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Elon Musk Is Now Trying To Haggle With Stephen King Over The Price Of A Blue Checkmark On Twitter

Here’s an idea: maybe don’t haggle with the King of Horror on Halloween, of all days. New Twitter overlord Elon Musk must have missed this memo (he was probably busy firing someone or spreading baseless conspiracy theories).

In response to Twitter potentially charging $20 a month for verified blue checkmarks, author Stephen King tweeted, “$20 a month to keep my blue check? F*ck that, they should pay me. If that gets instituted, I’m gone like Enron.” He’s been waiting 20 years to use “gone like Enron.” Anyway, King’s tweet caught the attention of Musk, who pleaded, “We need to pay the bills somehow! Twitter cannot rely entirely on advertisers. How about $8?” He added that “I will explain the rationale in longer form before this is implemented. It is the only way to defeat the bots & trolls,” which is the kind of thing you say when you have no plan to defeat the bots & trolls.

King did not respond to Musk (who changed his Twitter bio to “Twitter Complaint Hotline Operator”), but he did write back to a follower who told him that he could afford $20 a month. “It ain’t the money, it’s the principal of the thing,” he tweeted. The good news: you get a 10 percent discount every time you watch Elon’s Rick and Morty episode.

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BTS Leader RM Is Confirmed To Release A Solo Album Before 2022 Ends

Black Friday is about to be renamed to a new day for BTS’ Army this year.

Following the successful solo releases from BTS members J-Hope and Jin this year, leader RM will be the next member to release a solo project outside of the supergroup.

According to a news hit from Soompi, South Korean broadcasting network JTBC News reported today (November 1), the BTS member would be releasing a solo album on November 25. A source from BigHit Music responded to the report and confirmed the news and added that RM, whose real name is Namjoon, “is currently in preparations.”

RM is the third member to release a solo project this year after J-Hope’s Jack in the Box (July 15) and Jin’s “The Astronaut” (October 28).

However, this isn’t the first time RM has released a solo album. The BTS leader has released two mixtapes in the past: RM (2015) and mono (2018). Just two months ago, the Korean artist collaborated with alternative Korean hip-hop group Balming Tiger for a feature on their single “Sexy Nukim.”

Though there is no further information on the promo schedule, release date, tracklist, and more, fans and followers are now able to mark their calendars and countdown the days until RM’s release.

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Who Are The Openers For Taylor Swift’s ‘The Eras Tour?’

Taylor Swift is heading back out on the road with a newly announced list of 2023 stadium shows in North America. Known as The Eras Tour, it marks Swift’s first round of shows since her massive Reputation tour years ago. She now has six new albums of unplayed songs to choose from, so we already know that the setlist is going to be stacked. Even wilder, Swift is bringing a ton of popular acts on the road with her.

The Eras Tour kicks off next March in Arizona and will continue throughout the summer — before an eventual European leg as well. Swift’s North American shows will feature Paramore, Phoebe Bridgers, Haim, Muna, Gracie Abrams, Beabadoobee, Gayle, Owenn, and Girl In Red.

As Swifties pointed out, a lot of care appears to have gone into selecting these supporting acts. For example, Owenn was a dancer on Swift’s Reputation tour and appeared as the co-star in her music video for “Lover.” He shared his reaction to the news on social media.

Haim and Phoebe Bridgers are also past collaborators with Swift. Bridgers appeared on “Nothing New” from Swift’s Red (Taylor’s Version) and the Haim sisters have been longtime friends of hers — even appearing in her recent Midnights music video for “Bejeweled.”

Verified fan presale for Taylor Swift’s The Eras Tour is currently open on Ticketmaster. Fans will find out if they were accepted to purchase tickets for their selected show date, with tickets available for purchase on November 15 at 10 a.m. local venue time. More information is available here.

View a complete list of dates below.

03/18/2023 — Glendale, AZ @ State Farm Stadium $!
03/25/2023 — Las Vegas, NV @ Allegiant Stadium ~!
04/01/2023 — Arlington, TX @ AT&T Stadium ~%
04/02/2023 — Arlington, TX @ AT&T Stadium ~%
04/15/2023 — Tampa, FL @ Raymond James Stadium ~%
04/22/2023 — Houston, TX @ NRG Stadium ~%
04/28/2023 — Atlanta, GA @ Mercedes-Benz Stadium ~%
04/29/2023 — Atlanta, GA @ Mercedes-Benz Stadium ~%
05/06/2023 — Nashville, TN @ Nissan Stadium &!
05/12/2023 — Philadelphia, PA @ Lincoln Financial Field &!
05/13/2023 — Philadelphia, PA @ Lincoln Financial Field &!
05/19/2023 — Foxborough, MA @ Gillette Stadium &!
05/20/2023 — Foxborough, MA @ Gillette Stadium &!
05/26/2023 — East Rutherford, NJ @ MetLife Stadium &!
05/27/2023 — East Rutherford, NJ @ MetLife Stadium &%
06/02/2023 — Chicago, IL @ Soldier Field #@
06/03/2023 — Chicago, IL @ Soldier Field #@
06/10/2023 — Detroit, MI @ Ford Field #@
06/17/2023 — Pittsburgh, PA @ Acrisure Stadium #@
06/24/2023 — Minneapolis, MN @ U.S. Bank Stadium #@
07/01/2023 — Cincinnati, OH @ Paycor Stadium *%
07/08/2023 — Kansas City, MO @ GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium *%
07/15/2023 — Denver, CO @ Empower Field at Mile High *%
07/22/2023 — Seattle, WA @ Lumen Field ^%
07/29/2023 — Santa Clara, CA @ Levi’s® Stadium ^%
08/04/2023 — Los Angeles, CA @ SoFi Stadium ^@
08/05/2023 — Los Angeles, CA @ SoFi Stadium ^!

~ with Beabadoobee
! with Gayle
# with Girl In Red
% with Gracie Abrams
^ with Haim
* with Muna
@ with Owenn
$ with Paramore
& with Phoebe Bridgers

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Heidi Klum Once Again Proved That She’s The Queen Of Halloween With Her Elaborate (And Unrecognizable) Costume

No one, not Janelle Monáe and especially not Tara Reid, does Halloween like Heidi Klum. Every year, the model and America’s Got Talent judge wears an elaborate (and expensive) costume — in 2019, she was a flesh-eating alien; in 2018, she was Fiona from Shrek (with husband Tom Kaulitz as the titular ogre); in 2009, she was a crow, which maybe hasn’t aged well. What did Klum dress up as this year? She teased the surprise on Halloween morning with a photo on Instagram where she’s wearing nothing but a thong. Sounds like a sexy costume, right? Her costume was not sexy.

Getty Image

Yes, that is Heidi Klum looking like the worm from Freaked.

“I tried to think outside of the box and come up with other things and last year I was thinking, oh, a tree would be really cool, or like, a plant, and then I kind of went from plant to rainworm,” she said. “This is one of the top ones I would say, just because it’s so unusual and so big in size and it’s weird.” The costume took 10 hours to complete, and Klum admitted that it’s “hard for me to move. I don’t really have arms or legs. When I fall over I need someone to help me get back up. I’m kind of stuck in it, you know?”

Klum had to propped up by Kaulitz, who went as a fisherman.

Getty Image
Getty Image

Of course, once she finished walking the red carpet, Klum put on something more comfortable — but left the worm face (which sounds an insult from a ’90s movie) on.

Getty Image

It’s not too late for Heidi Klum to be in Dune 2.

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This is the most important van in NYC… and it’s full of socks.

Homelessness in New York City has reached its highest levels since the Great Depression of the 1930s. Over 50,000 people sleep each night in a shelter, while thousands of others rely on city streets, the subway system and other public locations as spaces to rest.

That’s why this meal (and sock) delivery van is an effective resource for providing aid to those experiencing homelessness in New York City.

Every night of the year, from 7pm to 9:30, the Coalition for the Homeless drives a small fleet of vans to over 25 stops throughout upper and lower Manhattan and in the Bronx. At each stop, adults and families in need can receive a warm meal, a welcoming smile from volunteers, and a fresh, comfy new pair of Bombas socks. Socks may be even more important than you think.

Bombas was founded in 2013 after the discovery that socks were the #1 most requested clothing item at homeless shelters.

Access to fresh, clean socks is often limited for individuals experiencing homelessness—whether someone is living on the street and walking for much of the day, or is unstably housed without reliable access to laundry or storage. And for individuals experiencing or at risk of homelessness —expenses might need to be prioritized for more critical needs like food, medication, school supplies, or gas. Used socks can’t be donated to shelters for hygienic reasons, making this important item even more difficult to supply to those who need it the most.

Bombas offers its consumers durable, long-lasting and comfortable socks, and for every pair of Bombas socks purchased, an additional pair of specially-designed socks is donated to organizations supporting those in need, like Coalition for the Homeless. What started out as a simple collaboration with a few organizations and nonprofits to help individuals without housing security has quickly become a bona fide giving movement. Bombas now has approximately 3,500 Giving Partners nationwide.

Though every individual’s experience is unique, there can frequently be an inherent lack of trust of institutions that want to help—making a solution even more challenging to achieve. “I’ve had people reach out when I’m handing them a pair of socks and their hands are shaking and they’re looking around, and they’re wondering ‘why is this person being nice to me?’” Robbi Montoya—director at Dorothy Day House, another Giving Partner—told Bombas.

Donations like socks are a small way to create connection. And they can quickly become something much bigger. Right now over 1,000 people receive clothing and warm food every night, rain or shine, from a Coalition for the Homeless van. That bit of consistent kindness during a time of struggle can help offer the feeling of true support. This type of encouragement is often crucial for organizations to help those take the next difficult steps towards stability.

This philosophy helped Bombas and its abundance of Giving Partners extend their reach beyond New York City. Over 75 million clothing items have been donated to those who need it the most across all 50 states. Over the years Bombas has accumulated all kinds of valuable statistics, information, and highlights from Giving Partners similar to the Coalition for the Homeless vans and Dorothy Day House, which can be found in the Bombas Impact Report.

In the Impact Report, you’ll also find out how to get involved—whether it’s purchasing a pair of Bombas socks to get another item donated, joining a volunteer group, or shifting the conversation around homelessness to prioritize compassion and humanity.

To find out more, visit BeeBetter.com.

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Yes, Tár Is Real — Real Boring!

The hot topic or mostly joke, on “Film Twitter” (don’t ask) this past week, has been over whether the Todd Field movie Tár, starring Cate Blanchett, is about a real person. The Cut titled their review “No, Lydia Tár Is Not Real,” a nice companion piece for the countless explanations for why you’d have to be an idiot for believing that Lydia Tár was real, facetious jokes claiming she is real, and on and on.

I can understand the impulse — both to wonder if Lydia Tár was a real person, and to play along with the joke. This is a movie that feels like an inside joke by design. It is a bit like a fake biopic, but it also isn’t exactly Pop Star, which dared to have actual jokes. Tár, by contrast, presents milestones in the life of its subject almost exclusively in the form of allusion, supposition, veiled reference, and verbal deflection, making you feel like you’re supposed to know things about this person beyond what the movie is showing you. It’s almost elitist by omission.

The first scene takes the form of a live New Yorker event, in which Adam Gopnik (played by the New Yorker writer, Adam Gopnik) recounts Lydia Tár’s extensive resume — which includes a degree from Harvard, stints conducting orchestras all over the world, a fellowship studying the traditional music of a Peruvian tribe, being the first female conductor of the Berlin Philharmonic, and one of only 15 people ever to complete an EGOT. Gopnik asks her about her life, and she pontificates on subjects like the history of the conductor and the importance of understanding Gustav Mahler’s marriage before conducting his symphonies. On paper, the idea of giving this much weight to a person who gestures with a tiny baton does sound sort of funny; in practice, I felt like I was lost in an impenetrable thicket of esoteric references and vague aphorism. Presumably by design, but also not exactly pleasant.

The next scene is her lunch with Eliot Kaplan (Mark Strong), who manages some kind of charity with which Tár is involved. He peppers her with similar kinds of worshipful questions about music theory and esoterica, and it goes on nearly as long. Together, these two scenes take up almost FORTY-FIVE MINUTES OF SCREEN TIME. Field is clearly world-building here, meticulously constructing a snow globe out of only the most insufferably anodyne NPR segments.

The next scene, undeniably the film’s best, takes place in a class Tár is guest-lecturing at Juilliard. A fidgety student comes up to the stage to volunteer, and his dynamic with Tár gradually evolves from mentor/protege to predator/prey. This after the student, who describes himself as a “BIPOC pansexual” admits that he doesn’t really like Bach because he was a white, cis European. Tár lectures him on not letting identity politics blind him to great art (in so many words) verbally dissecting him like a bug until he finally has had enough and storms off.

Finally, I thought, the movie was getting somewhere. Conflict! Tension! Genuine emotion breaking through the facade! There was a joy to their passive-aggressive sparring, even if their debate was somehow even more arcane and esoteric than you’d imagine an identity politics debate set in the world of music theory to be.

And yet, there’s still something inherently perplexing about the scene; the feeling that Tár is meant to be a send-up of a world that doesn’t exist. Or of a milieu that’s already so minuscule and marginal that parody feels unnecessary. Are there really so many pansexual BIPOC aspiring composers out there being menaced by ruthless lesbian EGOT winners? What do we get out of imagining it? It’s a hat on a hat.

Yet the Juilliard scene is undeniably the best of the film, because at least there’s conflict, and it moves. We get to see Lydia Tár evolve from mentor to predator. The subtext of it is “Lydia Tár is a real piece of work,” which the next almost two hours of movie fail to expand on in any meaningful way. We get mostly allusions and scant references to other reasons Lydia Tár is a real piece of work.

Tár has a sickly long-term partner (Nina Hoss) and an ambiguously-sexual relationship with her assistant (Noemie Merlant, who looks like a younger version of Hoss). There’s a guy at the Berlin philharmonic who she hates and a former student who is angry with her, whom we’re left to infer is a jilted ex, and possibly Tár’s grooming victim. It’s never clear, but because nothing in Tár really is.

The passion for music is something we’re almost never invited to feel. It’s mostly alluded to, a status symbol in the characters’ lives, something they talk and scheme about but so rarely live in. As the old saying goes, “sell the sizzle, not the steak,” and here it feels like Todd Field has filmed the whisper campaign instead of the scandal. I assume people who love this film (many of whom would probably pay to watch Cate Blanchett paint an outhouse, and fair enough) will read this and shout “that’s the point, you dolt!” But to me, it’s emblematic of a movie that’s constantly positioning itself as being different without ever articulating what it is.

Tár‘s final shot, admittedly gorgeous, feels intended to be a crescendo, the final culmination of Lydia Tár’s descent into… obscurity? Artistic irrelevance? Like Mickey Rourke jumping off the top rope into the abyss at the end of The Wrestler. And yet I couldn’t quite enjoy it because I didn’t understand where it was meant to be taking place. What was this event the film so confidently alluded to? Was I meant to know, to understand the cultural significance of it, and how it related to Lydia Tár’s journey as a character?

My reaction to it was a lot like my reaction to much of the rest of the movie: I didn’t get it. Tár feels like a thing that exists solely to be unlike other things. Yet, in the end, it repudiates convention less than it repudiates the sense of joy those conventions evolved to produce. It’s understated to the point that it’s not stating much at all. Or maybe it’s just doing so very quietly and I couldn’t quite hear. It’s the cinematic equivalent of a low talker: you often don’t catch what it’s saying and it’s designed to make you afraid to ask.

‘Tár’ is playing now in theaters nationwide. Vince Mancini is on Twitter. You can read more of his reviews here.

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Yes, Tár Is Real — Real Boring!

The hot topic or mostly joke, on “Film Twitter” (don’t ask) this past week, has been over whether the Todd Field movie Tár, starring Cate Blanchett, is about a real person. The Cut titled their review “No, Lydia Tár Is Not Real,” a nice companion piece for the countless explanations for why you’d have to be an idiot for believing that Lydia Tár was real, facetious jokes claiming she is real, and on and on.

I can understand the impulse — both to wonder if Lydia Tár was a real person, and to play along with the joke. This is a movie that feels like an inside joke by design. It is a bit like a fake biopic, but it also isn’t exactly Pop Star, which dared to have actual jokes. Tár, by contrast, presents milestones in the life of its subject almost exclusively in the form of allusion, supposition, veiled reference, and verbal deflection, making you feel like you’re supposed to know things about this person beyond what the movie is showing you. It’s almost elitist by omission.

The first scene takes the form of a live New Yorker event, in which Adam Gopnik (played by the New Yorker writer, Adam Gopnik) recounts Lydia Tár’s extensive resume — which includes a degree from Harvard, stints conducting orchestras all over the world, a fellowship studying the traditional music of a Peruvian tribe, being the first female conductor of the Berlin Philharmonic, and one of only 15 people ever to complete an EGOT. Gopnik asks her about her life, and she pontificates on subjects like the history of the conductor and the importance of understanding Gustav Mahler’s marriage before conducting his symphonies. On paper, the idea of giving this much weight to a person who gestures with a tiny baton does sound sort of funny; in practice, I felt like I was lost in an impenetrable thicket of esoteric references and vague aphorism. Presumably by design, but also not exactly pleasant.

The next scene is her lunch with Eliot Kaplan (Mark Strong), who manages some kind of charity with which Tár is involved. He peppers her with similar kinds of worshipful questions about music theory and esoterica, and it goes on nearly as long. Together, these two scenes take up almost FORTY-FIVE MINUTES OF SCREEN TIME. Field is clearly world-building here, meticulously constructing a snow globe out of only the most insufferably anodyne NPR segments.

The next scene, undeniably the film’s best, takes place in a class Tár is guest-lecturing at Juilliard. A fidgety student comes up to the stage to volunteer, and his dynamic with Tár gradually evolves from mentor/protege to predator/prey. This after the student, who describes himself as a “BIPOC pansexual” admits that he doesn’t really like Bach because he was a white, cis European. Tár lectures him on not letting identity politics blind him to great art (in so many words) verbally dissecting him like a bug until he finally has had enough and storms off.

Finally, I thought, the movie was getting somewhere. Conflict! Tension! Genuine emotion breaking through the facade! There was a joy to their passive-aggressive sparring, even if their debate was somehow even more arcane and esoteric than you’d imagine an identity politics debate set in the world of music theory to be.

And yet, there’s still something inherently perplexing about the scene; the feeling that Tár is meant to be a send-up of a world that doesn’t exist. Or of a milieu that’s already so minuscule and marginal that parody feels unnecessary. Are there really so many pansexual BIPOC aspiring composers out there being menaced by ruthless lesbian EGOT winners? What do we get out of imagining it? It’s a hat on a hat.

Yet the Juilliard scene is undeniably the best of the film, because at least there’s conflict, and it moves. We get to see Lydia Tár evolve from mentor to predator. The subtext of it is “Lydia Tár is a real piece of work,” which the next almost two hours of movie fail to expand on in any meaningful way. We get mostly allusions and scant references to other reasons Lydia Tár is a real piece of work.

Tár has a sickly long-term partner (Nina Hoss) and an ambiguously-sexual relationship with her assistant (Noemie Merlant, who looks like a younger version of Hoss). There’s a guy at the Berlin philharmonic who she hates and a former student who is angry with her, whom we’re left to infer is a jilted ex, and possibly Tár’s grooming victim. It’s never clear, but because nothing in Tár really is.

The passion for music is something we’re almost never invited to feel. It’s mostly alluded to, a status symbol in the characters’ lives, something they talk and scheme about but so rarely live in. As the old saying goes, “sell the sizzle, not the steak,” and here it feels like Todd Field has filmed the whisper campaign instead of the scandal. I assume people who love this film (many of whom would probably pay to watch Cate Blanchett paint an outhouse, and fair enough) will read this and shout “that’s the point, you dolt!” But to me, it’s emblematic of a movie that’s constantly positioning itself as being different without ever articulating what it is.

Tár‘s final shot, admittedly gorgeous, feels intended to be a crescendo, the final culmination of Lydia Tár’s descent into… obscurity? Artistic irrelevance? Like Mickey Rourke jumping off the top rope into the abyss at the end of The Wrestler. And yet I couldn’t quite enjoy it because I didn’t understand where it was meant to be taking place. What was this event the film so confidently alluded to? Was I meant to know, to understand the cultural significance of it, and how it related to Lydia Tár’s journey as a character?

My reaction to it was a lot like my reaction to much of the rest of the movie: I didn’t get it. Tár feels like a thing that exists solely to be unlike other things. Yet, in the end, it repudiates convention less than it repudiates the sense of joy those conventions evolved to produce. It’s understated to the point that it’s not stating much at all. Or maybe it’s just doing so very quietly and I couldn’t quite hear. It’s the cinematic equivalent of a low talker: you often don’t catch what it’s saying and it’s designed to make you afraid to ask.

‘Tár’ is playing now in theaters nationwide. Vince Mancini is on Twitter. You can read more of his reviews here.

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Taylor Swift Announced ‘The Eras Tour,’ Which She Called ‘A Journey Through The Musical Eras Of My Career’

Finally, Taylor Swift is going on tour again: She just announced The Eras Tour, which will start in 2023. Swift made the announcement on Good Morning America this morning (November 1). She also wrote on social media, “I’m enchanted to announce my next tour: Taylor Swift | The Eras Tour, a journey through the musical eras of my career (past & present!) The first leg of the tour will be in stadiums across the US, with international dates to be announced as soon as we can!”

The currently announced slate of shows runs from March 18 to August 5. The roster of openers is impressive, too, as joining Swift on various dates are Beabadoobee, Gayle, Girl In Red, Gracie Abrams, Haim, Muna, Owenn, Paramore, and Phoebe Bridgers. This will be Swift’s first tour since 2018’s Reputation Stadium Tour.

Find the full list of tour dates so far below and learn more about tickets here.

03/18/2023 — Glendale, AZ @ State Farm Stadium $!
03/25/2023 — Las Vegas, NV @ Allegiant Stadium ~!
04/01/2023 — Arlington, TX @ AT&T Stadium ~%
04/02/2023 — Arlington, TX @ AT&T Stadium ~%
04/15/2023 — Tampa, FL @ Raymond James Stadium ~%
04/22/2023 — Houston, TX @ NRG Stadium ~%
04/28/2023 — Atlanta, GA @ Mercedes-Benz Stadium ~%
04/29/2023 — Atlanta, GA @ Mercedes-Benz Stadium ~%
05/06/2023 — Nashville, TN @ Nissan Stadium &!
05/12/2023 — Philadelphia, PA @ Lincoln Financial Field &!
05/13/2023 — Philadelphia, PA @ Lincoln Financial Field &!
05/19/2023 — Foxborough, MA @ Gillette Stadium &!
05/20/2023 — Foxborough, MA @ Gillette Stadium &!
05/26/2023 — East Rutherford, NJ @ MetLife Stadium &!
05/27/2023 — East Rutherford, NJ @ MetLife Stadium &%
06/02/2023 — Chicago, IL @ Soldier Field #@
06/03/2023 — Chicago, IL @ Soldier Field #@
06/10/2023 — Detroit, MI @ Ford Field #@
06/17/2023 — Pittsburgh, PA @ Acrisure Stadium #@
06/24/2023 — Minneapolis, MN @ U.S. Bank Stadium #@
07/01/2023 — Cincinnati, OH @ Paycor Stadium *%
07/08/2023 — Kansas City, MO @ GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium *%
07/15/2023 — Denver, CO @ Empower Field at Mile High *%
07/22/2023 — Seattle, WA @ Lumen Field ^%
07/29/2023 — Santa Clara, CA @ Levi’s® Stadium ^%
08/04/2023 — Los Angeles, CA @ SoFi Stadium ^@
08/05/2023 — Los Angeles, CA @ SoFi Stadium ^!

~ with Beabadoobee
! with Gayle
# with Girl In Red
% with Gracie Abrams
^ with Haim
* with Muna
@ with Owenn
$ with Paramore
& with Phoebe Bridgers

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News Trending Viral Worldwide

Taylor Swift Announced ‘The Eras Tour,’ Which She Called ‘A Journey Through The Musical Eras Of My Career’

Finally, Taylor Swift is going on tour again: She just announced The Eras Tour, which will start in 2023. Swift made the announcement on Good Morning America this morning (November 1). She also wrote on social media, “I’m enchanted to announce my next tour: Taylor Swift | The Eras Tour, a journey through the musical eras of my career (past & present!) The first leg of the tour will be in stadiums across the US, with international dates to be announced as soon as we can!”

The currently announced slate of shows runs from March 18 to August 5. The roster of openers is impressive, too, as joining Swift on various dates are Beabadoobee, Gayle, Girl In Red, Gracie Abrams, Haim, Muna, Owenn, Paramore, and Phoebe Bridgers. This will be Swift’s first tour since 2018’s Reputation Stadium Tour.

Find the full list of tour dates so far below and learn more about tickets here.

03/18/2023 — Glendale, AZ @ State Farm Stadium $!
03/25/2023 — Las Vegas, NV @ Allegiant Stadium ~!
04/01/2023 — Arlington, TX @ AT&T Stadium ~%
04/02/2023 — Arlington, TX @ AT&T Stadium ~%
04/15/2023 — Tampa, FL @ Raymond James Stadium ~%
04/22/2023 — Houston, TX @ NRG Stadium ~%
04/28/2023 — Atlanta, GA @ Mercedes-Benz Stadium ~%
04/29/2023 — Atlanta, GA @ Mercedes-Benz Stadium ~%
05/06/2023 — Nashville, TN @ Nissan Stadium &!
05/12/2023 — Philadelphia, PA @ Lincoln Financial Field &!
05/13/2023 — Philadelphia, PA @ Lincoln Financial Field &!
05/19/2023 — Foxborough, MA @ Gillette Stadium &!
05/20/2023 — Foxborough, MA @ Gillette Stadium &!
05/26/2023 — East Rutherford, NJ @ MetLife Stadium &!
05/27/2023 — East Rutherford, NJ @ MetLife Stadium &%
06/02/2023 — Chicago, IL @ Soldier Field #@
06/03/2023 — Chicago, IL @ Soldier Field #@
06/10/2023 — Detroit, MI @ Ford Field #@
06/17/2023 — Pittsburgh, PA @ Acrisure Stadium #@
06/24/2023 — Minneapolis, MN @ U.S. Bank Stadium #@
07/01/2023 — Cincinnati, OH @ Paycor Stadium *%
07/08/2023 — Kansas City, MO @ GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium *%
07/15/2023 — Denver, CO @ Empower Field at Mile High *%
07/22/2023 — Seattle, WA @ Lumen Field ^%
07/29/2023 — Santa Clara, CA @ Levi’s® Stadium ^%
08/04/2023 — Los Angeles, CA @ SoFi Stadium ^@
08/05/2023 — Los Angeles, CA @ SoFi Stadium ^!

~ with Beabadoobee
! with Gayle
# with Girl In Red
% with Gracie Abrams
^ with Haim
* with Muna
@ with Owenn
$ with Paramore
& with Phoebe Bridgers

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

The Music World Reacts To Takeoff’s Tragic Death At 28 Years Old

Early this morning (November 1), Migos member Takeoff died at 28 years old after being fatally shot. Reports indicate the incident took place outside of 810 Billiards & Bowling in Houston, during an altercation spawned from a game of dice. Takeoff was apparently hit in or near the head and was pronounced dead on the scene. Quavo was also present but was reportedly unharmed.

As the news has started to spread, figures from the music world and beyond have shared their thoughts about Takeoff’s passing.

Lloyd Banks tweeted, “Rest In Peace Takeoff my condolences to his family and close friends,very dope artist gone too soon.” Boxer Chris Eubank Jr. also wrote, “I remember @1YoungTakeoff being a very down to earth, cool dude. Cant believe I’m having to say this again about another young black star being killed for no reason, something really has to change in the industry, it’s sickening how easy & often people are dying. RIP Takeoff.”

Takeoff rose to prominence as a member of Migos, with Quavo and Offset. The trio is best known for its hit 2016 No. 1 single “Bad And Boujee” featuring Lil Uzi Vert. Takeoff and Quavo also just dropped a collaborative album, Only Built For Infinity Links, in October.

Check out some other reactions below.