Hot Girl Summer is officially here, since Megan Thee Stallion launched the Hot Girl Summer Tour in Minneapolis last night (May 14). If this show is any indication of concerts to come, here’s what to know about when you can expect her performance to start.
What Time Is Megan Thee Stallion On Stage For The Hot Girl Summer Tour?
Megan previously said of the tour, “I feel like I’ve never been able to be outside doing my own thing during the summer, since like 2019. So this is going to be the first time that I drop an album on time for the summer. I do want to give the hotties the Megan Thee Stallion experience.”
Check out the show’s setlist below.
Megan Thee Stallion’s Hot Girl Summer Tour Setlist
Hot Girl Season is officially upon us. Last night (May 14), Megan Thee Stallion kicked off her much-anticipated Hot Girl Summer Tour at Target Center in Minneapolis. The first night of the tour has already garnered much buzz, with Meg’s comprehensive setlist, top-notch choreography, flashy visuals, and more. And as Meg is known to do, the Houston rapper kept the party going.
So upon your arrival, be prepared to move your body-ody-ody into the night.
How Long Is Megan Thee Stallion’s Hot Girl Summer Tour Concert?
According to setlist.fm, the Hot Girl Summer Tour‘s setlist comprises of 29 songs. A review for Star Tribune indicated that the show went on for 95 minutes. Fans noted that that Meg went on beginning around 9:20 p.m., and therefore, can expect to leave around 11 p.m.
The songs you can expect to hear can be found below.
Megan Thee Stallion’s Hot Girl Summer Tour Setlist
As festival season continues and a blazing hot summer approaches, a cool, refreshing drink is always in order. Over the past five years, seltzers and canned beverages have seen a boom in popularity at pool parties, outdoor concerts, and conventions. Ready-to-drink cocktails (RTDs) and spiked seltzers like White Claw, Truly, and Ranch Water have made for fun beverage options, as they are light, refreshing, and pair nicely with days spent in the sun. One of the newest entries in the RTD space is Sprinter — a canned vodka soda that packs on the fruit flavor without tasting overly synthetic.
Sprinter was founded by Kylie Jenner, who developed the beverage with beverage development expert Chandra Ritcher over the course of the past year. Now, the Kardashians and Jenners may be polarizing figures — but when they have a hit, they have a hit. There’s Kim Kardashian, with her Skims athleisurewear, which has been received well by fitness enthusiasts; Kendall Jenner, whose tequila has surprised every critic (and is championed often by Uproxx); and now Kylie.
But with all of their money and access, the family does seem to have good taste and avoids cutting corners. Which is a wordy way of saying that Sprinter is going to be a hit. Or, to be more precise, it was always going to be a hit — but it’s good enough to have staying power.
Sprinter comes in four different flavors — black cherry, peach, grapefruit, and lime. In all four of those flavors, the fruit flavor and the sweetness are far more noticeable than the vodka flavor. Meaning that if you down a few in a hurry they just might sneak up on you.
Here’s out rundown of all four flavors:
Grapefruit
Our personal favorite was the grapefruit flavor, which boasts a palate reminiscent of Squirt soda. It’s delicious and bright — perfect for poolside.
Black cherry
The booze factor is probably most noticeable in the black cherry flavor, making it the go-to for the RTD cocktail purists. A slight vodka kick with a faint fruity aftertaste, Jenner and Ritcher crafted a flavor that will satisfy even the most particular of consumers.
Peach
Perhaps the most approachable flavor was the peach flavor. This one is the sweetest of the bunch, with a taste comparable to a peach Fanta, diluted with La Croix. The aftertaste is similar to that of Haribo Peach Rings. A little sweet for a vodka aficionado, but an ideal seltzer for people who really aren’t into seltzers.
Lime
Another simple flavor is the lime variant, which tastes a bit like Sprite with an edge. Of the four flavors, the lime is the most balanced between sweetness, fizz, and booziness. With a San Pellegrino-esque aftertaste, the lime is probably the most sophisticated of the bunch. Though, to be fair, it was my least favorite.
It’s not hard to understand why there may be an aversion to Sprinter. After all, the Kardashians and Jenners have a monopoly on nearly every industry — make-up, fashion, television, tequila, and now, canned cocktails. Sure, your first thought may be “What the f*ck does Kylie Jenner know about spirits?” but with backing from Ritcher, whose resume boasts over 20 years of beverage alcohol industry experience, and a PhD in molecular biology, she’s done her homework, and has delivered a promising product.
At 4.5% ABV and 100 calories per can, Sprinter is one of the lighter canned vodka sodas on the market right now. With no added sugars or gluten, Sprinter won’t sit too heavy while you’re swimming or dancing the weekend away at festivals. And — regardless of what you think of the Kardashian-Jenner empire — it’s freaking good. That’s what matters most.
Vince Gilligan has returned to New Mexico to begin working on his new show. The still-untitled Apple TV+ series isn’t set in the Breaking Bad-verse, but it does star one of the Emmy-snubbed leads of Better Call Saul: Rhea Seehorn, who played Kim Wexler. Filming began in Albuquerque on Monday, May 13, according to KOAT.
“I keep returning to the Land of Enchantment for the beautifully cinematic landscape and to continue working with the best crew ever,” Gilligan said. “They’ve been making me look good for seventeen years now, and I figure, why fix it if it ain’t broke?” The project will employ over 1,400 New Mexico residents, including 500 crew members and more than 100 principal actors.
Gilligan has previously teased that the Apple TV+ series has “no crime and no methamphetamine,” and that “the world changes very abruptly in the first episode, and then it is quite different. And the consequences that that reaps hopefully provide drama for many, many episodes after that.” The show also has a “sci-fi element to it.” He added, “It’s going to be fun and different. I have no prediction as to how folks to react to it — whether they’ll love it or hate it, or somewhere in the vast in-between. But I know it’s a story that interests me, and Rhea will be playing a very different character than she played on Saul.”
We’re coming up on the one-year anniversary of Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco’s relationship, as the pair first started dating in June 2023. Blanco has of course spent some time thinking about his future, and his vision includes children, as he conveyed in a May 14 interview with Howard Stern.
When Stern speculated that Blanco doesn’t “have room for kids” in his life, Blanco pushed back enthusiastically, saying that having children is his “next goal.” He added, “I have a ton of god kids, I got a ton of nephews. I love being around kids.”
Stern then jokingly tried to get Blanco to propose to Gomez on air, and after laughing it off, Blanco continued, “When I look at her, I do say… I’m always just like, ‘I don’t know a world where it could be better than this.’”
In an April interview, Blanco revealed that it took him a while to realize that he had fallen for Gomez, saying, “I was the last one to know. It’s crazy how your partner could just be sitting there the whole time, right in front of your eyes, and you don’t even notice, and then you have that clueless moment where you’re like, ‘Wait, I’m in love.’”
One of the biggest tours of 2024 has landed: In Minneapolis’ Target Center last night (May 14), Megan Thee Stallion launched the Hot Girl Summer Tour. For those who are set to attend a future date of the trek, here’s what to know about what the setlist might look like.
Per setlist.fm, Megan’s Minneapolis setlist featured 29 total songs. She opened by giving her recent single “Hiss” its live debut, and she also performed “Boa” and “Cobra” live for the first time, too.
Back in January, Meg said of the tour, “I feel like I’ve never been able to be outside doing my own thing during the summer, since like 2019. So this is going to be the first time that I drop an album on time for the summer. I do want to give the hotties the Megan Thee Stallion experience.”
Check out the setlist below.
Megan Thee Stallion’s Hot Girl Summer Tour Setlist
The Indiana Pacers will return home needing a win in Game 6 to stay alive, otherwise their offseason will begin and the New York Knicks will be headed to the Eastern Conference Finals.
They’re in that position because they laid an egg in Game 5 in the Garden, as Jalen Brunson and the Knicks dominated in every facet of the game. For the second time in three games in New York, Tyrese Haliburton was extremely passive, scoring just 13 points on nine shots. It was a stark contrast to the energy and aggression he showed at home in Indiana, and if the Pacers are going to have a chance at winning this series, he will have to figure out how to get his game to travel
Haliburton is dealing with a handful of ailments, but the same can be said about most players in the playoffs (including Brunson) and we saw him find that extra gear in Games 3 and 4. On Inside the NBA, Draymond Green and Vince Carter, who were filling in for Shaq and Charles, discussed what their messages would be to Haliburton. Carter’s was simple, asking him “are you ready to go home?” and telling him to be more aggressive. Green, meanwhile, had a more pointed critique of Haliburton’s effort, particularly on the defensive end.
“I’m going to take this another step forward with Tyrese Haliburton,” Green said. “You have to come out and compete at a level that says I want to move on. And that’s not just on the offensive end, that’s on the defensive end. When you come out and you hedge on a screen and you just slap behind a guy and the guy turns the corner, that is setting the tone for the team, because you’re the guy. We’re not asking you to come out and be Patrick Beverley. We’re not asking you to be Andrew Nembhard. We’re asking you to come out and give an honest effort and compete. When you slap and you stop on the defensive end and give up, you’re letting the other guys down. Those are the same guys that you need as a star to run through a brick wall for you. And if you take the easy way out on the defensive end every chance you get, those guys that you need to run through a brick wall ain’t runnin’ through that brick wall and you’re gonna be on your way home. So he has to come out and compete on both ends of the floor like his life depended on it. Not be lockdown, just show some effort so then the help can get there and help you.”
It’s a really terrific segment from Draymond and provides some insight into why he’s been effective as the Warriors vocal leader. This is thoughtful criticism, not just bashing a guy for the sake of it, and it points out how Haliburton has to improve if he’s going to be the guy on an elite level team. When your star isn’t giving total effort, the entire team feels like they can also let off the gas. As he notes, he’s not asking Haliburton to become a lockdown defender, but the lapses in effort simply can’t happen, because then you can’t demand it of your teammates on either end with credibility.
The Denver Nuggets were in a bad place after the first two games of the Western Conference Semifinals, as the team lost both home tilts to the Minnesota Timberwolves and looked like a shell of the team that lifted the Larry O’Brien trophy. Fast-forward to the end of Game 5 and you’d be shocked to learn that anyone was able to beat a team with Nikola Jokic on it, as the NBA MVP played one of the best games of his career en route to a 112-97 Denver win that moves them one win away from a series victory.
Neither team was able to really impose itself on the other over the course of the first quarter. While the Wolves had an early 6-point lead, Denver was able to piece together a quick, 10-3 run to go ahead. They’d never relinquish that lead over the remainder of the period, but a balanced effort by Minnesota’s offense kept the home team from ever opening up an emphatic lead, even though they went into the second ahead, 28-26, behind a big first quarter from Jokic, who had 12 points and four assists over the opening 12 minutes.
Joker makes it look easy with the hook shot in the 1Q of Game 5!
Jokic continued his heavy lifting during the second quarter, as he was ruthlessly efficient from the field despite battling with Rudy Gobert. And yet despite the MVP’s individual brilliance, Denver just couldn’t open up a sizeable lead on Minnesota. While Jokic had 19 points on 7-for-10 shooting, the rest of his teammates combined to shoot 45.2 percent from the field against the feisty Wolves defense, and as a result, the home team was unable to ever get its lead beyond seven points.
Aaron Gordon tips it to himself on the break and drops the hammer
Still, Minnesota’s offense wasn’t much better — Karl-Anthony Towns and Nickeil Alexander-Walker each had 11 points, while Anthony Edwards on had five points on 1-for-8 shooting — and as a result, the defending champs found themselves up 50-44 at the break.
The Wolves came out of the break at halftime on fire. The team raced out to an 11-3 lead to start the third quarter, which gave them an early lead and helped to quiet the opposing crowd. And then, the Nuggets showed off the championship DNA that they possess by immediately coming back with a run of their own — this time, it was an 11-2 stretch that erased everything Minnesota did at the start of the third.
Jokic continued to dominate in the third, whether he was showing off his passing chops or putting Gobert in the blender. It was one of the most emphatic quarters we’ve seen Jokic play, which is a high bar for the future Hall of Fame inductee. He took it to Gobert over and over again, scoring 16 points in the third as Denver took a 14-point lead into the game’s final frame.
With Jokic on the bench to start the fourth, Minnesota started to chip away, as the lead got down to 10 before Michael Malone called a timeout. During that stoppage in play, Jokic got put back in, and right away, the Nuggets ripped off eight straight points.
Down the stretch, any time that the Wolves started to put even a little pressure on the Nuggets, the champs would be able to find an answer and prevent them from cutting the lead to single-digits. This included Jokic, once again, doing something silly with Gobert on him.
There was just nothing that Minnesota could do about him on the night, as Jokic ended the evening with 40 points, 13 assists, seven rebounds, two steals, a block, and zero turnovers in 41 minutes of work. While others can debate if it was his best postseason performance, it was unquestionably in the conversation, as the MVP spent the evening breaking the spirits of the best defense in the NBA.
Beyond Jokic, Aaron Gordon had 18 points, 10 rebounds, and five assists, while both Jamal Murray and Kentavious Caldwell-Pope had 16 points. Towns scored 23 to lead Minnesota, and while Edwards and Gobert both went for 18, the former had one of his worst games of the postseason (he shot 5-for-15 from the field), while the latter had nothing for the league MVP.
The series will now return to Minnesota, where the atmosphere will assuredly be different from the jubilant environment that greeted the Wolves earlier in the series. Game 6 will take place at 8:30 p.m. EST on Thursday night on ESPN.
The first half of Game 5 between the Nuggets and Timberwolves was a Nikola Jokic masterclass, as the three-time MVP had 19 points and eight assists, doing just about everything for Denver to get them out to a six-point halftime lead.
Much of his work came against the league’s Defensive Player of the Year, Rudy Gobert, who Jokic has taken great pleasure in going at for years. He hit Gobert with the full arsenal of moves, from speed to power to finesse, and Gobert simply didn’t have any way of slowing him down. At halftime, the TNT crew assembled with Draymond Green and Vince Carter sitting in for Charles Barkley and Shaq, and when it came time to break down the Joker’s big half, Green couldn’t help but steal Shaq’s most famous line, calling Gobert “BBQ chicken” in that 1-on-1 matchup and recounting a legendary Jokic-Gobert anecdote.
Draymond: “BBQ chicken is happening…I’m a truth teller and right now the truth is, Rudy Gobert don’t stand a chance against Joker.” pic.twitter.com/SJvNrfTm4n
As Green is quick to note, this isn’t him continuing to pile on Gobert as he has been wont to do in the past, pointing out that he gave Gobert his due this year as a deserving DPOY. However, Green insists he’s just a “truth-teller” and in this game, Gobert has no chance on an island with Jokic, which is a place very few have success. The Wolves will certainly look to adjust in the second half, in particular trying to avoid letting Jokic get Gobert one-on-one in order to get Rudy off the grill.
The New York Knicks moved one win away from the Eastern Conference Finals with a 121-91 win over the Indiana Pacers on Tuesday night. After Indiana was able to even up the series by defending its homecourt, the Knicks were able to hunker down and run them out of Madison Square Garden behind the latest playoff masterpiece from Jalen Brunson.
One of the defining things about Game 5 was that it was the first time we’ve really seen emotions boil over with these two things, as there were multiple technical fouls handed out. At one point, Donte DiVincenzo ran into a screen by Myles Turner and got his money’s worth, which led to the two of them getting into it with one another before they were separated.
Unsurprisingly, DiVincenzo got asked about this after the game, and instead of trying to lower the temperature a bit, he opted to prod Turner and the Pacers.
“They were trying to be tough guys. That’s not their identity… Nobody’s gonna fight in the NBA. Take the foul, keep it moving. You’re not a tough guy, just keep it moving.”
“They were trying to be tough guys,” DiVincenzo told the press. “That’s not their identity, and there was nothing more to that. I just didn’t agree with trying to walk up on somebody that you … nobody’s gonna fight in the NBA, so take the foul, keep it moving. You’re not a tough guy, just keep it moving.”
DiVincenzo is not the first person to call out the Pacers like this during the 2024 playoffs, as Bobby Portis called them a team of “frontrunners.”
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