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At one of her recent Eras Tour shows in London, Taylor Swift met with the families of victims harmed by the deadly mass stabbing at a childrenâs dance class in Southport in July. In photos posted to TikTok by one mom who met the pop star with her daughters at Wembley Stadium over the weekend, […]
Before this wildly unpredictable presidential campaign season even kicked off, technology experts issued dire warnings that doctored artificial intelligence images and videos could be used to manipulate voters. That appears to be the case with some seemingly manufactured images shared by three-time White House candidate Donald Trump on Sunday (Aug. 18) on his Truth Social account.
The twice impeached former one-term Republican president re-posted a series of images whose authenticity could not be verified and which appeared to show Taylor Swift fans, as well as the singer herself, throwing in with his campaign. One featured six squares filled with smiling Swifties wearing âSwifties for Trumpâ T-shits with the message âSwifties Turning to Trump After ISIS Foiled Taylor Swift Concert,â a seeming reference to the recently foiled plot to attack Swiftâs since-cancelled trio of concerts in Vienna after the discovery of a 19-year-old ISIS-radicalized manâs plan to cause a mass casualty event outside the singerâs Austrian shows.
In another image meant to mirror the iconic âI Want You For U.S. Armyâ recruiting poster, a user doctored up an image of Swift in a patriotic red, white and blue suit and star-spangled top hat with the message, âTaylor Wants You to Vote For Donald Trump.â The other two pictures featured more images of what are allegedly Swift fans in Trump-boosting gear.
At press time spokespeople for Swift and Trump had not returned Billboardâs request for comment on the post, which also featured Trumpâs enthusiastic response to the alleged endorsement, âI accept!â According to The Daily Beast, the Swiftie images were first posted to X on Friday and Saturday by a couple of popular right-wing accounts, including one that reportedly mixed the doctored AI images with a real one of a blonde woman wearing a âSwifties For Trumpâ shirt at a rally. The Sunday Times noted that one of the 25 Truth Social posts featuring the faked images that read âThe Swifties for Trump movement is real!â was labelled âsatire,â calling into question whether Trump, 78, realized that he was re-posting computer-generated pictures.
Swift has yet to endorse anyone in the 2024 presidential race between convicted felon Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris, whose nomination will be celebrated this week in Chicago during the Democratic National Convention. Harris was swapped in for President Joe Biden last month and since her sudden elevation to the top spot on the ticket polls have shown the once dead-even race that Trump â now the oldest candidate to ever run for the White House â was winning in several key battleground states shifting slightly in Harrisâ favor.
The singer eschewed political endorsements for most of her career, but following Trumpâs election in 2016 she endorsed two Democratic candidates in midterm elections in her home state of Tennessee as well as endorsing Biden in 2020. She also took aim at the former Apprentice host during the George Floyd protests in 2020, lambasting Trumpâs response to the unrest after earlier saying she was âcompletely blindsidedâ by his 2016 victory over former Sec. of State Hillary Clinton.
âAfter stoking the fires of white supremacy and racism your entire presidency, you have the nerve to feign moral superiority before threatening violence? âWhen the looting starts the shooting startsâ???â Swift wrote in reference to a comment from Trump that many took as a veiled threat to protesters who flooded the streets around the nation following the killing of unarmed 46-year-old Floyd at the hands of a Minneapolis police officer who kneeled on his neck for nearly 10 minutes. âWe will vote you out in November.â
Trump, who the Washington Post reported in 2021 had made nearly 31,000 false or misleading statements during his presidency â a rate of 21 claims per day â recently claimed that photos of a massive Harris/Walz rally in Detroit were AI-generated, a falsehood that was quickly disproven by photos and videos taken by reporters and attendees on the ground.
Check out the AI Taylor Swift images below.
Lol, Trump posted a collage of AI generated Taylor Swift fans wearing âSwifities for Trumpâ T-shits, and wrote âI accept!â as if this were real.I meanâŠ..this is uniquely pathetic, even for Trump. pic.twitter.com/GUVXQLqzYoâ Peter Henlein (@SwissWatchGuy) August 18, 2024
At least 23 people were injured when two gondolas of a Ferris wheel caught fire at a music festival near Leipzig in eastern Germany, the German news agency dpa reported Sunday (Aug. 18). The accident took place at the Highfield Festival at Lake Strömthal near Leipzig. The fire started in one gondola and then spread […]
Jelly Roll is speaking candidly about his experience attending Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) meetings, a topic he says heâs never talked about in public before.
In a new interview with The New York Times, the artist â whoâs topped both the Mainstream Rock Airplay and Country Airplay charts â was asked about an unreleased song, âWinning Streak,â which will be heard on upcoming album Beautifully Broken, scheduled for release in fall 2024. âWinning Streakâ âbasically describes going to an AA meeting,â NYTâs David Marchese noted in the conversation. âIs alcohol addiction something you struggle with or have struggled with?â
Jelly Roll explained the song was written âfrom the perspective of a story Iâd seen happen for realâ at an AA meeting, which heâll attend âfor my demons.â
âI still will have a cocktail every now and then and Iâm a known weed smoker, but I got away from the drugs that I knew were gonna kill me,â Jelly Roll said of his relationship with drugs and alcohol in the podcast interview published on Saturday (Aug. 17).
He continued, âIt was really hard for me to get away from those drugs,â which heâs previously said included substances including cocaine, pain pills and codeine. âSomething I do [for] maintaining my relationship with those drugs is I will still attend the meetings, even though Iâm not a textbook sober guy â but I never share, I just quietly sit and appreciate the message and the meaning.â
Added Jelly Roll, âThis is the first time Iâve talked about this publicly at all. I donât tell people I go to meetings. Itâs not a part of my story that I share because I have so much respect for the men and women in that program that get actually completely sober, that I never want my stuff to get in the way of them.â
Jelly Roll, who says in the chat that heâs âactively doing better every single day,â described the moment at an AA meeting that influenced his writing on âWinning Streak.â It tells someone elseâs story, but in the first-person perspective.
He said that felt right for this particular track, and named first-person songs like James Taylorâs âCarolina in My Mindâ that have inspired him and made him emotional, solely as the listener.
âThis kid, heâs going through it,â he said of the meeting that resulted in writing âWinning Streak.â âOne of the old men sitting there was like, âLook man, itâs all good. Nobody came in here on a winning streak.â It was such a beautiful thing. If youâve ever been to an AA meeting, a big one, like this room had 20, 30 people in it, it felt like âŠ. You watch the room kind of split when he said that âcause half of the room are old, sober dudes who remember being the young dude, so they chuckle, and the other half are other dudes who just immediately feel it in their bones and cry. But itâs all the same emotion and feeling, and right then, there it was. That was the beginning of âWinning Streak.ââ
âGet By,â another new song from his upcoming album, will serve as the soundtrack for ESPNâs season-long college football coverage across ESPN networks and ABC. Jelly Roll, whoâs latest new music release is the collab âLosersâ on Post Maloneâs F-1 Trillion album, will hit the road for a series of headlining tour dates later this month.
Listen to his full interview, clocking in at over a half-hour, with The New York Times below.
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Maxie Solters, a third-generation entertainment publicist, died unexpectedly Thursday (Aug. 15) in Los Angeles. She was 37. She was also a writer, actor and producer. No cause of death was shared.
Solters followed her father, Larry Solters, and her grandfather, Lee Solters, in the family business. Her grandfather was a legendary press agent, who handled such acts as Barbra Streisand, Michael Jackson, Carol Channing and Frank Sinatra. Larry Soltersâ Scoop Marketing represents the Eagles, Irving Azoff and Iconic Artists Group, among other clients.
Solters, who was known for her helpful and friendly demeanor, joined Scoop in 2012, working with such clients as the Kia Forum, the Hollywood Bowl and Music Forward.Â
Maxie Solters
Solters family
Solters grew up in Sherman Oaks, California, and graduated from Oakwood School and the University of Southern California with a theater degree. Before joining Scoop, she worked in film and television casting and also served as a coordinator for One Billion Rising, the global movement for justice and equality. In addition to acting in a number of theatrical productions, Maxie, who was a member of the Screen Actors Guild, also created, produced and starred in her own comedy web series, including 2016âs Chooch and Adventures in Online Dating and 2017âs Climax! The Series.
Her social justice work also included involvement in V-Day International and work on womenâs rights.Â
Survivors include her father, Larry, and his partner, Carol Greenhut; her mother, Debra Graff; her longtime partner, Dim Dobrin; her aunt, Susan Reynolds; her cousin, Jonah Reynolds; and her dog, Pookie. A celebration of life will be held at a later date. In lieu of flowers, the family requests that donations be made in Maxieâs name to One Billion Rising, a cause she deeply believed in.
Courtney Kramer, the Republican challenger to Fani Willis in the race for Fulton County District Attorney in Georgia, is vowing to end the long-running YSL RICO trial involving Young Thug if sheâs elected, according to a statement issued by her campaign on Friday (Aug. 16).
âWith no apparent justice in sight, I have become highly concerned and disappointed in the lack of prosecutorial oversight in this case,â Kramer said in the statement. âAs time goes on, the public has witnessed a trial that is undoubtedly over prosecuted by attorneys who have repeatedly been admonished for lack of trial prepartion: a complete and utter waste of the courtâs time.â
Kramer goes on to blast prosecutors in the case, noting that they were recently âcondemnedâ by new judge Paige Reese Whitaker âfor not following the ethical and legal duty to disclose exculpatory evidence that could prove fruitful for the defense, one of the most basic requirements in the courtroom.â She further contends that the case âwas brought to bring fameâ to Willis, ânot to bring justice to the community,â and that itâs resulted in âendless amounts of taxpayer dollarsâ being spent âon a prosecution that is based almost entirely on witnesses with little to no credibility.â
âIf I am elected as the next District Attorney of Fulton County, I promise to end this prosecution immediately,â said Kramer. âI challenge my opponent to do the same thing, the right thing, and end this prosection and release the accused in this case who are being held without bond.â
Representatives for Willis and Young Thug did not immediately respond to Billboardâs requests for comment.
The YSL case was set into motion in May 2022 when Thug (real name Jeffery Williams) was indicted along with dozen of others over allegations that their YSL was not a record label called Young Stoner Life but a violent Atlanta street game called Young Slime Life. The group of defendants was charged under Georgiaâs Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) law, with prosecutors claiming they operated a criminal enterprise that committed murders, carjackings, armed robberies, drug dealing and other crimes over the course of a decade.
Since his arrest, Thug remained in jail despite multiple calls for his release. On Aug. 8, Judge Whitaker denied requests by Thugâs attorneys to declare a mistrial over the explosive revelation of a secret âex parteâ meeting between the since-removed judge in the case, Ural Glanville, prosecutors and a key witness. Prior to that, she denied their renewed motion to release Thug on bond.
Notably, the trial, which began in January 2023 and resumed on Monday (Aug. 12), is now the longest in Georgia state history; with dozens of witnesses still set to testify, itâs estimated to run well into next year.
You can read Kramerâs full statement here.

With the presidential elections approaching, the Democratic ticket is helping voters get to know them on a personal level.
Kamala Harris and her selected Vice President, Minnesota governor Tim Walz, sat down for a wide-ranging chat uploaded to YouTube on Thursday (Aug. 15), where the duo discuss topics including their childhoods, taco recipes and their hope for the future of America.
They also share a love for music, and the conversation led to each politician sharing the music that shaped them throughout their lives. For Walz, it started with Bruce Springsteenâs 1980 album The River, which he called a âtransformational piece of musicâ for him. He also shared his love for Bob Seger. âMy first car, it was the summer of 1980 and Iâd been saving up. I buy a 1973 orange Chevy Camaro,â he recalled. âGot an eight-track player in it. The previous owner left Bob Segerâs Night Moves in there. I listened to it, and itâs kind of the soundtrack of my life. [âŠ] Whatâs really great about it is Iâve got a â79 international thatâs my car and itâs got an eight-track player in it. I have the very eight-track to this day.â
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For Harris, Aretha Franklin was a major part of her childhood. âMy mother had every Aretha album and our Christmas gift to my mother, her birthday gift was always like, whatâs the latest Aretha Franklin record?â she explained.
Harris added that while Stevie Wonde, Miles Davis and John Coltrane were also fixtures within her family home, one of her âpersonal favorite musiciansâ was Minnesotaâs own Prince. âMy husband Doug and I â Iâm more of a hip-hop girl, and heâs more Depeche Mode,â she shared. âHowever, in the Venn diagram of things, Prince he and I love the same. Talk about how Prince was with that guitar, man. I almost know by heart every one of those songs.â
âI feel like a trip to Paisley Park is going to happen here,â Walz said of the late iconâs beloved Minnesota estate, to which Harris happily replied, âItâs on my bucket list.â
Watch Kamala Harris and Tim Walzâs full conversation below.
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As we approach the presidential election, Lil Pump will be voicing his support for Donald Trump in song. The âGucci Gangâ rapper took to X on Tuesday (Aug. 13) to reveal that he will no longer be performing a diss track aimed at both President Joe Biden and Vice President Harris during Trumpâs next rally, […]
Just under a week after President Bidenâs disastrous debate performance â and one day before Independence Day â a âfancamâ compiling Vice President Kamala Harrisâ most memeable moments to Charli XCXâs brash electropop banger âVon Dutch.â Created by X user @ryanlong03, the clip combines clips of Harris proclaiming her love for Venn diagrams, quoting her motherâs idioms and dancing and laughing while Charliâs neon-green Brat filter flashes across the screen. âItâs so obvious Iâm your number one,â Charli bellows across Easyfunâs blaring synths. Â
Unwittingly, the clip kicked off one of the most drastic shifts in public perception of a politician in recent memory. It also cemented a clear restructuring of the contemporary pop music hierarchy.Â
While Harris may not have always been peopleâs ânumber oneâ choice for the top of the Democratic ticket, pop music-driven memes have helped her ascend to that position in the minds of left-leaning online communities as she prepares to officially become the 2024 Democratic presidential nominee at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, IL (Aug. 19-22). Along the road to the convention, the Harris campaign has tapped Megan Thee Stallion and Bon Iver for rally performances, used BeyoncĂ© and Kendrick Lamarâs âFreedomâ as their official campaign song, and adopted the aesthetic of Charli XCXâs Brat album â which prompted a hilarious explainer segment on CNN. Pop music has never been more ingrained in U.S. politics â and itâs giving real weight to the voices of Americaâs youngest and newest voters.Â
Amid several ongoing global catastrophes, the climate crisis and the fight to codify a womanâs right to choose, the country has been understandably shrouded in a dark cloud of tension and anxiety going into November. Add an assassination attempt on former President Trump on a Sunday afternoon and President Biden shockingly ending his re-election bid on the one that followed, and youâre left with an electorate that exists in the context of realityâs best attempt at recreating Shonda Rhimesâ most ridiculous Scandal storylines. Â
According to an October 2023 study from Tuftâs Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning and Engagement, Gen Z (ages 18-27 in 2024) boasts 41 million eligible voters, including 8.3 million newly eligible voters who have aged into the electorate since the 2022 midterm election. Those are election-shifting numbers, especially in a race as close as this yearâs seems headed for. The youth vote is vital â itâs an area where Biden was significantly lagging â and those young voters have completely shifted the election landscape by processing their fears, anxiety and general amusement at the sheer absurdity of the times through this summerâs most culturally resonant pop releases. Â
Howâd they do it? In part because, if music is the universal language, memes â especially music-driven memes â are the Gen Z language.
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As much as Brat revels in cheeky self-aggrandizement and party-girl reflections, Charliâs latest LP also grapples with some intensely personal ponderings. While her ruminations on potential motherhood, her position in the music industry and her personal grief arenât necessarily the things causing the American electorate anxiety, her songs provide younger listeners a way to work through their own emotional anguish as it relates to their futures. Chappell Roanâs breakout album The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess has allowed for similar impact on its young fans. Roanâs debut album explores myriad moods, but the emotional turmoil of growing up as a lesbian in a small Midwestern town looms over the entire record â perhaps a much more real analog to the way Gen Z feels heading into November, as they chart paths for themselves in a country that feels increasingly detached from their concerns, from abortion rights to gun control.Â
Not only are Brat and Midwest Princess driven by anxiety, but theyâre also arguably pop cultureâs two defining albums of the summer of 2024. With constantly recirculated lyrics like âBumpin thatâ and âShould we do a little line/ Should we do a little key,â Brat finds Charli XCX at the peak of her cultural pull. The album coverâs funky shade of green has become the unofficial hue of the year, Pantone be damned. In the same week Brat became the highest-peaking album of Charliâs career, reaching No. 3 on the Billboard 200, Chappellâs record reached the chartâs top 10 for the first time, eight months after its October 2023 release. Assisted by a coveted opening slot on Olivia Rodrigoâs Guts World Tour and a stage show that effortlessly converted fans at every festival she appeared at, Chappell launched six Billboard Hot 100 hits off Midwest Princess â nearly half of the album! â from âMy Kink Is Karmaâ (No. 91) to âHot to Go!â (No. 17). In July, Roan also earned her first career top ten hit with the standalone single âGood Luck, Babe!â (which has since climbed to No. 6).Â
To varying degrees, pop music has always reflected the general mood of the population. Through the cultural and commercial success of Brat and Midwest Princess, Gen Z has helped significant pockets of the left-leaning Internet channel their political anxiety into a somewhat ironic, but still largely genuine, embrace of a new candidate suddenly offering an escape from the absolutely miserable election cycle that the Biden-Trump rematch seemed to promise â and the Harris campaign has taken notice. Â
In its first post since turning the official Biden campaign TikTok account into â@kamalahq,â the Harris campaign used Roanâs âFemininomenonâ to highlight her as a fresh, new alternative to Trump. The day after Harris officially announced her election bid, the X account for campaign headquarters rebranded to fit the Brat aesthetic. In the words of Charli herself, âKamala IS brat.â In an age where politicians are who we paint them to be, Gen Z has used this summerâs biggest albums to fashion Harris into a candidate that they can truly throw their support behind â whether itâs solely because of the draw of the memes or because anything seems preferable to the looming threat of a second Trump presidency. Â
Instead of trying to create an image for Harris, her campaign has let Gen Z create an image for her, simultaneously reasserting itself as a key voting bloc and reshaping the relationship between pop music and politics. In this way, Charli and Chappell have helped cement a new standard for era-defining pop stardom. Neither of them has seen a single from their most recent albums reach the Hot 100âs top 10, and their songs arenât exactly pulling multi-week reigns at No. 1 across different radio formats, either. Rather, theyâve captivated the zeitgeist through fresh idiosyncratic aesthetics and outward rejection of traditional pop fame. After all, part of Chappellâs appeal is her explicit disdain for her ever-rising notoriety, and Charli preceded Brat with an album that cheekily satirized what the ultra-commercialized version of herself would look and sound like.Â
As the electorate continues to welcome large swaths of new, younger voters, a shuffling has begun to occur in the pop music hierarchy. While artists like BeyoncĂ© and Kendrick Lamar continue to enrapture younger listeners â both scored culture-shifting Hot 100 chart-toppers this year with âTexas Hold âEmâ and âNot Like Us,â respectively â they also now appeal to a broader range of voters (age-wise) than they have in past presidential election cycles. Lamar, of course, made appearances on former President Barack Obamaâs oft-memed summer and year-end playlists, and visited him in the Oval Office back in 2015 â but the years since the Obama administration have cast the rapper in a slightly different role. No longer an exclusively âhipâ pick to attract young voters, Lamar, by virtue of his age and material, can reach scores of voters across age demographics.
The same goes for Queen Bey, who was riding high on the success of her Hot 100-topping âSingle Ladiesâ when she performed at Obamaâs first Inaugural Ball in 2009. In the years since, sheâs performed the National Anthem at Obamaâs second Inauguration (2013), played âFormationâ at a rally for then-Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton (2016) and took to her Instagram page to back President Biden (2020). At this point in her career, BeyoncĂ© isnât directly competing with flashy, younger stars like Roan â sheâs something of an elder stateswoman at the intersection of pop culture, music and electoral politics. Sheâs still admired by the countryâs youngest eligible voters, but she also commands the respect of Millennials, Gen Xers, and even some Boomers. Â
In this way, âFreedom,â her and Lamarâs 2016 Grammy-nominated anthem, was a natural pick for Harrisâ official campaign song. The song has roots in the mid-2010s Black Lives Matter era, boasts a pair of artists whose blending of politics and music have been lauded (and critiqued for years) and gives the Harris campaign a way to temper the hyper-contemporary feel of their other musical choices. And, for what itâs worth, Bey and Kendrick â two respected Black music titans â are valuable and logical musical picks for a Black candidate whose campaign (at least at the very beginning) was largely defined by the white pop stars of the moment.
Then, thereâs the Taylor Swift question. Under a special microscope this cycle because of her silence during past elections (sheâs since expressed her regret for remaining mum in 2016 and endorsed the Democrats during the 2018 midterms), Ms. Americana has all eyes on her as November draws nearer. The historic success of her globe-conquering Eras Tour has packed out stadiums across the country. But will she remind her fans to vote? Will she tell them who to vote for? It shouldnât really matter what Swiftâs voting stance is, but it does â especially as political fandom becomes more and more insidious. Â
The Internet drives pop stardom and political fandom in the same way; choices are made on the basis of how invested a person is in a pop starâs or politicianâs brand. In the same way that Swifties buy the umpteenth version of The Tortured Poets Department because they want to be as immersed in her brand as possible, Bidenâs most steadfast supporters â who often cited their respect for his 50-year political career and him being an âhonorable manâ â refused to waver, despite polls showing that his appearance on the ticket could very well cost the Democrats the election. From pop stars to politicians, brand loyalty is the crux of how people engage with most things in America right now, and the 2024 election cycle is already solidifying that. Yes, there are millions of voters that are fully aware of the issues they are most passionate about â namely, gun control, abortion rights, the Gaza conflict and inflation â but the voices of voters who struggle with interacting with politicians solely as public servants who owe them (and not the other way around) are often just as loud, if not louder. The support the Harris-Walz ticket has been able to accrue is undoubtedly impressive, especially because, at press time, the ticket doesnât even have a platform readily available on their official website.Â
In the days leading up to Harris officially taking over the top of the ticket, memes overlaying her trademark cackle over pop songs with laughing intros/outros (think: BeyoncĂ©âs âDrunk in Loveâ or Keshaâs âBlowâ) took over TikTok and Twitter. On TikTok, an AI-generated BeyoncĂ© song that turns Harrisâ âcoconutâ anecdote into an original track plays in over 1,000 videos. Inspired by the âWin With Black Womenâ Zoom calls that have helped raise millions of dollars for the Harris campaign â and spawned similar calls amongst other identity groups â Swifties launched an @Swifties4Kamala X account that touts over 53,000 followers. Some Swifties have even (jokingly) inquired if they can use a VPN to vote in the election from outside of the U.S. Harrisâ recently announced running mate â Minnesota Governor Tim Walz â has already been branded as the âMidwestern princeâ (Chappell) to Harrisâ âbratâ (Charli). In the days since Walz joined the ticket, a camo cap with a design nodding to a similar product from Chappellâs online store appeared on the official Harris-Walz campaign website. Call it the Stan Twitterfication of U.S. politics, a reimagining of the cult of personality.Â
Naturally, part of Stan Twitterfication is projecting entire identities onto people; hours after the announcement of Walz as Harrisâ running mate, American activist David Hogg took to X to write, âTim Walz 100000% stands at his doorstep when itâs raining and says âwe needed this.ââ The day prior, another X user wrote: âWalz strikes me as the type of VP candidate who runs on a platform of making sure everyone knows how to safely change their own spare tire, and I love him for that.âÂ
Whether or not these sentiments are rooted in the reality of Walzâs character is irrelevant. Whatâs interesting â maybe even damning â is that the kneejerk reaction is to romanticize Walz as a sympathetic and easily understood character rather than assessing his record as a public servant. Itâs not that far removed from conversations around pop musicians centering their likability and relatability over their musical, vocal and instrumental prowess. But thatâs the name of the game now â and the Harris campaign is smartly leaning into it. From the concept of a politician being âsomeone you can knock back a few beers withâ to the proliferation of online political memes post-2016, this has long been the case in politics. In this election, the scale has increased and feels uniquely defined by and catered to Gen Z for the very first time.Â
As the Harris-Walz ticket gears up for the home stretch of the 2024 election cycle, theyâll likely continue their pop music-informed strategy. Itâs not a bad choice, but itâs one they should exercise with caution â especially because theyâve already selected songs that could have invited a bit more controversy than they have so far. Everyone wants a piece of Brat, but itâs objectively mind-boggling to watch the presidential campaign for a major American political party adopt the aesthetic of a British artistâs coke-positive album. Chappell Roan is the yearâs breakout pop star, but using her music for the campaignâs TikTok was a bold choice considering Roan declined an invitation to perform at the White Houseâs Pride celebration this year, citing her disapproval of the administrationâs stance on the conflict in Gaza and transgender rights. Â
In that vein, âFreedomâ is a pitch-perfect anthem on paper, but in the context of both BeyoncĂ©âs and Lamarâs respective silence on global Black liberation, as it relates to Gaza, it rings a bit hollow. Thereâs also the matter of Lamarâs unavoidably massive âNot Like Usâ â which Harris spoofed during a BET Awards commercial preceding her candidacy (June 30) â a Drake diss that has thrust conversations around regionality, race, ethnicity and cultural preservation into the spotlight, as Harrisâ own race has become the subject of asinine questioning by her opponents.Â
If they intend to continue down this path, the Harris-Walz team needs to have their finger on the cultural pulse, but they canât make it too obvious that they do â thatâs when the pandering becomes unbearable. However the Democratic ticket proceeds with this race, their moves for the next few months are sure to further solidify the fact that politics is the new pop music. Ultimately, theyâll likely have to maneuver this campaign like a pop album rollout to secure the âFemininomenonâ that theyâre promising.
The Jewish Women for Kamala Harris will welcome an A-list guest at its group call this week: Barbra Streisand, who announced Monday (Aug. 12) plans to join the latest virtual gathering of voters supporting the vice presidentâs 2024 campaign for president. Described as âthousands of pumped up Jewish women ready to get Kamala elected,â the […]