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Billie Eilish And ‘Billie Eilish’ Came Face-To-Face When The Singer Brought Armani White On Stage At Osheaga

Last summer, Armani White blew up on TikTok and beyond thanks to “Billie Eilish” and the distinct line, “B*tch, I’m stylish / Glock tucked, big t-shirt, Billie Eilish.” Eilish herself seemed on board with the song, as she has shared videos featuring it on social media. Now, she’s taken her co-sign to the next level: At the Osheaga festival this weekend, Eilish brought White out on stage during her set.

Addressing her audience, she said, “You know that song that’s like [laughs], ‘Glock tucked, big t-shirt, Billie Eilish?’ You know that song?” The track’s instrumental started playing to much cheering, then White came out and performed some of the song as Eilish danced along. The two then put a cap on the fun moment with a big hug.

White previously spoke about his Eilish-like aspirations, saying in an interview with Genius, “I think Billie, what she is in her world, is what I aspire to be in my world, is just kind of like an anomaly… if it’s me for hip-hop, if it’s her for pop, or whatever it is, just to be in this world, but completely stand out from everybody else.”

Check out clips of Eilish and White at Osheaga above.

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Lizzo Did An Interview Right Before Her Lawsuit News Broke And She Spoke About Having A ‘Rough Day’

August started off on a sour note for Lizzo, when she was accused of sexual harassment and creating a hostile work environment by three of her former dancers in a lawsuit. Shortly before that news broke, though, Lizzo sat down for an interview with 60 Minutes Australia. During the conversation (which aired over the weekend), she indicated that something going on in her life had her feeling down.

She said, “Even today, I was having a rough day. I was sad and stuff earlier today. And I still feel like, for some odd reason, even if I’m having a bad day or if I’m going through something, people still get good from it. Maybe I’m, like, transmuting it, or maybe I’m an alchemist, you know?”

The 13-minute segment was seemingly intended to be a laudatory, lighthearted profile before the lawsuit news broke, and it is mostly that aside from some presumably last-minute re-framing to include mention of the lawsuit. The story makes note of Lizzo’s response to the lawsuit, which said in part, “These last few days have been gut wrenchingly difficult and overwhelmingly disappointing. My work ethic, morals and respectfulness have been questioned. My character has been criticized. Usually I choose not to respond to false allegations but these are as unbelievable as they sound and too outrageous to not be addressed. These sensationalized stories are coming from former employees who have already publicly admitted that they were told their behavior on tour was inappropriate and unprofessional.”

Watch the profile above.

Lizzo is a Warner Music artist. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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John C. Reilly And Hadley Robinson On ‘Winning Time,’ Family Drama, And Contentment Vs Chaos

There can be no doubt that Righteous Gemstones came along at the perfect time to fill the void left by the viper-esque quarreling and greedy Roy family when Succession went off the air. Now, with that show on break, we look to Winning Time (which returned for its 2nd season on Sunday night) to take the baton, giving us a look at the dysfunctional (but far less mean, ridiculous, and destructive) Buss family and their central pre-occupation, the 1980s Los Angeles Lakers. That team is, of course, a messed up family unit in its own right, complete with locker room feuds, and power struggles. At the heart of all of this is owner Jerry Buss (John C. Reilly) and his daughter Jeannie (Hadley Robinson), the master and the apprentice… if only father would acknowledge that his young daughter is the obvious heir to the throne and stop trying to make a square peg fit with his sons.

In the interview below (which was conducted prior to the ongoing Screen Actors Guild Strike), Uproxx spoke with Reilly and Robinson about the complex family dynamic at the heart of the show, fleshing out important stories by taking some artistic license (and the reactions — positive and negative — around the show), ambition, how the show has evolved, and there’s a special appearance from the late Jerry Buss by way of a bobblehead.

When the first season came out, there was, I guess you could say controversy or some complaints about some of the characterizations. I’m just curious, as an actor on the show, if you took it upon yourself or if you had an interest in something like the documentary Legacy: The True Story Of The LA Lakers, which came out in the interim between season one and season two.

John C. Reilly: No, I didn’t see that one.

Do you feel a sense of kinship, I guess, with the character to find out any other angles?

Reilly: I felt like in some ways a documentary about the Lakers is like a whole other exercise. What we were doing was filling in the blanks. Blanks that nobody really could fill in. You have to take artistic license to know what was said between two people, one of them is not alive anymore, the other one, whatever. The research for me on this was the script of our story, what we chose to focus on, and the arc that we chose to represent. That said, I understand why certain people who are still alive were bummed out to have their lives depicted in a semi-fictional way, but that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t do it.

There were crazy things that happened during this story and those are the things that people are interested in. You can look back at old game films and you can look at Wikipedia and you can even read the book that this is based on and get certain information, but what artists bring to a story is stuff that you just can’t get informationally elsewhere. What does it feel like to be the star of a basketball team? What does it feel like? Not just what do you have to say about it, but what did it feel like at the time?

That was more what I was interested in engaging with. Obviously, if we were depicting certain things like a press conference or something like that, I would watch the press conference, the original real press conference for sure. But you can get really bogged down in little details and I think the decisions that were made in terms of what to invent and what to do exactly as it really happened, are decisions that were made by the writing staff. I saw myself as just a tool in the process to bring all that stuff to life.

They’re important stories too, and not just from the standpoint of showing the largesse of the eighties or the rise of basketball and the importance of the culture, but even this season, I was really impressed by the way that the story is being told in terms of Dr. Buss’s decision to pay players more in free agency and the sort of shifting balance of power between the coaches and players.

Reilly: We talk about all of that. All that stuff is the story of America. Income inequality. What does a star deserve? If someone’s selling tickets, what should they get? All that stuff is all stuff that we examine. But it’s funny that you start out mentioning the people that were upset by what we did, but there are many, many, many more people that were really happy with what we did. Including Jeannie Buss, who is at the center of it as much as anybody. So, as I said, I understand how it could be uncomfortable to have certain things dramatized from your own life, but at the same time, that’s what artists do. That’s our job.

Absolutely. And I think you guys do a really good job.

Reilly: I wish how much LeBron loved the show got as much press as some of the other people that were not as excited.

That’s a very good point. Hadley, I’m curious about, in your opinion, what Jeanie’s objectives are in season two? How do you approach the character in season two?

Hadley Robinson: Well, I think her objective sort of remains the same and it’s a strong one: familial love and validation. That is something that everybody seeks, especially at a young age, and I think that that’s the goal: to fit into this family, to get the approval of her father, and to be a success in the thing that she wants to be a success at. And that drives through the second season and there is a shift there from season one. I think it’s also now with Honey as a part of the picture and her brothers are there. How do I fit into the family dynamic now and where’s my seat at the table, not just professionally, but also personally, and in this family, what role do I play? And there are a lot of obstacles she comes in contact with and it’s sort of watching her change her tactics and manage all those obstacles that arise.

You mentioned tactics. How important is strategy in terms of the way that she navigates the relationship with her father and the way she navigates the relationship with her brothers?

Robinson: Yeah, I think it’s actually left a little ambiguous in certain points because it is subjective. It’s not necessarily objective. For instance, when she trades her brother’s girlfriend, it’s left open-ended. Was that from a place of jealousy because she had to sacrifice so much for her work and her brothers weren’t doing the same amount of work and she was jealous that her brothers were dating girls and she didn’t have the opportunity to be dating guys because she was working so hard? It’s left open-ended and we don’t know if it’s because maybe there was some subconscious jealousy there and she wanted her out of her brother’s life or maybe it was just a really good trade and that was that. But yeah, little moments like that are left open-ended and I like it that way because maybe we don’t necessarily know what was actually happening in that moment historically and in the story, it could have been either, and it’s a choose-your-own-adventure, which I like that kind of style of acting and writing and I really like how it was written in that way. That happens at multiple moments in the story for Jeanie.

John, there are so many micro-feuds going on in Dr. Buss’s fiefdom with Pat and with Paul and with Magic and everything, and then the kids. What’s your view of what his dreams are, what makes him happy? Other than winning, obviously. Is he looking for contentment or is he comfortable in the chaos?

Reilly: We tell ourselves different things. I think maybe he was telling himself he was looking for contentment, but that’s not what he was actually doing. He was chasing after this perennial dream every year. I think that the amount of strife that was going on on the team, these little micro-feuds you’re talking about, that just goes with the territory of any team. Anytime a lot of money gets introduced into the scenario, anytime competitiveness and big stakes get introduced into a group of people, there’s going to be intense relationship things going on, people are going to have to sort that out. So I don’t think it was out of the ordinary for a team to have to deal with all this stuff, but what I think made Jerry Buss a really special person was his ability to see people just like a great poker player, which he was, he was able to sit at a table and be like, “Oh, that guy is going to choke. That person has cards, but they’re playing it very cool. That person’s bluffing.”

He actually was really good at that. And he could read people in positive ways too. He could see in Jeanie, “This girl can do it. I know she can.” But in order for someone to take over for the king, the king’s got to get off the throne. So Jerry was on the throne for quite a while in the events of our story here. Anyway, I think that was his superpower, was his ability and his desire to touch people, to really connect with them, to give audiences what they wanted entertainment-wise, to bring the best out of players and have them function at their highest level, to encourage women in his organization to think bigger and to take more responsibility than they were getting at most places at the time.

Absolutely. A question for both of you. What was it about this role at the start and how has it sort of changed or evolved in terms of the thing that gets you most excited about this?

Robinson: I think when I first got the script, years ago at this point, I think I was just thinking about the woman who we all knew and usually loved, Jeanie Buss. I saw her as this being, this entity, this icon, this legend, this kind of untouchable thing. I think I was pretty nervous to step into those shoes, but, I don’t know, that was always right there. I think as I’ve continued to play her, that sort of dissipated and I feel like now it’s like, “Oh, it’s this human being.” And it used to be that it was exciting to play the iconic version, but now it’s exciting to play the human being. Do you know what I mean? I think she’s both.

I’m getting to know her more and that’s really exciting, just getting to know her more and more and more because the more I learn about her, the more I learn about people, and the more I learn about me. From a personal perspective, that’s what gets me excited. And that’s just from a character perspective. The show overall keeps evolving. You have to keep evolving. It just keeps evolving. And I watched the season and I didn’t expect to be so riveted, because you’re there. You know what’s happening. You read the scripts, but then you’re watching and you’re like, “Oh my god, this is incredible.” And you get tingles and you get goosebumps and you’re like, “How am I getting goosebumps? I know what’s going to happen.” But you do, because that’s the way it’s made and that gets me excited too, is seeing that product after all the work put in.

John, what gives you goosebumps?

Reilly: I came for the comedy, and I stayed for the drama. I think the funny parts of Jerry Buss are what actually attracted me in the beginning, when (Adam) McKay sent me the first pilot script. I was like, “Oh my gosh, this is incredible. This guy’s swagger and his sense of male entitlement from the era.” There’s just something so funny, almost like a character out of Anchorman or something. He was a little bit less serious of a person when he started all this too. He was just trying to make something happen and then once he realized, “Holy shit, I might actually be able to pull this off,” he got very serious and very committed and dedicated to it, especially with people like Red (Auerbach, Celtics executive and coach) telling him that he wasn’t serious.

He was determined to prove people wrong. So yeah, to put it simply, I came for the comedy, I stayed for the drama because those scenes with, in particular, Sally Field in the first season as my mother and the scenes I had with Hadley this past season, those are really deep scenes. Those are really intense things to go through as an actor. I just did not expect it with this character when we started. So I was delighted with how deep it got.

Like you said, these characters were around for a long, long time. If this show goes 10 seasons and portrays the Buss family 20, 25 years beyond where we are in season two, is there interest in playing these characters at that stage of their lives?

Reilly: One of the reasons I’m an actor is because I have a low attention span. So I’m used to working, at the most, six months on something at a time. This job was a big challenge in that way, playing the same person year after year. It just was a brand new thing in my life. So some parts of it I didn’t like. One of the wonderful things about being an actor is the variety of the different people you get to inhabit. So getting to be the same person over and over, while it was nice to have job stability during the lockdown, I’m not going to lie, that was a great comfort during the lockdown to have a gig, at the same time… I mean, I want to do it as much as HBO wants to pay for it, let’s put it that way. (Laughs)

(Laughs) That’s a good answer. It’s an honest answer.

Robinson: Not very often do I answer questions with, “I don’t know.” But yeah, I don’t know. It’s hard to imagine. I think maybe just because focusing so much on the release of this season, I’m so focused on this version of her now. But I think yes and no.

It would be such a jump too for you. No offense, John, but Jerry Buss is cooked, he’s grown, he is a finished product, and obviously over the next 25 years of his life, there are changes here and there. But for Jeanie Buss, it’s a huge transformation from where you are right now.

Robinson: It’s true. It would be really great. I think there’s a lot to delve into, honestly. And I think I could definitely rise to meet that challenge without a doubt. And I think it would also be, I think it’s a story that would be important too. It’s the tip of the iceberg.

Reilly: Jerry Buss wants to respond to your question. [Reilly holds a Jerry Buss bobblehead up to the screen and channels the character] Jason, did you just say I was cooked? How dare you? I am an emerging story, a blossoming flower. Who knows where I could go after this? Thank you. That’s all.

[The Jerry Boss bobblehead saunters out of view with some help from burgeoning puppeteer John C. Reilly. Laughter ensues, farewells are offered, the interview ends.]

‘Winning Time’ airs Sundays on HBO

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Gilbert Arenas Didn’t Hold Back On The USA’s ‘Sorry Ass’ FIBA World Cup Team

Trae Young appeared on “Gil’s Arena,” the podcast hosted by former NBA player and current media personality Gilbert Arenas, and discussed his desire to represent USA Basketball some day. While he’s one of the top players in the NBA, Young has never gotten the opportunity to play for the national team, and as he laid out on the show, he would love to get the chance to join the team at the Olympics next year.

A pretty nice clip! Young would be a fun player in the international game — as he said, his passing, in particular, would be an asset — but we’ll have to wait and see if he makes it. But once he finished talking, the always outspoken Arenas excoriated the current United States squad that is about to participate in the FIBA World Cup a little later this month, calling them a “sorry ass group” and suggesting that Nike plays an outsized role in keeping guys affiliated with other apparel companies off of the team.

“I’m happy for the people who make it,” Arenas said. “It’s cool, it’s cool for some of the guys who got there that I don’t know, some of them probably don’t even start on their team. I don’t know, I don’t wanna look at it, cause it’s embarrassing sometimes where you have star players who’s really stars that do wanna participate, and you just automatically just say, yeah, he’s not gonna fit our style.”

While the World Cup featuring a slightly weaker USA team isn’t anything new — the team came in seventh place in the tournament back in 2019 — this is an especially young team, as only four players have earned All-Star nods and none of them have made it more than once.

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Trump Called Nancy Pelosi A ‘Wicked Witch’ Who Will ‘Live In HELL’ In Another Of His Chill Posts This Weekend

How was your weekend? Did you eat something nice or spend time with friends or family? Did you add to Barbie’s insane grosses, or catch its more serious movie twin Oppenheimer? Or did you spend it railing against your many enemies on a social media service, sometimes in ways that could land you in jail? If it’s the latter, you have something in common with Donald Trump.

On Friday, the former president dropped a threatening Truth Social post widely interpreted as concerning his third indictment. The judge overseeing that case didn’t take it lightly and is demanding answers by Monday. In the meantime, Trump decided to go after someone else: Nancy Pelosi, who had said he looked like a “scared puppy” en route to his third arraignment. Not so, according to the big guy himself.

“I purposely didn’t comment on Nancy Pelosi’s very weird story concerning her husband,” he said, referring to the intruder who viciously attacked her spouse last year, prompting wacko conspiracy theories. He added, “but now I can because she said something about me, with glee, that was really quite vicious.” He denied Pelosi’s claim, writing, “I wasn’t ‘scared.’ Nevertheless, how mean a thing to say! She is a Wicked Witch whose husband’s journey from hell starts and finishes with her. She is a sick & demented psycho who will someday live in HELL!”

Pretty weird stuff! The guy should probably go sit by the sea and eat some oysters or something. After all, those are two things he won’t be able to do should his antics finally laid him in the clink.

(Via Mediaite)

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Jake Paul Had Lil Durk Walk Him Out Before His Fight, So The Rapper Used It To Give An Update On The ‘Almost Healed’ Deluxe Album

In July, Eminem surprised fans when he joined boxer Terence Crawford during his ring walkout for his fight against Errol Spence Jr. On Saturday, August 5, Lil Durk accompanied Jake Paul in Dallas at the American Airlines Center for his stroll before he faced Nate Diaz. The pair used Durk’s latest single, “All My Life,” featuring J. Cole, as the soundtrack to their strut.

As Durk’s song played over the speakers, the rapper used the camera time to his benefit, updating fans on the deluxe version of his latest album, Almost Healed. The shirt he bore words, written in large red capitalized letters similar to the album’s featured font, that confirmed the album would be released sometime this month.

In the fan-captured video of the entrance, Durk emerged wearing his t-shirt before Paul appeared from behind the curtains.

For weeks Durk has told fans that the extended version of the album will eclipse the work he did on the original recording. On July 13, he took to X (formerly Twitter) to write, “Almost Healed Deluxe should of been the main album painnnnnnnnn🏆🤲🏾❤️‍🩹.”

After Durk canceled multiple dates of his Sorry For The Drought Tour due to a health scare, former ticketholders hoped the new edition would compensate for the nixed live shows.

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Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Has Not Been Pleased About What His Own Family Members Have Said About His Campaign And Views

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. must have known what would happen if he ran for president. For one thing, his wacko views would get greater exposure. When he floated a bizarre, arguably anti-Semitic theory about how COVID-19 was a bioweapon designed to exclude Jewish and Chinese people, even his own family members called him out. In the past RFK JR. has claimed that he’s cool with them doing that. Privately it’s another matter.

The New York Times has a new profile on the Democratic candidate, and buried within (as teased out by The Daily Beast) is a note on how he’s reacted when siblings and other close relatives have criticized his crackpot conspiracy theories, or the very fact that he’s running. (Some openly don’t support his campaign.) According to the report, Kennedy has “reached out” to some of them to complain about their public comments.” He’s also “engaged in tense discussions about his campaign and platform.”

Some of these correspondences have gone both ways. As per NYT, “Some family members recall pressing him on why he was running and warning him that he was putting his life up for scrutiny in a way that might be personally devastating.”

Has Kennedy’s controversial campaign been worth it? Is he fine with the extra scrutiny paid upon his wife, Cheryl Hines, whose most frequent coworker is no fan of her husband’s candidacy? Or is it part of some bigger scheme to peel off potential Biden voters, therefore making it easier for Donald Trump to amass more votes? The latter may be a conspiracy theory, but it’s a lot sounder than any of the ones Kennedy has ever floated.

(Via NYT and The Daily Beast)

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Post Malone’s Fiancée Rejected His First ‘Hammered’ Proposal, But He Thinks It Was For The Best

Early in his career, Post Malone would brag about his rockstar lifestyle. However, those drunken nights nearly derailed his marital plans after his fiancée rejected his proposal. During his appearance on the Call Her Daddy podcast on Wednesday, August 3, Post told host Alex Cooper about the night two years ago he decided to pop the question to his then-girlfriend.

“I had lost a significant amount of money at the table, and we go upstairs, and I’m, like, off my rocker hammered,” Post said. “I was like, ‘Hey, you wanna marry me? I got a ring and all this stuff. And then she said no.”

To others, getting a rejection might have been devastating. Pot, though, took it as a learning lesson. “She’s like, ‘Ask me tomorrow,’” said Post. “And then I did. And I was sober, and it was nice.”

Post took to social media in April to open up about his journey to sobriety. He shut down drug use rumors, writing, “I wanted to say that I’m not doing drugs. I’ve had a lot of people ask me about my weight loss and, I’d suppose, performance on stage. I’m having a lot of fun performing and have never felt healthier.”

Listen to the full episode of the Call Her Daddy podcast below.

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A Jack Harlow & Le’Veon Bell Song Isn’t Going To Happen Anytime Soon After The Rapper Declined His Feature Request Twice

Whether it’s soccer, basketball, or football, the worlds of professional sports, and rap music often bleed over into each other. Last year, Drake launched his recreational basketball league. J. Cole briefly played in the Canadian Elite Basketball League. Meanwhile, Jack Harlow showed off his basketball skills in the White Men Can’t Jump reboot. Although Harlow was embraced for his amateur abilities on the court, he has different standards for aspiring rappers.

During an interview with No Jumper, former NFL player-turned-rapper Le’Veon Bell revealed that Harlow declined his request for a guest feature a few times. As Bell discussed his budding music career, he confessed that he’s taken some hard hits to his ego.

“Bro, I sent Jack Harlow two songs, and he turned them both down,” said Bell.

He went on to provide more details regarding the interactions. “The first one, he’s like, ‘Nah bro, this one ain’t it.’ The second one, he was like, ‘Hey, you close on this one, but it still ain’t it,’” laughed Bell.

As such, a Jack Harlow and Le’Veon Bell song isn’t going to happen anytime soon. But Bell is hopeful that it will go down in the future.

Watch the full interview above.

Jack Harlow is a Warner Music artist. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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Steve Kerr Lays Out Why Getting Chris Paul Was ‘Hugely Important’ For The Warriors

The Golden State Warriors pulled off one of the more interesting trades of the NBA’s offseason when they turned Jordan Poole into Chris Paul. In a big picture sense, trading Poole for Paul indicated that Golden State is all-in on trying to win around its core of Steph Curry, Draymond Green, and Klay Thompson, with any hope of a two-timeline approach that sacrificed a little bit now with an eye on being able to compete on a longer timetable going out the window.

But for just next year, there’s a question about how Paul will fit into everything, in part because he made clear he would like to stay in the starting lineup. Regardless, in an interview with Robin Lundberg of Sports Illustrated, Steve Kerr made clear the team found it “hugely important” to bring Paul on board in an effort to make the team less one-dimensional.

“Chris is such an incredible competitor,” Kerr said. “He’s one of the all-time great competitors in my mind. He’s so smart, he controls games, he’s thinking three steps ahead all the time, he gets any shot he wants in the midrange. Our team last year needed another way to attack, and we became a little too one-dimensional with Steph and high ball screens. We needed another playmaker to give us a different look. And Chris is, as we know, one of the all-time great pick-and-roll players, and he’ll know how to control the tempo. It’s hugely important, especially in playoff games, to have guys like that and they’re hard to find.”

A major issue for the Warriors over the years has been keeping their offense afloat when Curry rests, and at the bare minimum, Paul should help with that. If there is a way for him and Curry together — and it’s not 100 percent clear that there is, as that would be a backcourt that has some serious defensive limitations — Paul could theoretically be a major on-ball option to unlock Curry’s ability to frustrate teams with his ability to get open off of the ball. At the very least, Kerr seems excited to explore any and all options with his new guard.