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Adam Scott Shared His Horrific COVID Experience And Offered A Word Of Advice: ‘Get The Vaccine’

In the past two years, we’ve heard a lot of COVID horror stories. Like, a lot a lot. And each and every one of them has succeeded in keeping me far away from crowds, masked up, and happily vaccinated. As it turns out, hearing about what people have gone through is a powerful tool in encouraging folks to be safe and get vaccinated — so we’re pretty thankful Parks and Rec actor Adam Scott has taken to Twitter to share his own unfortunate experience with the virus.

On August 11, Scott posted a tweet from his personal account detailing his experience with COVID vs. his experience with getting his vaccinations. According to Scott, there is “no comparison” between the two:

Of course, Scott isn’t the only celebrity who’s come forward with their own COVID horror stories in hopes that people will take the virus as seriously as they should. Back in May, musician Pink revealed she was diagnosed with COVID. According to Pink, she was so terrified by her symptoms she spent part of her time in bed rewriting her will and calling friends to remind them she loved them.

On a recent press tour for her upcoming Marvel film Eternals, actress Salma Hayek also shared her own horrifying experience with the virus and how she elected to stay at home once things got bad because she’d “rather die at home.” Hayek also stated that she still hasn’t regained the energy she had prior to the illness.

In addition to Pink and Hayek, Tom Hanks, Khloe Kardashian, Hugh Grant, and even Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson have all come forward and shared their COVID diagnoses. The late Larry King was also diagnosed and subsequently hospitalized for COVID mere weeks before his death back in January.

While the rising number of folks who have been fully vaccinated in the United States provides us with some hope, there’s still a sizable portion of the country who haven’t gotten their jabs. Here’s hoping celebrities like Scott using their respective platforms to stop the spread of misinformation and promote vaccination leads to more people lining up for their shots. If not, I mean, I don’t know about you all but I’d really love to see a concert sometime this decade, so maybe consider that.

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Donald Trump Issued A Random Three Word Statement About Bullies And No One Knows What The Hell It Means

On Wednesday morning, Donald Trump spokesperson Liz Harrington tweeted out a random, three-word statement from the former president that has social media trying to figure out what the heck is even happening. Despite being the messenger, Harrington offered zero context for the statement that simply said “BULLIES NEVER FIGHT!” in all-caps. Instead, she merely captioned it with the word “NEW!” and left it at that.

The only person who had any sort of educated guess at what Trump’s random statement might mean is New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman, who floated the idea that it might be about Andrew Cuomo… somehow?

While others tried to decipher the possible Cuomo connection, if that’s what Trump event meant, others had a field day at the random nature of a former president firing off three-word statements with no context whatsoever. Not to sound cliche, but it was very “old man yells at cloud” energy.

On top of roasting Trump’s random statement, other Twitter users began questioning how Harrington is able to blanket her account with Trump statements considering he’s been banned from the platform indefinitely. It does seem like this approach is a questionable workaround that Twitter should be concerned with considering the former president had his account suspended after the January 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol building. The purpose of the ban was to prevent Trump from being a threat to public safety. Harrington’s posting would seem to fly in the face of that.

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Normani Explains How Being ‘Overlooked’ In Fifth Harmony Affected Her Solo Career

It’s been a few years since smash-hit girl group Fifth Harmony went on hiatus to prioritize solo careers. Members like Camila Cabello were able to find instant solo success while others did not have the same opportunities. After leaving to focus on her own music and upcoming solo album, Normani has spent much time reflecting on her time in the group. She now says she felt “overlooked” while in Fifth Harmony, which has impacted her solo career.

Normani recently sat down with Allure for their September 2021 cover interview, where the singer got candid about her solo career’s trajectory. After describing how she felt “overlooked” as a part of Fifth Harmony, Normani says she now wants to show off her versatility. “I didn’t get to really sing in the group. I felt like I was overlooked,” Normani said. “That idea has been projected on me. Like, this is your place.” She continued that she aims to prove them wrong with her new music:

“My purpose in this work that I do is for other people that feel like they have Black women figured out. There’s so many layers to us, there’s so many textures, there’s so much that we’re capable of doing. Yes, I can throw ass. But I can also give you a proper eight-count, and I can do ballet, and I can do contemporary dance. If I want to sing this pop ballad, then you’re going to love it! While you see my Black face!”

Read Normani’s full conversation with Allure here.

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Becky Hammon On The WNBA Comissioner’s Cup, And The Kind Of Team She Wants To Coach

Picking one word to describe anyone is hard, picking one to describe Becky Hammon is next to impossible, but the closest has to be expansive. Like staring out at a horizon ringed with heat-hazed hills, clouds boiling with weather rolling in from one direction and blue skies stretching out in the other. Expansive, as in something active, acute, and promising in every direction.

Hammon, who is coming off her 7th season as assistant coach with the San Antonio Spurs and out of one of the more public head coaching searches, put on by the Portland Trail Blazers, is also a longtime champion of her athletic alma matter, the WNBA. As a 6-time All-Star who still might be better known for her perennial cool and incisive presence at the sideline of NBA games, Hammon also has a keen understanding of visibility, and where it tends to count more.

The WNBA’s inaugural Commissioner’s Cup Championship game, a matchup featuring two of the league’s best in the Seattle Storm and Connecticut Sun, airs via Amazon Prime Video in a first of its kind exclusive on August 12th. The Cup, a new in-season tournament created to raise interest in the WNBA throughout it’s regular season, will allow anyone with a Prime membership to stream the game and is another example of the WNBA’s comfort in experimenting for the sake of getting the game in front of new audiences.

“For the WNBA to be on a platform like Prime Video is a big deal,” Hammon says over the phone. “And I think the visibility of the game has a lot to do with the growth and the popularity of the game.”

It’s on the note of the Commissioner’s Cup that the conversation shifts to women’s accolades, specifically, a recent thread of all the titles Sue Bird has collected in one of the most storied careers in all of pro-sports. There are 39, and probably counting if you take into account Bird’s still accelerating career, but the surprising (and not so surprising) thing was how many people seemed to have no idea the extend of Bird’s achievements. Hammon, who often talks about moving the needle when it comes to recognition of women’s accomplishments in and outside of sports, chooses to look at it from a perspective of progress.

“The fact that people are talking about it, the fact that we’re having conversations is a positive. And the fact that it’s started to become visible to people to appreciate it more and not just from men, but other women, appreciating what these women have been doing for years and years,” Hammon says, adding, “Outside of sports, I mean they’re CEOs, they’re COO, they’re leading surgical teams, they’re leading platoons.”

From where she’s looking at it the needle is moving, because women are often the ones recognizing and holding up the successes of other women. Her own success, namely in gaining increasing notoriety for her name being tied to head coaching openings across the NBA, sits on the same double-edged sword of being one of the most qualified and accomplished professionals in the league whose qualifications tend to be viewed as less directly applicable, because her being hired as a head coach will inevitably become a heightened and scrutinized first rather than what it would be: the best person being hired for the job.

When Hammon’s name was floated by the Blazers as being in consideration for their new head coach, and was uttered again by Neil Olshey at Chauncy Billups’s introductory press conference in a kind of patronizing “thanks for coming out”, the message seemed anything but hopeful. But for Hammon, it was a step forward in the same race she’s been in her whole life and one she recently said she’s felt a step behind in since it started.

Asked how, or if she’s grown comfortable with that proverbial starting line being set behind the people she’s gone up against, and Hammon chuckles.

“Well, it is what it is, right? To sit there and say, ‘I have been behind in basically every race I’ve ever gotten into,’ it’s not that you ever get used to it,” she says. “I never like it.”

She acknowledges that it’s precisely that feeling that has built up a resiliency and toughness in her over the years, essentially since childhood.

“It adds a certain element of just a challenge, which I thoroughly enjoy. And I wouldn’t change it. I wouldn’t change it because,” she pauses, “the lessons that I’ve learned throughout these races or successes or failures, or however you want to frame it, has made me, me, and has put me in a position now where, you know, I’m sitting in front of Jody Allen, like I’m not complaining about the starting point. I’ll get in every race and do my best and whatever happens, happens. But to me, the real failure is not trying, not ever getting in the race.”

The race for head coaching jobs in the NBA can also feel like a perpetually cyclical and insular one, with front offices of teams adjusting the lanes to better fit someone it often seems they already have in mind. So much has been made of what a team wants, and whether Hammon fits that, but what is it that she would want, ultimately, at the end of that race?

“Support from the organization, support from the community. You’ve got to build a culture where people enable other people to be great. And you help that by everybody jumping in and helping wherever you can help,” she says, on what it is she wants out of the role of head coach. “I’m somebody who’s leadership style is very relationship oriented in the sense that, I want to know the guy’s stories. I want to spend time with them. I want to get to know them as people, because I want to coach the whole person.”

To Hammon, the role of head coach, the way that she sees it, has to go way beyond the floor. There is a responsibility that comes in being a driving force in the lives of the players she’d be coaching, specifically when it comes to their mental health.

“I don’t want to just coach the athlete. I think that’s one thing that professional sports in general, and we’re starting to call more attention to it, but the mental health stuff we do, we go to great extremes to take care of these guys’ bodies,” Hammon says. “And the most important thing gets neglected and that’s their mind and their emotions and their experiences.”

Hammon was at the Spurs Summer League team’s first game this week, watching from the stands instead of stalking up and down the sideline as she has since her first Summer League head coaching stint in 2015. The last time she coached in Vegas, pre-pandemic, she notes that “Pop really didn’t want me to do it” — “He actually has not wanted me to coach it for the last few years”, she laughs — and that while it’s a growth opportunity for younger coaches to develop, it still holds a prominent part in her heart for the talent, energy and opportunities that it represents for so many hopeful players.

“The hunger of these young players, and guys that are trying to get into the league, there’s just such a purity of competitiveness and try-hard factor that is just really enjoyable to watch that I think Summer League really brings out in guys. I think you feel it when you watch,” Hammon says. “You got a bunch of guys that are really battling for their dream. Their dream’s in the balance, teeter-tottering. And their try-hard factor, and their care factor, really exudes during these games.”

It’s that energy that she circles back to in talking about what she wants out of a head coaching job, because Hammon’s expansiveness comes from a well of determination and doggedness, over anything else.

“We have all these analytics about numbers and areas of the floor, but if there was an analytical test to tell me your competitiveness, your resiliency, your ability to handle stress and pressure, to block out outside noise, to focus, to compete on a night in and night out basis — those are really the markers that I’m really interested in as a coach,” Hammon says.

“Going into these interviews, you asked me what I want?” She says quickly, her voice gaining momentum in its surety. “I want competitors. Because I know you’re going to compete wherever you might be on a Monday night in the NBA on game 64, where nobody’s paying attention, competitors go in and do their job because that’s who they are. That’s how they’re wired.”

She knows, because she’s wired the same. It’s less a super power than it is a brutal kind of honesty, to take failure and disappointment and convert it into perspective, and the team she’d be standing in front of, and ultimately behind, has to have that same transformative skill.

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The Lakers Are Reportedly ‘Considering’ Isaiah Thomas For A Roster Spot

After trading for Russell Westbrook, the Los Angeles Lakers have spent free agency trying to find the best possible bargains on the market to fill out the roster as they are already well over the luxury tax and only have minimums at their disposal to add players to their roster after using their mid-level on Kendrick Nunn.

Many of their signings have been former Lakers, as Dwight Howard, Wayne Ellington, Kent Bazemore, and Trevor Ariza will all be back in L.A. for another stint. They’ve also added Carmelo Anthony for a long-awaited teaming up with LeBron James, but as it stands now, the Lakers have just 12 players on their roster (plus a pair of two-way players). That means there are still three roster spots to fill (although it wouldn’t be a surprise for them to leave one open for a buyout player later) as training camp approaches. With two undrafted rookies on two-ways, one would expect those spots to go to more veteran help, and another (briefly) former Laker has caught their eye.

Isaiah Thomas has spent his summer lighting up the pro-am circuit, most recently scoring 81 at the Crawsover in Seattle, proving that he’s not just healthy but is starting to feel like his game is rounding back into form. According to Marc Stein, Thomas (who has had some interest from the Celtics as well) is on the list of targets the Lakers are considering for those final roster spots on a minimum.

Adding a bit of fuel to that report was a tweet from LeBron offering some love to IT on his journey back.

The two played together briefly in Cleveland after the Kyrie Irving trade, as Thomas was still dealing with his hip injury, and Thomas was eventually sent to the Lakers from the Cavs in a trade that season. A reunion could be in order, as the Lakers could add Thomas as their third point guard behind Westbrook and Nunn. Whether Thomas fits the bill as the best possible option is a decision for Rob Pelinka and company to make, but it would certainly add another big name to a Lakers roster full of them.

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SNX DLX: Featuring Todd Snyder New Balances, The Latest Dunks, & Travis Scott’s Fragment Design Jordan 1

Welcome back to SNX DLX, our weekly roundup of the best sneakers to hit the market. We’ve got to hand it to Nike, they’re the only sneaker brand that has ever come close to completely dominating our roundup. This week they snagged five of our seven selections; a feat Adidas, Yeezy, New Balance, and Puma will probably never pull off. That’s impressive, but it’s still not a perfect week so try harder Nike!

Aside from the Swoosh, a few more picks caught our eye this time around, including a Todd Snyder New Balance link-up and Off-White, making its SNX DLX debut. But if you’re looking for a single release to win the week, we’re going to have to give it to Travis Scott, which is probably the reason you’re here if you’re not a regular SNX reader. Let’s dive in.

Todd Snyder New Balance 327 Farmer’s Market

Todd Snyder

Anytime a sneaker designer takes left-field inspiration, I’m instantly sold. So I’m loving this New York Farmer’s Market-inspired three-pack from Todd Snyder and New Balance. Utilizing the New Balance 327 (arguably the brand’s best silhouette) the Farmer’s Market pack drops in three colorways inspired by the colors of wheat, pineapple, and pomegranate, each with a unique tongue icon that matches the color’s food group — grains, fruit, and vegetables. I mean, pineapples and pomegranates are both fruits, but I’m not going to hold it against Todd Snyder.

The 327 features suede paneling over a mesh base, make this sneaker relatively light on the feet and breathable while keeping in line with its summer-celebrating design. Each sneaker features a split color scheme with inverted colors on the opposing shoe. If we had to pick a favorite, we’re going pineapple all the way, baby!

The Todd Snyder New Balance 327 Farmer’s Market set is out now for a retail price of $150, pick up a pair exclusively at Todd Snyder’s online store or in-person at the Madison Park Todd Snyder store.

Todd Snyder
Todd Snyder
Todd Snyder

Off-White 5.0

HBX

Generally, when we’re talking about Off-White products on SNX it’s in relation to a Nike collaboration, but this time around we’re actually shouting out a product released directly by the Off-White label. Congratulations, Virgil Abloh (as if he was waiting for our approval)! The low top 5.0 features a white textile upper with leather paneling, suede mudguards, and an asymmetric design on the sneaker’s tongue with a zebra-like marbled black and white zip tie to round out the design.

The Off-White 5.0 is out now for a retail price of $433. Pick up a pair at HBX or other Off-White retailers.

HBX
HBX

Nike Dunk Low Seoul

Nike

Dropping as a South Korean market exclusive, and available worldwide through the power of the internet, the Nike Dunk Low Seoul borrows the colors of the South Korean flag for a dope Dunk make-up that combines black leather paneling over a bright white upper with an eye-catching red wraparound swoosh and a blue outsole and heel tab. The sneaker’s right pair inverts the heel tab, outsole, and swoosh colors.

Since the sneaker is a tribute to its market, Nike didn’t just stop at borrowing the flag’s colors, they’ve also swapped out their own iconic Nike branding at the heel with Hangul. I mean, it still reads Nike, but it’s a nice touch for sneaker collectors looking for yet another reason to buy another Dunk.

The Nike Dunk Low Seoul I is set to drop on August 12th for a retail price of $110. Pick up a pair via the Nike South Korea webstore or aftermarket sites like StockX.

Nike
Nike

Air Jordan 1 High Seafoam

Nike

Another week, another women’s size Jordan exclusive, you love to see it! Nike has been making a strong effort to show support for its previously ignored WMNS size wearing demographic and we’re pretty much at the point where this year has brought more notable WMNS-sized sneakers than anything else. This Seafoam iteration of the Jordan 1 is fire, with cool minty leather panels over a bright white base and orange accented laces that pull the whole design together.

We’re going to call it now, this is the dopest Jordan drop of the summer.

The Air Jordan 1 High Seafoam is set to drop on August 12th for a retail price of $170. Pick up a pair via the Nike SNKRS app at 7:00 AM local time.

Nike
Nike

Travis Scott x Fragment Design x Air Jordan 1 Low

Nike

Two Travis Scott sneaker drops in a single month? Couple that with a matching apparel release as well as a brand of weed and it’s starting to make us wonder if La Flame even makes music anymore. Either way, we’re not complaining, look at this thing! It borrows the same color scheme as last week’s high-top iteration and features that custom backward over-sized Swoosh, but this one features black toe paneling as well as an off-white midsole and matching sail laces.

Like last week’s collaboration, this one is also coming straight out of Hiroshi Fujiwara’s Fragment Design, which means you should definitely expect triple Cactus Jack, Jordan, and Fragment Design branding at the heel. It sounds crowded, but they make it work.

The Travis Scott x Fragment Design x Air Jordan 1 Low is set to drop on August 13th for a retail price of $150. Pick up a pair at 7:00 AM local time via the Nike SNKRS app. Good luck! If you miss out on the official drop be sure to pick up a pair at GOAT.

Nike
Nike

Air Jordan 1 High Pollen

Nike

There is no reason why we should all go crazy over a simple black and gold Jordan 1, and yet, we can’t stop staring at the Air Jordan 1 Pollen. Our question is, why doesn’t Nike always have colorways this dope permanently stocked? Why make this a limited release that so much of us are likely to miss out on when we hit the Nike SNKRS app? Sometimes I wonder if Nike is afraid of money (they obviously aren’t).

The Pollen features University Yellow paneling over a dark black base. There isn’t much to say here, it’s a simple color swap, but it looks so damn good.

The Air Jordan 1 High Pollen is set to drop on August 14th for a retail price of $170. Pick up a pair via the Nike SNKRS app at 7:00 am local time, or pick up a pair at GOAT or Flight Club.

Nike
Nike

Nike Air Max 95 Smoke Grey

Nike

If you’re constantly on the hunt for new Nike’s that nobody else is rocking, I’m going to let you in on a sneakerhead secret. The best colorways come out of Japan. Don’t believe us? Ask yourself if you’ve seen an Air Max 95 this dope all year. The answer is no. Featuring vintage air max branding on the tongue with cherry blossom insoles and reflective detailing throughout, this Smoke Grey iteration of the Air Max 95 oozes ‘90s vibes and is a must-cop for all Air Max heads looking for something a little different.

The Nike Air Max 95 is set to drop on August 15th for a retail price of $190. Pick up a pair via the Nike Japan webstore.

Nike
Nike

Disclaimer: While all of the products recommended here were chosen independently by our editorial staff, Uproxx may receive payment to direct readers to certain retail vendors who are offering these products for purchase.

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Lil Nas X Discusses The Stigmas Bottoms Face After Coming Out As One On ‘Holiday’

Lil Nas X got real about a sexual preference of his on “Holiday” when he rapped, “Ayy, can I pop sh*t? / I might bottom on the low, but I top sh*t.” Now, the rapper, one of music’s most visible members of the LGBTQ community, has spoken out about being a bottom in a new Variety interview, in which he discusses some stigmas bottoms face.

He said, “I feel like even within the gay community, people see bottoming as a joke or something, and somebody who bottoms is beneath a top or something. The idea of that, I feel like, is a form of misogyny between men, you know? It doesn’t make any sense, and people attribute certain traits to whichever sexual position you decide to take. A lot of people say, ‘It’s just a joke.’ But all jokes have truths to them.”

Elsewhere, he speaks about how fame has impacted his love life, saying, “Before fame, I didn’t really have a sexual life besides one person or two. It’s definitely made things a lot more interesting, to say the least. I’ve had some good boyfriends, some bad ones. A lot of them emotionally unavailable and whatnot. A lot of insecurity between them. But yeah, I found somebody special now.”

Check out the full feature here.

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‘The Other Two’ (A Good Show) Makes Molly Shannon’s Character A Superstar In Its Season 2 Trailer

The HBO Max original series The Other Two is back for a second season, and this time around, Molly Shannon is getting a taste of that sweet superstar fame. In the Season 2 trailer, Shannon’s character Pat Dubek now has a hit daytime talk show and has become the family’s top dog following the announcement that her 14-year-old son and pop star sensation “ChaseDream” is officially retired. That leaves the sister and brother team of Brooke and Cary, once again, cast off to the side. Judging by the trailer, they’re not exactly thrilled with that predicament and are willing to do whatever it takes to not be “the other two.” (Get it? Like the name of the show.)

Here’s the official synopsis:

Your favorite chaotic brother (Drew Tarver) and sister (Heléne Yorke) duo is back for a second season… and so is their mom. Pat Dubek (Molly Shannon) is basking in her newfound limelight as a daytime talk show host, thanks to the continued fame of her youngest son, Chase Dubek (Case Walker), who’s new enrolled at NYU. Cary finds himself the host of a niche gay web-series, Brooke switches “clients” (hint: it’s her mom), and Streeter Peters (Ken Marino) gets closer than ever to the Dubek clan as a manager-and-maybe-more.

Recurring cast includes Brandon Scott Jones as “Curtis,” Gideon Glick as “Jess,” Josh Segarra as “Lance” and Wanda Sykes as “Shuli.” But the big story here is Molly Shannon getting the appreciation she truly deserves for being a comedic powerhouse. Between this more prominent storyline in one good show, and her scene-stealing appearance on The White Lotus (another good show), it’s always nice to see Shannon get some primo screentime. The lady doesn’t miss.

The Other Two Season 2 premieres August 26 on HBO Max.

(Via HBO Max)

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Est Gee’s ‘5500 Degree’ Video Is A Massive Flex Featuring Lil Baby, 42 Dugg And Rylo

Steadily dropping new singles all summer, rising Louisville rapper Est Gee has been on a run lately with track like “Riata Dada,” “Price Tag,” and “Capitol 1,” all of which appeared on his Bigger Than Life Or Death project from last month. That album also cracked the Billboard 200 chart, hitting No. 7, and dith momentum like that, all anyone would expect Est Gee to do is keep dropping new music. Today, that’s exactly what he’s done — although, if he’s going to be meeting up with Jay Z to put in work at the studio, he better come alone.

His latest single “5500 Degrees” is a study in the art of the posse cut, with Lil Baby, 42 Dugg, and Rylo all joining in. The video is a massive flex with stacks of cash everywhere, lots of fancy cars, diamond encrusted chains, and all the rappers partying together, celebrating their abundance. The track is a clever update of Juvenile’s 1998 classic “400 Degreez,” and is just another example of how ’90s nostalgia is finding its way into hip-hop and the pop mainstream of late. All the rappers deliver on their verses, but Lil Baby’s final, rapid-fire effort is definitely worth sticking around for. Watch the video above and look out for more new music from Est Gee coming soon.

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Indigo De Souza Shares A Cathartic New Track, ‘Real Pain,’ Featuring A Cacophony Of Anonymous Screams

Just a couple of short weeks out from releasing her sophomore album, Any Shape You Take, Asheville-based singer/songwriter Indigo De Souza has powerful new single for us. Titled “Real Pain,” the song layers in literal yelps, cries, and screams from a chorus of anonymous voices — ones that she invited fans to send in via voice memo. The result is a highly cathartic track that captures the type of frustration many of us have been experiencing over the last year and a half.

“‘Real Pain’ is about facing grief and loss and having compassion for yourself in that space,” De Souza said of the song in a release. “It’s about learning to be unafraid of experiencing a full spectrum of emotion, and welcoming the way it teaches you and changes you.

“For one of the sections in the song, I put out an invitation for people to anonymously send me voice memos of ‘screams, yells, and anything else.’ I layered the voices on top of one another to embody a kind of collective experience. I felt an incredible catharsis hearing their voices stacked with mine. While we live such separate lives, we are connected in the way that we all navigate immense amounts of pain and love and fear in our bodies every day. It can be hard to be a person! It’s okay to acknowledge that sometimes. It’s okay to feel things fully and to allow others space to do the same.”

Listen to “Real Pain” above.

Any Shape You Take is out 8/27 via Saddle Creek. Pre-order it here.