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Loyle Carner Has Achieved His American Dream

When a lot of people think of British rap, they often default to drill and grime artists like Skepta or Stormzy, or more recently, Central Cee or Dave. This is probably a function of how they’ve been co-signed stateside by institutions like Drake, whose approval has been a career booster for many artists, or Rolling Loud, the festival that has come to define the image and direction of hip-hop in recent years.

But when I interview London’s Loyle Carner about the disparity between this perception and his own, jazz-influenced approach to thoughtful, traditionalist rap, he dismisses any pressure to conform to the archetype known by both Americans and Brits. “It’s quite nice to have a space where it’s so much more laid back and small as opposed to something that feels so high pressure and big,” he says via Zoom the day after performing his first-ever show in Los Angeles at El Rey Theatre — nearly ten years after making his debut with the 2014 EP A Little Late.

Like Carner’s music, the concert at El Rey is intimate and personal; onstage with his band, he shares the compelling story of how he named his most recent album, 2022’s Hugo, after his dad’s car, where he and his patriarch hashed out nearly 30 years of resentments. As a performer, he’s composed and collected, sweeping from one song to the next with barely a pause to chat until the halfway mark of the set. As befits a veteran performer, if he felt any nerves about performing for the first time in LA, he sure didn’t show it — if anything, he transported his audience to the South London streets of his youth.

Although Hugo was distributed by Virgin EMI, Carner’s operation is basically independent, so playing his first US tour three albums into his career is more of an accomplishment than it may appear at first glance. It took a long, circuitous road to get here, along which the 29-year-old was nominated for a Mercury Prize, stretched his philanthropic wings, and became a father, in 2020. The latter, he says, not only informed the depth and growth he displayed on Hugo but also ensured that he was ready to embrace his own version of the American Dream when he got here.

During our Zoom, he revealed how he became “brave” enough to share some of his most confessional material yet, how fatherhood changed his artistry for the better, and just what it means to make it in America.

That show last night was absolutely incredible. You are one heck of a performer, sir.

Yo, man, thank you so much. Truly, it means a lot, especially in a place like LA. I’ve spent my whole life looking at this place, so yeah, it means a lot.

This is your first time coming to LA ever? How are you enjoying it?

Loving it, man. The weather, man. Fucking hell, it’s beautiful out here. There’s been a few false starts for us. We wanted to come here a few times, and visas got fucked up, or flights got canceled, so it kind of felt like this was the right time to come.

What’s been something that has changed in terms of the touring and the promotion for this album that you didn’t have before or that you’ve learned something and it’s unlocked a new level for you?

I’m a father now, so I guess the main thing was being away trying to look after myself, as opposed to just going out every night and trying to have fun — going to bed early and waking up early as opposed to going to bed late and waking up late. But for the shows, we have a band now, and that’s completely revolutionized the way we play. I feel like I’m part of a community on stage as opposed to just on my own.

It was my best friend’s birthday a couple of days ago, so I took him to the show. And he was just fascinated and enamored with the beats, because I think when I told him, “Oh, it’s this British artist,” he immediately heard in his head Top Boy, like the grime/drill sound. And then you come out there and you have these soulful beats. Is that something you’ve encountered a lot of, people being thrown by the British/American divide?

It’s funny. It’s why it’s such a trip for me being out here, because I grew up on American rap probably more than UK. I loved a lot of UK stuff, but really when I was growing up, I was listening to Common and Most Def, and I guess everyone in and amongst that world, A Tribe Called Quest, et cetera. So I was so affected by the relationship of jazz and rap and the poetry of it and the focus on what you were saying and how you had to be saying something.

Which is why I always felt so strange coming here to play music, because, to me, it’s kind of like I can’t reinvent the wheel. I take a lot of my inspiration from this place, yes, from other places too, but I was always scared to come and go, “Hey, you see that thing that you guys do? I kind of do it, too.”

You feel like even though you’ve kind of proved yourself, you’ve worked hard, you’re still stepping into an arena where now you’re the little fish in the big pond?

I think I finally feel brave enough to do that, but I think the pressure I put on myself is very different. I’m happy being out here and being more small and grassroots as opposed to what it’s like in the UK or Europe, where we play quite big shows. I think for me, it’s quite nice to have a space where it’s so much more laid-back and small as opposed to something that feels so high-pressure and big. I think the music reflects that. It’s nice at the moment because the people in the UK who are blowing up are like Dave, Central Cee, et cetera, et cetera. So it’s nice to come in and people are like, “Oh, hey, you know Central Cee?” And I’m like, “Yeah, but we don’t make the same kind of stuff.”

I find that fascinating because everything I know about the UK scene is peripheral, is third party, is at a distance, like blogs, and magazines, and movies, and things like that. So I know you guys had the rave scene. And it always felt more communal for you guys to me, so now you’re telling me it feels the same way, there’s that mutual feeling of like, “Oh, they have it figured out over there,” and we both feel the same way.

For sure. I think that’s what’s so cool. I think the things that have always seemed to do the best from the UK coming over to America, too, are things that are individual and truthful to where we live and what’s going on for us, and not trying to fit into the box of what’s going on over here.

When you think about the culture of rap music, in particular, hip-hop as a thing, like basketball, baggy pants, rap music, movies, all of this stuff is so heavily influenced by the culture of growing up and looking to America in the ’90s for me. And I think that’s still true now, but what’s cool is for the first time, guys in the UK are kind of equally part of that, which is so exciting. That’s why it’s so exciting thinking about someone like Central Cee or whatever, just being over here and being able to say, “Yeah, I’m from this part, I live in this part of London. This is what I see every day. This is our slang, this is how we speak.” Very exciting.

I always ask this question during interviews. I know you do a lot of interviews, and you have to answer a lot of similar questions. I have to ask a lot of the same questions. Have you ever thought of a question that you wish somebody would ask you that they’ve never asked you?

When you look at an artist that you love, I always want to know — like I love Kendrick Lamar, for example — and I always want to know what kind of art he’s digesting to make the stuff that he’s making. What movies is he watching or what books is he reading?

When I was making Hugo, I read a book. My girlfriend got me a book called, My Name Is Why, which is by a guy called Lemn Sissay. He’s a poet from the UK. But he grew up in the care system. And the care system anywhere in the world is fucked up, but in the UK, particularly difficult, especially for ethnic minorities and especially young Black boys, Black women. So yeah, it was a book about him growing up without any parents and trying to find a way of being a parent to himself, which I kind of resonated with. So I thought that was beautiful.

I watched Le Hain, which I’d watched many times. I watched a film called Manchester By The Sea, which I was really moved by. Yeah, a lot of drama, a lot of sad shit it sounds like.

Sometimes you have to watch some sad stuff to get to the meaning of life. The meaning of life is finding the joy. I think that’s something I get from your music. What do you want people to take away from Hugo?

I think it really is just that the main idea is that people are capable of change and forgiveness.

I think about rap music a lot, and the overarching theme of it always, especially from young men, is “I grew up without a father. It was fucking hard. Now I’ve made it and fuck my dad.” That’s the trajectory. People start off kind of jaded by the lack of infrastructure and kind of male presence they’ve had in their life, and you kind of culminate to a place of like, “Okay, now I’m that person with the power and the relationship, and I choose to put all the focus on my mom.” And that was me saying that’s kind of what I’m raised by.

I felt like never had I listened to a rap album that comes from my community that was like, “Hey, what happens if we actually try and understand where the deadbeat dad is coming from?” Not making excuses, but begin to kind of understand, okay, what was happening 20, 30 years ago that led to this? What’s the generational cycle? How do we break the cycle further instead of just kind of perpetuate it? And I guess, yeah, the thing that really I was struck by with this album is trying to say that people are capable of change. Forgiveness not only helps them, but helps yourself.

You told a story about how you named your album after your dad’s car, and I’d love for our readers to see it.

The story of the car was my dad, when he found out I was going to be a father, he was like, “You need to learn to drive because you need to pick up your kid from nursery and the hospital and all this shit.” And I was like, “I do need to learn to drive.” It’s very different in the UK because, especially in London, there’s so much transport that you don’t need to drive. But when you have kids, you kind of do need to. So he pulled up to my house and his red VW Polo, and we started to talk in these driving lessons. And the car’s a really good conduit, a great space for conversation because we’re both looking forward. So it’s not intimidating to when you’re talking to someone, you’re looking at them, it’s very intense, but when you’re both looking forward, you can be a bit more open.

I’m saying shit to my dad that no son should ever have to say to his father. My father’s saying stuff to me that no father should ever have to say to his son. And then I just at some point just gave up being angry and was like, “Okay, let me just start listening.” I stopped talking and started listening. I heard his side of the story, and he began to just explain what it was like for him, the pressures he felt, what he’d been shown by his father and by his father’s father and by the men around him, and in popular culture and the way that Black men are referenced in movies and all this shit. Everything is leading him down one path. And I think it takes a lot of strength and emotional support to go against what the whole world is expecting from you.

And I think sadly, he just kind of succumbed to the pressure. So yeah, I guess ultimately I forgave him, and the reason I was telling the story at the shows and stuff is for two reasons. One, I already said about learning to forgive and how you can set yourself free, and not only set someone else free. But the other one was just, yeah, my dad’s license plate was S331HGU, and everyone called my dad’s car Hugo. So I called the album Hugo because it was a space in time. It was a safe space for me, and without the car, the album wouldn’t exist.

I love when people put that kind of thought and intention behind creative endeavors. It just makes it feel like something that is more meaningful. This is something we’re going to be listening to in 20 years still.

I’m kind of getting to the point in my career where I’m kind of accepting of the fact that maybe the day it comes out, it’s not going to get a million views, but I’d love that maybe if one person listened to it every day for the next million days, it would get like a million plays that way, and I’d much prefer that. It’s like cave drawings. The whole point is to show people in 20 years, 30 years, 50 years where we were at. People right now, they know where they’re at. For me, it’s like a time capsule. I’m just hopeful in however many years people can look back and go, “Oh, no doubt. That’s kind of what was going on. That was the state of affairs when Loyle was growing up.”

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Bad Bunny Announced The ‘Most Wanted Tour’ For 2024 And Shared North American Tour Dates

All eyes are on Bad Bunny right now: He just released his new album Nadie Sabe Lo Que Va A Pasar Mañana and he’s hosting Saturday Night Live this weekend. That makes today (October 19) the perfect time for his latest announcement: In 2024, Bad Bunny is going on the Most Wanted Tour.

The run kicks off at Salt Lake City on February 21, 2024, and from there, he hits several North American cities before wrapping up with three Miami shows in late May. A tour poster teases, “and more…,” so additional dates will likely be announced in the future. Tickets are not yet for sale, but fans can now register for the chance to get tickets via the tour website.

Check out the Most Wanted Tour dates below. Find more information and get tickets here.

02/21/2024 — Salt Lake City, UT @ Delta Center
02/23/2024 — Las Vegas, NV @ T-Mobile Arena
02/24/2024 — Las Vegas, NV @ T-Mobile Arena
02/27/2024 — Phoenix, AZ @ Footprint Center
02/28/2024 — Phoenix, AZ @ Footprint Center
03/01/2024 — San Francisco, CA @ Chase Center
03/02/2024 — San Francisco, CA @ Chase Center
03/05/2024 — Sacramento, CA @ Golden 1 Center
03/07/2024 — Portland, OR @ Moda Center
03/09/2024 — Seattle, WA @ Climate Pledge Arena
03/13/2024 — Los Angeles, CA @ Crypto.com Arena
03/14/2024 — Los Angeles, CA @ Crypto.com Arena
03/15/2024 — Los Angeles, CA @ Crypto.com Arena
03/20/2024 — Denver, CO @ Ball Arena
03/23/2024 — Minneapolis, MN @ Target Center
03/26/2024 — Kansas City, MO @ T-Mobile Center
03/28/2024 — Chicago, IL @ United Center
03/29/2024 — Chicago, IL @ United Center
03/30/2024 — Chicago, IL @ United Center
04/04/2024 — Toronto, ON @ Scotiabank Arena
04/06/2024 — Detroit, MI @ Little Caesars Arena
04/09/2024 — Washington, DC @ Capital One Arena
04/11/2024 — Brooklyn, NY @ Barclays Center
04/12/2024 — Brooklyn, NY @ Barclays Center
04/13/2024 — Brooklyn, NY @ Barclays Center
04/17/2024 — Boston, MA @ TD Garden
04/19/2024 — Philadelphia, PA @ Wells Fargo Center
04/20/2024 — Hartford, CT @ XL Center
04/22/2024 — Louisville, KY @ KFC Yum! Center
04/24/2024 — Tulsa, OK @ BOK Center
04/26/2024 — Austin, TX @ Moody Center
04/27/2024 — Austin, TX @ Moody Center
04/30/2024 — Houston, TX @ Toyota Center
05/01/2024 — Houston, TX @ Toyota Center
05/03/2024 — Dallas, TX @ American Airlines Center
05/04/2024 — Dallas, TX @ American Airlines Center
05/07/2024 — New Orleans, LA @ Smoothie King Center
05/10/2024 — Charlotte, NC @ Spectrum Center
05/11/2024 — Nashville, TN @ Bridgestone Arena
05/14/2024 — Atlanta, GA @ State Farm Arena
05/15/2024 — Atlanta, GA @ State Farm Arena
05/17/2024 — Orlando, FL @ Amway Center
05/18/2024 — Orlando, FL @ Amway Center
05/21/2024 — Tampa, FL @ Amalie Arena
05/24/2024 — Miami, FL @ Kaseya Center
05/25/2024 — Miami, FL @ Kaseya Center
05/26/2024 — Miami, FL @ Kaseya Center

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How To Get Olivia Rodrigo’s Secret Tracks For Record Store Day 2023

Olivia Rodrigo released her sophomore album, Guts, just a few weeks ago. Fans who purchased vinyl copies of the record were in for a special surprise, as each of the color variations contained a hidden bonus track. In total, there were four songs: “Obsessed,” “Scared Of My Guitar,” “Girl I’ve Always Been,” and “Stranger.”

For those who only purchased one copy, or weren’t able to grab one of the Guts vinyl records, Rodrigo is giving you a second chance. The pop star is putting all four songs on a special vinyl pressing titled Guts: The Secret Tracks, in honor of this year’s Record Store Day.

It comes pressed on an “opaque deep purple etched vinyl” with a new cover photo too, that has Rodrigo’s face layered over cut-outs of her silhouette. The two pictures are also complete in her signature colors: purple and black.

Finally, as Rodrigo revealed on Instagram, her Record Store Day exclusive release was pressed at none other than Jack White’s Third Man Records. White has been a longtime inspiration for Rodrigo, and the two have since become friends. She even shared a hilarious photo of her attempting to give White a haircut backstage.

Guts: The Secret Tracks is out 11/24. More information can be found here.

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Are Martinis Better Shaken Or Stirred? We Found Out

It’s a question as old as time, “Do you shake or stir a martini?” And ho boy, do you people have opinions. Yes, that includes me. But opinions are just that. And while we can get into the science of “bruising” the gin while shaking it, let’s skip all of that for the important question. What is the difference in taste when you shake a martini instead of (or as opposed to) stirring a martini?

Let’s take a look at that and make a decision based on concrete evidence in our hands. Sounds like a good plan, right? First, parameters:

  • Both methods will have the same recipe/ratio (5:1).
  • Both will have the same gin, Gin Mare (a very tasty Spanish gin that’s made for cocktails), and Martini & Rossi Dry Vermouth.
  • Both martinis will use the same ice for shaking and stirring (no special ice in one or the other for different results).
  • Both will only be garnished with a twist of lemon, allowing lemon oils to be the only add-on (it’s classic).
  • Both will made at the same time and tasted right away to maximize freshness.

That’s as even and equal as I can make this. So let’s find out which is the better method for making a classic gin martini — shaken or stirred?

Also Read: The Top Five Cocktail Recipes of the Last Six Months

Shaken Gin Martini

Shaken Vs. Stirred Martini
Zach Johnston

Ingredients:

  • 2.5 oz. gin
  • 0.5 oz. dry vermouth
  • Lemon peel
  • Ice
Shaken Vs. Stirred Martini
Zach Johnston

What You’ll Need:

  • Coupe, Nick and Nora, or cocktail glass
  • Cocktail shaker
  • Cocktail strainer
  • Paring knife
  • Jigger
Shaken Vs. Stirred Martini
Zach Johnston

Method:

  • Prechill the glass in the freezer.
  • Add the gin and vermouth to the cocktail shaker and then add a handful of ice.
  • Affix the lid and shake vigorously for about 10 seconds, 15 seconds max.
  • Strain the cocktail into the prechilled glass and then express the oils from the lemon over the glass. Serve.

Bottom Line:

Shaken Vs. Stirred Martini
Zach Johnston

Okay, this is a really good martini. There’s a clear sense of deep botanicals with a hint of sweetness driving through the herbal vibes. It’s ice-cold and super refreshing. If it was a hot day, I’d down these easily to beat the heat.

The best part is that when you shake the drink, it creates ice slivers in the actual cocktail. Those slivers create this lush and almost creamy mouthfeel that’s silky smooth. It’s a textural treat for your mouth.

The downside side is that those slivers started to melt. And by the third sip, this was getting a little watered down. It was still cold and delicious but had lost its edge by the end.

Stirred Gin Martini

Shaken Vs. Stirred Martini
Zach Johnston

Ingredients:

  • 2.5 oz. gin
  • 0.5 oz. dry vermouth
  • Lemon peel
  • Ice
Shaken Vs. Stirred Martini
Zach Johnston

What You’ll Need:

  • Coupe, Nick and Nora, or cocktail glass
  • Cocktail mixing glass
  • Barspoon
  • Paring knife
  • Jigger
Shaken Vs. Stirred Martini
Zach Johnston

Method:

  • Prechill the glass in the freezer.
  • Add the gin and vermouth to a mixing glass and fill with a handful of ice.
  • Stir for about 20-30 seconds until the mixing glass is ice-cold to touch.
  • Strain the cocktail into the prechilled glass and then express the lemon oils over the cocktail. Serve.

Bottom Line:

Shaken Vs. Stirred Martini
Zach Johnston

This is a classic martini with deep herbal and botanical notes with a hint of sweetness. It was ice-cold and sharp with an almost bright demeanor to it. What it was missing though was that lush mouthfeel. It was nice but not silky or soft.

I would also argue that this was a tad watered down from the jump. It was more like the third sip of the shaken martini without the first two sips giving you that luxurious mouthfeel. Interesting…

Final Thoughts on the Shaken and Stirred Martinis

Shaken Vs. Stirred Martini
Zach Johnston

I can’t believe I’m about to say this, but the shaken martini is the way to go. The mouthfeel of those first few sips while the ice slivers were still whole was just leagues above the sharpness of the stirred martini. You can see the difference the ice slivers make in the drink on the left above. Notice the haziness of the drink?

That said, they both ended up tasting exactly the same after a few minutes. What you’re getting with the shaken version is a few moments/sips of something with a bold smooth textural experience that stirring just can’t match. But it’s fleeting. That feel a tad odd that people are so ride-or-die one way or another. After all, if you’re going to end up in the same place either way, why argue?

For me, I’ll probably still do what I always do and go with how I feel in the moment. I’ll shake one when the mood hits and I want that extra moment of textural comfort. And I’ll stir up a martini when I can’t be bothered shaking one up. Either way… martinis are delicious. So there’s that.

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If You Like ‘Scream’ You Should Watch ‘Wes Craven’s New Nightmare’

You can almost literally see the wheels spinning in Wes Craven’s head while watching Wes Craven’s New Nightmare, which both makes it unbelievably fascinating and also, at the same time, not quite a fully formed idea. Now, the fully formed idea would come two years later with Scream, but while watching Wes Craven’s New Nightmare the seeds of something wonderful had been planted. And it makes perfect sense New Nightmare under-performed at the time. Not putting the words “Elm Street” or “Freddy” into the title of a Nightmare on Elm Street movie is certainly … bold (though, originally it did have a Nightmare on Elm Street title), but there’s no way that helped the box office. (Also not helping, being released the same day as Pulp Fiction.)

Craven hadn’t directed a Nightmare on Elm Street movie since the original ten years before. It’s a little startling to watch that first one compared to the others. Freddy, referred to as “Fred” Krueger in the first installment, doesn’t yet have his trademark deep voice, certainly doesn’t have as many “jokes,” and his really disturbing backstory is discussed in much more detail. In the ten years since Craven had directed A Nightmare on Elm Street, Freddy Krueger had become basically a cartoon character, coming up with elaborate and wacky schemes to kill his victims, usually followed by a one-liner. But by the time of Freddy’s Dead: The Final Nightmare (the only Nightmare movie I saw in theaters), the formula was stale. Freddy’s antics and jokes were stale and, now, just resorted to using the word “bitch” a lot.

Actually, a lot of the “A-list” horror franchises were getting stale at the time.* By the time New Nightmare was released, Jason Vorhees had been to Manhattan and Hell. And even those titles were misleading. In Jason Takes Manhattan, yeah, Jason eventually makes it to New York City, which look a lot like Vancouver – but not until the third act of the movie after spending the first two-thirds basically watching Jason people stab a bunch of people on a boat. (Though this movie does feature Jason punching someone so hard his head flies off.) In Jason Goes to Hell, we never once see Jason in Hell. In fact, we barely see Jason at all. It’s kind of weird out of the original 11 Friday the 13th movies, Jason Vorhees is basically not in three of them. Hey, but at least Friday the 13th was trying something kinda fun and stupid (Jason eventually goes to space). On the other side, the Halloween movies decided, after the incredibly fun and weird Halloween III: Season of the Witch, to double down, and get bogged down, on the lore of Michael Myers and dig deep into cults and rituals and Michael’s psychic family members. Finally, Paul Rudd shows up in the sixth installment, Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers to end all this.

*Having said all that, at the time all of this seemed stale, but it’s all come around to being fun again. I have nothing against “elevated horror,” but sometimes I just want to watch Jason Vorhees go around and kill a bunch of people. Also, just like action movies of the era, it’s kind of surprising how good these movies look compared to the grey, CGI-heavy movies of today. Even the Friday the 13th movies are bright and colorful. Also, I think this is why David Gordon Green’s Halloween movies are so dividing. They really do borrow the spirit of an earlier era, which is going to play odd to viewers today expecting something meaningful. These movies are all stupid! But also that’s their charm. Also, speaking of Jason, I understand the lawsuits and disputes over ownership, but come on? How has it been 14 years since we’ve seen Jason Vorhees? The 2009 reboot made a lot of money! Let’s get Jason going again!

So obviously Craven was fed up with the current state of horror – or, at least, his contribution to horror – and wanted to drastically change things. (It is weird to watch, say, A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master and realize that movie technically spawned from the same person who made The Last House on the Left and The Hills Have Eyes.) The main concept of Wes Craven’s New Nightmare is a little disjointed between making fun of clichés and the supernatural, but the main concept is Freddy Krueger escapes the movie world and starts haunting and harassing Heather Langenkamp, who played Nancy Thompson in the first movie and the third movie, Dream Warriors. (As an aside, when I went to high school in a suburb of Kansas City, I lived two houses away from a girl named Nancy Thompson. In retrospect, it’s weird this wasn’t brought up more often. Then again, no one really wanted to take their chances with Freddy so maybe it wasn’t.) To the point, Langenkamp starts getting strange and aggressive phone calls, just like the Scream movie made famous. Langenkamp then seeks out both Craven and Robert Englund for help and advice. (Englund is particularly great in this movie playing himself. Also, I wish more people knew the original V miniseries today, and V: The Final Battle, because Englund is really great as a nice alien who is against eating humans. I can’t condone the actions of Freddy Krueger, but here I do agree with Englund’s character … eating humans is bad.)

I mean, look, people still love Scream. There have been two new Scream movies in the past two years. It’s remarkable there’s a movie where the creator of Scream is work-shopping Scream, using Freddy Krueger. It’s so fascinating and for whatever reason, like a lot of people I think, I had avoided it. (For me, before the pandemic, I was a “I hate horror movies” person. Then, with not much else to do, I kind of got into them. Not the more modern “jump scare*” variety, but the stuff that people would consider “fun.” So I am catching up still on a lot of horror.) The end result is New Nightmare is a very strange movie. And it works on a “what on Earth is this?” type movie, but I could also see how the meta tone of the whole thing, combined with actual supernatural elements, would fly over the heads of people in 1994. It would be like watching the first Scream and out of nowhere Ghostface has actual powers.

(*Some people seem to get offended having some movies classified as “jump scare,” but I’m sorry that’s what they are. That doesn’t mean they aren’t good, it just means they “aren’t for me.” Horror movies from the ’80s or ’90s would have one or two good jump scares. Now it’s nonstop and I find it unpleasant, but I also understand why people accustomed to nonstop jump scares might find movies without them not as exciting. Whatever!)

Two years after New Nightmare, Craven would just keep all the meta aspects of Wes Craven’s New Nightmare and ditch the supernatural elements and he made yet another movie that is now six movies deep into the franchise (just one less than Elm Street‘s original run. We can pretend the 2010 reboot doesn’t exist, though it did make a lot of money). Wes Craven’s New Nightmare is a gift to Scream fans that maybe don’t even realize it’s right there to be discussed and dissected. Anyway, that’s the point of all this … if you at all like Scream, you should watch Wes Craven’s New Nightmare.

You can contact Mike Ryan directly on Twitter.

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Here’s Why Gucci Mane & T.I. Had Beef

When Gucci Mane chose Breath Of Fresh Air as the title for his newly released album, he meant it. The 24-track double-album features several artists, such as 21 Savage, Lil Baby, J. Cole, Roddy Ricch, and the late Young Dolph, but T.I.’s surprise appearance at the Gucci Mane & Friends concert at Atlanta’s The Tabernacle on Tuesday (October 17) was, in some ways, more notable.

As seen in videos circulated by longtime hip-hop journalist and Rap Radar host Elliott Wilson, Gucci Mane teed up Tip’s appearance as doing “something special for the city” and showing everyone that their beef is firmly behind them. T.I. performed “24’s.” At one point, Gucci Mane and T.I. verbalized their respect for each other and sealed it with an on-stage dap.

In the wake of this feel-good moment, outlets such as HipHopDX and Vibe retraced the origins of Gucci Mane’s now-squashed beef with T.I. Most everyone agrees that it started in 2012 because T.I. aligned with Jeezy, another long-standing rival of Gucci Mane’s. Then, in April 2018, T.I. took to Instagram to dispute Gucci Mane’s claim about inventing trap music.

“Ok,so…. AGAIN for the slow ones in the back…,” T.I. captioned a screenshot of the Wikipedia page for his 2003 Trap Muzik album. “August 19th,2003 Birth of Trap Muzik & Only fools dispute facts!!! FOH wit that Christopher Columbus ass… ‘Look what I discovered,even though they was already here’ ass sh*t!!!! WITCHO GOOD CAPPIN ASS”

“A source close to the situation tells TMZ Hip Hop both superstars have long moved past their previous round of diss exchanges from years ago,” TMZ relayed on Wednesday (October 18). “They both were co-headliners for the recent Legendz Of The Streetz tour and mended the fences, which didn’t take much doing.”

TMZ’s reported timeline matches up with T.I. naming Gucci Mane and Jeezy to his Mount Rushmore of trap music with AllHipHop in August. Not to mention, in July 2020, T.I. and Jeezy expressed their desire to call a truce with Gucci Mane for the sake of trap music.

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

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The NFL Will Consider Letting Active Players Participate In Flag Football At The 2028 Olympics

When the International Olympic Committee announced flag football would be among the sports added to the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles, the immediate question from many was whether NFL players would be allowed to participate.

The answer for now is “maybe,” with the NFL not ruling out the possibility but noting they have to work through some logistics before giving players the green light. NFL executive vice president Peter O’Reilly told Front Office Sports they’ve seen the desire from players since the announcement was made, but have to talk through everything to understand the risks, timeline of when guys would need to be available, and more.

“We understand the desire,” O’Reilly said. “We think it’s a great opportunity, because the player interest is real and palpable. There’s a desire to work through with these stakeholders and get to that outcome for July [2028].”

“Clearly in the leadup to the announcement, and then [Monday], there was a lot of excitement, as you might expect, from great NFL athletes and NFL legends who love the idea of representing their country on an Olympic stage,” O’Reilly said.

The concern, of course, is with players potentially getting hurt in the summer leading into the season — although one could argue they’d be just as likely to get hurt doing individual workouts as they would playing flag football. Still, that’s going to be the thing they have to navigate with teams and the NFLPA (hence the “stakeholders” quote), but it would be very fun to see NFL players able to represent their countries on the Olympic stage.

Football players have never had that opportunity, and there are plenty of speedsters around the league who would be very fun to watch in a flag football setting. That said, NFL players would need to learn some new rules (like avoiding flag blocking) to be able to succeed at a sport that’s closely related but has some key rule differences to tackle football — but the new Pro Bowl flag football games offer a little introduction to all of that.

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Surprise, Will Smith Appeared At Jada’s Latest Book-Signing And Gushed About Their ‘Brutal And Beautiful’ Relationship

Jada Pinkett Smith continues her whirlwind book tour filled that’s been fully loaded with bombshell revelations like she and Will Smith secretly separated in 2016, but also, surprise, they got back together after he slapped Chris Rock at the Oscars. As always seems to be the case, we learned way too much about the overly-dramatic couple and were repeatedly reminded that Jada used to date Tupac in case anyone could have possibly forgotten.

Naturally, there’s no end in sight to this circus, which was punctuated on Wednesday night by Will making a “surprise” appearance at Jada’s book signing event in Baltimore. The Fresh Prince star took the stage to gush about his wife.

“I just really wanted to come out and just be here and hold it down for you the way you have held it down for me,” Will said via The Baltimore Sun. “We have had a very, very long and tumultuous [relationship]. We call it ‘brutiful.’ It was brutal and beautiful at the same time.”

According to the Sun, it was an “emotional, romantic speech” that left Jada covering her mouth on the side of the stage. The moment seemed “designed to quash public speculation” that their marriage is over. Speculation that Jada started, by the way, but who’s counting?

“Will and me are good,” Jada later said during an on-stage discussion. “All the people who don’t understand and got something to say are just going to have to fall in line.”

(Via The Baltimore Sun)

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Here’s The Release Date For The ‘BTS: Yet To Come’ Concert Film

Earlier this year, BTS had a limited theater run for their BTS: Yet To Come In Theaters concert film. Now, fans who couldn’t make it will get to experience the new version, BTS: Yet To Come, as it heads to streaming. Here’s what to know about the release date.

BTS: Yet To Come will be out on November 9 in 240 countries with Prime Video access. For fans in Japan, the film will be out just a few weeks later, with a streaming release date starting December 1.

“We are thrilled to partner with Hybe in welcoming BTS: Yet To Come to Prime Video,” David Simonsen, director of Prime Video in Southeast Asia, said in a statement. “We know the popularity of high-quality Korean content worldwide, and we look forward to delighting consumers around the globe with BTS: Yet To Come. We are excited to see the concert movie and this genre find new audiences from different countries on Prime Video.”

The movie is centered around BTS’ free performance from last October. The band took the stage at Asiad Main Stadium in Busan, South Korea, as the city was seeking a World Expo 2030 bid, according to Deadline.

While the band is on hiatus, fans can still expect to hear them perform “Dynamite,” “Butter,” “RUN,” “MIC Drop,” “Yet To Come (The Most Beautiful Moment),” and more, from the comfort of their homes.

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Father takes daughter’s bullying victim on a shopping trip to teach her a lesson

Bullying is a huge problem. According to DoSomething.org, 1 in 5 students ages 12-18 in the United States are bullied during the school year, and approximately 160,000 teens have skipped school because of bullying.

So when Randy Smalls of South Carolina discovered that his teenage daughter was making fun of a classmate over her clothes and makeup, he took swift action.

Smalls instantly felt sympathy for Ryan Reese, a seventh-grader at Berkeley Middle School, having been bullied in his youth. So he took money meant for his daughter and went on a shopping spree with Ryan to get some new clothes and a makeover.


Smalls’ wife and Ryan’s mother Richauna Reese are friends, but they weren’t aware of the bullying until recently. The families got on the phone after speaking to Ryan, and Smalls asked if he could take Ryan to buy new clothes and get a makeover at the beauty salon.

Smalls used money initially intended to buy his 13-year-old daughter some new clothes, but after learning about her bullying, he decided to spend the money on Ryan instead.

“I say, ‘When you laugh along, you’re co-signing the bullying,” Smalls told Yahoo News.

“My daughter was upset, especially because she is into fashion,” he said. “So she came with us and helped pick out Ryan’s new clothes.”

While his daughter was at church, Smalls took Ryan to the beauty salon and paid for twice-a-month appointments until the end of the year.

After hearing about the good gesture, local salons have also offered to keep Ryan looking stylish for the next few months.

Richauna, Ryan’s mother, told Yahoo News that her daughter was struggling after the recent deaths of her father, grandfather, and aunt, as well as non-epileptic seizures caused by the stress.

The shopping trip has helped Ryan immensely. “I wasn’t expecting it. I just started to cry. It (the bullying) was really sad for me because I had lost my grandpa, father, and aunt, and it really took me deep down in my depression,” Ryan explained.

“This is the first time I have seen a parent take such a stance on bullying,” Richauna added.

Smalls was overwhelmed by the response and says that it’s helped his daughter see her mistake.

“I didn’t expect for this to get big but I’m glad if other parents [can learn from it],” Smalls said. “My daughter learned her lesson.”

“As parents, we have to take responsibility for what our children do,” Smalls told ABC’s Strahan, Sara, and Keke. “We can teach our children, but when they go and are around other children they can veer off a little bit. When situations like this happen, we have to take action and be the parent and not the friend.”

And the pair seem to be getting along better for the experience. “They’re cool now,” Richauna said.

Watch to young girls break down the story in this adorable YouTube video:

This article originally appeared on 12.4.19