Going into the You Season 4 premiere, star Penn Badgley dropped what probably felt like a bombshell to fans of the hit Netflix series: He no longer wanted to film sex scenes. At the time Badgley chalked the decision up to wanting to preserve “fidelity” to his marriage, and it wasn’t long until the internet was off to the races. The Discourse around Badgley’s decision fluctuated between speculation that he got caught cheating or he was erroneously equating the scenes with, well, actual sex.
In a new interview, the actor makes it clear that he saw the online chatter, and while he didn’t quite understand the backlash, he knows the internet is going to internet. Via GQ:
Badgley says that he was somewhat taken aback by the reaction to his comments, which feel “blown out of proportion”, but is all too aware of how the internet takes things out of context. “What I was speaking about wasn’t actually the final product,” he says. “It was sort of like the culture inherent to the production of all movies, but particularly those scenes. It’s like, look, we know that Hollywood has had a history of flagrant exploitation and abuse.”
Despite the backlash, Badgley opened up even more about his stance on longer filming intimacy scenes and how it could affect his career moving forward.
“I was nervous to even have that conversation,” Badgley said about telling You creator Sera Gamble. “It was not easy. It was easy because of Sera’s response, and I felt relieved. But technically speaking, if I thought I’d had the ability to set that boundary earlier, I would have.”
He added, “We shall see if setting that boundary, of course, has any ramifications. Just simply, it does limit the number of projects you can be a part of.”
Lindsay Lohan is about to be a mom. Not like a regular mom, a cool mom.
The Mean Girls star shared a cheeky pregnancy announcement on Instagram Tuesday with a photo of a white onesie with the words “Coming Soon” in black lettering on the front. She captioned the image saying, “We are happy and blessed,” before sneaking in a few appropriately-themed emojis for good measure.
Lohan met her husband, financier Bader Shammas, in Dubai around 2018 and the two secretly tied the knot sometime in 2022. Now the couple is expecting their first child together and fans are losing it, sharing memes from some of Lohan’s most popular movies and hyping this next stage of the Lohanaissance.
so happy for lindsay lohan, she has always been a mother because she raised us all pic.twitter.com/xxIrUy011c
Lindsay Lohan is pregnant, so I need Disney to get in the board room and get 𝐓𝐡𝐞 𝐏𝐚𝐫𝐞𝐧𝐭 𝐓𝐫𝐚𝐩 𝐈𝐈: 𝐒𝐰𝐢𝐭𝐜𝐡𝐞𝐝 𝐀𝐠𝐚𝐢𝐧 going where Annie and Hallie are both pregnant with twins, but the hospital mixes them up and one twin from each sister gets switched out pic.twitter.com/0237NoTqD5
Lohan, who currently lives in Dubai with Shammas, told TMZ the pair are “very excited for our new family member to arrive and we are looking forward to this next chapter of our lives!” Lohan’s been making a comeback of sorts over the past few years, scoring a two-picture deal with Netflix while her former co-star Jamie Lee Curtis stokes rumors that a Freaky Friday sequel might be on the horizon. She’s also been rumored to be making a cameo in the Mean Girls Musical movie that Tina Fey is producing.
Now it looks like impending motherhood can be added to her busy schedule.
The White Lotus actor shared a photo of the transgender flag on his Instagram account, along with the caption, “dear brothers, sisters and siblings. fear not, be strong and don’t let the bastards grind you down. love you.”
When someone in the replies wrote that they were unfollowing him, Imperioli wrote back, “you should,” followed by “hurry up.” He also said that such people make him “ashamed” and they’re “not allowed to watch my shows anymore.”
This isn’t the first time that Imperioli has voiced his support for the LGBTQ+ community. After Qatar World Cup ambassador Khalid Salman described homosexuality as “damage in the mind,” the actor replied, “Since being gay is illegal in Qatar, anyone attending the world cup should obey their rules. How about no one attends or watches or supports this gross display of hate, intolerance and ignorance (which are the true diseases of the mind)? Homophobia sucks. and while we are so does FIFA for accepting blood money to hold their obsolete tournament in Qatar.”
Fall Out Boy is gearing up for their first new album in years, with So Much (For) Stardust dropping in just ten more days. Despite band member Joe Trohman announcing he would be stepping away from the band temporarily, they still have a lot of stuff in store for fans.
Here is everything to know about the new record.
Release date
Fall Out Boy’s new album drops on 03/24 via Fueled By Ramen/DCD2. You can pre-save it here.
Tracklist
1. “Love From The Other Side”
2. “Heartbreak Feels So Good”
3. “Hold Me Like A Grudge”
4. “Fake Out”
5. “Heaven, Iowa”
6. “So Good Right Now”
7. “The Pink Shell” (feat. Ethan Hawke)
8. “I Am My Own Muse”
9. “Flu Game”
10. “Baby Annihilation”
11. “The Kintsugi Kid (Ten Years)”
12. “What A Time To Be Alive”
13. “So Much (For) Stardust”
Features
Currently, there is only one feature on So Much (For) Stardust, as actor Ethan Hawke will apparently appear on “The Pink Shell.”
The band is set to head out on tour starting this summer. To celebrate their new album, Fall Out Boy is bringing Bring Me The Horizon, Royal & The Serpent, Alkaline Trio, New Found Glory, Four Year Strong, The Academy Is…, Games We Play, Daisy Grenade, and Carr as opening acts for selected dates. A complete list of the North American shows is available here.
Fall Out Boy is a Warner Music artist. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.
If you’re a John Wick fan living in Japan, I have good and bad news. Let’s do the bad news first: you won’t be able to see John Wick: Chapter 4 (which rules) until the fall, probably September. It’s unfair, I know, considering everyone else gets to enjoy Keanu Reeves fighting Donnie Yen as soon as later this month. But here’s the good news: if you hang out in a hotel bar in Tokyo, you might see Reeves discussing the future of John Wick over whiskey.
John Wick: Chapter 4 director Chad Stahelski recently did an interview with the Hollywood Reporter where he was asked about whether he and Reeves have considered making more John Wick movies. “In our minds, Keanu and I are done for the moment. We’re going to give John Wick a rest. I’m sure the studio has a plan. If everyone loves it and it goes kooky, then we’ll take a quiet minute,” he said. Stahelski added that the John Wick films, “for some weird reason,” always have “the latest release date in Japan… If it’s the same this time, we’ll do a Japanese tour and release the movie in September.”
Once press tour obligations are over, “Keanu and I will take the long trip to Tokyo, we’ll sit in the Imperial Hotel Scotch Bar and go, ‘What do you think?’ We’ll have a couple 20-year-old whiskies and write some ideas on napkins,” Stahelski said. “If those ideas stick, maybe we’ll make a movie.”
You can book a reservation at the Imperial Hotel for September here, in case you have any good John Wick story ideas. “This time, John Wick kills bad guys with his sidekick, a talking cat.”
Outside of Avril Lavigne being swarmed by a topless protestor during her presentation onstage, the 2023 Juno Awards went off without a hitch. The annual music ceremony for Canadian artists was held last night (March 13) in Edmonton at Rogers Place. Hosted by actor Simu Liu, some of the biggest names in music were present, well, except The Weeknd.
Despite not being present, the Toronto native was awarded five Junos, including Single of the year, Album of the year, and Artist of the year, making him the second most awarded music in Juno Awards history. The top spot is currently being held by Anne Murray. Other notable winners include Jessie Reyez, who not only performed but also took home the award for Contemporary R&B recording of the year for their album, Yessie.
Band Arkells also broke a record. After winning group of the year, the group is now the most awards in that category. Singer Savannah Ré hit a three-peat after winning traditional R&B recording of the year yet again.
View the full list of winners below.
TikTok Juno fan choice
Avril Lavigne
Lauren Spencer-Smith
MacKenzie Porter
Preston Pablo
Rêve
Shawn Mendes
Tate McRae
The Reklaws
The Weeknd
Tyler Shaw
Single of the year
“Bite Me” – Avril Lavigne
“Flowers Need Rain” – Preston Pablo and Banx & Ranx
“When You’re Gone” – Shawn Mendes
“She’s all I Wanna Be” – Tate McRae
“Sacrifice” – The Weeknd
International album of the year
Ed Sheeran – =
Harry Styles – Harry’s House
Lil Nas X – Montero
Taylor Swift – Midnights
Taylor Swift – Red (Taylor’s Version)
Album of the year
Ali Gatie – Who Hurt You?
Avril Lavigne – Love Sux
Nav – Demons Protected By Angels
Tate McRae – I Used to Think I Could Fly,
The Weeknd – Dawn FM
Artist of the year
Avril Lavigne
Lauren Spencer-Smith
Michael Bublé
Shawn Mendes
The Weeknd
Group of the year
Arcade Fire
Arkells
Billy Talent
Metric
The Reklaws
Breakthrough artist of the year
Dax
Devon Cole
Preston Pablo
RealestK
Rêve
Breakthrough group of the year
Banx & Ranx
Harm & Ease
Rare Americans
Tommy Lefroy
Wild Rivers
Songwriter of the year
Abel Tesfaye: “Less Than Zero” (co-songwriters Tomoko Yamaguch, Hamada Tetsuro, Daniel Lopatin, the Weeknd); “Out of Time” (co-songwriters Max Martin, Fragogian Josefsson, Axel Hedfors, Oscar Holter, Sebastian Ingrosso, Carl Nordstrom, Kevin Duane McCord); “Sacrifice” (co-songwriters Max Martin, Fragogian Josefsson, Axel Hedfors, Oscar Holter, Sebastian Ingrosso, Carl Nordstrom, Kevin Duane McCord).
Faouzia: “Anybody Else” (co-songwriters Andre Davidson, Michelle Buzz, Sean Davidson);
“Puppet” (co-songwriters Andre Davidson, Johnny Goldstein, Sean Davidson); “RIP, Love” (co-songwriters Fran Hall, Jakke Erixson).
Tate McRae: “Chaotic” (co-songwriter Victoria Zaro); “Feel Like Shit” (co-songwriters Victoria Zaro, Jacob Hindlin, Russell J Chell); “She’s all I Wanna Be” (co-songwriter Greogry Kurstin).
Tenille Townes: “The Last Time” (co-songwriters Gordon Sampson, Benjamin Goldsmith); “When you Need It” (co-songwriter Stephen Wrabel); “When’s it Gonna Happen” (co-songwriters Stephenie Jones, Stephen Wrabel).
Tobi: “Before we Panic” (co-songwriters Alex Goose, Eric Hagstrom, John Stephen Sudduth, Kevin Martin, Tony Martin, Stephenie Jones, Stephen Wrabel); “Flowers” (co-songwriters Alex Goose, Daniele Luppi, Homer Steinweiss, Nick Movshon, Nicole Wray, Leon Michels, Paul Spring); “Move” (co-songwriters Alex Goose, Jessica Lee Hansell, Jon Bap, Robin Hannibal, Tavon Thompson, Tyler Demorest).
Country album of the year
High Valley – Way Back
Jade Eagleson – Honkytonk Revival
Orville Peck – Bronco
Tenille Townes – Masquerades
The Reklaws – Good Ol’ Days
Adult alternative album of the year
Altameda – Born Losers
Basia Bulat – The Garden
Dan Mangan – Being Somewhere
The Sadies – Colder Streams
The Weather Station – How is it That I Should Look at the Stars
Alternative album of the year
Alvvays – Blue Rev
Luna Li – Duality
Ombiigizi – Sewn Back Together
Pup – The Unraveling of PupTheBand
Tanya Tagaq – Tongues
Pop album of the year
Alessia Cara – In the Meantime
Avril Lavigne – Love Sux
Carly Rae Jepsen – The Loneliest Tim,
Tate McRae – I Used to Think I Could Fly
The Weeknd – Dawn FM
Rock album of the year
Alexisonfire – Otherness
Billy Talent – Crisis of Faith
Nickelback – Get Rollin’
The Sheepdogs – Outta Sight
Three Days Grace – Explosions
Vocal jazz album of the year
Caity Gyorgy – Featuring
Diana Panton – Blue
Laura Anglade and Sam Kirmayer – Venez donc chez moi
Nikki Yanofsky – Nikki by Starlight
The Ostara Project – The Ostara Project
Jazz album of the year
Ernesto Cervini – Joy
Lauren Falls – A Little Louder Now
Luis Deniz – El Tinajon
Rafael Zaldivar – Rumba
Renee Rosnes – Kinds of Love
Jazz album of the year
Andrew Rathbun Quintet – Semantics
BadBadNotGood – Talk Memory
Carn Davidson 9 – The History of Us
Florian Hoefner Trio – Desert Bloom
Mark Kelso & the Jazz Exiles – The Dragon’s Tail
Instrumental album of the year
Canadian Brass – Canadiana,
Esmerine – Everything was Forever Until it was no More,
Hard Rubber Orchestra – Iguana
Jean-Michel Blais – Aubades
Stephan Moccio – Lionheart
Album francophone de l’année
Ariane Roy – Medium plaisir
Daniel Bélanger – Mercure en mai
Hubert Lenoir – Pictura de ipse: Musique directe
Les Louanges – Crash
Lisa LeBlanc – Chiac Disco
Children’s album of the year
Beppie – Nice to Meet You
Jeremy and Jazzy – Say Hello
Splash’N Boots – I am Love
Walk off the Earth and Romeo Eats – Walk off the Earth & Romeo Eats, Vol. 2
Young Maestro and Keysha Freshh – Maestro Fresh Wes Presents: Julia the Great
Classical album of the year (solo artist)
Bruce Liu – Winner of the 18th International Fryderyk Chopin Piano Competition Warsaw 2021,
David Jalbert – Prokofiev: Piano Sonatas, Vol. 1
Isabel Bayrakdarian – La Zingarella: Through Romany Songland
James Ehnes – Bach: Sonatas and Partitas for Solo Violin
Philip Chiu – Fables
Classical album of the year (large ensemble)
Clara – Robert – Johannes: Lyrical Echoes, Canada’s National Arts Centre Orchestra, conducted by Alexander Shelley
Richard Strauss: Metamorphosen – Arvo Pärt: Symphonie No. 4, ‘Los Angeles,’ I Musici de Montréal, conducted by Jean-Marie Zeitouni
Viola Borealis, Orchestre de l’Agora, conducted by Nicolas Ellis, featuring Marina Thibeault
Radiant Dawn: Music for Advent and Christmas, The Elora Singers, conducted by Mark Vuorinen
Classical album of the year (small ensemble)
Andrew Balfour and musica intima – Nagamo
ARC Ensemble – Hemsi: Chamber Works
collectif9 – Vagues et ombres
Elinor Frey and Rosa Barocca, conducted by Claude Lapalme – Early Italian Cello Concertos
Suzie LeBlanc, Marie Nadeau-Tremblay, Vincent Lauzer, and Sylvain Bergeron – De la cour de Louis XIV à Shippagan! Chants traditionnels acadiens et airs de cour du XVIIe siècle
Classical composition of the year
Anthony Tan – An Overall Augmented Sense of Well-being
Bekah Simms – Bestiary I & II
Keyan Emami – The Black Fish
Nicole Lizée – Prayers for Ruins
Vincent Ho – Supervillain Études,
Rap album/EP of the year
Boslen – Gonzo
Classified – Retrospected (Acoustic)
Jazz Cartier – The Fleur Print Vol. 2
Nav – Demons Protected by Angels
Tobi – Shall I Continue?
Dance recording of the year
“Afterglow” – Bob Moses and Kasablanca
“Shinigami Eyes” – Grimes
“These Nights,” – Loud Luxury feat. Kiddo
“Ctrl + Alt + Del” – Rêve
“Spiral” – Rezz
Contemporary R&B recording of the year
“When Flowers Bloom” – Adria Kain
“If I Get Caught” – dvsn
No Longer in the Suburbs – Dylan Sinclair
Yessie – Jessie Reyez
“WTF” – Savannah Ré
Reggae recording of the year
“Water” – Ammoye
“Like a Star” – Celena
“Jah Love” – Exco Levi
“In the Streets” – Kairo McLean
“Reggae Party,” – Kirk Diamond, Kairo McLean and Finn feat. Kairo McLean
Contemporary Indigenous artist or group of the year
Watin, Aysanabee
Zhawenim, Digging Roots
Code Red, Indian City
Beyond the Reservoir, Julian Taylor
The Crossing, Susan Aglukark
Contemporary roots album of the year
Blackie and the Rodeo Kings – O Glory
Fortunate Ones – That was you and Me
Shakura S’Aida – Hold on to Love
The Bros. Landreth – Come Morning
The East Pointers – House of Dreams
Traditional roots album of the year
Allison de Groot & Tatiana Hargreaves – Hurricane Clarice
Le Vent du Nord – 20 printemps
Mama’s Broke – Narrow Line
Pharis & Jason Romero – Tell ‘Em You Were Gold
The McDades – The Empress
Blues album of the year
Angelique Francis – Long River
Crystal Shawanda – Midnight Blues
Harrison Kennedy – Thanks for Tomorrow
Spencer Mackenzie – Preach to my Soul
The Harpoonist & the Axe Murderer – Live at the King Eddy
Contemporary Christian/gospel album of the year
Dan Bremnes – Into the Wild
Daniel Ojo – Trust
Jordan St. Cyr – Jordan St. Cyr
Love & the Outcome – Only Ever Always
Tehillah Worship – The Church Will Rise,
Global music album of the year
Ghalia Benali, Constantinople, and Kiya Tabassian – In the Footsteps of Rumi
Lenka Lichtenberg – Thieves of Dreams,
Pierre Kwenders – José Louis and the Paradox of Love,
Ruby Singh – Vox.Infold,
Wesli – Tradisyon,
Jack Richardson producer of the year
Akeel Henry: “For Tonight,” Giveon (co-producers Sevn Thomas, Jahaan Sweet); “Splash,” John Legend (co-producer Tone, Kevin Ekofo).
Banx & Ranx: “Ctrl + Alt + Del,” Rêve; “Dynamite feat. Sia,” Sean Paul (co-producers Greg Kurstin, Jason Jigzagula Henriques).
Kaytranada: “dog food,” IDK; “Iced Tea,” Joyce Wrice and Kaytranada.
Mike Wise: “10 Things I Hate About You,” Leah Kate; “Yuck,” Charli XCX.
Murda Beatz: “California Breeze,” Lil Baby (co-producer Marcel Korkutata); “Have Mercy,” Chlöe (co-producers Chlöe, BoogzDaBeast, Fnz, Joseph L’Etranger).
Recording engineer of the year
Derek Hoffman: “My Body,” Lili-Ann De Francesco; “Stronger Than you Know,” the East Pointers.
George Seara: “Hell/Heaven,” Keshi; “It’ll be Okay,” Shawn Mendes.
Gus van Go: “Grow up Tomorrow,” the Beaches; “What Feels Like Eternity,” Metric.
Jason Dufour: “She Don’t Know,” Jade Eagleson; “The old Me,” Ria Mae.
Serban Ghenea: “That’s What I Want,” Lil Nas X; “Unholy,” Sam Smith feat. Kim Petras.
Album artwork of the year
Emy Storey (art director, designer, photographer), Becca McFarlane and Pamela Littky (photographers): Crybaby, Tegan and Sara.
Ian Ilavsky (art director and designer), Maciek Szczerbowski (illustrator): Everything was Forever Until it was no More, Esmerine.
The “real” Walter White was last seen snacking in the desert for a Breaking Bad-themed Super Bowl commercial. Yet the darker side of his legend lives on, apparently in Russia, where a man dubbed as the “Russian Walter White” allegedly ran an amphetamine ring with his wife out of their apartment. The story is typically sketchy, as The Daily Beast reports, given that this duo claims to have only sold “fake” drugs while pulling the wool over customers’ eyes in order to raise money to save animals.
Yes, you read that correctly Diana Gribovskaya is the science teacher in this scenario, and Dmitry Karavaichik is her veterinarian husband. The pair received hefty prison sentences, and since Vladimir Putin has grown increasingly desperate for recruits, the Wagner Group (who Putin has hired as mercenaries for his Ukraine war) has now pulled in the husband for Putin’s cause. This does not bode well for the husband living, given that Putin recently cut off the ammo supply of Wagner, but Diana received a pardon in exchange for him essentially signing over his life. The Daily Beast has more details:
Reports had already emerged in January that Karavaichik had joined Wagner after an image was released showing the group’s founder, Yevgeny Prigozhin, alongside former prisoners who had been cleared of their convictions after fighting in the war in Ukraine.
Independent Russian investigative group Agentstvo (The Agency) identified Karavaichik as one of the ex-convicts in the photo. The BBC said the group — which also allegedly included a murderer who had drowned his friend — were also given medals “for courage” after completing a six-month stint on the frontline..
With that detail, the story of this war grows ever messier. Russia recently notched their day of greatest losses in this conflict after 1,000 soldiers lost their lives fighting in Ukraine. Putin has also taken to recruiting female convicts after restocking the Russian army with a hefty supply of male convicts. And it seems that the Russian version of Walter White could suffer a fate worse than his alleged inspiration in the AMC show. As they say, war is hell.
Hip-hop fans were dismayed to learn that long-running mixtape streaming site DatPiff — whose existence even predates that of more mainstream DSPs like Spotify — had shut down yesterday, leading to a period of mourning on social media for one of the pillars of the modern-day internet.
That is until DatPiff’s Twitter account popped up with a message reassuring users that the service was still alive and well. “Despite the rumors, we are happy to report that we will still be supplying you with all the mixtapes you love,” it read. “We’re working through technical issues on our site and app, but still actively update our youtube! Thanks for all the love and concerns but we promise, we are still here.”
Despite the rumors, we are happy to report that we will still be supplying you with all the mixtapes you love. We’re working through technical issues on our site and app, but still actively update our youtube! Thanks for all the love and concerns but we promise, we are still here
Well, you know how I’m constantly harping at you all about making sure you get your news from trustworthy sources? Yeah. Reddit.com is not a trustworthy source. Apparently, a subscriber of the subreddit r/hiphop101 interpreted some of these technical glitches as a sign that the company had completely folded. That post was then shared widely among hip-hop heads on social media — there’s an Instagram screenshot of the Reddit screenshot in the tweet below, courtesy of Complex — and it seems everyone pretty much ran with this story without confirming it via any legit news publications or first-person accounts.
DatPiff, which hosts mixtapes from both megastars and up-and-coming artists, holds a unique place in hip-hop history. Because it was easier to upload a new tape to the site directly than going through Apple Music (formerly iTunes, the only real name in the streaming game at the time), many artists got their start by sharing DatPiff links with their fans in the early days of social media. That includes names like ASAP Rocky, Big Sean, Drake, J. Cole, and Kendrick Lamar, among others (I wrote about some of them here). The entire blog rap era basically ran on DatPiff (and illegal file-sharing sites like ZippyShare and MegaUploads), and fans were quick to acknowledge its importance while (mistakenly) eulogizing the site.
Pioneers of the mixtape era. Thank you for shaping the culture in the 2000s and changing the music industry forever.
Long live Biggy Jiggy Mixtapes. So many classic tapes from Weezy and Gucci Mane. A launching pad for Drake, Wiz, and so many more. pic.twitter.com/2rJaGGwqAU
I haven’t used DatPiff in years but if the site is really gone then RIP, a lot of history was made there and changed a lotta artist’s lives.
— Ahmed/The Ears/IG: BigBizTheGod (@big_business_) March 14, 2023
Aside from being an amazing archive of mixtapes and unofficial projects that will never, ever touch DSPs, DatPiff outlasted the slang that it named itself after by many years, which I find most incredible.
RIP Datpiff — who probably has the most important archive of music from the past 10-15 years anywhere on the internet. It was a bridge between the blog era and the streaming era — and a hub for projects that will never see the light of day on DSPs.
Of course, with the reveal that the site wasn’t shutting down (yet), it seems that those flowers, while warranted, were premature. If the site can itself back up and running, now might be a good time to download all your favorite tapes for posterity — just in case. If not, well, there’s always LiveMixtapes.
It’s been exactly one month since Eric Andre and Emily Ratajkowski posted their celebratory naked pictures, and even though the couple seemed to have called it quits just days later, the photo has already taken on a life of its own. It would not be surprising if the historical artifact eventually hung in the Louvre.
But the mysterious photo was just that, a mystery, up until recently when Andre told Rolling Stone about the entire ordeal. “I was really in the moment. I was drinking wine. We both started cracking up,” he said Ratajkowski then took the photo, which shows the duo very naked with clothes littering the floor (stars–they’re just like us!) The comedian said that there “wasn’t much thought” when it came to posting it. “We both agreed that this was a beautiful image that we had to share with the world.” And the world loved the beautiful thing, as the photo quickly made the rounds in every corner of the internet.
The two didn’t seem to put much energy into how people would react, according to Andre. “It was one of those things. I think that’s what art is about. Art is not intellectual; it’s primal. It has to speak to your hormones as much as it speaks to your mind. The beauty of that was the spontaneity. Spontaneity and capturing happy accidents are what art is all about.” This is what Bob Ross was trying to tell everyone for all of those years.
The comedian also addressed the common trope of an actress/model dating an “ugly” (his words!) comedian, noting Colin Jost and Scarlett Johansson as an example. “How could this happen?” He joked, adding “I think that people think attraction is only based on physical appearance, but beauty is only skin-deep.”
The last 2-3 years of musical projects from TWICE may have felt like a transition period as they begin to mesh their bright and colorful image with cheeky messages on love and growing up. In their twelfth EP, Ready To Be (released last Friday, March 10), the top-selling South Korean girl group from JYP Entertainment — consisting of Nayeon, Jeongyeon, Momo, Sana, Jihyo, Mina, Dahyun, Chaeyoung, Tzuyu — has solidified their image as grown women in the pop industry. Their English pre-release single “Moonlight Sunrise” that dropped in January was only a glimpse of what was to come in the new seven-track project.
Ready To Be opens up with the group’s lead single “Set Me Free” — a disco-heavy pop track penned by GALACTIKA and produced by Lindgren. The first track off the mini-album suits its place in the EP, as the song can easily feel like you’re listening to the opening credits of a 1970s action-packed thriller. It’s not until we get into the bridge where modern meets nostalgia as TWICE’s rap-line of Dahyun, Momo, but Chaeyoung go back-to-back for a couple of lines. Blending in old and new genres is no stranger to TWICE’s signature sound. It’s something that they’ve perfectly formulated over the years alongside their production team. However, the message for “Set Me Free,” and its English version, are loud and clear: love freely and break from the chains that may bind and hold you back from doing so. Carrying a theme such as that makes “Set Me Free” a strong lead single and confirms both TWICE’s maturity as artists and their message.
If “Set Me Free” cemented TWICE’s newfound image of bringing sophisticated pop with mature themes, Ready To Be’s second track, “Moonlight Sunrise” (also known as the pre-release English single), was a teaser to the group’s grown era. As we’ve mentioned before, the song’s flirtatious lyrics (“I’ve got the moonlight, tequila sunrise, come take a shot on me, I got ya”) on top of a bed of Miami-bass is an invitation to the new side of TWICE. After all, the English single was the first project from the group after breaking K-pop’s seven-year curse and renewing their contracts last year.
“Got The Thrills” plays as the third track off of Ready To Be and can be easily taken as the sequel to “Talk That Talk” with its similar synths and progressions sprinkled throughout. Produced by JYP Entertainment’s in-house producer collapsedone (“What Is Love?” “Knock Knock,” “Feel Special”), TWICE highlights the adrenaline-rushing feelings of falling in love in a metaphorical sonic journey of thrills — “An insatiable thirst, risky eye contact / Even if it’s dangerous gotta gotta gotta get the thrills.”
The excitement springing from “Got The Thrills” transitions into a powerful rock and blues anthem penned by member Dahyun called “Blame It On Me.” Filled with a loud strum of the electric guitar and a consistent chord progression throughout, the song rages on the themes of a one-sided obsession with a subtle touch of lust. It’s an ode to unrequited love and the consequences of not being reciprocated.
As the thematic message of love can get complicated, TWICE’s “Wallflower” takes on a “drunk in love” approach in its messaging. With lyrics confidently suggesting an intimate night and sharing a dance with one another, TWICE allures the listener into their thoughts, eventually seducing them into their world in this lustful earworm.
And if you can’t deal with the complicated moments of love, sometimes it’s best to just leave it be. That’s exactly what the second penned track from Dahyun is saying in her rock pop song “Crazy Stupid Love.” While it may be considered a sad break-up song, it’s also a song filled with raging emotions of not wanting to deal with trivial lies and toxicity love can carry. Listing “Crazy Stupid Love” as the last [Korean-sung] track off the album (besides the English version of “Set Me Free”) is a great way to generalize how love is such a complex experience for young adults that, sometimes, we realize that maybe love, or specifically companionship, isn’t for all of us.
TWICE’s Ready To Be is out now and available on all streaming platforms.
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This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these cookies, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may have an effect on your browsing experience.
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.