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Brenda Equihua Discusses Fashion As A Storytelling Device, Embracing Your Soft Era, And Designing With Intention

I grew up with a mom who is a storyteller. I come from that community, and people call it “folklore,” and I understand why that word exists. But those are all real stories and they are told in the way that they’re told so they can survive generations… That’s what I feel like is one of my biggest goals, how do we keep this going beyond this moment?

-Brenda Equihua

For Brenda Equihua — founder and main creative force behind the eponymous label, Equihua — fashion is about more than product. Sure, every brand would like to claim that same philosophy. But few truly embody it.

Brenda Equihua does. A graduate of NYC’s famed Parsons School of Design, the designer lives and breathes fashion, using it as a tool to express herself, convey a larger message, carry and reinterpret history, and, most importantly, to question both herself and the gatekeeping “powers that be.” Whereas most brands think about the now — what’s trending and how to capitalize on it — Equihua makes moves that have the past, present, and future in mind.

Her designs aren’t just an exploration of Latin culture, they’re a window into her soul. A close study of her work reveals a designer who is thinking deeply about how you can continue an ages-old story as told through design and to push that narrative somewhere new. In a world of fast fashion and disposable design, it’s a breath of fresh air.

This is why Equihua has quickly become one of our favorite fashion brands in existence. This is why we celebrate the brand. This is why we think the company’s namesake designer is one of the most vital voices in the landscape.

Equihua
Rebeca Equihua

Equihua first gained prominence with outwear inspired by San Marcos’ style cobijas. Since the brand’s inception, it has continued to evolve offering luxury streetwear filtered through an unapologetically Latinx lens. The best Equihua pieces tell stories, conjure memories and transport you to another place and time.

We linked up with Brenda Equihua to talk about what the brand has been up to, how she uses fashion and design as a storytelling device, and the power of embracing your soft era.

***

The brand is famous for repurposing the Cobija from a comfort blanket to a luxury jacket. Why was it important for you to take this piece of heritage and turn it into something for a new generation?

I think at the time the idea came into my mind, I had really been thinking about what my purpose in this industry was. There are so many fashion designers, why me? What do I have to say and contribute to an industry that’s so overly saturated?

I think overall it was just me asking myself, what do I want to manifest into the future? What are the things that I don’t want to see lost? What are our collective memories that I want to preserve and how do I want us to remember them? And what angle can I add to this that’s going to further amplify what we already know and what we’re familiar with?

That’s the main thing I really wanted to do. The San Marcos Cobija was, to me, one of the most iconic things because it’s not only tied to our memories but it’s also visually striking and it has feelings associated with it. So to me, from a sensory part, it touched on all of our different senses. If you think about it, also, there’s scent involved right after the Cobija gets washed. That Cobija smell of it, it smells like softener. So there are so many different elements about those memories that I think on a collective level tap into our memories and all the different senses.

For me, that was just really important. It was perfect, and I couldn’t have asked for a better medium to work with and to have conversations with.

Equihua
Equihua

When I first found out about the brand one of the things that struck me about it was the maximalism of it, compared to what else was out there. Obviously, the main hook was this connection to my own childhood but the maximalism really stood out because minimalism was the prevailing trend at the time. Now that the fashion world seems to be embracing maximalism, do you feel like things are catching up to your vision?

Gosh, you can’t really talk about trends and aesthetics and things that fashion pushes forward without really talking about who the people that have been behind those conversations, and the gatekeeping behind it, are.

When I think about what we’re doing, I don’t even think about it as maximalism. I think of it as just how we live. We’re just now in a position where there’s no middle person to stop us from the things that we want. Stop us from seeing and wearing the things that we want.

I think that I came from a very traditional fashion background at Parsons, and when I was at school, it was all about minimalism. And Francisco Costa was out at Calvin Klein, it was Narciso Rodriguez, it was Raf Simmons at Jil Sander.

It was just extremely streamlined, and we were being trained to pretty much design like that. It made me very uncomfortable because I felt like the whole purpose of me doing what I was doing was to express who I am.

I think we’re very expressive as a community, not only in the things that we wear but in the ways that we speak. And for me, I guess the category of it being maximalist I feel like that’s an outsider’s perspective of what our experiences are. To us, this idea is normal.

In our world we have Cobija and colorful things, that’s just what we grew up seeing. That’s what our houses look like. That’s our life. Only when we’re drawing comparisons does it become maximalism.

So it didn’t feel so much subversive as true to your identity and where you come from?

To me, it felt normal. People talking to me about minimalism, that didn’t feel right. I shouldn’t say that because I do have the ability to express myself in that way, but to me, the idea that minimalism was the thing that we should be striving for, felt very foreign to me.

Even if you think about the way we acquire things. Coming from an immigrant community, people keep things. They treasure things. If someone gives you something, we have such a thing called recuerdos [Spanish for “memories” in this case, like an heirloom], we go to a party, somebody makes something and they give it to you for you to keep, and your mom keeps it forever.

That’s the culture that we grew up in, is just treasuring things and acquiring things. And sometimes it’s not related to aesthetics, it’s related to feeling.

Equihua
Equihua

I wanted to talk about some of the more recent Equihua pieces, specifically the inspiration behind the Terrestrial Activities camp shirt, and Mermaid Home Girls. I feel like it’s showing a more playful side of the brand.

I feel like I’ve really been tapping into my inner child and finding a lot of comfort and peace there. On a collective level, a lot of my friends and people that I know, we’ve all been in that frequency.

The stories are kind of personal even though they’re not being expressed that way. Over the last couple of months, we have been engaging in “terrestrial activities” collectively as friends. I’ve noticed that there’s a shift to that. There are more people having kickball meetups and people are playing pickleball, which is a more, I guess, playful, version of tennis. I don’t even know how to phrase it…

Right, it’s less competitive.

It’s chill tennis, and so people are in their soft era. And the softness to me is also tied to childhood, having that sense of freedom. For my birthday, we played a game of kickball and people had a really good time.

One day my friend was having a barbecue and we were all just playing catch, and it was just a bunch of 20 and 30-year-olds just throwing a ball around at Elysian Park.

A lot of these memories are things that I’m doing and things that I’m noticing on a collective level.

I feel like even though the story of the Marcianos… it’s aliens. I feel like it’s very relatable. You can anchor into that world. Even with Mermaid Homegirls, there’s so much more tied to it than the funniness.

I think it’s very Mexican to incorporate humor into serious topics, right? That’s the nature of the Ex-Votos too, which is what these are inspired by, very serious things that are illustrated in ways that are funny with funny stories, but behind all of this is real life.

Equihua Interview
Equihua

On the other end of that is the Origins collection. Can you talk about Origins and the concept of what you call “portal wear?”

Origins is a project that I’ve been working on mentally since 2017 or earlier when I started to do the research of San Marco Cobijas.

My research showed me that the blankets were no longer produced in Mexico. And that was a very painful reality, I remember thinking, “Wow, I didn’t know this. And there are probably so many other people that don’t know this,” we all think we’re buying San Marcos blankets and it stopped being San Marcos a long time ago, and the blankets are being made somewhere else.

Ever since I’ve heard that I wanted to take the story back to Mexico, and I finally had the opportunity last July to go to Mexico and start the sourcing process and look for blankets that I felt would be able to bring that story back, but also into the future. My goal was to bring the story back to Mexico.

When I found the Aztec calendar, I was like, “Oh, shit. The story can go further than Mexico… before it was called ‘Mexico.’” So the blanket was pretty much telling me what it wanted to become. It was like, “Hey, let’s tell this story. Let’s really go back.”

The story evolved from there, I was thinking about how to make this image, which we’re all super familiar with, we’ve seen it done so many ways, the Aztec calendar, we’ve seen it on ponchos, we’ve seen it on art, we’ve seen it in homeware. We are very familiar with this calendar as a community.

So I’m always thinking how can we translate this in a way that is new, that is futuristic? And so usually for me, that means combining it with something sort of unconventional.

I think the more predictable thing would’ve been to cut it into a poncho or something. But I was like, what if we took this super regal imagery and put it into these silhouettes that are considered workwear? We need this workwear that’s so totally elevated that it’s almost unrecognizable. And that’s how the Levi’s silhouette jacket and the Levi’s inspired pants, those silhouettes, came into play.

And then the story just started to evolve from that. I was thinking a lot about the world where we are and what is the messaging. What if the lightworkers from the future came to visit us? What sort of things would they want to remind us of?

In my mind, I imagine they’d be like, “Hey, stop fucking shit up. Y’all have to do better as a society. We’ve lived through this and we’ve seen the world destroyed this many times. It’s in the calendar, we have sacred knowledge and we want to share that with you.”

And ultimately what that led me to was this idea of when are we our best selves historically? When we’re kids, we’re so innocent and we’re so precious and beautiful, and we are so curious about the world. If we’re lucky, because every child doesn’t grow up the same, and some children have to grow up to find that in their adulthood. But the story is also about that too.

It’s about taking that spirit of when we’re kids, we know what’s right. We know hurting someone is bad. We know love at its purest form. And I think that if we remember that more, we would just be better to each other and we would treat nature better. We would just be better humans. And if we believed in our superpowers the way that we did when we were kids… when you said you were the Blue Ranger, you thought that no one could tell you otherwise.

“No, I’m the Blue Ranger.” You would go to war over it. “I’m the Blue Ranger, and I have the power and the ability to be this giant force.”

And when we become adults, we lose that and just subscribe to these things that are detrimental to our society. If we remember to keep that part of ourselves to continue to connect to that, I think that we stand a chance. And that’s what Origins became.

When I went back to Mexico, there was a message there for me. I didn’t realize what I was going to find there. And it ended up being a treasure. It was a message. And so I feel very lucky to be getting these downloads. And the story of Origins for me is really about hope and about remembering.

Equihua Interview
Nicole Alvarenga

I like the story of that and the juxtaposition between something spiritual and workwear, it feels like a cool evolution of the brand, especially because Equihua started with the hoodies, which were inspired by the Cobija blankets. Which I think both represent comfort. It deepens it and has a historical angle to it.

What other kinds of stories do you think you’ll tell in the future?

I think that all of these things are determined by observations.

I’m very lucky to be very, very closely connected to the community, and to the people that are directly supporting the vision. And I think a lot of the inspiration and the things that we decide to do and to touch on are also the conversations that we’re having with them. Sometimes I’ll just ask things on my Instagram Stories. I just want to know how people are doing, what’s happening in your world, and how are you feeling. It helps me to understand people better.

Conversations I’m having with friends. Questions I’m asking myself, things that I’m curious about. But in the future, it’s going to be driven by the same frequencies that led me to the San Marcos and the Origins, and the Ex-Votos.

It’s not easy for me to describe what I do, to be honest with you, but I think a lot of it is just me being curious about something and how I can share this story in a way that feels relevant to today and the future.

I grew up with a mom who is a storyteller. I come from that community, and people call it ‘folklore,’ and I understand why that word exists. But those are all real stories, and they are told in the way that they’re told so they can survive generations… That’s what I feel like is one of my biggest goals, how do we keep this going beyond this moment?

Beyond this being a shirt, what happens when we engage in this sort of format and what conversations does it mean people are having with each other?

Take the Ex-Votos alien story, someone could be wearing that shirt, and maybe someone looking at it and say “Oh, that’s a cool shirt.” “Oh, it’s actually an Ex-Votos-inspired shirt.” ‘Oh, What is that?’ That creates a dialogue and now the story’s made its way to someone else.

So for me, it’s really about preservation and creating heirlooms through memories. When we think about the things that we want to keep or the things that you have that don’t really have “value” to other people but have value to you it’s because there’s a story behind it or a memory.

I feel like I want to do more collaborations because I want to be able to tell these stories in formats that are bigger than what we currently have access to because we’re such a small brand that our stories can only be told right now with the resources that are in front of us. And I feel like if we partner with the right brands or if we just have the right partnerships, we’ll be able to really do more with it.

I’d love to do films and also a sneaker collab and tell a story with that. I feel like we can incorporate a lot of what we’re doing into so many mediums. I think what’s next for us is we have to be realistic about where we are and not be afraid to ask for opportunities and ask for help in amplifying what we’re trying to do. And that’s something that I’m trying to get better at.

Equihua Interview
Nicole Alvarenga

Would you say that conversation starting aspect goes hand-in-hand with the high-end handmade quality of everything that you’re doing? Because these pieces are ultimately used as storytelling vessels, it feels like the fact that they’re handmade and quality helps add to that longevity because they’re not throw-away pieces. This is stuff to treasure and pass down.

Yeah. I think that for me, making good quality things is natural. I have a training in luxury. I’ve always loved beautiful things ever since I was a kid. And that came from my mom and her loving going to garage sales and finding luxury brand treasures. So for me, making beautiful things feels like something that I’m made to do and that I love doing. I love the outcome of a good well-made product.

And really, when I say I want people to keep these as heirlooms, for me, I take that very seriously. We need to make beautiful things that people want to keep and have the stories behind them that really cement the idea that this is something you want to have forever.

I know this is bananas, but making good clothes is also about respect for me. I don’t want to disrespect you, and I know better because I know how to make good shit. Why would I give you something that’s trash, that’s disrespectful to you as a person that’s supporting me.

I think that speaks on respect for the environment as well.

Totally. I don’t want to make clothes that end up in a landfill. Even if it’s on a resale level, it’s being sold for three times the cost, but then eventually it leads to a landfill, then what is the point? I just don’t want this to end up in the wrong place.

I want it to be treasured and I want it to be passed down. And I know that we are doing that kind of work because I get direct feedback from the people who support the brand. I know what we’re doing is very special, and I take that very seriously. I literally think about the people who are supporting me not as consumers. I think of them as people who are supporting the brand and are choosing to do that. We need to respect who those people are, and we need to do things with love and intention because they deserve that.

Equihua Interview
Rebeca Equihua

How big of a challenge is that when it seems like people are increasingly looking for cheaper and cheaper clothes? Do you feel like your audience just has a completely different mindset?

It is a challenge for sure. Our people are out there. I know, but we haven’t reached not even 1% of the people who are for us. But it is a challenge financially because I understand why people cut corners. Doing things the right way, a lot of our pieces are hand-cut one by one. 90% of everything we do is cut literally one by one, even our scrunchies and our hoops, and we’re producing, I’d say 95% of everything in LA. And we source most of what we create locally, even if it’s an overseas product.

It’s very hard. It’s very challenging because we’re not making large mass-market units.

I don’t even know if the consumer needs to know this, or maybe they do, but people just don’t understand fashion enough. In terms of the way that it works and why you’re able to get something for $15 cheap from H& M and Zara. They are cutting millions of that product, which is why they’re able to get it on the cheap. They are negotiating. It’s not even just labor they’re saving on, they’re saving on material, they’re saving on shipping, they’re getting all the deals, all the tax breaks.

And in a small business, if I’m doing stuff made to order, I don’t have good negotiating power with the people that are creating the pieces, but I also have a fucking conscience because I’m close to it too. I go and I see who’s sewing it, and I actually care. And caring means that caring and capitalism are not best friends.

Not compatible.

They’re not compatible. And so that makes it very, very challenging. And we don’t have an investor, so everything that we make from ourselves goes back into developing new products and covering our overhead. We’re still educating people on what it means to make a garment.

It’s extremely difficult. That is our biggest challenge. I have a lot of these conversations with other friends who are in the industry and they tell me, “Well, why don’t you just price it what it is?” Pricing it what it is would mean that the coats are over a thousand dollars. And I’m like, that’s a whole other type of person that I’m speaking with. I fucking love the people that support me. Those are my friends. Those are people that when we have popups and when we are at ComplexCon and when I actually get to meet those people and we have open studios, I love them. I’m like, “These are the best people on this fucking earth.”

And the thought of pricing them out, it’s very hard for me. I’m like, “They want nice things too.” And I don’t know what the end result will be of what we’re doing. I know that it’s very hard, especially now.

But I know that this is a community that I am very connected to and I want to make it work. I want to be able to have these pieces be what they are and be able to have these conversations with the people that matter the most.

To me, I do feel like the people who purchase our products are people who genuinely care. They care about the planet, they’re engaged in community. They are looking after their neighbor. They’re the kind of people that are going to be there for you when shit hits a fan. And maybe that’s super naive of me. I live in a fantasy land but that’s how I see people.

Equihua
Nicole Alvarenga
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Donald Trump’s Lawyers Will Reportedly ‘Rip Her To Shreds’ If Ivanka Testifies Against The Family

With the possibility of Ivanka Trump testifying against the family business in the air, experts have been weighing in on what might happen if she were to actually cooperate with prosecutors in the New York fraud case. According to Donald Trump biographer David Cay Johnston, it won’t be pretty.

While talking to CNN on Thursday evening, Johnston made it clear that should Ivanka turn against her father and/or brothers, she will be thrown to the wolves by the former president’s legal team.

Via Raw Story:

“If, however, Ivanka testifies in any way that’s damaging to her father or her brothers’ interests, then Donald’s lawyers are going to rip her to shreds and do everything they can to go after her.”

“This creates quite a challenge inside the family, but of course Ivanka has largely removed herself from the family,” added Johnston. “You haven’t seen her with her father. She’s made a few perfunctory statements on his behalf. That’s about it.”

Despite his dire prediction, Johnston believes that Ivanka will mostly take the stand only to plead the fifth. However, other legal experts don’t feel that’s the case. A ruling has already been issued, so it would be a waste of time to make Ivanka testify if she has nothing of value to say.

“It would be unusual and a waste of prosecutors’ resources if she takes the 5th,” Michigan attorney Jamie White told Newsweek. “That’s because there’s no jury to impress, no media to impress — they simply have to establish damages at this point in the proceedings.”

(Via Raw Story)

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When Is Chili’s Barbz Day For 2023?

Ice Spice’s devoted Munchkin fans run on her Dunkin’ specialty drink. For a while, Cardi B’s Bardi Gang and Saweetie’s Icy Girls were lovin’ their McDonald’s meals. But “Last Time I Saw You” rapper Nicki Minaj’s die-hard supporters, The Barbz, was one of the first hip-hop communities with a devoted chain restaurant celebration thanks to Chili’s Grill & Bar. So when is Chili’s next Barbz Day for 2023?

According to the announcement posted to the company’s official X (formerly Twitter) page, the date to remember is October 17.

What seemingly started as a stunt to spike the engagement on Chili’s social media page last year has become a fun night for Barbz and anyone near a chain. Last year, around this time, locations hosted Barbz Day with a specialty drink, the Barbarita (Cranberry Margarita), for $5.

Earlier in the week, when ChChili’srompted the open call, the Barbz answered with whooping support.

“Damn 25k y’all asking for too much [crying emojis],” wrote one fan.

“The barbz can do anything, baby,” replied the company.

Although it isn’t clear if the same drink special or discount price will remain the same, based on the online engagement, the Barbz are down to support their queen either way.

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

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The Best Vinyl Releases Of September 2023

Anybody who thought the vinyl resurgence was just a fad was mistaken: The industry has experienced a legitimate revival. As a result, music fans are interested in physical media in ways they may not have if the decades-old medium hasn’t made a comeback. That doesn’t mean everybody is listening to just their parents’ old music, though. That’s part of it, sure, thanks to rereleases that present classic albums in new ways. A vital part of the renewed vinyl wave, though, is new projects being released as records, of which there are plenty.

Whatever you might be into, each month brings a new slew of vinyl releases that has something for everybody. Some stand out above the rest, naturally, so check out some of our favorite vinyl releases of September below.

Beastie Boys — Hello Nasty (Deluxe Edition)

Beastie Boys vinyl
UME

Beastie Boys are perhaps best known for their ’80s and early-’90s output, but they were still getting after it later in the decade. Hello Nasty was a No. 1 album in 1998, and now that the project is turning 25 this year, the group has reissued it with bonus LPs (for 4 LPs in total) that have a number of bonus tracks (and there’s even a sew-on patch for you in the box set).

Get it here.

Aesop Rock — Skelethon (10th Anniversary Deluxe Edition)

aesop rock skelethon vinyl
Rhymesayers

Skelethon was a turning point for Aesop Rock, as his sixth album came five years after its predecessor, None Shall Pass, and it was his first album to be completely self-produced. So, as it turns 10, Aesop has given it premium treatment, which includes a 3-LP package that includes “a gatefold jacket with revised art layouts, printed sleeves, a 4-panel insert with full album lyrics, two cream & black marble-colored vinyl, and a UV printed ultra-clear bonus disc vinyl with four exclusive bonus tracks.”

Get it here.

The Eagles — Hotel California (Box Set)

eagles box set
Rhino

It’s very likely there’s no song/album about a hotel more famous than the one by The Eagles. Now the group has dusted off the album for a new limited edition (there are 17,500 numbered copies) of the album that was mastered from the original analog master tapes, and is pressed to high-fidelity MoFi SuperVinyl.

Get it here.

Green Day — Dookie (30th Anniversary Deluxe Edition)

green day dookie vinyl
Warner

Dookie is certainly in the conversation when it comes to the most classic albums of the ’90s. It’s somehow already been 30 years since it was released and the band has released a vinyl box set that has a bunch of rare and unreleased material, as well as other goodies, included.

Get it here.

Steely Dan — Aja (Reissue)

steely dan vinyl
Geffen/UMe

Steely Dan is in the midst of a vinyl reissue series and up next is the 1997 classic Aja. For this edition, the album has been remastered “from an analog, non-EQ’d, tape copy.”

Get it here.

Haim — Days Are Gone (10th Anniversary Reissue)

haim days are gone vinyl
Polydor

It doesn’t feel like Haim’s been around long enough for anniversary reissues, does it? Regardless, Days Are Gone is 10 now, so the sisters are re-releasing it for the first time ever, housed in a new package, exclusive poster, a printed transparent slipcase, and more.

Get it here.

Huey Lewis & The News — Sports (Reissue)

huey lewis vinyl
Capitol/UMe

Sports was an unstoppable album in 1983, yielding four top-10 hits and managing a rank of No. 2 on the year-end album charts in 1984. The album is 40 years old now and now we’re treated to a fresh pressing, including one edition featuring olive green vinyl.

Get it here.

The Replacements — Tim: Let It Bleed Edition

replacements vinyl
Rhino

The Replacements’ Tommy Stinson recently spoke with Uproxx about the band’s new Tim box set, and he said of how the project sounds on this particular release, “I think it sounds more the way it should have sounded to begin with. The funny thing is there were two records that we did that I always felt sounded terrible and this is one of them. It always sounded bad to me, and when it came out it seemed that everyone whitewashed — including the record company — that there was something wrong with it. Intrinsically, I’ve always known what was wrong with it. The original mix was mixed on f*cking headphones. So I don’t suspect Ed Stasium mixing it on headphones. I don’t really know anyone that mixes on headphones, but I always knew there was a problem with that. So this is great. I’m pretty stoked on it.”

Get it here.

The Who — Who’s Next (Reissue)

who vinyl
UMR

Uproxx’s Steven Hyden recently dove deep into this release, saying this reissue proves Who’s Next is “the ultimate classic rock album.” He wrote in part, “It is, simultaneously, one of the most overexposed rock albums ever, with a reach that extends into every sports stadium (and CSI franchise spin-off) known to man, and an intriguingly nebulous idea dreamt up by a genius who earnestly believed that his music could elevate his audience to a better, heretofore untouched astral plane. […] It offers proof positive that aiming for the impossible can result in achieving the incredible. And that’s why it’s the ultimate classic rock album.”

Get it here.

Tom Waits — Swordfishtrombones, Rain Dogs, and Franks Wild Years (Reissues)

tom waits rain dogs
Island/UMe

Waits is in the midst of reissuing some of his most classic albums on vinyl, and a few of them are available now. Waits is personally overseeing the series of newly remastered rereleases and each album is available on gorgeous colored vinyl.

Get it here.

The Breeders — Last Splash (30th Anniversary Original Analog Edition)

breeders last splash
4AD

This 30th anniversary reissue of Last Splash actually marks the first time the album has ever been remastered, making this the best the classic project has ever sounded. Also included is “an exclusive, one-sided etched 12-inch which excitingly features two brilliant and previously unreleased tracks — ‘Go Man Go’ and ‘Divine Mascis,’” which “originate from the original sessions and were left forgotten until the sessions were exhumed to create this new master.”

Get it here.

Grandaddy — Sumday Twunny

grandaddy Sumday Twunny vinyl
Dangerbird Records

Grandaddy announced this reissue back in May, revealing that it includes the album itself, demos, rarities, and B-sides. Jason Lytle noted,” After many years of hammering away at writing and recording as Grandaddy, Sumday seems to be the center of it and where it all peaked. To the journalists we were, ‘On the verge of greatness, underrated, overlooked, unsung.’ It was a tumultuous and exciting time for us for sure. Also very exhausting.”

Get it here.

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

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The Style Hot List: The Brands, Fashion, & People You Need To Know

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How Was Tupac Killed?

Tupic‘s 1996 murder remains one of the most-discussed deaths in hip-hop, as it remains unsolved. Earlier this year, though, an investigation was opened again, and today (September 29), a suspect by the name of Duane “Keefe D” Davis has reportedly been taken into custody.

Though the rapper was killed in 1996, the story begins well before that. On November 30, 1994, Tupac was shot five times during a robbery at Quad Studios in Times Square, but he survived. Then, on September 7, 1996, he was leaving a boxing match at the MGM Grand on the Las Vegas strip. He was shot multiple times in a drive-by and taken to the hospital, and subsequently died on September 13.

About the arrest made today, retired Los Angeles police detective Greg Kading who investigated the case and wrote a book about it, said, “People have been yearning for him to be arrested for a long time. It’s never been unsolved in our minds. It’s been unprosecuted.” He said Davis’ book gave “Las Vegas the ammunition and the leverage to move forward. Prior to Keefe D’s public declarations, the cases were unprosecutable as they stood… He put himself squarely in the middle of the conspiracy. He had acquired the gun, he had given the gun to the shooter and he had been present in the vehicle when they hunted down and located both Tupac and Suge [Knight].”

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Six Teams That Make Sense For A Jrue Holiday Trade

The Damian Lillard trade sweepstakes are over, and now, his old team is getting right back to making calls about trading a guard. The biggest name that the Portland Trail Blazers received in the deal that sent Lillard to the Milwaukee Bucks was Jrue Holiday, the standout two-way guard who was crucial in getting Milwaukee over the hump in their pursuit of a championship.

If Portland wanted, it could keep Holiday around for a bit, let him serve as a mentor for their bevy of young guards, and look to move him at the trade deadline to a team that wants to make an all-in move during the season. But according to Shams Charania of The Athletic, it seems far more likely that they move quickly.

“The Bucks sent two-time All-Star Jrue Holiday to Portland to acquire Lillard, and I expect the Blazers to be active in the next few days to find a new landing spot for the veteran guard,” Charania reported on Friday morning.

It begs the question: Which teams could use Holiday’s services the most? Holiday’s one of the best all-around guards in the league, a snug fit on basically any roster, and one of the NBA’s most highly-respected guys, which is to say that the Blazers are in a pretty good spot here. There will be a bidding war to acquire his services, even though he is slated to become an unrestricted free agent at the end of this season if he declines to pick up his player option for 2024-25. With camp starting soon, teams interested in acquiring Holiday should be incentivized to move quickly to get in him before the season begins, which would theoretically drive up the bidding even more.

There are a ton of teams that could end up looking into a Holiday deal. Here, we’re going to look at the ones that make the most sense, both in terms of wanting to compete right now and having the stuff to make a deal happen.

6. Boston Celtics

Does Boston desperately need Holiday? Not really, no — they have Derrick White as their presumed starting point guard and felt confident enough in his ability to run the show that the team traded away Marcus Smart. Having said that: Boy, can you imagine this Celtics team with Jrue Holiday on it? Holiday has pushed one Eastern Conference contender with title aspirations over the hump before, and it’s not hard to see how he could do the same thing here if he ended up on this team.

Boston has a ton of picks it can potentially trade, including a top-4 protected 2024 selection from the Warriors, and a reportedly disgruntled guard in Malcolm Brogdon who could head the other way. Figuring out how to make the rest of this work financially would be tricky — would Boston even consider this if they’d have to move one of Robert Williams or Al Horford? — but there would not be a better starting five in the NBA than Holiday, Jaylen Brown, Jayson Tatum, and any two of Horford, Williams, and Kristaps Porzingis. That, mixed with how he can initiate the offense and let Brown and Tatum focus on other things, makes the thought of him in Boston awfully fun.

5. New York Knicks

New York is sitting and waiting to strike when an All-NBA player hits the trade market. Why not make a move that: 1. Doesn’t really compromise their ability to do that and, 2. Gets them a guy who fits really well alongside Jalen Brunson in their backcourt? The Knicks have a boatload of future first-round picks, including four in the 2024 NBA Draft (their own and protected selections from Dallas, Detroit, and Washington). They can’t make all of these picks, and they have to do something at some point. Would two of those picks, one of their own future picks, Evan Fournier’s salary, and a young player work? Would they want to move R.J. Barrett? Would the Blazers want Immanuel Quickley (along with whatever else New York would need to add to make this work financially)? I’m assuming Quentin Grimes, who the team had zero interest in moving during its pursuit of Donovan Mitchell, would be off the table, but who knows?

Tom Thibodeau loves defense and toughness, both of which Holiday brings in droves. He’d be part of a very good backcourt with Brunson, would give him and Julius Randle room to cook, and if they could sign him to an extension, he’d be an excellent player alongside whomever the Knicks acquire when that day comes for their really big swing.

4. Golden State Warriors

Just think for one moment about a Steph Curry-Jrue Holiday backcourt. They have a big ol salary to make things work out financially in Chris Paul, they could sweeten the pot with some combination of picks (say, their 2026 and 2028 firsts) and young players (Jonathan Kuminga and/or Moses Moody would be sensational fits on a young Blazers team), and they’d probably care less than anyone else on this list about Holiday potentially being a one-year rental. The “who comes off the bench?” question that exists right now with Paul in town would become more of a conversation, and it’s worth wondering if the Gary Payton II trade saga from last year soured relations between the teams. But if that’s not a hang up, Golden State should 100 percent kick the tires on a trade here — all that matters is to win as much as possible before Curry’s career comes to an end, and this would get them closer to accomplishing that goal.

3. Los Angeles Clippers

Considering their links to James Harden this offseason, the Clippers sure seem like a team that could use some backcourt help, even though Terance Mann is perpetually underrated, Bones Hyland is a promising youngster, and Russell Westbrook is back on a new deal. Holiday, a Los Angeles native, would give Ty Lue the sort of versatile perimeter defender that he loves, all while giving them a steady hand on offense when Kawhi Leonard or Paul George needs a break (or, in a worst-case scenario, miss time due to injuries). It also stands to reason that Steve Ballmer would have no qualms about signing him to a contract extension — presumably one that puts him on a similar timeline to Leonard and George, who are also potential free agents next summer — ahead of the team moving into their new arena next season.

They have the sorts of big expiring contracts that can work as salary ballast here, although players like Marcus Morris and Robert Covington may be helpful for them this season. Two big questions: Would the Clippers want to move a young player like Mann or Hyland if the Blazers demanded it? Would they really want to dip into their stash of picks that is just now getting replenished following the monster deal that landed them George (and, by extension, Leonard)? If the answers to both are yes, that would be one hell of a trio for, say, a postseason matchup with Phoenix.

2. Miami Heat

This would probably be the funniest possible outcome here. After trying and failing to acquire Lillard — in part, per reports, due to the Blazers’ disinterest in trading him to his preferred destination — would Miami actually pick up the phone and try to call up Joe Cronin and co.? The irony here is that Holiday could not be a more perfect fit on the Heat, and it would 100 percent be worth trying to figure something out. A deal built around Kyle Lowry’s salary and some of the picks they were willing to move for Lillard would be sensible, and while it would be a tough pill to swallow, maybe a promising young player like Nikola Jovic or Jaime Jaquez could help put their offer over the top.

Getting him in and letting him handle the point guard responsibilities makes life easier on Jimmy Butler (who wouldn’t have to shoulder such a gigantic role), Bam Adebayo (who would have a killer pick-and-roll partner), and Tyler Herro (who can just focus on being a scorer and secondary creator). And as an added bonus, he’d give Miami someone who could do as good a job as anyone guarding the guy Milwaukee just acquired, which, well, that’d be a fun subplot in a playoff series, wouldn’t it?

1. Philadelphia 76ers

Holiday is, obviously, a former Sixer. More importantly, Holiday could be the solution to the single biggest problem the team has right now, which is trying to find a way to get rid of James Harden while still being able to compete for a championship. While it’s certainly fair to wonder if Philly has any chance at accomplishing that following the moves Boston and Milwaukee made this summer, their best chance is probably turning Harden into a player who makes sense alongside Joel Embiid and Tyrese Maxey. If they’d need to give up Maxey here, that probably turns this into a non-starter, especially if they’d move him and keep Harden.

But imagine something like a three-team deal where Harden goes to the Clippers (or somewhere else), Holiday goes to Philadelphia, and both the Sixers and the team that lands Harden send Portland a first-round pick. (It’s very funny to imagine a two-team trade here with Harden and picks going to the Blazers, thereby letting them play this game with another guard.) But in terms of need, Philly laps the field, as Holiday gives them a solution to the Harden dilemma, is a terrific running mate alongside Maxey, and would be a great second fiddle to Embiid. It’d be difficult to pull this off, but they should certainly operate with the most urgency.

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What Year Was Tupac Killed?

Tupac died some time ago now, and yet, there’s been some significant news on that front. The investigation of his murder was revived earlier this year, and today (September 29), it was reported that Las Vegas police have arrested Duane “Keefe D” Davis in connection with the drive-by shooting that killed Tupac.

As for when this all went down: As ABC News points out, Tupac was shot five times on November 30, 1994, during a robbery at Quad Studios in Times Square, but he survived. A couple years later, on September 7, 1996, he was shot in a drive-by after leaving a boxing match at the MGM Grand on the Las Vegas strip. He was shot multiple times and taken to the hospital, where he died from his injuries a few days later, on September 13. He was 25 years old.

As for the recent arrest, Davis has admitted to his involvement in the shooting before: In his 2019 memoir Compton Street Legend, he said he was a passenger in the car from which the shots were fired, and he claimed his nephew Orlando “Baby Lane” Anderson was the one who actually pulled the trigger. Anderson was later killed in a shooting in Compton, two years after Tupac’s death.

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‘Gen V’ Season 1, Episodes 2 & 3 Recap: Ranking All The WTF Moments

Warning: Spoilers for Gen V episodes one and two below.

Jeff Bezos is truly sick (in a good way) for inventing the three-episode premiere model and then utilizing it for a show as bloody and disturbed as Gen V. After a premiere filled with gore, death, and dicks, the show’s follow-up episodes (released simultaneously) gave us more insight into the bigger mystery fueling this season and the role our dangerous little idiot supes have to play in it.

We met parents, we pondered on whether flashy jewelry makes poor people sad — spoiler: they already are — and we absurd hero antics that definitely won’t make it into anyone’s In Memoriam tribute video. Here’s where the WTF leaderboard stands after episodes two and three.

6. Cate’s Jumanji Moment

The hazmat crew had barely mopped up her dead boyfriend’s intestines before Cate Dunlap decided to start wielding her mind influence for good. She’s saving the world one unfunny frat bro at a time, powering the economy in the process and making fans care about baseball again. That’s real hero behavior. Was it worth the small brain bleed to tell some incel asswipe he should go to Dicks Sporting Goods, purchase a Louisville slugger, and have a crack at his own balls every hour while shouting “Jumanji” at the top of his lungs? Honestly, yes.

5. A Freudian Scavenger Hunt

Andre’s got bigger problems than almost murdering a girl in a nightclub and watching his best friend have a very public, very fatal meltdown: His dad is here. The only thing worse than being stuck with powers and the responsibility that comes with them for Andre is having a parent who lived that superhero life before you did. The senior Polarity is stagedad-ing hard in these episodes which makes the campus scavenger hunt Andre and Cate go on to find a clue left behind by Golden Boy all the weirder. Shoving your hand into your dad’s bronzed penis to retrieve your dead bestie’s cell phone is no one’s idea of a good time. Except maybe Sigmund Freud. Sigmund Freud would’ve loved this show.

4. That Nancy Reagan Reference

Like The Boys, Gen-V isn’t afraid to get political but, unless you’re intimately familiar with the search engine results when you combine “Nancy Reagan” and “Throat Goat,” this reference might’ve gone over your head. Never fear. Even without knowing the oral history of a former First Lady, watching a girl gag herself on her own tale for likes is still nauseating.

3. When Flashlights And Starfish Turned Sexual

Cate risked another aneurysm in episode three to save Andre’s life after a rescue attempt gone wrong in a moment that proved heroic moments come in all shapes, sizes, and sexual innuendos. Using her telepathic abilities, Cate manipulated two guards who seemed ready to transport Andre to “The Woods,” influencing one to simulate oral using a flashlight before the other threatened to stick the organically-lubed battery-operated torch up his “chocolate starfish.” Disgusting, but effective.

2. Sam’s Hulk Out

We’re finally clued into what caused Luke to spiral in the premiere when Andre and Cate discover Sam (the brother Golden Boy believed was dead) is the kid that almost escaped back in episode one. He’s clinically insane and suped up just like his big bro, which might be why the school is experimenting on him in “The Woods.” Of course, we’re not advocating child kidnapping and torture, but watching Sam get so angry he punched a guy’s intestines through his mouth has made it clear: this kid needs help.

1. Q-Tips By Cricket

Emma deserved a hero moment after the suffering she endured in the show’s first few episodes. Feeling pressured to purge herself to satisfy a guy’s kink, having her eating disorder disclosed for likes, being betrayed by a friend, and having to field exploitative reality TV pitches from her own mother meant Cricket needed a win. Would we qualify swimming inside a guy’s ear canal only to emerge in a pool of brain matter and blood as a win? Eh. Knowing Cricket’s mom, there has to be a way to spin this into a brand deal with Q-tips.

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Peter Dinklage Is Having A Blast In The Face-Ripping ‘The Toxic Avenger’ Teaser Trailer

Not unlike Daniel Radcliffe’s post-Harry Potter years, Elijah Wood made a ton of money starring in the Lord of the Rings film and now he can follow what creative impulse he wants. Sometimes it’s voicing a dancing penguin, other times it’s producing one of the best horror movies of the 2010s. Now, he’s in a hyper-violent remake of a horror-camp cult classic. Bless him.

You know who else is having fun? Game of Thrones star Peter Dinklage, who plays the “98 pounds of solid nerd” known as the Toxic Avenger (a.k.a. Toxie). Does Toxie rip someone’s face off in the teaser trailer above? You’ll have to watch to find out! Here’s the official plot synopsis:

The Toxic Avenger follows struggling everyman-janitor Winston Gooze, who is transformed by a horrible toxic accident into a new evolution of hero: The Toxic Avenger! Now with super-human strength and wielding a glowing mop for his unconventional weapon, he must race against time to save his son and stop a ruthless and power-hungry corporate tyrant bent on harnessing toxic superpowers to strengthen his polluted empire.

The R-rated The Toxic Avenger, which was written and directed by Macon Blair (the brilliant Green Room), does not currently have a release date.