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Cher is out there hitting all the usual spots promoting her long-awaited autobiography, Cher, The Memoir: Part One. And a recurring theme in her chats is how unapologetically Cher she is, including talking candidly about how hard it was reviewing her 78 years on Earth, most of which she’s spent in the public eye.
And, Cher being Cher, sometimes that forthrightness can tip over into not-safe-for-morning-TV talk. That’s exactly what happened on The Today Show on Tuesday morning (Nov. 19), when the singing legend sat down to talk about the memoir with co-host Hoda Kotb and dropped an uncensored F-bomb while telling a hilarious story about some solid relationship and career advice she got from late comedy icon Lucille Ball.
To be fair, Cher warned Kotb that she was going to sprinkle some zesty language into the breakfast mix when the host asked about what Ball had counseled when Cher split from husband/singing partner Sonny Bono in 1975. “I can’t say it on TV,” Cher said before making sure that producers were “going to bleep it.” When Kotb promised that it would be censored, Cher went ahead and told the story, as-is.
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She then described reaching out to Ball — who went through a similarly public break-up with her husband and I Love Lucy co-star, Desi Arnaz, 15 years earlier — who gave some sage, and salty, advice after Cher found out that, as she told Kotb, Bono had taken “all her money” before their split. “I said, ‘Lucy, I’m calling you because to my knowledge, there’s never been a situation besides mine except yours,’” Cher said she told Ball about a female entertainer who publicly left their on- and off-screen spouse. “And she said, “F–k him. You’re the one with the talent!’”
Though the f-word is now bleeped in the online video of the moment on the Today feeds, after it happened a clearly shocked Kotb said, “Oh!… we didn’t have the seven-second [delay]. But we will get it for the next feed!”
After realizing the f-bomb had not been bleeped, Cher turned to Kotb and pointed the finger, saying, “Well you said I could!”
Kotb laughed, saying, “I should have bleeped it myself! Bleep!”
That oopsie moment followed Cher’s Monday night (Nov. 18) visit to the Tonight Show, where she did another funny bit with host Jimmy Fallon and talked about how difficult it was to really lay it all out in the book — which is the first half of a two-part project that will be followed by Part Two next year.
“It was a b–ch,” she told Fallon about the first half of the book, which follows her rise from Cherilyn Sarkisian to worldwide fame as one-half of the Sonny & Cher duo. “It’s not going through your life that’s hard so much. But I did it a couple of times because the first time it didn’t work out. The second time I just didn’t want to tell anything. And then I thought, ‘You know what? Give back the money.’ It’s hard because when you’re telling your life there’s parts you’d like to guard.”
More importantly for her fans, the new Rock and Roll Hall of Famer also casually mentioned that she’s working on her twenty eighth studio album and follow-up to 2018’s ABBA cover album Dancing Queen; she released the Christmas holiday album in 2023. When Fallon asked if a new LP was on the horizon, Cher said she’s “about to” begin work on one to wild applause from the audience.
Watch Cher on the Tonight Show below.
Cardi B has big plans for 2025, from a new album to a romantic conquest.
In a clip from a recent Instagram livestream hosted by the rapper, Cardi tells fans that she’s been “wilding out lately” but wants to “get [her] f–king life together.” “I have so much things coming next year,” she continued. “I know next year is gonna be my f–king year.”
The Bronx native went on to share her to-do list for the new year: “My album will be out. My secret businesses will be out. Hopefully next year I get a little boyfriend.”
Billboard has reached out to Cardi’s rep for comment.
Fans have been waiting on a new LP from Cardi for well over half a decade at this point, with 2018’s Billboard 200-topping debut album Invasion of Privacy remaining the entirety of her discography six and a half years later. She previously teased in October that her sophomore effort was “coming really, really soon” and confirmed that she was actively working on it in the studio.
But, as Cardi pointed out in her livestream, she’s been quite busy these past few years — 2024 in particular. On the personal front, she welcomed her third baby in September, just a couple weeks after filing for divorce for a second time from Offset. The exes — who have put each other on blast on social media multiple times since their spit — are also parents to daughter Kulture and son Wave.
On the professional front, the “WAP” artist has been spearheading her Whipshots business in between releasing a number of singles this year, including “Like What (Freestyle),” “Enough (Miami),” “Puntería” with Shakira and “Wanna Be” with Megan Thee Stallion and GloRilla.
“This has been the most rudest year I’ve ever experienced,” Cardi summarized on her Live. “I don’t know what the f–k happened this year. I can’t even tell you. A b—h got knocked up, a b—h f–king fell in love, then fell out of love, then got a divorce … I’m going through a very different transition in my f–king life.”
Cardi has also been active in politics this year, championing Democratic candidate Kamala Harris in the 2024 presidential election and speaking at one of the VP’s final campaign rallies Nov. 1. When Harris ended up losing to Donald Trump, the rapper shared a lengthy message on Instagram, writing, “To Vice President Kamala, no matter what they’ve said to bring you down or belittle your run for presidency they can never say you didn’t run your race with honesty and with integrity!”
“This may not mean much but I am so proud of you!” she added at the time. “No one has ever made me change my mind, and you did! I never thought I would see the day that a woman of color would be running for the President of the United States, but you have shown me, shown my daughters and women across the country that anything is possible.”
Ultra Music Festival has added more than 50 artists to the lineup for its 2025 event this March in Miami.
New to the bill are techno legend Dubfire, who’ll be performing his 2022 album Evolv, melodic house star Gryffin, bass mainstays Knife Party, Claude VonStroke performing as his Barclay Crenshaw bass project, mainstage regulars Steve Aoki and Timmy Trumpet, along with Nico Morena, Stephan Bodzin, Joris Voorn, Kshmr, Tokimonsta, Odd Mob, Peekaboo, Said the Sky and many more.
Additionallly, Australian producer Partiboi69 will bring his Area 69 party to Ultra for the first time, with this stage takeover lineup including debut Ultra performance from Partiboi69 and KETTAMA’s Ketboi69 project, along with Partiboi69 b2b Juicy Romance and Skream playing b2b with Interplanetary Criminal.
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These artists join a previously announced lineup featuring Ultra regulars Armin van Buuren, Carl Cox, Afrojck, Tiësto, Martin Garrix and Hardwell, along with pairings including Anyma b2b Solomun and Knife Party alias Pendulum playing both solo and back to back with Deadmau5. This latter artist will also perform his first ever career-spanning “retro5pective” set, which will see the producer playing his classic hits.
Meanwhile, Swedish House Mafia’s Axwell will perform his first ever solo headlining set on the mainstage, Dom Dolla and John Summit will play for the first time in Miami with a mainstage set under their Everything Always name, and Above & Beyond will play the fest for the first time in six years. Richie Hawtin will also debut his DEX EFX X0X show at the event. Gesaffelstein will play Ultra for the first time in a decade.
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Ultra 2025 will also feature Zedd, Nero, Charlotte de Witte, Four Tet, Lsdream, Miss Monique, Subtronics, Mau P, Eli Brown, Artbat and many more.
Next year will mark the 25th edition of the festival, which returns to downtown Miami’s Bayfront Park on March 28-30. Tickets are on sale now.
See the lineup for Ultra Music Festival 2025 below:
Ultra Music Festival 2025
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Post Malone appeared to let the cat out of the bag about two of his biggest 2025 tour dates. In an Instagram post announcing his most ambitious outing to date — next year’s Big Ass Stadium Tour with Jelly Roll — Malone also included a pair of shows on April 13 and 20 in Indio, […]
Giorgio Moroder, who has won three Oscars and two Grammys for film music (out of a total of four Grammys won) will receive a lifetime achievement award from The Society of Composers & Lyricists (SCL) during its 35th annual holiday dinner, to be held at the Sheraton Universal ballroom in Los Angeles on Dec. 11.
At that same event, composers Hoyt Curtin and Carl Stalling will posthumously be inducted into the SCL Hall of Fame. Curtin composed themes for such Hanna-Barbera series as The Flintstones, The Jetsons, Yogi Bear, Josie and the Pussycats, Scooby-Doo, Jonny Quest and The Smurfs. He served as music director at Hanna-Barbera from 1957 to 1965 and again from 1972 until his retirement in 1989.
Stalling created music for more than 600 animated films, including Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937), Pinocchio (1940) and Fantasia (1940), and Warner Bros. cartoon series Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies. He served as music director at Warner Bros.
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Film and TV composer Brian D. Siewert has been named the recipient of the SCL’s 2024 Trailblazer Award. Siewert won four Daytime Emmys for his work on Guiding Light.
EGOT-winning songwriters Benj Pasek & Justin Paul, and Jeff Beal, the winner of five Primetime Emmys, will be presented with 2024 SCL Ambassador Awards. Pasek and Paul clinched EGOT status in September when they won a Primetime Emmy for a song they wrote for Only Murders in the Building. Beal has won Emmys for his work on Monk, Nightmares & Dreamscapes: From the Stories of Stephen King, The Company and House of Cards.
The awards presentations and inductions will take place at SCL holiday events in New York, Los Angeles and Nashville.
In making the announcements, Ashley Irwin, president of the SCL, said, “The SCL Lifetime Achievement Award and these other special honors were created to recognize and acknowledge a select group of music creators with significant contributions to our profession and music community. Their achievements will be used as the ultimate standard for future generations of media composers and songwriters.”
Here are details on when and where these awards will be presented.
Dec. 4 – New York City: Benj Pasek & Justin Paul, and Jeff Beal will be presented with the 2024 SCL Ambassador Awards during the SCL holiday party to be held at The Cutting Room (44 E 32nd St), beginning at 7 p.m.
Dec. 7 – Nashville: Film and TV composer Brian D. Siewert will be honored with the SCL’s 2024 Trailblazer Award during the SCL Nashville holiday party to be held at Oceanway Studios Nashville (1200 17th Ave S), from 4 to 7 p.m.
Dec. 11 – Los Angeles: SCL will present the Lifetime Achieve Award to Giorgio Moroder and posthumously induct Hoyt Curtin and Carl Stalling during its holiday dinner to be held at the Sheraton Universal Ballroom from 6 to 10 p.m.
Attention, ROSÉ stans — your No. 1 girl has a new solo single on the way.
As announced Tuesday (Nov. 19), the 27-year-old musician is dropping a song titled “Number One Girl” this Friday (Nov. 22). Sharing what appears to be the track’s cover art — a photo of ROSÉ staring wistfully off to the side while modeling a shirt with the song’s title printed on it — the BLACKPINK star wrote on Instagram, “this one’s for my number ones. ❤️”
“Number One Girl” will follow ROSÉ’s chart-topping duet with Bruno Mars, “APT.,” which has spent four weeks and counting at No. 1 on the Billboard Global 200. Released in October, the track also debuted at No. 8 on the Billboard Hot 100, marking the New Zealand native’s first top 10 solo hit.
Prior to “APT.,” ROSÉ announced her debut solo album, rosie, with a heartfelt post on Instagram. “I have poured my blood and tears into this album,” she wrote Oct. 1, two months ahead of the 12-track project’s Dec. 6 release date. “I cannot wait for you to listen to this little journal of mine. Rosie – is the name I allow my friends and family to call me. With this album, I hope you all feel that much closer to me.”
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At the time, ROSÉ also may have subtly teased the title of her new single by specifically thanking her “number ones” for their support. She did the same during her recent appearance on Hot Ones, closing the show by saying, “love you, number ones.”
The star isn’t the only member of BLACKPINK who’s been rolling out a solo era this year. LISA has also shared a slew of independent singles — “Rockstar,” “Moonlit Floor (Kiss Me)” and Rosalía duet “New Woman” — and announced her own solo album, Alter Ego, on the same day ROSÉ shared the news about “Number One Girl.”
The foursome — which also includes JENNIE and JISOO — is expected to reunite for full-band activities in 2025. But in the meantime, ROSÉ says she’s pursuing her solo efforts with advice from none other than Taylor Swift in mind.
“As soon as she met me, she’s like, ‘Spill, let me help you out,’” ROSÉ recalled of meeting the “Karma” artist recently. “I’m really grateful for her, because I was at a moment where I was drowning a little. She is literally the coolest, and she’s such a girl’s girl. She was telling me – ‘make sure to take care of this, this and this’ – like, logistics. She was trying to protect me.”
See ROSÉ’s “Number One Girl” announcement below.
While her October performance at London’s Royal Albert Hall was a one-night-only affair, Dua Lipa wants to make sure that her performance doesn’t go “Houdini.” On Tuesday (Nov. 19), the pop star announced the release date for her first-ever live album, Dua Lipa Live From The Royal Albert Hall. Recorded during her Oct. 17 performance […]
It’s a necessary fact of music-industry life that the conditions in which music is created are often different than the reality in which they’re consumed.
Christmas songs, for example, are often penned in spring or summer, and they’re frequently recorded when Nashville temperatures are still in the 80s or 90s. Similarly, artists typically develop future singles when their current releases are just beginning to grow, and many of their projections about follow-up material are educated guesses about how the already-finished songs might perform.
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In that spirit, Nate Smith’s new single – “Fix What You Didn’t Break,” released by RCA Nashville to country radio via PlayMPE on Oct. 28 – is an example of strong artistic instinct. It’s a power ballad, fueled by crunchy chords and Smith’s trademark rasp, though it’s something of a departure. His first three singles – “Whiskey On You,” “World On Fire” and “Bulletproof,” each of which reached the top 5 on Country Airplay – all incorporated that rasp into defiant post-breakup anthems. “Fix What You Didn’t Break” revises the message, embracing a plot that celebrates a woman who changed the outlook of a previously defeated romantic partner. It’s not exactly the formula Smith has employed thus far, and he’s acutely aware.
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“It’s kind of scary when you put your first kind of ballad out there,” he says. “But I do love this song so much.”
Understandably. Smith was a teenager in the late 1990s and early 2000s when pop/rock radio was spinning Lifehouse’s “You and Me,” 3 Doors Down’s “Here Without You,” Aerosmith’s “I Don’t Want To Miss A Thing” and Goo Goo Dolls’ RIAA diamond-certified “Iris.” That sonic strain is part of Smith’s musical DNA, and provides permission to explore the emotions around successful relationships.“Guys,” he reasons, “are more sensitive than we get credit.”
Smith’s musical identity was still being forged for the public when he wrote “Fix” on July 11, 2023, at the home studio of producer Lindsay Rimes (LOCASH, Tyler Rich). They were joined by songwriters Ashley Gorley (“I Am Not Okay,” “Truck Bed”) and Taylor Phillips (“I Am Not Okay,” “Hurricane”) – the same team that authored “World On Fire,” which was just in its fourth charted week at the time on its way to becoming Smith’s second No. 1. They already had a sense that Smith needed to think about changing things up with his future radio-targeted releases.
“Our goal,” says Gorley, “is not just to try to get a song on them, but to have a hand in what they should do next, or what we think we’d like to hear from them personally next. This kind of checked all those boxes.”
Phillips submitted the title – “He always has the titles… it’s one of his expected roles,” Gorley says – and it didn’t take long to figure out that it fit a story about a woman who served as something of a savior for a guy who was lost. Rimes cranked up some chords on electric guitar that gave it some testosterone.“Lindsay, he’s always got that electric turned up so loud the neighbors can hear him,” Phillips quips.
The opening lines came early: “I was a 10-year train wreck/ With a last-call longneck.” They captured a guy numbing his pain with alcohol, and Smith says they drew on a past relationship that he hasn’t talked much about publicly. “It had been in the ballpark of 10 years since my divorce and what I went through before, when I left Nashville the first time,” he notes. “It kind of had a little nod of that.”
They mapped out the melody, still applying an anthemic attitude to “Fix,” even if it was a love song. One particularly attractive melodic segment, featuring short phrases and distinct-but-modest intervals, emerged during the work, though it wasn’t immediately apparent how to use it.
“We all dug the melody and the vibe of that section, and we were just trying to figure out where to put it,” Rimes remembers. “At the time, we might have thought that could be a verse, but it felt right as the pre-chorus.”
That pre-chorus was an ideal puzzle piece, easing from the opening verse into the first chorus. The verses themselves had their own forward motion thematically. While the opening stanza established the singer’s brokenness, the second verse focused on the woman, who saw him as salvageable and took the steps to revive his spirits, answering his prayers and picking up “the towel that I threw in.”
“One of my favorite lines – and I’m sure Taylor had something to do with it – is ‘Showed me the past ain’t a tattoo/ Loved me even when you didn’t have to,’” Gorley says. “That’s like a spiritual moment to be like, ‘Hey, you don’t have to be known for your past. It’s not with you forever. I’m gonna change that.’ That really goes with the theme.”
To cap it, they re-employed the pre-chorus as the bridge, figuring that the melody was so good it should be heard again.
“I don’t like doing a lot of pre-peats – it’s what I call them when you repeat the pre-chorus – but in that situation, what else can you say that’s better than that?” Phillips says. “The melody was so hooky, and it gave the song a second to breathe again before the last chorus.”
Rimes built the demo as the writing session progressed, adding programmed drums and bass around his guitar parts. When they thought they were done writing, Gorley took a swing at a scratch vocal, just to see if there were any issues that jumped out. Once he wrapped, Smith sang the real demo vocal, adding his rasp in all the right places.
“Fix What You Didn’t Break” languished for months, but Rimes brought it out this summer during a tracking session at Nashville’s Blackbird Studios with a five-piece band: drummer Evan Hutchings, bassist Mark Hill, guitarist Derek Wells, keyboardist Alex Wright and steel guitarist Justin Schipper. They found themselves with extra time at the end of the booking, and Rimes thought framing Smith’s demo vocal with a real band would better sell it to the team.
“I felt personally that the song wasn’t getting as much love as I felt it deserved, and it wasn’t finished,” Rimes says. “We were all focused on getting the album finished, and cutting songs and listening to new songs and stuff. I wanted to cut a band on this song, because I feel like it’s a huge hit.”
Sol Philcox-Littlefield came in later to drop a loud-but-simple guitar solo, and Smith spent hours finding places to add in backing vocals.
There were other options for singles, but multiple radio stations asked RCA to service it, presenting Smith in a slightly different light. It debuted on the Country Airplay chart dated Nov. 23, reminding listeners that the right situation can help overcome a past hardship.
“I feel like a good relationship exposes it,” Smith says, “but it also gives you the freedom to grow and the grace to forgive and understand that you’re going through this stuff, slowly refining.”
Two of the biggest names in country are hitting the road together next year. On Tuesday morning (Nov. 19), Post Malone announced the dates for his 2025 BIG ASS Stadium Tour, a 25-date spring/summer run that will team the “I Had Some Help” singer up with Jelly Roll for a run of baseball/football stadiums slated to kick off on April 29 at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City, UT.
The Live Nation-produced North American tour, Posty’s biggest headlining outing to date, will also feature support from Sierra Ferrell on select dates. After launching in SLC, the tour will hit Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas and the Alamodome in San Antonio, before moving on to Dallas, Atlanta, St. Louis, Detroit, Minneapolis, Chicago, Philadelphia, Toronto, New York, Miami, Denver, and Portland before winding down on July 1 at Oracle Park in San Francisco.
In his Instagram post announcing the tour, Malone included a poster with two other dates not featured in the official press release on April 13 and 20 in Indio, California, which coincides with the two weekends of the 2025 Coachella Festival and will not include Jelly or Ferrell; the lineup for next year’s Coachella has not yet been announced and spokespeople for Malone and Coachella had not returned a request for comment on the April dates at press time.
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Both Malone and Jelly are former rappers who’ve found great success in country music, with Malone hitting No. 1 on the Billboard 200 album chart earlier this year with his feature-packed debut country album, F-1 Trillion, which has been nominated for a best country album Grammy award.
Fans in the U.S. and Canada can register for an artist presale now here, with the artist presale slated to begin on Friday (Nov. 22). Tickets will also be available first through a Citi presale in the U.S. beginning on Wednesday (Nov. 20) at 12 p.m. local time through Nov. 25 at 10 p.m. local time through the Citi Entertainment program. Additional presales will take place ahead of the general onsale that kicks off on Nov. 26 at 12 p.m. local time here.
In addition, tour sponsor T-Mobile is giving customers exclusive access to preferred tickets on every U.S. date — even sold-out ones — with details available here.
The team-up with Malone comes just weeks after Jelly Roll wrapped up his biggest tour to date, the Beautifully Broken outing, which hit arenas across the U.S. on a bill featuring Warren Zeiders and Alexandra Kay.
Check out the dates for 2025’s Post Malone Presents: The Big Ass Stadium Tour:
April 29 – Salt Lake City, UT @ Rice-Eccles Stadium^
May 3 – Las Vegas, NV @ Allegiant Stadium^
May 7 – San Antonio, TX @ Alamodome^
May 9 – Dallas, TX @ AT&T Stadium^
May 11 – Atlanta, GA @ Mercedes Benz Stadium^
May 13 – St. Louis, MO @ Busch Stadium^
May 18 – Detroit, MI @ Ford Field^
May 20 – Minneapolis, MN @ U.S. Bank Stadium^
May 22 – Chicago, IL @ Wrigley Field^
May 24 – Philadelphia, PA @ Citizens Bank Park^
May 26 – Toronto, ON @ Rogers Centre^
May 28 – Hershey, PA @ Hersheypark Stadium^
May 29 – Pittsburgh, PA @ PNC Park^
May 31 – Foxborough, MA @ Gillette Stadium
June 2 – Washington, DC @ Northwest Stadium
June 4 – New York, NY @ Citi Field
June 8 – Miami, FL @ Hard Rock Stadium*
June 10 – Orlando, FL @ Camping World Stadium
June 13 – Ridgedale, MO @ Thunder Ridge Nature Arena
June 15 – Denver, CO @ Empower Field at Mile High
June 21 – Glendale, AZ @ State Farm Stadium*
June 24 – Boise, ID @ Albertsons Stadium
June 26 – Seattle, WA @ T-Mobile Park
June 28 – Portland, OR @ Providence Park
July 1 – San Francisco, CA @ Oracle Park
*Without Jelly Roll
^With Sierra Ferrell
BLINKs already know LISA — now get ready to meet her alter ego. After weeks of teasing, the BLACKPINK star has finally announced that her debut solo album is on its way, and it’s coming in just a few months.
On Tuesday (Nov. 19) — a date fans have been impatiently counting down to alongside a cryptic timer on LISA’s website — the 27-year-old performer shared that her first-ever LP independent from her famous girl group is titled Alter Ego and slated to arrive Feb. 28. She also unveiled the project’s cover art, which features a sleek photo of a hooded LISA showing off her spiky black nails and staring down the camera.
On her LLOUD YouTube channel, the Thai singer-rapper further hyped up fans by dropping a three-minute album trailer, which expands on the teaser she dropped a few days prior to the announcement. With her eyes changing colors through the landscapes, the video finds LISA traveling from a black rock structure to a cyberpunk outer-space catwalk, an enchanted garden, a green laser-beam motorcycle track and a volcanic red runway.
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According to the press release, the five locations represent the five characters LISA emulates on the LP, “each representing a unique personality.” “They are represented by the five points on a star, which has become a key emblem in the campaign,” the description adds.
Alter Ego will follow a run of three LISA singles in 2024, beginning with “Rockstar” — which reached No. 70 on the Billboard Hot 100 — and followed by “New Woman” with Rosalía and “Moonlit Floor (Kiss Me).” The star has been prepping the album for months for a release ahead of BLACKPINK’s planned reunion in 2025, and in her Billboard cover story, she opened up about her perfectionism when it came to the project.
“I’m trying to figure it out, the tracklist and everything, what I can change in there,” she told Billboard. “Everything’s there. I think they’re going to be shocked at how capable I am [at] doing so many things.”
The star also gushed about her BLACKPINK bandmates ROSÉ — who has simultaneously been forging her own solo music era this year — JENNIE and JISOO in her cover story. “We know each other so well and know how much energy we have to put into every single project,” LISA said. “So we want to support and say, ‘You did really well!’ Like, JENNIE and Rosie just released their own songs, and we’re on texts, we’re on FaceTime. They’re like family.”
Watch the Alter Ego teaser and see the album cover below.
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