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Here’s Which Bottle Won Our Big Single Barrel Bourbon Blind Tasting

Single barrel bourbon whiskey is growing in popularity by leaps and bounds. The style of bourbon is all about the refinement found in a single barrel of whiskey. Finding depth, complexity, and drinkability in a single barrel is kind of a miracle, as the vast majority of whiskey barrels are blended, into various expressions from “small batch” to “barrel proof” to “limited editions.”

The idea that a single barrel of whiskey can hit a perfect flavor profile to be bottled on its own is exceedingly rare, especially when you get into big age statements where a million factors can alter the booze in ways that force it to be blended out. Of course, that makes it even more magical when it happens. All of this is to say, it’s time for a single barrel bourbon blind tasting.

For this tasting, I pulled some brand new single barrel bourbons and put them up against some stone-cold classics. For the most part, I’ve kept this blind tasting in the mid-range of $25 to $75 per bottle. But I couldn’t help myself, so I threw in a ridiculous bottle just to see if it’d really dominate (and to make it more fun for me).

Our lineup today is:

  • Evan Williams Single Barrel
  • Baker’s Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey Single Barrel 7 Years Minimum
  • Wild Turkey Kentucky Spirit Single Barrel
  • Starlight Distillery Single Barrel Huber’s Rickhouse Select Indiana Straight Bourbon Whiskey
  • George Dickel Tennessee Single Barrel Whisky 15 Years
  • King of Kentucky Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey Single Barrel
  • Nashville Barrel Company Single Barrel Straight Bourbon Whiskey 5 Years Old
  • Jim Beam Single Barrel

Let’s see if that big-hitting King of Kentucky beats out some of these seminal favorites and newbies.

Also Read: The Top 5 UPROXX Bourbon Posts Of The Last Six Months

Part 1: The Tasting

Single Barrel Bourbon Blind
Zach Johnston

Taste 1

Single Barrel Bourbon Blind
Zach Johnston

Tasting Notes:

This has a really nice nose full of woody cherry, salted caramel with a tart apple edge, and a soft leatheriness. The palate feels and tastes “classic” with notes of wintry spices (eggnog especially) with a lush creaminess supported by soft vanilla, a hint of orange zest, and plenty of spicy cherry tobacco. The end is supple with a hint of tart apple tobacco with a light caramel candy finish.

This isn’t crazy good but it’s damn fine.

Taste 2

Single Barrel Bourbon Blind
Zach Johnston

Tasting Notes:

A hint of cellar funkiness is countered by a soft leather with dashes of sourdough rye crust, dry cornmeal, and a hint of anise next to a creamy cherry/vanilla base on the nose. The palate leans into the vanilla with a dusting of cinnamon and allspice (maybe some cardamon too) next to creamy eggnog with a thin line of dried dill and fennel. The end leans woody with soft winter spices and an echo of sour candy spiked with chili pepper.

This felt a little like rye masquerading as a bourbon thanks to that herbal not in the middle and that funk on the nose. Otherwise, this is a pretty solid sipper.

Taste 3

Single Barrel Bourbon Blind
Zach Johnston

Tasting Notes:

The nose draws you in with classic vibes from top to bottom thanks to rich vanilla smoothness, wintry spices, a hint of cedar, and a mix of sour cherry and tart apple. The palate stays very classic with old boot leather next to dry cedar bark, a layer of marzipan, and a distant hint of orange blossom with a whisper of honey. The end finishes with a good hint of spiced cherry tobacco and old leather next to mild nuttiness.

This is just f*cking great.

Taste 4

Single Barrel Bourbon Blind
Zach Johnston

Tasting Notes:

The nose on this meanders from sheet cake with vanilla frosting toward chili-laced dark chocolate ice cream to old leather gloves with a hint of potting soil, soft cedar planks, and a twinge of an orange creamsicle. The taste balances a lemon meringue pie with silky cream soda, red peppercorns, and thick toffee sauce with plenty of brown butter. The end has a bit of woody spice next to spiced cherry syrup, a crack of black pepper, and crumb more of that cake from the nose with a counter of those old leather gardening gloves finishing off the taste.

This is a winner right here.

Taste 5

Single Barrel Bourbon Blind
Zach Johnston

Tasting Notes:

The nose opens with a slice of cherry pie with a vanilla sauce, some apple tobacco, and a good snifter full of Necco Wafer. The palate leans into tart red berries with a Cherry Coke mixed with a Yoo-Hoo vibe next to apple-cider-soaked oak staves with a whisper of smoky old leather tobacco pouches. The chalky wafer comes back at the end with a bit of black licorice countered by sweet/spicy cherry tobacco and a dry firewood finish.

This is a bit all over the place — and definitely a TN whiskey (thanks to that chalkiness). I like it but can’t place it after the last two killer pours.

Taste 6

Single Barrel Bourbon Blind
Zach Johnston

Tasting Notes:

This opens very tannic-y (and old) with a mix of pitchy firewood, old honey barrels, dried cranberry, nutmeg, old vanilla husks, cornmeal pancake batter, and a hint of chili-laced tobacco. The taste is bold with a hot spice mix of cinnamon and dried anchos that’s tempered by lush vanilla and creamy dark chocolate with a hint of sweet cherry and old wicker rounding things out. The end is woody and full of potting soil with a hint of old chewing tobacco next to orchard wood.

This is very obviously the King of Kentucky as the age is unmistakable here. The thing is, it’s not as easy-going or inviting as some of the other bottles on the list. I’m going to have to think about where to put this.

Taste 7

Single Barrel Bourbon Blind
Zach Johnston

Tasting Notes:

This opens with a mix of cotton candy next to buttered popcorn with plenty of vanilla, cherry pie, caramel, and old leather rounding out the nose. The palate hints at cinnamon sticks and orange oils as creamy eggnog with plenty of nutmeg lead to Almond Joy and sweetgrass with a toffee underbelly. The end leans into the dark chocolate with a nutty edge while dried tart berries and sweet wood round out the finish.

This is deep and easy to drink. It also feels pretty classic. This is a good one.

Taste 8

Single Barrel Bourbon Blind
Zach Johnston

Tasting Notes:

The nose is a little thin but does come with vanilla, caramel corn balls, and a good dose of spiced cherry pie. The palate largely follows the same path while layering in floral honey, orange zest, and mild cherry tobacco with a leather edge. The end is a little thin but has plenty of wintry spices, caramel, and cherry that lead to a lingering sense of cherry tobacco in an old cedar box.

This was pretty good but the lightest sip of the bunch by a fair bit.

Part 2: The Ranking

Single Barrel Bourbon Blind
Zach Johnston

8. Jim Beam Single Barrel — Taste 8

Jim Beam Single Barrel
Beam Suntory

ABV: 54%

Average Price: $24

The Whiskey:

Each of these Jim Beam bottlings is pulled from single barrels that hit just the right spot of taste, texture, and drinkability, according to the master distillers at Beam. That means this juice is pulled from less than 1% of all barrels in Beam’s warehouses, making this a very special bottle at a bafflingly affordable price.

Bottom Line:

This is a pretty solid whiskey and it’s in last place — there are some killers on this list, folks. I like this as an easy everyday sipper on a rock or two. It’s also a great cocktail base, especially for a simple old fashioned.

7. George Dickel Tennessee Single Barrel Whisky 15 Years — Taste 5

Diageo

ABV: Varies

Average Price: $69

The Whisky:

The whiskey showcases Dickel’s vast warehouses and the gems they have hidden deep on those ricks. This is a very old whiskey, all things considered. The juice is from single barrels — aged 15 years or more — and the proof varies accordingly (sometimes it’s cut with water, too).

Bottom Line:

This feels like the biggest outlier thanks to that clear Tennessee whiskey vibe. Overall, this is still a solid pour of whiskey at an outrageously affordable price (relative to the cost of double-digit aged single barrels on the market these days).

6. Baker’s Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey Single Barrel 7 Years Minimum — Taste 2

Baker's Single Barrel
Beam Suntory

ABV: 53.5%

Average Price: $59

The Whiskey:

Baker’s is pulled from single barrels in specific warehouses and ricks across the Beam facility in Clermont, Kentucky. The juice is always at least seven years old. In this case, it was aged eight years and one month before bottling as-is.

Bottom Line:

This is another outlier. The taste is a bit all over the place but does work. I tend to use this more for unique cocktails (Sazerac is a good choice).

5. Evan Williams Single Barrel — Taste 1

Heaven Hill

ABV: 43.3%

Average Price: $32

The Whiskey:

This is Heaven Hill’s hand-selected single barrel Evan Williams expression. The juice is from a single barrel, labeled with its distillation year, proofed just above 86, and bottled as is.

Bottom Line:

This is always a pleasant surprise. It’s also amazingly affordable for a single barrel whiskey. I tend to use this for great cocktails more than anything else though.

4. King of Kentucky Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey Single Barrel (5th Edition) — Taste 6

King of Kentucky Bourbon Whiskey
Brown-Forman

ABV: 65.3%

Average Price: $249 MSRP ($2,814)

The Whiskey:

This year’s King of Kentucky is a 15-year-old bourbon made from a mash of 79% corn, 11% rye, and 10% malted barley. The spirit — made at the Brown-Forman Distillery in West Louisville (Shively) — went into the barrel on December 18, 2009, at 125% entry-proof. After 15 long years, only about 35% of the whiskey was left in the barrel. 43 single barrels were then chosen for this release and individually bottled as-is, yielding about 3,500 bottles of King of Kentucky.

Bottom Line:

This was a wood and spice bomb compared to the other whiskeys on this list. I would also argue this is the most “acquired taste” whiskey on this list, hence it ended up right in the middle. Maybe it’s for you. Maybe it’s not. Read the tasting notes again to decide before you pay the big bucks for it (or try it at a high-end whiskey bar).

3. Nashville Barrel Company Single Barrel Straight Bourbon Whiskey 5 Years Old — Taste 7

Nashville Barrel Co. Bourbon
Nashville Barrel Co.

ABV: Varies

Average Price: $90

The Whiskey:

Nashville Barrel Co. is doing some of the best work in the bottling game, full stop. They’re sourcing incredible barrels (a lot from MGP) and bottling them as-is without any cutting, filtering, or fussing — they let the whiskey speak for itself and it’s kind of magical. This expression tends to be five to eight-year-old barrels that will vary slightly in the flavor profile while always leaning into bold and distinct flavors.

Bottom Line:

This is the “just delicious” part of the ranking. These top three are all classic yet deep and rewarding sips. This was a little warmer, so it’s third instead of second of first, but that’s splitting the thinnest of hairs.

2. Wild Turkey Kentucky Spirit Single Barrel — Taste 3

Wild Turkey

ABV: 50.5%

Average Price: $79

The Whiskey:

Jimmy Russell hand selects eight to nine-year-old barrels from his warehouses for their individual taste and quality. Those barrels are then cut down ever-so-slightly to 101 proof and bottled with their barrel number and warehouse location.

Bottom Line:

Seriously, the top three are pretty much interchangeable. That said, this was that tiny bit more refined with a tad less heat that the NBC bottle above. Some would call it “smoother” and I would tend to agree.

1. Starlight Distillery Single Barrel Huber’s Rickhouse Select Indiana Straight Bourbon Whiskey — Taste 4

Starlight Single Barrel
Huber Winery

ABV: Varies

Average Price: $55

The Whisky:

These single barrel releases from Huber Winery’s Starlight Distillery are starting to light up the craft bourbon scene. The Indiana juice is real craft from a family tradition going back to the mid-1800s on the same farm (this isn’t MGP). Depending on the barrel, the mash here is a unique one with 58% corn, 27% rye, and 15% malted barley. That whiskey is aged for at least four years before it’s considered ready for single barrel bottling as-is.

Bottom Line:

This was the best bottle of the day. It has that perfect balance of warmth, lushness, and classic bourbon vibes. It’s super easy to drink while offering a great palate that takes you on a journey. This is a winner.

Part 3: Final Thoughts

Single Barrel Bourbon Blind
Zach Johnston

Well, there you go, the most expensive and elite bottle didn’t win. In fact, it didn’t really come close. The wild thing is, I loved that King of Kentucky pour on its own when I first tasted it. But when perched next to seven other pours, different — read: bigger — flavor profiles get highlighted on the palate. And that’s the big problem with blind taste tests, the subtleties get lost in favor of the big notes that differentiate pour after pour. It is what it is.

Overall, the top three picks on this list are all bottles you should be drinking. They’re stellar whiskeys on their own or in a blind taste test. Still, if you do buy only one bottle, make it that Starlight Bourbon — it’s a truly great bottle of whiskey.

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How Has Pete Davidson Dealt With Kanye West’s Harassment?

To the surprise of no one, Kanye West reveled in the news that Kim Kardashian and Pete Davidson broke up and declared “Skete Davidson Dead At Age 28” in an Instagram post celebrating the momentous occasion. Despite Kardashian demanding that Kanye take the post down, the rapper refused as he’s clearly not done with his long-simmering feud with Davidson.

At this point, you’d assume that the King of Staten Island star would be used to Kanye’s antics by now. He’s cracked jokes about it on SNL, during a Netflix special, and he reportedly thought Kanye’s video for “Easy” where a claymation version of Davidson gets kidnapped and basically murdered was “hysterical.”

However, privately, Davidson has not been so quick to joke away the situation, and he reportedly sought trauma therapy thanks to Kanye’s non-stop harassment putting a target on the young comedian’s back. Via PEOPLE:

Beginning in April of this year, the Saturday Night Live alum, 28, “has been in trauma therapy in large part” due to threatening posts that West, 45, has posted numerous times on social media while Davidson was dating the rapper’s ex-wife, Kim Kardashian.

“The attention and negativity coming from Kanye and his antics is a trigger for [Pete], and he’s had to seek out help,” the insider says.

Despite Kanye’s toll on his mental health, Davidson has “no regrets” about his whirlwind romance with Kardashian and “wants it to be made very clear that she’s been nothing but supportive of him throughout their relationship.”

(Via PEOPLE)

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Alex Jones Apparently Had An ‘Intimate Photo’ Of His Wife On His Phone That He Texted To Roger Stone

At this point, it feels more like public record than personal opinion to state that Alex Jones is not the world’s most likable man. Or the most empathetic. (Though if he’s really looking for a superlative, Most Shirtless Conspiracy Theorist is certainly on the table.) And chances are that if you were Mrs. Alex Jones (shudder to think), you’re probably not going to rank him too high in the thoughtfulness department, either — especially if you only just learned that he texted an “intimate photo” of you to his nutty pal Roger Stone.

Just last week, almost 10 years after the tragic school shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School, the InfoWars host lost his long-waged war against the parents of that day’s victims and has been ordered to pay them nearly $50 million in an ongoing defamation case. A large part of this was thanks to Jones’ lawyers committing what might be the most idiotic accident in all of legal history: sending two years’ worth of texts and personal communications to a Sandy Hook parents’ lawyers.

While Tucker Carlson is reportedly sh*tting his pants over what those texts might reveal about his daily texts with Jones, a lawyer for the Sandy Hook parents has confirmed that one of the items found on Jones’ phone was an “intimate photo” of Jones’ wife, Erika Wulff Jones, which Alex texted to Stone.

On Monday, as Mediaite reports, Mark Bankston—the lawyer to whom Jones’ team accidentally sent the private communications—confirmed that an “intimate photo” of Wulff Jones were among the details they received. As Bankston explained:

I’m a little concerned about it because that intimate photo was sent to Roger Stone, and I don’t know if that was consensual. And if it wasn’t consensual, and Mrs. Wulff Jones should know about that. And there might be something that needs to be done about that. Then again, it could be totally consensual. But when I see that — and I don’t see any indication that it was — I’m concerned something might not be on the up and up with that. There are certainly laws in certain states about that.

Jones himself talked about the matter on InfoWas over the past weekend, explaining: “There was a photo I sent my wife of her naked. Ok, they got that. So, my wife looks pretty good. The point is, there is one naked picture of my wife in there, so that’s what they got! No dick pics, no nothing,” he said.

Spoken like a true narcissist.

(Via Mediaite)

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Jim Carrey Initially Said No To Working With The Weeknd On ‘Dawn FM’

The Weeknd had a handful of collaborators on his latest album, Dawn FM, but perhaps the most important of them all was Jim Carrey, who does voice acting at various points throughout the project and helps move the narrative forward. While he ended up being a pivotal part of Dawn FM, Carrey says he initially turned down The Weeknd’s request to get on board.

Speaking with ET, Carrey said of The Weeknd and the album:

“He’s an incredible guy, an incredible artist, and a lovely person, and I feel very lucky to be his friend. He put it to me that he was doing this thing that was the radio station in purgatory, and I was like, ‘I love you, but I don’t want to do any work.’ And he said, ‘You know, you can just do it into your iPhone.’ Like, that it’s broadcast quality.

And then I started waking up in the middle of the night, which is what happens with me: I wake in the middle of the night and I start spitting bars [laughs] of all things, for god’s sake.

And to have our lives comes full-circle, because The Mask was the very first movie he ever saw and kind of inspired him to want to be in this thing, and boy, did he ever get in this thing.”

Watch the interview here.

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The Wickedly Funny Trailer For Palme d’Or Winner ‘Triangle Of Sadness’ Will Bring You Joy

Only a select few directors have won the Palme d’Or, the highest prize awarded at the Cannes Film Festival, more than once. The prestigious list of filmmakers includes Francis Ford Coppola for The Conversation and Apocalypse Now; Michael Haneke for The White Ribbon and Amour; and Ruben Östlund, who won in 2017 for the art world satire The Square and again earlier this year for Triangle of Sadness.

Described as a “wickedly funny” exploration of “the tawdry relationship between power and beauty,” Triangle of Sadness is about a “celebrity model couple, Carl (Harris Dickinson) and Yaya (Charlbi Dean), who are invited on a luxury cruise for the uber-rich, helmed by an unhinged boat captain (Woody Harrelson). What first appeared instagrammable ends catastrophically, leaving the survivors stranded on a desert island and fighting for survival,” according to the official plot description from distributor Neon.

Östlund credited his wife for the inspiration for Triangle of Sadness. “She’s a fashion photographer. When I met her, I just wanted to hear everything about her work and the fashion industry and to get an insider’s perspective of that industry. I had an outsider’s perspective and thought that the world was very cynical. She started telling me interesting facts and stories about that world. And I got very interested in looking at beauty as a currency,” he explained to the Hollywood Reporter.

You can watch the trailer above, because there’s never a bad time for a movie about rich people being the worst.

Triangle of Sadness opens on October 7.

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Black Thought & Danger Mouse Invite ASAP Rocky And Run The Jewels To Drop Ballistic Bars On ‘Strangers’

In just a few days, Black Thought & Danger Mouse’s collaborative album Cheat Codes comes out, and they couldn’t resist giving fans just one more preview of what’s to come. After dropping videos for “No Gold Teeth,” “Because” with Joey Badass and Russ, and “Aquamarine,” the rapper-producer duo has unleashed one final posse cut on the world featuring the truly jaw-dropping lineup of Tariq, ASAP Rocky, and Run The Jewels. It’s called “Strangers,” and you can check it out above.

Featuring a signature Danger Mouse beat with a murky, breakbeat-laden soul loop, “Strangers” finds the four MCs spitting multisyllabic verses with no hook, simply beating listeners over the head with bars until there’s nothing left to do but shrug and say, “Those boys are RAPPIN’ rappin’.” Let the debate about who’s got the best verse begin.

In addition to the aforementioned names, Cheat Codes will also feature rap titans such as Conway The Machine, Raekwon The Chef, and the late, great MF DOOM, with whom Danger Mouse rose to prominence in the early 2000s with the Adult Swim-backed collab project The Mouse And The Mask as Danger Doom. The album is dropping on Friday, 8/12 via BMG.

Listen to Black Thought & Danger Mouse’s “Strangers” featuring ASAP Rocky, El-P, and Killer Mike above.

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The 1975’s Matty Healy ‘F*cking Hates’ Metallica But ‘F*ck Yeah’ He Likes Kate Bush

The 1975 are set to drop their new album Being Funny In A Foreign Language this fall. Ahead of time, the band spoke with Pitchfork about the creative process behind the records, as well as their inspirations, of the past and today.

The author of the piece noted that throughout the interview, The 1975’s lead vocalist Matty Healy dropped several F-bombs. When asked if he was a fan of Kate Bush, Healy said, “f*ck yeah.” Healy, however, revealed that he’s not big on all Stranger Things-related music, saying, “I f*cking hate Metallica. My worst band of all time.”

Healy did not further discuss Metallica. However, he shared that he shared an early listen of his band’s new album with Taylor Swift, who summed up the record saying, “It’s so funny.

He also expanded on the band’s choice to work with Jack Antonoff to produce Being Funny In A Foreign Language, which he says has left fans polarized.

“People may think that it’s ‘uncool’ to work with the biggest producer in the world — I don’t give a f*ck,” said Healy. “I wanna make a great f*cking record… Jack doesn’t get enlisted by a lot of the best artists because he’s some go-to guy — Jack’s good.”

Being Funny In A Foreign Language is out 10/14 via Dirty Hit. Pre-save it here.

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All The Best New Indie Music From This Week

Indie music has grown to include so much. It’s not just music that is released on independent labels, but speaks to an aesthetic that deviates from the norm and follows its own weirdo heart. It can come in the form of rock music, pop, or folk. In a sense, it says as much about the people that are drawn to it as it does about the people that make it.

Every week, Uproxx is rounding up the best new indie music from the past seven days. This week we got new music from The 1975, The Killers, Stella Donnelly, and more.

While we’re at it, sign up for our newsletter to get the best new indie music delivered directly to your inbox, every Monday.

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Brijean — Angelo

Rhythmic duo Brijean, composed of Brijean Murphy and Doug Stewart, have made a name for themselves with their lo-fi, groovy music which combines intricate soundscapes to create colorful tracks. Full of breezy, percussive tunes, their new EP Angelo is music to soundtrack sunny days.

The Killers — “Boy”

We all need a reason to reflect on our younger years at times, and The Killers‘ new track “Boy” does just that. The song is constructed around driving beat and nostalgia-inducing guitar riff which takes a back seat once the synth kicks in. Overall, the song was inspired by singer Brandon Flowers’ recent visit to his small hometown. “I found that the place I had wanted to get away from so desperately at 16 was now a place that I couldn’t stop returning to,” he said. “I have a son approaching the age I was at that time in my life. With ‘Boy,’ I want to reach out and tell myself — and my sons — to not overthink it.”

The 1975 — “Happiness”

If The 1975‘s latest lead single “Part Of The Band” sounded like Bon Iver attending a Phoebe Bridgers concert, their newest track “Happiness” sounds like Peter Gabriel attending a MUNA concert. The more upbeat song is lead by a groovy bass guitar and a jazzy saxophone and shows the band’s ability to pen a range of music from brooding ballads to carefree love songs.

Stella Donnelly — “How Was Your Day?”

Australian songwriter Stella Donnelly is just a few weeks out from her anticipated album Flood. Giving fans another taste of the album, she delivers the poetic anthem “How Was Your Day?” With bright, sunny chords, Donnelly takes up a talk-y lyrical delivery as she unpacks what it means to have meaning get lost in digital translation.

Young Jesus — “Ocean” Feat. Tomberlin

It hasn’t been long since Young Jesus, the band of songwriter John Rossiter, released the 2020 album Welcome To Conceptual Hill, but a lot has happened in Rossiter’s life since. Following the untimely and tragic death of a close friend, Rossiter poured his emotions into music, resulting in the upcoming album Shepherd Head. The Tomberlin-featuring track “Ocean” acts as a preview for the project, combining haunting vocals over wistful chords as Rossiter asks life’s big questions.

Frankie Cosmos — “One Year Stand”

Frankie Cosmos‘ 2019 project Close It Quietly was her last full-length project, but this week, the songwriter shed light on her creative endeavors with the lead single “One Year Stand” and Inner World Peace album announcement. The tranquil track features a rolling guitar and veiled lyrics about a relationship that ran its course. “To me, the album is about perception. It’s about the question of ‘who am I?’ and whether or not the answer matters.”

Gordi — “Stranger”

After emerging as one of Australia’s leading, heart-tugging singer/songwriter, Gordi goes back to her acoustic roots with the relatively upbeat track “Stranger.” The song arrives ahead of her upcoming EP Inhuman and offers a reflection on detachment and running on borrowed time.

Helado Negro — “Agosto” Feat. Buscabulla

Helado Negro, moniker of musician Roberto Carlos Lange, released the enthralling 2021 LP Far In, but that hasn’t stopped him from continuing to roll out new projects, like the comforting song “Agosto.” The track is a collaboration with Puerto Rican duo Buscabulla, resulting in gorgeous soundscapes and tender melodies that create a comforting and blissful lullaby.

Whitmer Thomas — “Rigamarole”

Comedian/musician Whitmer Thomas is on a mission to prove comedy and indie rock go hand-in-hand. So far this year, he’s already released the EP Can’t Believe You’re Happy Here, but he’s now gearing up for a full-length release, produced by Jay Som nonetheless. This week’s single “Rigamarole” is a synth-driven tongue-in-cheek anthem about giving in when life’s getting you down. To Thomas, the song is about “trying to shake depression with routine, and ultimately accepting I’ve got no choice but to sink into it.”

Okay Kaya — “Spinal Tap”

Dynamic songwriter Okay Kaya is preparing the release of her upcoming album SAP, which features the brand new track “Spinal Tap.” Opening with spoken word prose, the song is underscored by a driving bass guitar that compliments Kaya’s languorous vocals. In terms of subject matter, “Spinal Tap” is an investigation into her mind’s function, which can be oddly comforting when looked at through a scientific lens.

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Fox News Viewers Will Soon Be Watching Liz Cheney’s Ad Where Her Dad Calls Trump A ‘Coward’

Last week, Liz Cheney‘s re-election campaign unveiled a brutal attack ad where her father and former Vice President Dick Cheney rails against Donald Trump. While the ad has been airing in Wyoming where Liz is facing a primary challenger, her campaign is apparently taking it national this week. According to Axios, Fox News viewers will soon be watching Dick Cheney call Trump a “coward” as he praises his daughter for her work on the January 6 commission despite the Republican Party’s allegiance to the former president. To add a little more sting, the spot will reportedly air during Trump’s favorite programs: Fox & Friends and Hannity.

“It’s important not only for Fox News viewers, but for the network’s hosts and top executives, to hear former Vice President Cheney’s warning about the ongoing danger Donald Trump and his lies pose to our constitutional republic,” a spokesman for Liz Cheney’s campaign told Axios.

In the now-viral ad, Vice President Cheney blasts Trump as an unprecedented danger to America. “In our nation’s 246-year history, there has never been an individual who is a greater threat to our republic than Donald Trump,” Cheney says. “He is a coward. A real man wouldn’t lie to his supporters. He lost his election and he lost big. I know it, he knows it and deep down I think most Republicans know it.”

Adding insult to injury, the Cheney ad running on Fox News arrives on the heel of the FBI searching Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence and reportedly confiscating his safe. If the Department of Justice is on the verge of pressing criminal charges, it could jeopardize’s chances of running for president again in 2024.

(Via Axios)

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Guy makes a tweet about what you should have ‘by age 30.’ People’s responses were hilarious.

When Steve Adcock, an entrepreneur and “fitness buff” posted this to his Twitter:

“By age 30, you should have a group of friends that talk business, money, and fitness, not politics and pop culture.”

… people had thoughts.

His post might have been intended as more of an encouragement to surround yourself with people who challenge your current mindset, considering the tweet continued with “one of the biggest mistakes I’ve ever made was making friends with like-minded folks who talked about the same [stuff] over and over. I agreed with 99% of it. Your comfort zone will kill your progress.”

But still, overall the tweet left an unsavory taste in people’s mouths—primarily because it implied that money was somehow a better conversation topic than what people are usually genuinely passionate about. Why not talk about your favorite television show with friends if it lights you up inside?


It also seemed to uphold the dying myth that by the age of 30, the puzzle pieces of adulthood should somehow, as if by magic, simply fall into place. And this is where folks chimed in with their own hilarious (and sarcastic) jokes about what one should expect by their third decade on planet Earth. They did not disappoint.

Here are 12 things you didn’t know you needed by the time you turn 30. Enjoy:

1.

By the age of 30 you should have anxiety, and an emotional support pet that also has anxiety.” – @shilparathnam

I have at least three friends who tick this box.

2.

turning 30

By the age of 30 you should have a therapist you always reschedule on, a big bag of spinach in the fridge that always goes bad before you get to it, and at least one stagnant 401k that you haven’t merged after changing jobs.” – @kianatipton

Check, check and check.

3.

By the age of 30 you should own, not rent, OWN a bouncy castle. This is a time when you should be building equity. The only way to beat inflation is with inflatables.” – @FridayinHalifax

Where’s the lie?

4.

viral twitter

By the age of 30 you should have a favorite pen you won’t let anyone use, a cache of pretty notebooks you’re saving for a special occasion, and at least one piece of media you rewatch endlessly for comfort.” – @allieiswriting

Oh how I do love using my unicorn gel pen while writing in my notebook as “The Great British Bake Off” plays in the background. Not my good notebook, of course. That’s tucked away for the day I finally write the next great American novel.

5.

“By the age of 30 you should have at least one large emotional support box of obsolete* cables.* but you know they aren’t.” – @nanoraptor

Better yet, make it two.

6.

funny tweets

By age 30 you should have a sick ass jacket people identify you by.” – @dieworkwear

Nicolas Cage knew this back in the ’90s.

7.

“By the age of 30 you should have at least 3-5 feral raccoons as your best friends.” – @casinthemeadow

A Marvel-based Twitter account thought something similar…

8.

millennials, millennial culture

“By the age of 30, your friend group should consist of a talking raccoon, a tree with a limited vocabulary, the most dangerous woman in the galaxy, and Drax.” – @MarvelUnlimited

9.

By the age of 30 you should have one friend who is a little frog.” – @Hana_D_Barrett

I don’t know who these 30-year-olds with frog friends are, but they are winning at adulting.

10.

getting older memes

By age 30 you should have several henchmen, a sworn enemy, and a narrative foil.” – SparkNotes

The company that’s helped us fake our way through book reports in high school offers life lessons too.

11.

millennial humor

By the age of 30, you should have at least 5 web browsers with over 100 tabs opened that you don’t have any plan to actually read.” – @KhoaVuUmn

Being 30 means having virtual commitment issues. Finally, one person rallied in the war of art versus commerce, and their stance was quite clear.

12.

“By your 40’s-50’s (or sooner), you realize that people that talk frequently about their money/wealth are nothing but insufferable, shallow boors. Call me dull, but I prefer to talk about amazing books, podcasts, gardening, hobbies, documentaries/shows on Netflix, etc.” – @SJCanyonLove

Bottom line: Love what you love and don’t weigh yourself down with arbitrary rules about age.