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Before it was lights out at the Formula 1 Las Vegas Grand Prix over the weekend, Beyoncé and Jay-Z linked up with Lewis Hamilton on the track — after which the Destiny’s Child alum gassed up the racing champion on Instagram.
On Tuesday (Nov. 25) — two days after the big race — Bey shared a carousel of photos of herself and Jay chatting with Hamilton, who took the 35-time Grammy winner on a drive around the circuit in a Ferrari model. The musical power couple was all smiles while chatting with the seven-time world champion, with Bey showing up and out in a glamorous F1-inspired jumpsuit.
“Love and gratitude to the best to ever do it! Lewis Hamilton #44!” she praised the driver, who would go on to place eighth in the Vegas Grand Prix. Red Bull Racing’s Max Verstappen finished first, followed respectively by George Russell and Kimi Antonelli of Mercedes.
Bey also shared videos of herself strutting through Sin City and enjoying the race-weekend offerings, as well as a clip of Hamilton driving her on the track captioned, “Give it to Mama!”
She and Jay were just two of the many A-listers who were present at the event in Vegas, which seems to attract more and more stars each year. Travis Scott was also on the ground, as were Cynthia Erivo, Magic Johnson, Brooks Nader, Michael Douglas, Catherine Zeta-Jones, Gordon Ramsay, Ciara and Ben Affleck.
Their attendance goes to show how large F1’s presence in culture has become in recent years. Earlier this fall, everyone from Adele to Shaboozey, Matthew McConaughey, Jay Leno and Glen Powell descended on Austin, Texas, to watch the U.S. Grand Prix, which featured live performances from Kygo, Garth Brooks and the Turnpike Troubadours. In June, an original F1 movie starring Brad Pitt — and featuring a star-studded soundtrack — premiered in theaters.
“The whole thing is a show,” Williams Racing’s Alex Albon told Billboard on site at the time “It’s entertainment, and I think if you can get these huge stars coming to these races, it just makes the weekend and the day so much better.”
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Sublime are getting into the festival game. The long-running reggae punk band announced the debut of their first-ever touring festival, Sublime Me Gusta, which is slated to debut in Forth Worth, Texas on May 9 at the Panther Island Pavilion. According to a release announcing the event, the “beginning of a national festival series built around the timeless sound, spirit and cultural impact” of the band takes its name from the lyric “Me gusta mi reggae, me gusta punk rock” from the trio’s iconic song “Caress Me Down” from their 1996 self-titled debut album.
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“The festival embodies everything Sublime stands for: sun-soaked vibes, rebellious spirit, and a love for music without boundaries,” reads the release. Tickets for the festival start at $89.99 for general admission and are available here now.
“It’s always been our dream to put on a Festival for our friends and family,” says Sublime singer Jakob Nowell, son of the band’s late, original singer Brad Nowell. “It’s punk rock, hip hop, reggae, surf — all facets of true west coast alternative culture that has been kept alive for generations by fans and musicians alike. This is our era now and we got nothing but love for everyone coming with us.”
The band will be joined on the bill by their longtime friends in fellow reggae punk band Slightly Stoopid for what is described as an “immersive day of live music, community and good vibes.” A full festival lineup will be announced in the coming weeks. The event is being co-produced by Sublime and independent promoter Brew Ha Ha Productions.
A second stop in Oregon on June 27 has also been announced, though a city and venue were not revealed at press time. Each show will feature a hand-picked lineup of bands that bridge the punk-reggae gap, with the promise of a full day of music, vendors, art, food and drinks.
“As someone who lives in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, I couldn’t be more excited to launch the first-ever Sublime Me Gusta Festival right in our own backyard,” event co-producer Cameron Collins of Brew Ha Ha Productions said in a statement. “Sublime and Slightly Stoopid are two of the most influential bands of our generation and bringing them together for this new festival is something truly special. Fort Worth is the perfect place to kick off Sublime Me Gusta, and we can’t wait to share the full experience with everyone.”
Sublime was formed in Long Beach, Calif. in 1988 by singer/guitarist Nowell, bassist Eric Wilson and drummer Bud Gaugh. The band’s self-titled third album was released two months after 28-year-old Nowell’s death from a drug overdose, peaking at No. 13 on the Billboard 200 album chart. The band broke up in 1996 following Nowell’s passing and reformed in 2009 with fan Rome Ramirez taking over vocal/guitar duties, changing their name to Sublime With Rome.
Gaugh, who had split in 2011, rejoined the band in 2023 when Jakob Nowell took over as lead singer, followed by the dissolution of Sublime with Rome in 2024. In May of that year the band released their first new song in almost 28 years, “Feel Like That,” followed by the single “Ensenada.” Earlier this year, Sublime revealed that Nowell has been in the studio with Blink-182 drummer/producer Travis Barker and producer John Feldmann writing songs for the trio’s first new full-length album in three decades.
Check out the Sublime Me Gusta festival poster below.
Trending on Billboard Mario may like to get up close and personal with fans at his shows, but one woman crossed the line at his recent stop in Detroit, inappropriately feeling up the singer’s crotch as he was performing on stage. In a video captured by someone else at the concert posted Monday (Nov. 24), […]
Trending on Billboard Taylor Swift’s “The Fate of Ophelia” rises a spot to No. 1 on Billboard’s Adult Pop Airplay chart dated Nov. 29. The song becomes her 14th leader on the list, the most among soloists. Overall, only Maroon 5 has more, with 15. The track became the highest debuting hit in the chart’s […]
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Fans of Law & Order: SVU had been wondering why Ice-T’s Sgt. Fin Tutuola character has been less involved in season 27, and the rapper-actor has explained the reasoning behind his screen time being cut.
Ice, who has been on Law & Order since 2000’s season two, essentially chalked the reduced role this season to a “business” decision, as SVU brought back Det. Amanda Rollins, who is played by Kelli Giddish.
“It’s just basically business,” Ice-T told TMZ in an interview published Monday (Nov. 24). “They brought Kelli back. At the end of the day, they couldn’t keep both of us on both times, as far as budget-wise. They said, ‘Ice, we’ll have you come in and out this year.’ Everybody wanted Kelli back. We have new cops. I am not leaving the show. I am more concerned with going to season 28.”
However, SVU die-hards and the Fin hive can breathe easy, as he isn’t expected to be phased out of the series. Show organizers told Ice that they “can’t imagine” NBC’s long-running procedural drama without him.
Ice-T continued: “This year, they said, ‘Ice, we’re going to work you a little less.’ Everything was cool with me. I understood. I said, ‘Are you getting rid of me?’ They said, ‘No way. We can’t imagine Law & Order without you.’ I’ve been on this show for 27 years. I am not going to say anything negative about this show. They have taken care of me for so long. I’m trying to get to season 28.”
The 67-year-old has appeared in four of the eight episodes thus far in season 27. Early in the season, Fin was jumped by two men and a woman after being set up by the crew, with the woman pretending she was being sexually assaulted. Fin was hospitalized from the beating and took a leave of absence to deal with the trauma from the altercation.
Ice-T also explained that the free time has allowed him to pursue other endeavors, such as focusing on music andmaking AI-generated photos. “Don’t worry about me. I am kind of glad the fans are upset,” he said. “What if I was missing and nobody cared? I will be sprinkled throughout this season.”
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit airs on NBC and streams on Peacock.
Denzel Curry, My Bloody Valentine, Shygirl, Paris Paloma, Vacations, Innvervisions and YHWN Nailgun have joined the more than 1,000 other artists and labels taking part in the No Music For Genocide movement comprised of acts committed to removing their catalogs from streaming services in Israel amid the shaky truce between the Jewish state and Hamas-led militant groups.
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The cultural boycott is asking artists and music rights-holders to support the Palestinian people by geo-blocking their music and pulling it from streaming platforms in Israel. They join a growing roster of acts on the list, including: Clairo, Lucy Dacus, Wolf Alice, Of Monsters and Men, Lorde, Hayley Williams, Paramore, Björk, MUNA and Paloma Faith.
The effort was originally launched in September with more than 400 signatories, with organizers saying in a statement that the urgency of the project has been ratcheted up by reports of nearly 500 alleged ceasefire violations by Israel since October’s U.S.-led ceasefire deal ending two years of devastating bombing of Gaza by Israel.
“Drawing from the successful music boycotts of apartheid South Africa, No Music For Genocide stands firm in refusing to reward the music industry’s on-the-ground presence in apartheid Israel with access to the art it requires, rejecting the use of cultural work and influence to normalize Israel’s criminal occupation, genocide, forced displacement, torture, and imprisonment without charge,” read a statement from the group. “Music is both a universal language and inherently politicized; the only question is whether we define its politicization to advance true justice.”
At press time the fragile ceasefire appeared to be holding, though Israel has continued to strike inside Gaza in response to what the country alleged was a violation of the terms by a Hamas gunman who reportedly opened fire on Israeli troops in Southern Gaza.
Israeli forces waged a relentless bombing campaign in the Gaza Strip following the Oct. 7, 2023 surprise attack by Hamas militants on Israel that killed nearly 2,000 and resulted in the kidnapping of 251 hostages. Following two years of fighting in which Palestinian authorities said more than 69,000 Palestinians were killed and 170,000 injured by Israeli attacks that leveled a massive amount of structures in the territory and caused what experts said was a severe hunger crisis, a shaky ceasefire was signed on Oct. 10 as the first step towards a hoped-for peace deal.
No Music For Genocide held it’s first fundraiser last month in New York, raising $7,000, with all proceeds going directly to mutual aid programs and family lifeline funds in Gaza and the occupied West Bank.
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Alison Wonderland shares her loss and truth behind canceled shows, her new upcoming album ‘Ghost world,’ being a mother and more.
Katie Bain:
Hi, I’m Katie Bain, Billboard’s senior music correspondent. I am here with the one and only Alison Wonderland. Thank you for joining us.
Alison Wonderland:
Thank you for having me.
Yeah, especially in this special state of being.
Yeah.
Yeah, you’re about to have a baby.
Literally about to have a baby.
Any minute now.
Any minute.
Could happen here today. We don’t, we don’t want that to happen, but…
But I said the middle name would be Billboard if the baby was born today.
Which would be a really nice shout-out. But, so we have a lot to talk about, because a lot of things are about to happen in your life.
A lot.
You’re about to release ‘Ghost World.’
Yes.
And it’s your first Alison Wonderland album since 2022.
Yes.
Since ‘Loner.’ Yeah, so you obviously did the Whyte Fang project in between those two projects, but why did you feel like it was time to bring Alison Wonderland back, and how did you kind of get into the mode where you’re back in the studio making that music?
I just really felt like it was time. I think for Alison, obviously it’s more about the songwriting, a lot more about the songwriting with Whyte Fang. Um, you know, I have a lot of featured vocalists on those records, and when I was making ‘Genesis,’ the Whyte Fang album, it just kind of felt like where I was at the time, which I’ll be bringing back again soon.
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Trending on Billboard Ideally, cake is fluffy and moist, but every once in a while, you bite into one that’s as dry as cardboard. And if you’re Katy Perry, you sometimes bite into one that’s literally cardboard. In a hilarious no-context video posted to Instagram on Monday (Nov. 24), the pop star sits on a […]
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Fabrice Morvan might have a bone to pick with F. Scott Fitzgerald about that whole there are “no second acts in American lives” thing. Because the once-disgraced pop singer, who along with late partner Rob Pilatus was half of the face of 1990s dance pop duo Milli Vanilli, has just pulled off one of the most improbable second acts in music history.
Thirty-five years after being the first and so far, only, act to have a Grammy award revoked after it was revealed that the perfectly coiffed, fancy dancing duo did not sing a note on their best new artist-nominated debut 1988 album, Morvan recently landed his second Grammy nod for best audio book, narration, and storytelling recording for the audiobook of his memoir, You Know It’s True: The Real Story of Milli Vanilli.
“To this day ain’t nobody in the history of music has gone through what I went through,” said Morvan, 59, who went from being a multi-platinum, arena-filling superstar with three No. 1 singles on the Billboard Hot 100 chart to a late night punchline within two years when it was revealed that he and Pilatus were merely the images, but not the voices, on their LP. “Thirty-five years later you’re looking at a dude who got a Grammy nomination with his own voice! I found my own voice because of me being able to find the strength to tell my story. Wow. You can’t write that story!”
But, Morvan did and now he is up against some serious heavy-hitters in his category when the 68th annual Grammy Awards are handed out on Feb. 1. Among those he’ll be vying with for a Grammy are Supreme Court justice Ketanji Brown Jackson (Lovely One), comedian and former Daily Show host Trevor Noah (Into the Uncut Grass) and the Dalai Lama (Meditations: The Reflections of His Holiness the Dalai Lama).
Billboard caught up with Morvan to talk about the shock nomination, what his plans are for Grammy night and why the book (and the potential feel-good Grammy redemption arc) is the start of what he hopes will be a robust second (or third) act. (This interview has been edited for length and clarity).
Even though Milli Vanilli’s music has remained popular, it’s been a lifetime since most people heard your name. Why did you write the memoir now?
People were enlightened about what really took place and the documentary [the 2023 doc Milli Vanilli, which this writer appeared in] was instrumental in rewriting the narrative… I looked at my kids and thought it would be nice to leave something for them so they could understand each and every chapter, a gift to them. The documentary was done, the book was done, but I still felt I had so much truth I haven’t spoken and I don’t want to throw nobody under the bus, but it was very personal. [It was about] my childhood and how I grew up, so people can understand the choices I made. As humans, everyone goes through trauma, especially Rob, who got into the music industry because he had no love at home and he got addicted to that love, which is the core of the story. [Pilatus, 32, died in 1998 of a suspected drug overdose.]
What’s it feel like to be Grammy-nominated again?
[Laughs.] It was never in our minds back then, “ay man, let’s get that Grammy!” That was never something we wanted. We knew the criteria for a Grammy was you have to 100-plus percent perform. When we sat in the front row, we were like, “lord, lord, lord, no!” I knew how awards ran and when they sit you there and you have that camera view and your name is about to be read… we never wanted that… To this day ain’t nobody in the history of music who has gone through what I have gone through.
Thirty-five years later you’re looking at a dude that got a Grammy nomination with his own voice! I found my voice and because of me being able to find the strength to tell my story. Wow. You can’t write that story! It’s a true story about storytelling and redemption and trauma and I haven’t given up. Stories are here to have us look at our humanity and because of that it brings us closer together and music does the same thing.
Are you shocked that Grammys gave you another chance after the scandal the first time?
It’s about storytelling and I’m one-hundred percent sure my peers, the voters that nominated me, all had a story — they all fell, they were all used by someone, a person who took advantage of them. If you look at the story you have black and white, but in between are shades of gray that people can understand. People who’ve gone through what I went through can identify the shades of gray. The physical, mental, financially being taken advantage of — some people have all three — back then we were voiceless, but now with social media you hear more stories and are like, “Damn! What happened to that person?”
What did you think when you found out?
It had the total opposite effect. I never go towards hype. I run away as far as I can until I can feel calm. Like someone very famous said, “I sizzle,” then I meditate on it and figure out what does that look like? What does it really mean? It means I touched a nerve at the core of the people exposed to the story, whether they read the book or not, and my peers, because I am not the first, or last one, to have been used and taken advantage of in the industry. But I became the poster boy, 100%.
You competition is pretty fierce: a Supreme Court justice, the Dalai Lama, Trevor Noah… what are your odds?
I don’t look at the list. I told my story and was as vulnerable as possible. Understood early on, either I tell it all or why do this if I’m not going all the way? I was as vulnerable as possible and it touched a nerve about storytelling. I look at winning as when I meet someone in the streets and they say they read the book and it changed my life, that’s cool… Who would have thought?
Will you attend the Grammys and how do you think it will feel three decades later?
Oh man, of course. You know I’m gonna be there, I’ll look good too! Whatever happens out of the wreckage of Milli Vanilli I took whatever I could to reverse-engineer the DNA of what it was… I did the right thing, I listened to myself and kept going even through blind faith. You look at the company you’re in and for me it’s about inspiring the people who’ve been knocked down or misunderstood or judged, this is for you. It’s also in the name of Rob as well, for my family, for people who sometimes have no way out of that vicious circle you’re locked in because of life.
Do any feelings of shame or regret come with being in the Grammy spotlight again? Does it bring up difficult emotions?
No, because I’ve forgiven and forgiveness is such a magical tool. I advise anyone to forgive the ones who’ve hurted you, who’s abused you, who’ve taken advantage or you or otherwise you’ll keep going in vicious circles. When I was able to forgive them, forgive myself for letting it happen… I was able to forgive myself and I was able to walk out.
So maybe you won’t be in the front row this time, but what happens if your name is called?
[Big breath.] I don’t even know if that part is televised. But you know what I’m gonna do? When a situation gets very overwhelming I slow down everything and tune out everything around me. I would take that walk and thank the most important people in my life, my family, Rob and then it’s about the ones who’ve been misunderstood, underrated and underestimated. In the end, one thing I understood is it’s not about me, it’s about inspiring others. We’re nothing but a grain of sand… Just the fact that I’m nominated, in my heart I definitely won already. Just to be in the company of those people?! It’s never too late.
When we spoke a few years ago you promised this was not the last chapter for you. What is next?
I knew there would be more eyes on me this year, so right now I have out the single “Future Love” with Ray Slijngaard [2 Unlimited] and “Clothes Off” [a cover of Jermaine Stewart’s 1986 hit single “We Don’t Have to Take Our Clothes Off”] and I’m working on an Afrobeat record with James [BKS, the son of late Cameroonian sax giant Manu Dibango] due out in January called, if you can believe it, “Milli Vanity.” I’m also sitting on a couple of albums of material and something else might come out after the “Vanity” record. I’ve also released a reggaeton version of “Girl You Know It’s True” and an acoustic “Blame it on the Rain.” Also, I’m working on a deal with a company in New York to do 30-50 shows next year.
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Muni Long is setting the record straight regarding her new Instagram videos featuring a Mariah Carey impersonator, which some Lambs have interpreted as shade directed at the Songbird Supreme.
Shortly after posting two clips promoting her new single “Delulu” — in which an actress dressed as Carey crashes Long’s rehearsal and gives notes, mimicking the icon’s distinctive voice and mannerisms — the Florida native clarified on her Instagram Story on Monday (Nov. 24) that she meant no offense.
“Y’all don’t be delulu,” she wrote. “I would never disrespect Queen Mariah!!!!!!”
Long’s post on Stories comes as many fans have been flooding her comment section to accuse her of shading Carey. “Career too young for this level of disrespect,” one person wrote. “Humble yourself everything doesn’t need a rebuttal.”
“Shading Mariah in MARIAH’S SEASON good luck girl,” added another fan.
But according to Long, she has nothing but love for the Queen of Christmas, adding on her Story, “Forever a Lamb.”
Billboard has reached out to Carey’s reps for comment.
Also in one of the impersonator videos Long posted, the faux Carey sings a version of “Delulu,” after which Long winks at the camera and says, “I just … don’t like when other people sing my songs.” In the second clip, the impersonator pushes Long off a ledge.
“AND YOU KNOW WHAT!? She could push me off of every ledge in sight,” the caption reads. “THANK YOU!!! I LOVE HA!!!”
The first of the videos is definitely a reference to Carey’s previous comment about Long, with whom she collaborated on “Made for Me” last year. At the 2025 iHeartRadio Music Awards, Long performed a cover of “We Belong Together” as part of a tribute to the legendary vocalist, who later told GQ this past September, “I didn’t even hear the cover. I didn’t know it happened.”
“I’m very honored and flattered that she did it,” Carey added at the time. “I love Muni Long, she’s a great person, umm, but I just don’t like people doing my songs.”
That’s seemingly why some Lambs assumed Long was coming for Carey with her new videos — but in the first video’s caption, she also made her fandom of the superstar clear. “THE DIVA!?!!!!” Long wrote. “Maybe…I can come around to people singing my songs if this who singing it!”
Check out Long’s videos featuring “Mariah” below.
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