following the departure of The Ellen DeGeneres Show. Another American Idol breakout, Jennifer Hudson, launched her show from Ellen producers Warner Bros. TV this season as the landscape also features programs fronted by Drew Barrymore, Karamo, Rachael Ray, Sherri Shepherd, Steve Wilkos and Tamron Hall.
This story originally appeared in The Hollywood Reporter.
The Masked Singer is slowly whittling down its season eight contestants, and with the arrival of a ’90s-themed episode on Sunday night (Nov. 6), there were two contestants whose identities were revealed. Both Milkshake and Walrus were sent packing, but not before sharing who they are and giving a final exit interview before leaving the show.
Walrus was the first contestant to leave The Masked Singer after failing to secure enough votes to stay on the singing competition. The unmasking revealed that the Walrus was none other than Joey Lawrence, star of ’90s sitcom Blossom and of “Can’t Fix My Love” fame. The track appeared on the actor’s self-titled debut album that was released in 1993, and it later peaked at No. 19 on the Billboard Hot 100.
Speaking of his experience on the show, Lawrence said, “It’s not about winning. I thought it would be fun for my girls to see at some point. I have two beautiful daughters, and being anonymous and having to look like Daft Punk walking around the set is always fun.”
The actor and singer also shared that being on The Masked Singer is making him consider coming back to music. “I haven’t released a full record in about 20 years, but music brings back this memory of why this whole journey began for me,” he added. “I am seriously thinking about dedicating a lot more of my time to music. Gotta use the stuff god gave you, so maybe I’ll get back into it.”
Milkshake was the second contestant to leave The Masked Singer night after a sing-off against the Lambs to “What Is Love,” by Haddaway. Le’Veon Bell, an NFL running back and free agent, was revealed to be behind the mask. Though Bell is an athlete, in 2017 he dabbled in music with songs uploaded to SoundCloud and later released an album in 2019 titled Life’s a Gamble.
“I did The Masked Singer because I watch it a lot and my friends were on it, and it’s a good opportunity to showcase my talent musically. A lot of people look at me on the field or boxing. I think this was a good opportunity on the show, I could entertain and people didn’t even know it was me. I think that kinda opened up people’s eyes a little bit,” he said in his exit interview. “Watching them try to guess who I was, that was entertaining too. It was ranging from all types of artists and athletes: T.I. got brought up, LL Cool J, Ice Cube. The praise from the judges, I appreciate it and I’m glad I went up there performing what I did.”
Watch Walrus and Milkshake’s unmaskings and exit interviews below.
“Weird Al” Yankovic and Daniel Radcliffe are big fans of each other.
While promoting his new biopic, Weird: The Al Yankovic Story, the award-winning artist got candid about why he wanted to recruit the Harry Potter actor to play him, saying he had the “right energy for it.”
“I’m a big fan of Dan’s. He does amazing dramatic acting and amazing comedic acting, and he gets it,” Yankovic tells The Hollywood Reporter. “I mean, I knew that he’s a huge comedy fan. He’s a huge nerd, just like me, and I knew that he would just really lock into the tone that we were going for in this movie, which is so important.”
It wasn’t as important to Yankovic that Radcliffe wasn’t an “exact physical doppelganger” because the film is meant to be a parody of biopics, and it was more important for the star to be able to grasp that than to look exactly like the main character.
“I just thought that he would just really be able to capture the spirit of the character that we’ve written for the movie,” he says.
Radcliffe didn’t realize Weird: The Al Yankovic Story was supposed to be a parody until he began reading the script. When he initially got it, he wasn’t sure why he was being asked to read for this role.
“I was already a big ‘Weird Al’ fan, and I was confused about why they would ask me to play him in a movie of his life because I was like, ‘I don’t look very much like him,’” Radcliffe tells THR. “But then I read it, and I was like, ‘Oh, right. It’s fine. We’re not doing that. We’re doing something different, and it doesn’t matter.’”
However, it didn’t take very long for him to realize that there’s nothing else a “Weird Al” biopic could be other than a parody of biopics.
“Seeing that and seeing how well they’d like done that joke, and then talking to them and being like, ‘Yeah, Eric Appel is lovely. Al seems lovely,’” says Radcliffe. “You just want to make a movie with these guys.”
Weird: The Al Yankovic Story is now streaming for free on Roku.
This article was originally published by The Hollywood Reporter.
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