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Kevin Morby’s ‘Sundowner’ Offers A Hopeful Prayer For A Divided America

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“It just feels extreme,” Kevin Morby said of the political divide between his Kansas City, Kansas hometown and his former LA dwelling. “Moving back here, it’s interesting when you’re faced with someone who you might love, but then suddenly their politics are the complete opposite of yours.”

Morby was forced to get used to extremes in the past two years. Little did he know it at the time, but the singer had a “weird precursor to quarantine” while recording his cinematic slice-of-life album Sundowner. Isolated at his new home in the suburbs of Kansas and far away from his life in the big city, Morby was overcome with a poignant sense of nostalgia as the sun set each night across the boundless country. While he struggled with seclusion, his newfound free time allowed him the opportunity to contemplate the bigger picture: Death, divisive politics, and why he found himself ceaselessly chasing the sun’s setting rays.

These are themes Morby delicately depicts in Sundowner. He captures the vastness of the American landscape, both political and otherwise, through hushed pleas in “Don’t Underestimate Midwest American Sun” and samples of groaning thunderstorms on the fully-instrumental number “Velvet Highway.” In this way, Sundowner speaks to the stark contrast between rural and city life and casts an auspicious prayer for the future of American children in a time where hope feels as fleeting as ever.

Speaking over Zoom from the same studio where the album was recorded on his 4-track Tascam, Morby and his life-sized cardboard cutout of Elvis Presley broke down Sundowner from its overarching themes to its most personal tracks.

In the press materials for Sundowner, you talk about how you came up with the term after feeling really nostalgic whenever the evening time came and you were watching the sunset over the landscape. Do you think that returning to your hometown played into that nostalgic feeling at all? Especially since you were actually living there and not just visiting, did you find yourself surprised, disappointed, or excited about any of the ways that it changed?

Yeah, absolutely. It played into it. I lived in New York for so long and I lived in LA for so long, and those are two places where I would get home from tour or I’d get home from recording and my life in the music industry would just continue. I was very social and constantly going to shows or going out with other friends who were also songwriters, and the night sort of represented this different thing. I really looked forward to the night and I was really anticipating it. It’s kind of when my day began in a lot of ways. And then coming back here where there are none of those things and there is none of the temptation or opportunity to go out and be as social as I was, I was really faced with myself. So the nightfall really represented this different thing. That seemed to be when it became most apparent that I was really just isolated. I was left to my own devices to keep myself entertained, and then later my girlfriend Katie [Crutchfield] moved in. But then it was the two of us isolated and the two of us left to our own devices to keep one another entertained. It took on this whole new meaning, like the sunset and my life in LA or New York meant one thing — the day’s kind of beginning — and then here, it means a whole different thing. And the product of that was me becoming very reflective and looking out at this whole other part of my life from this different vantage point.

That’s really interesting because obviously New York City is known as the city that never sleeps. Things are open until all hours of the night, but I’m sure that in your hometown things close at eight or nine p.m. and there’s nowhere to go that you can stay out late.

There are some lyrics where I literally depict that on this record because it was just a sort of jarring experience, especially when I got back and I was still a night owl and I was staying up late. It just became a very strange experience. There’s a weird sports bar near my house that no one like us would ever hang out at. But I found myself going there alone and it was an isolated experience and a completely new world. […] I think the biggest thing is that there was no one really to relate to about my “bigger” life — “bigger” in terms of being on the road and having a name for myself in music. Whereas in LA, all my friends are songwriters and in New York, all my friends are songwriters and can relate to that sort of lifestyle, but here, I just kept those thoughts to myself.

Do you have the experience in your hometown where there are a lot of people who just stay there and don’t travel?

Yeah, absolutely. And that’s a totally fine thing to do, but it makes it hard for me to relate to those people. But, in the same breath, I really enjoy being around people who are out of the music industry. I think in its own ways, the music industry can be its own small town. It can be its own form of claustrophobia. So it felt really good to step away from that and gain a new perspective on things. And during this fucking reign of Trump, I think there is something to be said about being an artist who exists outside of this liberal bubble in both California and New York. I took some pride in moving back home where I was out of that bubble and I was reminded that it’s everyday people who maybe have never met an artist or who maybe just have never learned about a different way of life.

I like being back in a place where my vote is going to count more in a state like Kansas than it would in a state like New York or California. And I think that’s important too. When I moved here, I was sort of wondering why I was doing it. And the whole thing now feels like a weird foreshadow of the situation we’re all in now. And I see a lot of friends leaving New York or LA or bigger cities and coming back to their hometowns. I think ultimately that’s good because I don’t think that creative people, progressive thinking people, should necessarily be all in hubs. I think it’s good sometimes to spread that out so that the country feels a little bit more evenly divided. It’s been an interesting experience being faced with a lot more Trump flags. Though I will say, I’m very surprised — and I really hope this is significant of something — but I see a lot of Black Lives Matter and a lot of Biden signs, way more than I ever saw any Hillary signs. So I’m taking that as a good omen, hopefully, for November.

You speak about praying for America in certain songs, like in “Don’t Underestimate Midwest American Sun,” you say “pray for our American daughters and sons.” What specifically did you have in mind when you were writing that?

The one water lyric (“Pray for our American water and sons”) pertains to the environment and everything that’s happening. Speaking to then the Dakota pipeline or the pollution, the rising oceans, the wildfires. And I know that’s a global problem, but just more specifically, I think the pipeline stuff was really happening at that time and the California wildfires. Also, speaking to the youth and thinking about what the youth are going through. I think about the stark difference between kids who grew up with Obama as their president and then now, people growing up with someone like Trump is the president. And also that stark difference in terms of things like social media. I think we’re in such an interesting and sort of scary and exciting time in history. And to be a kid right now — my heart goes out to them. I’m very grateful to have grown up without a lot of these things. Growing up with a president that, even if I didn’t agree with, I could make sense of, and growing up without an iPhone. So now, it just seems like the wild west out there.

A theme that I noticed throughout the album is you talked about running. Either running from something, someone running ahead of you, or in “Sundowner,” talking about the sun running away from you.

In both situations, the sunset or the running, I’m speaking about a relationship. My girlfriend, Katie, and I had just started dating at that time. It was almost like we were existing in this incubator, like we had this force field around us when we were here. Then, we’d go back out into our lives. In the beginning phases of dating somebody, you never know what’s going to happen, but it felt like a very safe place. We had our own little world, but then we’d go out to the world and we’re subjected to any sort of danger. It just felt like we were existing in this life, but always running from it — running to the next tour or just the next thing that was pulling one of us away.

And then the sun running from me is the idea that I was never conscious of the sun’s patterns. In these other places, I didn’t have too much time to think about it or if I did, I really welcomed the night time. But it was here that I really became anxious. Once the sun goes down, I’m just faced with the night and it’s just me and my thoughts. So it just felt like I was always running or that I was trying to chase the sun, trying to get as much of the day as possible because I didn’t want to confront the night and all that it brought on.

Your song “A Night At The Little Los Angeles” is your longest song on the entire record. You moved to LA after being born in Kansas and you touch on a lot of different midwest states throughout the lyrics. I personally read the song as a way of describing the city through the eyes of somebody who grew up in a small town, especially when you talk about the sand looking like sugar and being buried underneath the concrete, but you also refer to Kansas itself as the little LA.

That song came about when I first moved back to Kansas from LA. I bought this house and I was decorating it. I totally made it look just like a California house and I had a friend comment, ‘Oh, you can’t decorate your house like this. You moved out of California, you got to decorate it with something different.’ It was all agave plants and cacti. It looked like I was trying to live in Joshua Tree or something. So, my buddy gave it that name and some creative part of me really ran with that. I really liked the idea of being in rural Kansas having a hotel that is Los Angeles themed. […] I think of a hotel as a brain. It’s got all these brains within it and there are so many stories to this one building. I’m actually working on a short novella about that — the song but a longform of that song.

Driving through Kansas, it’s just so flat and so boring. There are a couple of rest stops that have palm trees. They try to make it seem like a tropical resort. And there’s also this big billboard that’s in Manhattan, Kansas. It says, ‘We have flights to Los Angeles!’ It’s a big picture of LA, but it’s out in this ugly, barren place. I just love the juxtaposition of someone in the Midwest really romanticizing a place like LA, but perhaps never having been there.

Speaking about your song “Jamie,” it deals a lot with death and the afterlife — death of friends, death of musicians that you really idolized. And it seems like it’s your way of paying homage to those talented musicians. You write about both being sad and angry about death, but also acknowledge that that’s not always the best response — there’s even a sense of hopefulness.

Jamie’s a really good friend of mine and one of my best friends. When I was 20 and he passed away and his death made a very big impression on me. Up until that point, I’d never really lost someone close to me. It just changed my outlook on everything. Jamie has been a constant muse, probably once on every record I mention him or something that he inspired in some way. When I wrote that song, it’d been around 10 years since he had died. So in my own mind, he’d become this mythological figure in my life. He’d inspired so much and I feel like I was able to carry on and do all these things he never got to do, but I got to do them because of him. I wanted to finally give him a name as this person who had inspired stuff but whom I’d never explicitly named. It felt very personal when I was writing it into my 4-track and it was kind of like, ‘Oh, I’ll never release this — this is just too personal, it’s too explicit.’

But then, when I was sitting with a collection of songs, I thought it was good to put his name out there like this. And also the song mentions my friend Desiree, who passed away and who I wasn’t that close with at all. But she’s someone who I knew in passing and who was this popular person in Los Angeles when I was living there. She was a surfer and she died surfing. They were both two people who, when they died, I wasn’t able to go to their funerals. I chose not to go to their funerals because I had a tour plan and it was a kinda crazy thing you deal with as a touring musician. You end up missing a lot of funerals, weddings, and a lot of big life moments for a lot of people. Both of them were such influential people to the people around them and had such big personalities that both of their funerals, having not been there, sort of exist like these big parades in my mind.

You talk about the fire of one’s life “continuing to billow” after it goes out, does that relate back to your song ‘Campfire’ as well?

Yeah, absolutely. That’s the song, which I think about those other people. I never really made fires, but when I moved back here, I have a fire pit in my backyard. I was making a lot of fires in the winter. I was always blown away by how long it takes to put out a fire. You put it out, but it’ll keep smoking and you’ll think it’s out. Then you’ll come back there’s still some wood burning. I would look out my window and be like, ‘The fire is still burning, I don’t know how to put this thing out.’ But I like that as a metaphor for someone’s life — the embers burn on. People, especially those who leave us with music or arts, they really make an impression long after they’re gone.

Sundowner is out now via Dead Oceans. Get it here.

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Finneas Details His Complex Relationship With The Internet On His Electric ‘Can’t Wait To Be Dead’

Musician and producer Finneas gained recognition with a handful of Grammys for his work on his sister Billie Eilish’s debut When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go, but he also has an impressive catalog of his own. The singer recently released the powerful ballad “What They’ll Say About Us” and now, Finneas returns with an electric reflection on internet culture.

Finneas’ “Can’t Wait To Be Dead” opens with a folky acoustic guitar and the singer’s gentle musings before a driving beat takes over. “Somebody’s callin’ you out for somеthin’ you never said / Kinda can’t wait to be dead / Somebody’s wasting my time / F*ck your Confederate flag, you’ve got no reason to brag,” he sings.

Speaking about the single in a statement, the musician explained his inspiration comes from his complicated relationship with the internet: “I’m happy for this song to mean anything to anyone who listens to it, but, to me, it’s a song about my relationship with the internet. Especially in an election year. Especially during a pandemic. Sometimes, the internet makes me laugh, sometimes it makes me cry, sometimes it makes me hopeful. But sometimes, it really makes me wanna be dead.”

Ahead of releasing “Can’t Wait To Be Dead,” the singer hopped on a number of projects with other big-name stars. Most recently, Finneas worked with Demi Lovato on her politically-charged anthem “Commander In Chief.”

Listen to Finneas’ “Can’t Wait To Be Dead” above.

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Michael Keaton Doesn’t Hesitate To Name The Best Batman Ever (But He Can’t Talk About ‘The Flash’ Yet)

Michael Keaton dropped by Jimmy Kimmel Live last night where the late night host, who’s a big time comic book lover, couldn’t resist asking about Batman. Back in June, reports started coming out that Keaton is in talks to return as the Caped Crusader in the The Flash movie that’s now being directed by Andy Muschietti. Kimmel asked Keaton point blank if he can confirm the reports, and the two-time Dark Knight offered a fuzzy answer that’s not exactly a yes, but it isn’t a no.

“I can’t confirm anything,” Keaton responded. “We’re having discussions, as they say. We’re talking about it. We’ll see if it happens.”

However, while Keaton wouldn’t reveal any secrets about The Flash, including his own involvement, he was game for Kimmel’s next question: Who is the best Batman? “Me,” Keaton answered around the 4:00 minute mark without even hesitating.

Keaton’s reluctance to confirm his casting in The Flash is most likely the result of the studio playing things close to the vest as is standard with most comic book movies. That said, fans who have been waiting for a solo film starring Ezra Miller are aware that The Flash has gone through a revolving door of writers and directors, so some cause for alarm is warranted. That said, Warner Bros. seems much more confident this time around. The Flash was featured prominently during this summer’s DC Fandome event, and Ben Affleck has reportedly been convinced to come back for one last ride as Batman.

Interestingly, Kimmel mentioned Affleck also appearing in The Flash, and Keaton didn’t correct him. He nodded his head, and then cracked a joke that “all 127 Batman” are in the movie, which suggests that Keaton is well aware of the plans to feature multiple Batmen from different realities in the solo flick.

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HER Stages A Live Performance In Her Intimate ‘Damages’ Video

Ever since she first rose to prominence in 2017, HER has displayed an affinity for stripped-down, yet mysterious music videos, hiding her eyes behind dark shades and using moody, low lighting to almost obscure her identity as she bared her soul in song. However, over the past year, she’s begun to change that tendency, partly out of necessity, as she opened up with her Girls With Guitars live streams and had to rely more on social content to share her artistry as a result of the pandemic.

She continues that evolution in her new video for “Damage,” swapping out her usual shades for more straightforward specs and staging a live performance in what appears to be a hotel lobby with her band. The effect is a different kind of intimacy and a greater display of her confidence, which she built up with a string of performances for shows like The Grammys, The Roots Picnic, and The Tonight Show.

The next place she’ll demonstrate her newfound swagger is the Saturday Night Live stage, as she’s billed as musical performer for an episode hosted by Adele. While it’s been about a year since the release of her most recent album, I Used to Know Her, she’s got plenty of new music to choose from for the performance after releasing singles “Comfortable,” “Damage,” and “I Can’t Breathe” this year.

Watch the video for “Damage” above.

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‘Borat 2’ Is Still Funny, But The Shock Of Open Racism In America Has Worn Off

At first, it almost feels like a parody to watch Borat 2 (or, if we are doing the actual full title, Borat Subsequent Moviefilm: Delivery of Prodigious Bribe to American Regime for Make Benefit Once Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan). It’s hard to believe we’ve been living through 14 years of “my wife” impressions, but the first 2006 film became such a cultural moment that it eventually became “cool” again to quote the movie as irony. It’s like if Wayne’s World 3 happened today, and we were watching Mike Myers on screen saying “…not” again. It’s somehow both cringy and kind-of exciting.

Borat 2 the first movie of our new era I truly would have liked to watch in a theater. (There’s a chance I’ve said this before. But if I did, I’m changing my answer to Borat 2.) Do you remember watching Borat in theaters? It was a thing. It’s up there in the top two or three movies of “hardest I’ve ever laughed in a movie theater,” and an experience that could never have been recreated at home. The crowd I saw it with in 2006 was euphoric. Now, flash forward to 2020, and I watched the sequel by myself, in bed, on a laptop. (One disclaimer: to be fair, over the last few months, I’ve watched very few movies on a laptop. I’ve done a good job of feeding pretty much everything to a fairly large screen. But I sprained my ankle pretty bad over the weekend, and it just seemed easier this way because I didn’t want to get up. The only reason I bring any of this up is, of course, a plea for cheap sympathy. But also, even under these conditions, I still laughed a lot, which is pretty remarkable. This only made me miss seeing this in a theater even more.)

The screener came enclosed with instructions not to reveal any of the real-life people who Borat (Sacha Baron Cohen) and his daughter, Tutar (Maria Bakalova), interact with during the film when it comes to Amazon Prime (on Oct. 23). And I’ll try to adhere to these rules because part of the “fun” of this movie are these interactions. But, of course, there’s one former mayor who “spoiled” his role in the film months ago. And his actions that we see here don’t quite match up with his assertion that he figured out he was being tricked and got out of there right away. It’s… a little more (okay, a lot more) nefarious than that.

Like the last film, there’s a “plot,” which was weird then and is weird now. This time, Borat returns to the United States from Kazakhstan (where he’s lived in exile after shaming his country with the first film) in an effort to deliver his daughter as a gift to Mike Pence, which would bring honor back to Kazakhstan. So, Borat and Tutar do what they do and mingle with a lot of people and, like in the first film, a bunch of pretty horrific things happen.

But there’s a difference this time. In 2006, Borat seemed shocking because we weren’t used to people being so open about their racism and prejudices. Whether or not it was actually the case then, it at least seemed a bit more fringe. It’s true that a lot of us were more naïve then and probably had greater confidence in our fellow human being to be “a good person,” but we certainly weren’t as accustomed to people coming out and saying these things on camera. Today, would it surprise you that Borat and his daughter can walk into a bakery and get a cake that reads, “Jews will not replace us,” with some smiley faces added? I’m guessing this won’t surprise you anymore. But the best part from this exchange comes when Tutar accidentally eats a small decorative plastic baby atop a cupcake, which leads the pair to a southern “woman’s health center” in an effort to “remove the baby.”

Honestly, I get the impression that Cohen also knows just getting people to say racist things really isn’t going to be that big of a shocking turn of events anymore. And the movie is at its best when it leans into current events, like Borat spending some time with a couple of QAnon believers. Or if they aren’t true believers, they at least are open to the fact that Hillary Clinton created the coronavirus and drinks the adrenaline-spiked blood of children for energy. This seems to be how most interviews with QAnon believers go: that they maybe don’t believe all of it, but who’s to say? (Also, I personally had never heard the “adrenaline” part of this conspiracy theory before now. That it’s the adrenaline that’s the key? Is it weird that this makes more sense now? Not in a, “maybe it’s true,” way, but more in a logistical, “Well, at least I can see why people might think people drink blood if they thought it gave them some pep,” way.)

But, of course, the real “get” here is the aforementioned former mayor that I’m not supposed to talk about. I’ve seen a lot of rumors floating around about what happens and.. some of them are pretty off-base. But the reality is that it’s still pretty gross what happens. And the craziest thing is that we’ve all become so desensitized to the things these people do, my initial reaction was “that tracks” more than pure disgust. But when you see this and really think about what was about to happen? Yikes.

And that’s the thing about Borat 2, it’s not shocking anymore. Because it certainly should be. There’s certainly a lot of hilarious things that happen, like the look on a computer store owner’s face when Borat learns he can look up porn on his new phone that he’s testing and heads to the bathroom, where his search results are still being displayed over the large monitor on the sales floor. But over the last 14 years, things have drastically changed enough where “shocking” is no longer a relevant emotion to these movies. But that’s where we’re at: where the reaction to a sequel to Borat is more, “yeah, that seems about right,” than either disbelief or disgust… which, when thought about, is maybe the most shocking thing of all.

You can contact Mike Ryan directly on Twitter.

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Blackpink Take Over US TV With Appearances On ‘Jimmy Kimmel Live!’ And ‘Good Morning America’

Blackpink is one of the most esteemed groups in all of K-pop, which is why they’ve been on TV a lot over the past 24 hours: They were on Jimmy Kimmel Live! last night, then they stopped by Good Morning America earlier today.

On Kimmel, they performed “Lovesick Girls” on a colorful gas station-themed set and spoke with the host in an interview segment. Remotely from South Korea, they explained the meaning of their band name for Kimmel, with Rosé saying, “We kind of felt like those two colors represented us the most because we’re very girly, but at the same time, we’re very savage, too.” Jisoo, whose English isn’t as strong as those of her bandmates, revealed her favorite English phrase is, “That’s a pity.”

Then they made an appearance on GMA this morning. They also performed “Lovesick Girls,” although this rendition of it was set up to look like more of a concert environment. They chatted with Michael Strahan, and told the host they are surprised by the level of success they’ve achieved. They also explained why their new album is called simply The Album, saying, “We thought that our fans have been waiting for Blackpink’s album for such a long time that there was nothing better than to just name our album, Blackpink: The Album.”

Check out clips from the group’s TV appearances above.

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50 Cent Says He’s Going To Leave The US If Trump Loses The Election

Joe Biden shared his proposed tax plan this week. The candidate plans to raise taxes only on citizens making over $400,000 while cutting taxes for everyone making less than that — and 50 Cent isn’t happy. After finding out that the wealthiest people living in California, New York, and New Jersey could see up to 62% of their income taxed before deductions, credits, offsets, and loopholes under Biden’s plan, the rapper has decided to leave the US if the candidate wins the election.

50 shared his endorsement of Trump on Monday, saying he’s voting for the incumbent even if “doesn’t like black people.” Taking things one step further Tuesday, the rapper said he’s ready to pack up and move out of the US entirely if Trump loses his bid for a second term.

Announcing his plan on social media, 50 wrote: “explain 62% to me. I’m packing my bags everybody that has money is gonna move.”

While many of 50’s listeners have expressed their disappointment in his Trump endorsement, including his ex-girlfriend Chelsea Handler, Fox News host Tomi Lahren is welcoming the rapper to the Republican Party with open arms. After 50 said he would be voting for Trump, Lahren praise the rapper for joining her on the “Trump Train.”

Check out 50’s posts above.

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Pepsi Reveals A Previously Unreleased Biggie Freestyle For A New Ad

Earlier this year, The Notorious B.I.G., Biggie Smalls, was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, becoming just the seventh hip-hop artist ever to do so. While the pandemic may have stifled that news somewhat thanks to the official induction ceremony getting postponed as a safety precaution, Biggie’s accomplishment is being celebrated in other ways. In May, Statik Selektah shared an “unreleased” Biggie verse on Instagram, while the rapper’s “King Of New York” crown was auctioned off for close to a whopping half-a-million dollars.

Today, another piece of Biggie pop culture ephemera gets immortalized as Pepsi unveils its new ad featuring a rare, in-studio freestyle from 1997, set to colorful animation celebrating the rapper’s hometown. As Biggie raps about the virtues of Pepsi — clearly one of his favorite soft drinks, judging from the lyrics — a boombox blasts his words out into the New York streets as locals go about their day-to-day interactions, grabbing egg sandwiches from the bodega and dancing on the corner.

Pepsi’s bond with hip-hop is strong, as the brand continues to employ rappers as its spokespeople. Cardi B has appeared in multiple ads for the brand, while Missy Elliott remixed The Rolling Stones’ “Paint It Black” for their 2020 Super Bowl ad. Biggie’s legacy is in good hands, especially since he rapped about how much he liked it long before rappers were receiving massive checks for doing so.

Watch Pepsi’s new ad above.

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Matthew McConaughey Is, Shockingly, Not Hollywood’s Most Shirtless Actor

Matthew McConaughey is shirtless. A lot. Both in real life (like when he’s getting arrested while playing the bongos… naked) and in his movies. Fool’s Gold: shirtless. The Beach Bum: shirtless, obviously. Serenity: shirtless. Failure to Launch: shirtless. How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days: more like how to lose a shirt in 10 seconds. Magic Mike: I mean…

Point is, it’s weird seeing McConaughey wear a shirt, so I was surprised to discover that he’s not Hollywood’s most shirtless actor. He’s not even Hollywood’s second most shirtless actor. The first-time author is in third place. Bingo Sites, via CinemaBlend, crunched the numbers and discovered that “Daniel Craig nabs the crown as the most shirtless actor: the scenes in which he appears shirtless are equivalent to 1,278 seconds (or 21 minutes).” Behind him is Sylvester Stallone with 1,117 seconds, which feels like cheating because he’s Rocky and boxers are often shirtless (that’s like saying Michael Phelps is the most shirtless athlete), followed by McConaughey with 1,026 seconds. James Bond being Extremely Shirtless is not shocking, but more than this guy? Gasp.

Here’s the complete top 10.

10. Zac Efron (694 seconds)
9. Leonardo DiCaprio (724)
8. Colin Farrell (730)
7. Charlie Hunnam (799)
6. Christian Bale (833)
5. Michael Fassbender (853)
4. Jake Gyllenhaal (913)
3. Matthew McConaughey (1,026)
2. Sylvester Stallone (1,117)
1. Daniel Craig (1,278)

Congrats to hunks everywhere. As for nude scenes, Eva Green is number one by far (she’s at 1,730 seconds, while Helen Mirren ranks second with 1,496 seconds; Ewan McGregor is the most in-the-buff male with 1,103 seconds), while “women spent an average of 10 seconds of scene time per hour in the nude, while men bared some or all of their bodies for just 5.9 seconds per hour,” which is not surprising. Between this important intelligence, and the Ringer learning that Keanu Reeves is at the top of the Hollywood Sex Symbol Leaderboard, we’re living in the golden age of Horny Data.

(Via Bingo Sites and CinemaBlend)

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Chet ‘JR’ White Of Girls Has Died At 40

Chet “JR” White, who was best known half of the indie band Girls and as a producer, has died at 40 years old. A representative of True Panther, the label that released Girls’ music, confirmed the news to Pitchfork. Additionally, Stereogum reports that according to True Panther founder Dean Bein, White died on Sunday at his family’s Santa Cruz home after his heart stopped during the night. No other details are publicly known as of press time.

Christopher David Owens, White’s Girls bandmate, mourned the loss, tweeting, “I hope you feel nothing but peace now my brother. I love you, and thank you for believing in me, and for what you brought to the table. Always and Forever, and I’ll always be proud of you… I’ll always remember you protecting Liza, Patrick, myself and Beta from the jerks.”

White and Owens formed Girls in 2007, and before disbanding in 2012, the group released three albums: Album (in 2009), Broken Dreams Club (2010), and Father, Son, Holy Ghost (2011). All three releases earned critical acclaim. Following Girls, White was respected as a producer and worked on the 2013 Cass McCombs album Big Wheel And Others and the 2015 Tobias Jesso, Jr. album Goon. He also recorded material with Diiv in 2013 that hasn’t been released.

In a 2013 Paste interview (with Uproxx’s own Philip Cosores), White discussed his love of producing, saying, “I do like making music, but at some point I realized that I like producing better. I really do like to help people realize their music as they imagine it, or being another set of ears to help them realize something that they haven’t thought about. It’s a really interesting way to be a part of music and art, almost the sneaky, backdoor way of being in a band.”