Last night, Taylor Swift uploaded all of the track reveals for the remaining songs on her upcoming album Midnights. Between using her bingo roller to unearth her famous track five (“You’re On Your Own, Kid”) and announcing a collab with Lana Del Rey (“Snow On The Beach”), Swift also shared a separate video to explain the meaning behind the album’s opening song — “Lavender Haze.” The initial inspiration for the title came from a surprise TV show.
“I happened upon the phrase ‘Lavender Haze’ when I was watching Mad Menand I looked it up because I thought it sounded cool, and it turns out that it was a common phrase that was used in the ’50s where they would just describe being in love,” Swift said. “Like, If you were in the ‘Lavender Haze,’ that meant you were in that all-encompassing love glow, and I thought that was really beautiful.”
She continued to explain how this moment, even though the show was set in the ’60s, connects to both the modern era and her longtime relationship.
“I guess theoretically when you’re in the ‘Lavender Haze,’ you’ll do anything to stay there and not let people bring you down off of that cloud,” she added. “And I think a lot of people have to deal with this now — not just, like, quote-unquote public figures — because we live in the era of social media and if the world finds out that you’re in love with somebody, they’re gonna weigh in on it.”
The Mad Men scene itself happens during season 2 episode 12, when a minor character tells Don Draper that he’s in “the lavender haze.” Draper, who at the time was feeling that way about Betty (which Swift also has a song called) according to Reddit, reacts with a shy smile. So, by association, Taylor Swift is in her Don Draper era. The good one.
Watch Swift’s full video about “Lavender Haze” above.
Midnights is out 10/21 via Republic. Pre-order it here.
So playing a show in her hometown of Detroit, Michigan was a big full-circle moment for the “About Damn Time” singer that evoked many feelings in her, especially gratitude. Before launching into the track “2 Be Loved (Am I Ready),” she said (as Billboard notes), “Tonight is a very special night ’cause we are home, b*tch! My whole family is in this motherf*cker!”
“The feeling that I have,” she added, before being interrupted by a cheering crowd, “is indescribable.” She gave shoutouts to her family, saying, “My mom’s over here somewhere.” She continued, “It’s emotional being in the place where you were born. It’s emotional being back where your roots began… thinking about the people you wish were here.” She began to tear up. “I think about my father every time I come here. He would’ve been so proud…”
Before finally getting into the song, she said to the audience, “I love you. You are beautiful. You can do anything.”
Lizzo is a Warner Music artist. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.
Lindsay Lohan‘s last leading role in a movie was all the way back in 2013, with Paul Schrader’s messy The Canyons. But the Mean Girls and Freaky Friday star is coming back with a pair of Netflix movies, including the holiday rom-com Falling for Christmas where she falls off a cliff during a marriage proposal and can’t remember her name.
Hallmark really biffed it by not making this movie first.
The Falling for Christmas trailer has everything you want in a holiday rom-com: attractive people in sweaters, attractive people in flannel, and… that’s it, honestly. “The doctors did say that if I did normal things, my memory might come back,” Lohan’s Sierra, who was a spoiled hotel heiress before the accident, tells a small-town lodge owner played by Glee‘s Chord Overstreet. It sure would be a shame if those two fell in love and drank hot chocolate by the fire and lived happily ever after. Probably won’t happen, though.
Here’s the official plot synopsis:
A newly engaged, spoiled hotel heiress (Lindsay Lohan) gets into a skiing accident, suffers from total amnesia and finds herself in the care of a handsome, blue-collar lodge owner (Chord Overstreet) and his precocious daughter in the days leading up to Christmas.
Falling for Christmas comes out on November 10 on Netflix.
For the fifth year in a row, the World Happiness Report named Finland the world’s happiest country. The evaluation was based on a “healthy life expectancy, GDP per capita, social support in times of trouble, low corruption and high social trust, generosity in a community where people look after each other, and freedom to make key life decisions.” It also helps that Finland has a cool as hell prime minister.
Unlike most politicians, Sanna Marin has a healthy work-life balance. She works… and she has a life where she likes to party (and invite topless influencers to her residence) “I have danced, sung, celebrated, done legal things,” Marin explained after a bunch of buzzkills got mad at her for having fun. “I have a family life, I have a work life, and I have free time to spend with my friends. Pretty much the same as many people my age.”
Marin also has a smart solution for how to end the conflict in Ukraine.
When asked by a reporter for her thoughts on Joe Biden saying that he’s trying to figure out what is Vladimir Putin’s “off-ramp” before he uses nuclear weapons against Ukraine, Marin asked for clarification about the term “off-ramp.” The reporter explained that it’s “a way out of the conflict,” to which she replied, “The way out of the conflict is for Russia to leave Ukraine. That’s the way out of the conflict.” Marin then laughed and walked away in a mic drop moment. The Finns don’t mince words, now do they?
Finnish prime minister Sanna Marin was asked about a potential off-ramp for Russia to end the war in Ukraine. Her reply: pic.twitter.com/VblWxkMuFc
The RX is Uproxx Music’s stamp of approval for the best albums, songs, and music stories throughout the year. Inclusion in this category is the highest distinction we can bestow and signals the most important music being released throughout the year. The RX is the music you need, right now.
In 2019, Charlie Puth couldn’t wait to get his heart broken for the first time. At 30 years old, Puth is the pop poster boy for late bloomers, and he described himself that way to Hunter Harris and Vultureback then — yearning for the kind of teenage puppy love he watched in Clueless and worrying that his love songs came across as formulaic. In January 2020, that insecurity caused him to scrap his followup to his acclaimed 2018 sophomore albumVoicenotes. He provided an update 18 months later, revealing the pressure he’d felt to pump out the next radio-friendly hit while operating from a relatively empty internal well. Charlie, his long-awaited third solo album out today (October 7), leaves that problem firmly in the past.
This is Puth at his most vulnerable, down to a teary-eyed TikTok admission about how traumatizing “That’s Hilarious,” the album opener, was for him. That unabashed transparency is the backbone of Charlie — rooted in authentic pain, brave exploration, and subsequent self-discovery. The album was produced entirely by Puth and assembled on TikTok, to extinguish his self-doubt by receiving real-time feedback from his fans that he’d missed during the pandemic.
Puth hadn’t needed to draw from experience to churn out platinum-certified pop earworms like the ubiquitous “See You Again” with Wiz Khalifa, “Marvin Gaye” featuring Meghan Trainor, “Attention,” “One Call Away,” or “We Don’t Talk Anymore” featuring Selena Gomez. With Charlie, recorded in the aftermath of a draining breakup — be careful what you wish for? — he balances his reputable music theory expertise, pristine pitch, and innovative production with his newfound introspection.
It began with “Light Switch,” the gold-certified catchy lead single with nearly 300 million Spotify streams and 15 weeks on the Hot 100 to its name. Born by accident on TikTok, Puth had an epiphany after recording himself flipping a light switch. The melodic, uninhibited album closer, “No More Drama” was similarly hinged on a creaking door. The Jung Kook-assisted bop “Left And Right” cleverly pans from one headphone (or AirPod, probably) to the other in the chorus. Each track seamlessly segues into the next sonically, but the duality in the ordering is more intriguing — mirroring the emotional whiplash of falling in and out of love. The lasting revelation, though, is the cohesive lyrical arc Puth paints. The broken man in “That’s Hilarious” is stronger for it in “No More Drama.”
In “That’s Hilarious,” Puth laments that his ex “took away a year of my f*ckin’ life” in the pre-chorus before the chorus reveals his scars, underscored by synthesized laughter: “You didn’t love when you had me / But now you need me so badly / You can’t be serious / That’s hilarious.” The next track, “Charlie Be Quiet,” hits on Puth’s pension to keep his messy (and potentially risky) feelings to himself.
Early album standouts “Light Switch” and “There’s A First Time For Everything” capture the hypnotizing and intoxicating nature of developing a crush. Puth’s buoyancy is immediately deflated with the synth-based “Smells Like Me,” which simultaneously sounds like it’s plucked from an ’80s rom-com and delivers a bitter yet earnest message — “I hope your jacket smells like me” — that could be found in any Instagram caption.
“Left And Right” indulges all-consuming infatuation. “Loser” is soaked in self-loathing and blame for someone leaving, followed by the gut-punch piano ballad “When You’re Sad I’m Sad,” where Puth can’t help but empathize and take her back when he knows he shouldn’t. By the time we arrive at “I Don’t Think That I Like Her,” punctuated by Travis Barker on the drums, and “No More Drama,” Puth has the clarity to choose himself.
“I’ve got no more drama in my life, and it’s been amazing,” he sings in “No More Drama,” utilizing his signature high register. “I’m so glad I finally realize I’m better without you / It took a year before I recognized / That our love already died / Baby, I was down bad, I was down bad / Now I’m healing.”
It was a hard-earned realization, one he credits his fans for guiding him toward. “This album was born on the internet, and I’ve had so much fun making it in front of all of you this past year,” Puth wrote on Instagram when confirming Charlie‘s release date. “2019 me used to think that in order to be an artist, you had to hide away and talk to nobody to make your art. Turns out you make MUCH better art when you involve millions of people in the process. (For me at least.) I hope you scream cry every word when I sing these songs on tour because they wouldn’t be here without you.”
As with any piece of art, the subject matter doesn’t matter as much as the perspective. Charlie is a breakup album, a staple in music since forever. But the unique TikTok crafting of Charlie normalized crowdsourced healing. The typical artist trope is to relinquish ownership of an album to their fans upon release, but Puth welcomed joint custody of Charlie from the beginning — out of therapeutic necessity rather than vanity. He’s thrilled to finally have a full body of work that not only he can stand behind but that people want to claim. (He summarized his career-long frustration to Entertainment Weekly by saying he wished he “had a time machine” to make Charlie his debut offering.)
Since “See You Again,” Puth has tried so hard, by his own admission, to package himself as the perfectly consumable pop star. He was born with the skill to make chart-topping bangers in his sleep, and he did, but the sleepwalking ends with Charlie.
“I can’t think of a melody that makes you come back to me,” Puth poignantly sings in the thumping, bass-laced track “Tears On My Piano.” It feels like a reckoning that music can’t solve everything. The missing ingredient couldn’t be manufactured or serendipitously found by flipping a light switch. Puth just needed to live more life, experience heartbreak, and throw perfectionism to the wind (literally). As a result, he became what he, and his truest fans, always wanted him to be: a more complete human being and relatable pop star.
Charlie is out now via Atlantic. Stream it here.
Charlie Puth is a Warner Music artist. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.
Every now and then, a new Drake beef pops up or an old one gets revived. Now, there’s apparently a new situation that came seemingly out of nowhere, with actor Zach Woods. Woods was a guest on The Late Late Show yesterday (October 6) and while there, he took a minute to clear the air about his (very much a joke, unless there’s something we don’t know) feud with Drake.
Woods started by offering some context, saying:
“I just want to squash a beef that’s starting to get out of hand. Drake and I… this beef is getting out of control, and I just think it needs to stop. Because Drake is out there like, ‘Oh, I’m the most famous person in the world. I’m more famous than Zach Woods, who was on The Good Wife, a recurring on The Good Wife, and in late seasons of The Office.’ And it’s like, no one knows… neither one of us are scientists, we don’t know who is more famous.
And also, if you think about it… and this is the thing that started the beef… I mean, you guys know, so I’m just telling you. Everyone knew I was ‘Champagne Papi.’ Everyone knew it, and then Drake rolls in and says, ‘I’m Champagne Papi,’ and it’s like, well, are you from the Champagne region of France? Because if not, you’re Sparkling Wine Papi, b*tch. My friend Vanessa pointed that out to me.”
Woods, who IMDb lists as 6’4″, continued, “I want to squash the beef, I don’t want to perpetuate the beef, but I will say: Drake is a musician, but I can play any movie theme on trumpet and Drake can’t even play trumpet. You see what I’m saying? So that’s it. I just need to squash it because I’ll be the bigger man, spiritually, also physically because Drake’s a mini, and that’s between him and his nutritionist. But I just, it ends here tonight, Drake. You can stop.”
He then wrapped it up, concluding, “The thing that he’s done that is really inexcusable is… in a beef, what you don’t do is you don’t be passive-aggressive. And Drake has acted as though he doesn’t even know who I am or that we’re in a beef, which is a low blow, so shame on you, and that’s coming from your Champagne Papi.”
Netflix’s Unsolved Mysteries returned this week to deliver more O.G. true-crime vibes for the streaming audience. The series will grow more supernatural with the second episode, but the first one takes a grounded approach to dealing with a real-life crime and considers whether an 18-year-old volleyball star, Tiffany Valiante of New Jersey, took her own life. Of course, Netflix recently scored a major hit with Ryan Murphy’s Dahmer dramatization starring Evan Peters, and that show upset victims’ families by arguably capitalizing upon tragedy. With this newest Unsolved Mysteries episode, however, the family is fully onboard in the interest of uncovering the truth of what happened to a beloved daughter who died in a puzzling, nonsensical way in 2015.
Officially, the medical examiner and investigators declared Valiante’s death to be a suicide, a determination that her family cannot stomach as the truth. That’s because Valiante was not only apparently an outwardly happy and well-adjusted teen, but she was nearly about to begin college on a volleyball scholarship. Her stature (she was 6’2″) made her stand out in a crowd, but no one saw what happened to Valiante after she left a party to walk a few blocks to her family’s home. She did show up on footage from a neighbor’s deer camera (as shown below), but investigators determined that she supposedly ditched her shoes and walked three miles, barefoot and on rough terrain, to the point where a moving train (which was on the route between Atlantic City and Philadelphia) hit her after she allegedly threw herself on the tracks.
Netflix
The episode’s a spooky one, and — as the episode details — the conductor who was helming the train gave conflicting stories about what he saw or didn’t see on the tracks that night. Tiffany was also not fully clothed when (what was left of) her body was found. In addition, a previous Daily Beast investigative report detailed a hearsay story from a Wawa manager, who claimed that he overheard some teenage boys discussing how Tiffany was allegedly kidnapped after she had left the party. Whether or not that story was true, or whether Tiffany was chased onto the tracks by anyone else, no one knows for sure, and the manager didn’t want to be identified by the Daily Beast.
In addition, there are differing accounts of whether Tiffany had argued with her mother and/or ditched her cell phone in her parents’ driveway. Reportedly, cell records showed that Tiffany used the phone an hour after some people say that she tossed the device. Her mother also indicated that Tiffany always kept her cell phone with her and went to great measures to protect it with a durable, waterproof device. Further questions involve whether Tiffany could have been distraught over an ended relationship, but she had recently entered into a different coupling.
In the end, this episode doesn’t provide the answers, which adds to the obligatory “Unsolved” nature of the tragedy in question. The Netflix series, as with the original, asks viewers to provide any tips (here) if they think they can help solve a crime. Hopefully, Tiffany’s family can gain some closure if anyone out there can help determine what actually happened leading up to those train tracks.
Netflix’s ‘Unsolved Mysteries’ is currently streaming the return of Volume 3.
In recent times, Taylor Swift has been gradually rolling out the tracklist for her upcoming album Midnights, by revealing one song at a time in her “Midnights Mayhem With Me” series of videos. As of last night, there were five song titles yet to be unveiled, and Swift went ahead and revealed them all in one go, sharing a new video hourly between midnight and 4 a.m. ET last night/this morning.
Swift saved the most intriguing reveal for last, as she captioned the video, “The season finale of Midnights Mayhem with Me, with QUITE the twist of an ending…” As for the song, it was the fourth track, called “Snow On The Beach.” The song includes the album’s only credited feature: Lana Del Rey.
The Del Rey collaboration shouldn’t come as a huge surprise to Swifties, as the link-up has been rumored for weeks now. The main piece of evidence here was a sweater: Fans caught a glimpse of a distinctive pattern of a sweater Swift wore in a Midnights teaser video, identifying the article of clothing as the same one she wore in a photo with Del Rey and Midnights collaborator Jack Antonoff in April.
Taylor Swift sparks collaboration rumors with Lana Del Rey as fans notice the shirt she wore while making #Midnights is the same shirt she wore in a photo with Lana Del Rey & Jack Antonoff in April. pic.twitter.com/5bh1hKwyu0
Dustin Lance Black, the Oscar-winning screenwriter of Milk and Under the Banner of Heaven, came out as gay his senior year of college. It was a struggle not only because of his Mormon upbringing and the acute belief growing up that he was destined for hell, but because his mother’s initial response was antagonistic. Mama’s Boy, among other things, is an exploration of how his mother came around and eventually inspired him to become an activist.
The most fascinating turn in the trailer comes when Black gives his famous acceptance speech for writing Milk, wherein he promised that gay and lesbian children would one day have equal rights. We all remember it, but his mother took it more seriously than anyone else, reminding Black that a promise isn’t something to be given lightly, and that he’d better get off the couch and put in the work to make those equal rights a reality. There’s just no way to stay still after mom gets on your case like that.
Here’s the official synopsis: “Traveling back to the places where he grew up, Black explores his childhood roots, gay identity and close relationship with his mother, who overcame childhood polio, abusive marriages and Mormon dogma, while becoming Black’s emotional rock and ultimately, the inspiration for his activism. With a wealth of personal photographs and candid memories from Black’s family, colleagues, and friends, Mama’s Boy embraces the personal to tell a universally hopeful tale of resilience and reconciliation through the power of love and shared stories.”
Directed by Laurent Bouzereau (Natalie Wood: What Remains Behind), the HBO documentary premieres October 18th.
Somehow, nearly 25 percent of the 2022 NFL season is in the rearview mirror. It goes quickly after the (very) long offseason each year, but Week 5 is upon us with a full slate of intriguing offerings. This week’s schedule includes another London game on top of everything else and, unlike previous weeks, there are some very large underdogs on the board. Through four weeks, the results have been solid in this space, including a 3-2 mark in Week 4, but the fun never stops.
Before we roll through the card, let’s check in on the overall progress.
Week 4: 3-2
2022 Season: 12-8
Come get these winners.
TEASER: Green Bay Packers (-2) over New York Giants and Kansas City Chiefs (-1) over Las Vegas Raiders
I’m only leading with this because the Packers are playing the London game, but it’s a play I like. For the uninitiated, teasers can be profitable long-term if you’re picking off key numbers, and both of these lines move through the keys of three and seven. Green Bay is on a neutral in an odd setting against New York, but I’m going to have to see the Giants do more before I believe it. Teasing the Chiefs to one at home in prime time is solid as well, and I would at least consider the Jaguars as another teaser leg.
Pittsburgh Steelers (+14.5) over Buffalo Bills
The Steelers might just be hideous, and I get that. Mike Tomlin has always been a very profitable bet as an underdog, and this number feels a touch high, against the team that many have power rated as the best team in the NFL. Kenny Pickett making his first start is scary, but we have our principles.
Washington Commanders (+2) over Tennessee Titans
Tennessee is seemingly getting a bump after beating the Colts, but the Titans were soundly out-gained in that matchup and I’m not buying it. Washington isn’t fantastic or anything, but I’m not sure they should be an underdog at all in this spot at home.
Dallas Cowboys and Los Angeles Rams UNDER 21 points in the first half
Sound familiar? We’re going back to the well with another Rams first half under. Los Angeles continues to play very slowly in the first half, and the Rams are scuffling on offense. Dallas has earned trust on defense this season, and this one could be a slug-fest. I’d also lean under on the full game.
Baltimore Ravens (-3) over Cincinnati Bengals
Nabbing the 3 (rather than 3.5) is important, but there are multiple shops still dealing 3 as this post goes up. I’m buying the dip on the Ravens and I think this line should be 4 or 4.5. It’s not a complicated handicap, but I also trust Baltimore’s coaching staff to deliver in a big divisional spot.
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