In the 15-second clip — which Rihanna captioned “looking for nudes” — shared yesterday (May 5), she models nude lingerie (specifically, the Signature Script Underwire Teddy) from the brand’s Signature Script collection. In a voiceover, she explains, “I was desperate for a nude. Like, I go in between nudes when I get tan or when I’m a little paler. It’s hard to find a nude you can carry through in that range of shades, and I found mine. Signature Script.”
Meanwhile, in a recent interview, Rihanna looked back some some bold fashion choices she’s made, saying, “I’ve done so much sh*t in my life. I’ve had my nipples out, my panties out. But now, those are the things which, I guess as a mom and an evolved young lady — emphasis on ‘young’ — there are things I feel like I would never do. Like, ‘Oh my God, I really did that? Nips out?’”
She also just sparked pregnancy rumors after some people thought they spotted a sneaky maneuver in a video.
Chance Perdomo was already beloved to viewers of Chilling Adventures Of Sabrina before he appeared as Supe Andre Anderson on Gen V. His rising-star status was cut short on the eve of second-season filming for The Boys spin off when the cast and crew learned of Chance’s death in a motorcycle accident at age 27. That news surfaced in late March, and producers delayed production “indefinitely” and are now circling back to discuss how the show will proceed.
Brooke Palmer/Amazon Prime Video
In a statement, producers wrote that Chance’s role will not be recast despite Andre figuring prominently into the overall story, and the show will rewrite the storylines and push production back until May:
“As we continue to navigate the tragic loss of Chance Perdomo, everyone at Gen V is determined to find the best way to pay respect to his memory. We won’t be recasting the role, because no one can replace Chance. Instead, we have been taking the time and space to recraft our season 2 storylines as we begin production in May. We will honor Chance and his legacy this season.”
Chance’s character appeared in the final season-finale scene where he and his college classmates found themselves in a medical facility, which may or may not have been The Woods. However, filling his shoes would have been impossible as producers have communicated, hence the decision to recraft the group’s stories. With that said, Perdomo’s absence will surely be felt by viewers, cast, and crew alike.
Forget “Espresso.” The song of the summer is “Do Not Diddle Kids.” Over the weekend, Drake released “The Heart Part 6,” his latest response to Kendrick Lamar‘s endless barrage of diss tracks. “Only f*ckin’ with Whitneys, not Millie Bobby Browns, I’d never look twice at no teenager,” he raps, a response to Lamar accusing him of being inappropriate with underage girls, including the Stranger Things actress (“Tryna strike a chord and it’s probably A-Minor”).
“Nah Drake” started trending on social media following the release of “The Heart Part 6,” as did a clip from It’s Always Sunny In Philadelphia. In the season seven episode “Frank Reynolds’ Little Beauties,” Frank (Danny DeVito) asks Dennis (Glenn Howerton), Charlie (Charlie Day), and Mac (Rob McElhenney) to help him write a song about how he does not “diddle” kids.
Frank’s proposed lyrics to “Do Not Diddle Kids”:
Do not diddle kids, it’s no good diddlin’ kids
I wouldn’t do it with anybody younger than my daughter, not little kids, gotta be big
Older than my wiiiife, older than my daughter
As Mac points out, “There is no quicker way for people to think that you are diddling kids than by writing a song about it!” A certain someone did not get the message.
“Oh my god. Drake’s response was to actually make a song about he doesn’t diddle kids. ‘The Heart Part 6’ is literally the It’s Always Sunny scene,” one X user wrote, while another added, “Drake literally pulled a Frank Reynolds.”
You can see the reactions below
Oh my god.
Drake’s response was to actually make a song about he doesn’t diddle kids.
We already know that Madonna is one of the biggest stars in the history of music, but her latest feat provides further evidence: On May 4, Madonna put on a free concert at Copacabana Beach in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Per a press release from Live Nation, 1.6 million people attended, which sets the record for “the largest audience ever for a stand-alone concert by any artist in history.”
According to this Wikipedia list, Madonna’s show is No. 6 on the all-time list of the most-attended concerts. However, all the concerts ahead of Madonna were part of some larger event/occasion/observation, so Madonna does indeed claim the title of biggest stand-alone concert. The previous record holder was The Rolling Stones, who performed to 1.5 million people, also at Copacabana Beach, in 2006.
Leading that larger list, though, is Rod Stewart, who performed for an estimated 3.5 million people — again, also at Copacabana Beach — in 1994. After him are Jean-Michel Jarre (3.5 million); Jorge Ben Jor (3 million); Jean-Michel Jarre again (2.5 million); Antonello Venditti (1.8 million); the collective of AC/DC, Pantera, Metallica, The Black Crowes, and E.S.T. (1.6 million); and then Madonna.
The New York Knicks and Indiana Pacers will meet in the 2024 Eastern Conference semifinals, renewing one of the great rivalries of the 1990s. From 1993 to 2000, the two teams met six times in the playoffs, with each team winning three of those series.
Since then, the teams have met just once in the postseason (2013) in 23 years, but the 2024 edition feels like it could be the start of another postseason rivalry between Indiana and New York. It’s hard to replicate the roster continuity of the 90s in today’s game, but both teams have cornerstones set at the guard position with Tyrese Haliburton and Jalen Brunson, and if both can retain their ex-Raptor wings in Pascal Siakam and OG Anunoby, that would seem like two good starts to perennial playoff cores.
What makes the 2024 edition of this rivalry so interesting is the divergent styles the two teams play. Indiana likes to play at breakneck speed, pushing the pace off makes and misses alike to stress opposing defenses and attack weak points before they can get set in the halfcourt. New York, meanwhile, is a classic Tom Thibodeau outfit, looking to wear you down with defensive pressure and intensity, and then dominating on the boards on both ends. The clash of styles should be fascinating, as each team will look to dictate the tempo which could lead to wild swings.
If we’re lucky, the 2024 renewal will find footing alongside some of the past epics between these two teams, and before we get to Monday night’s Game 1, we wanted to look back at the history between New York and Indiana in the playoffs and some of the moments that defined the rivalry.
1993 Eastern Conference First Round (Knicks 3-1)
The 1993 first round matchup between the top-seeded Knicks and the 8-seeded Pacers is where it all began. The Knicks won in four games, with Patrick Ewing leading the way while getting help from John Starks and others. But the seeds of a rivalry Reggie Miller averaged 31.5 points per game in the series and drawing a theatrical ejection of John Starks (who just went for 29/11 in Game 2) for a headbutt in Game 3 — which would serve as the intro to the fantastic 30 for 30, Winning Time.
1994 Eastern Conference Finals (Knicks 4-3)
Things really picked up in 1994, as the two teams looked to take advantage of Michael Jordan’s absence from the league and punch their ticket to the NBA Finals. It was a grueling 7-game duel that culminated in a wild finish to Game 7, with Patrick Ewing putting up a huge 24-point, 22-rebound game, including the go-ahead tip-dunk in the final minute. That was followed by a Reggie Miller airball that sent the Knicks to the NBA Finals.
While the Knicks got the last laugh, that series was where the legend of Reggie Miller in the playoffs really grew with his Game 5 performance in the Garden, scoring 25 in the fourth quarter to lead Indiana to a win — and then delivered his iconic “Spike Who?” line to Ahmad Rashad after the game.
1995 Eastern Conference Semifinals (Pacers 4-3)
The 1995 Pacers-Knicks conference semifinals is one of the all-time great NBA Playoff series, providing an almost unbelievable number of memorable moments. It started with the biggest of them all, as Reggie Miller and the Pacers quite literally stole Game 1 thanks to Miller’s 8 points in 9 seconds, which remains one of the craziest playoff sequences in NBA history.
The Pacers would win both back in Indiana to put the Knicks on the brink back in the Garden in Game 5, but they were able to stay alive thanks to a game-winning runner from Ewing in the final seconds, cutting the deficit to 3-2.
After winning Game 6 in Indiana, the Knicks had a chance to pull off a remarkable comeback from down 3-1 and found themselves in the same position as Game 5. This time, however, Ewing could not provide the heroics, as a running layup at the buzzer hit off the back rim and bounced out to send the Pacers to the Conference Finals.
1998 Eastern Conference Semifinals (Pacers 4-1)
It would take three years for the two teams to meet again, this time with some different supporting casts, but most of the main stars remained the same. The Pacers would once again get the best of the Knicks, winning in five games with Game 4 being the standout. Miller once again had a big game in New York, scoring 38 points, including a game-tying three in the closing seconds, in an Indiana overtime win. That game also featured another scuffle between Miller and Starks, with the Knicks guard getting ejected in the first quarter for throwing an elbow to Miller’s head.
1999 Eastern Conference Finals (Knicks 4-2)
The two teams met again in the Conference Finals in the strike-shortened 1999 season, where the 8-seeded Knicks gave Miller a taste of his own medicine. After splitting games in Indiana — where Ewing suffered an Achilles injury — the Knicks were able to improbably hold serve in Game 3 thanks to a Larry Johnson 4-point play in the closing seconds to turn a 3-point deficit into a 1-point win.
While the Pacers would even the series at 2-2 in the next game, the Knicks won Games 5 and 6 to become the first 8-seed in league history to reach the NBA Finals.
2000 Eastern Conference Finals (Pacers 4-2)
A year later, Reggie Miller got to put on his final big show in the Garden, exacting revenge on the Knicks in the 2000 Eastern Conference Finals by scoring 34 in Game 6 in New York to send the Pacers to their first (and only) NBA Finals. This was the final battle between Miller’s Pacers and Ewing’s Knicks, as the New York legend would move on to the Sonics that offseason for the twilight of his career.
2013 Eastern Conference Semifinals (Pacers 4-2)
The 2013 edition saw the Paul George-Roy Hibbert era Pacers at the peak of their powers go up against the best Knicks team of the Carmelo Anthony era. The two teams split the first two in New York before the Pacers took control by winning both at home. Game 6 was the best game of the series, as the Pacers were able to get the series clinching win at home despite a 39-point performance from Melo — thanks to a playoff career-high 25 from Lance Stephenson.
It doesn’t look like this whole Drake/Kendrick Lamar situation is stopping any time soon. After Lamar spent last week unleashing a flurry of diss tracks aimed at Drake, the latter fired back last night (May 5) with his latest contribution to the conversation, “The Heart Part 6.”
So, how did Drake’s new diss go over? Well, here’s an indication: “Nah Drake” was the No. 1 trending topic on X (formerly Twitter) after the song was released, as Kurrco notes.
“Nah Drake” is #1 trending on Twitter after he dropped his new Kendrick Lamar diss pic.twitter.com/7FGDXztLBF
A number of the reactions focused on the line, “Only f*ckin’ with Whitneys, not Millie Bobby Browns, I’d never look twice at no teenager,” which is a clear response to Lamar accusing Drake on “Not Like Us” of having an inappropriate interest in young women.
One X user wrote, “he called u master manipulator and u admitted to feeding him lies then dropped a bar about Millie Bobby Brown when Kendrick never mentioned her. you’re #Caught.” Another tweeted, “kendrick: drake you are a pedophile. drake: i did NOT do anything inappropriate with millie bobby brown.” Somebody else said, “Drake put out the names Millie Bobby Brown and Epstein in reference to himself before Kendrick even mentioned them.”
he called u master manipulator and u admitted to feeding him lies then dropped a bar about Millie Bobby Brown when Kendrick never mentioned her. you’re #Caughtpic.twitter.com/k56KGk8PQ7
damn drake is next level. he really played the long game FOR YEARS by dming underage girls, rapping about high school girls being hot, and even bringing underage girls on stage, all to trick Kendrick into thinking drake’s a pedophile!!! chess not checkers from the !!!!!!
While Sunday featured a pair of Game 7s in the first round of the NBA and NHL playoffs, much of the sports world’s attention on later in the day was focused on Netflix’s roast of Tom Brady. The future Hall of Famer, for whatever reason, signed up to get lit up for a few hours by various comedians and former teammates and coaches live on the streaming giant.
It was a pretty wild event, reminiscent of the golden age of Comedy Central roasts as the comedians and athletes that hit the stage all let it absolutely rip. Brady’s divorce was frequently brought up, as was Deflategate, and Julian Edelman and Bill Belichick both seemed to use this as an excuse to get some things off their chest about Brady’s longtime trainer, Alex Guerrero.
However, the wildest joke of the night might’ve belonged to Brady himself, as he took to the stage and gave it right back to everyone. Among them was Drew Bledsoe, who Brady famously replaced after an injury to Bledsoe and never gave that job back. Few probably expected Brady to come at Bledsoe by way of a 9/11 joke, but he certainly did just that.
“Like the rest of America, I’ll always remember where I was that fateful day in September of 2001, when tragically, those two Jets…slammed into Drew Bledsoe.”
I think this is made even crazier by the fact that Brady got up and told Jeff Ross “don’t say that sh*t again” when he made a joke about Robert Kraft getting busted for solicitation at a Florida massage parlor, meaning Brady’s line of joke tolerance has 9/11 coming in before his old boss’ indiscretions.
If anyone thought Drake would throw in the towel after Kendrick Lamar hit him with three back-to-back disses — “6:16 In LA,” “Meet The Grahams,” and “Not Like Us”– has another think coming, as Drake not only keeps the mayhem going with a new diss of his own, but also takes a page from Kung-Fu Kenny’s playbook, titling the new song “The Heart Part 6,” a reference to Kendrick’s long-running freestyle series.
This time around, Drake addresses the accusations that Kendrick levels in his last three diss tracks, claiming that he seeded the stories with individuals that he knew Kendrick could reach out to for dirt on him. He celebrates being a master manipulator as Kendrick coined the phrase in his first diss track, “Euphoria,” having successfully tricked the Compton rapper into biting bait he himself laid out ahead of the battle.
Drake also reverse-unos Kendrick’s allegations against him of pedophilia denying that he has any such charges against him while theorizing that Kendrick’s own history with abuse is what led the Pulitzer prize winner into taking that angle of attack against him. Honestly, if this is the last diss from either rapper, that would be okay, because this thing is rapidly getting out of hand.
In life only two things are certain — death and taxes. However, there is something else that you can almost always bet your bottom dollar on, a Foo Fighters tour.
Last year, the band hit the road for the Everything Or Nothing At All Tour. Due to overwhelming success, Foo Fighters extended the run into 2024. So, if you snagged yourself a ticket, what should expect?
Continue below for show times, the remaining tour dates, and more.
What Time Is Foo Fighters On Stage For The ‘Everything Or Nothing At All Tour?’
According to attendees submitted data on Setlist.fm, Foo Fighters tend to take the stage two and a half hours after doors to the venue have opened. For example, on May 1 in Dallas, Texas, Dos Equis Pavilion began letting ticketholders into at 5:30 p.m. By 8:30 p.m., the band had kicked off the opening song to their setlist.
Now, the length of their set fluctuates from show to show. For more lively crowds, their encore can run between one and three songs. So, to play it safe be prepared for a roughly two hour and forty five minute performance.
Foo Fighters Tour 2024: Everything Or Nothing At All Tour
05/07 — Raleigh, NC @ Coastal Credit Union Music Park at Walnut Creek
05/09 — Charlotte, NC @ PNC Music Pavilion
05/11 — Daytona Beach, FL @ Welcome To Rockville (festival appearance)
06/13 — Manchester, England @ Emirates Old Trafford !/
06/15 — Manchester, England @ Emirates Old Trafford %~
06/17 — Glasgow, Scotland @ Hampden Park %<
06/20 — London, England @ London Stadium !>
06/22 — London, England @ London Stadium %@
06/25 — Cardiff, Wales @ Principality Stadium !
06/27 — Birmingham, England @ Villa Park %@
07/17 — Queens, NY @ Citi Field &+
07/19 — Queens, NY @ Citi Field £=
07/21 — Boston, MA @ Fenway Park £=
07/23 — Hershey, PA @ Hersheypark Stadium £=
07/25 — Cincinnati, OH @ Great American Ballpark &+
07/28 — Minneapolis, MN @ Target Field &!
08/03 — Denver, CO @ Empower Field at Mile High &+
08/07 — San Diego, CA @ Petco Park £$
08/09 — Los Angeles, CA @ BMO Stadium £=
08/11 — Los Angeles, CA @ BMO Stadium &$
08/16 — Portland, OR @ Providence Park Soccer Stadium &$
08/18 — Seattle, WA @ T-Mobile Park &$
* with The Breeders
! with Wet Leg
% with Courtney Barnett
# with The Chats
{ with Teenage Joans
[ with Body/Type
@ with Hot Milk
} with Dick Move
? with Teenage Jesus And The Jean Teasers
/ with Loose Articles
~ with Chroma
< with Honeyblood
> with Shame
with Himalayas
& with Pretenders
+ with Mammoth WVH
! with L7
£ with The Hives
= with Amyl And The Sniffers
$ with Alex G
Foo Fighters’ Everything Or Nothing At All Tour poster
Tom Brady has an extremely strong argument as the greatest quarterback in NFL history. He won seven Super Bowl championships (appearing in 10), five Super Bowl MVPs, and three NFL MVPs over his two decades in the NFL with the Patriots and Buccaneers. He made an outrageous amount of money and is set to make even more over the course of a monstrous deal with Fox to be their new lead broadcaster — if he doesn’t try to make another NFL comeback this fall.
All of this is to say, Brady should not be in a position where he’s desperate to say yes to things like a celebrity roast. And yet, there he was on Sunday night sitting on stage as comedians (and Drew Bledsoe) tore into him on stage live on Netflix, looking like he was not exactly enjoying himself.
While Brady’s football career is unassailable, his personal life is not, and if he thought certain things would be off limits then he was very mistaken. There were plenty of divorce jokes, which he probably expected, but the line he seemingly drew in the sand was when Jeff Ross made a massage joke about Robert Kraft. Brady stood up from his seat, walked over, and very much not jokingly said “don’t say that shit again” to Ross.
Kraft, of course, was charged with solicitation in 2019 after a sting at a Florida massage parlor, but pled not guilty. Ross, who showed up for the roast in a “Roast J Simpson” jersey, has never met a line he wouldn’t dance over, and Brady was clearly not pleased with that — and it briefly looked like we might have a Will Smith-Chris Rock moment.
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