Why Didn’t Normani Perform At The 2024 BET Awards?
Before the show, Normani revealed she had sustained an injury that forced her to call the performance off. In an Instagram Story, she explained:
“I am more frustrated and disappointed than anyone believe me. I wanted to get on here and give you guys an update letting you know that while in rehearsals for BET I had a really bad accident and injured myself. I am normally good for powering through under any circumstance but unfortunately due to my doctor’s orders, I am just not able to make this performance happen. I desperately wanted to give you my best on that stage but performing would delay my healing. I have been going through my process and doing my best to make sense of my feelings regarding this. I am devastated and hate feeling like a disappointment to you but I have to focus on recovering at this time. Trust me, I hear you, and I see you. There is nothing more that | wanted to do than perform for you and also, get back to doing what fulfills me most- BEING ON STAGE. Thank you so much for understanding. Sending my love to BET for giving me and all of the other beautiful black women this opportunity. This is definitely NOT how l envisioned this weekend but best believe I will be championing everyone from home tonight.
I’m sorrrrrrrry guys and love you so much.”
She later shared a photo showing her right foot in a walking boot and her right knee bandaged up.
Heat domes are so hot right now, literally, and that means that after you are finished binging The Bear and taking in the latest House of the Dragon and The Boys episodes, you’ll still be stuck inside. Fortunately, a variety of worthy series are also coming your way in July, even though Stranger Things (sadly) isn’t among them. Remember when that show would land in mid-summer? Delays happen, man.
The good news is that Netflix is reopening the dojo again, and there’s a murder mystery, a few new anticipated animation series, and some sci-fi goodness. Please enjoy the must-see shows for June 2024.
Those About to Die: Season 1 (Peacock series streaming 7/18)
This ain’t Gladiator (or Gladiator 2), but it does bring to mind the famous “Are you not entertained?” line from Russell Crowe’s Maximus. The story does take a swing at “bread and circuses” and the “entertainment underbelly” of Ancient Rome and adapts the story of the real-life Flavian dynasty. Anthony Hopkins will surely be not-at-all disturbing as ruler Flavius Vespasian, whose sons are battling it out over who will succeed dad.
Lady in the Lake: Season 1 (Apple TV+ series streaming 7/19)
Natalie Portman and Moses Ingram star in this modern noir story from Laura Lippmann’s same-named book about privileged 1960s housewife, Maddie, who flees her marriage and launches a new career as an investigative journalist who digs into the murder of Cleo Johnson, and the secrets begin pouring out from unexpected sources in the Baltimore setting. Look for a surreal story with some supernatural aspects and Apple TV+ billing the limited series “as a feverish noir thriller and an unexpected tale of the price women pay for their dreams.” Ouch.
Sausage Party: Foodtopia: Season 1 (Prime Video/Amazon series streaming 7/11)
The ridiculously popular R-rated animated movie from 2016 follows up with a spin off, in which the filthy jokes shall fly for a longer collective runtime. Naturally, Seth Rogen is sill forcing the leading Frank (a sausage) while the group of profane grocery items attempts to come together as a community. That should (not) go well, and Rogen will be joined again by former co-stars Kristen Wiig, Edward Norton, Michael Cera, and David Krumholtz. New characters will be portrayed by Sam Richardson, Will Forte, and more.
Vikings: Valhalla: Season 3 (Netflix series streaming 7/11)
This extremely hairy spin off will return for a final season after a seven-year time jump. Freydis simply wants to find happiness while Harald is pushing for power, and Leif is closing in on Newfoundland. Take a nap, y’all.
Exploding Kittens (Netflix series streaming 7/12)
After several years of portraying the Devil, Tom Ellis is here to portray God, at least in voice form. Strangely enough, God must also mingle with humanity on earth, and he ends up stuck inside of a house cat’s body, and his new home happens to be situated near another cat who is actually the Antichrist. Also, Godcat is obsessed with a pigeon and Devilcat really enjoys naps. You in?
Cobra Kai: Season 6 Part 1 (Netflix series streaming 7/18)
Kreese is fresh outta prison, so watch out, soul of karate. Actually, Daniel and Johnny are already training their joint dojo to take on any recently escaped villainous senseis, and the world championship — Sekai Taikai — sits on the horizon. More importantly, Hawk has grown his mohawk back, which makes the long wait between seasons almost worth it, and I cannot wait to find out if anyone brawls their way into a swimming pool this season. That keeps happening, and we don’t talk enough about it. Time to fix that omission.
Snowpiercer: Season 4 (AMC series streaming on AMC+ 7/21)
TNT very controversially shelved this season after completion, but AMC picked it up, so that we can see what happens in the TV version when people finally get off the train. Somehow, Jennifer Connelly’s character still lives and plans to keep running the Eternal Engine, but Daveed Diggs’ leading man looks more than ready to get rid of his ticket to this hellish ride around the globe while leading Big Alice occupants into the great, snowy unknown. This shall be the final chapter of post-apocalyptic class warfare for this franchise, so let’s hope that a secret oasis awaits.
Time Bandits: Season 1 (Apple TV+ series streaming 7/24)
This series brings the Terry Gilliam book of the same name to the small screen following the cult-classic film of the early 1980s. This version stars Lisa Kudrow and follows the comedic adventures of those ragtag thieves through time and space. They end up on a mission to save their newest member’s parents and somehow end up with the fate of humanity in their hands, too.
The Philadelphia 76ers had two main priorities this offseason. For one, they need to fill out their roster, as they entered the summer with only two players (Joel Embiid and Paul Reed) other contract. The other priority involved Tyrese Maxey, who was extension eligible this summer and was always going to get a big deal from the team that drafted him.
In order to get some free agents on board, Maxey had to wait to put pen to paper on an extension, but in the aftermath of the team bringing in Paul George and Andre Drummond, Adrian Wojnarowski of ESPN and Shams Charania of The Athletic reported that Maxey got a 5-year max deal that will pay him more than $200 million.
ESPN Sources: Philadelphia 76ers All-Star guard Tyrese Maxey has agreed in principle on a five-year, $204 million maximum contract extension. pic.twitter.com/rBT8Tpkvg8
Maxey joined the Sixers after falling to them with the No. 21 pick in the 2020 NBA Draft. At the time, it was believed that Philadelphia got a steal, with Maxey viewed as a potential lottery pick. And after a rookie campaign where he didn’t make a huge impact, Maxey quickly became one of the brightest young guard talents in the NBA, something he’s continued to build on over his first four years in the league. Last year, in the aftermath of James Harden’s dispute with the front office that led to him getting traded, Maxey earned his first All-Star berth and got named the league’s Most Improved Player, showing off a skill-set that makes him a perfect fit alongside Embiid.
Maxey averaged 25.9 points and 6.2 assists in 37.5 minutes per game for the Sixers during the 2023-24 campaign while shooting 45 percent from the field, 37.3 percent from three, and 86.8 percent from the free throw line.
The “Hawk Tuah” girl is making the most of her 15 minutes of fame. Last month, Hailey Welch went viral when she appeared in one of those “guys with microphones stand outside of bars and ask drunk people silly questions” videos. When asked by Tim & Dee TV for one move in bed that makes a man go crazy every time, she replied, “You gotta give ’em that ‘hawk tuah’ and spit on that thang” (you really need to watch the video for the full effect). Since then, the “Hawk Tuah” girl, as she’s been dubbed, has sold thousands of dollars in merch and supposedly been courted by Hollywood talent agencies.
Welch also joined Zach Bryan during the Nashville stop on his The Quittin Time Tour over the weekend. She performed “Revival,” a song from the country star’s 2020 album Elisabeth, and even gave the crowd an enthusiastic “hawk tuah!” before leaving the stage. You can watch the video below.
Hawk Tuah girl made it on stage with Zach Bryan. Why are people hating on her for it? pic.twitter.com/92YJNTXhi6
Bryan is making a habit out of big-name guests, having performed live with everyone from Bruce Springsteen to Sexyy Red. Here’s another: earlier in the Nashville show, he and Kacey Musgraves performed the lovely “I Remember Everything” together — Kacey did not walk off with a catchphrase.
Kacey Musgraves joined Zach Bryan for a performance of their smash hit duet “I Remember Everything” at Nissan Stadium in Nashville.pic.twitter.com/TYwJzT9Nst
— Kacey Musgraves Access (@KaceyAccess) June 30, 2024
Paul George will be heading back to the Eastern Conference for the first time in eight years, as he will join Joel Embiid, Tyrese Maxey, and a refreshed Sixers roster next season. Adrian Wojnarowski of ESPN broke the news that George will get four years and $212 million to join the Sixers, with Shams Charania of The Athletic confirming.
BREAKING: Free agent F Paul George has agreed on a four-year, $212 million maximum contract with the Philadelphia 76ers, sources tell ESPN. George committed in a meeting with Sixers officials and returns East to join Joel Embiid and Tyrese Maxey in pursuit of an NBA title. pic.twitter.com/pkCfGu3hyp
All the way up until Sunday evening, George’s future seemed very much in the air. First was a strong pursuit of the star by the Golden State Warriors, with George apparently signing off on a deal to the Warriors only for their offer to be shot down by the Clippers. From there, his first meeting of free agency was with L.A., but the two sides couldn’t get close on a deal and the Clippers released a full statement thanking George for his time and confirming he would not be back with the team before he even signed with anyone else.
With Orlando signing Kentavious Caldwell-Pope and Oklahoma City chasing Isaiah Hartenstein, that left the Sixers as the only cap space team that made any sense for George, and the two sides met in Los Angeles to work out a deal. The result was a 4-year, $212 million max deal that gives George the financial commitment he was seeking that L.A. wouldn’t offer — they held firm at the same deal Kawhi Leonard signed last season.
George joined the Clippers ahead of the 2019-20 season as part of a package deal with Kawhi Leonard. The pair had aspirations of winning a championship in Los Angeles, but injuries have frequently derailed the team’s effort of winning the Larry O’Brien trophy for the first time in franchise history — the Clippers only made the conference finals one time in the five years since George and Leonard came to town.
George is coming off of an All-Star campaign in L.A., one in which he averaged 22.6 points, 5.2 rebounds, 3.5 assists, and 1.5 steals in 33.8 minutes per game on 47.1 percent shooting from the field, 41.3 percent shooting from three, and 90.7 percent shooting from the free throw line. Now he’ll slot in between one of the most potent two-man combos in the league from a year ago in Embiid and Maxey, and look to provide them with the support they haven’t been able to get to make a real push in the Eastern Conference Playoffs.
In 2019, Lizzo played the Austin City Limits Music Festival. Now, she would be one of the bold-name headliners, but she was booked before her positivity anthems like “Truth Hurts” and “Juice” made her famous enough to eventually get mocked on South Park, so she was scheduled for an early evening set on one of the festival’s mid-sized stages. This proved to be a miscalculation of her popularity. By the time her set neared, Lizzo’s crowd was big enough that it swelled into the small-by-comparison camp (including me) waiting for iconoclast Robyn’s headlining performance at an adjoining stage. The mass of people was so large, there were genuine safety concerns.
The “Red Wine Supernova” singer and burgeoning queer-pop icon reportedly pulled in larger crowds than headliner Ed Sheeran at last month’s Boston Calling. She was also the biggest story at New York’s Governors Ball, where she came out dressed as the Statue of Liberty. To prevent a Lizzo-like incident, Bonnaroo — arguably the second most influential music festival in the country, after Coachella — moved Roan from a tent to the much-larger Which stage. She’s gotten so big, so fast, that she’s turning down invitations to perform at the White House (although that was also an act of protest against the Biden administration for failing women, trans folks, and “all oppressed people in occupied territories”) and publicly expressing her struggles with her fame.
“I guess I just want to be honest with the crowd,” she said at a recent concert in Raleigh, North Carolina. “I just feel a little off today ‘cause I think that my career is going really fast and it’s really hard to keep up. So I’m just being honest that I’m just having a hard time today. So sorry that — I’m not trying to give you, like, a lesser show. It’s just, there’s a lot… Thank you for understanding. This is all I’ve ever wanted. It’s just heavy sometimes, I think.”
It’s not the kind of thing that you would expect to hear from someone in a profession that demands constant ascension, but little about Roan’s charting-in-dozens-of-countries rise has been predictable.
Born in 1998 in Willard, Missouri, Roan (real name Kayleigh Rose Amstutz) grew up in a strict Christian household, but, as she explained in a 2023 interview with Variety, “I had this part of me that wanted to escape so bad. I just wanted to scream. I snuck out a lot, but I still went to church three times a week, you know what I mean? So it was just this dichotomy of trying to be a good girl, but also wanting to freaking light things on fire.”
Roan found her creative outlet on YouTube, where she caught the attention of Atlantic Records. She was signed at 17 years old, and made her stage name Chappell Roan in honor of her late grandfather (Dennis K. Chappell) and his favorite song (“The Strawberry Roan” by singing cowboy Curley Fletcher). In 2017, Roan released the folk-tinged EP School Nights, but “I just wasn’t ready,” she admits now. “It’s so cliché, but one weekend I was playing coffee shops and the next weekend I was signed to Atlantic Records. It was very, very unhinged… I just genuinely didn’t know what I was doing, and I didn’t feel like I had a lot of help.” Roan felt disconnected from the music she was making, but there was enough momentum that she moved to Los Angeles in 2018. “That changed everything,” she told Rolling Stone. As did a visit to a gay bar.
“Pink Pony Club,” the first song of Roan’s that sounds like it was made by Chappell Roan, not Kayleigh Rose Amstutz, was inspired by a night at Los Angeles institution The Abbey. “I grew up thinking being gay was bad and a sin. I went to the gay club once, and it was so impactful, like magic. It was the opposite of everything I was taught,” she said. The dreamy single — produced by Dan Nigro, who also worked on Olivia Rodrigo’s Sour, Sky Ferreira’s Night Time, My Time, and Carly Rae Jepsen’s best-pop-album-of-the-2010s E•MO•TION — made some noise, especially in gay clubs, but it didn’t catch on enough for her label. Roan was soon dropped by Atlantic. This was during the pandemic, and she ended up moving back home to Missouri to save money by working at a coffee shop, among other odd jobs. She was also going through a break-up with a long-term partner. It must have been miserable at the time, but it proved to be a fruitful experience for her songwriting.
Fast forward to 2022. Roan is out of the Midwest and back in Los Angeles, where she lands a publishing deal. She starts transforming herself into “a thrift store pop star,” which allows her to crack her naturally introverted shell and sing about getting freaky and kinky and making the bed get squeaky. The viral Tiny Desk Concert and support from the queer community and The Tonight Show appearances would soon follow. “I think Chappell’s a drag-queen version of me because it’s very larger-than-life,” she explained about finding herself to Vanity Fair. “Kind of tacky, not afraid to say really lewd things. The songs are kind of the fairytale version of what happened in real life.”
Whether real or not, the songs on Roan’s funny, vulgar, and honest debut album, The Rise And Fall Of A Midwest Princess, are undeniable. Opener “Femininomenon” begins with lovely strings before a self-aware Roan asks “um, can you play a song with a fucking beat?” and the bubbly energy jumps from a ! to !!!; the bratty “Red White Supernova” keeps the enthusiasm going with an ode to drinking and smoking and f*cking. Later, on the throbbing “Casual,” Roan asks, “Knee deep in the passenger seat and you’re eating me out / Is it casual now?” She even has her own calling-card dance with “Hot To Go!”The Rise And Fall Of A Midwest Princess sounds like the work of a pop-star lifer, not someone who was making coffee in Missouri two years ago.
Roan is one the biggest success stories of 2024. In June 2023, she was getting 130,000 daily streams on Spotify; a year later, she’s up to 16 million. “Good Luck, Babe!” is expected to hit No. 10 on the Billboard Hot 200 next week, which would give Roan her first top-10 hit, and her social media accounts (Roan’s TikTok is full of gems like this) are showing “explosive growth.”
There are a lot of factors to explain Roan’s rise to the pop star major leagues: her obvious talent, her opening slot for Olivia Rodrigo on the Guts tour, her work ethic, her Lady Gaga-like theatricality, her decision to “stop trying to impress the music industry and start trying to impress gay people.” But the biggest reason is also the simplest: her songs are fun! With big hooks! And melodies you can hum! People want to dance and sing and dress up in pink (Chappell Roan is Barbie for people who watch RuPaul’s Drag Race), and she provides an outlet for a good time. Hopefully for a long time.
Swerve Strickland retained his AEW heavyweight championship against Will Ospreay at Forbidden Door in New York.
While Ospreay paid tribute to the legendary Hayabusa during his entrance, Strickland continued his entertainment meets pro wrestling crossover by bringing out Dipset founding member and New York native Jim Jones to introduce him.
Jones hit the top of the entrance ramp holding the AEW championship and said he swerves when he drives before the champ’s music hit. Strickland greeted Jones at the top of the ramp, put the belt over his shoulder and made his way to the ring.
Will Swerve Strickland leave Forbidden Door with the #AEW World Title still held high?
Once the bell rang, Strickland and Ospreay set a rapid pace right from the beginning. While the challenger had the early advantage, Strickland found his opening and gained some momentum. Strickland looked to be in momentum after hitting a Swerve Stomp onto the announce table.
The champion Swerve Strickland giving challenger Ospreay no room for rest!
After the referee took an errant hit from Ospreay, Don Callis arrived at the ring and handed Ospreay a screwdriver. Prince Nana took out Callis and Ospreay decided against using the screwdriver. Strickland took out Ospreay when he climbed into the ring, then hit the Swerve Stomp for two. He hit the House Call for two again.
Strickland hit a House Call again before hitting Big Pressure for the pinfall victory.
After a week of trades, the Draft, and teams signing current players to extensions and new deals, NBA free agency finally got started at 6 p.m. ET on Sunday. Typically there is flurry of action as soon as the moratorium period opened up, as teams don’t want to wait long to lock up top targets and players don’t want to wait too long to miss out on cap/exception space that often dries up quickly around the NBA.
However, this year it took longer than usual for things to get warmed up. For one, teams could agree to deals with their own free agents as soon as the Finals ended, which meant a lot of the deals that used to get held for 6:01 p.m. (or 12:01 a.m.) could just get locked in over the past two weeks. We saw that with guys like Pascal Siakam, OG Anunoby, Immanuel Quickley, and others, taking away some of those handshake deals to re-sign guys we usually get the first night. Along with that, teams at least pretended to be better about playing along with the league’s rules about not contacting other players outside their rosters. There were a handful of deals that teams got done on Sunday prior to free agency opening to keep their own players in town, and then about an hour after free agency finally started to open up and deals began rolling in.
Still, it was a pretty quiet night, largely due to Paul George still not being officially locked in — even though the Clippers publicly announced he wouldn’t be back in Los Angeles. With the biggest name taking his time in meeting with the Sixers, things were held up a bit, while the newly increased salary cap apron penalties put a real damper on teams enthusiasm for being aggressive early on.
Here are the 15 deals that got agreed to on Sunday, including those that re-signed with their current team prior to free agency opening.
Patrick Williams (Bulls)
Sunday’s action started with the Bulls and Patrick Williams agreeing to a 5-year, $90 million deal just after midnight to keep the young forward in Chicago.
Elsewhere in the Central, the Pacers beat the clock to lock up Obi Toppin on a long-term deal for 4 years, $60 million to keep him from hitting the open market, giving him just above the mid-level to stay a couple hours prior to free agency.
ESPN Sources: Restricted free agent F Obi Toppin intends to sign a four-year, $60 million contract to stay with the Indiana Pacers. Toppin emerged as a top bench contributor for the Eastern Conference finalists. pic.twitter.com/sJP8q5prJe
An hour before the market opened up, the Lakers got a deal done with Max Christie to keep him in L.A. for the next four years (including a player option) and $8 million per year.
ESPN Sources: Restricted free agent G Max Christie intends to sign a four-year, $32 million deal to stay with the Los Angeles Lakers. Deal includes player option. Christie — 35th pick in the 2022 draft — has shown promise as a future LA rotation player. pic.twitter.com/75Y86oszJa
From there, James Harden got a new 2-year, $70 million deal done to stay with the Clippers just before free agency started and let L.A. focus their efforts on Paul George’s free agency once the clock hit 6 p.m. ET.
James Harden’s $70 million deal includes a player option for Year 2, sources said. https://t.co/3cUiid3ugb
Breaking: The Philadelphia 76ers and free agent center Andre Drummond have agreed to a two-year, $10+ million deal, league sources told @hoopshype. Drummond gets a player option Year 2. During his career, Drummond has been a two-time All-Star and a four-time rebounding champion. pic.twitter.com/r9Z77n844C
The Clippers signed Kevin Porter Jr. to a two-year deal (with a player option) after he missed all of the 2023-24 season after getting charged with harassment and third-degree reckless assault of his then-girlfriend at a New York City hotel, reaching a plea agreement in January.
Kevin Porter Jr. has agreed to a two-year deal with the Los Angeles Clippers, including a player option, sources tell @TheAthletic@Stadium. After six weeks of strong play in Greece in April and May, Porter had multiple NBA suitors and chose the Clippers. pic.twitter.com/0R19BUW6bu
The first truly big signing of the day came when the Orlando Magic struck a new three-year, $66 million deal with Kentavious Caldwell-Pope. Orlando fills their need for a veteran presence and three-point shooting with the move, while Denver loses a key contributor for a second straight year (but this time could’ve matched the offer and chose not to).
Kentavious Caldwell-Pope leaving the Denver Nuggets and headed to the Orlando Magic on a three-year deal, I’m told.
The Spurs made their first move of free agency by bringing in a needed veteran point guard presence with Chris Paul on a 1-year, $11 million deal to provide some stability on offense and create a very fun pick-and-roll pairing with Victor Wembanyama.
Free agent guard Chris Paul has agreed on a one-year, $11 million-plus deal with the San Antonio Spurs, sources tell ESPN.
The Wizards got in on the action by signing Jonas Valanciunas to a 3-year, $30 million deal to bolster their frontcourt alongside No. 2 overall pick Alex Sarr.
Free agent center Jonas Valanciunas has agreed on a three-year, $30 million deal with the Washington Wizards, sources tell ESPN. pic.twitter.com/0XnEyWotOw
The reigning West champs made their first move of free agency by signing Pelicans wing Naji Marshall to add another much-needed 3-and-D wing to their rotation.
Free agent F Naji Marshall has agreed on a three-year, $27 million deal with the Dallas Mavericks, sources tell ESPN. pic.twitter.com/KlICsYvVyc
With the Mavs going in a different direction with their mid-level, Derrick Jones Jr. was left to find a new team and landed a 3-year, $30 million deal with the Clippers as they pivot away from Paul George.
Free agent forward Derrick Jones Jr. plans to sign a three-year, $30 million deal with the Los Angeles Clippers, sources tell @TheAthletic@Stadium. Major pickup for the Clippers. pic.twitter.com/ANwrqHAczJ
Tonight (June 30), the 2024 BET Awards was about giving entertainers their flowers. The most notable honorary of the evening was Usher. As the Lifetime Achievement Award recipient, several other musicians joined in on the celebration.
Uproxx cover star Chlöe, Childish Gambino, Keke Palmer, Coco Jones, Tinashe, Teyana Taylor, and more paid tribute to Usher with special performances of his greatest hits. Despite the jammed-packed lineup, following the set, users online shared their mixed reviews of what they witnessed.
The biggest gripe folks had on Twitter was the actual acts selected to take the stage. Continue below to read a few of their responses.
“Hopefully Usher gets a better tribute at the #GRAMMYs cause this wasn’t it. #BETAwards,” wrote one user.
“Soooo Luke James, Tank, Vedo, Eric Bellinger, Trevor Jackson, Baby Face, Tevin Campbell, Miguel, etc weren’t available for this Usher tribute?,” added another.
Soooo Luke James, Tank, Vedo, Eric Bellinger, Trevor Jackson, Baby Face, Tevin Campbell, Miguel, etc. weren’t available for this @Usher tribute? #BETAwardspic.twitter.com/4MTTjJE3K9
Yall keep forgetting that Usher dances! He performs! The R&B boys of today are NOT that. Let them honor a ballad singer!! The women gave him a proper tribute! Not that one mic/ one body open mic bullshit. #BETAwards
Luke James. Lucky Daye. Tevin Campbell. Omarion. Mario. Durand Bernarr. Kevin Ross. Tank. Even Jon B/Justin Timberlake if you wanna go that route And Christopher Maurice Brown.
just a FEW men who should’ve been front & center to give Usher his 10s. #BETAwards
Usher has had one hell of a 2024. He’s got a new album, he’s headed on tour, he performed at the Super Bowl, and now, he’s been honored with a BET Lifetime Achievement Award. However, we aren’t sure how he feels about it, because BET’s infamously touchy censor weighed in pretty heavily during Usher’s acceptance speech after he let some colorful language fly in reference to his absentee father. The speech ended up sounding a bit like the radio edit of Snoop Dogg’s “Ain’t No Fun (If the Homies Can’t Have None),” only without the fly instrumental. Fans were quick to let their own commentary off the chain on Twitter.
— Toney! Toni! Toné! (@the_notorious_) July 1, 2024
They really cut Usher’s whole damn speech. Cannot believe we really waited around for Usher to FINALLY get on the damn mic and #BETAwards really cut the whole damn thing other than 4 words and claps. That’s that BS, Gelado!! pic.twitter.com/hRWrgwlkQT
Despite this, the mics were indeed on during the tribute performance honoring Usher, which featured an all-star roster of nearly all women singers covering hits from across Usher’s near-30-year run of hits. Included in the performance were Childish Gambino (“U Don’t Have To Call”), Keke Palmer (“You Make Me Wanna”), Summer Walker (“Good Good”), Coco Jones (“There Goes My Baby”), Marsha Ambrosius (“Confessions Pt.2”), Chlöe (“Good Kisser”), Tinashe (“Nice & Slow”), Teyana Taylor & Victoria Monét (“Bad Girl”), and Latto (“Yeah!”).
This isn’t the first time the BET Awards have had censor issues — it’s a tradition going back decades at this point. Nor is this the first time this month Usher has had technical difficulties on the mic, after Latto had to help save his performance at her Birthday Bash in Atlanta a couple of weeks ago. Check out his speech… in all its censored glory… above.
This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Cookie settingsACCEPT
Privacy & Cookies Policy
Privacy Overview
This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these cookies, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may have an effect on your browsing experience.
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.