Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Snoop Dogg And 50 Cent Headline The ‘Once Upon A Time In LA’ Festival Lineup

As live music returns in 2021, the growing list of festivals and tours being announced has a new entry from a dark horse: A new festival called Once Upon A Time In LA is gaining attention for its impressive, diverse lineup, which includes headliners 50 Cent, Al Green, The Game, Ice Cube, Snoop Dogg, and YG. The festival is billed for December 18 at Banc Of California Stadium in Los Angeles, as well as the surrounding Exposition Park area.

Further down the list, the lineup appears to be a similar mix of (mostly) LA rap favorites spanning the last three decades of hip-hop and the funk and soul bands that inspired the original G-Funk sound that put the West Coast on the rap map in the early ’90s. While names like Cypress Hill, DJ Quik, Mack 10, Warren G, and WC should satisfy old-school hip-hop fans, their soulful counterparts include The Delfonics, George Clinton, The Isley Brothers, Lisa Lisa, Morris Day, Rose Royce, War, and Zapp.

Meanwhile, younger fans — and those older fans who are young at heart, I guess — can enjoy newer acts like Blueface, Drakeo The Ruler, OhGeesy, and RJMrLA. Out-of-towners range from Bay Area legends like E-40 and Too Short to Clevelanders Bone Thugs N Harmony and Memphis’ own Three Six Mafia.

Presale begins this Friday, June 25 at 10 AM PT, with payment plans available. You can find more info at onceuponatimeinlafest.com.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Jensen McRae Gets A Lesson On Love In Her Reflective ‘Starting To Get To You’ Video

Jensen McRae‘s breakout moment arrived with her viral track “Immune,” which was an imagined cover of a Phoebe Bridgers song about getting vaccinated. But McRae had been honing her musical craft at a well before the song’s release. After making music for years and even joining onto a Grammys songwriting camp, McRae celebrates the release of her official debut EP with a glossy video to her “Starting To Get To You” single.

McRae’s six-track Who Hurt You? EP was released to the world on Tuesday and expertly combines bedroom indie-folk and cutting-edge dream pop sensibilities. McRae showcases her captivating sound in her intimate “Starting To Get To You” visual. Directed by Elizabeth Archer, the clip shows McRae reflecting on the state of a budding relationship in the quiet comfort of her living room.

In a statement about the video, McRae said she wanted to capture the “quiet chaos” of infatuation:

“‘Starting To Get To You’ is a song I will always have a soft spot for, about a person I will always have a soft spot for. There is something so magical falling in love (or something close to it) with a friend, even if it’s only for a brief moment of time. This video seeks to capture the quiet chaos and warm, gentle magic of becoming infatuated with someone, and realizing that those feelings are slowly being reciprocated. I want you to feel like you’re in your room, on the other end of a breathless phone call, hearing that yes, it finally happened, your best friend has fallen again, but this time someone was there for the big catch.”

Watch McRae’s “Starting To Get To You” video above.

Who Hurt You? is out now via Human Re Sources. Get it here.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Damon & Naomi Return With Dreamy Guitars On ‘Sailing By’

Former Galaxie 500 members Damon Krukowski and Naomi Yang — who perform as the duo Damon & Naomi — announced the release of their first studio album since 2015, called A Sky Record. The album features the Japan-based electric guitarist Michio Kurihara, with whom Krukowski and Yang recorded when they visited the country in November 2019 — shortly before the COVID-19 lockdowns.

Krukowski and Yang said the record is a tribute of sorts to a BBC radio program called the Shipping Forecast, which has provided weather information for boats around the UK since 1911. Krukowski spoke about the single “Sailing By” in a statement, saying:

“‘Sailing By’ is also the title of a light classical waltz that’s played every night shortly before the 1am end of the broadcast day on BBC Radio Four, followed by the ‘Shipping Forecast’ (and then ‘God Save The Queen’!). The Shipping Forecast is simply the weather forecast for the sea around the UK. But it’s also a mesmerizing list of place names (‘Viking’ and ‘Tiree’ are examples) and slightly coded information about wind direction, etc — it has its own language. But for some reason, Naomi and I found ourselves listening to it almost every night during lockdown… It comes on just as we’re usually cooking dinner, which is how we stumbled on it… and then this marker became important to us, even though (or because?) it’s a report about conditions for places we couldn’t possibly visit…”

Listen to Damon & Naomi’s dreamlike new song “Sailing By” above.

Riot Act Media

A Sky Record is out 8/6 via 20-20-20. Pre-order it here.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

The 2021 BET Awards Will Feature A Special Tribute To The Late DMX

The 2021 BET Awards airs live this Sunday at 8 PM ET/5 PM PT and will feature a special tribute honoring the late, great DMX. Among the performers honoring the late legend are Busta Rhymes, Griselda, Method Man, Swizz Beatz, and more, performing some of DMX’s most-beloved songs and new work from his posthumous album Exodus. Swizz Beatz curated the setlist to celebrate the life and music of DMX in conjunction with Ruff Ryders, including hits such as “Party Up,” “Where The Hood At?,” and “X Gon’ Give It To Ya.”

Connie Orlando, Executive Vice President of Specials, Music Programming & Music Strategy, said in a press release, “We look forward to celebrating DMX’s indelible mark in music and pop culture. DMX inspired fans around the world with his signature raspy voice, the delivery of raw emotion through his lyrics and performances, and his giving spirit. We are proud to pay our respects to a hip-hop legend on our biggest stage, the BET Awards.”

DMX passed away in April after suffering a coma caused by an accidental drug overdose. Since then, seven of his hit singles have been certified gold or platinum by the RIAA, and he’s been the subject of a number of fond tributes, including one from legendary cellist Yo-Yo Ma, who played a cover of “Ruff Ryders Anthem” on Desus & Mero.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Jeopardy! Is In Hot Water After Some Insensitive Phrasing In A Clue About A Medical Condition

Guest host Savannah Guthrie just got caught up in her first Jeopardy! controversy. While hosting Monday night’s episode, Guthrie become embroiled in a social media backlash after reading a clue that included an outdated and problematic name for a medical condition.

“Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome is also known as Grinch Syndrome because this organ is too small,” the clue read. The answer was the heart, but Guthrie and producers soon learned that there is a significant amount of controversy around the term “Grinch Syndrome” and associating it with POTS. Via Yahoo!:

It occurs mostly in younger women, and also includes elevated heart rate, extreme fatigue and lightheadedness as other common symptoms. There has also been an uptick in POTS diagnosis in patients who have had Covid-19.

But Jeopardy!’s use of the term “grinch syndrome,” and associating it with having a small heart – which is not currently linked to POTS – both rubbed people the wrong way. One viewer said, “Oh Jeopardy! this is shameful. I have POTs and am sad you would resort to this. How low. And I might add, incredibly incorrect.”

The show and Guthrie were also tagged in multiple tweets from Dysautonomia International, a non-profit that raises funds and awareness for issues like POTS. “Hey @Jeopardy no one with any credibility calls POTS ‘Grinch Syndrome,’” the non-profit’s Twitter account wrote. “Promoting outdated misogynistic terms to describe a debilitating autonomic nervous system disorder that impacts millions of Americans is not cool. We request an apology on behalf of our community. Do better.”

Following the social media backlash, Jeopardy! issued an apology on Tuesday afternoon for using the offensive term. “Yesterday’s program included a clue about postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS). After hearing from the community, we found we used an outdated and inaccurate term for this disorder, and we apologize.”

(Via Yahoo!)

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

H.E.R.’s Official Debut ‘Back Of My Mind’ Embraces Feelings With No Filters

The RX is Uproxx Music’s stamp of approval for the best albums, songs, and music stories throughout the year. Inclusion in this category is the highest distinction we can bestow, and signals the most important music being released throughout the year. The RX is the music you need, right now.

Since 2016, HER has been serving up top-shelf R&B. Mixing emotional tales with potent production, her music has been a vessel of vulnerability. Whether waxing poetic about insecurities in love or crooning about political injustices, HER has mastered the ability to communicate the complexities of womanhood (especially one of Black and Filipino origins) and attempts to make messages out of her messes.

With the release of her proper debut album, Back Of My Mind, via MBK Entertainment/RCA Records, she delivers a melodic memoir of uncomfortable truths, sharing the parts of HER that carry weight. The only difference between this set and her previous projects: she’s made more figures and thus attracted more triggers. But material wealth has only given her more material to work with.

For context, HER was an industry mystery five years ago. Before stating one’s pronouns became standard practice, the singer/songwriter emerged with only a photo of a silhouette and ironically, a name that stood for “Having Everything Revealed.” Equipped with a velvety voice, the HER package included all-inclusive R&B at a time when the genre was commingling with rap, experimenting with alternative styles, or leaning into nostalgia. To this day, she says people fail to recognize her without her trademark shades.

The mysterious chanteuse turned out to be Gabi Wilson, the Vallejo, California native who had been performing since she was a child. She has released two compilation albums, comprising two sets of EPs — 2016’s HER: Volume 1 and 2018’s I Used To Know HER: The Prelude and I Used to Know Her: Part 2 — that solidified her star power. The awards and opportunities followed in abundance: four Grammys, an Oscar, five Soul Train Awards, an MTV Video Music Award, a Netflix movie cameo, soundtrack and TV show placements, brand endorsements, numerous collaborations and performances on national stages, including the BET Awards, the Super Bowl, and the Country Music Awards.

It may seem strange that the accolades would precede an artist’s official debut but HER’s Back Of My Mind is a portrait of perhaps the most triumphant and mentally challenging season of her career. The 21-track LP pops the cork with the celebratory “We Made It,” a Dom Perignon toast to the stress and blessings, both past and present.

The tone shifts by track two with the album’s namesake featuring Ty Dolla $ign, setting up the emotional obstacle course that dominates the debut. Lyrically, the tracks sound like transcripts of conversations that live in HER’s head. While her image has been equated with success, her moments of weakness and self-doubt are repurposed into motivation throughout the album. HER and featured guest Lil Baby wave off the haters and honor the hustler’s mentality on “Find A Way.” “Trauma,” co-starring Cordae on their second song together and produced by Hit-Boy, harps on what could be BOMM’s tagline: “I take it personal, I ain’t perfect though.”

In spite of her imperfections, HER’s pen is mightiest when the category is love, especially the unrequited kind. Among the highlights include “Cheat Code,” a guitar-driven joint with a writing credit from Julia Michaels (who’s penned songs for Selena Gomez, Fifth Harmony, and herself) that puts a cheater on blast and “Mean It,” where HER also strums her pain caused by an ain’t-sh*t lover.

As a result of her L’s in romance, HER proceeds to plaster caution tape all over her heart. The album’s lead single “Damage” (which samples the ‘80s classic “Making Love In The Rain” by Herb Alpert, Lisa Keith, and Janet Jackson) is a delicate plea to her partner to handle HER with care. On the Goapele-inspired “Closer To Me,” HER craves reassurance in a shaky situation while “Hard To Love” outlines the kind of concerns that drive couples to therapy, solo or together. To keep the rotation spicy, HER also lends her version of hot girl summer anthems with the YG-assisted standout “Slide,“ the sneaky link-ready “Come Through” and a late-night rendezvous with Yung Bleu on “Paradise.”

Elsewhere, HER takes issue with the state of the world. The Thundercat-assisted “Bloody Waters” borrows the formula from her Academy Award-winning “Fight For You” (included on the score for the highly praised drama Judas And The Black Messiah) by wrapping political messages in a weighted blanket of funk and pain that soothes yet aches. HER’s state-of-mind, though, is probably best summed up on “Exhausted.” Producer extraordinaire Rodney “Darkchild” Jerkins lends his magic to the whew-worthy track that finds HER as a woman who’s had enough: “I’m way, way, way, way past bein’ jaded / And all of y’all just way too opinionated / I’m just sayin’, when do I get a say?”

On the DJ Khaled and Bryson Tiller collaboration “I Can Have It All,” HER gets the chance to talk her sh*t: “I know they say, ‘Money’ll make you change’ / That’s ’cause they can’t handle the price of fame / And while you was fantasizin’ ’bout chains / I was plottin’ on a way to buy my momma a house one day.” Although HER’s image was built on mystique, the narratives that fuel her music are familiar stories of shame, fears, and the growing pains that ultimately lead to clarity. Having means and good karma may have jacked up the price for her shows but it’s evident that even an artist of her caliber can’t afford peace of mind sometimes. But as long as she speaks her mind into a mic, those of us listening can at least try to have these crucial conversations with ourselves.

Back Of My Mind is out now via MBK Entertainment/RCA Records. Get it here.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Liam Neeson, The Accidental Action Hero, Discusses His Latest Tough Guy Role In ‘The Ice Road’

Liam Neeson’s latest movie is called The Ice Road, from the writer of Armageddon. Like Armageddon, The Ice Road‘s heroes are unlikely blue collar workers — Liam Neeson plays an ice road trucker — who save the day in the end (not from a meteor this time, but from corrupt industrialists). It’s a bit of a twist for Neeson, who has spent much of his last 15 years onscreen punching out terrorists and kidnappers and generally utilizing “a particular set of skills.”

While he may not play an ex-spy or retired hitman this time around, Neeson’s character still has to beat up a few people and survive multiple assassination attempts before the end credits roll. That’s just the logic of the mass-market thriller, especially one that feels so torn from basic cable programming.

It’s nonetheless of a piece with Neeson’s later-career iteration as a salt-of-the-Earth tough guy, a niche that seems to have taken Neeson himself by surprise. When he did Taken in 2008, Neeson explains, “I thought it was going straight to video.”

Instead, the actor, who as a young man aspired to Shakespeare and was heretofore known for playing a wider variety roles, from Oskar Schindler to Alfred Kinsey, quickly became not only the go-to guy for reluctant badasses, but virtually synonymous with them. (See: Key And Peele‘s series of sketches about valets who love “Liam Neesons” for evidence of this). It wasn’t so much that Liam Neeson had changed — he’d always done the occasional action movie — it was the movie industry, or the public’s appetite that had. It’s worth wondering, then, what particular set of qualities we saw in Liam Neeson that made us immediately adopt him as our collective avatar of never starting a fight but always finishing one.

Maybe it’s that the actor, born and raised in the north of Ireland, even after decades in show business still maintains the air of a humble upbringing. He boxed, he played football (in the British sense), he even worked at the Guinness factory. He’s candid, but not quite ebullient, or over-familiar in that false way that people who do a lot of interviews can be.

When he speaks, it’s in that unnaturally pleasant-sounding north Irish accent, using phrases like “never in a month of Sundays” that make you feel like you’re in a pastoral novel, or a whiskey commercial. Even when he’s answering your questions as honestly as a person could, you get the sense that he’s holding back as much as he’s giving. Just mentioning the name of his wife, Natasha Richardson, who died in a skiing accident in 2009, is all that’s necessary to signal that his life hasn’t been quite as charmed as your average fabulously rich movie star.

Maybe that’s why moviegoers are so willing to watch Liam Neeson play the reluctant badass: his natural reluctance. That, combined with the plainspoken gravitas, make it easy to believe in a set of abilities he’s holding in reserve.

***

What’s it like becoming synonymous with being a badass? Has the shift in the kinds of roles you play changed how you interact with the public at all?

(Pause) No, I don’t see myself as a badass. I was very lucky to fall into the action genre. When was it? 13, 14 years ago, we shot the first Taken movie in Paris and to be honest with you, I thought it was going straight to video. Not because it was shot badly or written badly, it’s just it was this simple little story and a fast-paced little thriller and then Fox took it here in America and really sold it. I was really surprised by it. And then Hollywood started seeing me in a different light, I guess. They started sending me more action-oriented scripts, which I was thrilled about it because I love doing my own fights and stuff in these movies. Not my own stunts. I don’t do the stunts, but the fighting I do. I like doing that. And I work very closely with Mark Vanselow, who is my stunt double’s fight choreographer, who is now working with Jordan Peele on his third movie. Mark and I have done 25 films together now.

So it surprised you that they saw action hero in you. Had you seen that in yourself before?

No, not really. My ambitions when I turned professional in 1976 was to maybe end up at the National Theater of Great Britain or the Royal Shakespeare Company, never in a month of Sundays would I have dreamt of the silver screen and being on it. And then John Boorman gave me that chance in 1980, when we did Excalibur. And I just fell in love with the movie camera and that whole different way of acting. John was a fantastic mentor and teacher for both Gabriel Byrne, who’s a pal, and myself. I’ve just been lucky.

That being said, I’ve created my own luck too, in that when work was drying up in London, I thought, “I have to go to LA.” That’s the center of the English-speaking motion picture industry. And I went, and eventually I started getting bits of work and one thing led to another. And then I thought, you know, I’ve had enough of this, I want to go back to see theater, and Natasha Richardson, who became my wife, she, out of the blue, she offered me this role, a Eugene O’Neill play called Anna Christie that the Roundabout Theater in New York were doing. I read it and I thought, yeah, it’s time, it’s time to get back on stage. Then out of that, I was offered Schindler’s List and things just started happening.

Your character in this movie gets fired for punching out his boss. What’s the most satisfying thing you’ve ever said or done to a boss that you didn’t like?

To a boss? That’s a good question. I’m trying to think of an example. Nowadays I like saying if it’s a spunky, young director who’s asking me to do something on camera that I disagree with, I like to be able to say, “how many movies have you made?” If he says “Two and a bunch of commercials.” Then I’ll say that’s interesting like, “I’ve made over 90 and I’m not doing it this way because of A, B and C, but I will do it this way because that is the way to do it.” Now that hasn’t happened very often because I respect my directors, but this has happened a couple of times.

You mentioned that you enjoy doing the fighting part of shooting. I know you used to box a bit.

As a kid, yeah.

Are you ever watching action movies and you get annoyed by the way that they’re doing fights or you see things that you think can be done better?

Occasionally I might think… I might say, “Oh no, look that guy threw that left jab wrong, he’s never done that before,” but they’re little fleeting moments. And for all the times I’ve thought that there’s been hundreds of times I’ve seen fight scenes that I think, “Wow, how did they do that? That was really impressive.”

Are there any action movies that you’ve seen in the last few years that you were particularly excited about or that you thought did it well?

I liked the action scenes in the Bourne Identity movies that Matt Damon played. They were very inventive fight scenes with like rolled up magazines, improvised weapons and stuff, which actually happens. You use whatever’s there in these fights. I felt they were good. And I have to say too, going back, because I’ve done some myself, sword-and-sorcery films, with suits of armor and swords and that stuff, the fight scenes in Game of Thrones were really outstanding, I thought. Outstanding.

In this movie you play a truck driver. Did you have to learn how to drive a truck or did you know anything about that going in?

I knew nothing about them. I had seen them on the road and… the Kenworth Trucking — I think they’re made in Ohio. They supplied these trucks, which were — I mean, they are the star of the movie I think. They couldn’t have done enough to help us. I was in awe of the size of them and I was also in awe of the sensitivity of them, the gear changing, and the brake pressure, and how gently you have to apply that brake. I went out with a professional who took me around the streets of Winnipeg and allowed me then when they came back to base camp, to drive around the parking lot and just get used to it. But they’re special, special machines. I’ve been describing them as, when you’re inside, they’re like small New York apartments. We had a crew of, when myself and Marcus Thomas, who plays my brother Gurty in the film, were sitting in the driving seat, he’s in the passenger seat, and we had a crew in the back of six guys with a camera and sound equipment and stuff shooting over our shoulders at the panorama of the ice and snow and stuff. I enjoyed those scenes a lot. It all happened inside the truck.

What was your first car?

My first car, I’ll tell you, I didn’t get my driving license until I was 28, maybe 29. It was a Citroen 2CV6. They don’t make them anymore. Little French cars. They’re kind of collector’s items now and they have incredible suspension and you forget when you filled it up with gasoline because they just seemed to go forever. Gabriel Byrne, who is a pal of mine, when he first saw, he said “That’s a converted sewing machine”…And the steering wheel was on the left-hand side instead of the right in Britain. This was when I was living in London, but it was a cool little car. I loved that car.

‘The Ice Road’ hits Netflix on Friday, June 25th. Vince Mancini is on Twitter. You can access his archive of reviews here.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Brittany Howard’s Upcoming ‘Jaime’ Remix Album Features Childish Gambino, Bon Iver, And More

Back in September 2020, Brittany Howard shared a pair of remixes from Earthgang and Bon Iver, which were released together as Jaime (The Remixes). Now, Howard is expanding on the idea, as her upcoming album Jaime Reimagined, which is set for release on July 23, will feature more remixes of the album’s songs. Participating artists include Childish Gambino, Common, Syd, and others. Alongside the announcement, Howard shared a pair of tracks from the release: “Presence (Little Dragon Remix)” and “Tomorrow (BadBadNotGood Remix).”

Brittany Howard said of the project, “Making Jaime was so much fun for me because I was able to explore so many different genres of music. There were no rules. This reimagination project has been no different. I have been honored to have so many incredible artists from all musical worlds interpret my songs in such interesting and different ways.”

BadBadNotGood also said, “We’ve been fans of Brittany Howard’s work from a distance for years but haven’t had the chance until now to connect. She has an absolutely incredible voice and her songwriting style is really unique. The original of ‘Tomorrow’ had such a special, floating sound that it was difficult to find a direction to go in for the remix. We tried to give the amazing vocals a new context and build around that. We were honored to have the opportunity and hope everyone enjoys it!”

Little Dragon added, “Working with Brittany’s voice felt really inspiring, because it radiates emotions and energy.”

Previously, Earthgang said of their remix, “We’ve been big fans of Brittany and Alabama Shakes so this is a dream come true. Songs like these help us make sense of all the craziness in the world at times. Her song ‘Goat Head,’ dealing with her Black experience in America and the world, resonated the loudest at this time. Just thankful to be able to give the world our medicine and heal the people.”

Vernon also noted of his at the time, “Brittany is a truly singular artist; so much power and musicality. This album speaks to so many people, including us. To have a chance to recreate ‘Short And Sweet’ in our own image with long-time collaborators Jenn Wassner and CJ Camerieri, was both an honor and almost too much of a privilege.”

Listen to the Little Dragon and BadBadNotGood remixes above and find the Jaime Reimagined art and tracklist below. Also revisit our 2019 interview with Howard about Jaime here.

ATO Records

1. “13th Century Metal (Michael Kiwanuka Version)”
2. “Goat Head (Earthgang Version)”
3. “Stay High (Childish Gambino Version)”
4. “Presence (Little Dragon Remix)”
5. “Short And Sweet (Bon Iver Remix)”
6. “Tomorrow (BadBadNotGood Remix)”
7 .”Baby (Gitty Remix)” Feat. Syd
8. “History Repeats (Georgia Anne Muldrow Geemix)”
9. “Georgia (J Most Remix)” Feat. Emily King
10. “Stay High again.. (Fred again.. & Joy Anonymous Version)”
11. “He Loves Me (9th Wonder Remix)” Feat. Common
12. “History Repeats (Jungle Remix)”
13. “Run To Me (Laura Mvula Version)”

Jaime Reimagined is out 7/23 via ATO Records. Pre-order it here.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

‘The Boys’ Pretended To ‘Spoil’ The Season 3 Ending, And It’s A Doozy Of A Fakeout

The Boys triumphantly returned for Season 2 in September 2020 and headed into production surprisingly fast (considering what was happening last year) in Toronto. Don’t you dare ask on Twitter when Season 3 will arrive, however, because the show has faux-threatened to push things back simply to be a pain in the butt. The show’s social media account is also having a grand old time while fake-spoiling the next season finale, which will have to really up the ante after Homelander’s raunchy display that led us deep into his messed-up psyche.

So, what else besides a jacked Jensen Ackles and a “Herogasm” episode will the next season have to offer? Well, the show’s now pretending that the season will end just like Newhart did in 1990. Yes, they went there.

“Season 3 ends with Hughie waking up in bed with Susanne Pleshette,” The Boys tweeted. “[A]nd telling her about the weird dream he had where a guy with a beard kept swearing at him.”

The “guy with a beard who kept swearing” would, of course, be Karl Urban’s Billy Butcher character, and Jack Quaid’s Hughie is envisioned here while waking up and realizing that The Boys never actually happened. This is all, of course, a play on Newhart ending with Bob Newhart waking up next to his wife, played by Suzanne Pleshette, from his 1970s sitcom, The Bob Newhart Show. It’s a pretty smartass reference to make for superhero-satire show, but it’s right in line with the series’ usual social media approach.

As for Jack Quaid, he also offered this as a response: “There was SO much blood! Arguably too much!”

Yup, get ready for (apparently) even more blood than the whale scene, whenever Season 3 arrives (again, don’t ask).

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

What Nneka Ogwumike’s Olympic Snub Means For Team USA

Team USA’s women’s basketball roster for the Tokyo Olympics was announced on Monday with one glaring omission. In a shocking move, Nneka Ogwumike, the 30-year-old Los Angeles Sparks star who was the WNBA’s MVP in 2016, was left off the roster. The forward suffered a left knee injury on June 3, but in five games this season has averaged 16.4 points on 58.6 percent shooting with 7.0 rebounds. She’s the only MVP not to make an Olympic roster.

“It really breaks my heart that Nneka is not on this team,” head coach Dawn Staley said, according to ESPN’s Mechelle Voelpel. “I mean, if we had to make a decision a month from now … I’m sure she would be healthy. I know this is one of the things that she wanted to do. She came to every training camp, she’s been a great voice in our training camp and our practices. We’re definitely going to miss Nneka.

“I do feel for the players who were with us the last three or four years [as part of the senior national team pool] and didn’t make the roster. It’s not anything against who they are … it’s just hard to get down to 12. Every four years we do this, and it gets more difficult.”

Ogwumike’s sister, Erica, pushed back on the idea that Nneka’s injury played a role in the decision, and her sister and Sparks teammate, Chiney, stated that “her timeline worked PERFECTLY to return to play for the Olympics.” Nneka was expected to miss four-to-six weeks with the knee sprain, which even at its latest point would’ve had her cleared by July 15. She’s suffered no set-backs since. The games are slated to begin in Tokyo on July 26.

So what happened?

Ogwumike’s absence was especially surprising because she had the resume and the extracurriculars. She won MVP for Team USA in the FIBA Olympic qualifying tournament in 2020, and also won gold medals at the FIBA World Cup in 2014 and 2018. She was also the only player of the original eight invitees except Elena Delle Donne – who is sidelined long-term due to injury – to play in Team USA’s college tour against top-ranked schools in 2019 and not make the cut. The six other participants: Sue Bird, Diana Taurasi, Skylar Diggins-Smith, Chelsea Gray, A’ja Wilson and Sylvia Fowles, did.

Every Olympic cycle, someone is snubbed from the roster. That’s the nature of having just 12 spots on a team all of the best players in the world want to compete for. Candace Parker’s cut in 2016 was especially controversial, but Ogwumike’s absence from the team is leaving a particular bad feeling for women’s basketball fans.

Regardless of how Ogwumike finishes out her career, which is already loaded with every accolade in the book including a WNBA championship, she’ll be remembered as an elite competitor and one of the game’s most important leaders. As president of the Women’s National Basketball Players’ Association, she’s overseen negotiations for the most lucrative collective bargaining agreement the league has ever seen, stood for social justice causes, and led the league’s 144 players through a “bubble” season during the Covid-19 pandemic.

Ogwumike is one of the faces of women’s basketball for reasons on and off the court.

What is everyone around the league saying?

There are questions about why Ogwumike’s injury would’ve withheld her from the Olympic roster while Diana Taurasi, who has been sidelined since May 21 due to a fracture in her sternum, was still picked. It’s since been updated that Taurasi is expected to return to play on Sunday, but she’s been sidelined for a month. Could Team USA have given Ogwumike a roster spot and allowed her to bow out of the Olympics if she wasn’t ready in time?

Shortly after the announcement, Erica Ogwumike shared her thoughts on Twitter:

Chiney followed:

Then former WNBA player Devereaux Peters sounded off on the entire Team USA program:

Sparks coach Derek Fisher also expressed his frustrations, calling it “a freaking travesty.”

What happens now?

Team USA is likely to win its seventh consecutive Olympic gold. Even without Ogwumike, the team is stacked with A’ja Wilson, Breanna Stewart, Skylar Diggins-Smith, Sue Bird, Diana Taurasi, Jewell Loyd, Tina Charles, Brittney Griner, Sylvia Fowles, Napheesa Collier, and Ariel Atkins. Staley is an excellent coach and no team in the world should be able to compete USA’s talent.

But for the second consecutive Olympic cycle (the first of which was under head coach Geno Auriemma), the USA program is taking a ton of flak for a roster decision which — if Parker’s fallout was any indication — could end with Ogwumike’s unwillingness to play. And they may need her. This is likely Bird and Taurasi’s final Olympics, and in 2024, Fowles will be 38 years old.

“It’s trash, ” Peters said on Twitter, “they’re trash and honestly I wouldn’t be mad or surprised if players just start saying F it and passed on them all together. And quite frankly I hope they do cuz they dead ass wrong year in and year out.”