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Billboard Japan’s Women in Music initiative launched in 2022 to celebrate artists, producers and executives who have made significant contributions to music and inspired other women through their work, in the same spirit as Billboard’s annual Women in Music celebration that has continued since 2007. This interview series featuring female players in the Japanese entertainment industry is one of the highlights of Japan’s WIM project, with the first 30 sessions published as a “Billboard Japan Presents” collection by writer Rio Hirai.

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Ayaka Wada chatted with Hirai for the latest installment of the WIM interview series. The former member of the Hello! Project idol group Angerme currently continues her music career as a solo artist while also actively sharing her thoughts on art and feminism. The 30-year-old elaborated on the discomfort she felt as a member of a popular idol group and on why she is vocal about changing the norms of the industry and society now that she is free to speak her mind.

You began your career as an idol performer when you were 15 years old. How did you end up going down that road?

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I auditioned for Hello! Project when I was in fourth grade and started out as a trainee. After five years of training, I made my debut as a member of S/mileage in 2010. The group later changed its name to Angerme and I also experienced being the leader.

Before you actually made it, did you long to become an idol?

You know what, I never aspired to become an idol. My dad is a doting parent, and he was like, “My child is cute so she’ll be accepted anywhere,” and kept sending in applications without asking me. I was shy around new people and bashful, so I was like, “I can’t stand on stage and sing and dance!” and was thinking of quitting when I entered junior high. But as I was thinking how I didn’t want to get in trouble with my parents, I ended up making my debut, and before I knew it, I’d come to a point where I couldn’t turn back. My environment changed after my debut and I had to interact with more people, so that made me more responsible. I felt that as long as there were people paying to see us, we had to make sure we didn’t mess up.

So you ended up becoming an idol group member without really intending to. Were you able to fit in with the image of “idols” that people around you expected?

Being “idol-like” has a lot in common with the concept of “femininity.” You have to keep your legs closed and not cross them, you have to keep smiling, you’re discouraged from expressing your own opinions and talking about politics or religion is strictly forbidden. It felt like society’s old-fashioned gender roles were still deeply rooted in the industry and being expected to be idol-like, i.e. feminine, made me feel more and more uncomfortable. So I kept thinking that I had to overcome this somehow or I wouldn’t be able to live as myself as I continued my idol career.

Did you ever feel uncomfortable with your femininity outside of your work as an idol?

I used to go to Tokyo from my hometown when I had work, but moved there when I entered university. From then on, it felt like I’d been thrown into society, and I became more and more aware of my gender as a woman. I was attending a women’s university and used to wear whatever I liked without worrying about how men saw me, but was often approached on the street at night when wearing pink or floral clothes and it was scary… I thought, “Maybe this is the wrong way to dress,” and started wearing jeans and T-shirts, and wasn’t approached on the street when I did so. I thought this was connected to the discomfort I felt about femininity. But at the time, I wasn’t able to verbalize that I was being forced to conform to the idea of femininity that people around me had in their minds, and it’s like I’ve always been searching for and researching the true nature of the discomfort I felt in my life and in my idol career.

How did you figure out the true nature of the discomfort you were feeling?

I learned about feminism at university. It was a women’s university, so there was a lot of emphasis on women’s education, and there were classes that helped us think about how to build a career that would allow us to become independent. In the French art classes I was taking, I also learned about how artists had been treated according to their gender. The biggest shock I got was when I learned the famous line, “One is not born, but rather becomes, a woman” from Simone de Beauvoir’s The Second Sex in a French literature class and realized that this was the reason of my discomfort. After that, I went to the library and read all kinds of books on feminism.

You were a member of Angerme at the time, so you must have been living with a disconnect between that knowledge you were inputting and the required output in your work life.

My feelings and actions were always completely the opposite. While going back and forth between these opposing views, I discovered that idols are social existences rather than individual ones. I tried my best thinking I could change the world of idols too somehow, but it was hard to do by myself. I decided to “graduate” from the group because I thought that I couldn’t realize what I wanted to do while I still belonged to the company.

What did you do to approach those concerns?

While idols are existences that are produced, each person wants to express something different, so I was hoping we’d be treated as individuals, including during our private lives. Being young, innocent and cute was considered important, and growing up wasn’t a good thing. We couldn’t even grow out our bangs. Under those circumstances, I continued to take a grassroots approach like making leaflets saying, “Why can’t I express myself as I am?” and handing it out to the staff. I didn’t get any outward response, but there was a staff member who told me secretly that they “all passed it around and read it.” That was in 2018 and the concepts of “diversity” and “gender” weren’t as well known in (Japanese) society as they are now, so my actions may have seemed abrupt. I’m starting to notice changes now. There are more variations in expressions such as hair and makeup and costumes. Labor standards are also being questioned, and I’ve heard that more and more talent agencies are setting up mental health consultation services.

When you decided to go solo, what kind of message did you want to send out to whom?

People belonging to a younger generation than myself. When I was in a group, all my comments about feminism were cut. “I want to consider how women should be,” was the limit. But I want to think about the issues of idols and feminism, and to create a working environment where everyone can have peace of mind. The thing that surprised me the most about making those kinds of comments after going solo was the support I received from my fans. On social media, there are still people who don’t think well of women who speak out, but I know now that I have lots of allies and feel that as long as I have these people I can continue to speak out.

It must be reassuring to feel the presence of allies around you. There may be people out there who struggle because they can’t find like-minded communities. What do you think should be done in such cases?

It’d be best if you could connect with people in real life, but now, “in-person” isn’t your only option. When I was an idol, I didn’t use the word feminism when talking with the other members and felt lonely sometimes, but it helped to look at posts on social media by people who felt the same way as me. So, even if you can’t connect with people in real life, I hope you find another place where you can belong. Books and art can also become places where your mind can belong, and you’ll feel protected. When you come across someone with different views, express your feelings by saying, “I don’t think so” without getting swept away, and that simple comment can protect your mind. In my case, I release the emotions that have built up in my mind by putting them into words as song lyrics.

How do you think we can eliminate gender imbalances within the entertainment industry as a whole?

I want people who are in the public eye, the staff members, and the fans, regardless of gender, to join this conversation. If we can visualize what everyone is thinking, including men as well as women, then I think changes will take place. 

—This interview by Rio Hirai (SOW SWEET PUBLISHING) first appeared on Billboard Japan

When Reba McEntire was caring for her sick mother, the last thing she expected was to accidentally get way too high.
The country legend stopped by The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, where she recalled a hilarious story she experienced with her late mother, who died in 2020 from bladder cancer. While taking a break from prepping a tour, McEntire flew to her home state of Oklahoma to look after her mom.

“When I got to Stringtown, Oklahoma, [her sister] Alice told me, ‘Now, if Mama starts hurting tonight when y’all go to sleep, give her one of these gummies. I said, ‘OK, alright. The whole thing?’ She said ‘Yes, the whole thing,’” she recalled of the marijuana gummies she was given. “Well, I wasn’t really comfortable with that, so when we started going to bed, I said, ‘Mama, let’s get ahead of this pain. I’m going to give you half of this.’”

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McEntire noted that after her mother took the gummy, she fell asleep right away, which inspired the “Fancy” singer to take the other half of the dose herself. “I thought, ‘Well shoot, Mama’s taking it. I need to see what she’s experiencing,’” she explained.

However, that decision quickly took an unexpected turn when McEntire was awoken in the middle of the night by her mother getting up to use the restroom. “I said, ‘Mama, hang on I’ll be right there,’ and she said, ‘I’m good.’ So, I threw back the covers and that’s about as far as I got,” she recalled. “I thought I’m either going to crawl over the bed or walk right around.”

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McEntire then recreated the hilariously slow, creeping motion she made to get herself to the other side of the bed, and when she arrived, her mother requested ice water. “You know how you can fast forward on something real quick? Reba McEntire found in her mother’s kitchen, ice all around. I thought, ‘Ain’t no way I’m going that way,’” she said, noting that she gave her mother regular water and told her they were out of ice.

She continued, “I laid down and I swear there was weeds and flowers growing out of my head. So the next day, I asked everybody, ‘How many milligrams were in those things?’ 50! I took 25 milligrams with my mother.”

However, McEntire noted, “I still took care of mama!”

Watch McEntire tell the full story below.

If you’re a disrespectful photographer or an overly personal fan planning to cross Chappell Roan‘s boundaries, we have one thing to say: Good luck, babe. The pop singer/songwriter has been making headlines for months for calling out bad behavior in the music industry, whether it’s her plea to fans to respect her space when she’s […]

The tables turn in Rihanna‘s latest interview, which has the singer asking most of the questions.
Rihanna appears on Tuesday’s (Oct. 29) new episode of Recess Therapy, the feel-good YouTube series featuring interviews with regular kids who usually don’t realize their answers are funny — they’re just being themselves. (You might remember the web series for the “it’s corn” kid that went viral with this video in 2022.)

On the latest episode Rihanna meets 7-year-old Miles, her favorite Recess Therapy kid. Miles has previously talked to stars like Olivia Rodrigo and Dua Lipa, and those videos are probably among those Rihanna’s seen.

“I actually am a fan of yours, Miles,” she tells him on the new episode, adding, “I got a little bit excited about it and I started watching all your videos. You’re really funny.”

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“I know,” Miles says.

Throughout the adorable conversation, Rihanna and Miles discuss songs and shoes, and address important life topics like confidence, thinking too much, lying and making friends.

What’s Miles’ favorite Rihanna song? “Shine bright like a diamond,” he says, without hesitation, which is cuteness overload for Rihanna.

“Love on the Brain” is her favorite to sing, she tells him. “Love on the Brain” is from her eighth studio album, Anti, released in 2016. Pop music lovers have been waiting for Rihanna’s ninth album since then.

Young Miles is much more present than most of us grownup interviewers, with no reason to think in headlines — so, unfortunately for her fans, he doesn’t get scoop on R9 on Recess Therapy. He discusses his love life with pop star instead.

Watch Rihanna’s sweet guest spot on Recess Therapy below.

Like Ice Cube was for the Los Angeles Dodgers in game two, New York Yankees fans were hoping that Fat Joe would serve as a good luck charm for the team heading into game three of the 2024 World Series on Monday (Oct. 28).

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Joey Crack took the field in a pair of signature brown Timberland boots to warm up the 40,000-plus fans at Yankee Stadium. Rocking a Yankees letterman jacket and a matching NYY x Terror Squad fitted cap, the Bronx native tweaked some of the lyrics to his hits to go with the baseball theme and rep for his hometown squad. Joe kicked off the set with his “Lean Back” anthem before moving into Ja Rule’s “New York” and closing out with “All the Way Up.”

As he performed, Fat Joe headed to the pitcher’s mound — which had to give the grounds crew members a collective heart attack — where he named some Yankee legends after Derek Jeter threw out the honorary first pitch to have the fans ready to roar for game three.

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“Even when Fat Joe came out, the body language from the fans was like, ‘Damn!’ I was like, ‘What’s going on here?’ Are we in a funeral already?” MLB Fox Sports analyst and former Boston Red Sox player David Ortiz said.

Many fans seemed to be perplexed by the performance, as many remained seated. Others roasted Joe and the Yankees on social media. “Fat Joe opening up for the Yankees might be one of the worst things I’ve ever witnessed,” one person tweeted.

Another chimed in: “I’m not a hater, BUT Fat Joe opening up for the Yankees might be one of the worst things I’ve ever seen. I think they got him on SALE 50% OFF.”

Even diehard Yankees fan Desus Nice was displeased, tweeting, “good morning to everyone except fat Joe and his trump sneakers!”

Some wondered why they couldn’t get fellow New York rappers such as Jay-Z or 50 Cent to pull up. Hov previously performed “Empire State of Mind” at Yankee Stadium ahead of game two of the 2009 World Series, which is the last time NYY appeared in the Fall Classic.

But it wasn’t all bad news for the rapper. Some fans chimed in to show their support on social media. “We won no matter the outcome as far as I’m concerned @fatjoe,” one fan wrote on Instagram over a photo of the performer on the field.

“BIG Bronx showed up!” another added over a snap of Big Joe performing, adding a “100” and fist-bump emojis.

Unfortunately, Joe’s performance wasn’t able to help power the Yankees to a win, as the team now faces a 0-3 deficit to the Dodgers. The Yankees’ bats largely went quiet into the night with Monday night bringing on a 4-2 defeat.

Fat Joe and the NYY will look to avoid a sweep at the hands of the Dodgers on Tuesday evening (Oct. 29) in game four. No performances are scheduled for pre-game.

Watch Fat Joe’s performance below.

“I think it’s one of the best feelings, euphoria,” says Sara Landry. “Like, I just like that type of feeling.”
One might have already assumed as much prior to meeting Landry, whose throttling, physical, psychospiritual live sets have made her one of the buzziest names of the current dance music moment.

Today she shows up on Zoom bathed in the dim glow of an off-camera light source. Other interviews she’s done have mentioned her being cast in a green gleam; this afternoon, it’s magenta. Either way, the effect contributes to the witchy and so-called “high priestess of hard techno” persona the American-born, Netherlands-based producer has developed, although the veil is kind of pierced when a delivery guy rings the doorbell of her place in Amsterdam.

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“I’ve gotta step over my pilates machine that’s buried in clothes because I’m trying to clean out the closet,” Landry says, laughing as she maneuvers back to the camera after grabbing a package containing new stage outfits. “It’s been a long summer.”

A long 14 months, even. While Landry has been in the scene for a decade with singles and EPs dating back to 2018, she was thrust into the zeitgeist in August of 2023, when honestly hypnotic her Boiler Room set created, she says, “a wave of momentum.” This wave has turned tidal as she’s bounced across continents playing increasingly larger shows.

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With it all, Landry is making “hard techno” — a genre that’s existed largely in the underground and at festival side stages since developing in Northern Europe in the early ’90s — a dark horse entry in the mainstream live dance music market. Landry made her EDC Las Vegas debut in June and in July became the first hard techno artist to play the Tomorrowland mainstage in the festival’s nearly 20-year history. She’s sold out every show she’s played in the U.S. this year, closed out Portola festival in San Francisco last month, released her wild-eyed debut album Spiritual Driveby in early October and last week announced a series of headlining shows, called Eternalism, which will happen across Europe in early 2025. A press release calls these shows not just a tour, but “a spiritual gathering, a testament to the power of collective energies.”

That might be true, and certainly Landry has developed a potent brand around her techno witch sensibilities. The success she’s found, as she tells it, is a function of “settling into this comfortable knowledge of what my vibe is,” with that vibe essentially being a hybrid of hard techno and the meditation/sound bath realm of spirituality wrapped up in black bodycon and heavy eyeliner. This identity, while compelling, on its own wouldn’t be enough to sustain, but Landry has the music to both back it up and make it all feel less like a put on and more like a natural extension of her interests and artistry.

Born in the Bay Area and raised in Austin, Texas, Landry got into clubbing and dance music while a student at NYU, where she earned degree in finance, psychology and advertising — areas undeniably applicable to succeeding as a DJ. After college, she worked as a data analyst in Austin while teaching Ableton courses, throwing parties around town and livestreaming through the pandemic. After meeting agents Bailey Greenwood and Annie Chung backstage at a festival, she signed with WME for representation in North America in 2022, with her growing presence neatly coinciding with an increased appetite for dark, pummeling, sort of apocalyptic but also kind of chic music in the North American scene. (See also: the success of Tale of Us’ Afterlife brand and Anyma’s upcoming residency at Sphere.)

The general assessment among many, Landry included, is that in these hard times, people want commensurately hard music and a place, she says, for “high energy, high octane experiences” where they can forget out the wars, the election, climate change and other varieties of doom and just tap into their reptilian brain for a few hours. Of course dance music has existed as an escape since its origins, with mainstream EDM offering this same space and freedom to the masses not by acknowledging bad things in the world but by pumping out feel-good anthems that made it possible to momentarily pretend they weren’t there. Now, the scene is in a place where heavy sounds are embraced because reality is no longer so easy to ignore.

But also, TikTok. Beyond existential angst, social media primed the metaphorical pump for Landry and other young artists making heavy styles of music. “With hard techno specifically, social media has been a huge factor in making it more accessible for people to discover new sounds and find their community,” Greenwood and Chung say in a joint statement, continuing that after the pandemic “people were hungry for new energy and seeing clips from these events circulate made them want to go out and participate.”

The agents agree that dance music is having a major moment in the U.S., “but this time we are seeing different genres that were historically deemed ‘underground; get pushed to the forefront of the scene and come together in new inventive ways,” a phenomenon they say has made space for new artists like Landry while giving a platform to veterans who’ve been making this type of music for a long time.

Being American has also helped Landry, given that she can canvass the market more than international acts with similar sounds who aren’t able to tour here as often. “Her team saw the value of investing in smaller markets and really laid the groundwork throughout the country,” Greenwood and Chung say. “Our first few runs in the country were really deep dives that brought the sound to corners of the U.S. that often get overlooked, long before this sound exploded here.” To wit, in June Landry was the first hard techno artist to ever headline at The Caverns in Pelham, TN, with two sold-out shows. (Landry is repped by CAA in Europe.)

While she considers herself a member of the “second wave of electronic music that’s really punching through and breaking into the mainstream,” (a category one could also slot in new stars like John SUmmit, Dom Dolla and Mau P in) Landry doesn’t foresee her music charting like the mainstream crossover dance of the 2010s. “My goal has never really been radio,” she says.

Indeed Spiritual Driveby isn’t really top 40 material. Its 12 tracks fuse hard techno foundations (heavy kickdrum, rumble, sidechain, BPMS ranging between 140 and 160) with trance-like chants, spoken word lyrics about devotion and giddy rhymes about sex. Released on her own Hekate Records (which is named for the Greek goddess of the underworld and also releases music by rising acts), the album features collaborators including Mike Dean, who worked on the album-closing title track. Her catalog has 50.9 million official global on-demand streams, according to Luminate.

“I’ve been taking elements of kind of whatever I want and just putting it on a hard techno chassis,” Landry says of her approach, “where the drums, the arrangement and the grooves are rooted in that, especially the kick drum. but then I kind of do whatever I want on top of it.”

“Whatever I want” can include adding elements of psytrance, chanting and little injections of pop. Working in samples of music by artists like M.I.A. and Nickelback “scratches a little part of my brain,” Landry says. Not everyone is a fan, with a certain number of techno purists side-eyeing the style, a generally predictable turn of events that follows the tradition of many veteran dance scenesters hating on new styles that lean into pop and generally commercialize underground sounds and scenes. (See: basically the entire EDM era.)

“I find myself wanting to do things that are a bit more commercial than what a lot of people, especially people who’ve been in the techno scene for 20-plus years, may think techno can be,” says Landry. “A lot of that stuff is tongue in cheek, but I think it’s just fun. I feel like parties are supposed to be fun.”

But she also acknowledges that people are naturally protective of underground spaces and resistant to throngs of newcomers in techno cosplay who might threaten it.

“Especially when you get into the underground scene, I think a lot of people love the music, but there’s also this social construct of value,” she says. “People are like, ‘I’m cool for knowing about this and liking this, and I want to remain here and be cool with my cool little clique and my identity that I’ve constructed for myself, where I’m so much cooler than everybody else.’ People want to gatekeep, because they want to protect the space that they feel cool and underground for knowing about. But with the invention of social media, everybody has access to everything all the time, which is a blessing and a curse.”

“I understand why people get upset,” she continues, “because I imagine it feels a bit like a loss of identity. If everybody thinks this thing I think is cool that I based a good chunk of my personality around, then am I a unique person? Do I have any unique experiences? I can understand how that inspires stressful thoughts that cause people to lash out.”

While she will defend people being attacked in the dance culture war crossfire, she also doesn’t really have a lot of time to dwell on it. She’s touring heavily in the U.S., South America, Asia, Australia and Europe through the end of the year, with her Eternalism performances starting in late January in Amsterdam. Her team plans to bring this production around the world. “We’re really only seeing the beginning of where she can go,” Greenwood and Chung say.

In the meantime, here on Zoom in the magenta glow, Landry demonstrates that euphoria can be subtler than percussion shaking the walls of any given sold-out venue.

“It feels like the end of the first cycle,” she says of where things are for her today. “The first cycle of your career is working very hard to get to a point where you’re like, ‘Oh, I’ve done it. I’ve done what I set out to do so far.’ The place I’ve always hoped I could get? I’m in that place.”

Selena Gomez and David Henrie attended the Wizards Beyond Waverly Place premiere on Monday night (Oct. 28), as the duo are expected to reprise their roles as Alex and Justin Russo, respectively on the upcoming spin-off of Disney’s Wizards of Waverly Place. Explore Explore See latest videos, charts and news See latest videos, charts and […]

One week after wrapping up the 2024 dates of her GUTS Tour, Olivia Rodrigo has brought the global trek to TVs around the world, as Olivia Rodrigo: GUTS World Tour, the pop superstar’s debut concert film commemorating her first arena headlining run (in support of the album of the same name), was unveiled on Netflix on Tuesday (Oct. 29).

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In a conversation with Billboard the day before the special was released, Rodrigo explained that the GUTS tour — which reached four continents (South America will become the fifth next March) and grossed $186.6 million, according to Billboard Boxscore — represented a moment that she wanted to preserve in the form of a concert film.

“I think I was just so proud of the show — it felt special,” says Rodrigo. “It was happening at the right time for me and my career, and I wanted to capture it. I’m really excited to have a kind of a time capsule — like I could show my kids, ‘Hey, when your mom was 21, this is what she did every night!’ I think that’s gonna be pretty fun.”

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Olivia Rodrigo: GUTS World Tour showcases the full experience of the show, with elaborate set pieces, ample footage of Rodrigo rocking out with her band, close-ups of screaming super-fans and (of course) smash hits like “Drivers License,” “Vampire” and “Good 4 U.” Rodrigo says that she got the idea for the concert film midway through the arena run, which kicked off in February and wrapped up for the year on Oct. 22. 

“I made sure that I had a lot of shows to practice with, because I was pretty nervous for the filming,” she explains. “I think we always had an intention of making a concert film. I would go to all these cities, and I love to get breakfast before I go to the show. I would meet all these people in the various states, and they’d be like, ‘Oh, I just wish I could have gotten tickets, I wasn’t able to,’ and it made me sad. And so I’m really excited that maybe people who wanted to go, who weren’t able to get a seat, can watch it now on Netflix, in the comfort of their own home.”

The special was filmed over two nights at Intuit Dome in Los Angeles in August, and Rodrigo says that she is “so happy that we shot it in my hometown.” At one point in the film, Rodrigo salutes In-N-Out Burger as a nod to the local chain, and is met with roars from the L.A. crowd. “We almost cut it out,” she says of the line in the movie. “They were like, ‘People who don’t live in California aren’t gonna get it!’ I’m like, ‘No. Keep it in. It’s part of who I am!’”

Filming in Los Angeles also allowed Rodrigo to feature Chappell Roan, who opened the first leg of the GUTS tour at the start of her own whirlwind breakthrough year. Roan returned as a surprise guest at the Aug. 20 show to perform her hit “Hot to Go!” alongside Rodrigo, the pop stars embracing and ecstatically dancing around the stage midway through the film.

“I’ve heard lots of really loud screaming in my life and the various shows that I’ve done, but I truly don’t think I’ve ever heard a scream as energetic as the scream when I announced that Chappell was coming onstage,” Rodrigo says. “It was just electric, and people were so excited. It felt like such a really special moment, and so I’m really happy that it’s in the film, for us to be able to watch forever. 

“And on a more personal level,” Rodrigo continues, “Chappell was a really big part of the GUTS world tour — she opened for the first leg, and really helped me through a lot of it. I’ve known her for a while, and she’s a really wonderful friend of mine, and so I’m happy that she could be included [in the film].”

Olivia Rodrigo: GUTS World Tour is being released one week before a U.S. presidential election in which women’s rights has become a hot-button issue. Rodrigo’s work with the Fund 4 Good, the charitable component of the GUTS Tour that partnered with local organizations to champion girls’ education and support reproductive rights, will continue beyond the arena run and become a core part of her career moving forward. And while the Fund 4 Good is not an explicit part of the concert film, Rodrigo’s work uplifting young women, onstage and off, is demonstrated throughout its run time.

“I created the Fund 4 Good at the beginning of this year, tied to the tour — I wanted to do something that tried to help or make a difference, and this year felt particularly apt,” Rodrigo explains. “We raised a lot of money for abortion funds in America, through grassroots organizations who raise money to provide hotels or airfare, or can cover medical bills, for women who are unable to get an abortion because of financial situations, or because of what state that they live in.”

Ultimately, Rodrigo says, the Fund 4 Good feels like “the most important part” of the entire GUTS tour. “I really hope that people get out there and vote,” she says, “and that we won’t have to have so many abortion funds next year.”

Now that she’s had a few weeks to think it over, Cynthia Erivo says she kind of wishes she’d reached out to a few friends before posting her heated reaction to some viral fan edits of the poster for Wicked. The singer/actress made it very clear earlier this month that she was not cool with […]

Bad Bunny has released a stirring video tribute to Puerto Rico after comedian Tony Hinchcliffe referred to the U.S. commonwealth as a “floating island of garbage” during Donald Trump’s Oct. 27 rally in New York’s Madison Square Garden. The racist statement sparked widespread criticism, prompting Bad Bunny to respond not with words, but with a […]