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Benny The Butcher Updates Biggie’s Instructional Classic On ’10 More Commandments’ With Diddy

Although both rose to prominence decades apart, Griselda rapper Benny The Butcher and The Notorious B.I.G. have plenty in common. Both men rap with a gritty, underground-approved delivery about life in the streets, yet have risen to mainstream prominence on the strengths of their talents and connections. Both made their money via shall we say “alternative means” before finding success in the rap game. And now, both have parlayed their hard-won experience into instructional songs about the commandments of the illicit drug trade.

Building on the ground rules established by Biggie’s Life After Death standout “10 Crack Commandments,” Benny linked up with the late rapper’s number-one benefactor Diddy to offer “10 More Commandments” from Benny’s newly released project, Tana Talk 4. Produced by Griselda’s go-to beatsmith Daringer, “10 More Commandments” finds Benny counting down from number 20 this time around, dishing more advice that, while being far less pithy than Big’s, is no less useful to the aspiring kingpins who might be listening. Some examples:

  • Count the money
  • Test the work before you buy it
  • Only buy sh*t that can be sold
  • No social media postin’
  • The most important one: The first chance you get, you better get out this sh*t

Man’s got a point.

Watch the “10 More Commandments” video above. Tana Talk 4 is out now via Griselda Records / EMPIRE. Stream it here.

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One Week Later, Disney Has Decided To Pause All Political Donations In Response To Florida’s ‘Don’t Say Gay’ Bill

After Disney faced internal and external criticism for its tepid response to Florida’s “Don’t Say Gay” bill, CEO Bob Chapek announced on Friday that the massive entertainment conglomerate will be pausing all political donations in the state. Chapek also apologized to LGBTQ+ employees for his failure to be a “stronger ally” in the face of the looming legislation that will restrict teachers from discussing any non-heterosexual issues, which will negatively impact non-cisgender students.

In his open letter to employees, Chapek finally recognized the severity of the bill’s impact, which he called “yet another challenge to basic human rights” with ramifications that go far beyond Florida. He also doubled on Disney’s promise to tell more inclusive stories while recognizing that, clearly, even more action needs to be taken.

Via IndieWire:

Starting immediately, we are increasing our support for advocacy groups to combat similar legislation in other states. We are hard at work creating a new framework for our political giving that will ensure our advocacy better reflects our values. And today, we are pausing all political donations in the state of Florida pending this review. But, I know there is so much more work to be done. I am committed to this work and to you all, and will continue to engage with the LGBTQ+ community so that I can become a better ally. You will hear more about our progress in the coming weeks.

Chapek concluded the letter by fully admitting that he “missed the mark” in his initial response to the “Don’t Say Gay” legislation. Clearly, the public and internal pushback worked as Disney appears to have made a significant 180. Whether the company actually makes good on the promises in Chapek’s letter will be the subject of intense scrutiny in the days ahead.

(Via IndieWire)

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Belle and Sebastian Share A Beautiful Video For The Ukraine Benefit Track, ‘If They’re Shooting At You’

As the conflict in Ukraine continues, artists around the world are finding ways to show their support and benefit the people of the war-torn nation. Scotland’s Belle and Sebastian have just shared a moving song and visual collage entitled “If They’re Shooting At You,” which also functions as a benefit for the countless Ukrainians affected by the Russian invasion of their country.

The band are pledging all of their income from streaming, digital sales and publishing royalties to the Red Cross. The UK government have also agreed to match any donations made via Bandcamp until March 18th as part of the joint appeal with the Disasters Emergency Committee.

“We think any way in which we can get behind Ukraine – politically, culturally, practically, spiritually – it must all add up in the end. Together we have to do what it takes to help Ukraine beat this tyranny,” singer Stuart Murdoch said in a statement. The moving video for the song is a visual collage, comprised of images taken by photographers who have been covering the ongoing conflict.

Watch the video for “If They’re Shooting At You” above and read Murdoch’s full statement on the effort below.

“When the situation in Ukraine first started to happen it became clear that the lives of the people there, and probably ‘ours’ too, were never going to be the same. The band had just started rolling out tracks for our new album, and it all felt a bit silly to be honest.

We had one track called ‘If They’re Shooting At You’, it’s a song about being lost, broken and under threat of violence. The key line is ‘if they’re shooting at you kid you must be doing something right.’

We stand in solidarity with the people of Ukraine and hope that their pain and suffering can be brought to a halt as soon as possible.

We got in touch with various photographers and creatives in Ukraine and they generously said that we could put their pictures to music. In creating this we aspire to show a hopeful, defiant side, as well as bringing an awareness to the plight of the people there.

We think any way in which we can get behind Ukraine – politically, culturally, practically, spiritually – it must all add up in the end. Together we have to do what it takes to help Ukraine beat this tyranny.

Please consider giving to the Disasters Emergency Committee, The Red Cross, or any other humanitarian charity involved in the crisis.

If you choose to donate to the Red Cross, please visit here redcross.org.uk/ukraine. They are part of the joint appeal with the DEC until March 18th, and money donated before then will be matched by the UK government.

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Blind Taste Test Showdown: Kentucky Bourbon Vs. Tennessee Whiskey

All Tennessee whiskey is technically bourbon but not all bourbon is Tenessee whiskey. The juice from Tennessee mandates one tweak that differs from its Kentucky cousin, charcoal filtration. With very few exceptions, all Tennessee whiskey has to be filtered through sugar maple charcoal before barreling to be classified in the regional style. Does that make Tennessee whiskey “better” than Kentucky’s bourbon?

That’s a question for the ages. And, like everything, comes down to a matter of taste.

Today, I’m going to try and answer that question for myself by blind tasting six Kentucky bourbons and six Tennessee whiskeys. I’ve picked mostly mid-range bottles that all clock in around the $30$60 price point with some above and below that mark. There’s nothing super rare or old. Just good-but-pretty-standard whiskey you’re able to actually find. I also threw in one blend of Kentucky, Tennessee, and Indiana whiskeys to see if it would stand out or maybe even win.

Overall, the point is to find out which whiskey style (generally) reigns supreme.

Our lineup today includes:

  • Woodford Reserve (KY)
  • Bib & Tucker 6 (TN)
  • Uncle Nearest 1884 Small Batch (TN)
  • Noah’s Mill (KY)
  • Paul Sutton (KY)
  • Barrell Bourbon Batch 029 (TN, IN, KY)
  • George Dickel Bottled-in-Bond Fall 2008 (TN)
  • Benchmark Old No. 8 (KY)
  • Bulleit Bourbon (KY)
  • Nelson’s Green Brier Tennessee Sour Mash (TN)
  • Jack Daniel’s Tennessee Travelers Sweet & Oaky (TN)
  • Four Roses Small Batch Select (KY)

Let’s get tasting!

Also Read: The Top 5 UPROXX Bourbon Posts Of The Last Six Months

Part 1: The Tasting

Kentucky Bourbon vs. Tennessee Whiskey Blind
Zach Johnston

Taste 1

Kentucky Bourbon vs. Tennessee Whiskey Blind
Zach Johnston

Tasting Notes:

This feels classic from the nose to the end with vanilla, chocolate oranges, and a hint of minty tobacco leading the way. The taste has a buttery toffee vibe next to dried stone fruits, cinnamon sticks, and a woody mid-point. The finish arrives with a return to the chocolate orange with mild hints of winter spice, old wicker, and a hint more of that mint tobacco.

Taste 2

Kentucky Bourbon vs. Tennessee Whiskey Blind
Zach Johnston

Tasting Notes:

Leather and wet cedar drive the nose toward woody vanilla with a hint of spiced apple pie filling. That pie filling leads the palate while old cedar boxes mingle with ginger snaps and spicy apple tobacco. That fruity spice fills out the finish with a final note of sweet oak.

Taste 3

Kentucky Bourbon vs. Tennessee Whiskey Blind
Zach Johnston

Tasting Notes:

The nose opens with sweet cornmeal, pecan cookies, and leather rubbed with cinnamon sticks. The palate smoothes out with a soft vanilla cream pie next to a tart apple crumble with plenty of brown sugar. The mid-palate sweetness edges towards walnuts, dried cherries covered in dark chocolate, and a hint of leather. That leather fades to an old potting soil earthiness on the short finish.

Taste 4

Kentucky Bourbon vs. Tennessee Whiskey Blind
Zach Johnston

Tasting Notes:

Nutmeg-laden eggnog opens the nose with lines of a cedar box full of dry tobacco and warm leather. Cinnamon candy arrives early on the palate as buttery toffee, chocolate Corn Pops, and dry wicker drives the taste. The mid-palate feels like a caramel and vanilla marriage that’s countered by more of the wicker and a sweet, fresh potting soil full of minerals with a winter spice tobacco warmth rounding everything off.

Taste 5

Kentucky Bourbon vs. Tennessee Whiskey Blind
Zach Johnston

Tasting Notes:

Barnyard funk and wet straw lead on the nose as salted caramels and cherries in a pine box counter. Sweet corn cakes with vanilla cream come together on the palate as chocolate-covered cherries lead to a slight eggnog vibe. Pecan pie filling drives the mid-palate toward dark chocolate and cherry tobacco on the finish.

Taste 6

Kentucky Bourbon vs. Tennessee Whiskey Blind
Zach Johnston

Tasting Notes:

Spiced oatmeal cookies pop on the nose with fresh leather, orange oil, and honey. Plums meet that honey on the palate with a sense of roasted almonds, toasted coconut, dark chocolate, and just a hint of crusty Tuscan bread. That final note lingers as a touch of fresh green savory herbs arrive on the finish with an echo of the nuts and orange oil.

Taste 7

Kentucky Bourbon vs. Tennessee Whiskey Blind
Zach Johnston

Tasting Notes:

Maple syrup and pecan pie lead the way on the nose with dried apple and worn leather. The palate has big notes of apple pecan crumble with a scoop of malted vanilla ice cream next to cherry syrup and dark chocolate powder. That powderiness leads the mid-palate to a cherry Necco Wafer and a touch of brown butter. The finish holds onto that cherry Necco as the nuttiness and mild spices from the crumble slowly fade away.

Taste 8

Kentucky Bourbon vs. Tennessee Whiskey Blind
Zach Johnston

Tasting Notes:

Lemon candies and honey lead to a vanilla wafer on the nose but not much else. The taste is classic bourbon with hints of leather, spice, and cornmeal next to vanilla extract, caramel, and buttered popcorn. The end is very faint and almost vodka-like.

Taste 9

Kentucky Bourbon vs. Tennessee Whiskey Blind
Zach Johnston

Tasting Notes:

Again with the classic nose of vanilla, caramel, leather, spice, and “oak.” There’s a thin line of cinnamon on the palate that leads to vanilla pudding, apple tobacco, and dry cornbread with a pad of butter. There’s a dry wicker deck chair woodiness near the end that’s augmented by brown sugar sweetness and wintry spice.

Taste 10

Kentucky Bourbon vs. Tennessee Whiskey Blind
Zach Johnston

Tasting Notes:

This pops with milk chocolate on the nose next to leather, cinnamon sticks, and rich caramel. There’s an apple-cinnamon toast vibe on the front the taste that leads to cherry wood and more of that milk chocolate with mild tobacco feel to it all. The cherry marries to that tobacco as wet cedar and apple skins fade away on the finish.

Taste 11

Kentucky Bourbon vs. Tennessee Whiskey Blind
Zach Johnston

Tasting Notes:

This is sweet from the nose to the finish with sour cherries leading to Cherry Coke, vanilla pudding powder, salted caramel, and wet barrels. The palate leans into the Cherry Coke with almond shells and Brazil nuts next to vanilla cream. That vanilla mid-point circles back to a cherry wood/cherry tobacco mix on the finish that ends with wet wicker, vanilla pods, and flat cherry root beer.

Taste 12

Kentucky Bourbon vs. Tennessee Whiskey Blind
Zach Johnston

Tasting Notes:

Old oats and dried raspberries with a hint of clove mix with worn leather and apricot on the nose. The palate lets dried dark berries mix with apricot jam as winter spices warm the sense. The mid-palate is all about vanilla sugar cookies with a thin layer of red spiced jam. The finish arrives with a sense of that worn leather tied to an old pine box, a sense of damp soil, and blackberry chewing tobacco.

Part 2: The Ranking

Kentucky Bourbon vs. Tennessee Whiskey Blind
Zach Johnston

12. Benchmark Old No. 8 — Taste 8

Sazerac Company

ABV: 40%

Average Price: $11

The Whiskey:

The juice in this bottle is from Buffalo Trace’s Mash #1, which has a scant amount of barley and rye next to mostly corn. This is the same mash that’s used for bigger hitting brands like Eagle Rare, Stagg, and E.H. Taylor. In this case, this is a four-year-old bonded that’s sort of like a proto-E.H. Taylor Small Batch.

Bottom Line:

This felt like a $10 budget bourbon from top to bottom. Even the vanilla extract was more like the plastic bottle than the actual fluid. I guess I’d mix this with Coke or ginger ale.

11. Bulleit Bourbon — Taste 9

Bulleit Frontier Whiskey

ABV: 45%

Average Price: $33

The Whiskey:

Bulleit embraces a high-rye mash bill that’s comprised of 68 percent corn, 28 percent rye, and four percent malted barley. The juice is then rested for six years before blending, cutting down to proof, and barreling.

Bottom Line:

This was fine, but nothing to write home about. Again, I can see mixing with this or drinking it with ginger ale when I want a sugar rush.

10. Bib & Tucker 6 — Taste 2

Screen-Shot-2021-10-18-at-12.43.44-PM.jpg
Deutsch Family Wine & Spirits

ABV: 46%

Average Price: $60

The Whiskey:

Bib & Tucker pulls barrels of Tennessee whiskey from an old and quiet valley in the state. They then blend those barrels to meet their brand’s flavor notes. While they are laying down their own whiskey now, this is still all about the blending of those barrels in small batches.

Bottom Line:

This felt like a cocktail whiskey through and through. That’s not a bad thing at all. It’s more of a shrug and a “yup, tastes good. Next.”

9. Woodford Reserve — Taste 1

Brown-Forman

ABV: 45.2%

Average Price: $40

The Whiskey:

The mash bill on this bourbon is mid-range rye with 18 percent of the grain added for support. The triple distilling in pot stills and blending with column distilled whiskey is utilized. The juice then rests for six to seven years before barrels are pulled for blending, proofing, and bottling.

Bottom Line:

This was where things get “fine” in that this whiskey felt like it could easily be an on the rocks sipper or cocktail base. It wasn’t challenging or bland. It just… was.

8. Uncle Nearest 1884 Small Batch — Taste 3

Uncle Nearest 1884
Uncle Nearest

ABV: 46.5%

Average Price: $49

The Whiskey:

This whiskey is built from a batch of barrels that are a minimum of seven years old. Nearest’s Master Blender, Victoria Eady-Butler, builds the blend according to classic flavor notes first put into Tennessee whiskey by her ancestor, Nearest Green, back in the 1800s.

Bottom Line:

This, again, feels perfectly fine though maybe a little more suited to mixing than sipping. There was nothing offensive by any stretch. This was more just lost in this big middle section of the tasting.

7. Paul Sutton Bourbon — Taste 5

Paul Sutton

ABV: 50%

Average Price: $65

The Whiskey:

Paul Sutton is a new bourbon from an old family recipe. I know, we’ve all heard it before. The new whiskey is not a blend of sourced bourbons. The brand took the time to release its contract distilled whiskey. The bourbon mash bill has a touch of rye in it and it aged for up to five years in medium char barrels.

Bottom Line:

That barnyard funk on the nose is enticing. It really helps this whiskey stand out. There’s just not much after that that feels like it commits to that unique opening volley. It’s classic through and through, which is fine as both a sipper on the rocks or cocktail base.

6. Jack Daniel’s Tennessee Travelers Sweet & Oaky — Taste 11

Jack Daniel's Tennessee Travelers Tennessee Whiskey
Brown-Forman

ABV: 53.5%

Average Price: $34 (Heineman Travel Shops Only)

The Whiskey:

This limited edition, traveler’s exclusive is classic Jack Daniel’s at a much higher ABV. The mash is 80 percent corn, 12 percent malted barley, and eight percent rye. That whiskey is then aged in Jack Daniel’s vast warehouses after going through the iconic Lincoln County Process of sugar maple charcoal filtration. The barrels are then hand-picked by Master Distiller Chris Fletcher for their uniqueness and flavors that lean into what’s advertised on the label.

Bottom Line:

Goddamn, this was sweet compared to all the other whiskeys. That helped in stand out and really hide those higher ABVs. That puts this squarely in the middle for me. It’s pretty damn good for what it is and stands out in interesting ways.

5. Barrell Bourbon Batch 029 — Taste 6

Barrell Bourbon

ABV: 57.94%

Average Price: $110

The Whiskey:

This release from Barrell Bourbon is a blend of whiskeys from Kentucky, Indiana, and Tennessee. The final mix is a blend of six, seven, nine, ten, 14, and 16-year-old barrels that are vatted and then bottled at barrel proof.

Bottom Line:

This is where things get interesting. The proof on this sort of outshined the nuance of the flavor profile, but that’s not insurmountable. A little water or a rock will really let this whiskey shine.

4. Nelson’s Green Brier Tennessee Sour Mash — Taste 10

Nelson's Green Brier Tennessee Whiskey
Nelsons Green Brier

ABV: 45.5%

Average Price: $32

The Whiskey:

Nelson’s Green Brier is a heritage brand that has a great comeback story. The family’s shingle was killed by Prohibition until descendants of the former owners stumbled upon the old distillery. Now, they’re making one of the finest, wheated Tennessee whiskeys at one of the most accessible price points of any whiskey.

Bottom Line:

Honestly, I’m pretty shocked to see this so high. That pure chocolate throughline really enticed me today. It was a really easy sip neat but I can see this working well on the rocks.

3. George Dickel Bottled-in-Bond Fall 2008 — Taste 7

Screen-Shot-2021-08-19-at-4.35.35-PM.jpg
Diageo

ABV: 50%

Average Price: $45

The Whisky:

Nicole Austin has been killing it with these bottled-in-bond releases from George Dickel. This release is a whiskey that was warehoused in the fall of 2008. 13 years later, this juice was bottled at 100 proof (as per the bottled-in-bond law) and sent out to the wide world, where it received much adoration.

Bottom Line:

I thought this would be number one. I generally really like this whiskey but it didn’t quite stand up to the next two in true depth. It’s excellent, even as a neat sip, but didn’t wow me on this tasting.

2. Noah’s Mill — Taste 4

Screen-Shot-2021-06-02-at-10.12.59-AM.jpg
Kentucky Bourbon Distillers

ABV: 57.15%

Average Price: $60

The Whiskey:

This is Willett’s high-proof bourbon that’s barely cut down to a very high 114.3 proof. This is kind of like the big and bolder sibling of Willett’s Rowan’s Creek bourbon, which is cut down to 100.1 proof.

Bottom Line:

This felt like “grown-up” whiskey. There was so much going on that I wanted to really take my time with this dram and go back into the glass to find more of the nuance. This feels damn near perfect compared to the rest of this list.

1. Four Roses Small Batch Select — Taste 12

Four Roses

ABV: 52%

Average Price: $64

The Whiskey:

This expression uses six of Four Rose’s 10 whiskeys in their small-batching process. The idea is to blend both high and very high-rye bourbons with yeast strains that highlight “delicate fruit,” “slight spice,” and “herbal notes.” The whiskeys tend to spend at least six years in the barrel before blending and proofing with just a touch of Kentucky’s soft limestone water.

Bottom Line:

This really shined the brightest. It was all-around a more nuanced and flavorful whiskey that seemed super dialed in. I wanted to go right back and pour another of these once I finished.

I did. It was excellent.

Part 3: Final Thoughts

Kentucky Bourbon vs. Tennessee Whiskey Blind
Zach Johnston

Four Roses pulling off the win feels like a bit of an upset. But it’s really not. That whiskey is really good for a mid-range bottle that you can actually find.

When it comes to Kentucky bourbon versus Tennessee whiskey, well… It looks like Kentucky took the gold medal home. But two Tennessee whiskeys made the top five with a blend landing in fifth place. Also, the lowest two slots both went to Kentucky bourbon. What I’m getting at is that it was a pretty even result at the end of the day.

That said, there was just no beating Noah’s Mill and Four Roses today and that’s a clear win of Kentucky.

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Chris Pine Says His New Grizzled Look Was Inspired Largely By Him Being Too Lazy To Shave

Perhaps you’ve seen recent photos of Chris Pine out and about and thought to yourself “hm, that must be him preparing for some sort of Aquaman sequel, or a gritty Gorton’s Fisherman origin story.” You would be incorrect, though those are pretty good theories. In reality, the Star Trek star is actually just lazy. Stars! They’re just like us.

While promoting his new movie All The Old Knives (not the Knives Out sequel, just to be clear. That’s a different Chris.) the actor was asked about his new bearded look. He attributed his long, graying beard to “equal parts laziness and equal parts something I may do in the future here.” Perhaps a Santa Clause biopic is in the works?

Pine added that his publicist was a fan of the new style. “This is my Gregg Allman ’70s look,” he reportedly told Entertainment Tonight. “My publicist said I look like a Bee Gee, but I prefer Gregg Allman.”

In All The Old Knives, Pine stars as ex-spy Henry Pelham who is haunted by an unsolved case. The movie, which drops on Amazon Prime next month, also stars Thandiwe Newton, Laurence Fishburne, and Jonathan Pryce. The actor is also gearing up to star and shoot his directorial debut, Poolman, alongside Hollywood icons Annette Benning and Danny DeVito. Hopefully, the beard is here to stay. We are still waiting to hear about his upcoming Dungeons and Dragons project, though.

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Patrick Beverley Claims Russell Westbrook’s Old Comments On His Defense ‘Damaged My Career’

Patrick Beverley and Russell Westbrook have a history. Back in the 2013 playoffs, Beverley collided with Westbrook’s knee going for a steal that resulted in Westbrook tearing his meniscus. Westbrook was bracing for a timeout when Beverley made the play. Classifying it as unnecessary, at best, is justified.

Years later, Westbrook famously downplayed what Beverley does on the defensive end of the floor, saying in a post-game interview, “Pat Bev trick y’all, man, like he playing defense. He don’t guard nobody, man. It’s just running around, doing nothing.” Earlier this season, Beverley tweeted that Westbrook was “The Real Magician” amid the former MVP’s struggles.

More recently, Beverley appeared on The Old Man & The Three Podcast, where he discussed the longstanding rivalry between them. Specifically, he hit on the fall-out of Westbrook’s “trick y’all” comment from 2019.

“People looked at me differently, people around the NBA: coaches, players. After that, people were just taking the ball, going at me,” he said. “I’m like, ‘What the f*ck?’ All because of what one person said.

“People really looked at it like, ‘Yeah, maybe this motherf*cker don’t play defense. Only thing he does is run around.”

Beverley also said people would use his poor outings as vindication for Westbrook’s sentiment and called his tweet last month a “forgiven, but not forgotten type of thing.”

“He damaged my career,” Beverley said. “Coaching staffs and players, fans, they looked at me way different. … Some people still do.”

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Pixar Gets Refreshingly Weird In ‘Turning Red’

It’s nice to see that Pixar has finally made a movie about how the coming of a woman’s moon blood turns her into an uncontrollable beast, ruled by extreme emotion and immune to reason.

I kid, but only sort of. Turning Red takes the Teen Wolf formula of a werewolf-like curse as a metaphor for puberty and fuses it to the PEN15/The Sex Lives Of College Girls-style comedy about adolescent female sexuality — specifically for first-generation Asian women. Much like Maya Erskine plumbed conflict with her Japanese mother in PEN15 and Mindy Kaling mined her own Indian-American adolescence for The Sex Lives Of College Girls, Turning Red director Domee Shi explores her own coming-of-age in this lovingly-told tale of Chinese-Canadian mother-daughter conflict in what is arguably Pixar’s most personal story to date.

Turning Red stars Rosalie Chiang as the voice of Meilin, an overachieving, self-admittedly kind of obnoxious Toronto 13-year-old, who on the day of her first period turns into a giant red panda. Chiang is a Bay Area teen who was initially brought on just to do the temp track while they looked for a bigger star, but Pixar liked her work so much that they kept her, a nice story in itself. Meilin plays the flute, excels at math, and mostly strives to be a dutiful daughter, helping her mother, Ming (Sandra Oh) clean up and speak to visitors at the local temple, honoring some of her own ancestors.

Meilin has four best friends, Miriam, Priya, and the intensely grating Abby, a voluble-to-the-point-of-psychopathy girl in overalls who converses exclusively in angry-sounding shouts — all of whom are devoted fans of the boy band 4 Town, as well as the local heartthrob Devon, a squinty turd in a buckethead hat that the girls are inexplicably (even to themselves) in love with. Meilin frequently has to abandon the crew mid-adventure to keep from disappointing her demanding mother, which makes her friends lament, “She’s so brainwashed.”

Meilin’s mother herself also takes helicopter parenting to clinically demented levels, finding Meilin’s fantastical drawings of Devon and immediately confronting Devon with them, while her deathly embarrassed daughter looks on helpless. Shouldn’t CPS step in at this point, I wondered? Yet ironically, Ming is the only one who truly understands Meilin’s predicament, the family curse that turns them into massive fluffy pandas any time they experience extreme emotions.

Suffice it to say, Turning Red is the first Pixar movie to attempt to explore a girl’s first period, “the blooming of the red peony,” as Ming calls it. Director Domee Shi herself admits that it was “a weird pitch,” this magical period panda monster embodying its alter-ego’s most extreme (but also perhaps her most assertive, and possibly necessary) emotions. (Disney/Pixar was willing to take on periods and boy bands but stopped just short of the War on Terror, probably for the best).

Turning Red‘s weirdness is an integral element though because without it the film would probably too closely reflect its influences — PEN15, Teen Wolf, and Lady Bird. Like PEN15 and Lady Bird, Turning Red is even a period piece (STOP LAUGHING), though you might not notice that it’s meant to take place in 2002 if you hadn’t picked up on all the flip phones and Tamagotchi references.

Pixar movies aren’t usually this specific, and without Turning Red‘s specific Chineseness, its particular Canadianness, its especially fraught relationship between the protagonist and her near lunatic of a mother, its resolution would surely ring treacly or generic. Shi (along with her co-writers Julia Cho and Sarah Streicher) goes deeply personal, and this boldness seems also to have freed her to be even more fantastical, with a showdown between Stay Puft Marshmallow Man-sized red pandas and a climactic exorcism at a boy band concert. Red Panda‘s hyperspecificity makes it weird, and its unabashed weirdness makes it fun.

Soul took an equally big swing, but its attempt to find some all-encompassing statement about the nature of existence paradoxically made it feel creatively constrained, like a massive budget corporate spreadsheet about finding one’s bliss. Ironically few things turn a movie dull and esoteric like trying to be everything to everyone. Turning Red finds the universal through Shi’s specific story about trying to do right by her mother without losing herself in the process. It might not reach the heights of Coco or some of Pixar’s all-time bests, but, hey, that’s a high bar. Turning Red is fun and sweet and strange, and really, what more could you ask of it?

‘Turning Red’ premieres exclusively on Disney+ March 11th. Vince Mancini is on Twitter. More reviews here.

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Pink Floyd Are Pulling Their Music From Russian Streaming Services

If we learned anything from artists like Neil Young, Joni Mitchell, India. Arie, and David Crosby pulling their music from Spotify last month in response to The Joe Rogan Experience’s racist undertones and vaccine misinformation, it’s that the move was an effective way to raise awareness to their causes. Now Pink Floyd and David Gilmour are following suit by pulling their music from digital music streaming services in Russia and Belarus in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

In a tweet posted to Pink Floyd’s account, which was subsequently re-tweeted by Gilmour, a message read, “To stand with the world in strongly condemning Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the works of Pink Floyd, from 1987 onwards, and all of David Gilmour’s solo recordings are being removed from all digital music providers in Russia and Belarus from today.”

Gilmour, whose daughter-in-law is Ukrainian, first publicly voiced his stance on Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on March 1st, when he tweeted, “Russian soldiers, stop killing your brothers. There will be no winners in this war. My daughter-in-law is Ukrainian and my grand-daughters want to visit and know their beautiful country. Stop this before it is all destroyed. Putin must go.”

Pink Floyd’s A Momentary Lapse Of Reason came out in 1987, marking the first release from the band following a new contract with Columbia Records, instead of their previous releases on Harvest Records and others. It seems that it’s only albums following that transition that Gilmour has the legal power to pull from the streaming services in Russia and Belarus. Regardless, the point being made here by Gilmour and Pink Floyd is clear.

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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Nashville-Based Band, COIN, Shares Their Detailed Guide To The Music City

If there’s one city that does live music right, it’s Nashville, Tennessee. While most people first think of good ol’ country songs, line dancing, and barbecue grub, the Southern city is also home to diverse music genres, eclectic food, and an iconic nightlife scenes.

Among the many bands calling Music City home, the alternative rock-pop trio COIN reps hard for their town. Bandmates Chase Lawrence, Ryan Winnen, and Joe Memmel — who will be releasing their new single “Brad Pitt” this Friday, the final release before their album Uncanny Valley drops on March 25th — were drawn to Nashville for not only its music scene, but also for its welcoming citizens, close proximity to nature, and acclaimed restaurants. Naturally, we had to ask them to create a guide to their adopted home for us.

If you’re in the market for great music, a lively atmosphere, and an enticing selection of cuisine, it might be time to book a flight to Nashville. Here’s where COIN recommends you stay, eat, party, and explore in the Music City.

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Nashville Travel Guide
COIN

WHY NASHVILLE?

Each of us moved to Nashville separately, for different reasons under the umbrella of wanting to pursue music — play a single show, write one EP worth of songs, start a band. We feel lucky to have met when we did, total kismet.

We’ve continued to base out of Nashville for the kind people, easy nature access, highly confused food scene, and diversity of music. Nashville has proved to be an ideal hybrid.

Nashville Travel Guide
The Ryman

What’s one thing that every first-time visitor should see or do in Nashville?

See a show at The Ryman.

There’s inexplicable energy in that building. We were fortunate to perform there last year, and it felt as though some spiritual entity of music history was giving us a pat on the back.

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Where to get the absolute best Southern barbecue meal?

Hot take…and please forgive our pivot here…Whenever we’re finished at the studio for the day, in long rehearsals, or getting on the bus for the night, we order Thai curry from Deg Thai. The first time we had it, it reminded us of a Thai restaurant in Seattle that we often crave. The rest was history.

If barbecue is necessary, we’ve been into Central BBQ for the wings or Shotgun Willie’s (Texas BBQ, East Nashville). The most popular spots are good, but not the best bites we’ve had. Memphis, however…

Top three bars for a night of good drinks and live music?

Robert’s, to check the Broadway country music box.

Skull’s Rainbow Room, for a more elevated experience — live jazz, cocktails, etc.

Dino’s, for an unpretentious diner-style bar with burgers and hot chicken.

Best way to spend a day outside adventuring?

Percy Warner or Beaman Park for choosing your own length and difficulty of hikes/walks, while still being 20 minutes or so from the city center.

Shelby Park is vast and paved, great for cycling and running.

We have some friends and family who have small sports boats, so occasionally we’ll go to Percy Priest Lake in the summer. If rentals are available, it would be mellow on a weekday. Weekends are a bit mad.

Nashville Travel Guide
The Hermitage Hotel

Coolest hotel or place to stay?

There’s no shortage of hotels given the city’s growth. 21C, Noelle, Bobby Hotel, Virgin, Thompson, Urban Cowboy, The Hermitage Hotel is beautiful, there’s a Soho House now…However, while there are plenty of ~cool~ options, some of these locations can easily become stuffy on weekends with tourism. Nashville is a place where the charm of the city can be distorted by the wrong accommodations, so we typically tell friends to get an Airbnb in a neighborhood setting.

Best time of year to visit?

Fall in Nashville is so idyllic — a resounding “October” from us.

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News Trending Viral Worldwide

Is Chelsea Manning Grimes’ Post-Elon Musk Rebound? Maybe!

Yesterday, the world learned that Canadian hyper-pop singer Grimes had a second child with ex-boyfriend Elon Musk, in December. She also revealed information about her upcoming album and projects, but everyone was focused on the whole “second baby” thing.

Grimes (real name Claire Elise Boucher) confirmed that she and Musk are broken up, but still co-parenting and “best friends.” The internet was confused and intrigued, as they always are with Grimes and Musk, but that was quickly overshadowed by today’s news: that Grimes and Chelsea Manning are allegedly dating.

Consider the following evidence: Manning, known for her activism and whistleblowing, has been liking and replying to a series of tweets about Grimes. When streamer Hasan Piker asked if Grimes would come on their Twitch stream, Grimes responded that she kept postponing because she wasn’t in LA. Manning simply responded with “vouch” implying that the two were definitely in contact, and perhaps together when Grimes kept rescheduling.

While neither party has confirmed the news, a source has told Page Six that the two are getting serious and have “U-Hauled it” which is a common stereotype that basically means they moved in together after a short amount of time.

Grimes has been known for her, uh, confusing political stances, and on-again-off-again relationship with one of the richest men in the world. Manning has also been known for speaking out against politicians, so perhaps it will work? It’s all so very confusing. This is the world right now.

The singer has since tweeted that she won’t be doing any more traditional press as she wants her life to remain as private as it can, despite being associated with both a billionaire and a prominent social media activist. We must let her music speak for itself. Though nobody can really tell what that’s about, either.