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Halle Bailey was awarded temporary sole physical and legal custody of her son amid the ongoing abuse allegations against her ex-boyfriend DDG. According to a Friday (May 16) report by People, court documents obtained by the publication indicate that Bailey sought out the custody order for the safety of both herself and 16-month-old Halo, alleging […]
Legendary rappers Tupac Shakur and Notorious B.I.G. might have been rivals in life, but they’re now united in copyright litigation.
A pair of photographers who snapped separate photos of the late hip-hop stars are teaming up to sue Univision for copyright infringement, accusing the broadcaster of using the images without permission in a web article about “Unsolved” murders.
“Plaintiffs sent a letter to Univision, demanding that it cease and desist all publication and display of the Subject Photographs,” write lawyers for the photographers in their Wednesday suit. “Univision has failed to meaningfully respond, necessitating this action.”
The case was filed by the estate of Chi Modu, a well-known hip hop photographer, over a black and white picture of Biggie looking into the camera in his trademark Coogi sweater and sunglasses; and by Dana Lixenberg, another acclaimed photog who has snapped pictures of Iggy Pop and Steely Dan, over an image of Pac in a bandana and sports jersey.
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Attorneys for Modu’s estate and Lixenberg say Univision stitched the images together and used them as art for a 2018 article reporting that a trailer had been released for a USA Network documentary series called Unsolved: The Murders of Tupac and The Notorious B.I.G.
Though Biggie and Tupac have both been gone for nearly 30 years, Wednesday’s lawsuit is just one of many recent intellectual property battles over the two iconic rappers.
Modu’s estate filed one of them, suing Universal Music Group in 2022 for allegedly using a Tupac photo in a blog post. Then last year, Shakur’s own estate threatened to sue Drake for using an AI-generated version of the later rapper’s voice. And in February, Biggie’s estate filed a lawsuit against Target, Home Depot and other retailers over allegations that they sold unauthorized canvas prints of the famed “King of New York” photo. Coogi even got in on the action in 2018, suing the Brooklyn Nets after they released a multi-colored jersey that were “inspired by Biggie” and paid homage to the Brooklyn-born rapper.
In one case, Biggie’s estate sued Modu himself, claiming the photographer had illegally authorized the use of his photos on commercial products like skateboards and shower curtains. In 2022, a year after the famed photographer passed away, a judge ruled that such merch likely violated the rapper’s likeness rights. The case ended in a settlement last year.
Reps for Univision did not immediately return a request for comment on the new lawsuit on Friday.
Travis Kelce flew solo at Patrick Mahomes’ charity auction Thursday night (May 15), but Taylor Swift‘s presence was still felt — especially during one hilarious moment when the Kansas City Chiefs tight end withdrew his bid on a guitar signed by his superstar girlfriend.
In a clip filmed by one attendee of the 15 and the Mahomies Foundation’s Golf Classic gala in Las Vegas, Kelce stands near his table with his bidding paddle in hand as an auctioneer fields offers on an acoustic guitar autographed by Swift. As the asking bid rises, the New Heights podcaster changes his mind and withdraws from pursuing the item, quipping, “I just realized I have that already.”
As Kelce sits back down with a cheeky grin, Mahomes — who stands nearby — bursts out laughing with the rest of the event’s attendees. The quarterback’s wife, Kansas City Current co-owner Brittany Mahomes, also sits at their table, covering her face as she chuckles.
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Founded by Patrick Mahomes in 2019, 15 and The Mahomies is “dedicated to improving the lives of children” and supporting initiatives that “focus on health, wellness, communities in need of resources and other charitable causes,” according to the charity’s website. In 2024, Kelce attended the same gala with the “Fortnight” singer on his arm, at one point auctioning off four tickets to Swift’s Eras Tour for $80,000.
The event comes just a few days after the Grotesquerie star and Swift stepped out together in Philadelphia for a Mother’s Day gathering at a restaurant, marking one of the first times the couple has been seen out in public in the past few months. Since concluding her Eras trek in December, the 14-time Grammy winner has largely been staying out of the spotlight (although fans do suspect she’s gearing up to announce something at the 2025 American Music Awards on May 26).
During her time off, Swift has seemingly been prioritizing family time. Travis’ older brother, retired Philadelphia Eagles center Jason Kelce, recently revealed that the singer-songwriter had made time to meet his and Kylie Kelce’s new daughter, Finnley, whom they welcomed in April.
“We were fortunate to have them all in,” Jason told Entertainment Tonight on Monday (May 12). “It doesn’t happen often — everyone’s busy — but it was really special.”
Styles P has been one of the sharpest rappers in the game for the past three decades as a member of The Lox, along with his prolific solo career. In a recent interview, Styles P essentially ranked himself higher than Jim Jones and cited his body of work as proof.
Styles P was a recent guest on The No Funny Sh*t podcast hosted by Kenny “KP” Supreme & DP. The G-Host discussed a bevy of topics, including his alignment with his brothers from The Lox, his various health business ventures, becoming an elder in Hip-Hop, and life as it happens.
In a clip that began to buzz online, Kenny Supreme, who we should note is a Harlem native, floated the idea that the Capo Jim Jones would get Styles P out of here in a song-for-song VERZUZ-like battle. Holidays Styles, a battle-tested MC, met Supreme’s assertion head-on as any rapper would when it comes to their skill set.
“Me and Jim [Jones] ain’t in the same league,” Styles says, after telling Supreme that his opinion is incorrect in his eyes. “Me and Jim don’t do the same things. I’m a bar master. I’m a lyrical technician. I’ve been on joints with some of the best emcees in the world. [The Notorious] B.I.G., Hov, Black Thought, Talib [Kweli]. I bar sh*t down.”
Styles added, “If there is a lyricist or MC, I’m one of their favorites. I’m not here to make catchy hooks and do dope shit, I don’t know that. I’m into making your f*cking soul move.”
Styles P, along with Jadakiss and Sheek Louch, easily dispatched of Jim Jones and the Dipset collective in their explosive VERZUZ battle in New York that the culture still talks about with high reverence. Will this renew interest in a further battle? Will the Vamp Life honcho respond to Styles? Stay tuned.
Hop to the 23:00-minute mark to hear the discussion above.
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Photo: Johnny Nunez / Getty
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Chris Brown was denied bail during a court hearing for his assault charge in Manchester, England, on Friday (May 16), according to Reuters. The singer was taken into custody on Thursday (May 15) after being arrested at his Manchester hotel and charged with “inflicting grievous bodily harm,” which has been tied to a February 2023 […]
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Snoop Dogg kept it real and admitted Kendrick Lamar checked him on “Wacced Out Murals,” and rightfully so.
The West Coast legend pulled up for an interview, Snoop talked about the heat he caught after postin’ Drake’s AI-made diss track, “Taylor Made Freestyle,” which used fake vocals of Pac and Snoop himself. Kendrick didn’t hold back on the GNX intro, rapping, “Snoop posted ‘Taylor Made,’ I prayed it was the edibles, I couldn’t believe it, it was only right for me to let it go.” That line hit the streets hard and had folks talkin’.
Snoop owned up to it with no ego. “A big dawg can get checked if it’s by the right person,” he said. “Ain’t nothin’ wrong with gettin’ put in your place if you outta pocket… Sometimes the young homies can teach the old Gs a new trick.”
He broke it down even more with Bootleg Kev, sayin’ he didn’t even realize what he did wrong at first. “Then I get the word, ‘Nephew didn’t like what you did.’ I’m like, what did I do?! ‘You played some music.’ I’m like, what music?! Then I look back at the post and I’m like, ‘Aw, that’s cuz.’”
Once it clicked, Snoop did the grown man thing. “I deleted it, called Kendrick, left him a message ’cause he ain’t pick up, he was locked in workin’ on his shit. I said, ‘Nephew, it’s Uncle Snoop, I got the message, I apologize, I was f**ked up, my bad.’”
All love between the OG and the new king
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In the first quarter of the year, a significant number of high-profile acts have made changes to their management teams.
At the top of 2025, Gigi Perez, known for her viral hit “Sailor Song,” parted ways with Laffitte Management Group and The Chainsmokers and longtime manager Adam Alpert dissolved their management deal though the chart-topping dance act is still represented by Alpert’s Disruptor Records and remain partners in several other ventures.
In February, Lil Nas X parted ways with Adam Leber‘s Rebel and signed with Crush Music for management. Then in March, Billboard’s Women In Music executive list revealed that Janelle Lopez Genzink, founder and CEO of Volara Management, the firm behind superstar Sabrina Carpenter, signed longtime free agent HAIM, which The Azoff Company’s Full Stop formerly represented. That same month, Noah Cyrus signed a management deal with Range Music, having formerly been represented by TaP.
And in the weeks following Q1’s close, Best Friends Music lost three high-profile clients: Billie Eilish and Finneas parted with Best Friends co-founders/co-managers Danny Rukasin and Brandon Goodman to sign with Sandbox Entertainment’s Jason Owen; and Rukasin’s rising star client Role Model departed, too. In late April, Chappell Roan’s new management team was finally announced — led by Foundations Music’s Drew Simmons — after the artist parted with State Of the Art last November. And at the top of May, Billboard reported that Camila Cabello and her longtime manager Roger Gold had split.
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Artists swapping managers is hardly a rare occurrence. As one 20-plus-year veteran of artist management says, “Working with high-profile pop artists can be incredibly stressful, especially when things start to go wrong — it can feel like you’re in a sinking ship and can’t find where the water is coming in.”
Having managed some of the biggest acts of the mid-2000s, the veteran manager has seen their fair share of shakeups. But they argue that what has changed in the field is the job’s visibility – and scrutiny. “Social media has made it much easier for a manager to position themselves as a public figure, and some, Scooter [Braun] being a good example, understood that world and navigated it in a really smart way. And I remember watching it over time — it was such a different approach to using persona as a way to complement the business that you’re trying to build.”
And now, the industry itself is giving the field a bigger platform. “You have places like ROSTR, which I think has made it really easy and accessible for a passive participant in the industry to be aware of information,” continues the source. “And the passive participant probably creates a much different echo chamber than historically the people who read [trade publications].” (To prove their point, the popular X account PopCrave, known for posting surface-level updates across pop culture, shared the news of Roan’s new management setup.)
The longtime manager/label executive agrees that social media has altered the playing field. “We’re constantly comparing and looking at how someone is doing better than us. Managers, writers, producers — we’re all looking at it. I have producer clients that see other producers posting cuts and then they’re [feeling] down. Artists do that as well, and I think the manager is typically the first to blame and the easiest to get out of a deal because we don’t have the contracts that a label or a publisher has. Agents and lawyers do, too, but they get fired all the time and no one knows about it.”
Given the recent spate of shake-ups, the veteran manager says his profession needs to consider a core question: “When society and consumer behavior changes and evolves, how quickly do industries reassess?”
Some contend that reassessment is happening right now, with one calling Eilish and FINNEAS’ departure from Best Friends — where they had been since the beginning of their careers — “this natural tipping point of like, ‘Huh. Why?’”
“It’s social media,” argues the manager/label executive. “Artists are quicker to move on. And I do think that’s just the nature of society today and this instant gratification culture. Artist empowerment is phenomenal, [but] maybe this is a small downside to it, that artists think they know everything.”
Another source points to the ongoing reevaluation of remuneration as an underlying reason for recent changes. Traditionally, a music manager will receive a commission on all business in which an artist engages. But the fast-changing field – and music industry at large — is why some believe more artists want to build “in-house teams like Taylor [Swift],” according to the boutique firm owner. “They don’t want to pay commissions. They want to structure it differently.”
But, such an arrangement is typically reserved for music’s upper echelon, with the artist manager-executive saying, “it takes a rare artist in the sense that, economically, it makes more sense when you’re at a certain level to carry that overhead. If you’re playing arenas and stadiums, then that is probably something you should be thinking about. But at the same time, if you started your career with a manager and you’re 10 years in, I think that’s a rough time for you to be like, ‘Hey, by the way, I think you should switch to salary.’”
Which is why the boutique firm owner argues that “really good managers who do so much should actually participate more — and have equity. The label, the rest of the team, it’s all really driven by management. Fifteen percent [commission] is not [enough] to cover all the overhead and everything that you do for an artist and everything that the label doesn’t do.” (In the case of a management deal ending, they insist sunset clauses, in which managers are entitled to continued pay for a set period after an artist fires them, are “crucial.”)
It all adds up to a climate in which the veteran pop manager can’t help but wonder: “In a world where it is so easy for you to search out what other people are doing or how to do something [yourself], how manageable can a person be?”
Slick Rick will soon drop off his first new body of work since 1999. On Thursday (May 15), Rick announced he’ll be delivering the follow-up to The Art of Storytelling on June 13. The new album, titled Victory, will be a visual album executive-produced by Idris Elba. The album will be accompanied by a 30-minute […]
EDC Las Vegas starts Friday (May 16) at the Las Vegas Motor Speedway. The three-day dance mega-festival will feature sets from more than 250 artists, with many of them being blasted out of Vegas and onto the internet via the festival’s free livestream.
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Fans can thusly enjoy EDC from the comfort of their couch by tuning into either Insomniac TV or the Insomniac YouTube page. Live coverage begins at 6:45 p.m. PT/ 9:45 p.m. ET daily, with the broadcast going all night and into the dawn Friday, Saturday (May 17) and Sunday (May 18).
The livestream will feature coverage from five of Insomniac’s nine stages — KineticField, CosmicMeadow, CircuitGrounds, NeonGarden and BassPod, with Insomniac TV dedicating a separate channel to each stage.
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While the exact coverage schedule isn’t known, the festival overall will feature performances from artists including Dom Dolla, Alesso, Afrojack, Alison Wonderland playing b2b with Kaskade, Illenium playing b2b with Slander, Sara Landry, Horsegiirl, Gesaffelstein, RL Grime, Martin Garrix, DJ Snake, Interplanetary Criminal, Rezz, Fisher, Eric Prydz and many, many more.
Produced by Insomniac Events, EDC Las Vegas is the biggest dance music festival in North America, welcoming more than 540,000 attendees over its three days. Myriad versions of EDC also take place around the world in countries including Mexico, Brazil, the U.K., China, India and South Korea.
Earlier this week, Insomniac announced that a new edition of EDC will happen in Medellín, Colombia, in October. The show will be produced in partnership with Colombian events company Páramo Presenta.
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On Wednesday (May 15), Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was testifying before the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee on Capitol Hill when he was interrupted by several activists who chanted, “RFK kills people with AIDS.” Kennedy jumped up from his seat, reacting to the commotion as Cohen yelled, “Congress pays for bombs to kill children in Gaza,” and “They need to let food into Gaza, they need to let food [in] to starving kids!” before he was detained by Capitol Police officers.
In a post on X, formerly Twitter, Cohen shared a video of the protest as seen on CSPAN before he was grabbed by police officers. The video then showed him being walked out of the hearing in handcuffs. “I told Congress they’re killing poor kids in Gaza by buying bombs, and they’re paying for it by kicking poor kids off Medicaid in the US,” he wrote. “This was the authorities’ response.” Cohen has been charged with incommoding, or inconveniencing others, according to the Capitol Police. The charge carries a penalty of 90 days in prison and a $500 fine if convicted. Cohen would be released later, but six other activists who were arrested are still in custody.The vocal protest set the tone for Kennedy’s hearing, which showed him being fuzzy concerning several cuts made by Health and Human Services to people’s healthcare plans. New Jersey Senator Andy Kim grilled Kennedy about the elimination of the World Trade Center health plan for those affected after the 9/11 attacks, which have been restored. “But why were they cut in the first place?” he asked.Thre 74-year-old has been a staunch progressive activist for years, having signed his name to a letter by A Statement From Jewish Americans Opposing AIPAC, which calls for an end to the infuluence of lobbyists working on behalf of the Israeli government. Cohen and Jerry Greenfield, the other founder, have been highly vocal about their political beliefs which include criticism of Israel’s occupation of the West Bank. The company is mostly owned by Unilever since 2000, and the pair have been at odds with Unilever, suing them last year over allegations that it fired a chief brand executive who attempted to show support for Palestinian refugees.
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