Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Ratboys Put An Indie Pop Spin On Kacey Musgraves’ ‘Love Is A Wild Thing’ For A New Compilation

Ratboys, a Chicago-based rock band, has dropped a new cover of Kacey Musgraves‘ 2018 song, “Love Is A Wild Thing.” While the crossover might seem unexpected, their version appears as part of a compilation tribute to the country star’s Golden Hour album. With each artist tackling a different track, the Bandcamp exclusive benefits The Brigid Alliance, an organization that helps support people with access to abortions.

Their spin on “Love Is A Wild Thing” opts for an indie-electronic instrumental, as lead singer and bassist Julia Steiner performs Musgraves’ lines over a fuzzy guitar. It feels just as enticing as the original.

“thrilled to share a dancey cover of “Love Is A Wild Thing” for this dope comp! benefiting an important cause. check it out! happy bandcamp friday!” the band posted on Twitter.

Other acts on the tribute compilation include Pronoun (“High Horse”), Death Party (“Slow Burn”), Jetty Bones (“Velvet Elvis”), Future Teens (“Rainbow”), and many more. “this year is a tribute to the one and only @KaceyMusgraves record ‘Golden Hour’ and everyone crushed it,” Future Teens posted. “check it out, share, & donate if u can. all proceeds go to @BrigidAlliance who support ppl across the US to access abortion care.”

Listen to Ratboys’ cover of Kacey Musgraves’ “Love Is A Wild Thing” here.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

The Lakers Held ‘Internal Discussions’ About Trading For DeMar DeRozan And Nikola Vucevic ‘Like Any Responsible Team Would’

The Los Angeles Lakers find themselves at the center of a new trade rumor seemingly every day. It comes with the territory of being both the Lakers and a team that has LeBron James on it, but despite the fact that they’ve been mentioned as a potential landing spot for a number of players dating back to this offseason, L.A. has not pulled the trigger on a major move to overhaul its roster.

The latest example of this came on the most recent episode of The Lowe Post, where ESPN’s Zach Lowe mentioned that a popular trade going around the Twitterverse involves the Lakers sending Russell Westbrook to the Chicago Bulls, along with the team’s 2027 and 2029 first-round NBA Draft picks, for DeMar DeRozan and Nikola Vucevic. As Lowe said, the Laker front office has discussed this, although he made clear that this is something “any responsible team” has to do.

“I can tell you 100 percent for sure the Lakers have had internal discussions about that very possibility (trading for DeRozan and Vučević) if it would ever come up,” Lowe said, per Rob Schaefer of NBC Sports Chicago. “Not that they (the Lakers) would do it, let me be clear. Just, you look around the league, like any responsible team would.”

It is worth mentioning that the Lakers’ decision to acquire Westbrook last offseason came at the expense of DeRozan, who has said that he was led to believe he was on his way to Los Angeles in the summer of 2021 before the team opted to pull off a trade for Westbrook.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Paramore Finally Shared Their Spotify Wrapped Message After A Fan Joked About Them Having Technical Issues

Following the release of Spotify’s annual Wrapped promotion, some music lovers found special surprises from their top musicians this year. If an artist was in your Top 5 and they recorded a special message for listeners, Spotify users could view exclusive videos from Taylor Swift and Mitski to Niall Horan and Blackpink in the app. However, some Paramore fans were shocked to find out that they didn’t receive any videos from the band… at first.

One fan joked that they didn’t submit a video due to a running joke about ongoing technical difficulties. “paramore didn’t submit a spotify video for their top fans this year because they couldn’t figure out how to unmute themselves,” the viral post read.

Shortly after, Paramore must’ve caught wind of the post, as they eventually quoted with their exclusive Spotify video message. And it wasn’t on mute.

“Thanks so much for listening to our music, and being one of our top listeners this year,” the band said.

“So far, we’ve had a really good year releasing some new music, getting back on the road, and we cannot wait for you to hear our new album, This Is Why next year,” Hayley Williams added.

“On that note, have a very happy new year,” the video ends.

As it turns out, there was a happy ending for Paramore lovers after all.

Paramore is a Warner Music artist. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Taylor Swift Fans Are Filing A Lawsuit Against Ticketmaster Over The Disastrous ‘Eras’ Tour Presale

The Swifties are out for blood. According to TMZ, fans of Taylor Swift have filed a lawsuit against Ticketmaster following the infamous presale for Swift’s “Eras” tour that took place last month.

Documents obtained by TMZ see fans alleging that Ticketmaster was to send “verified” fans of Taylor Swift a code on Nov. 14, ahead of the presale date. The code would allow them access to the presale event, however, many fans allege that several of them didn’t get a code, or were sent codes that did not work.

The Swifties areas suing for “intentional deception,” and are also accusing Ticketmaster of allowing “scalpers” access to the presale. They also are suing LA County, where Ticketmaster’s parent company Live Nation is headquartered, alleging fraud, price fixing and antitrust violations. They plan to hit the company with a civil fine of $2500 per violation.

At the time of writing, Swift has not commented on the lawsuit, however, she has previously expressed her chagrin toward Ticketmaster and the events of the presale.

“It’s truly amazing that 2.4 million people got tickets,” Swift said in an Instagram story last month, “but it really pisses me off that a lot of them feel like they went through several bear attacks to get them.”

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

The Mavericks’ Offense Needs To Be More Than A One-Man Show

On Thursday, the eyes of the NBA migrated toward Little Caesars Arena for a duel between the Dallas Mavericks and Detroit Pistons, the lone game of the night. Despite Cade Cunningham’s continued absence, Detroit snagged its sixth win of the season, a 131-125 victory, behind Bojan Bogdanovic’s 30 points and Killian Hayes’ crunch-time scoring flurry.

While Bogdanovic’s season-long torrid shooting and Hayes’ ascendant improvements dominated storylines for the winning side, I found myself fixated on Dallas, which has now lost five of six and is 11th in the Western Conference at 10-11. Six months ago, the Mavs won 52 games, earned the No. 4 seed, and were Western Conference Finalists to mark their most successful season since the 2011 title. Now, they’re closer to the 13th seed than they are a top-4 seed.

Jalen Brunson’s exit is assuredly hurting this team. He’s a tremendous player whose secondary creation was a synergistic complement alongside the greatness of Luka Doncic. But the Mavericks did bring in Christian Wood, a different player off to his own very good start, albeit one who is not on Brunson’s level of talent or fit. The rest of the rotation, save for Tim Hardaway Jr.’s return, is quite similar — eight of the top-10 minutes-getters are the same.

The tradeoff from Brunson to Wood should not be the difference between a top-4 finish and missing the postseason altogether. This is a playoff-caliber team. It’s not a title contender, yet it’s led by a superstar and flanked by quality, albeit flawed, players. Dallas should not be on pace for 39 wins.

Although last year’s defensive resurgence garnered much of the acclaim (eighth in defensive rating, 21st the season prior), the Mavericks plied their trade on offense following the Kristaps Porzigins-Spencer Dinwiddie deal. Before that move, they were 17th in offense and sixth in defense en route to a 33-24 record. Afterward, they were fifth in offense, 16th in defense, and went 19-6.

Winning 10 of 11 games in clutch time, due to an improved roster and some shooting luck, aided those post-trade numbers. However, the point remained: Porzingis’ departure signaled an offense-first style.

That’s the case again in 2022-23. Dallas is 10th in offensive rating and 15th in defensive rating. The issue: Doncic is at the height of his regular-season powers and a legitimate MVP contender. He’s averaging a league-leading 33.6 points (60.6 percent true shooting), 8.7 rebounds, 8.7 assists, and 1.9 steals per game. His plus-8.0 Estimated Plus-Minus is a career-high. If the Mavericks want to maximize his splendid season, the offense can’t hover a couple ticks above pedestrian. That’s especially the case if Wood and Dinwiddie, a pair of tenuous defenders, are going to factor so prominently into the plans.

There are a slew of factors responsible for this development, Doncic’s approach included (this is, to be clear, a minor part). Chief among them is the bland scheme. The overwhelming basis of Dallas’ offense is to yield mismatches for Doncic, Wood, and Dinwiddie, all of whom are fit to thrive in these scenarios.

So much of the action is window dressing designed to provide that trio an advantageous matchup. Rarely is the intention for Xs and Os to actually scheme an advantage by generating space, either for drives or open jumpers. Everyone aside from Doncic, Wood, and Dinwiddie are generally treated as a conduit to help enact that mismatch rather than being considered both a conduit and option if an advantage were to arise.

They’re quite effective with this style, too. The Mavericks rank first in isolation frequency (14.2 percent) and second in points per possession (1.07). At 9.9 percent, the Philadelphia 76ers are second in isolation frequency. Dallas is in a class of its own with regard to volume here.

Beyond Doncic, the duo of Wood and Dinwiddie are producing gaudy numbers. Wood is tallying 16.8 points and 7.7 rebounds on 63.8 percent true shooting (.556/.406/.671 split). Dinwiddie is notching 16.2 points and 4.9 assists per game on 59.8 percent true shooting (.472/.397/.804 split).

Problems arise when these mismatches prove difficult to find. Possessions stall. The Mavericks are 30th in pace. Doncic’s methodical ethos spearheads this. They take so long to organize the offense. That itself is not cumbersome, it’s that what they take so long to organize is often myopic. There aren’t any counters. If Plan A collapses, there is no Plan B, nor do they have time to even consider a Plan B if it existed.

Watching the glacial nature of their one-trick offense versus the jet-engine, multifaceted Sacramento Kings’ attack is enough contrast to induce whiplash. The Kings flow into their offense immediately and holster read after read. Their personnel lets them accomplish this, but they also emphasize it to widen the margin for error. Dallas exacerbates its own shortcomings and burrows itself into a narrow avenue for success. When mismatch-hunting unravels, their possessions can end like these disappointing ones.

Doncic, Wood, and Dinwiddie’s individual scoring numbers aren’t hurt by those instances. The collective offense does take a hit, though, and that dichotomy provides a glimpse into the flaws of the scheme. It’s overly reliant on that trio and reduces everyone else to onlooker, not confident in their creation aptitude until the initial read spirals and they’re forced into service. Nothing has been done to ease their already arduous position or avoid them from being overextended.

Similarly, the offense has routinely been neutralized when defenses trap or double-team Doncic. According to Second Spectrum, the Mavericks are scoring 0.988 points per possession (50th percentile) when opponents blitz pick-and-rolls. This tactic reveals various limitations. Among them is Doncic’s inactivity after he passes out of a trap, as he’s prone to removing himself entirely from the play and witnessing things unfold rather than providing a lifeline.

His supporting cast is full of shaky ball-handlers, poor passers, and questionable decision-makers who can be flustered by prompt, lively rotations. They struggle to parlay his gravity into prosperous opportunities. His apathy exacerbates the challenges, even if he’s not the primary culprit.

He’s a dazzling offensive talent whose shot-making and facilitating will flood teams. Coaxing plays elsewhere is a natural solution made easier by Dallas’ ineffectual responses to it. The record-scratches, hesitancy, and delayed passing reads burst onto center stage when Doncic isn’t directing the events. Really, the collective passing of this roster beyond Doncic, not solely in scramble situations, contributes to their underwhelming offensive rating.

Throughout much of Thursday’s first half against Detroit, the Mavericks dialed up more set plays than I can recall at any other stretch this season (my viewing sample, of course, is not foolproof). They posted an offensive rating of 122.4 over that span. The actions weren’t complex, largely centered on Motion Strong, as well as some Horns pick-and-roll, Spain pick-and-roll, and 77 Exit.

Complexity isn’t required. The salient angle here is diversifying the deployment of everyone around Doncic and the utilization of his ball-dominance. Advantages were forged that weren’t merely “here’s a switch for you, go rock out.”

Detroit’s 29th-ranked defense isn’t the proper litmus test, nor is a half of 63.2 percent true shooting. But possessions in which Doncic sets others up without the defense keying entirely on him after he works his way into a compromising place on the floor are a welcomed change. There’s notable offensive talent on the roster around him, it’s just geared toward play-finishing rather than secondary creation like it was when Brunson co-starred last season.

Aside from the heightened post-up volume, the schemes hardly seem to amplify Doncic’s talents. Instead, they lean on his greatness to prop up everything. His lack of off-ball proficiency complicates matters, though much less than the dull playcalling. He’s not a beneficiary of his context when making him one shouldn’t be particularly hard.

A career-high 90 percent of his baskets are unassisted this year, per Cleaning The Glass. He leads the NBA in usage rate (42.3 percent). Giannis Antetokounmpo (39.7 percent) is in second, 2.6 percentage points below him. Dallas is 0-6 when he scores fewer than 32 points.

None of this feels sustainable. Doncic’s fourth-quarter true shooting is 48.9 percent this season. His final frame struggles are not exclusive to 2022-23. This time, though, they underscore the taxing method of his game, some of which is self-inflicted, while further emphasizing the burdensome scheme dragging him down.

The Mavericks are yet to build upon the delight of last season. It may never materialize in 2022-23. The roster is worse and deep playoff runs are tough, almost always borne in part because of fortuitous matchups or circumstances. Regardless, something needs to change offensively, both for Doncic’s sake and the aspirations of the team. Luka Magic™ alone isn’t going to get them there. They, and he, must help one another.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Future Will Hold ‘One Big Party’ In Atlanta To Kick Off 2023 And He’s Bringing Some Friends Along

Future is bringing his friends along for a newly-announced Atlanta show, which will serve as the second date of his One Big Party tour. The rapper’s concert is being held at State Farm Arena on January 14. While the lineup hasn’t been revealed, it’s likely that Future‘s roster of surprise guests on the road won’t disappoint fans. He might also pull from his record label, which houses other musicians like Doe Boy, Herion Young, Test, Lil Wookie, and many more.

In addition to Atlanta, Future kicks off the One Big Party in Charlotte, before heading to Chicago, Washington D.C., Boston, and Detroit. He will also play at Rolling Loud Festival next March.

“I don’t feel like nobody needs to be like me… exactly how I am. I only can do this,” Future shared in a recent Billboard cover story. “I’m the only one that can do this sh*t, you know what I’m saying? That’s from my personal life to musically. I’m really one of none. I can live like this. People accept that because it’s just me.”

Tickets for the Atlanta show go on sale on January 7 at 10 a.m. EST. More information on the concert is available here.

Continue scrolling for some fan reactions about Future’s concert announcement.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Russell Westbrook Counted Down While Giannis Antetokounmpo Shot A Free Throw

The Los Angeles Lakers are in Milwaukee to take on the Bucks on Friday night. At one point during their game, Russell Westbrook did an admirable impersonation of Brooklyn Nets fans during the 2021 NBA playoffs, as he very loudly tried to count up to 10 while Giannis Antetokounmpo shot a free throw.

You might recall that Nets fans made a huge deal out of how long it takes Antetokounmpo to shoot from the charity stripe, as the entire Barclays Center would get into it in an effort to get into the multi-time league MVP’s head. Well, Westbrook wasn’t exactly trying to do that — Antetokounmpo shot a free throw and missed, but the referee let him shoot it again because Westbrook quickly stood up.

This did not sit well with Westbrook, who then started making a big deal out of how long it takes Antetokounmpo to shoot. His error appears to be that he decided to take a “1,001, 1,002…” approach instead of just counting, because Antetokounmpo was able to get his shot up right as Westbrook finished saying “1,008.”

This ultimately ended up being nothing more than a pretty funny moment involving Russell Westbrook, but I suppose it is also a lesson to opposing fans, who now know that Antetokounmpo gets his free throws off more quickly than he used to.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Jacob deGrom Will Leave The Mets And Join The Rangers On A 5-Year, $185 Million Contract

The top free agent pitcher in all of Major League Baseball is changing teams. According to Jeff Passan of ESPN, former New York Mets starter Jacob deGrom will leave the only team for which he has played during his professional career and head to the American League, where he will become the ace for the Texas Rangers.

Passan noted that deGrom’s deal is a guaranteed five years and $185 million, a hefty price tag but one that is justified because of how good deGrom has been over his career. It has the potential to add an additional year, which would bring the total value of the contract to $222 million, and includes a no-trade clause for the 34-year-old righty.

The Rangers confirmed the transaction in a press release on the club’s PR Twitter account, but did not include the financials of the deal.

While deGrom has been hit with the injury bug over the years, when he has been able to pitch and is on his game, he is one of baseball’s most unhittable arms. He is a two-time Cy Young Award winner and a four-time All-Star, and over nine years with the Mets, deGrom registered an 82-57 record with a 2.52 ERA, a 0.998 WHIP, and 1,607 strikeouts in 1326.0 innings of work.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Drakeo The Ruler’s Posthumous Video For ‘Diddy Bop’ Has Been Revealed

A new Drakeo The Ruler video has been released, on what would’ve been his 29th birthday (December 1), and nearly a year after his death. In the video for “Diddy Bop, ” Drakeo and his crew are seen posted up, on guard for any opps that may come their way.

“Hop out on the opp out the Coupе, I served with him a chop / Know no he was no longеr, when I seen his nerves hangin’ out /Half a Hundiddy in the chop, it’s a Minnie Mouse / Don’t wanna strip, don’t wanna dance, f*ck it, Diddy Bop,” raps Drakeo on the song’s chorus.

The song features Drakeo’s brother and longtime collaborator Ralfy The Plug, and comes from their joint project, A Cold Day In Hell.

On his verse, Ralfy warns his opposition that if they’re not careful, consequences could be dire.

Upon the video’s release, Ralfy took to Instagram to honor Drakeo, saying, “Happy birthday to the best rapper to ever touch the mic we know the truth, the truth hurt, ain’t that the truth almost been a whole year since you been gone and still got this sh*t on lock…they still don’t want to give you your flowers but the truth is undisputed.”

You can watch the video above.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

An Atlantic City Chocolate Shop Made $30,000 With A ‘Willy Wonka’ Contest For Taylor Swift Tickets

Bar 32, a chocolate shop located in New Jersey’s Atlantic City, auctioned off 3,000 chocolate bars for $10 this week. Selling out by Wednesday night, they raised $30,000. And, in just one of the bars, there is a Willy Wonka style winner of two tickets to Taylor Swift’s The Eras Tour. Specifically, Swift’s show at Philly’s Lincoln Financial Field on May 13, 2023.

The catch is that fans won’t know if they won right away. The chocolate bars allegedly all contain a number and the company will draw the winner on Christmas Day. Purchases were only limited to… 50 bars per person. Meaning, that there are likely some Swifties out there who spent $500 on chocolate bars and still might not even get tickets.

Another caveat is the unclear idea of just where the seats would be. Floor? Sign me up. Nosebleeds? Doesn’t seem as worth it. Be careful guys, it’s brutal out here.

“We’ve always wanted to incorporate a ‘golden ticket’ within our chocolate bar and shop,” Bar 32 assistant chocolate maker Katie Callazzo said to The Philadelphia Inquirer. “We are overwhelmed by how much support we have gotten with our contest.”

The article notes that Bar 32 has no plans for a restock, but fans can stay tuned for a potential Christmas miracle in the form of a future Instagram live. And, considering resale for two seats at Swift’s show in Philly are currently listed for $810 each at the lowest on Stubhub ($2,054 with estimated fees), the math would make a profit of approximately $27,946 from the chocolate shop contest.

Just imagine, if Swifties banded together to buy tickets instead, they would actually have a stronger chance of attending with a decent view.