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Tim Robinson Won An Emmy For ‘I Think You Should Leave,’ So Awards Shows Aren’t A Total (Coffin) Flop

We’re all trying to find the guy who won Outstanding Actor in a Short Form Comedy or Drama Series at the 2022 Creative Arts Emmys. Oh wait, it’s Tim Robinson.

Netflix’s fantastic I Think You Should Leave was up for two awards during the non-televised Emmys this weekend: Outstanding Short Form Comedy, Drama, or Variety Series and Outstanding Actor in a Short Form Comedy or Drama Series for Robinson. Sadly, Carpool Karaoke won the former (even though the driver’s ed sketch is 50 times more entertaining than watching James Corden drive ALF around Los Angeles, or whatever), but Robinson took home the latter for playing “Various Characters.”

It’s a shame that the Short Form categories aren’t presented during the primetime Emmys. A Dan Flashes shirt would really pop on the red carpet. Maybe for season three.

Speaking of the Emmys: did you realize that they’re this Sunday? Better Call Saul, Euphoria, Ozark, Severance, Squid Game, Stranger Things, Succession, and Yellowjackets are up for Outstanding Drama Series, while Abbott Elementary, Barry, Curb Your Enthusiasm, Hacks, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, Only Murders in the Building, Ted Lasso, and What We Do in the Shadows compete for Outstanding Comedy Series.

You can find the full list of nominees here.

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Michelle Branch ‘Would Probably Be In Bed Crying All Day’ About Patrick Carney If Not For Her New Album

Michelle Branch is going through a lot right now, as she’s in the process of divorcing husband and Black Keys drummer Patrick Carney after accusing him of infidelity. Furthermore, she got a domestic violence charge for hitting Carney, although that was later dropped.

Another wrinkle of this situation is that Branch and Carney are musical collaborators, and Carney co-produced and performed on Branch’s upcoming album, The Trouble With Fever. Now Branch has discussed that dynamic in a new Billboard interview.

Branch was asked if the Carney situation has made it difficult to focus on the upcoming album and supporting tour and she said, “It has been the best distraction ever. I think if I didn’t have this record coming out, I would probably be in bed crying all day.”

She continued:

“It’s actually made me more excited about going out on the road and playing these shows in the next few weeks, and being reacquainted with who I am on my own, without a partner. It’s been a while since I’ve not had that creative partner with me, as far as, like, going on tour, planning, rehearsing and figuring out sounds through live shows. All that stuff is so intertwined. And seeing the amount of people who are so supportive, and ready to come out and hear these songs, it’s made me really excited to go out. I’m weirdly looking more forward to it now than I probably was, like, two months ago. Because I’m like, ‘Yeah, this feels good. I need this for my heart.’”

She also noted of the material on her new album (which she nearly released in 2021 and has therefore been finished for some time now), “It’s also great to get it out of the way now, because I have a lot of sh*t I want to write about now. This is finally leaving the nest and making room for new stuff, and that’s always exciting, too.”

Check out the full interview here.

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

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Hmm, This Gossipy Little TikTok From 2021 Sure Does Feel Relevant Again Amidst The ‘Don’t Worry Darling’ Fiasco

As the promotional tour for Don’t Worry Darling continues to devolve into madness for various feud and/or spit-based reasons at the Venice Film Festival, an unearthed TikTok video might hold the secrets to the movie’s current state of disorder. Vulture writer Kathryn VanArendonk brought the video to Twitter’s attention after the Venice debacle, and if true, the behind-the-scenes account answers a lot of questions particularly around the rumored feud between Olivia Wilde and Florence Pugh.

“Months ago – months and months! – there was a very gossipy blind item tiktok from someone who worked behind the scenes describing what was CLEARLY don’t worry darling, and i remember watching it and talking about it and now i’ll never find it again,” VanArendonk tweeted.

Thanks to an assist from Vice writer Cait Bladt, we now have that clip. Dated for October 2021, almost an entire year ago, the TikTok video claims to be a story from a production assistant for an unnamed film that, like VanArendonk described, is totally Don’t Worry Darling.

@klatschhh

That director is wild :/ Story was sent to me. No warranty for correctness. #story #storytime #tea #celeb

♬ Senorita Chicolita – Orchestra Heinz Kiessling

In the video, the PA claims that the trouble began when Wilde allegedly banned Jason Sudeikis from the set, which everyone just assumed was because of COVID. However, according to the very thinly-disguised account in the video, Wilde and Harry Styles so began visibly hooking up, which allegedly led to Pugh stepping in to direct the film. The cast and crew were allegedly hit with non-disclosure agreements to sign a month before wrapping, and the PA claims to have quit after witnessing Pugh and Wilde arguing in a trailer over how Pugh was being treated after “doing all of the work.”

For the record, this is a random TikTok video that never once mentions the name of the film nor the actors involved. However, the descriptions closely match the principal cast and director in Don’t Worry Darling. That said, we are making no claim that any of the allegations contained in the video are accurate. Fun and gossipy? Yes. Interesting given the week of chaos around the film? Sure. So there’s that.

(Via Kathryn VanArendonk on Twitter)

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Talking With Rafe Spall About ‘Trying,’ TVs Most Heartfelt Comedy

In Trying, Rafe Spall (The Big Short, Black Mirror, and the upcoming western The English) is one half of a young London couple trying to stay together through the slow rolling process of starting a family through adoption. It is funny and nuanced with a big heart, never hiding from the tough moments that can challenge a young couple that’s trying to chase their dreams and the silly moments that can often act as a salve. It is a show that, to be honest, not enough people are talking about despite the fact that it just wrapped its third season (on Apple TV+) with a fourth on order. A show that, while very different, has the capacity to charm fans of shows like Parks And Rec, Schitt’s Creek, and The Good Place.

Trying will absolutely fit like a comfy sweater if you or someone you know is struggling to start a family (I speak from personal experience). But the show’s reach is larger, really nailing coupledom and how happily ever after isn’t purely restricted to perfect people who have everything in common. Authenticity and love are the words that I most think of when I think of the show, and they clearly sparked Spall’s interest, bringing him to a project that has very clearly changed his perspective when it comes to work/life balance. In the following interview, we talk about that, what it’s like to give your heart to a streaming project in an era when one might get erased for a tax break, only wanting to do relatable comedies, and the secret to Jason and Nikki’s charm on Trying.

My wife and I are getting ready to get into the adoption process ourselves, so this show has meant a lot to us. It’s a lovely, well-done thing.

That makes me very happy to hear.
I imagine you hear that a bit, right?

Yeah. I’m not on any socials, but Esther (Smith, who plays Nikki to Spall’s Jason) is and she passes on lots of stuff that she gets on DMs talking about how important this show is to people. Because infertility is a thing that touches many, many people’s lives. I think one in seven. And even if it’s not happening to you specifically, it will be someone you know. And it is a topic that’s not discussed in our culture. It still remains something of a taboo. And so to make people feel less alone, to make people feel seen, which is the purpose of all art, isn’t it? To make people seen, recognized, and understood. And I’m really pleased that this show showed us that in its own way.
What do you think it is that makes Jason and Nikki so perfect for each other?

I think they’re an aspirational couple in some ways because no matter what they go through, their love deepens. There’s that great line in the end of the first season where I say to Nikki, “If this doesn’t work out, you are enough. You are enough.” And I think that’s really gorgeous. They have the same sense of humor and much like in heavyweight boxers, if their speed goes, if their footwork goes, one thing that never goes is their punching power. And I think if you get a couple that makes each other laugh, it’s the last thing to go. Many other things fall by the wayside, but the sense of humor endures. That stays. That’s what keeps you together.

It’s a perfect pairing because the two characters are drawn very differently, but yet it still works, which is something that relates very much to my own relationship. Do you think that’s part of the strength of it also, that they’re so unique [from each other]?

Yeah. They’re different and they argue and they fall out, which is obviously true to most people’s relationships. But yeah, I like that. It’s not like the classic thing that had been defined by Peppa Pig. And if you do go down the route of adoption, and you are blessed with a child, Peppa Pig will become a part of your life. And in Peppa Pig, there’s Daddy Pig who’s dumb and always getting things wrong. And then there’s Mommy pig who’s always eye-rolling at Daddy Pig and is the organized one. And this isn’t the case in our show. We are free of those tropes. These characters surprise me at every point. I’m surprised at how good a parent Jason is, how easily he takes to it. He’s a natural. And there are things that moms would expect from Nikki that don’t come true. She’s incredibly organized, but she’s also unbelievably instinctive when it comes to the kids. There’s that great bit where she knows when the kids are thirsty. It’s lovely.

Before I got this show, I was putting out into the universe that I wanted to play a character as close to myself as I could find, and then this came along. And although we’re very different, there’s a lot of me in this character, which is quite revealing actually. It’s quite revealing because I can’t hide behind an accent or whatever. There’s a lot of me in it.

Does that cause you to question certain things in your own life?

Yeah, of course. I mean, it sounds trite, but this is a show about love and connection. And I think we can become very caught in our goals in life and the achievement and attainment of dreams, and something that I found in my own life is I’m real lucky. I’ve got a really nice career and I’m able to get paid for what I love to do, but what I realized is that success and whatever success I’ve achieved professionally, it’s all great. It’s cool. I’m very, very grateful for it and I love what I do, but it doesn’t keep you warm at night. People do. Humans do. Connections. You sacrifice a lot for your career, for the attainment of dreams because you hope that when you get the money or the status or the recognition, you hope that you’ll get to the end of the rainbow, and there’ll be that pot of gold that you spent the last 20 years striving for. But that doesn’t exist. That pot of gold is in people. It’s not in any of the other things I’ve just described.

Career-wise, by any measure of my 15-year-old self’s expectations, I’ve made it in what I wanted to do, and that’s really great, but that isn’t enough. It isn’t enough. It’s not the good stuff. I’ve got three kids and my relationship with them, with my friends, the people that I love the most, that is what’s important. And it’s an obvious realization.

Things get in the way though. It’s a very difficult realization. You get distracted. Ego, ambition, all these things. In my own life, I’ve experienced it.

Yeah. Of course.

When you’re looking at the next project, does it have to be something that really makes an impact on you emotionally that you want to connect to? Are logistics and geography more a part of the discussion now than they’ve been in the past?

Yeah, all of the above. I just finished doing a 22-week run of To Kill A Mockingbird in the West End, Aaron Sorkin’s script, which meant that I didn’t get to see my kids a lot. And then I won’t say what it is, but I got offered the role of my life, to start straight after this show. I finished To Kill A Mockingbird on the 13th of August and this would’ve been going to another country, to America for three months. Amazing part, hell of a director, fantastic script, very jazzy cast, and I didn’t do it. I didn’t do it because I needed to be around, need to be around for my kids. And I perhaps would have done that in the past. Maybe I would’ve done it because it’s all I’ve known really.

You go, “Well, this incredible opportunity has come along. Let’s jump on it.” And God willing, those opportunities will continue, but they didn’t meet the criteria, and the MO at the moment was to be present for my kids. They’re starting new schools. They need me, they need their father. And you don’t get these years back. And in terms of creatively, I just have to do things that I believe in. And I know that, again, that sounds trite, but that’s what I care about. And that might even be also, they scare me. Playing Atticus Finch really scared me. That was frightening.

It would only feel trite if I see you in the trailer for Fast And Furious 11 as a mechanic. I think you’re in good shape.

That would be disingenuous. But no, I mean, I love what I do and I like to be challenged. But really, now, I just want to do things that have humor in them because life has humor in it. I just did To Kill A Mockingbird, big laughs in that. Yeah. You need to have laughs because it’s how we cope. And I’m not really interested in doing anything that doesn’t contain some element of relatable humor because that’s what humor is. It’s relatable. That’s why we laugh because it’s a release of identification.

Obviously, you’re in a streaming show, you pay attention to the industry. You see, I’m sure, the stuff that’s going on with HBO Max and shows disappearing from the service. Does that give you pause or concern about not just this show, but any other things that you would do in the future that would be on a streaming service? The idea that it could just get taken away for a tax write-off or something?

Yeah. But listen, that’s the gig, right? That’s what you do.

That seems like a new evolution of the gig to a certain extent.

It is a new evolution, but it speaks to a certain thing, which in my game is the wafer-thin gap between glory and humiliation that you tread all the time as a performer. One minute, you’re cock of the walk, the next you’re a feather duster. And that speaks to that, just like you could be on a hit show, which does three seasons or more on Apple TV. I did a season of a show that I loved on Showtime called Roadies that was written and directed by Cameron Crowe, and that got canceled after one season. And at the time I was heartbroken, but lucky enough to get this. But look, sure, that perspective of looking at the ruthlessness of commissioning and counseling… I look at it from the point of view of this is a golden time to be an actor. The wealth of stuff that’s out there.

Oh, so many opportunities.

Yeah, it’s very different. My father’s an actor (Timothy Spall). The wealth of opportunity that I have is far greater than that which he had. It’s terrific, and who knows how that’s going to play out in the future? Because every rush, there’s a crash. So let’s see. So let’s make hay while we can.

With regard to something like Roadies dying off and having that heartbreak, do you get more closed off from falling in love with a show like that [now], or do you just have to push back against that?

You’ve got to give all yourself to it. You got to do that. You got to realize that disappointment is a part of it. For every job I got as a young actor, there were 500 I didn’t get, so I get rejection constantly. And you soon figure out as a young performer whether you’ve got the stomach for that and bad reviews. You can do something really great that you care about so much, and then everyone thinks you’re terrible in it. But that’s all part of the fun, it really is.

All three seasons of ‘Trying’ are available to stream on Apple TV+

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Charli XCX Thinks Men Who Wear Crocs Have A ‘Big Dick’

As far as casual footwear goes, you’ll be hard pressed to find any that are as comfortable as Crocs. The foam clogs are not only a popular choice for cooks around the country who are on their feet all day, but they’ve also become a fashion statement around the world. Bad Bunny made glow-in-the-dark-Crocs. Saweetie made ranch dressing Crocs (because you can decorate your Crocs with pins and it won’t affect how soft their sandal-like slip-on fit feels.) Post Malone has his own model. Everyone pretty much knows about Crocs at this point, but somehow, pop star Charli XCX just discovered them this week and she has some very pointed thoughts on them.

“Why have I only just discovered crocs?,” she tweeted yesterday. Apparently her mind just couldn’t get off of the idea of Crocs, because the “Beg For You” singer kept ruminating on what they signify as a fashion statement. “Also I feel like if ur a man who fully commits to crocs then u probs have a big dick?? that’s just the vibe I get,” she tweeted today. She later replied to a user asking about “crocs with socks” saying that, “Crocs with socks is the only way imo.”

But let’s backpedal for a second here, because it’s that first through of hers that really sticks out. I mean, that’s a pretty cold, hard take on Crocs and the men who wear them. it’s in the same vein as something Rachel Bilson brought up recently and one has to wonder whether her ex-boyfriend Bill Hader, is indeed, a part of the Crocs army?

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

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P-Lo Brings The Funk And Positivity On His Sunny New Album, ‘Stunna’

A lot of my favorite music lately has come from my home state, but surprisingly, the bulk of that comes from the northern half. From Guapd4000 to Larry June to Rexx Life Raj, I’ve found that the Bay Area has made the music that most resonates with my spirit, whether it’s for reflection, relaxation, or turning up. Now, I’ve added P-Lo to that list, thanks to his new album Stunna.

Like the other Bay mainstays mentioned above, P-Lo is a rapper and producer who’s been at it for a long time but has only recently begun to receive more acclaim despite his contributions to movements and the blog-era fame of HBK Gang. You might remember their 2013 “Gas Pedal” from Sage The Gemini and Iamsu! as they rode the wave of the hyphy movement’s late 2000s popularity.

Since then, P-Lo has released four albums, including 2019’s Shine, and become a fixture at Golden State Warriors games, performing at halftime and even reshooting his recent “One Thing” video to take advantage of the team’s most recent championship parade. With Stunna, he continues his mission to spread positivity and shine a light on the growing second wave of Bay Area dominance. He was kind enough to break down his new album via Zoom, discussing those Golden State championships, the responsibility of representation, and the benefits of his newfound love for yoga.

So just right off rip, I always ask an artist, every album has kind of a thesis statement or a theme. What would be the thesis statement or theme for Stunna?

Stunna is like a… it’s a frequency. It’s energy. It’s a belief. It’s a level of confidence that I have in myself, in which I feel like people can also reach that same level, or whatever capacity that means for them. So Stunna is just a frequency, it’s a confidence, it’s positivity. And I think all the music represents that.

One thing that I’ve always loved about your music is the bounce. That Bay Area bounce is very different than probably any other kind of music in the hip-hop world. Why is it so special and why does everybody want a piece of it?

It’s just the amount of weirdness and uniqueness that sets it apart. Because a lot of Bay Area rap is rooted in funk. So a lot of the bass lines are really funky, really different, really odd, really, really interesting. And I think the Bay Area has always been ahead in setting new waves and precedents all over, not just in music, but just in tech and art and fashion and everything. It’s like living 10 years ahead of the whole world.

You have a song on Stunna called “My Ghetto Report Card Freestyle.” Can you just tell me about high school P-Lo? Where was he? What was he doing when [E-40’s album] My Ghetto Report Card dropped? What kind of an effect did that have on young P-Lo?

Man, I was in the ninth grade. I remember buying the bootleg of My Ghetto Report Card from my homie Bryan Fisher — shout out to Bryan Fisher. I bought it off of him for $5, it was a burnt CD. Later on, when I got really close to 40, I had to confess to him. I was like, “Hey yo, 40, when I was in middle school, I didn’t actually buy the album. I bought a burnt CD of the album.” And he was like, “Oh man, don’t worry about it, man.”

That whole CD had so much influence on the production style, everything. That project embodied the Bay so on point at that time, especially when the “Tell Me When To Go” video came out. And I remember sitting at my homie Buddha’s crib, and when that shit premiered on BET or TRL. It was the whole black-and-white video. Everybody’s slow motion, shaking their dreads, it was incredible, bro. That time period is so vital to even what I’m doing now, from the production to the songwriting… I still pull so many inspirations from that whole era, from the whole Hyphy Movement to this day. Even if you listen to this project, there’s so much influence from that time period and still trying to flip it and reinvent it.

I feel like modern kids are having a little bit of their own Bay resurgence, thanks to Stephen Curry and Draymond Green and Klay Thompson, and I know that you have been a huge, huge aspect of that. The time you describe was around the time of the “We Believe” Warriors. Y’all weren’t doing too good back then. And now they have championships.

Multiple championships, man. Growing up, it was really hard. The Warriors weren’t winning as much. That time period, the “We Believe” Warriors, coincided with that whole scene. That was such an integral part of my life too. Because that’s right in high school, the Warriors are going crazy. Even though they didn’t really go that far. We embodied the underdog mentality that the Bay Area has always had. We’ve always been the underdogs and we’ve never gotten the credit that we’ve always deserved.

Being a part of it now and being able to go to the games, performing at halftime, and just being a part of the culture of the Warriors is such a true honor. Shout out to the Warriors organization for reaching out and always making sure we’re taken care of. And it’s just so dope. We’re doing the album release party in the Chase Center Plaza. It’s a free event, it’s for all ages. It just celebrates the album, brings the community out.

Yes, sir. Now I would be remiss if I didn’t ask you about what it means to be this visible as a Filipino person in hip-hop culture representing the kababayan.

I hold a responsibility. I’m cognizant of the responsibility of doing that because I’m one of the few Filipino-Americans in music that’s at the forefront of it. And that holds a lot of responsibility because you know when you break down the door, you might not get the full thing of it, but the people behind you are going to be able to really take that and go. I feel like that’s a responsibility that I’m taking upon myself also. I want to make people feel comfortable in who they are. And that’s something that I’m also still figuring out is who I am and what I represent.

I think we’re starting to see some benefits of that. Jo Koy got the movie in theaters, and Guapdad is doing his thing. H.E.R. is going to be on ABC as a Disney princess. And you’re all from the Bay.

Yeah. I mean, feel like we Filipinos are the Puerto Ricans of the West Coast. I think that’s the tether to what New York is. The Filipino community is so intertwined and it’s such a melting pot, especially in the Bay, just like everyone’s together. Well, at least how I grew up. It’s a little different now with gentrification and stuff going on, but how I grew up, it was interwoven.

Now, if someone was going to be just flipping through the playlist on New Music Friday and they see P-Lo and they have a bunch of options from the new album from Stunna, what’s the song that they should click play on first to really understand who P-Lo is and what Stunna is and want to listen to the rest of the album?

I think the perfect song for that is “Good” featuring Larry June. I feel like it’s an embodiment of who I am. It’s an embodiment of what the Bay Area represents. It’s me and Larry, it’s unity, and it’s funky. I think it just has all those things that embody what P-Lo represents. Especially the positivity in the song. I think that’s what the whole album’s about. It’s just about having that confidence, having that confidence in yourself, having that belief in yourself, and being positive. Knowing that you’ll be able to make it through everything with belief and positivity.

And the video looks fun. The video looked like a lot of fun to shoot.

It’s a great time man. Everything’s just natural like an afro, man.

I know you do a lot of interviews. You probably get a lot of the same questions. You probably get tired of answering all the same questions. Do you have anything that you have always wished somebody would ask you about?

Something that I want to start talking about is my journey in yoga.

Yoga! P-Lo does Yoga! Now I have no excuse not to do it!

I started maybe last November and it’s been an interesting journey. It’s definitely mentally challenging, it’s physically challenging and spiritually challenging. So anyone that I talk to or come across I’m like “Hey, you should try this sh*t.”

Oh, you’re that guy now?

I’ve turned into that guy now. I got one of my roommates coming with me now. I think everyone should try it. It’s really good for mind, body, and spirit and balance in life.

Stunna is out now via EMPIRE. You can get it here.

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The Sweet Villainous Boys Of ‘Better Call Saul’ Love Hanging Out In Real Life And Everyone Loves Them For It

Do you know that feeling where everyone is hanging out without you? That’s what it feels like to be a fan of Better Call Saul. Sure, you can rewatch all the episodes to get that feeling of being included, but as soon as you turn off Netflix and log on to Twitter, you’ll see that all of the people you thought were your friends are hanging out at a beautiful late-summer soccer match, laughing and enjoying themselves, almost as if they didn’t commit various crimes together while you watched, cheering them on for over six years.

The Better Call Saul boys (minus Saul) attended a soccer game in LA last night, and it would not be a real Patrick Fabian hang if he didn’t post a heartwarming photo of it afterward. Fabian was joined by Tony Dalton, Giancarlo Esposito, and Jonathan Banks as they posed for a shot and just pretended that nothing historic or violent had ever happened between them at all.

Fans were quick to make the throwaway “wow look at all these murderers” jokes, along with one or two or a few dozen thirst tweets over Dalton.

Noticeably absent is Jimmy McGill, who is still serving his jail time, and Kim Wexler, who is probably somewhere smoking, as she should be.

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Noted Pizza Loyalist Lil Yachty Launches Yachty’s Pizzeria, His Own Frozen Pizza Line

Following a year of fast food partnerships with rappers, including Saweetie at McDonald’s, Jack Harlow at KFC, and Megan Thee Stallion at Popeye’s, it appears grocery partnerships are the new wave: Lil Yachty has officially launched Yachty’s Pizzeria, a line-up of frozen pizzas now available in Walmart stores.

Yachty’s Pizzeria comes in four different flavors, including buffalo-style chicken, hot honey cheese, pepperoni and bacon, and veggie supreme.

In an interview with Complex, Yachty shared how his pizza brand, which comes in partnership with Deep Cuts, came to be.

“The fact is bro, I really love pizza,” Yachty said. “It’s really my favorite food, especially frozen pizza. So, it’s been something I’ve been saying for years. It became more serious within the last year-and-a-half.”

While many artists have executed some of their ideas outside of music during the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, Yachty said this is something he has wanted to do since the beginning of his career. “I just added a new manager to my team who made it happen,” he said.

Yachty once said he had eaten pizza every day since the second grade, although now, he says his pizza-eating habits are “not as hardcore” these days.

Elsewhere in the interview, Yachty reiterated the importance of partnering with brands that reflect an artist’s values and how they can expand their cash flow beyond music.

“I mean, [brand partnership is] extremely important if that’s what you care about,” Yachty said. “For some people, that may not be what they’re here for. If you care to become this public figure and be on a cereal box, or a f*cking lotion bottle, or you want a cologne company, whatever it is, then yes, expanding your brand is so important.”

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‘The View’s Whoopi Goldberg Came Ready To Do Battle With Racist Fans Attacking ‘The Rings Of Power’ And ‘House Of The Dragon’

The View returned for its 26th season on Tuesday. While there were some noticeable changes, like Alyssa Farah Griffin starting her permanent co-hosting gig and new seats so Joy Behar (or the others) don’t fall out of them, some things stayed exactly the same. Namely, Whoopi Goldberg bringing the fire.

As the panel discussed the recent racist attacks on The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power and House of the Dragon for daring to be inclusive in their casting, Whoopi came charging to the fantasy series’ defense. “Are you telling me Black people can’t be fake people too? Is that what you’re telling me?” she said. “What is wrong with y’all?”

Goldberg then got a jump on the inevitable backlash that’s coming down the pipe for Disney’s live-action remake of The Little Mermaid starring Halle Bailey. Via The Wrap:

“Y’all are gonna lose your minds when you see the new Ariel. ‘Cause you know — and I don’t want to upset any mermaids who are watching the show, you know, because I know there are many communities of mermaids of various colors!” Whoopi said. “And when I say ‘of various colors,’ I’m not playing. There are violet mermaids, there are pink mermaids, there are black mermaids, there are Latina mermaids, there are mermaids of every ilk. And you know why there can be? Because it’s the world that we would like to see better.”

As Whoopi’s co-hosts agreed with the ridiculousness of getting mad about representation in make-believe series, Goldberg capped things off with a blunt blow that only she can deliver.

“All of y’all who have problems because there are Black hobbits? Get a job!” she said. “Get a job! Go find yourself, because you are focused on the wrong stuff.”

(Via The Wrap)

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Harry Styles Spits On The Idea That He Spit On Chris Pine, Denying The Reported Incident Happened

Over the past 24 hours or so, much of the public discourse about Harry Styles has been spit-related. First, he swapped some with Nick Kroll as the Don’t Worry Darling co-stars kissed at the Venice Film Festival yesterday. Then, video surfaced that made it look like he spit on other co-star Chris Pine at the event.

Later, though, through further analysis and additional video, it started to look less and less like the alleged spitting actually happened. Now, Styles himself has denied it: The Guardian reports that a Styles representative insists the singer did not spit on Pine, with “sources close to Styles” saying, “This is not true.” Furthermore, “sources close to Pine” added, “There is nothing but respect between these two men.”

So, why did people believe Styles spit on Pine in the first place? Well, for one, the video of the alleged incident looked pretty convincing. Secondly, some thought that for various reasons, there was some tension between the two. However, drag queen Dr. Panti Bliss-Cabrera offered an explanation of what appears to have happened in the video: “Chris Pine is holding a pen (?) which he puts down on his seat to clap, then realises that the glasses he’s just been looking for have been there on the seat the whole time too. ‘Silly me!’ (then puts them on in longer clip).”

Meanwhile, all this Don’t Worry Darling talk has overshadowed the fact that Styles’ “As It Was” just went No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart for a 12th total week, making it the longest-running No. 1 single of the 2020s so far.