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Who Is Samara Joy? Meet The Grammy’s 2023 Best New Artist Winner

Best New Artist is subject to mockery because the nominees are usually established artists by the time they are nominated for Best New Artist. Olivia Rodrigo won the award in 2022 after her record-breaking 2021 entrance with “Drivers License” and Sour.

Rodrigo presented the Best New Artist category at the 2023 Grammys last night, February 5, and in a refreshing turn of events, it was likely the first time most of the audience had heard the name Samara Joy.

Joy, 23, claimed the title over more mainstream nominees Anitta, Domi & JD Beck, Latto, Måneskin, Molly Tuttle, Muni Long, Omar Apollo, Tobe Nwigwe, and Wet Leg. The New York jazz singer also won Best Jazz Vocal Album for Linger Awhile.

Joy has been in the spotlight before now, though. She performed “Nostalgia (The Day I Knew)” on The Late Show With Stephen Colbert and “Warm In December” on The Kelly Clarkson Show in December. She also recently graced Spotify’s Best New Artist event.

As relayed by The Los Angeles Times, “Joy grew up the granddaughter of Elder Goldwire and Ruth McLendon, who performed with a Philadelphia gospel group, the Savettes. Yet as a kid Joy also sang in school musicals and absorbed the soul and R&B music of Marvin Gaye, Aretha Franklin and Chaka Khan. In 2019, while studying at the State University of New York at Purchase, she won the prestigious Sarah Vaughan International Jazz Vocal Competition.”

Joy paid homage to her musical influences during her endearing Best New Artist acceptance speech.

“I am so, so — oh my gosh, I can’t even believe. I’ve been watching y’all on TV for so long,” she said. “To be here with you all, born and raised in the Bronx, New York, my family is here. I’ve been singing all my life.”

She continued, “Thank you so much for this honor. Thank you to everyone who has listened to me, who has supported me. All of you are so inspiring to me, and so to be here because of who I am — all of you have inspired me because of who you are. You express yourself exactly who you are, authentically, so to be here by just being myself, by just being who I was born as, I’m so thankful.”

Watch below.

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

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The Title Of Daryl’s ‘The Walking Dead’ Spinoff Might Have Been Revealed By Norman Reedus (Who Actually Wants A Different Title)

The Walking Dead will launch three spinoffs within the next year (in addition to wrapping up Fear The Walking Dead, starting on Mother’s Day). The last of that batch will be a series that finally tells us what really happened to Rick Grimes, which means that Andrew Lincoln will return in a show that co-stars Danai Gurira as Michonne. First, we’ll see the Negan and Maggie spinoff, The Walking Dead: Dead City, which will show them as unlikely partners who try to locate Maggie and Glenn’s son in Manhattan. Then there’s the show starring crossbow fetishist Daryl Dixon, and you know that Norman Reedus is stirring that put before his show arrives.

What little we know about the show is kind-of wild. Daryl apparently wakes up in France and has no idea how he got there. According to Variety, he literally “washes ashore.” He desperately wants to go home (I hope there are some sentimental Carol flashbacks) and finds himself traveling across France, where I hope he tours the Paris catacombs. This must happen. Why else would this show pointedly head to France?

As far as the show’s title goes, that’s a mystery. Comic Book spotted a Reedus Instagram story, in which he posted an image of make-up boxes that all include “Raise The Dead” in straight-up labelling. Of course, this could be a reference to a working title, but again… catacombs.

As well, Comic Book points out that Reedus has a preferred title for his spinoff (as he told Jimmy Kimmel last fall), and I kind-of like it: “boom boom.” Yes, he went there:

“I’m hoping for a certain title. Let’s just think about it. She-Hulk is She-Hulk. Spider-Man’s Spider-Man. Batman’s Batman,” Reedus said, seemingly suggesting the simple Daryl Dixon. “So, why not this be, ‘boom boom’? You know what I mean? You see where I’m going with that, without me saying that?”

It’s worth noting that Reedus has also toyed with everyone’s emotions by asking (in reference to Melissa McBride’s Carol), “How do you know she’s not gonna come back?” A fair point.

(Via Comic Book)

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Stephen A. Smith And Jay Williams Got A Bit Personal Talking About Kyrie Irving

The dominant story in the sports world coming out of the weekend was Kyrie Irving being traded from Brooklyn to Dallas, ending his tumultuous tenure with the Nets after issuing a trade request on Friday.

There is plenty to unpack about Irving’s time in Brooklyn, where he and Kevin Durant only played in 74 games together over three years and never made it beyond the conference semifinals, as well as what Irving will bring (good and bad) to the Mavericks. On Monday’s First Take, Stephen A. Smith, Jay Williams, and Tim Legler were planning on doing just that when things got spicy and a little bit personal between Smith and Williams, who had a very tense two-minute exchange.

Williams accuses Smith of having personal issues with Kyrie and letting that color his commentary of Irving. Smith, unsurprisingly, takes issue with that, coming from”you of all people,” referencing how Williams is rather famously close with Irving and has defended him on a number of occasions since he arrived in Brooklyn. He also calls out Jay for talking about things he finds interesting rather than simply saying what he feels.

The best part of the whole thing is when they pan to the camera behind Molly Qerim and you just see Legler chuckling to himself and sitting there wondering what the hell he’s doing there. Molly tries her best to get things back on track while Smith and Williams insist on trying to get the last word, but it didn’t seem like this segment did anything to resolve any lingering issues between Stephen A. and Jay.

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A ‘Stranger Things’ Star May Have Hinted When The Final Season Will Premiere

2023 will see the returns of Succession, Yellowjackets, and Justified, but not Stranger Things. Netflix’s biggest show might not be back next year, either.

In an “Actually Me” video for GQ, Finn Wolfhard (who plays Mike) responded to a YouTube comment about season five being the final season. “I can’t really believe that it’s the fifth season either. By the time it comes out, I will be 22, I think, and I started working on the show at 12,” the When You Finish Saving the World star said.

He continued:

“That is insane, and I’ll be able to drink with Gaten [Matarazzo], Caleb [McLaughlin] and Noah [Schnapp] and the whole cast at the premiere of Stranger Things 5, which couldn’t have said the same thing at the season one premiere, which blows my mind.”

Wolfhard is 20 years old. He’ll turn 22 on December 23, 2024, but it’s unlikely that Netflix would drop new episodes between Christmas and New Year’s, so expect Stranger Things season five to premiere during 2025. That’s a long time from now. But 2025 will also see the release of M3GAN 2.0, so you have two things to look forward to.

Wolfhard told Uproxx that he’s not ready for Stranger Things to be over. “I’m just really excited to start working on it because after I finished watching season four, I just was like, ‘Damn, let’s just go back and film now.’ I just want to help finish it off, but not in a way of I want to be done with it,” he said. “It’s just like I want to know what happens.”

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Would You Believe George Santos Allegedly Committed More Dog-Related Fraud?

As George Santos reportedly faces an FBI investigation into allegations that he absconded with the proceeds from a GoFundMe account meant for a veteran’s dying dog, the embattled New York congressman is being accused of even more shady transactions while running a supposed animal charity.

According to a new report on Santos’ charity, Friends of Pets United, the organization has a questionable past starting with the fact that it is not registered as a non-profit nor did it save over 2,500 animals as Santos claimed on its website. Friends of Pet United also had an issue with pet owners not receiving GoFundMe proceeds raised on their behalf. (Sound familiar?)

Via The New York Times:

Regina Spadavecchia, who runs the Adore-a-Bullie Paws and Claws rescue in the Bronx, said that Mr. Santos boasted of his fund-raising prowess, saying he was a financial money manager with connections. In reality, he had worked for a Turkey-based hospitality technology company, eventually moving on to work at a small company that organized conferences for investors and fund managers.

But Mr. Santos never fully followed through on his promises, Ms. Spadavecchia said, sending her around $400 instead of the thousands of dollars he had suggested. She decided to cut ties with him.

“If you’re doing fund-raising in my name, and you’re claiming you can make a couple of thousand, and you’re sending me $400, then something’s off,” Ms. Spadavecchia said. “You’re either boasting about stuff you can’t do, or you’re keeping money on the side. I don’t know.”

In one damning incident, Santos allegedly instructed a pet store owner to make a check out to “Anthony Devolder” — an alias Santos used at the time — instead of “Friends of Pets United” during a charity drive. When the owner refused, his bank records showed that Santos crossed out the charity name and added his alias as the payee anyway.

When reached for comment by the Times, Santos’ lawyer refused to answer questions about Friends of Pets United due to “pending investigations.”

(Via The New York Times)

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The 2023 Grammys’ Efforts To Include Hip-Hop Look More Like Talk Than Action

Well, I regret to report that the Grammys, despite staging a celebration of 50 years of hip-hop history (supposedly), still can’t seem to get hip-hop right despite all the ways the world makes it easy these days. And we’ll get to that performance in a minute, but first, let me dust off the drum I’ve been banging for the past six years to once again call out the rap establishment for either overlooking or downplaying the contributions and accomplishments of women in hip-hop for, well, the past 50 years.

From the obvious, like omitting Gangsta Boo from the In Memoriam segment to the subtle, like the vague respectability politics displayed by which female stars’ songs didn’t make it into the 10-minute-long tribute, the Recording Academy members’ biases were evident throughout the rap-focused portions of the ceremony.

Now, hip-hop doesn’t need and has never needed the Grammys’ approval or acknowledgment. But the Grammys have been striving for more relevance through engagement with hip-hop and to continue to do so on a purely surface level after all this time despite being called out repeatedly over the past decade isn’t going to get them there.

Make no mistake; that engagement is definitely surface-level. I’m not arguing that the Grammys should be honoring the most underground rappers… We don’t need Griselda menacing the crowd or a full slate of Memphis trap rappers dominating the nominations. But look, when one of the very pioneers of Memphis trap rap passes away a month before the ceremony, it makes very little sense for her name to be omitted from the In Memoriam segment (this isn’t the first time this has happened, either).

But let’s stick a pin in that thought because it’s going to tie into some of my points about the 50 Years of Hip-Hop tribute performance. Judging from that performance, the Grammys have also taken what feels like a reductive outlook on hip-hop in general. Check out the list of songs that supposedly represent 50 years of hip-hop history.

It looks a lot more like something that would have been done in 2003 than in 2023, doesn’t it? How else can you explain that 15 of the 23 songs were from before the year 2000 and only six of those were from between 1990 and 2000? The jump from The Lox to Lil Baby was called jarring on Twitter but even more than that, it belies the Grammys’ commitment to honoring younger, more diverse artists.

Sure, the logistics of pulling together something like that performance are likely Herculean, but do you truly mean to tell me that Soulja Boy was doing something more important than the Grammys on Sunday night? What about Chief Keef? Future was in the room, awaiting his eventual disappointment as the rightful Rap Album Of The Year winner, they couldn’t ask him to do “Turn On The Lights” or “March Madness?”

I could expend at least a couple more paragraphs on just the missing 2010s. It appears the Grammys’ current contingent of hip-hop representatives – to be sure, a crowd of Gen-Xers who all remember “Rapper’s Delight” coming on the radio in 1979 but who couldn’t name a recent Young Thug song to save their lives – are more than content to let that decade fall by the wayside while paying lip service to the last year or so of contemporary hits.

I certainly understand the compulsion, I really do. For literal decades, not just one, but two generations who grew up on rap watched those old-school pioneers of the ‘80s get overlooked or ignored – hello, the first untelevised Rap Grammy in 1989 – so it makes sense they’d want to give themselves these flowers now.

But they shouldn’t come at the cost of throwing their successors under the bus. That only starts a cycle that is self-destructive and counterintuitive – although it is also, to be fair, instructive of the way the Grammys works in the first place (see: Bonnie Raitt winning Song of the Year for a song literally no one listened to). And it’s a modus operandi that first and second-generation hip-hop stars have been employing for far too long, dumping on ‘90s and 2000s kids because they don’t like the greater emphasis on melody and trap aesthetics.

It’s also telling that the only women included were the upright-seeming, “wholesome” ones. Salt-N-Pepa may have been sex-forward and unapologetic for their time, but compared to Cardi B and Megan Thee Stallion, they are downright tame. Queen Latifah and Missy Elliott – who are among my personal favorites, and are indisputable legends – are also the most often pitted against contemporary faves like Nicki Minaj as the role models for girls to look up to.

Even Lil Kim and Foxy Brown, largely credited as the godmothers of modern “pussy rap” – the subgenre of hip-hop that women are mostly allowed to dominate – were absent from the celebration, giving the impression that the history of hip-hop is being sanitized as the disruptors of yesteryear age into the conservative parental figures youth movements are designed to rebel against.

Rap music is the most popular genre in the world. Hip-hop culture has permeated every corner of the globe. It’s done so largely by the efforts of the members of the Recording Academy who helped push rap forward. But now that they’ve done so, they seem intent on holding it back.

From predictably awarding Kendrick Lamar Rap Album Of The Year, seemingly for breaking with the conventions of the genre rather than embracing them, to overlooking so many contemporary rap heroes to trying to shrink and demean women in hip-hop, it seems the Recording Academy has had a bad influence on its rap delegation. They seem to be trying to conform rather than shake things up – and that’s not hip-hop.

No institution can ever be perfect or get everything right, but it’s clear that whatever measures the Grammys have supposedly taken to balance things out aren’t working. Perhaps more transparency is needed – I’d love to see how the ranked voting results are actually shaking out, personally – or maybe more expansion and a larger youth contingent are needed to ensure that more options appear on the ballot. One way or another, the Grammys have to do better, or else why even bother with hip-hop honors in the first place?

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

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Jay-Z Isn’t Sweating Beyoncé Losing Album Of The Year Because ‘It’s Just A Marketing Thing’

Last night, fans were stunned when the Grammys announced the Album Of The Year winner. While many expected that the win would go to Beyoncé for her groundbreaking album Renaissance, the award was instead given to Harry Styles for Harry’s House. Twitter erupted with fury, with many calling it an outright robbery, but there’s one person who’s not sweating it — arguably the second most invested party, Beyoncé’s husband Jay-Z.

In an interview with Tidal (a friendly outlet if there ever was one) ahead of the ceremony, Jay explained that he takes a different perspective on the importance of the award show, rather than getting his hopes up. “I remove myself from the process and hope they just get it right,” he said. “It got to the point where I was like, it’s just a marketing thing. You go, you got an album out and it could help the sales go up.”

Jay also explained why he thought Renaissance deserved the award, while admitting his bias. “Look what it’s done to the culture,” he observed. “Look how the energy of the world moved. They play her whole album in the club. I don’t know if I’ve ever seen that. The whole entire joint — like, everything?! Every remix is amazing. Everyone’s inspired. It has inspired the world. Every remix is better than the other one. From anybody, we’re just finding these joints out in the street… It’s inspiring creativity. You know how The Black Album had The Grey Album [Danger Mouse’s 2004 mashup project]? And the one with Radiohead? It was called Jaydiohead [Minty Fresh Beats’ 2009 mashup]. When it just inspires creativity, that’s an album. That has to be Album Of The Year. It has to be.”

Unfortunately, it seems the Recording Academy, by and large, disagreed (for what it’s worth, most of them are way too old for “the club” by now, right?). We’ll see how it does affect Beyoncé’s (and Styles’) sales in the future or their award show strategies, but with her world tour in front of her, Beyoncé has bigger fish to fry.

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What’s The Difference Between Song Of The Year & Record Of The Year?

The “big four” categories brought the fireworks at the 2023 Grammys. Harry Styles claimed Album Of The Year, leading to widespread dismay that it didn’t go to Beyoncé for Renaissance. Nobody could believe that Bonnie Raitt emerged victorious in the Song Of The Year category, including Bonnie Raitt. Lizzo, in host Trevor Noah’s words, was the embodiment of dopamine while accepting Record Of The Year for “About Damn Time,” and Samara Jay was named Best New Artist.

The confusion over Raitt winning out over monster songs by Adele, Beyoncé, DJ Khaled, Gayle, Styles, Kendrick Lamar, Lizzo, Steve Lacy, and Taylor Swift led to some tweeters differentiating between Song Of The Year and Record Of The Year.

But the official website for the Grammys offered an explainer in December 2017. To sum it up, Record Of The Year “goes to the artist(s), producer(s), and engineer(s) involved in crafting the specific recording (hence ‘record’) of a song,” and Song Of The Year “goes to the songwriter(s) (hence ‘song’) of new material (not including sampled or interpolated material) of a song.”

Raitt won Song Of The Year for “Just Like That,” which she produced and wrote herself. Lizzo shared her “About Damn Time” Record Of The Year victory with producers Ricky Reed and Blake Slatkin, engineers/mixers Patrick Kehrier, Bill Malina, and Manny Marroquin, and mastering engineer Emerson Mancini.

See the full list of 2023 Grammys winners here.

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

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Beyoncé Should Have Won The Grammy For Album Of The Year And It’s Infuriating That She Didn’t

Let’s not waste time, here: the Grammys let us all down by failing to acknowledge Beyoncé’s Renaissance as the Album Of The Year, in favor of the audio equivalent of plain oatmeal. I’m sure Harry Styles is a very nice British boy – distinctive lack of personality aside – but I, and indeed, many, many others fail to see what his album accomplished that Beyoncé’s did not.

Where Styles’ album was a fine example of a middle-of-the-road pop album, taking inspiration from the past 40 years or so of Top 40 radio (I’m putting it nicely – others have argued that it was pale imitation), Renaissance excavated 40 years of Black music history. Beyoncé sought to shine a spotlight on an oft-and-long-overlooked subculture of Black joy and rebellion.

And while the Grammys were certainly happy to make a fuss about her setting the record for most-awarded act ever, shutting her out from Album Of The Year – again – felt like a repudiation, a rejection, of not just Beyoncé’s efforts, but of the validity of the lived experience of the people her album highlighted. It’s a slap in the face.

To add insult to injury, these are the people and this is the scene that has most directly influenced pop music over the past 40 years. All of your faves? They got their swag from queer Black folks. If you ask just about any dance-pop star with a Billboard Hot 100 hit who they were inspired by, you’re going to get the same answers: Britney Spears, Madonna. Well, who inspired Madonna? I’ll wait.

Actually, no I won’t. It was that New York rave culture, where queer Black folks pioneered house and techno, ball culture, and the sampling techniques that permeate modern music today. Look at Sam Smith and Kim Petras winning Best Pop Duo/Group Performance last night. That doesn’t happen without the queer Black community opening the door, at the roots of things, laying the foundation for the branches to flourish.

And Beyoncé, who brought that underground movement to the daylight, went out of her way to acknowledge those contributors to the culture. She put Grace Jones on the album. She nodded to the dozens of collaborators and inspirations for that album in both the liner notes and on her website. As my colleague, Alex Gonzalez, pointed out on Twitter, “Both Harry and Beyoncé noticeably took inspiration from LGBTQ+ aesthetics and culture for their respective album eras… but only one of them actually thanked the queer community.”

And musically, she embraced the breadth and range of those contributions, from disco to neo-soul and everything in between. She displayed versatility and depth and grace and vulnerability and gratitude. She, to quote the kids (who are, again, only quoting Black drag queens), ate and left no crumbs.

In the end, she was paid dust.

Harry’s acceptance speech, oddly enough, inadvertently highlighted just how insultingly tone-deaf this pick really was. “This never happens to people like me,” he said. People like who, Harry? British people? Paul McCartney, Sting, and Adele all have several. Guys who were hand-picked and groomed by some of the biggest producers on the planet to be pop stars from their teens? Hey, have you ever heard of Justin Timberlake?

There is literally no category or tag that you could place on Harry Styles that would put him at a disadvantage in today’s society, let alone at an institution like the Recording Academy, which has had a 100-year history of dropping the ball on honoring Black artists, women, queer artists, or people of color in general at best, and outright racism at worst. Harry is, to the best of anyone’s knowledge, a straight, white, rich dude… the people modern society is set up to serve.

You can’t even blame this on the voting process; in a Variety feature about Academy voters, two anonymous members of this “prestigious” group openly admitted they didn’t vote for Beyoncé “because she always wins.” There was true spite behind this robbery, like the heist in Ocean’s Eleven. It wasn’t just about seeing Harry win – it was about seeing Beyoncé, a Black woman whose commitment to excellence in her craft oozes out of every fiber of her being, who has sacrificed so much to be the best at her craft, who shouldered the burden of representing an entire community in her work… lose.

That is truly heinous.

But, it’s also business as usual in America, where we Black folks are told we have to work twice as hard for half as much. If nothing else, last night’s Grammy result adds one more exhibit to the mountainous pile of evidence for this. It’s all just proof that the Grammys, like most everything else, ain’t really for us – and that’s a shame, because America, and its music, owe us so much.

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‘Heartbreak’ Will Feel Extra Bad In AMC Theaters When It Starts Charging Prices Based Upon Seat Location

It seems like, once again, we have been betrayed by Nicole Kidman. She brought us to AMC theaters to laugh and cry and become way too attached to robotic dolls, only to sneak in a new price hike while nobody was looking. Only kidding. It’s not really Kidman’s fault, but her “heartbreak” commercial hits differently now.

AMC theaters announced that they will be adjusting seat prices starting this week at select locations. Despite sounding like a fun gondola ride, Sightline at AMC is a less-fun new ticket pricing model that will adjust seat prices based on where the viewer is sitting in the auditorium.

Kind of like how there is an unspoken hierarchy of seats in your family’s living room, each seat will be priced differently based on where it’s located in the theater according to the screen. Less desirable seats like the front row will be a lower price than those in the middle of the room, where you can get that crystal clear view of alien fish.

The new price model will begin this week in select New York, Chicago, and Kansas City locations and is expected to be introduced domestically later in the year. According to Variety, there will be three ticket pricing options: Standard Sightline, which is a standard price ticket for the most common seats, then there’s Value Sightline, referred to as “seats in the front row of the auditorium, as well as select ADA seats in each auditorium, and are available at a lower price than standard sightline seats” and finally, Preferred Sightline seats, which are middle “premium” seats at higher prices. These options are available to AMC Stubs A-list for no additional cost.

It seems like a potentially risky move, though there is one upside: Sightline is not applicable to $5 Discount Tuesdays, the best day of the week to see a movie. Tuesday Moviegoers, we are safe this round.

(Via Variety)