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Watch Brandi Carlile Perform ‘You And Me On The Rock’ With Lucius On ‘Ellen’

After playing both “Broken Horses” and “Right On Time” this past weekend on the Saturday Night Live episode hosted by Jason Sudeikis, Brandi Carlile took to the The Ellen DeGeneres Show stage this morning to play “You And Me And The Rock” with Lucius. It marked the first live performance of the In These Silent Days song since the album dropped on October 1 and subsequently topped the country and rock charts. Makes you wonder which Grammy categories she’ll be eligible for….? But I digress.

Carlile donned a flowing, silk-coated leisure suit and a gold rose on her lapel. With her blonde locks slicked back, she dominated her falsetto delivery that became more sublime when backed by harmonies from Jess Wolfe and Holly Laessig of Lucius. She’s a dynamite performer and also just finalized the dates for the “Beyond These Silent Days Tour,” which you can see below and also includes a performance at New York City’s Carnegie Hall with Carlile performing Joni Mitchell’s timeless album, Blue, in full.

Watch the “You And Me And The Rock” performance above and see Brandi Carlile’s tour dates below. Tickets go on sale this Friday the 29th here.

11/06/2021 — New York, NY @ Carnegie Hall
02/01/2022 — Riviera Maya, Mexico @ Girls Just Wanna Weekend
04/02/2022 — Miramar Beach, FL @ Moon Crush 2022
04/29/2022 — Indio, CA @ Stagecoach Music Festival
06/11/2022 — George, WA @ Gorge Amphitheatre *
06/24/2022 — Los Angeles, CA @ The Greek Theatre †
07/08/2022 — Nashville, TN @ Ascend Amphitheatre ‡
07/09/2022 — Nashville, TN @ Ascend Amphitheatre ‡
07/30/2022 — St. Paul, MN @ Xcel Energy Center +
08/06/2022 — Chicago, IL @ Huntington Bank Pavilion at Northerly Island #
08/18/2022 — Columbia, MD @ Merriweather Post Pavilion §
09/09/2022 — Morrison, CO @ Red Rocks Amphitheatre ~
09/10/2022 — Morrison, CO @ Red Rocks Amphitheatre §
10/21/2022 — Boston, MA @ TD Garden ^
10/22/2022— New York, NY @ Madison Square Garden ^

* with Sarah McLachlan and Lucius and featuring Celisse
† with Lucius
‡ with Indigo Girls and Celisse and featuring Lucius
+ with Lake Street Dive and Celisse
# with Ani DiFranco and Celisse
§ with Indigo Girls and Allison Russell
~ with Lucius and Allison Russell
^ with Brittany Howard

In These Silent Days is out now via Low Country Sound/Elektra. Get it here.

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Latto Trends On Twitter After Absolutely Demolishing Her LA Leakers Freestyle

When Latto released the pop-leaning “Big Energy,” the first new single from the follow-up to her debut album Queen Of Da Souf, some fans weren’t sure what to make of her stylistic evolution. After all, she’d made her name on bass-heavy, rap-forward trap anthems, with the most recognizable sample on her debut coming from Gucci Mane’s 2006 hit “Freaky Gurl.” Now, she’s using the same sample as Mark Morrison’s “Return Of The Mack” and Mariah Carey’s “Heartbreaker,” leaving some fans feeling like she switched up.

However, today, Latto reassured those fans with some absolutely devastating rhymes for the LA Leakers radio show as she flexed her lyrical chops over Yung LA’s “Ain’t I,” reminding folks that her pen game remains as sharp as her dagger-like fingernails. Boasting that she’s still spending money from The Rap Game and boasts that “I’m in my prime, Amazon can’t f*ck with my delivery.” She also takes a few bars to shoot down some of her detractors, many of whom took issue with her single “The Biggest“; “How you big, can’t name a track? / How you big, can’t hang a plaque?” she challenges. The verse was so impactful that “Big Latto” began trending on Twitter just an hour later and shows no sign of slowing down — just like Latto’s booming career.

Watch Latto’s LA Leakers freestyle above.

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‘The French Dispatch’ Is Wes Anderson’s Best Film In At Least A Decade

Wes Anderson has been derided in recent years, perhaps understandably so: aside from being one of the most easily imitated filmmakers working, his picture book style has grown increasingly ornate and refined, seemingly alongside a commensurate decline in the anarchic spirit that once seemed to define his work. Post-Fantastic Fox, his movies looked more beautiful than ever, but they had become, arguably, a little forgettable.

Moonrise Kingdom, The Grand Budapest Hotel, and Isle Of Dogs seemed a little lacking in terms of characters. Max Fischer and Royal Tenenbaum, arguably Anderson’s most memorable creations, were incorrigible shitheads. Their basic unpredictability added a necessary element of surprise to Anderson’s standard cuckoo clock production design. Which, absent the wild card character, can feel anodyne, more like a collection of tics than living characters.

In this context, it’d be easy to assume that Anderson’s latest, The French Dispatch, is just a further extension of gorgeous-but-empty late-Anderson. It seems to have been marketed to the smug tote bag crowd that always patronize his work, using images of Owen Wilson wearing a beret and a special edition newspaper from the town of “Ennui, France.”

Now, if the phrase “Ennui, France” doesn’t make you groan a little on the inside, you’re probably not human. Yet experienced in their full context, these elements seem less symbolic of Anderson’s final descent into self-parody than a mark that he may finally know himself, things he was only groping blindly after in his younger days. The French Dispatch feels like a confident and even vulnerable exploration of Anderson’s own psyche; it’s his best film in at least a decade.

The French Dispatch is a kind of anthology, see, similar to Wes Anderson what The Ballad of Buster Scruggs was to the Coen Brothers: a collection of sneaky-deep vignettes that both sharpen and further the themes that have been driving him for his entire career. Stylistically it seems to marry much of what Anderson learned in his forays into animation with his skills in live-action photography. It’s his most ornate and self-satisfied cuckoo clock yet, only this time it’s more than just a knick-knack. It’s a dollhouse-scale model of his own mind.

Rushmore, Wes Anderson’s breakout film, told the story of Max Fischer, a precocious private school scholarship teen seemingly out of step with his peers on account of his precociousness. Max falls in love with his much older widowed teacher and becomes friends and rivals with a 50-year-old man, played by Bill Murray. The Royal Tenenbaums too dealt with precocious youths, though at a later stage in life, and I think it’s fair to say that Wes Anderson is, to some degree, still that clever boy, searching for a gold star from a teacher after whom he secretly lusts, or an emotionally withholding father he can never seem to please.

This aspect of Anderson’s character is most evident in one of the French Dispatch‘s storylines, about a student radical named Zefferelli, played by Timothee Chalamet. Frances McDormand plays Lucinda Krementz, the journalist who arrives to cover the Zeffereli-led student protest. Arriving in the guise of a neutral observer, she ends up helping Zefferelli polish his manifesto and attempting to broker a truce between Zefferelli and his fractious female counterpart, Juliette, played by Lyna Khoudri. It’s obvious, to Krementz and to us, that the protests, and the youths’ painful earnestness, are mostly just a product of their desperate, repressed youthful horniness. Lucinda, as the wise stand-in for adult Anderson’s worldy superego, patiently advises Zeffereli and Juliette that they should maybe quit it with all the big words and just screw already.

That The French Dispatch is arguably Wes Anderson’s horniest film in years might be its saving grace. Horniness drives so much of its characters’ decision-making, and symbolically, maybe even some of the film’s style choices themselves, every self-satisfied turn of phrase just a way of pleading “please fuck me.”

This more transparent subtext has a way of humanizing all of Anderson’s stylistic peacocking, even as you can’t help but admire the feathers. The French Dispatch is something of a love letter to overwrought prose, and as Anderson once proved in the character of Eli Cash, few writers do satirically overwrought prose as well as Wes Anderson. I almost tore my pockets fumbling for a notebook in which to write down “her large, stupid eyes watched me pee,” Zefferelli’s art student-chic rendering of his post-coitus reverie with Juliette, or “a weakness in cartography: the curse of the homosexual,” Roebuck Wright’s inner monologue as he wanders the halls of a labyrinthine French police station. While Wes Anderson’s “comedy” has been trending towards “smiling in my head” for years, The French Dispatch produced in me multiple legitimate belly laughs.

The character of Roebuck Wright, played by Jeffrey Wright, is, like Lucinda Krementz, another reporter for the French Dispatch. The titular paper is the film’s framing device, a special weekend publication of the Kansas City Star, whose sections become separate vignettes introduced with title cards and narrated by the writers. There’s Chalamet’s disaffected college student (as told by McDormand’s Krementz); Benicio Del Toro as a prisoner turned artist painting abstract nudes of his beautiful guard, played by Lea Seydoux; Jeffrey Wright as a gay author (fairly obviously a fictionalized James Baldwin) writing a food profile that turns into a kidnapping; and a lyrical cyclist, played by Owen Wilson in a brief montage segment introducing the town. These stories are all presided over and commented upon by the Dispatch’s editor, Arthur Howitzer, Jr. (Bill Murray), a patient father figure who advises his incorrigibly voluble team of writers, “Whatever you write… just try to make it sound like you did it on purpose.”

It is, honestly, hard to imagine a more magnificent signature line for a film, delivered poignantly in Bill Murray’s signature crushed velvet Chicaaago baritone, melting any natural aversion I had to Anderson’s brand of practiced private schoolboy kitsch.

“Try to make it sound like you did it on purpose” is the perfect advice for writing and really, for any art. It’s also Wes Anderson’s guiding philosophy in The French Dispatch, doing all of the things he normally does, just more deliberately, and with clear purpose. It’s twee, of course, but knowingly so, fully cognizant that its turns of phrase are a little too precious and acknowledging that they are the work of someone desperate to be loved. And hey, who isn’t, deep down? The French Dispatch appeals to that little voice inside all of us that secretly thinks New Yorker cartoons are sometimes clever.

That anarchic energy Anderson once had through his wild card characters he regains in The French Dispatch, through exuberant prose, and actors whose faces always render them slightly unruly, even if their movements are so choreographed that they seem to travel on rails: Benicio Del Toro, Tilda Swinton, Mathieu Almeric. You can knock Wes Anderson for his predictability, but it’s hard to argue his impeccable taste. In The French Dispatch he has created the most gorgeous, mid-century modern, glorified two-hour Stella Artois commercial you’ve ever seen. It’s something I desperately wanted to hate on the face of it but just couldn’t bring myself to. It’s too pretty. Too witty. Too romantic.

God dammit, Wes Anderson. You fucker, you absolute shit. You made me love your stupid francophone love letter to overwrought prose.

‘The French Dispatch’ is available now, exclusively in theaters. Vince Mancini is on Twitter. You can access his archive of reviews here.

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Drew Barrymore And Tom Green Reunited In Person For The First Time In Nearly 20 Years On Her Show

The last time Drew Barrymore and Tom Green were in a room together was nearly 20 years ago. But the pair, who started dating in 1999 and were married from 2001-2002, reunited on Tuesday’s episode of The Drew Barrymore Show (the only good talk show).

“It’s very nice to see you. It does feel weird, though,” Green told his Freddy Got Fingered co-star, Barrymore. “Not weird in a bad way — weird in a good way. Appreciate it, Drew, so thanks for having me on the show. It’s awesome. This is cool. I actually think this is a nice way of reconnecting, actually. It takes a little bit of the pressure off.” Barrymore said, “I respect and love you,” to which Green replied, “Love you, too.”

Green joined his ex-wife and television personality Ross Mathews for the “Drew’s News” segment of Barrymore’s show, during which Green spoke about his yearlong road trip. The two also reminisced about their honeymoon in Ireland, which included mountain hikes, a hairy sheep, a “mini cemetery” of headstones, and jumping in “random oceans” and finding “random fields.”

“It was one of my favorite trips of my life,” Barrymore said.

Green guested on The Drew Barrymore Show last year, but it was a virtual appearance. You can watch the in-person reunion above (and listen to “The Salmon Song” here).

(Via USA Today)

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A New York School District Is Banning ‘Squid Game’ Halloween Costumes Due To Their ‘Violent Nature’

While Squid Game might be Netflix’s most-viewed show of all time, not everyone is loving the show’s massive surge in popularity — especially elementary school teachers. According to The New York Post, three elementary schools in upstate New York are now banning students from wearing Squid Game costumes to school for Halloween, citing the show’s “violent message” and “potential violent nature of the game” as the reason. The announcement came in the form of an email sent to the parents of Syracuse-area Fayetteville-Manlius schools’ students, and stated that sending children to school in Squid Game apparel would violate “school costume guidelines.”

“Due to concerns about the potential violent nature of the game, it is inappropriate for recess play or discussion at school. Additionally, a Halloween costume from this show does not meet our school costume guidelines due to the potential violent message aligned with the costume.”

For those keeping score, Squid Game now joins iconic horror franchises Friday the 13th and Scream in being at the top of the New York school district’s ban list, with the series’ signature tracksuits and masks now just as susceptible to being taken away as Jason’s iconic hockey mask. In addition, the school is forbidding students dressing in any costumes deemed “too gory or scary” for their younger students, or bringing in any items “that can be interpreted as weapons” to schools, such as toy swords and guns.

With such short notice, the email might frustrate some parents who had already taken care of their Halloween costume shopping and perhaps landed on letting their kid come to school as a miniature-yet-just-as-ruthless red soldier. However, a casual reminder that the costumes are not off-limit for parents, and Netflix is making it easier than ever to pick one up.

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Jeezy Says Jay-Z, A Native New Yorker, Has Never Been To Central Park

Rappers have a reputation for telling some pretty big fish tales, but every so often, they’ll share a true story so outrageous that it sounds like a whopper. In a new promo clip for TV One’s Uncensored series shared by Complex, Atlanta rapper Jeezy relates a story from his longtime friend and mentor Jay-Z that falls into the latter category.

As Jeezy describes the impact of his relationship with Jay, he recalls a time that he and the Brooklyn rapper went for a drive through New York. As they passed by Central Park, Jay — a native New Yorker — admitted that he’d never visited the Big Apple landmark. “We was riding by Central Park,” Jeezy remembers. “And he was like, ‘You know what? I’ve been here my whole life and I’ve never been to that place.’ What I took from that is he’s so focused on doing and being what he is that something as peaceful as a park, he never took a minute to go over there and just enjoy that peace of mind. That meant a lot to me because that’s something I strive for.”

Jeezy also describes how Jay-Z has always had his back, even in a fistfight that took place in Las Vegas. “Some things popped off in Vegas, and I gotta say, Hov got hands!” he chuckles. “‘Cause me and him was getting down!”

You can watch the full clip above.

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The Creators Of ‘Cobra Kai’ Will Set Out To Tackle A Famous Powerball Mystery Next

Riding off of the success of Cobra Kai, which started out as a YouTube hit before making the jump to Netflix, the series creators are now setting their sights on a real-life tale of an unclaimed lottery ticket. While not as fast-paced as the world of high school karate fights, the new comedy series from Jon Hurwitz, Hayden Schlossberg, and Josh Heald will focus on a Washington Post article from earlier in the year that brought to light the mystery that practically tore a small town apart. Via Deadline:

The article, published in mid-July, chronicles the aftermath of a Powerball ticket sold in the small town of Lonacoming, MD (population 1,200), winning $731 million. Maryland is one of seven states that allow lottery winners to remain anonymous, and the lucky Lonacoming group, who call themselves “Power Pack,” took advantage of that when they eventually claimed their reward four months after hitting the jackpot. The news turns this small town upside down as the residents work to uncover the mystery of who won the ticket. Nine months later, the mystery has not been solved.

In the meantime, the Cobra Kai creative team still has their hands full with the Netflix series. Season 4 is slated to start streaming on December 31, 2021, and the show was already picked up for Season 5 back in August. Obviously, Netflix knows Cobra Kai is a sure thing if they’re locking down future seasons without even seeing the latest viewership numbers.

You might say it’s their… winning lottery ticket. Eh? Get it? Like the other thing!

(Via Deadline)

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Udonis Haslem’s ‘Worst Fight’ With A Teammate Involved Gary Payton Trying To Hit Him With A Broomstick

Miami Heat center Udonis Haslem is roughly a week into his 20th NBA season. At 41 years of age, he’s the league’s oldest active player. With those two decades of experience come an array of tales, so he recently spoke with GQ’s Tyler R. Tynes to share some of those stories.

The entire piece is worth reading, both because of Haslem’s candid nature and Tynes’ gifted interview skills, but one segment might stand out: brawls Haslem deems the best and worst of his NBA tenure.
“Worst fight? Me and Gary Payton got into it at practice once. I don’t know what we were talking about, but sh*t went left,” Haslem said. “We started arguing and Gary went and got a broomstick! Pat [Riley] kicked us outta practice. We had a game that night and me and Gary didn’t speak the whole game. He was finna hit me wit’ a broomstick!”

The best fight, in his view, was one he tried to prevent during Shaquille O’Neale’s time with the Heat that involved Haslem learning first-hand that Shaq is one of the biggest and strongest humans to ever live.

“Best fight? Probably the one when Shaq and Pat got into it. It wasn’t even a fight, they were just going at it. The fight was me trying to hold Shaq back and he threw me like a sack of potato chips,” Haslem said. “I’m trying to save Pat’s old ass and Shaq grabbed me and swung me. He threw me down like that and I was just trying to stop him. Imagine if he really wanted a piece of me? I would’ve had to tase him!”

There has long been a level of intensity that comes with playing for the Heat — Haslem discusses the famed “Heat Culture” on multiple times, and yes, it is as demanding as it sounds. That can, invariably, lead to tensions running high. Hopefully they’ve learned form this, though, and they now put broomsticks away when things boil over just in case.

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Greg Gutfeld And Geraldo Rivera Got Into It (Again), This Time Over A Teen Boy In A Skirt Who Committed A Rape

Geraldo Rivera and Greg Gutfeld have a real love-hate relationship. In that they love to hate on each other, then make up, rinse, and repeat. There doesn’t seem to be a whole lot the two agree on, and their disagreements regularly turn into full-blown freak-outs, with Gutfeld mugging for the camera and Rivera, somehow, often seeming like the voice of reason on Fox News’ The Five. But on Tuesday, as Mediaite reports, the two got into an argument that quickly escalated to pretty epic proportions—even for them.

The topic? It started with the gubernatorial race in Virginia, and comments made by Democratic frontrunner Terry McAuliffe about how he doesn’t “think parents should be telling schools what they should teach” or have a say when it comes to each school’s policies to protect trans and non-binary students from being discriminated against. The bigger issue that’s playing into this at the moment, however, is a walkout staged by students in Loudon County, Virginia following the rape of two young girls by the same student—a boy wearing a skirt (yes, that part is important to this argument)—and how the story has been largely buried by the press. Which is something that’s been bothering Gutfeld, who explained:

“This is the thing that has been driving me nuts for like a week, alright? How the news decides when to turn the spigot of news on or off. A young girl is raped by a boy. Forget even the part about the skirt, right? This is after the boy had assaulted somebody else. Adults knew about this. When you think about how horrible this is, it should be a national story, because it’s bloody insane. This kid raped somebody in the school, then raped another person, wearing a skirt. But it’s not a story… Now we know that it’s true. The rapist has pled guilty. And no one would have known about this if it wasn’t for the dad of the victim being arrested and humiliated and called a ‘domestic terrorist’ by the school board.”

The victim’s father was arrested after showing up to a school board meeting and demanding to know why his daughter’s attacker was not being prosecuted. But Gutfeld’s conclusion is that this is a story about “a young girl being raped in her school by a guy who might’ve been using a skirt as a ruse. That is a huge, huge story! So it had to be covered up for the sake of the election, or because there was some sympathy toward the suspect, and some antipathy toward the victim. That’s a possibility. But if you vote for Terry McAuliffe, you’re voting for the same corrupt system that condoned a rape because the suspect may have worn a skirt? Who knows. But if you vote for Terry McAuliffe, you’re voting for rape!”

(Got that?)

While Gutfeld was careful to preface his comments by saying to “forget about the skirt part,” it was something he mentioned several times, which didn’t sit so well with Geraldo, who said that he agreed with McAuliffe’s statements that teaching kids about diversity is as important as teaching them math—which got him a few eye rolls from his co-hosts. And while Rivera (thankfully) concurred that the sexual assault was “horrifying,” he then went on to say that “we’re living in a brand-new world” and “a guy wearing a skirt is not the definition of all these kids struggling with their gender identity.”

An apoplectic Gutfeld claimed that, “You get more angry over people who don’t get the frickin’ vaccine than you are over a rapist!” Which Rivera called “bullcrap,” then called Gutfeld out for starting his argument off by saying to “‘forget about the skirt,’ then you mentioned the skirt 10 more times.”

If just reading this sounds juvenile, watching it—which you can do, if you dare, at Mediaite—is even more migraine-inducing.

(Via Mediaite)

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Another Day, Another Anthem For Beach Bunny With The New Single ‘Oxygen’

Few emerging bands have come out of the pandemic’s concert lockdown thriving quite like Chicago indie pop quarter Beach Bunny. Sure, they had a viral TikTok hit in 2019 with “Prom Queen,” but that was before their debut Mom + Pop Records LP, Honeymoon, dropped in late February of 2020. They played Kimmel, they played Fallon, they did a track with Tegan & Sara, and now they’re back in action with 32 straight sold out tour dates throughout North America starting next week. That many sellouts at venues like The Fillmore in San Francisco, Webster Hall in New York City, and 9:30 Club in DC is an impressive feat to say the least.

Ahead of the tour, the band just dropped the new single, “Oxygen,” and it sees singer Lili Trifilio’s sticky vocals, flying above a pop-punk melody. “Life looks better when it’s with you,” she sings as she bridges into the yet another sing-a-long hook for a band who just can’t seem to stop to keep producing them. In a statement, Trifilio commented on what the song means to her:

“’Oxygen’ is a song about the perils of navigating romantic feelings, the joy that comes with allowing love to happen, and the act of letting go of the anxiety and our inner voices that make us feel undeserving of love. I wanted it to have a playful vibe with anthemic choruses and a big, blissed out ending.”

While Beach Bunny’s North American tour dates are all sold out, there’s still tickets left for some Europe dates. Check out the tour schedule below and listen to “Oxygen” above.

11/01/2021 — Detroit, MI @ The Majestic Theatre +
11/02/2021 — Columbus, OH @ The Athenaeum Theatre +
11/03/2021 — Pittsburgh, PA @ Mr. Smalls Theatre +
11/08/2021 — Boston, MA @ Paradise Rock Club +
11/09/2021 — Boston, MA @ Paradise Rock Club +
11/10/2021 — New York, NY @ Webster Hall +
11/11/2021 — Philadelphia, PA @ Union Transfer +
11/12/2021 — Washington, DC @ 9:30 Club +
11/13/2021 — Richmond, VA @ The Broadberry +
11/15/2021 — Durham, NC @ Motorco Music Hall +
11/16/2021 — Atlanta, GA @ Variety Playhouse +
11/17/2021 — Orlando, FL @ The Abbey +
11/19/2021 — Nashville, TN @ Mercy Lounge +
11/20/2021 — Newport, KY @ The Southgate House Revival +
11/21/2021 — Cleveland, OH @ Beachland Ballroom +
11/27/2021 — Madison, WI @ The Sylvee +
11/28/2021 — Minneapolis, MN @ First Avenue +
11/30/2021 — Englewood, CO @ Gothic Theatre +
12/01/2021 — Salt Lake City, UT @ The Depot +
12/03/2021 — Portland, OR @ Wonderland Ballroom +
12/04/2021 — Vancouver, BC @ Biltmore Cabaret +
12/05/2021 — Seattle, WA @ Neumos +
12/07/2021 — San Francisco, CA @ The Fillmore +
12/08/2021 — Santa Ana, CA @ The Observatory +
12/09/2021 — Los Angeles, CA @ The Fonda Theatre +
12/10/2021 — San Diego, CA @ Quartyard +
12/11/2021 — Phoenix, AZ @ Crescent Ballroom +
12/13/2021 — Houston, TX @ White Oak Music Hall/2021 — Downstairs +
12/14/2021 — Austin, TX @ Mohawk +
12/15/2021 — Dallas, TX @ Trees +
12/17/2021 — Saint Louis, MO @ Delmar Hall +
12/18/2021 — Chicago, IL @ Riviera Theatre +
02/11/2022 — Glasgow, Scotland @ Saint Luke’s *
02/12/2022 — Dublin, Republic of Ireland @ The Workmans Club *
02/14/2022 — Manchester, England @ Gorilla *
02/15/2022 — London, England @ Electric Ballroom *
02/16/2022 — Antwerp, Belgium @ Kavka VZW *
02/17/2022 — Amsterdam, Netherlands @ Paradiso Noord *
02/18/2022 — Paris, France @ Le Pop Up! *
02/20/2022 — Berlin, Germany @ Cassiopeia *
02/21/2022 — Copenhagen, Denmark @ Pumpehuset *
02/22/2022 — Stockholm, Sweden @ Bar Brooklyn *
02/24/2022 — Oslo, Norway @ Parkteatret *
02/26/2022 — Hamburg, Germany @ Molotow/2021 — Club *
06/02-04/2022 — Barcelona, Spain @ Primavera Sound
06/05-08/2022 — Barcelona, Spain @ Primavera a la Ciutat

* with Field Medic
+ with Miloe