Rauw Alejandro travels to the future with reggaeton pioneer Baby Rasta in their music video for “Punto 40 Año 2077.” The mind-blowing visual that was released on Saturday (September 25) previews Alejandro’s upcoming album Saturno.
“Punto 40 Año 2077” is Alejandro’s lead single from his Saturno album. He put a rave-ready spin on Baby Rasta and Gringo’s classic “Punto 40,” which helped shape the reggaeton genre. Alejandro revisited the genre’s perreo roots alongside Baby Rasta while putting a grimy electronic twist on the track. The “Año 2077” version shows a harder edge to Alejandro’s artistry while accentuating his alluring charm.
Alejandro wrote on Twitter, “In this song, I was musically inspired by the 90s as a fan of Playe, Baby Rasta, and Gringo, and I also decided to give [‘Punto 40’] another meaning. The .40 can be your aura, your energy, what you project, your success, the baby you have by your side, your group, your art, your talent, your discipline. You kill them with that.”
En este tema, me inspire en los 90 musicalmente fan de Playe y Baby Rasta y Gringo y tmbn decidi darle otro sentido. La .40 puede ser tu aura, tu energía, lo que proyectas, tu exito, la baby que tienes a lao, el corillo, el arte, tu talento, tu disciplina. Con eso tu los matas.
The “Punto 40 Año 2077” video is next level. Alejandro seemingly pulled inspiration from The Matrix movies as he glides throughout outer space. Baby Rasta also appears in the video as Alejandro’s wing man in their hydraulics-loaded car. What sets Alejandro apart from the other reggaeton artists is his incredible talent as a dancer and he flexes that skill with gravity-defying choreography.
Alejanrdo’s Saturno album is due out in November. He’s tied with his girlfriend Rosalía as the second most-nominated artists at this year’s Latin Grammy Awards with eight nominations each. Bad Bunny leads the 2022 nominees with 10 nominations.
In celebration of four sold-out shows at NYC’s Kings Theater, Pavement has announced a new museum exhibition that will open in the city. From September 29 to October 2nd, Pavements 1933-2022: A Pavement Museum will feature “previously unseen imagery, artwork, and ephemera, commendations and commemorations, alongside rumored relics of the band’s real and imagined history (as well as exclusive merchandise and classic museum souvenirs),” according to a statement.
While it will be available to fans from 12-6 pm at 475 Greenwich Street, Pavement will also be bringing the exhibition globally. Specifically, with additional pop-ups in London and Tokyo. From there, Pavements 1933-2022: A Pavement Museum will become a permanent display in the band’s hometown of Stockton, California.
According to the exhibition’s website, it “completes a circle for one of the most celebrated and deliberated bands in modern music and helps redefine a secret history performed in plain sight.”
In April, Pavement’s debut album, 1992’s Slanted And Enchanted, celebrated its 30th anniversary by repressing the record on limited-edition vinyl. After revealing their reunion, Pavement performed at Barcelona’s Primavera Sound festival, and are currently continuing their global tour. It was originally announced in 2019 and planned for 2020 but was postponed due to the pandemic.
More information about Pavement’s museum exhibition is available here.
Sunday Night Football has been a Carrie Underwood vehicle for the last decade, but she took a backseat to Beck last night (September 25). The highlight of a bumbling contest between the Denver Broncos and San Francisco 49ers was a surprise 30-second spot featuring the eight-time Grammy winner covering Neil Young’s “Old Man” to promote next weekend’s SNF match-up between the Kansas City Chiefs and Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The full-length, standalone cover was released as a single today (September 26).
In the black-and-white SNF spot, Beck strums in an empty room while singing the intro (“Old man, look at my life / I’m a lot like you were”) and first verse (“Twenty-four, and there’s so much more”). The lyrics aligned with spliced footage of quarterbacks Patrick Mahomes and Tom Brady, who each won his first Super Bowl as a 24-year-old. Mahomes turned 27 on September 17, while Brady is the oldest active NFL player at 45.
The Week 4 clash will be a rematch of 2021’s Super Bowl LV. Brady’s Bucs dominated the Chiefs, 31-9, and Brady claimed his all-time most seventh Super Bowl ring. Mahomes only has one so far from Kansas City’s 2020 Super Bowl LIV victory over San Francisco.
Beck has been at it even longer than Brady, and the indie rock legend is similarly going strong. Over the weekend, Beck joined Damon Albarn and Gorillaz to perform “Possession Island” at the Forum in Inglewood, California. Beck is featured on the closing track of the Gorillaz’s forthcoming album, Cracker Island, due February 24, 2023.
Listen to Beck’s full cover of “Old Man” above.
Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.
When Chadwick Boseman passed away in 2020, many fans were shocked and heartbroken, including the cast and crew of Black Panther. The Marvel franchise was gearing up to begin production on the highly-anticipated sequel when it unexpectedly lost its lead.
After various COVID-related delays and controversies, the movie began production last year. When the topic of casting a new lead came up, Marvel president Kevin Feige insisted that they would not recast the title character. Now, Feige has explained his decision.
“It just felt like it was much too soon to recast,” Feige told Empire. “Stan Lee always said that Marvel represents the world outside your window. And we had talked about how, as extraordinary and fantastical as our characters and stories are, there’s a relatable and human element to everything we do. The world is still processing the loss of Chad. And Ryan [Coogler] poured that into the story.”
Instead of re-casting, the crew wanted to figure out how they could honor Boseman while producing the movie. “The conversations were entirely about, yes, ‘What do we do next?’” Feige continued. “And how could the legacy of Chadwick – and what he had done to help Wakanda and the Black Panther become these incredible, aspirational, iconic ideas – continue? That’s what it was all about.”
Earlier this year, co-star Lupita Nyong’o opened up about how making the movie without Boseman was ‘therapeutic’ for the cast. “It was very therapeutic. It restored a sense of hope for me in making it, and I think we’ve expanded the world of Wakanda in ways that will blow people’s minds — not just Wakanda, but the Black Panther world. ”
Black Panther 2 also stars Letitia Wright, Danai Gurira, Winston Duke, Florence Kasumba, Dominique Thorne, Michaela Coel, Tenoch Huerta, Martin Freeman, and Angela Bassett as they fight for Wakanda after the death of King T’Challa. The sequel hits theaters on November 11th.
Whether it be trades, free agency or otherwise, the San Antonio Spurs have encountered an exodus of talent over the past few seasons, including the likes of Kawhi Leonard and DeMar DeRozan. Most recently, they traded 26-year-old All-Star Dejounte Murray to the Atlanta Hawks in exchange for a package largely centered on future draft capital. As a result, youthful development seems to be the priority entering the 2022-23 campaign, headlined by recent draftees such as Jeremy Sochan, Joshua Primo, Devin Vassell and Keldon Johnson.
Head coach Gregg Popovich appears starkly aware of the direction of the franchise. He did not mince words at Monday’s Media Day about his team’s title odds.
“I probably shouldn’t say this, but I’ll say it anyway. What the hell,” Popovich said. “Nobody here should go to Vegas with the thought of betting on us to win the championship. And I know somebody will say, ‘Gosh, what a Debbie Downer. There’s a chance, what if they work really hard?’ It’s probably not going to happen. But the point is to develop this group and give them the best possible opportunity to have long NBA careers and enjoy the hell out of it. And whoever comes after me will have an opportunity to take them to the next level.”
Popovich on the Spurs youth: “Nobody here should go to Vegas with the thought of betting on us to win the championship…probably not going to happen, but that’s not the point.” #Spurs#KSATsports#PorVidapic.twitter.com/u2JjHStXEQ
Following two decades of sustained postseason success, defined by five championships and a 22-year playoff streak, Popovich and the Spurs have pivoted. It’s been fun to watch a legendary coach like him adapt to different circumstances. He seems as though he’s embracing these new chances in what should be a year where success won’t necessarily start or end in the win-loss column for San Antonio.
A lot of bands might call themselves the “best band in the world,” but Fontaines D.C. is one of the few who can actually claim the title. Hailing from Dublin, the five-piece band bagged a trophy for Best Band In The World at the NME awards this year. But that’s not the only win Fontaines D.C. have had lately.
Their recently released post-punk album Skinty Fia went No. 1 in the UK and Ireland, and they celebrated by performing to a crowd of over 50,000 at Primavera Sound. On top of that, the group’s 2020 sophomore album A Hero’s Deathwas Grammy-nominated for Best Rock album and earned a nod for Best International Group at the BRITs. But despite their impressive superlative and Fontaines D.C.’s coveted nominations, vocalist Grian Chatten remains humble.
For Chatten, getting the chance to write songs for a living is far more important than any award or accolade he could ever receive. “There’s a fair few jobs that I could be doing that’d I’d be happy with, 9-5’s that I can think of,” he says over the phone just before Fontaines D.C. took the stage at the inaugural Primavera Sound LA. “I’d love to work in a bookshop. I think I’d be basically as happy as I am now as long as I could go home and write for myself.”
Chatten’s in it for the music, and Fontaines D.C.’s critical recognition is just a cherry on top. Well, most of the time it is. Their newfound fame also had a few drawbacks that came with international attention, like when the band found themselves in a highly publicized chart battle with Taylor Swift. A Hero’s Death was racing to No. 1 in the UK at the same time as Taylor Swift’s Folklore was climbing the charts, unintentionally pitting the two artists against each other. “We got death threats and all that kind of stuff,” Chatten recalls, chuckling at the memory of getting on the wrong side of Swift’s, shall we say, emboldened fanbase. “That whole world is just beyond me. I don’t really even try and understand it. One thing I would say is that they’re dedicated fans.”
But now, Fontaines D.C. find themselves, like Swift, embraced by a global fanbase. After being unable to tour much behind their 2020 Grammy-nominated release, the band has just embarked on a months-long global tour. They’ll make stops across the US, Europe, Australia, Japan, and play three sold-out shows in their Dublin hometown. Toasting the band’s massive success and lengthy tour, Chatten sat down with Uproxx to talk Ian Curtis comparisons, future plans, and how performing on stage is as close as he can get to having a “positive” panic attack.
Philip Cosores
Your last album, A Hero’s Death was nominated for Grammy and for a BRIT award when it was released. What was your reaction to hearing that you were Grammy nominated? Was that something that you ever thought would happen when you first started the band?
I don’t think so. It’s difficult for me to tell — we kind of shrouded ourselves in this blind optimism from the get-go and I don’t know to what extent that was real. I think the whole point of it was to not know how much it was real. We told ourselves at the very beginning that we were great, but we did have extreme self-doubt, like anyone does. My reaction was — I couldn’t believe it. I thought there was a mistake, you know what I mean? And it felt like this weird infiltration. I think a lot of people say that, and it’s probably a little bit self-aggrandizing to say that. It felt like we must have gotten in a back door somewhere.
And can you tell me about how you felt being nominated in the same category as artists like The Strokes?
The Strokes were huge for us as a band whe growing up. They’re kind of a good soundtrack to our friendship as well. I’m glad they won it, to be honest. I’m glad they won it because I think they deserve it, they have deserved one for years and I think it’s mad that they didn’t have one already. And I think that their last album was really, really admirable. There’s a tenacity to it. Genuinely, I really prefer them winning it to us winning it, honestly.
Speaking about your success as well, you were recently named the Best Band in the World by NME. I was wondering if you recall a certain moment — I know you said that you kind of started the band with blind optimism — but do you recall a certain moment where you really felt like you made it as a band?
I used to worry about my inability to feel or dwell on achievements. I used to think that it was a kind of shortcoming on my behalf and it was a signal of my non-presence in the moment. But now, I actually just think that it’s just kind of in my makeup to look ahead. The most important thing for me, the thing that gives me existential value, is songwriting; Songwriting and lyric writing or poetry, finding expression in words and in music. And I mean that sincerely. It takes up so much of my mental space and my heart that I don’t have time or space to look backwards on awards and titles like Best Band In The World and all that. I feel it kind of just induces fear. I don’t really want to feel ever like I’m on top of anything. I’m much more comfortable punching up.
I’m curious to hear too about how your family and your hometown have reacted to your band’s success. I’m sure that they’re pretty proud, right?
Dublin’s a bit scary for me now. I get recognized quite a bit. It can be a bit difficult to go to — a lot of my favorite spots, a lot of my favorite pubs are basically no-go areas for me now because I’ll just end up having a conversation that I’m not invested in for the whole night with someone who is being really nice but is not my friend or family. But Dublin fans are really funny because they stay slagging, they give you a hard time, which is really Irish and really funny. But if it happens a hundred times in one day, it actually can get to you.
So talking a little bit about your tour and your live shows, do you and your band have any pre-show rituals that you do together before you go out on stage?
I think the ritual happens to me, whether I like it or not. It’s in the sort of two hours before a show, I start this slow wave of anxiety and adrenaline. Energy basically comes over me and it’s kind of like the moments before vomiting, it’s like I’m almost retching with anxiety and energy. I think I’m prone to overstimulation. If too many people are moving in a room or people keep walking in and out of a room, I have to run. I get kind of overstimulated. And that’s basically the feeling that I have for an hour before the show. It’s really uncomfortable and I can’t stop moving around and touching things and picking things up and putting them down and jumping up and down.
And I’m not focused. I’ll be talking to people, but it’ll almost be like I’m blacked out. I don’t know what I’m saying. I’m not listening to them. It’s really weird. It’s just excitement, it’s nervous energy and stuff like that. Me and [Conor] Curley have to do a pretty good shot of tequila right before we go on. That’s kind of our thing.
That anxious, nervous energy, do you release it on stage or does it stay with you when you’re on stage?
I release it on stage. Like the gig is the vomit, you know what I mean? I always have a huge sense of relief, euphoria, and endorphins rushing after a show. But during the gig, my body is tense for the whole thing. My toes curl up for the whole gig and I come off stage and I realize because my feet are f*cking killing me. I think it’s almost like a positive version of an anxiety attack. It’s like, I’ve got way too much energy in my body on stage. I really enjoy gigs. Touring is really difficult, and I have a lot of problems with the rest of the mechanics of touring and stuff. But gigs are blessing for me.
You talked a little bit about how being back in Dublin can be kind of weird because you get recognized all the time, but I want to hear about what your hometown shows are like, because I know that the end of this tour has three back-to-back sold-out shows in Dublin. I can imagine that they get pretty crazy, right?
The last couple we’ve done felt like there’s been this pent-up energy. Dublin is in a really kind of strange state in terms of government and cost of living and what it’s like to be a young person there. I think there’s a lot of dissatisfaction amongst young people in Dublin at the moment, for good reason. They know that, we know it, and they know that we know it. And when we play a show in Dublin, there’s this collective expression. I feel like we’re all singing on behalf of each other for a common purpose. And that’s really, really powerful. It’s probably the most communal I’ve ever felt at a gig was our last Dublin show.
Philip Cosores
Now that you’ve played some shows in the US, is there anything that has surprised you about your American audience?
I’m really surprised about how much they connect with our songs which are based on stories of life in Dublin. To me, there’s a specificity to our lyrics that I didn’t think would translate as well as it has. And that’s been amazing to see. We played a show in Salt Lake City and I really had no idea what to expect from an audience there, with my preconceptions about what people who lived in Salt Lake City were going to be like. But it kicked off. That was amazing.
This is something that came up a lot when I was reading some of your interviews and people just writing about you. Something that I see a lot is people calling you, “This generation’s Ian Curtis,” what do you have to say to that?
Yeah, I’ve been hearing that for f*cking years. I don’t know. I feel like we’ve made so much music that isn’t similar to them at this stage. I don’t look like him, do I? People say that I do, but I don’t agree.
You don’t think he’s your celebrity lookalike?
Not really. Maybe there’s a physical movements similarity and I don’t know, but I think he was a genius. So, I’m pretty cool with that. I’m going to keep doing my own thing though.
Philip Cosores
Now that you’ve been named The Best Band In The World by NME and you’ve been nominated for Grammy, what’s your next goal for your band?
Honestly, it’s just really… I feel boring sometimes because I feel I keep answering in the same way, but it’s really just about songwriting. It’s so simple. I love songwriting and I’m really just looking forward to doing more songwriting. And that’s such an uninteresting thing to say. One thing I’m really looking forward to is collaboration. I feel strong enough in [Fontaines DC’s] identity as an artist now that I’m really open to collaboration and I’d love to write with someone else’s voice. I think I’m really limited as a vocalist. I think I’d really love to write songs for female voice.
Nice, like a songwriter for a bigger pop star or something?
Yeah, maybe. I’ve got a lot of friends who are in bands who aren’t necessarily bigger or pop stars. There’s a band called Sorry from London. Actually, do you know what? I actually want to go on the record and say I think [Asha Lorenz] is genius. And I’ve never said that word in an interview before about someone alive. I think she is a genius. I’ve heard the record that they’re putting out soon. I’ve heard the whole thing and it’s just jaw-dropping. I’d love to write with her. I think her voice is so cool as well. If she was willing, I’d love to direct that voice for one show.
Tucker Carlson picked the wrong tattoos to insult. The Fox News host recently went on a “20-minute long rant” about John Fetterman and his tattoos, which Carlson called a “stupid little fake” costume. Naturally, Pennsylvania’s tough as nails lieutenant governor had a whole lot of words for the right-wing provocateur. In a new op-ed for NBC News, Fetterman revealed the true nature of his tattoos, and if Carlson was capable of shame, he’d be feeling pretty foolish right about now.
“So let’s talk about the tattoos that Carlson seems to be so interested in,” Fetterman writes. “I have nine dates tattooed on my right forearm. Each one is a day on which someone died violently in Braddock, Pennsylvania, while I was mayor. Gun violence and violent crime might be jokes to someone like Carlson, but they are very real to people in towns like Braddock.”
After detailing the tragic deaths memorialized on his arm, Fetterman defended his unorthodox approach to elected office and serving his constituents. Via NBC News:
My decision to mark these deaths with tattoos was inspired in part by their permanence — the fact that these people, their stories and my town will be with me forever. I get that etching art permanently onto your body isn’t how most politicians would express their connection to their communities. But I didn’t care about what anyone else thought. It felt right to me.
Of course, Fetterman also used the tattoo discussion as a chance to highlight the stark contrast between his experience serving the state of Pennsylvania, and his opponent Dr. Oz‘s glaring lack thereof.
“While he was making millions of dollars peddling miracle cures from a TV studio in Manhattan and living in a mansion on a hill in New Jersey, I was rolling up my sleeves and putting in the work to make my community safer,” Fetterman writes. “I’m the only candidate in this race who has fought violent crime and won.”
The NFL Pro Bowl has long been considered the worst of all the major four men’s sports’ All-Star games, mainly because “taking it easy” in football yields a far worse product than doing the same in basketball, baseball, or hockey.
Football is inherently a violent game and when players main goal is to avoid injury, the result is not particularly enjoyable to watch. For years, fans and media have thrown ideas around about how to improve the Pro Bowl, and it seems the league is finally ready to make a big swing and try something new. On Monday, the NFL announced a new format for the Pro Bowl that will replace the game itself with a flag football game, while the week leading up to that will feature various other competitions (as has been the case in recent years).
Introducing the 2023 Pro Bowl Games presented by Verizon.
The NFL cited feedback it’s gotten from players, coaches, and executives as the impetus for the changes, noting that players enjoyed the multiday element of recent Pro Bowl weeks, but that getting rid of the tackle football game and replacing it with flag football will allow them to be more competitive while removing a good bit of tackle football’s most dangerous elements — via the Associated Press.
“The feedback very directly from guys who had been in the Pro Bowl recently was to keep the construct of the week, make sure you’re having that multiday element,” NFL executive Peter O’Reilly said. “It was overwhelmingly positive both from players as well as from clubs.”
Peyton Manning’s production company will be heavily involved in helping craft the multiday event schedule, with Manning also coaching one of the flag teams. One would figure they’ll keep some of the competitions from recent years, as the Best Catch competition, in particular, has been a hit, while also creating some new elements — and maybe bringing back some old favorites. We’d love to see the old QB challenge come back in full, and with the move to flag football I hope they find a way to shine the light on the big fellas who won’t exactly get much opportunity to do much when the physical contact portion of the game is removed.
They may be operating in two different sports, but the Memphis Grizzlies just put the Atlanta Falcons to shame in the marketing game. Last month, the Falcons were lambasted for their “Rise Up” season promo video, which featured New Jersey native Rotimi singing an generic, off-brand motivational anthem for some reason. While the attempt was a promising step in the NFL’s ongoing efforts to appeal to younger fans (and, well… you know), it also showed how far the league has to go to catch up to the NBA.
Today, though, the Grizzlies showed just how much more in-touch with the zeitgeist the NBA really is with their own 2022-23 season hype video. Instead of a moderately well-known out-of-towner best recognized for his role in Power, the Grizz tapped hometown rising star GloRilla, whose breakout single “F.N.F. (Let’s Go)” began and ended the “song of the summer” debate this year, to narrate their “Big Memphis” promo and show how teams can highlight the connection with their respective cities. Glo’s distinctive voice booms out over a thumping trap track, declaring, “This is our city… everything we do here is big!”
big energy. big vibes. big noise. big swag. 𝐁𝐈𝐆 𝐌𝐄𝐌𝐏𝐇𝐈𝐒.
After the success of “F.N.F.,” Memphis godfather Yo Gotti signed GloRilla to his label Collective Music Group, releasing a remix of the track featuring JT of City Girls and Latto (and nixing another remix featuring Saweetie). Since then, her breakout year continued this past weekend as Cardi B joined her on the boisterous “Tomorrow 2” and ASAP Rocky brought her out during his short headlining set at Rolling Loud New York.
The Memphis Grizzlies are a perfect example of how to rep your city. Glorilla is very popular in the M too, she’s on the come up, a star. They just do it right. I love my basketball team. LET’S GET IT MANE! YAH! https://t.co/lHiOCnl7RB
Whatever else happens with the Memphis Grizzlies this year, they’ve started off their season with a big win, and GloRilla is already proving herself to be the people’s champ of 2022.
OK, maybe it wasn’t the happiest of days in The Last of Us universe, considering all the death and cannibalism and Rat Kings that would soon spread across the globe. But in the real world, today is a good day. Why? Because in honor (?) of the nine-year anniversary of Outbreak Day, HBO has released the teaser trailer for The Last of Us.
Based on one of the most acclaimed video games ever (and its excellent if divisive sequel), the series follows Joel (played by Pedro Pascal), a grizzly and grieving middle-aged man, who’s tasked with escorting Ellie (Bella Ramsey), a teenager who’s immune to the deadly virus, across a post-apocalyptic United States. The teaser effectively captures the same sense of intense moodiness — and constant threat of danger — as the video game, which Pascal told GQ was the intention.
“There’s a very, very creative way of honoring what’s important and also preserving what is iconic to the experience of the video game, and also things that you wouldn’t necessarily expect. And then directions that you would expect it to go, and it might not… They’re doing some really smart things, is all I can say,” he said about the HBO series, while also comparing it to The Mandalorian. If only Baby Yoda was there to protect Joel and Ellie from the Clickers.
The Last of Us premieres on HBO in 2023.
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.