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Source: Bill Watters / Getty
Comic book fans still aren’t sure exactly how James Gunn’s rebooted DC Universe will round out and which characters will be invited to join his new Superman and friends, but if rumors are to be believed, John Cena’s Peacemaker will be included as the second season of the series has just wrapped filming.

On Monday (Nov. 25), James Gunn excitedly announced that Season 2 of the popular DC series is officially in the can and took to X to express how much he loved the team behind it writing, “And that is a WRAP on #Peacemaker season 2, including our last remaining actors Steve Agee, Tim Meadows, Sol Rodriguez & Brandon Stanley (& our DP Sam McCurdy pictured here moments after the last shot.) Thanks to our entire cast & crew who made this a wonderful experience. My relief to have a break from shooting after ten months straight is countered by how much I’ll miss all of you!”
https://x.com/JamesGunn/status/1861178032406610350

In an earlier post, Gunn praised John Cena himself for the performance he put in as the character posting a pic of himself with Cena saying, “And that’s a #Peacemaker Season Two wrap on @JohnCena &@jennlholland, who both turned in wonderful performances this season as Christopher Smith and Emilia Harcourt. To top it off, shooting yesterday was one of the most fun days of shooting I have EVER had! Thanks to the incredible people of Savannah, Georgia for making the Peacemaker crew’s stay here so special.”
https://twitter.com/JamesGunn/status/1860369232724467845
Looks like John Cena’s Peacemaker might actually be meeting David Corenswet’s Superman at some point in the future especially since Deadline is reporting that they’ll have a specific character connecting both franchises.
Per Deadline:
Season 2 of the HBO series will welcome Frank Grillo to the cast. Grillo will play Rick Flag Sr. in live-action form. Grillo first voiced the animated version of his character in the Max animated series Creature Commandos.

“This isn’t just a good guy, not at all,” Gunn told EW recently. “We see all different sides of his character. He is morally a complex human being. Grillo is somebody who I’ve known for a little while, and I’ve wanted to work with him for a long time. He was one of the first people that I talked to when I took over the studio, like ‘we’re going to find something cool for you,’ and now he is everywhere.”
Interestingly enough, Gunn also teased the inclusion of a new character in Season 2 of Peacemaker, posting a picture of someone near a campfire with a caption that read, “Who might this be? #Peacemaker.”
https://twitter.com/JamesGunn/status/1844056853791084667
We don’t know but we bet fans have their theories on who it’ll be.
Are you excited about the second season of Peacemaker? How soon should he be included in James Gunn’s cinematic DC Universe? Let us know in the comments section below.

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Source: Marion County Sheriff’s Office / MCSO
Susan Lorincz, the white woman who fatally shot her Black neighbor Ajike Owens, received a sentence of 25 years in prison for the offense.
On Monday (Nov. 25), Susan Lorincz, a white woman from Ocala, Florida, was sentenced to 25 years in prison for fatally shooting her neighbor Ajike (A.J.) Owens. The incident where Owens, a Black woman, lost her life sparked waves of outrage across the nation and reignited the debate concerning Florida’s controversial “Stand Your Ground” gun laws. Lorincz shot Owens in the chest through her locked front door last June after Owens (who was unarmed) confronted Lorincz over yelling at her children and throwing roller skates at them.

Owens’ family had sought a charge of second-degree murder initially, but prosecutors opted to charge Lorincz with manslaughter. Circuit Judge Robert Hodges informed the court that he had considered the defense’s testimony that the 60-year-old Lorincz was dealing with post-traumatic stress disorder and other mental health issues along with her not having a criminal record. “I find the shooting was completely unnecessary,” he ruled, citing that Lorincz was safe in her home and law enforcement was on the way. “The shooting was based, I find, more in anger than in fear.”
Lorincz addressed the court after several others spoke in her defense at the sentencing including her sister who revealed that Lorincz suffered sexual abuse at the hands of their father which impacted her.  “I am so sorry I took A.J.’s life. I never intended to kill her,” Lorincz said. “I could not understand why she was so angry.” Her voice breaking, she continued: “I so wish I could go back and change things so she was still here. I would trade my life.” Witnesses testified that Lorincz harassed other children in the neighborhood, with some citing her calling them racial slurs. Lorincz admitted to some of that behavior in interviews with detectives.
Owens’ mother, Pamela Dias, stated that her 10-year-old grandson witnessed the fatal shooting in an interview with CBS This Morning. “I still can’t believe this happened,” Dias said at the time. “When does a person get shot for knocking on a door?” She was overcome with emotion during testimony over the loss of her daughter and how it impacted the four children left behind, saying she was “a mere shell of the person I once was.”

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Source: Jordan Brand / Jordan Brand
While Nike and Jordan continue to struggle to bank off the hype of their general releases like they used to just a few years ago, their Travis Scott sneaker line continues to be a hot commodity out on these streets and the latest colorway of the Jordan Jumpman Jack‘s are bound to be a hard copp when they release today (Nov. 26).

Luckily for sneaker aficionados, Sneakernews has a list of where you can attempt to purchase the black and brown colorway of the Jordan Jumpman Jacks a.k.a the CJ1 T-Rexx as the Nike SNKRS app has become damn near impossible to get a dub on. With websites like SneakersNStuff, Dovers Street Market and Concepts holding raffles for a chance to purchase the CJ1 T-Rexx’s, sneakerheads might have a chance to get that illusive win as hype behind the sneaker continues to grow.
Per Sneakernews:

The Jumpman Jack model features a mix of elements combining the Air Jordan 1 as well as Nike training footwear from the 1980s. The thick fore-foot strap is considered to be a nod to the original Air Trainer 1, a silhouette that La Flame collaborated on in 2022. Despite the shoe being completely reimagined in the “Cactus Corporation” theme, the Travis Scott x Air Trainer 1 is largely viewed as the only real flop of his collaboration history. The Air Jordan 33 comes in close as the shoes are still available for close to MSRP.
The CJ1 T-Rexx “Dark Mocha”, however, will not go by unappreciated. Pairs are already selling for double the MSRP, and given the solid design of the shoe and the striking colorway, this latest pair of Travis Scott shoes will be considered among the best of 2024.
Though resell prices are still under $500, don’t be surprised if it steadily rises as the weeks and months go buy and people begin to search for these as Christmas gifts for the special sneakerheads in their lives.
Check out all the websites holding their raffles here and let us know if you’ll be trying to get a pair of these grails in the comments section below.

HYBE’s BigHit Music record label named current general manager Seon Jeong Shin to be the next president, following approval at a shareholders meeting and board of directors resolution on Tuesday (Nov. 26).  Shin, who was named to Billboard’s 2022 40 Under 40 list for helping develop HYBE’s artist training system, played a role in the […]

Grimes is sharing a glimpse her difficult year-long custody battle with Elon Musk, with whom she shares three children: sons X Æ A-Xii, 4, and Techno Mechanicus, 2, as well as daughter Exa Dark Sideræl, 3.

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“Having babies rips you apart and puts you back together,” she wrote on X (formerly Twitter until Musk bought and renamed the platform in 2023). “Babies are ten thousand philosophy classes of s— you can only learn from that experience.”

She continued, “Spent a year locked in battle in a state with terrible mothers rights having my instagram posts and modeling used as reasons I shouldn’t have my kids and fighting and detaching from the love of my life as he becomes unrecognizable to me, with a fraction of his resources (or iq/ strategy experience), all the while I didn’t see one of my babies for 5 months. And this is only what can be said publicly, since most of my experience these last years should remain behind closed doors.”

Trending on Billboard

While she didn’t indicate which of her children she wasn’t able to see and why, the “Genesis” artist continued that she is now ready to reignite her creative process, “Poetry and pure raw emotion are pouring out of my soul at a rate I’ve never known, and Im improving deeply as a producer past the technical and back to the art after now knowing my craft so much better. + I’ve found the creative partners I’ve always wanted. So I hate to waste everyone’s time, but I have to make what I’m making right now. And it might be upsetting and provocative to many, but it’s real and the people who will feel me will feel me.”

She concluded, “And all that said I’m grateful for every bullet I caught. Cuz I feel on top of the world right now. And everything that used to give me anxiety feels like child’s play after all this. Ego death, ego birth – it’s everything an artist could dream of.”

Musk has 12 children total. In addition to X Æ A-Xii, Techno Mechanicus and Exa Dark Sideræl, Musk shares seven children with his first wife, Justine Wilson — Nevada Alexander Musk, Griffin Musk, Vivian Jenna Wilson and triplets Kai, Saxon and Damian Musk. In 2021, he welcomed twins Strider and Azure with Shivon Zilis.

All products and services featured are independently chosen by editors. However, Billboard may receive a commission on orders placed through its retail links, and the retailer may receive certain auditable data for accounting purposes.
The sooner you start Black Friday shopping, the better chance you have of snagging the deepest discounts on big ticket items like TVs before they got out of stock.

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Because there are so many Black Friday deals to comb through, and many of them start before Thanksgiving, we looked online to find some of the best Black Friday sales on smart TVs at Amazon, Walmart and Best Buy.

Currently, Amazon is offering up to 70% off for Black Friday week, which ends on Dec. 2. Walmart’s Black Friday sale started on Monday (Nov. 25) with up to 70% off thousands of items and Best Buy’s sale features up to 50% off electronics and top appliances.

Trending on Billboard

See below for a few of the best Black Friday TV deals starting at just $59.99.

Amazon

Hot Deal!

INSIGNIA 32-inch Class F20 Series Smart HD 720p Fire TV with Alexa Voice Remote

$69.99

$129.99

46% off

Starting with the best deal of the day! Get an Insignia 32-inch smart TV for $69.99, or a 24-inch TV for $59.99, at Amazon.

Insignia’s 32-inch class F20 TV is a decent television for the price as Amazon has it marked down to $59.99 for the 24-inch TV, and just $10 more for the 32-inch television. The TV features 720p resolution for streaming movies, episodes of your favorite shows, sports and other entertainment, in addition to gaming. And there’s an Alexa remote, which means you can use your voice to control the TV.

If you’re looking for a no-frills, smart TV for casual viewing or for a child’s room, Insignia is a good choice. I’ve owned one of these TVs for a few years and it’s held up longer than I expected — it’s a good second TV in a multi-TV home and fits just fine in a bedroom, den, office or living room. Insignia’s smart TV lets you access millions of movies and episodes of your favorite TV series and more on Netflix, Apple TV+, Hulu, Paramount+, Starz, DirecTV, Prime Video and other streaming platforms.

Keep reading for more discounts on smart TVs.

Walmart

TCL 43” Class Q5 (43Q51BR) 4K UHD HDR QLED Smart TV with Roku TV

$178

$248

28% off

Need a larger display? TLC 42-inch TV is just right.

TCL is already an affordable brand, but the price drops even lower for Black Friday. Save $70 on this 43-Inch 4K UHD HDR QLED Roku Smart TV at Walmart.

Walmart

Hisense 85″ Class R6 Series 4K UHD Roku Smart TV (2024 Model)

$548

$798

31% off

If you’re willing to go even bigger, there’s an 85-inch TV on sale for under $250 at Walmart.

The Roku TV has enough surface room to make you feel like you’re in a mini theater while streaming movies, sports and TV shows. The TV also features three, high-speed HDMI inputs and Game Mode to enhance your gaming experience.

Amazon

TOSHIBA 65-inch Class C350 Series LED 4K UHD Smart Fire TV with Alexa Voice Remote (2023 Model)

$339.99

$419.99

19% off

Save $80 off this Toshiba 65-inch Class 350 TV at Amazon and Best Buy.

Toshiba’s Class 350 TV is available in sizes ranging from 43 to 75 inches. It features a 4K resolution with an LED display and built-in voice control via Amazon Alexa.

Best Buy’s Black Friday and Cyber Monday sales offers up to 50% off gift options and top brands. The Cyber Monday sale will be held from Sunday, Dec. 1 until Monday, Dec. 2.

For more sale recommendations, check out the best early Black Friday sales to shop, streaming discounts and deals on PlayStation 5.

All products and services featured are independently chosen by editors. However, Billboard may receive a commission on orders placed through its retail links, and the retailer may receive certain auditable data for accounting purposes.
There’s no need to wait until Black Friday to get deep discounts on wireless earbuds. Retailers from across the web just dropped their best deals a few days before the biggest shopping event of the year.

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We rounded up the best early Black Friday deals on all sorts of wireless earbuds. You can save up to a whopping 60% on earbuds from Apple, Bose, Sony and more to listen to your favorite music and podcasts on-the-go.

Since most of these deals are from Amazon, you’ll get items shipped to you in less than two days for free if you’re an Amazon Prime member. Otherwise, your cart has to be more than $35 to get free shipping.

Trending on Billboard

Not a member? Sign up for a 30-day free trial to take advantage of all that Amazon Prime has to offer, including access to Prime Video, Prime Gaming and Amazon Photos; free shipping in less than two days with Prime Delivery; in-store discounts at Whole Foods Market; access to exclusive shopping events — such as Prime Day and Black Friday — and much more. Learn more about Amazon Prime here.

In addition, early Black Friday earbuds deals are available at Walmart and Target. Scroll down and check out our picks for the best early Black Friday earbuds deals, below:

JLab

Early Black Friday Earbuds Deals

JLab Go Air Pop

$9.88

$24.88

60% off

Beats by Dre

Early Black Friday Earbuds Deals

Beats Studio Buds

$79.99

$149.95

47% off

Apple

Early Black Friday Earbuds Deals

Apple AirPods Pro

$153.99

$249.99

38% off

JBL

Early Black Friday Earbuds Deals

JBL Tune Buds

$49.95

$83.99

41% off

Bose

Early Black Friday Earbuds Deals

Bose QuietComfort Ultra Wireless Earbuds

$229

$299

23% off

Sony

Early Black Friday Earbuds Deals

Sony WF-1000XM5 Wireless Earbuds

$228

$299.99

24% off

Sony

Early Black Friday Earbuds Deals

Sony LinkBuds Open

$178

$199.99

11% off

SoundPEATS

Early Black Friday Earbuds Deals

SoundPEATS True Wireless Earbuds

$38.39

$47.89

20% off

Skullcandy

Early Black Friday Earbuds Deals

Skullcandy EcoBuds

$23.49

$39.99

41% off

Jabra

Early Black Friday Earbuds Deals

Jabra Elite 10

$149.99

$249.99

40% off

Panasonic

Early Black Friday Earbuds Deals

Panasonic Technics Premium Hi-Fi

$197.99

$297.99

34% off

Sony

Early Black Friday Earbuds Deals

Sony PlayStation Pulse Explore

$169.99

$199.99

15% off

Bang & Olufsen

Early Black Friday Earbuds Deals

Bang & Olufsen Beoplay EX

$279

$399

30% off

When shopping online, you’ll want to factor in shipping deadlines so that your gift gets delivered in time. Christmas falls on Wednesday, Dec. 25, so it’s best to get your gifts shipped as soon as possible, or at least by Dec. 18-19, which is the delivery deadline for most online retailers — like Amazon, Walmart and Target.

Want more? Shop the best early Black Friday wireless earbuds deals on Amazon, below.

For more product recommendations, check out our roundups of the best Xbox deals, studio headphones and Nintendo Switch accessories.

On Oct. 22, Burning Man CEO Marian Goodell published an urgent message to the global Burner community. The gist? The organization needs to raise a whopping $20 million in charitable donations by the end of the year — or it may need to raise ticket prices for future events.
“We are well past the point where ticket revenues from Black Rock City are able to support our year-round cultural work,” Goodell wrote, explaining that Burning Man Project — the nonprofit behind the annual gathering in Nevada’s Black Rock Desert and other Burning Man-related initiatives — experienced a significant revenue shortfall this year.  

Goodell explained that the primary reason behind this shortfall was that Burning Man’s highest-priced tickets for the 2024 festival had not sold “as planned.” Each year since 2016, before the main sale begins, roughly 4,000 Burning Man tickets go on sale for much more than main sale tickets — this year selling at $1,500 and $2,500. These tickets, which are typically purchased by people who have cash to spare and don’t want to risk not getting a ticket during the main sale, usually bring in approximately $7 million — and nearly $10 million in 2023. But a spokesperson for Burning Man Project says that in 2024, higher-priced ticket sales totaled $3.4 million, down nearly $6 million from the prior year. 

Trending on Billboard

“This $5.7M shortfall, combined with a $3M dip in receipts from main-sale tickets and vehicle passes, means that our year-end charitable donation target has essentially doubled to nearly $20M,” Goodell wrote.

The financial issue was compounded when Burning Man 2024 failed to sell out, with organizers pointing to the generally soft 2024 festival market and the fact that after two difficult years — temperatures reached a grueling 103 at Burning Man 2022 while rain created issues in 2023 — many people opted to stay home. Goodell says all ticket tiers saw decreased sales in 2024 and estimated that attendance was down by roughly 4,000 this year, bringing total attendance to approximately 70,000.

“The drop in the population, but particularly around the higher price tickets, simply pushed us into a spot that I knew we were going to be in,” Goodell says, explaining that she and the team had seen this financial turning point coming for several years as production costs increased.  

Burning Man typically relies on $10 million in charitable donations every year, with a varying number of full-time staff dedicated to philanthropy, depending on current projects and time of year. Now, given the doubled demand for donations in 2024, the organization has launched a new fundraising model through which people can subscribe to make a monthly donation, with one-off donations also being accepted.

Goodell declines to give a number for how much money has been raised over the last month but says engagement with the new model has been high and that Burning Man is “at a record for recurring gifts.” The organization is also seeing new donors “coming in at decent amounts,” she says. 

Still, not everyone in the community has been enthusiastic about the request. The comments on Goodell’s post and social media have veered toward critique, with some accusing her and the organization of mismanaging funds, despite Burning Man sharing information and tax filings about the tax-exempt organization’s annual revenue and expenses for the last decade. For 2023, Burning Man cited $63.6 million in total expenses, with $43.8 million of that spent on Black Rock City and the rest spent on art, civic engagement, administration and fundraising efforts.

“I like reading Reddit because it’s really mean,” Goodell says with a laugh about the comments on her announcement, all of which she’s read. “I really process it all as people having an incredible amount of passion. If they didn’t, we wouldn’t be Burning Man.” 

Some commenters have accused the organization of spending unnecessary money on Burning Man Project-related projects including the disaster relief volunteer group Burners Without Borders and programming at Fly Ranch, a 3,800-acre property near the Black Rock City site that the organization bought for $6.5 million in 2021. But Goodell says there is “absolutely” a misperception that these projects use more money than they do, adding that the initiatives are largely funded and run by groups of independent Burners and that their cost accounts for less than 4% of the organization’s total programming dollars. “So even if you get rid of them,” she says, “you still haven’t solved the budget problem whatsoever.”

The general consensus from commenters is that they want the focus of the organization’s expenditures to be on Black Rock City itself. To that end, says Goodell, the amount of money raised through the end of the year will determine the price of Burning Man 2025 tickets. As she explains, the price of many Burning Man tickets is subsidized by tickets that sell at a higher price. These higher-priced sales have made it possible for Burning Man to sell main sale tickets at $575 since 2022, an increase from $475 in 2019. (Burning Man didn’t officially happen in 2020 or 2021 due to the pandemic.) Without this subsidy, Burning Man estimates those $575 tickets would be priced at $749.

“If we don’t set ourselves up right, we’re going to have to raise ticket prices,” Goodell says, “[especially because] we don’t have the sponsorships that the other festivals do. And I’d like to lower ticket prices.”

With respect to prices for the 2025 event, a Burning Man Project spokesperson tells Billboard that current fundraising “will inform operational decisions including pricing for Black Rock City 2025. Philanthropy, which is key to subsidizing ticket prices, helps us avoid a situation where the cost of a ticket prevents a community member or new Burner from coming to Black Rock City.”

To save money, the organization has looked at, Goodell says, “all the ways we can be working better with resources” by reviewing all expenditures from Black Rock City electricity use to medical facilities to the number of toilets rented. She adds that the landlords of Burning Man Project’s San Francisco office have “been really flexible” in adjusting their rental agreement to provide them with “a little relief.”

With many tech billionaires, movie stars and other one-percenters all trekking to Burning Man every August, there’s also presumably a short list of rich Burners who could solve the current financial shortfall by donating a million or two. But Goodell says that’s not the point.  

“Just going to major donors right now without having an outside world narrative doesn’t make any sense,” she says. “It’s not like the pandemic where we’re short, so we call up a couple people… We need to build a narrative and a conversation about what we’re doing for the long term. That’s why we’re creating this public conversation, which is not something we’ve typically done.” 

The idea, Goodell says, is that creating widespread community engagement via information sharing and the subscription model will help set up Burning Man for the long run. In making this point, she emphasizes that many cultural institutions — ballets, operas, museums, etc. — rely on patrons who believe in the cause and underwrite costs. As she puts it, “I want to get through this moment [to a place] where people get excited and feel good about the philanthropic nature of Burning Man culture.” 

Raising this money is especially crucial given that Burning Man has a strict no-sponsorships policy that’s part of its “decommodification” principle — one of 10 principles that guide and shape the event. Burning Man doesn’t have a merch stand or sell t-shirts or posters on its website; the only thing one can buy onsite is ice. (This cash transaction-free setting of course strongly contrasts with the typically high price of attending the event in the first place.) 

“We’re deliberately creating an environment that brings people together so that they can collaborate, create art and do it without interference from transactions or from commerce,” Goodell says. “We’re going to keep protecting that.” She adds that this decommodification principle is so entrenched that when Ben & Jerry’s cofounder Ben Cohen came to Burning Man and drove around giving away ice cream, he used an unmarked truck and cups without a logo.  

“[People from] Coachella, from Outside Lands, Bonnaroo, Glastonbury, they’ve all come to Burning Man, and they’re all like, ‘You’re crazy. You don’t have sponsorships? How the f— do you guys do it?’” says Goodell. She adds that the producers of one California festival with corporate sponsorships told her their event gets 25-30% of its total income from, as she puts it, “forms of commerce that Burning Man has banned.” 

While the current financial situation is creating questions about the viability of Burning Man 2025 and beyond, Goodell says that the event “has to happen, and it will happen, because that’s who we are.” In true Burner spirit, she speaks of the current need as an opportunity to set Burning Man up for the future: to create more art, to bring a more diverse group of participants to the event and to spread Burning Man culture around the world.  

“There are definitely some skeptics out there,” she says. “But what we’re hearing is the majority understand that we’re a nonprofit and that we’re depending on financial support to accomplish the mission.” 

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Drake continues to have one of the worst years in Hip-Hop after Kendrick Lamar handily dismantled his rival in a series of songs that reached a peak with the “Not Like Us” diss track. In a recent livestream, Drake lashed out at K-Dot’s fellow Compton native Steve Lacy by referring to him as a “fragile opp,” sparking the talented singer to lean into the jab hilariously.
Earlier this week, Drake made an appearance on the Kick streaming channel of fellow Canadian and streamer, xQc. In the clips that surfaced online, the 6 God is continuing to lean into a defiant stance despite the several chinks his armor has taken since his public battle with Kendrick Lamar.

During the stream, Steve Lacy, who Drake referred to as a “fragile opp,” caught a stray for reasons that one can assume are related to Lamar. This happened ahead of Drake throwing a shot at former collaborator The Weeknd and asking xQc to skip the singer’s “Starboy” song. Drizzy did, however, say that Lacy’s track was, quote, a “good song.”
Taking to Instagram, Lacy embraced the petty and trolled Drake for the “fragile opp” bar before asking his legion of fans which one of them wanted the title, effectively taking all the sting out of the insult.
Check out Steve Lacy firing back at Drake’s “fragile opp” shot below.


Photo: Getty

Amid rumors that Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo were paid different salaries for their work co-starring in Wicked, the reports have been debunked by the film’s production company, Universal Pictures. Explore See latest videos, charts and news See latest videos, charts and news “Reports of pay disparity between Cynthia and Ariana are completely false and […]