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Drew Afualo gives flowers to Laverne Cox who shares stories about when she was in middle school and more at Billboard Women in Music 2025. Drew Afualo: I’m here with the iconic, the legendary, the talented Laverne Cox. How do you feel to be here at the Billboard Women in Music Awards? Laverne Cox: Incredibly […]

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Source: Johnny Nunez / Getty

Lil Durk has been denied bond again as he waits for his upcoming murder-for-hire trial.

The rapper, whose real name is Durk Banks, went back to court on Thursday, May 8, hoping the judge would let him out on bond, but things didn’t go his way.

Durk’s legal team argued that the whole case should be thrown out, or at least that he should be released, because the prosecutors used fake evidence. They said the grand jury was shown Durk’s lyrics and fan-made social media posts, which they believe unfairly painted him as guilty. Still, the judge wasn’t convinced and decided Durk would stay locked up until his trial.

Durk’s team came with a serious bond package: $1 million in cash, $900,000 in real estate, support from other people willing to put up money, plus a promise that Durk would be on house arrest with 24/7 security watching him. But even with all that, the court said no. Now, Durk will stay in the Los Angeles Metropolitan Detention Center until his trial starts. The trial was supposed to begin in January but got pushed back to October 14. It’s a tough break for the rapper, who has stayed quiet about the case publicly but continues to say he’s innocent.

Even behind bars, Durk has stayed active in music. Earlier this year, he dropped a new album called Deep Thoughts, giving fans a raw look into his mindset during this difficult time.

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Source: Getty Images / Donald Trump / Jeanine Pirro
One drunkard from Fox News isn’t enough to fill Donald Trump’s heada** cabinet. The Orange Menace tapped one of his biggest fans, Jeanine Pirro, as the interim top DC prosecutor.

Clearly, with Trump, the only qualifications you need to land a job in his administration are a talent for kissing his oversized orange a**, being a douche and have some run-in with law enforcement.
Jeanine Pirro Is The Perfect Candidate For A Role In The Trump Administration

Pirro easily checks all of those boxes. She staunchly defends her president on Fox News and was ticketed for excessive speeding in Upstate New York after she was clocked at 119mph on the radar.
Oh, and she also had an episode on her show Justice With Judge Jeanine in 2020, when she appeared visibly drunk, leading to her stumbling to form sentences and delaying the show.
The incident earned her the nickname “Judge Box O’ Wine” and has since resurfaced following Trump’s announcement that he was stupidly giving her the job she has no business having.
“I am pleased to announce that Judge Jeanine Pirro will be appointed interim United States Attorney for the District of Columbia,” Felon 47 wrote on crappy platform, Truth Social. “Jeanine was Assistant District Attorney for Westchester County, New York, and then went on to serve as County Judge, and District Attorney, where she was the first woman ever to be elected to those positions. During her time in office, Jeanine was a powerful crusader for victims of crime.”
He continued, “Her establishment of the Domestic Violence Bureau in her Prosecutor’s Office was the first in the Nation. She excelled in all ways. In addition to her Legal career, Jeanine previously hosted her own Fox News Show, Justice with Judge Jeanine, for ten years, and is currently Co-Host of The Five, one of the Highest Rated Shows on Television,” he added. “Jeanine is incredibly well qualified for this position, and is considered one of the Top District Attorneys in the History of the State of New York. She is in a class by herself. Congratulations Jeanine!”
Jeanine Pirro’s Husband Is Also A Crook
Of course, Pirro’s husband is a despicable person in his own right. He was indicted on 66 counts of federal tax fraud.
Per Crooks & Liars:
Albert J. Pirro was indicted on 66 counts of federal tax fraud. The Feds say Pirro hid $1 million in income between 1988 and 1997, claiming dozens of personal luxuries as business expenses, from his $123,000 Ferrari to his wife’s Mercedes-Benz, New York Magazine reported in 1999. And she hasn’t practiced law in 20 years. Just normal stuff!

X Is Dragging Both Trump and Jeanine Pirro
Like with Trump’s head-scratching choice for Surgeon General, X, formerly Twitter, is absolutely dragging Trump’s decision to give Pirro the job for now.
“Jeanine Pirro, Sean “Real World” Duffy, Pete “Whisky Leaks” Hegseth, Linda “A1” McMahon, and the entire trash trump cabinet are proof that they don’t give a FUCK about “merit hires.” They’re unfit clowns. ALL OF THEM,” one post read. 
Another post read, “After hiring unqualified and incompetent drunk Pete Hegseth to be Defense Secretary, Trump’s doubling down by giving serious consideration to unqualified and incompetent drunk Jeanine Pirro as US Attorney for DC. There has never been a more incompetent president than Trump, EVER.”
Lord help us, it hasn’t been a year, and this crazy ride is far from over.
You can see more reactions in the gallery below.

1. Lol, don’t show Trump this

2. Judge Box O’ Wine LMAO

3. This will land you any job in the Trump administration

4. Trump uses Fox News like it’s LinkedIn

The eye-opening documentary about Colombian superstar Karol G, Tomorrow Was Beautiful (on Netflix now), can be summed up in one poignant moment that showcases the complicated dichotomy of fame.
“I remember one particular concert at MetLife Stadium,” said the film’s director Cristina Costantini of a surreal scene that unfolded before both her eyes and lens. “She looked like she was living her best life on stage, performing for 90,000 people. This should be the best day of her life. But when she gets offstage, she cries for like an hour. And that kind of whiplash, of the public Karol and the private Karol, was really fascinating to me, and a real privilege of being able to witness.”

The documentary was filmed in the wake of Mañana Será Bonito, her boundary-breaking fourth studio album which became the first Spanish-language album from a woman to debut at No. 1 on the Billboard 200. During the barrier-bashing tour that followed (where that aforementioned scene occurred), the documentary peels back the curtain on the private life, creative process and fame that turned the former teenage Colombian X Factor contestant into a giant of reggaeton and an icon of her homeland.

When Costantini spoke to Billboard, she was fresh off a plane from attending the film’s world premiere in Medellín, the Colombian metropolis in a mountainous province where Karol was born and raised.

“It was surreal and I think it’s a once in a lifetime thing for a filmmaker to see 3,000 people all come together in great spirits to watch a documentary,” she says, noting she was among everyone from Karol’s childhood friends to music teachers who all showed up to support the global superstar. “It was a very lovely, very special and a very pink event.”

Costantini’s road to getting a front-row seat with a camera in hand during an auspicious time in Karol’s life has its roots in her directing a slate of acclaimed documentaries. Her Emmy-nominated Science Fair turned heads in 2018, and Mucho Mucho Amor: The Legend of Walter Mercado, a 2020 portrait of the famed Puerto Rican astrologer, garnered equal acclaim.

“Two years ago I got a call that Karol was interested in making a movie about both her tour and her life and would I be interested,” Costantini remembers. “So I said ‘Yeah, let me talk to my husband first, who is not Latin.’” The problem is, her husband hadn’t heard of the star, so Costantini, who had recently given birth, had him speak to their nanny, Jasmine, to get her perspective.

“Jasmine said to him, ‘Oh my God, if Cristina doesn’t do this movie, I’ll die. My hair is red right now because of Karol.’ She started crying and talked about how Karol meant everything to her and how her music got her through a hard relationship. So he said, ‘Um, okay. I think you have to do this movie.’”

While Karol was no doubt popular at the time, she hadn’t turned into the indomitable global superstar who transcended borders just yet.

“I mean, I’m Latina and I listen to reggaeton, so I’ve been following Karol since she released ‘Tusa’ [her 2019 collab with Nicki Minaj],” notes Costantini. “But what made it interesting to me is that she wasn’t as well known in the Anglo community then, so it felt like a really interesting time to jump on board.”

Costantini and her crew shot 50 days in total with the promise that Karol wasn’t interested in a fluff piece, but rather a warts-and-all mediation on modern celebrity. “At first we had a much bigger footprint, with a lot of gear and people. But she wasn’t quite being herself, so we shrunk it down to these cameras you’d normally not shoot on because we had a sense we’d get way more footage and access, and that wound up being the case.”

“For the last two and a half years, I’ve had cameras around me like I was living in a reality show, trying to ignore, overlook or avoid them,” Karol G told Billboard‘s Isabela Raygoza on the red carpet for the film’s premiere in New York. “It was hard — sometimes I did feel a little frustrated, like I was being watched too much. There were plenty of times when I’d ask for a bit more privacy, to be a little more alone, to spend more time with my family and friends.”

Eventually, she came to trust the process; the end result is Karol splayed on a couch, pouring her heart out into the lens. “This is basically like a mini reality show squeezed into an hour and 48 minutes,” she cracked.

The result are raw scenes where the superstar ruminates on the pros and cons of fame. “Everyone could see I was at the top of my career,” she says at one point in the film in her native Spanish. “But inside, I felt like I was losing who I really was. As much as I’d like to explain how difficult it was, I wouldn’t have enough time.”

“I have so much respect for her ability to really go there and put herself out like she has,” Costantini explains of the superstar’s vulnerability. At one point in the film, Karol talks about being sexually harassed when she was 16 by a former manager, leading her to take a pause from her dreams of pursuing music and move to New York.

Costantini said she didn’t need much prompting to mine her darkest memories. “Like the story about her [former] manager, she’s never gone there before, but we had talked about that and she was clearly very ready to go there,” the director says. “It takes an immense amount of trust and faith to be as vulnerable as Karol has been.”

“I can assure you that no woman who respects herself would allow being harmed in order to achieve something,” an emotional Karol said.

She also touched on her relationship with the Puerto Rican rapper Anuel AA, with whom she collaborated on the songs “Follow” and “Secreto.” The two, who met on the set of their collab “Culpables,” became engaged in 2019 before calling it quits in 2021. In the film, she calls the whirlwind love affair and brutal breakup “a nightmare” and “hell,” admitting she “felt worthless as a person.” In its wake, she also is honest about her more positive times with her boyfriend, the Colombian star Feid.

Costantini also had her camera on moments where Karol’s tenacity shines, including a day when she went through a grueling eight hours of tour rehearsals with the famed choreographer Parris Goebel (who most recently was the architect of Lady Gaga’s Coachella set), during the same period she swam in New York’s East River.

The dip in the water “didn’t mean much to Colombians; I don’t think they understood what the East River was,” Costantini says of the notoriously murky New York waterway. “But the American team was like, ‘I don’t know if we should be doing that.’ And then of course she gets sick, so watching her just press on in the face of all of this was incredible.”

In fact, Karol’s hands-on approach made the biggest impression on Costantini, who noted that the singer is involved with even the most granular details of her career. “We know she writes, sings and dances with that pop star skill set, but she also has this incredible business mind which I’ve seen up close. She just opened two restaurants and a nightclub, and she’s overseeing all of the menus. Meanwhile, when she’s on tour she’s asking questions like, ‘Why do the bracelets at the stadium cost this much if they’re only doing these certain functions.’”

For Costantini, she chalks it all up to her “obsession of being perfect.” She explains: “You see that her success is not a mistake. She’s been working at this for years and years and years and it’s the product of really hard work.”

Naturally, that obsession seeped into the production of the documentary itself. “She can (tell you) ‘this is where the camera should be, this is where the lights should be, this is how I wanna look.’ But she can also be very soft, very sweet and very kind, too.”

So what did the perfectionist think of the Costantini film? “I think there are some parts that are really hard for her to watch or tough for her to stomach,” says Costantini of Karol’s impression following the film’s premiere, while conceding that Karol is “also the kind of person who is onto the next thing: ‘What do we do now, what’s next, how I am going to completely flip the script of what I just did?’

“But in the end, what’s great about a documentary is that it lets you stop and think for a moment. She expressed that idea quite a bit: that it forces her to stop and say, ‘Hey, I did that.’”

De La Ghetto presents his new production, Daylight, a seven-track set that marks the first EP of his 20-year career and part one of a full-length album dropping later this year. 

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“This all happened last October in Medellín,” he tells Billboard. “A promoter friend rented an Airbnb and invited me to a music camp. The first day I went, I never left. We did 10-12 songs that week. Something that started as a single or two, turned into a whole album. I decided to do a double EP, like in the ’80s and ’90s, because right now we’re living in an era where music is going too fast. People don’t have time to listen to 20 songs.”

“Loco,” a saucy Afrobeat song that dropped in March, was the first taste of the EP and set the tone for the project. “I wanted to give my fans something short and spicy with beachy vibes, chill and laid-back,” the Puerto Rican artist born Rafael E. Castillo Torres notes.

On Daylight, De La (also known as De La Geezy or GZ), worked with different music creatives such as Los Hitmen, Arboleda “Blaine,” UVE, and Hydra Hitz, who brought to life a refreshing sound that blends reggaetón with jazz and funk (“Phil Jackson”), reggae with perreo (“Acerola”) and even some sensual flamenco guitars found on the Blessd-assisted “Organic.”

GZ also reeled in Spanish newcomer JC Reyes for the hard-hitting trap song “RMPR T,” a record he admits was not meant to be on the album.  

“I felt like I met De La Ghetto from 2008. There’s this rawness with him and I love what he’s doing with the hip-hop scene in Spain,” he expresses. “This song came to me by surprise. It was the perfect song to close Daylight. Can you imagine if I didn’t put a trap song? My fans were going to go crazy. Being an artist with 20 years in the game, this album has a little bit of everything with my essence, that GZ essence.” 

Listen to Daylight below.

So far in 2025, the No. 1 slot on the Billboard 200 albums chart has regularly been filled with some familiar faces: SZA, Lil Baby, Bad Bunny, The Weeknd, Kendrick Lamar, Drake, Lady Gaga, Ariana Grande. So this week’s chart — with Swedish hard rock band Ghost, as shadowy and mysterious as its name implies, coming in at No. 1 with its latest album Skeletá — may seem like an anomaly to most casual music fans in the U.S.

But it’s not a surprise to Ghost’s longtime fans, nor to its label, Loma Vista. And for those paying attention to the group’s growing lore over the years, it seems like it may have been a long time coming. Since first debuting on the Billboard 200 in 2013 with Infestissumam (No. 28), the group has steadily climbed up the chart with each subsequent full-length studio album: 2015’s Meliora (No. 8) was its first top 10, followed by 2018’s Prequelle (No. 3), 2022’s Impera (No. 2) and now, Skeletá’s chart-topping debut, which marked the group’s biggest sales, streaming and equivalent album unit mark in its career so far. And with that steady growth, not to mention the big album week, Loma Vista director of marketing Todd Netter is Billboard’s Executive of the Week.

Here, Netter breaks down the band’s growing fan base, the clever marketing tactics that went into Skeletá’s rollout and what this could mean for the band, and the hard rock genre, overall. “There are a ton of decisions, small and large, that go into a successful marketing campaign,” Netter explains. “A successful album marketing campaign really is a series of interconnected decisions, tied together by strategy, creativity and execution.”

This week, Ghost landed its first-ever No. 1 album on the Billboard 200 with Skeletá. What key decisions did you make to help make that happen?

With Ghost, our goal is to always make creative decisions with clear intent at very pointed moments, like which songs to lead with and what the vehicle is for rolling those songs out and when; how to eventize the album announcement to generate maximum attention and enthusiasm amongst their large global fan base; and how to rev up that fan base going into release day. An example of such a decision was committing to creating “The Satanizer” — a first-of-its-kind music video experience for fans who wished to be “Satanized” — which was the title of Ghost’s first single, launched alongside the album announcement. “The Satanizer” morphed its users into characters featured in the song’s melodramatic music video. 

With a quick upload of their photo, “The Satanizer” sent out a personalized music video clip featuring the participant, who in turn could share via social media that they too had been “Satanized.” Strategically, it was a decision to create a moment at the launch of the campaign that personalized the experience of new Ghost music while simultaneously encouraging fans to create UGC on their socials. A powerful one-two punch that drew die-hard fans in while inviting other more casual music fans to pay attention. And, most important, it was a decision to have fun with this album campaign from its very launch.

This is the band’s fourth full-length top 10 album in the past decade, with each release achieving a higher position each time. What has gone into helping them build their career to get to this point?

We at Loma Vista fundamentally believe Ghost’s music and their vibrant fan community is for everyone. They have a sound and general appeal that draws people in. So we’ve made a very concerted effort at developing their passionate and creative fan community. It’s an immersive fan experience, rewarding for the most committed of fans and welcoming to the curious. An experience rich in storyline — we call it “lore” — chock full of creative content, loaded with call-to-action drivers for the fan base, and all culminating in real-world activity for the fans to attend, be it pop-up events, concerts — aka “rituals” — or feature film cinema screenings. It’s a fan-focused experience that is constantly evolving, mysterious, fun and always centered around the music of Ghost. And this has proven great for attracting more fans, be it by word-of-mouth, or simply by being a beacon to those who feel misunderstood but are proud of their creative and unconventional points of view in terms of music and culture. Focusing on Ghost’s fan community has allowed us to expand their audience size and the impact of the band, album over album, for the last decade.

The album also made a global impact, debuting at No. 1 not just in the U.S. and in Ghost’s native Sweden, but also in countries like Australia, Germany, Belgium and Switzerland, and at No. 2 in the U.K. How did you set it up to make such a big debut worldwide?

It starts with our unwavering belief that Ghost’s music is universal. We’ve always seen our marketing campaigns for Ghost albums as worldwide endeavors. As a label, we have a global footprint with label marketing teams located in key cities across the globe including London, Berlin, Toronto, Mexico City, Sydney and Tokyo, allowing us to strategize, prep and execute globally. So any time we cook up an initiative or fan activation, we have teams positioned around the world to help us ensure the idea is executed properly in local territories, be that via social media, real-world events, or via hybrid experiences where we blend the two things. 

A great recent example of that in our Skeletá album campaign were the Midnight Sales and the complimentary online album countdown event that we staged to celebrate the release of the new album. I knew we had a global fan base, one that loves to dress up and participate with other fans. I also knew Ghost’s sound and aura can harken back to previous eras of rock’n’roll, and that the album’s release was heavily anticipated by the band’s passionate fan base. We created Skeletá-Eve Midnight Sales, a series of events at 150 independent record stores around the globe, where fans could gather, listen to the album together for the first time and purchase it the minute the clock struck midnight. And for fans not near one of these many stores, we created Skeletá Rockin Eve, a global live stream event where fans tuned in at midnight locally to count down together the release of Ghost’s new album and hear new music. Coordinated timing-wise, thematically complementary, and global in scope. An example of how our strategy and execution allow us to cultivate a global fan base and have a major impact with Ghost’s music around the world. 

Ghost has a very particular aesthetic and look. How did the marketing campaign for this album differ from prior releases, and from other acts on the label?

Ghost are the most unique-looking band in music. They stand out, and the way they look is an instant attention-grabber for any onlooker. But it’s not just sensational — their appearance has a very strong creative point of view and a sophisticated design intent. They challenge norms and push boundaries in terms of rock’n’roll presentation, and music fans gravitate toward that. 

That said, I’m not sure our approach on this album cycle differed so much as it evolved. Their photos, wardrobe, stage design and overall aesthetic continue to elevate, album over album, and so our marketing campaigns aim to match that elevation. We look at every visual facet of our marketing campaign, be it vinyl jacket materials, music videos, band photos, band store merch, social media platforms, magazine covers, out-of-home billboards, etc., as an opportunity to establish Ghost’s creative point of view, to leave a meaningful impression on their fans and the public in general. As the band’s growing popularity collides with loftier opportunities coming their way, it enhances our ability to enrich the band’s overall aesthetic, music presentation and visual world. Our marketing campaigns have always been heavily integrated with the band’s aesthetic, so it was an evolution on Skeletá, not a different approach. 

The album represented Ghost’s biggest sales week ever, but also its biggest streaming week ever. How did you balance each to get such a big debut?

The easiest explanation is the band’s audience grew a ton. Following a very successful IMPERA album campaign, viral TikTok moment for “Mary On A Cross,” and a No. 1 feature film, Rite Here Rite Now, the band simply had a lot more fans. That said, the Ghost fan base is not a monolith, nor is the music consumption landscape these days. I knew we needed a comprehensive plan to tackle all the different ways people listen and consume music these days, to best understand what motivates people to listen and how they choose to do so. 

We had specific marketing plans for each streaming service, with specific platform targets and goals so that we could best position the band and their music. We took a similar approach with physical formats, creating 30 vinyl formats worldwide, as well as multiple CD and cassette formats, working with specific retailers from independent record stores to big box stores to boutique online retailers. The final component was creating a really rich and rewarding experience on the band’s webstore, offering special formats and early access to drive home the connection between the band and their fans. The music consumption landscape is fractured these days. We understood we’d never be able to funnel fans to one place, so instead we dug in and really catered to every platform and retailer’s strengths and customer base, to reach Ghost fans where they were. 

This is also the first time in four years that a hard rock album has reached No. 1 on the Billboard 200, since AC/DC’s Power Up in 2020. What is the significance of that for the genre, and what can you take away from that?

I’m a little hesitant to wax poetic about knowing exactly what Ghost’s accomplishment can mean for a whole genre of music. Nor do I think of Ghost as simply a rock band. I do think their music, presentation and overall appeal transcend genre — they’re simply Ghost in my mind. But so far as I can offer a little professional and personal insight into what this means for hard rock, it never hurts when a band achieves something big like this for other bands in their genre. It shines a light on a sound and puts the genre in the zeitgeist alongside arguably more popular genres and artists. The spotlight should open doors for other bands and labels looking for opportunities, as it’s “proof,” in an industry validation sort of way, that the sound and genre have some cultural cachet. 

I think with real people, average music fans and listeners, genres are becoming less and less important. Most people’s tastes bounce all over the place and artists are constantly crossing genres and audiences. More anecdotally speaking, and where my optimistic side takes over, maybe Ghost hitting No. 1 on the album charts inspires some young kids to pick up a guitar or learn to play the drums, instead of opening up a laptop, and a whole new generation of bands are formed.

This is Loma Vista’s first-ever No. 1 album on the Billboard 200. What does that mean for the label?

It’s terrific! We made a promise to our roster of artists that we’d match their vision and aspirations for their music and their careers. And this might sound cliche, but this team of people wakes up every morning with that artist commitment front of mind. None of us are personally motivated by accolades or awards. Instead, Ghost debuting at No. 1 drives home what we believe as a label: that with great music, strong creative vision, a commitment to collaboration, hard work, and an unwavering belief that anything is possible, special things will happen. A No. 1 album on the Billboard 200 reinforces that we’re right about the philosophy we take when signing and working with artists. And if I’m honest, it’s also just a really fun week for a record label when one of their artists goes No. 1.

Akon has chimed in on the tension between 50 Cent and Black Mafia Family co-founder Demetrius “Big Meech” Flenory.
During a recent appearance on the BagFuel podcast, he talked about his relationship with BMF and Jeezy during the mid-2000s, and was eventually asked about Meech falling out with his business partner 50 Cent once he got out of prison. “Actually, me and Meech had some talks about that,” Akon revealed. “He does feel slighted ’cause he felt that, you know, him and 50 should’ve sat down and had a real conversation as men because he’s been in [prison] for 20 years. He don’t know the feud that’s going on with 50 and whoever else. All he know is that, when he got out, [Rick] Ross came through, showed some love. While he was locked up, Ross made a big ass song that was, you know, ‘They think I’m Big Meech, Larry Hoover.’ In his mind, Ross is just paying homage.”

He added that the former music executive and drug kingpin wasn’t fully aware of the music business politics that would “warrant what Fif’ did.”

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The “big ass song” Akon is referring to Rick Ross’ 2010 street anthem “B.M.F. (Blowin’ Money Fast)” featuring Styles P, which peaked at No. 60 on the Hot 100. The same song Rick Ross once told Billboard that he would clear for the show if 50 agreed to help promote Ross’ Wingstop franchises after the G-Unit boss expressed interest in using the track in another Billboard interview.

50 Cent and Big Meech have been in business together with the former producing a docuseries and a TV series for Starz about the latter’s rise to power alongside his brother Terry “Southwest T” Flenory in the Detroit underworld during the late ’80s, eventually turning BMF into a national crime syndicate and influential record label that was instrumental in breaking Jeezy’s solo career.

However, things turned sour when Meech and Rick Ross were seen together on social media, causing a back and forth between the Miami rapper, 50 and Meech’s son, Demetrius “Lil Meech” Flenory Jr., who plays his father in the BMF series.

The fourth season of BMF is set to premiere on June 6.

Riley Green’s “Worst Way” becomes one of three new top 10s on Billboard’s Country Airplay chart, dated May 17.
The track hops from No. 11 to No. 8 on the survey, up 10% to 16.6 million audience impressions May 2-8, according to Luminate.

With the song — from Green’s LP Don’t Mind If I Do, which entered Top Country Albums at its No. 8 best last November — he banks his sixth Country Airplay top 10. It follows his duet with Ella Langley, “You Look Like You Love Me,” which led for a week in December, becoming his second chart-topper. He first led as featured on Thomas Rhett’s “Half of Me” for a week in November 2022. “There Was This Girl” became his first top 10 (No. 3, 2019).

Notably, Green wrote “Worst Way” solo. It’s the first Country Airplay top 10 by one author since Cody Johnson’s “Dirt Cheap,” penned by Josh Phillips (No. 5 peak in August 2024). “Worst Way” is the first top 10 solo-penned by the artist who recorded it since Chayce Beckham’s “23,” which led for a week in April 2024.

Big ‘Heart’

Corey Kent lands his second Country Airplay top 10 as “This Heart” rises 12-9 (16.4 million, up 12%). The song, from the Bixby, Okla., native’s album Black Bandana, released last fall, follows “Wild as Her,” which hit No. 3 in May 2023.

‘Wind’ Blows In

Ella Langley achieves her second Country Airplay top 10 as “Weren’t for the Wind” gusts 13-10 (15.5 million, up 12%). The single, from her 2024 LP Hungover, follows her chart-topping Riley Green team-up “You Look Like You Love Me” (see above).

Ongoing ‘Problem’

Morgan Wallen’s “I’m the Problem” dominates Country Airplay for a fourth total and consecutive week (30.7 million, up 1%). The song marks the fifth of his 17 No. 1s to rule for four or more frames. His longest-leading hit, “You Proof,” reigned for 10 weeks beginning in October 2022. It’s tied for the longest command in the chart’s 35-year history with Nate Smith’s “World on Fire” (2023-24).

‘The Giver’ Debuts

Chappell Roan makes her Country Airplay debut as “The Giver” enters at the chart’s No. 60 anchor spot (512,000 in audience, up 1%). The pop star’s country turn launched at its No. 5 best on the Billboard Hot 100 in March and reached Nos. 32 and 37 on Adult Pop Airplay and Pop Airplay, respectively, in April.

All charts dated May 17 will update on Billboard.com on May 13 (Tuesday).

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Sean “Diddy” Combs and his defense team were granted a delay in the jury selection process on Friday (May 9), pushing it to this coming Monday. Opening statements are reported to be heard after the jury is selected, and it was also revealed that a key witness has decided they will not testify against Diddy.

The Daily Mail reports that Judge Arun Subramanian granted the defense’s request based on their feeling that jurors would get “cold feet” between Friday and Monday (May 12), which is when opening statements were originally supposed to be heard. The prosecution attempted to push back, but the judge said that if the jury is fully selected on Monday, it would ensure that the process would not need to be restarted.

Other developments in the trial involve Jane Doe, also known as Victim Number 3, who was thought to be a key witness. It appears that Victim Number 3 never worked with prosecutors, and according to a TMZ report, she did not want to testify. The outlet added in another report that Victim Number 5 might testify, and the judge ruled that they will need to reveal their identity to the court.

The defense also claimed that Diddy and his ex-girlfriend, Cassie Ventura, were both physically violent with one another. Ventura came forth with explosive claims about Combs, which led to an investigation and his eventual arrest. She is not involved with the sex trafficking trial directly, but it is said to be a character witness.

Photo: Axelle/Bauer-Griffin / Getty

SEVENTEEN announced plans on Friday (May 9) to perform later this month on Seoul’s famed Jamsugyo Bridge in honor of their tenth anniversary as a group. The special performance, which will mark the first time a K-pop group has ever performed on the South Korean landmark atop the Hangang River, is set to take place […]