Janet Jackson is one of the most esteemed performers in music history. Given just how often she’s taken the stage at this point in her career, though, it makes sense that she’s dealt with at least a handful of issues during a performance. One such instance arrived with terrible timing: Jackson once had a wardrobe malfunction while performing for the Queen of England.
In a British Vogue video shared yesterday (September 12), Jackson talks about some of her most iconic fashion choices from over the years. When she get to one look, she explained:
“Funny story about this outfit: I was performing for the Queen of England, and we were doing Rhythm Nation. Sure enough, as soon as I squatted, my pants split right in my booty crack. I couldn’t believe it happened. I thought, ‘Oh my god.’ And then I started feeling air back there, so I knew it had really happened [laughs]. And the whole time, it was fine until, no, you’re going to perform for the Queen of England. So I never turned my back to her, which, some of the choreography, I was supposed to. I just faced forward.”
Beyond that, the video offers a fun look at Jackson’s career through the lens of her clothes, so check it out above.
Kristen Stewart has been acting since she was 12 years old. After bracing the Twilight storm and becoming one of the most acclaimed actresses of her generation, with unique performances in Clouds of Sils Maria, Personal Shopper, and Love Lies Bleeding, she’s finally making her directorial debut.
The Chronology of Water is based on author Lidia Yuknavitch’s 2011 memoir of the same name, and it’s been a long time coming for Stewart: the passion project was first announced in 2018. Renesmee Cullen wasn’t even a teenager then — now she’s 18 years old! Here’s everything we know about The Chronology of Water, including plot details and whether there’s a release date.
Plot
The Chronology of Waterfollows swimmer-turned-writer Lidia, played by Imogen Poots (Outer Range, Green Room), from “her earliest childhood memories in the Pacific Northwest, through explosive misfires and mistakes, children that almost-were, toxic relationships, art heroes, wins and losses.” The synopsis continues, The Chronology of Water is “an in-depth exploration of sexuality, of creativity, an unflinching stare at all the gory details of having a female body and a sensitive depiction of the emotional vocabulary of youth.”
Despite it being her first film (and a “f*cking thrill ride”), Stewart was a dream to work with, according to Poots. “She’s really something. She was born to do it. I’m so proud of her,” she told Collider. “She’s done it her way and it’s the only way. I think she’s punk-rock and authentic, and she’s my favorite girl. I think she’s amazing.” Poots even called Stewart “one of the greatest directors I’ve ever worked with in my life.”
Stewart was so determined to adapt The Chronology of Water that she vowed to quit acting until it was made. “I’m going to make this movie before I ever work for someone else,” she told Variety earlier this year. “Yeah, I will quit the f*cking business. I won’t make a-f*cking-nother movie until I make this movie. I will tell you that, for sure. I think that will get things going.”
The gambit worked: the first image from The Chronology of Water is here.
Cast
Outside of Imogen Poots, The Chronology of Water also stars Thora Birch, Earl Cave, Michael Epp, Susannah Flood, Kim Gordon (of Sonic Youth fame), and Jim Belushi. Name another movie with a member of Sonic Youth (Gordon), the star of K-9 (Belushi), and a human named Imogen Poots (Poots)? You can’t!
Release Date
The Chronology of Water does not currently have a release date, so expect sometime in 2025. If that’s the case, it will be a big year for Stewart. She’s also starring in Sacramento, a road trip comedy with Michael Cera, Maya Erskine, and Michael Angarano; post-apocalyptic romance Love Me with Steven Yeun; and Flesh of the Gods, Mandy director Panos Cosmatos’ sexy vampire movie about a married couple played by Stewart and Oscar Isaac who are “seduced into a glamorous, surrealistic world of hedonism, thrills, and violence.”
Trailer
There’s no trailer for The Chronology of Water yet, so instead, please enjoy Kristen Stewart’s delightful day drinking antics with Seth Meyers.
Still, streamer Kai Cenat wanted to test the validity of these claims. In a video recorded backstage at the 2024 VMAs (viewable here), Kai challenged Snoop Dogg to see how quickly he could roll a blunt.
“Snoop, how fast can you roll up a blunt,” asked Kai.
Without hesitation, Snoop replied: “Before this song ends.”
The song in question was Shirley Murdock’s beloved 1985 single, “As We Lay.”
Although neither opted to begin an official timer, sure enough before the ballad could end Snoop completed the mission, all while featuring his Death Row Cannabis line. Back in 2019, Snoop Dogg revealed that he actually hired a full-time blunt roller. According to him, she’s already rolled about half a million marijuana cigarettes during her tenure.
But don’t get it twisted, with Snoop catching his first high in the 1970s and maintaining a habit of on average 81 blunts a day, he proved to Kai Cenat that he is never to be questioned again.
Days later, Wayne has spoken up, and he’s heartbroken.
Wayne shared a video this morning (September 13). In it, he appears downtrodden as he speaks, saying:
“First of all, I want to say forgive me for the delay. […] I had to get strength enough to do this without breaking.
I’m gonna say thank you to every voice, every opinion, all the care, all the love and the support out there. Your words turned into arms and held me up when I tried to fall back.
That hurt. It hurt a lot. You know what I’m talking about. It hurt a whole lot. I blame myself for not being mentally prepared for a letdown, and for automatically mentally putting myself in that position like somebody told me that was my position. So I blame myself for that. But I thought that was nothing better than that spot and that stage and that platform in my city, and so it hurt. It hurt a whole lot.
[But] y’all are f*cking amazing. It made me feel like sh*t, not getting this opportunity, and when I felt like sh*t, you guys reminded me that I ain’t sh*t without y’all… and that’s an amazing reality.
So, like I said, it broke me and I’m just trying to put me back together. But my God, have you all helped me. Thanks to all of my peers, my friends, my family, my homies on the sports television, and everybody repping me. I really appreciate that, I really do. I feel like I let all of y’all down by not getting that opportunity, but I’m working on me and I’m working. So, thank you.”
As TMZ notes, during Katy Perry’s performance, Antonoff was spotted putting noise-canceling earplugs in his ears. Footage made the rounds and Perry fans took to the internet to express their dissatisfaction with Antonoff’s perceived slight.
Antonoff saw what was going on and responded. In a tongue-in-cheek statement shared on X (formerly Twitter) and his Instagram Story yesterday (September 12), Antonoff explained:
“i would like to tell you directly from me that i did in fact use earplugs the other night. they were blue ‘hearos’ brand and im mortified to admit that i’ve been using them for a long time as well as buying them in bulk. i would also like to be honest and get ahead of that fact that i do not only use them when in 100 plus DB environments. it is humiliating to admit that i use them on planes and every night while sleep. there is nothing left to do but apologize and thank those who have covered this story because although it’s an embarrassment to my family and i, i do believe that this was a very important and pressing issue that needed to be exposed. i’m sorry to those i let down and today i will not being going to work and instead thinking about my earplug use and everyone that has been affected by it. the band and i have decided to keep all dates as scheduled.”
To Antonoff’s point: Per a 2016 paper from the Audio Engineering Society, the noise level at concerts typically ranges from 100 to 105 decibels; Some rock concerts have apparently even reached 130 decibels. The National Institute On Deafness And Other Communication Disorders, meanwhile, notes, “A single very loud noise or long or repeated exposure to sounds at or above 85 dBA can cause hearing loss.” So, Antonoff, a musician and producer who heavily relies on his hearing, took a simple step to protect his ears in a loud environment.
Yellowstone creator Taylor Sheridan will put his most well-known series to rest this fall, which is also the season when he will debut his next star-studded offshoot. Landman isn’t quite considered even Yellowstone-adjacent, yet the series will surely have the trademark touches of a Sheridan show. As always, this prolific screenwriter has penned another adventure that captures a quintessential part of the American essence, and co-star Jon Hamm has made it known that this is not a cowboy-focused show.
Of course, Landman is likely to include a fair amount of cowboy boots and hats like Tulsa King does (and Sylvester Stallone’s show will return on September 15 because this Paramount+ king does not rest), but in vastly different settings. Let’s round up what to expect on this show, starting with the cast:
Cast
Paramount Plus
Sometime in the future, somebody will attempt to pinpoint the most storied cast of any Taylor Sheridan series, and Landman will surely hit the top three. First, a certain 1883 actor flowed so well with the Yellowstone creator that Sheridan wrote the Tommy Norris role specifically for Billy Bob Thornton. He has portrayed unruly characters (Bad Santa) and written captivating characters of his own accord (Sling Blade) and won one of TV’s highest acting honors (Fargo), but here, Billy Bob will portray a unique but wholly American beast: a wheeling and dealing oil company crisis manager.
Additionally, every show is better with a dose of Michael Peña, who will portray “veteran roughneck” Armando Medina. Jon Hamm will star as oil-industry king Monty Miller (an ally of Tommy), and his wife, Cami, will be portrayed by Demi Moore, who’s having quite a year between her Sheridan debut and with The Substance. Additionally, Tommy’s private life will be under the microscope with his ex-wife portrayed by Ali Larter, who will very much be on the scene, as revealed in a Vanity Fair photo reveal. Their young adult children will be portrayed by Michelle Randolph and Jacob Lofland.
Other cast members include Andy Garcia and Paulina Chávez with locally-based extras for filming oil-field and college-campus scenes.
Plot
Landman is based upon the hit Boomtown podcast and arrives with a synopsis that sets the show “in the proverbial boomtowns of West Texas” as “a modern-day tale of fortune seeking in the world of oil rigs.” Further, this is an “upstairs/downstairs story of roughnecks and wildcat billionaires fueling a boom so big, it’s reshaping our climate, our economy and our geopolitics.”
Thornton recently told TV Insider that he and Sheridan had an early-on conversation about Norris’ feeling that he could have had everything in life, but due to various circumstances, that didn’t happen, and he’s very aware of the situation: “Taylor said to me one day, ‘When you go over to this house, and you think of where you live, you’re looking around, and you think: I could have had this – but it went a different direction.’”
Demi Moore further revealed to Deadline that the “boomtown of Fort Worth, Texas” will reveal “kind of this subculture that we haven’t seen before, which is what I think Taylor does so well.” Additionally, Moore promises that in addition to “really exploring the issues around oil, petroleum, on all sides,” there will be plenty of “delicious drama within and family dynamics.” Will there be an endangered ranch somewhere on the peripheral, too? Hopefully, there will be some Yellowstone Easter eggs in there somewhere.
We do know, however, that Billy Bob has something in common with Stallone, who described this filming experience as too hot to handle, temperature wise. In fact, Thornton admitted to Vanity Fair that certain scrubland scenes were “probably” the toughest type of filming that he’s ever physically done. The crew even nearly passed out on a day that Thornton had to run in 100 degree weather in high humidity while wearing cowboy boots on “caliche roads,” which does sound like hell on earth. That’s a day in the life of, according to Jon Hamm, “oil speculators and what they called landmen, which are the guys that run around and try to acquire mineral rights and land rights.”
Release Date
Hold onto your boots, this Paramount+ series will premiere on November 17.
Trailer
The first teaser trailer promises a gripping ride for Sheridan-heads.
Steven and Ian open today’s episode with some jokes (and some empathy!) directed at Dave Grohl. The president of rock is down this week, but the guys are not going to kick him. Steven then laments the state of the Green Bay Packers in a quick Sportscast, and the guys marvel at the unintentional comedy of Donald Trump in Politicscast. Steven gets really depressed during the Fantasy Albums Draft update, but then things perk up when they address the recent controversy about Linkin Park’s new singer and the overall “yay or nay” status of the popular nu-metal band. The guys also review new albums by “indie sleaze” artists The Dare and Fcukers, which brings out the “Danny Glover in Lethal Weapon” side of Steven.
In the mailbag, a listener asks if there is an American band whose reunion would engender as much hysteria as the Oasis reunion in England. (The answer is: Nirvana, maybe, if Kurt Cobain faked his own death.)
In Recommendation Corner, Ian talks up the new album by Foxing while Steven stumps for the latest live record by The War On Drugs.
New episodes of Indiecast drop every Friday. Listen to Episode 206 here and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. You can submit questions for Steve and Ian at [email protected], and make sure to follow us on Instagram and X (formerly Twitter) for all the latest news. We also recently launched a visualizer for our favorite Indiecast moments. Check those out here.
Poor Finneas. After falling down an elevator shaft in the video for his last single, “For Cryin’ Out Loud!,” his heart gets kicked in its ass in his new “Cleats” video. Obviously, he’s learned a lot from teenage heartbreak, as the overall tone of the song is upbeat and tongue-in-cheek. Finneas sings the lyrics as an address to his younger self with all the wisdom of the intervening years, knowing he was barking up the wrong tree all along — but everything’s obvious in hindsight.
Finneas plays a fly on the wall in the video as his teenaged self hangs out with a girl from the soccer team — honestly, bro, you did this to yourself — until he works up the courage to make a move. Naturally, he promptly goes down in flames, but like… the song is called “Cleats” for cryin’ out loud! (See what I did there?)
For Cryin’ Out Loud is also the name of the producer-songwriter’s upcoming album, on which he steps out of the “bedroom producer” mindset and works with a full band — which sounds like another step toward making that musical with his sister Billie the two have been brainstorming for a while.
You can watch the video for “Cleats” above.
For Cryin’ Out Loud! is out 10/4 via Interscope Records. Find more information here.
After becoming the music business’ go-to call for a hit single feature, the time is ripe for Playboi Carti to finally come through with his long-awaited, oft-delayed album, Music. In typical Carti fashion, the self-declared King Vamp hasn’t given fans much to go on, let alone a solid album release date, but he did offer hope in the form of a new single, “All Red.”
In addition to trading in the high-pitched, squeaky voice we’ve heard him employ on a number of releases for a deeper-voiced, Future-esque flow, “All Red” is also the first official release to streaming services Carti’s shared since 2020’s Whole Lotta Red. Like many of Carti’s tracks, it was first teased through snippets on social media, although he did perform the song in full during his headlining set at Lyrical Lemonade’s Summer Smash in Chicago in June.
Carti’s new flow pairs with his usual approach to wordplay, lending “All Red” a menacing, but playful vibe. It’s certainly a good sign for Music that Carti appears to be fully motivated and actually dropping new music again.
However, just because he wasn’t officially releasing music doesn’t mean we hadn’t heard from him lately. In August, he was featured alongside Drake on the leaked track “No Face,” which still has yet to see an official release as well.
The Weeknd is generally known for embracing dark subject matter with matching aesthetics, and the first single from his new album is very much in that tradition, despite its uplifting production
“Dancing In The Flames” is an uptempo dance-pop ballad of the sort we often get from Abel Tesfaye. With lyrics encouraging a lover to “just have faith,” it seems at first listen to be a more hopeful song — but like, many of his tracks, the glittering beat hides some harrowing content. Fortunately, the video is suitably horrifying; Abel gets into a head-on collision with a semi truck, resulting in what very much looks to be a trip to the afterlife.
As a glimpse of his upcoming sixth studio album, Hurry Up Tomorrow, it suggests that the nightmarish posture of its immediate predecessors, After Hours and Dawn FM, might be in the past — which is fitting, since Hurry Up Tomorrow is being presented as the conclusion of a trilogy.
The album’s cover, which he shared earlier this week, also seems to bear out this theory, as the photo presents a bare-faced Tesfaye with tears in his eyes, a stark contrast to the old man makeup from Dawn FM and the bloodied hedonist of After Hours. In a message teasing the new album, he reinforced the optimistic speculation about the album, writing, “A new path awaits. When today ends, I’ll discover who I am.”
While he has yet to reveal the release date for Hurry Up Tomorrow, the release of “Dancing In The Flames” will surely raise the anticipation for the upcoming album.
You can listen to “Dancing In The Flames” above.
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