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Big Sean Is The Pistons’ New Creative Director Of Innovation

As the Pistons look to make the Detroit community a bigger part of their team branding through their D-Up campaign, the team on Wednesday named hip-hop artist and Detroit native Big Sean as its creative director of innovation.

The Pistons said in the announcement that Big Sean will be part of the creative team overseeing team merchandise design and in-game experience for Pistons fans as well as community outreach efforts and social responsibility efforts in the Detroit area.

In addition, the Pistons in-arena intro video will feature Big Sean’s music, and the team’s practice jerseys will be emblazoned with the rapper’s signature “Don Life” logo.

The move comes at a time when NBA teams are increasingly looking outside the world of pro basketball for branding and marketing professionals. The Raptors notably have a partnership with Drake and his OVO line, while Jay-Z at one point was closely attached to the Brooklyn Nets as a minority owner of the franchise.

At the same time, a league like the WNBA, which recently hired Nike’s senior director of concept, Phil Cook, to be its first CMO. The lines between culture, sports, and fashion are increasingly becoming blurred, and the Pistons are betting that Big Sean, especially due to his local ties to Detroit, will be the next successful example.

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Quavo Gifted Saweetie Bentley And It Has A Subtle Nod To Their Infamous DM Conversation

People were impressed when Cardi B celebrated Offset’s birthday by gifting him a $700k Lamborghini. But fellow Migos member Quavo wanted to take things up a notch by giving his significant other a different custom ride. The rapper decided to ring in the holidays by surprising Saweetie with an icy Bentley — and she was speechless.

Quavo surprised Saweetie with a powder blue Bentley convertible with custom-made details. The car’s seats are embroidered with the word “icy” and the car’s exterior is adorned with a snowflake decal, Saweetie’s favorite emoji, and a reference to Quavo’s viral, relationship-starting DM conversation with her.

Saweetie shared the luxury gift in a video posted to her Instagram. After being initially speechless at the gift, Saweetie squealed and said her heart was “beating so fast.”

Saweetie was happy with the gift, to say the least.

Quavo’s gift to Saweetie arrives shortly after the rapper teased Migo’s highly-anticipated Culture III. Speaking about the album’s release date in a recent interview, Quavo said it’s coming “at the top of the year.” He added that Migos decided to wait to drop the LP so that they could be together with fans in person. “I just want to be with the people,” he said. “I want to touch the people and that’s what we gon’ do at the top of the year.”

Some of the artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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Chloe X Halle’s Latest Virtual Performance Has Fans Buzzing

Chloe X Halle had a breakout year thanks to their viral single “Do It” and penchant for turning their backyard into one of music’s hottest stages as live entertainment turned to live streaming in response to the ongoing pandemic. Each of their performances has drawn more attention and discussion to the duo, but their latest has completely upended the discourse about them. Video of the sister act’s appearance on Verizon’s all-female series of virtual concerts prompted a trending topic on Twitter as fans were blown away by their virtuoso vocal display — and Chloe’s exuberant choreography.

Incidentally, the concert footage was initially only available to Verizon Up members, but once enterprising fans began to upload their screen captures, the clips quickly took on a life of their own. However, while much of the discussion was positive, some fans took the opportunity to suggest the sisters go solo, while others shot down their accusations that Halle is “holding Chloe back.”

Meanwhile, other fans were just extremely here for Chloe’s energetic performance, contrasting her super low squats with Halle’s relatively demure posing.

From once being told that their music was “too complex for the average ear” to Chloe X Halle to releasing a fan-and-critics-favorite album that launched them to superstardom, this year has been a good one for the young Beyonce proteges.

See the reactions to their Verizon Up performance above.

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‘Seinfeld’ Fans Are Honoring Jerry Stiller On The First Festivus Since He Passed Away

Today is December 23, which means it’s Finn Wolfhard’s birthday (the most important December birth, imo), as well as the annual airing of grievances known as Festivus.

The Christmas-adjacent holiday was introduced in the Seinfeld season nine episode, “The Strike,” and has since become “the perfect secular theme for an all-inclusive December gathering,” as the New York Times once wrote. In real life, it was created by Seinfeld writer Dan O’Keefe’s father, Daniel, but on the show, it’s Frank Costanza, played by Jerry Stiller, who comes up with the traditions. There’s the pole (it requires no direction because Frank finds tinsel “distracting”), the Feats of Strength (“Until you pin me, George, Festivus is not over”), and the Festivus dinner, where “you gather your family around and tell them all the ways they have disappointed you over the past year.”

There was a lot of disappointment in 2020, including losing Stiller, who passed away in May at 92 years old. On this, the first Festivus without Frank Costanza, Seinfeld fans are paying tribute to the actor who taught us that there’s a “Festivus for the rest of us.”

“It’s a pretty good holiday when you think about it,” “The Strike” co-writer Jeff Schaffer told about Festivus’ legacy. “It’s the perfect antidote to Christmas when you’re supposed to pretend to be nice to everybody, and give them presents. Why not have its evil twin where you can sit around a pole and tell everyone what you don’t like about them?”

For much more on the origin of Festivus, click here.

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An MSNBC Anchor Mopped The Floor With Chris Christie For Attempting To ‘Clean The Trump Stink Off,’ Too Little And Too Late

Chris Christie’s past four years have been quite an adventure, to say the least. He went from a Trump rival in the primaries to a Hostage Face mascot to McDonald’s fetching manservant and, finally, a trusted Trump surrogate for years. Small moments aside, it really wasn’t until Christie caught COVID-19 that he started pushing back at Trump’s policies and admitting that it was mistake to not wear a mask in public. Subsequently, Christie has been very vocal in urging Trump to stop pushing voter-fraud conspiracies and attempting a coup, but one MSNBC anchor isn’t afraid to say that she’s not buying it.

After the 1:10 mark in the above video, Nicolle Wallace starts to call Christie out for not distancing himself from Trump until recently (and while Christie apparently positions himself for a 2024 run). The discussion began with Christie expressing his belief that Trump would leave the White House on January 20 without incident because that’s what’s good for the U.S., and then Wallace got real with Christie, accusing him of simply polishing himself up faster than the rest of the GOP while distancing himself from Trump.

“It is my sense, and I know you said in an interview with Hugh Hewitt, you haven’t ruled out a run in 2024. I don’t remember you coming out and forcefully pushing back against Donald Trump’s comments on the Access Hollywood tape. I didn’t hear you, after he called African nations ‘bleep-hole nations.’ I didn’t hear you distance yourself from this president at any point until the target for his ire and lawlessness was the democracy you haven’t ruled out leading in four years. Are you simply making a political calculation that you could clean the Trump stink off you faster than Marco Rubio or some of the other competitors?”

Yeah, that left a mark, and people noticed.

In response, Christie simply asserted that he made the right decision back in 2016 before he chose Trump over Hillary Clinton. “I wouldn’t vote for Hillary Clinton today, if that choice were to be made,” he explained while also arguing that he stood up for former AG Jeff Sessions. It’s quite a deflection. Watch the full video at the top of this post.

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Nipsey Hussle Posthumously Appears On J Stone’s ‘The Definition Of Pain’

Nearly two years have passed since the death of the great Nipsey Hussle, and while hip-hop still contends with the void left behind by his loss, his voice still resonates through his music — including the posthumous verses he blessed collaborators with before he died. Two new Hussle verses arrived today courtesy of the Crenshaw rapper’s All Money In artist J Stone, who released his new project The Definition Of Pain. Nipsey appears on a pair of songs, “LeBron James” featuring Dom Kennedy, and “Started Wit Nothin’” featuring T.I.

The fellow featured artists are fitting, as both were regular collaborators and close friends of Nipsey’s in life. Dom and Nipsey were two of the primary rappers at the forefront of Los Angeles’ blog rap explosion in the late 2000s, culminating in their collaboration “Checc Me Out” from Nipsey’s Crenshaw mixtape as well as on “Double Up” with Belly from Nip’s debut album Victory Lap, while Nip appeared on T.I.’s Paperwork on the song “About My Issue.” J Stone’s new album also contains features from Dave East, E-40, Kash Doll, and Trae The Truth.

Along with Cobby Supreme, Cuzzo Capone, Pacman Da Gunman, and Wali Da Great, J Stone was one of the artists on Nipsey’s All Money In label. Nipsey was fiercely independent in his life, living by the mantra, “All money in, no money out,” and eventually turning that motto into the name of his label. Before he died, he partnered with Atlantic Records to distribute his debut album after independently releasing mixtapes for ten years — including the $100 mixtape Crenshaw and the $1,000 mixtape Mailbox Money.

Listen to Nipsey’s posthumous verses above and check out The Definition of Pain here.

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Beyonce’s Foundation Is Pledging $500K To Support Families Facing Evictions

As many cities extend stay-at-home orders with little relief for families facing evictions, Beyonce is stepping up to the plate. The singer’s BeyGood foundation is known for making hefty donations to support families in need and now, they’re offering rental assistance.

BeyGood announced the program this week as part of their Small Business Impact fund, which to date has given $10,000 to over 250 Black-owned small businesses. They’re now looking to donate $500,000 to support families facing evictions due to the pandemic:

“When we were faced with the pandemic caused by COVID-19, BeyGood created a plan to make a difference. We assisted organizations across the country that were providing people with basic needs like food, water, household supplies and COVID testing. We also provided mental health support. […] Beyoncé is continuing her heart of support and helping where needed most. Phase Two of the BeyGood Impact Fund will now help those impacted by the housing crisis. The housing moratorium is set to end on December 26th, resulting in mortgage foreclosures and rental evictions. Many families are impacted, due to the pandemic that resulted in job loss, sickness and overall economy downturn.

This holiday season, while many are stressed with what they will do next regarding their housing, we are proud to share some GOOD news. Beyoncé is giving $5k grants to individuals and families facing foreclosures or evictions.”

Read Beygood’s full statement here.

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Mike Birbiglia On Doing Comedy And Finding Beautiful Moments During A Pandemic

Like virtually every industry, stand-up comedy has been tested by the pandemic with both philosophical and logistical questions hanging over it. What place do comedians have in the midst of a tragedy? How does a business model reliant on cramming people into a tight space for a show adapt when social distancing measures seemingly make it impossible to operate? And what do comedians do if they can’t find work on a stage? It’s a crush that every working comic (and club owner and employee) has had to deal with, but I could think of no one better to speak to this transformative year in comedy (and life) than Mike Birbiglia.

Not only has Birbiglia taken to the challenge of adapting — launching a new podcast where he workshops jokes with other comics, putting on virtual shows, and writing… a LOT. But he was also an early and constant advocate for the waiters, bartenders, and other employees of the comedy clubs that have been left with few options. Together with Daily Show correspondent Roy Wood, the two launched TipYourWaitstaff.com, a portal for people to connect with the GoFundMe pages for their favorite local clubs. All told, the effort has led to about three-quarters of a million dollars going to comedy club staff, according to Birbiglia. That’s a real difference-maker, especially considering the often cold and/or sclerotic government response to everything COVID. And he hasn’t stopped, recently vowing to donate the proceeds of his New Years virtual shows to six different regional food banks.

Now, as some clubs have opened back up with COVID numbers still high, Birbiglia isn’t quite ready to go out in front of or draw a crowd. Instead, he’s choosing to double down on the evolution (technical and creative) of his Working It Out virtual show, which he’ll put on six times between the day after Christmas and New Years (with those two New Year’s Eve shows timed to help reach and ring in the new year with his international audience) over at the virtual Nowhere Comedy Club.

We spoke with Birbiglia about those virtual shows and what their technical polish (AV nerds and fans will be interested to peak behind the scenes to see an office transform into a set with four iPhones on a switcher and a whole lot of thought put into evolving virtual shows from their early COVID era “I’m in my living room, let’s do this” feel) might mean for his career in the future. We also discussed writing to fill a void, the difference between what we want and what we need, and trying to laugh about our own mortality. Because what else are we going to do about it?

You had mentioned, on the Working It Out podcast, something about how you’re not somebody who is keen on network notes and that kind of process. Doing something like these virtual Working It Out shows where you’re learning how to operate them nimbly with your team (Peter Salomone, Joe Birbiglia, Mable Lewis, cinematographer Matthew Wolf, and director Seth Barrish) and, as you said, “filming it like a TV show…” Where you’ve got a distribution model in place… does that all free you to want to do more things on your own outside of the system with specials and things like that?

Post pandemic, I’m open to seeing if we could do a monthly working it out. Just maybe not do four of them, but do like one or two and see does that still work for people. Because, we’re getting better and better at the picture, but also the sound, which is the interaction of the laughter coming through, and me responding to the laughter, and me seeing people on the screens. We have two big-screen TVs that have all of the Zoom participants on the screen. So, I can sort of look at people in their living room and be like, “Oh, you have a Christmas tree made of doilies and paper towels. Let’s talk about that.” And then, we pin that person, and then I’m having a conversation with that person. It’s like crowd work, but it’s like a… I don’t know. International in your living room crowd work. It’s really funny in a totally different way than other types of comedy.

It’s a little disconcerting, just thinking about where I’m going to sit and my background. I’ll set it up in my office. I have like a three-foot-tall Gonzo. I’ll try to make sure he’s in the shot.

Oh yeah. That’s a huge thing. People definitely try to get your attention.

So, you’re like a guard at Buckingham Palace with people trying to throw you?

Yeah, exactly. That’s what it is.

I know you’ve also mentioned on the podcast, but the show you’re working on [about facing one’s own mortality], YMCA Pool… in terms of your own relationship to death, how has that kind of changed? I guess the main question is was this the plan for the show before the pandemic, or did it kind of come out of this?

That’s a great question. No, it’s actually what I’ve been working on for about two years. I think since The New One, it’s been the show I’ve been working on at Minetta Lane and all the Working It Out shows I’ve been doing have been these sort of like ruminations on middle age, and death, and mortality, and going to the YMCA pool. And the tie-in is that as a kid I swore I would never return to the YMCA pool because I spent so much time there learning how to swim. And then literally in my 40s, I’m 42 now, it’s like I’m on doctor’s orders because of various ailments that I have. My doctor’s like, “You better be hitting the YMCA pool and swimming.” And so, I find myself just sort of ruminating on life and death. And then, of course, the pandemic has just really heightened that. It’s made it a top of mind topic for everyone because it feels so… It just feels eminent. I mean you see that many people die in a day, and you just feel… It just feels like anybody can get it at any time, which is really what the show is about. And anyone can die at any time, and the hope of the show is that it’s 90 minutes of jokes that are about death and making people laugh so as to affirm life, which is of course a very simple premise and has been done in 10,000 different ways. And, I’m hoping that mine’s different. Trying to make it different.

This is a big and maybe unfair question, but aside from what you’re doing and putting out into the world in terms of your job… in terms of your life, how else has this year kind of impacted you?

I mean, it’s like…

Or, do you need a little distance to kind of figure that out?

I think that’s what it is. The way I look at all the things is like nothing is anything until later. You don’t really know what anything is until a few years from now. I will say, like, I’m writing more, and I think the reason that I’m writing more is that I don’t have an audience to bounce stuff off of. Or I don’t have as much of an audience. I’m unable to go to The Comedy Cellar five nights a week and sort of get feedback on something I wrote that morning. And as a result, I just have more in the can. I have more… hours and hours of untested material. And, honestly, I think it’s going to be another book. Like I think… It’s definitely another show. And, it possibly… and I teased this in the Rachel Bloom episode of the podcast that we recorded already that launches in January. And, there’s another one with Jack Antonoff where we teased this a little bit. But, I’m definitely going to write another show and maybe a musical. And, all of that is sort of happening in the pandemic, or it’s been sort of, I would say, amplified during the pandemic. Just because I had much more time to write and much less time to perform.

How does that kind of impact you where you don’t necessarily have that outlet to take it to a crowd really and say, “Is this good? Is this funny?” Like, I have a problem just free writing. I need to know what it’s for, when it’s going.

Well, it’s funny, because I have a piece coming out in the New Yorker for Shouts. And, that’s just me showing it to… That’s my second piece since the beginning of the quarantine. I wrote this other one called the “Ways That I’d Be OK Dying.” And, you should read it. It’s actually really fun. It’s a fun little piece. And, it’s basically like ruminating on my own death and like the ways I wouldn’t be okay dying, and the ways I would be okay dying. So I wrote that, and then the second New Yorker piece I wrote is about essentially sending my mom pre-made meals. I never heard back from her. And like a couple of weeks went by and I was like, “Hey mom did you get those Freshly meals I sent?” And there was like this long pause from the phone. There’s a long pause, and I’m like, “Mom, it’s okay if you didn’t like the Freshly meals.” And, there’s like a long pause again and she’s like, “We didn’t like the Freshly meals.” But, it’s like this classic sort of Catholic repressed… even gifting someone pre-made meals is like you can’t even admit that you don’t like them. And it’s called “How To Say I Love You, Freshly.” I had never written a piece for the New Yorker before, and this year I wrote two. I’m sort of entering this new realm of like, “Okay, if I can’t do this, what else could I do?” And, I think that that’s… In terms of artistically, I can get good.

This productivity: does it help your mental health to create like that or is it just more work-focused. “This is just what I do, so I’m just going to do that.”

One of the things that helps my mental health is going for walks, literally getting my 10,000 steps on my Fitbit. And then, writing. I mean, those are the two things that sort of create my situation of mental health. And then, the other one is performing. And since I can’t perform it created this sort of new calibration of “what is the thing that sort of fosters my mental health?” But, I mean the other thing is, I’ve gotten a lot closer to my daughter in the pandemic. I mean, what’s funny is in a lot of ways… Obviously, it’s hard on kids because they can’t have friends as much in the traditional way that they had friends. But, they also get to hang out with their parents a lot and five-year-olds love their parents.

Yeah, it’d be bad if she was like 15.

Yeah, 15 is like, “fuck my life. I’m 15 and have to hang out with my parents all the time. Like the biggest losers on the planet.” But, when you’re five you think they’re cool. And so, we have dance contests, the one-minute dance contest in the living room. We play soccer. You know we invent games like froccer, which is a cross between Frisbee and soccer. And, it’s just a lot of silliness and a lot of goofing around. Life is beautiful, which is essentially distracting from the horror that is what’s going on in the world right now, which is mass amounts of death and illness.

How do you find a balance between when you need to feel outraged and engaged with the news, and when you need to just kind of unplug? I feel like some people have trouble with it. I’ve seen people who seem to imply that they always need to keep focus on this and not let go. But, it’s like, how do you live without kind of doing exactly what you’re saying, like playing with your daughter, just getting that bit of energy and help?

Yeah, I think that’s a good question. I think that the answer is we don’t drive havoc. I don’t know what the balance is. I think I’m… What are we nine months in? And, I’m just starting to get a little better at finding that. And I’m still not there yet. I don’t know. I definitely think it’s forced us all to sort of face an internal question, like an internal essential question, which is like, “What do we need versus what do we want?” And, I think like, what do we want in some ways is so external. It’s like. “Well, I want to go to a Broadway show. I want to go to a comedy show. I want to go to France.” But, “what do we need” is a little bit more… like we need food. We need love. We need… You know what I mean? The pandemic is in some ways this really ominous metaphor for what we want versus what we need. Because, in the pandemic, we’re all just trying to get what we need.

Tickets are still available for some of Mike Birbiglia’s ‘Working It Out’ virtual shows and you can listen to the podcast here.

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The Rockets Are Reportedly Working To Verify If Video Of James Harden At A Strip Club Violates League COVID Protocols

The latest chapter in the James Harden saga is here, and it involves the Houston Rockets star seemingly partying maskless at a strip club in Houston this week in the lead-up to the Rockets’ opening game at home against the Thunder. As a result, the Rockets and the league have begun investigating the incident, which was publicized through a leaked video at Black Sports Online. The investigation was reported by Tim McMahon of ESPN.

McMahon also noted in his story that a player’s failure to comply with the NBA’s COVID-19 protocols can result in a fine or suspension from their team. And while McMahon also confirmed that Harden already had COVID-19 over the summer prior to arriving at the Orlando Bubble, players are of course still required to follow protocols, as the details of immunity from this coronavirus are still fuzzy.

It’s long been known that Harden would prefer to be traded from the Rockets, and with the stand-off now spilling into the regular season, Harden is seemingly upping the ante on his side. Being late to camp is one thing, but it was assumed Harden would at least be ready for the regular season and go back to his normal All-NBA caliber ways when he stepped onto the court.

By going out and allegedly breaking NBA rules just before opening night, Harden is now jeopardizing his status for regular season games, which could result in not only a punishment from the Rockets or the league.

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There’s An AI Bot That Roasts Your Music Taste By Exploring Your Spotify History

We’re a few weeks removed from Spotify’s annual celebration of its users listening habits via Spotify Wrapped. If that had you feeling good about your music taste, there’s now an AI bot that will knock you down a peg and roast your favorite music.

How Bad Is Your Spotify?” is a project from The Pudding and it was created by Mike Lacher and Matt Daniels. The tagline when you first enter the site reads, “Our sophisticated A.I. judges your awful taste in music.” The bot is “trained on a corpus of over two million indicators of objectively good music, including Pitchfork reviews, record store recommendations, and subreddits you’ve never heard of.”

Once I gave the site access to my Spotify listening history, it reported back to me, “Analyzing your listening history… lol. omg. okay hold up. Do you really listen to ‘In Degrees’ by Foals?” I responded affirmatively, and it fired back, “Like ironically?” When I again confirmed my reply, the site said, “Cool…” Elsewhere, the site noted, “Finding a lot of The Weeknd. Like… a LOT.” At the end, my music taste was described with hyphenated adjectives like “hxcore-falsetto-craft-beer-snob-sad-in-a-cabin bad.”

It’s good fun, but that said, it looks like the bot isn’t without bugs: It told me I listen to 100 Gecs’ “Hand Crushed By A Mallet (Remix) [Feat. Fall Out Boy, Craig Owens, Nicole Dollanganger]” too much, which doesn’t seem possible.

Check out the bot for yourself here.