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Grimes needs your help. The singer recently put out a call to her fans in search of assistance in tracking down one of her cinematic idols. In a series of posts on X, the “Shinigami Eyes” star asked her followers for advice on getting in contact with director Quentin Tarantino. Explore See latest videos, charts […]

Lizzo is staying unbothered when it comes to jokes about health, including Antonio Brown’s recent jab about her taking Ozempic.
Captioning a series of Instagram photos of her modeling various bikinis and form-fitting dresses Monday (Nov. 11), the “About Damn Time” singer wrote, “Holding life like an ozempic pen.. 😝” — a seemingly nonchalant sentiment unless you know the context. But one day prior, the retired NFL star had retweeted a video Lizzo posted and quipped, “She hold the pen like she hold her ozempic shot…..”

In the clip, the Grammy winner had filmed herself writing on a piece of paper, “Sending LOVE to everyone in the WORLD.” She originally posted the video Nov. 7, two days after the presidential election.

Lizzo’s post responding to Brown is just the latest instance of the musician laughing off comments about her body. In September, she clapped back at speculation about her recent weight loss by posting a video of herself sighing into the camera, captioning it, “When you finally get Ozempic allegations after 5 months of weight training and calorie deficit.” 

Trending on Billboard

Then, for this year’s Halloween, the Yitty founder dressed up as “LizzOzempic,” a costume inspired by a recent episode of South Park that suggested Lizzo’s message of body positivity as an alternative for the popular weight-loss drug. She also reacted to the episode in May, when it first aired.

“I just feel like, damn, I’m really that b—h,” she said in a TikTok at the time. “I showed the world how to love yourself, and now these men in Colorado know who the f–k I am, and put it in their cartoon that’s been around for 25 years.”

The “Truth Hurts” artist has been particularly open this year about her fitness journey, from getting vulnerable in September about a small setback — “I overate yesterday and im feeling really bad about it … trying to remind myself that my body needed that nourishment,” she wrote on TikTok — to sharing her workouts on social media. In October, she participated in Fortune’s Most Powerful Women Summit and spoke about the complexities of her appearance changing in front of the public eye.

“One inevitability we all have to face is that our bodies will change … it’s a beautiful thing,” she said at the time. “My body is nobody’s business, other than me, my doctor, my trainer and my man.”

Young Thug’s first music endeavor since his release from jail could include some serious star power. According to DJ Akademiks, Thugger was in the studio with frequent collaborators Travis Scott, Future and Lil Baby on Sunday night (Nov. 10). Explore See latest videos, charts and news See latest videos, charts and news A photo and […]

Coldplay have made a habit of throwing the odd cover into the tightly scripted set of their record-setting Music of the Spheres world tour. But during Sunday night’s show at Accor Stadium in Sydney, Australia — the final gig in a four-night stand at the 83,500-capacity venue — they busted out an unexpected take on […]

Season 26 of The Voice is heating up, and on Tuesday night’s (Nov. 12) episode, Gwen Stefani‘s team members Felsmere, Gabrielle Zabosky and Kay Sibal put on three powerful performances during the Knockouts that make the choice of a winner nearly impossible for their coach. Explore Explore See latest videos, charts and news See latest videos, […]

SXM Music Festival will bring a sprawling crew of artists back to the beaches and hilltops of Saint Martin for the festival’s eighth edition in March.
The lineup for the 2025 fest includes house music pioneer Danny Tenaglia, techno globetrotter Nicole Moudaber, Afrohouse phenom Francis Mercier, U.K. progressive house stars CamelPhat, German house/techno legend Amê, house producer Layla Benitez and a crew of other house and techno artists from around the world, with additional artists to be announced in the coming months.

Explore

See latest videos, charts and news

See latest videos, charts and news

The five-day fest, happening March 12-16, will also feature showcases from Defected Records, Israeli label Frau Blau and the New York label Indo Warehouse. 

Trending on Billboard

Presale tickets for SXM 2025 go on sale Nov. 14, with general tickets going on sale the following day.

Founded by Julian Prince, SXM has happened on St. Martin since 2016 and typically draws attendees from more then 35 countries. The 2025 edition of the festival will once again take place in locations around the island, including a private villa, a Sunday morning sunrise party on the beach, and the annual Panorama Party that happens on the island’s highest hilltop. The event will also offer day trips including hikes and cultural excursions.

In 2017, after the island was devastated by Hurricane Irma — which left an estimated 95% of the French side of the island destroyed — SXM organizers collected more than $38,000 for the relief effort. The event was one of the few festivals to happen in 2020 before the pandemic shut down the live events space, and after a postponed 2021 event also due to the pandemic, returned to Saint Martin in 2022.

Along with music and partying, SXM focuses on leaving a small footprint and helping replenish the area’s natural environments via initiatives that include going paperless, saving energy with LED and solar lights, and eliminating plastic waste throughout the festival.

See the phase one lineup below:

SXM Festival

Courtesy Photo

When Mike Jones, Slim Thug and Paul Wall first cut “Still Tippin,’” they weren’t seeking superstardom, just a bonafide street hit. But with the classic track, the three Houston MCs — and the people behind them — propelled Houston into a hip-hop hub. 

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See latest videos, charts and news

See latest videos, charts and news

“Still Tippin’” received its major release on November 12, 2004 — though it was a hit in the streets and clubs of Houston over a year prior. But Jones had spent years just trying to make it as an artist. At his side was his mother and grandmother, who were his biggest supporters in his creative journey — and inspired the famous “Who? Mike Jones!” adlib.

“I was trying to go to the club and get my music played,” Jones tells Billboard. “People were making fun of me, like, ‘Are you Biggie?’ I’m like ‘I’m Mike Jones.’ and they’d be like, ‘Who?’ And my grandma and mom said, ‘Throw it back in their face’”

Trending on Billboard

Jones was discovered by Swishahouse founder and president Michael Watts in the late ‘90s, after artist manager — then A&R man — T Farris suggested Watts get him to rap on Swishahouse mixtapes. At the time, Watts says that Jones was performing freestyles and mixes at strip clubs for the women to dance to. “I went there to go check him out,” Watts recalls, “and I said, ‘Hey, why don’t you come to the studio and lay down a few freestyles?’”

Jones would later cut some tracks for the Swishahouse crew before signing in the early 2000s, but his Houston breakthrough would come in the form of “Still Tippin’” — in its original 2003 iteration. 

The song first appeared on Swishahouse’s The Day Hell Broke Loose 2 mixtape, not necessarily as a Jones single, but a compilation track comprised of the Swishahouse roster. “The song was so strong, that we ended up partnering with Asylum. So we used this song that was hot on the streets as a single for Mike Jones,” says Watts.

The original version of “Still Tippin’” had a verse by Chamillionaire instead of Wall, and rides a different instrumental. Watts remembers that the artists didn’t want to rap over the beat we know and love today — composed of a downtempo percussive loop and a hypnotic sample of Giachiono Rossini’s “Willam Tell Overture” by the South German Philharmonic Orchestra and Alfred Scholz. “No one originally wanted to rap on that song,” says Watts. “So what I did was, I reproduced it, I put the hook on it, put Slim, Mike, and Paul’s verse on it, and that’s how that song came about.”

Jones remembers it differently, crediting the main version’s producer for crafting the simple yet memorable loop we know today. “Shoutout Salih Williams. That was all him,” Jones says. “It was his idea. Like ‘let me create it off of this vibe,’ and we just did what we did.”

One of the biggest factors in the song’s rise was its music video. Before the eras of YouTube, Vevo, and TikTok, the “Still Tippin’” visual became a staple late-night video on the after-hours program BET Uncut through word of mouth.

The video is fairly simple, featuring the rappers driving through the streets of Houston in Escalades and cars decked out with rims and dubs. Notable moments include a callback to Jones’ days in the strip club and Slim receiving road head (oral sex while driving) — both of which were cut from the daytime version. But scandalous moments aside, Jones believes that the music and the car culture depicted in the video is what made it a classic.

“This was a good song that both sides of the city of Houston could come together and ride with,” Jones says. “We got the south side with the candy red cars [and] we got the north side with the candy blue cars.”

Helming the video was John “Dr. Teeth” Tucker, a Cincinnati native who became an advocate for southern hip-hop after attending Texas Southern University in Houston. After college, Teeth worked as a producer on BET’s Rap City — and would often rave about southern hip-hop artists to his colleagues. 

“These guys were going platinum without a deal, because they were making this music between Louisiana and Oklahoma and Texas — and going on tour,” Teeth recalls. “And I was telling the people back about UGK and Southside Players and DJ Screw and Swishaouse. I was telling them about these guys back in Texas — and up north, man, New Yorkers feel like hip hop starts with them and it ends with them. They weren’t trying to hear nothing about the South.”

As Teeth became more invested in southern hip-hop, he continued to document and highlight these artists — and later, made UGK’s Bun B a southern correspondent on Rap City. He also created the “The Booth” portion of Rap City: Tha Bassment, where artists brushed off their freestyle skills and showcased a fiar share of southern acts.

Teeth eventually left BET and moved back to Houston to pursue a career as a music video director. Upon his return, he remembers meeting a man named Wally, who was doing distribution for Swishahouse. Wally urged Teeth to meet with Swishahouse’s CEO G-Dash to discuss shooting videos for Swishahouse to distribute on DVDs. When meeting G-Dash, Teeth said he would shoot a video for Mike Jones for $30,000. However, according to Teeth, “He didn’t want to put down the money.”

G-Dash, Teeth, and Wally later met up, with Wally mediating. Teeth eventually agreed to do the video, capturing various aspects of Houston street culture. In portions of the video, Watts is seen spinning “Still Tippin’” on turntables, as a woman dances to the track. According to Teeth, this woman was recruited from a local strip club.

“I picked her because she was generating all the attention in the strip club,” says Teeth. “People were drawn to her and she had an energy to her. They were like a moth to the flame.” For Teeth, everything about the video was intentional — not for mainstream success, but for Houston rap fans. “I said, ‘Let’s make it for your fans, because DVDs were heavy and we can make a DVD around this and sell it if we can never get it to BET’.”

Jones also only anticipated this being a Houston hit, which is why he felt comfortable wearing a shirt with his personal phone number — (281) 330-8004 — on it. This also came as a suggestion from his grandmother, who died in 2003, before the video’s official release.

“I didn’t want to give out my phone number at first,” Jones says. “My grandma was like, ‘Do something that ain’t nobody else doing. Be personal to the fans. Give out your phone number.’ And I was like ‘Man, I’m not finna give out my phone number.’ I eventually gave out my phone number. Thank God for her giving me that direction.’” Today, the phone number has since been reactivated as a fan hotline.

To the surprise of Teeth and the Swishahouse crew, the song became a slow-burning hit — so much so that Teeth had to cut a second version for rotation on MTV channels, as well as BET’s daytime countdown 106 & Park. Thankfully, Teeth had plenty of footage to comply with the networks’ requests. “I hate the 106 & Park version,” Teeth jokes. “Asylum didn’t give us the money to go back and reshoot what we shot before, and we shot on an older film camera.”

Since its release, “Still Tippin’” has peaked at No. 60 on the Billboard Hot 100 and has been certified platinum. The video also earned a nomination in the MTV2 Category at the 2005 MTV Video Music Awards.

“That song is so personal to me, because when you look at that video, it’s 100% a vision that God gave to me. To put the city that I live in now on the map and give respect to the pioneers of of Houston sound,” says Teeth. “And to me what makes it so great is that it was nominated for a viewers choice award. It’s more than just what he did on the charts. It’s what the people connected to and I’m really proud of that.”

To this day, “Still Tippin’” continues to make an impact in hip-hop. Artists like ASAP Rocky, Lil Uzi Vert, and Normani have gone on to sample the track in their own works. The song is also a staple at any Texas function.

“If it didn’t blow up nowhere else, we knew it was going to blow up in Texas,” says Jones. “Everybody’s big on rides and cars. We still tippin’, and people that are from where we’re from understand the lingo.”

Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo might be powerful witches now, but years ago, they were simply munchkins with big dreams. And in a new Xfinity commercial that premiered Tuesday (Nov. 12), fans are reminded of the long yellow brick road both women took to make their dreams come true through being cast in Wicked, which […]

Blake Shelton was born in Oklahoma, but the singer will be in a Lone Star state of mind (again) on his upcoming single. Shelton will release the song “Texas” on Friday (Nov. 15), which a press release described as a “fresh and addictive” track that “captures the classic theme of lost love with a twist […]

Never let it be said that Timothée Chalamet doesn’t do his homework. In his first extensive interview about his role as Bob Dylan in the upcoming biopic A Complete Unknown, the Willy Wonka star told Apple Music’s Zane Lowe that he learned how to play 13 classic Dylan songs for the movie, in addition to working with a harmonica coach for five years to nail the Rock and Roll Hall of Famer’s signature style.
In addition to tapping a movement coach to help him embody the enigmatic icon’s physical stance, Chalemet also told Lowe that he took a “spirit-gathering” road trip mimicking the Minnesota native’s early years as a budding folk singer, starting off in Dylan’s hometown of Hibbing, MN, before traveling to neighboring Duluth, then on to Chicago and Madison, WI.

Trending on Billboard

“It was the best experience I’ve had as an actor or the most rewarding experience I’ve had doesn’t really necessarily translate to the effect of it, not only on people, but maybe in the finished product because I’ve also had more challenging experiences that come out great,” Chalamet said of the long journey to bring the singer to life on screen. “I’m happy it took five, six years because I am now deep in that Church of Bob. I feel like that’s my mission is the next three months, until the movie comes out, I feel like I’m in the Church of Bob, I’m a humble disciple, and I feel like I got this opportunity to kind of be a bridge to this music or this period, this time period.”

Despite his deep-dive, Chalamet said he wasn’t trying to do an imitation of the singer’s voice, explaining, “This is interpretive. This is not definitive. This is not fact. This is not how it happened. This is a fable.” In fact, he said none of his fellow actors were there to perform impersonations.

“This is about not only myself interpreting Bob, but Edward Norton interpreting Pete Seeger, Monica [Barbaro] interpreting Joan Baez and Boyd Holbrook interpreting Johnny Cash in this moment in the ’60s where American culture was a kaleidoscope and Greenwich Village was a kaleidoscope,” he said. “The way culture still is now too, but without being a history teacher, that was the beginning, personalized music, stuff with intention, stuff with poetry, it all started there in the movie.”

The journey was, as expected, arduous, given Dylan’s unique vocal style and quixotic public persona. Though he said he didn’t play guitar on the pre-records of the songs, Chalamet said he worried the guitar on the songs was too “friendly,” given that in the early 1960s Dylan was playing an instrument was “basically falling apart.” Similarly, the actor said he found that his voice had a baritone range, but that too sounded too “clean” too him.

“I was doing vocal warmups with Eric Vetro, who was this vocal coach who helped me on Wonka and helped me sing ‘Grand’ on Wonka. And then, here, I would listen to it back and I’m like, ‘Man, this sounds too clean,’” he said, calling the role the “most dignified work” he’s ever done.

In a nod to Dylan’s often unpredictable nature, Chalamet recalled that the singer’s manager secretly came to set one day and after watching the actor he praised him for capturing the “spirit” of his client. In fact, the text he got was so effusive and positive, that Chalamet said he and Norton were “jumping up and down and went, ‘man, Bob’s manager loves it’ and then we were like, ‘oh no, the real Bob’s such a contrarian that Jeff’s gonna go to him and say this movie looks good and then Bob’s gonna say well, it must be a piece of s–t.’”

Now that he’s been fully immersed in the “Church of Bob,” Chalamet said he feels like he can be a “bridge” to bring the the voice of a generation to a whole new generation. In a pair of trailers to date, Chalamet appears to fully transform his voice and physical manner to tell the story of Dylan’s early 1960s rise to fame and the controversial moment he switched to electric guitar at the 1965 Newport Folk Festival.

A Complete Unknown opens in theaters on Dec. 25.

Watch the full interview below.