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Eddie Vedder Confirms His Solo Album’s Release Date And Drops The Swelling Single ‘The Haves’

In early September, Pearl Jam’s Eddie Vedder dropped a track called “Long Way,” which arrived alongside news of a new Vedder solo album called Earthling. He didn’t offer much info about the album, but now, we know a little more about it: Earthling is set for release on February 11, 2022 and will be his first solo album since 2011’s Ukulele Songs.

When he originally announced the album, it was also noted that a song called “The Haves” would be out soon. Well, “soon” was apparently referring to a month and change later, because the track is out today. The song features a foundation of piano and acoustic guitar and becomes increasingly grandiose as it progresses. The choruses vary throughout the track, but Vedder sings on the first of them, “But we’ve got enough / All of the haves they have not / Not got half of what we got / They want more / I just want you / Better believe it / I beg of you.”

There’s no confirmed tracklist yet, but pre-order pages note the album is produced by Andrew Watt (who just this year has worked with folks like Post Malone, Ed Sheeran, and Justin Bieber) and will feature “special guests artists.” Confirmed to appear on the album are Vedder’s two recent singles, “Long Way” and today’s “The Haves.”

Listen to “The Haves” above.

Earthling is out 2/11/2022 via Seattle Surf/Republic Records. Pre-order it here.

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

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Xbox Head Phil Spencer Is ‘Evaluating All Aspects’ Of Their Relationship With Activision Blizzard

Activision Blizzard CEO Bobby Kotick has been receiving massive public backlash ever since an investigative report from the Wall Street Journal revealed that not only did he allegedly have far more knowledge over the ongoing sexual misconduct allegations going on within Activision and its umbrella companies, but that he faced many allegations himself over the years while leading Activision.

Ever since the latest revelations, employees within Activision have been demanding that Kotick resign from the company and even held a walk-out recently in response. Activision’s response so far has been to stand behind Kotick and call the report “misleading” despite people all around the industry demanding his removal as CEO. Many have found his response to the situation disturbing and among those was PlayStation CEO Jim Ryan. Ryan sent an email to employees on Wednesday where he admonished Kotick and Activision’s response.

On Thursday, head of Xbox, Phil Spencer also responded to everything currently taking place within Activision. According to Bloomberg’s Jason Schreier, Spencer sent out an email to employees calling the allegations “deeply disturbing.” Not only that, but he mentioned that the company is “evaluating all aspects of our relationship with Activision Blizzard.”

Microsoft Corp.’s head of Xbox said he’s “evaluating all aspects of our relationship with Activision Blizzard and making ongoing proactive adjustments,” in light of the recent revelations at the video game publisher. In an email to staff seen by Bloomberg News, Phil Spencer said he and the gaming leadership team are “disturbed and deeply troubled by the horrific events and actions” at Activision Blizzard Inc.

“This type of behavior has no place in our industry,” Spencer wrote. He joins a swell of outcry from employees to investors and shareholders in demanding a stronger response from the U.S.’s second-biggest gaming publisher.

The promise of action from Spencer, as well as the messaging that they’re “evaluating their relationship” makes it sound like Spencer and the Xbox brand are willing to deliver a strong response to Activision if the company continues to allow Kotick to remain CEO. The strongest response would of course be Xbox removing Activision Blizzard titles from their platform. That would mean that titles like Call of Duty would not be purchasable for the Xbox. They could even take it a step further and remove their games from services like Game Pass.

We now wait for a response from Activision with the heads of the two largest video game companies in the world both publicly admonishing the company and Bobby Kotick.

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Will Smith Is Contemplating A Possible ‘Verzuz’ Matchup With LL Cool J, Who He Says ‘Is Going To Body Me’

Although Will Smith is probably better known for his film work than his music these days, his decades-long legacy as one of rap’s foremost pioneers will likely always be too important to ignore. With the Verzuz series paying homage to and highlighting many of the stars of yesteryear, XM Radio host Sway Calloway checked in with the former Fresh Prince on Sway In The Morning to find out whether he had any designs on signing up for a battle.

Surprisingly, Will said that he had been contemplating an appearance — and had even already chosen a potential competitor in LL Cool J — but that he’s been too busy writing and promoting his upcoming book to lock down a date. However, despite both rappers’ 20-plus years of hits, Will maintained that he believed “L is going to body me” in a one-to-hit battle, despite being able to draw upon cultural cornerstones like “Parents Just Don’t Understand,” “Summertime,” “Gettin’ Jiggy Wit It,” and “Men In Black.”

However, there was one situation where co-host Heather B could foresee a Will Smith victory. “What’s dope about Will though, Will and L was out when the era when it was the DJ and the rapper,” she noted. “Everybody had their DJ so don’t let [DJ Jazzy] Jeff on the turn tables.” Will agreed, “That’s my secret weapon right there.”

Watch Will Smith discuss a potential Verzuz matchup with the Sway In The Morning crew above.

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Chef And Entrepreneur Chris Oh Has Met Success By Throwing Hard Work Into His Passion

By the time Chris Oh had hit thirty he already had a real estate company and a few successful businesses to his name. But it wasn’t enough. Oh soon realized that he wasn’t fulfilling the larger-than-life aspirations that had always been a key component of his personality,

“I was fortunate to achieve a lot of goals,” he says, “but when I turned 30 I just said to myself, ‘Is this it, is this what I’m going to do for the rest of my life?’”

Oh knew the only way to realize his true potential would be to dive into something he felt passionate about, which was crafting food in the kitchen. The dream was born from a love for food that grew out of enjoying the flavors of his mother’s home cooking (who Oh refers to as “the best chef in the world”), the responsibility of feeding his little brother while his parents were hard at work, and a steady diet of cooking shows. Just like that, Oh threw away the life he built in his twenties, selling his business and his house before moving to LA and fibbing on a resume to get a job at a restaurant. That’s the level of commitment that it took to truly forge a new path that aligned better with his true aspirations.

“I really took a leap of faith,” he tells us, later adding, “the rest is history!”

That determination and commitment to purpose is precisely why Oh was chosen as one of The Next 9 by Porsche. In the years since dropping everything to chase a dream, he has entered the culinary scene and speedily established himself as a true innovator and a vital voice in modern cuisine.

“I have always had a can-do attitude,” he says. “If I don’t know it, I can learn it, and I can learn it fast and probably end up doing it better than you. Relying on that resume just got my foot in the door, and then I went from there.”

That confidence and drive led Oh down a path that would see the young chef go on to own several restaurants across the country including Um.Ma in San Francisco, Chingu in Hawaii, and Kamu in Las Vegas. This while scoring multiple wins across several TV cooking competitions. Still, Oh strives to take things to the next level: turning his personal brand into an icon.

“I want to put my stamp on this planet in an iconic way, like when you think of a brand like Porsche, you think handcrafted, sexy, cutting edge,” he says. “I want to be that kind of person and I think I’m on my way to those goals.”

As his aspirations grow, Oh is looking beyond the work he can accomplish in the kitchen. His true goal is to push Korean food and flavors to be enjoyed on a mass scale, crossing cultural borders in an effort to bring people together through the communal act of sharing a meal.

“Food is a common love, it doesn’t matter where you’re from,” he says. “We can talk food all day long because food has the power to bring people together… Korean food isn’t just bicoastal anymore. I want people in the Midwest or people in another country to have a jar of kimchi in their fridge.”

Oh knows that the only way to make that happen is the same way he’s achieved his success thus far, with hard work and determination, parting advice he shares for anyone who also finds themselves chasing their dreams.

“Find what you’re in love with, what you’re passionate about, what you’re willing to sacrifice for, and just go. Your dream job, your dream career, it’s not going to come easy. You’re going to have to bust your ass to get there, but once you do, the champagne sure tastes sweet.”

It doesn’t take long speaking with this rising star before you realize: True passion mixed with hard work is Chris Oh’s recipe for success.
For more on The Next 9 series, check out our hub page.

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The Washington Wizards Didn’t Force A Rebuild And Now Look Better Than Ever

The Wizards could be in a very different position right now.

After last season ended in a rather non-competitive first round exit at the hands of the Sixers, there were calls to tear things down completely. They could have chosen to trade Bradley Beal when pressure, at least from the outside, mounted for them to do so once Russell Westbrook put in his request to leave the nation’s capital a year after he arrived in a trade shipping out longtime face of the franchise John Wall.

That transition from Wall to Westbrook, with all of the financial burden attached to both players, felt like a desperation play, one last effort to salvage things before entering a rebuild. Instead, they managed to seize opportunity when it presented itself, appear to have nailed their coaching change from Scott Brooks to Wes Unseld Jr., and restocked the roster with talent and depth in a way few could have foreseen six months ago.

Similar positions have doomed other franchises, pushing them towards a full teardown and a long rebuilding process. The Wizards, in every sense, resisted that path and appear to have come out better for it. At 10-4, Washington is tied for the best record in the Eastern Conference, alongside the Nets, fueled primarily by the league’s third-best defense, according to Cleaning The Glass. It’s the franchise’s best start since 1974-75, which has resulted in contract extensions and promotions for much of the organization’s front office, including general manager Tommy Sheppard. It feels like a new beginning for a team that desperately needed one.

How the Wizards got here did require some luck. When Wall tore his Achilles in the middle of a massive contract extension, that could have been the end right there considering how important Wall has been to the franchise since 2010. Flipping Wall and a first-round pick to the Rockets for Westbrook was another risk that could have not worked out. At the time of the deal, Westbrook had three years left on his supermax contract, and when they traded for him, they had to at least expect — if not assume fully — he’d be a Wizards for the rest of the deal.

Westbrook’s brief tenure had its ups and downs, including a tear at the end of the regular season to drag Washington to the playoffs. That performance raised his value and the Lakers, desperate for a third star, provided them with an out, fueling a roster overhaul over the summer that has given Washington its best supporting cast around Beal in some time. Turning Westbrook into Kyle Kuzma, Montrezl Harrell and Kentavious Caldwell-Pope was a coup. Add in being able to sign-and-trade for Spencer Dinwiddie, a more flexible backcourt partner for Beal, after dealing Westbrook, and it looks even better.

There was luck involved, for sure. They don’t get that chance in a world where the Lakers dealt Kuzma and Caldwell-Pope for Buddy Hield instead. There’s nothing that Sheppard really did to manifest this directly, but his recognition of the need to get a deal done and not get hung up in the weeds on draft compensation or whatever else when opportunity came knocking is the kind of initiative that can change the direction of a franchise. It’s the kind of deal that the Trail Blazers weren’t able or wiling to make to better support Damian Lillard this summer, and are probably paying for now as they struggle through this season.

The result is a team with depth, balance, and versatility that hasn’t been seen in Washington in some time. Under Unseld, Washington is playing connected team defense where everyone is playing in sync covering up each other’s weaknesses. This kind of scheme probably wouldn’t be tenable with Westbrook at the point of attack. He’s a gambler, often living in his own world on defense instead of playing within a defined role. The Wizards, as we know them so far, would not exist without the scheme they are playing, and the personnel to execute it.

Deni Avidja, last year’s top pick, developing into a legit wing stopper as the youngest player in the rotation has been key. Harrell’s energy in the frontcourt has been contagious. Kuzma and Caldwell-Pope were important cogs in the Lakers title team that defined themselves on the defensive end, capable and willing to fill the roles asked of them and work within the system. Daniel Gafford continues his development as an anchor in the middle, rewarding the team for putting their faith in him with an extension this offseason.

There’s also some reason to think the Wizards should get better on offense. Currently, they are 17th in offense according to Cleaning the Glass, and that’s with Bradley Beal shooting a career-worst percentage from the field (40.7 percent, down from a career average of 45.5 percent) and from three (25 percent, down from a career average of 37.4 percent). Beal is particularly struggling on catch and shoot three-pointers, where he’s shooting 21.2 percent on 3.3 attempts per game after shooting 38.7 percent on the same volume last year. He’s also seen his efficiency dip at the rim, falling from about league average to well below.

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As he works his way back to normal and grows more comfortable with the new pieces around him, the offense is going to be better — that’s the benefit of holding onto an All-Star who averaged over 30 points a game last year, but doesn’t need to now. And whenever Rui Hachimura comes back, they’ll add more scoring punch to the rotation.

Avdija and Hachimura are two pieces worth considering in thinking about where the Wizards are. In another world, where they did decide to start over, they’d be pieces they’d be evaluating in suboptimal context as the team loses a lot and adds even younger talent over a few years. Instead, with the Wizards winning, they get to contribute to something now, play in roles more suitable to their current skillsets rather than being thrust into leading roles, and continue growing in a positive environment.

Not every team has the ability to emerge anew from a situation like the one Washington found itself in this summer, but credit to Sheppard and the organization for recognizing an opportunity for a reset rather than rebuild this offseason and pouncing. From the new coaching staff to roster moves, it’s hard to imagine a better offseason and the results are bearing that out early on the floor.

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Folksy GOP Senator John Kennedy Snidely Addressed A Biden Nominee As ‘Comrade,’ And She Calmly Mopped The Floor With Him

A hearing for the Senate Banking Committee should be a fairly drama-free affair unless you’ve got a senator like Republican John Kennedy on hand ready to embarrass himself with some tasteless remarks, which is exactly what happened earlier today.

Kennedy shocked a room full of lawmakers and members of the press while questioning Saule Omarova, Joe Biden’s appointee to lead the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC). Omarova is a law professor at Cornell University who previously served under the George W. Bush administration, but her nomination has angered some GOP members like Kennedy who seem more concerned with her childhood than her track record. Omarova was born in the former Soviet republic of Kazakhstan before she came to the States and became an American citizen. She’s also been critical of the U.S. banking system. Apparently, those two facts seem to be enough for Senator Kennedy to insult her during what should’ve been a routine hearing.

“I don’t mean any disrespect,” Kennedy began. “I don’t know whether to call you professor or comrade.”

The insinuation came after Kennedy spent an inordinate amount of time questioning why Omarova was part of a communist youth group when she lived in Soviet-controlled Kazakhstan — because she was living under a communist regime that forced her to, obviously — and was met with audible gasps by those in the room. Unfortunately for Kennedy, Omarova took the opportunity to calmly mop the floor with him.

“Senator, I’m not a communist,” a visibly annoyed Omarova responded. “I do not subscribe to that ideology. I could not choose where I was born. I would never knowingly join any such group.”

(Via Mediaite & Reuters)

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‘Ghostbusters: Afterlife’ Is A Beautifully Crafted, ‘Goonies’-Esque Take On Ghostbusters That Also Feels A Bit Scattered

Because Ghostbusters has been so successfully franchised over the years, it’s hard to know what to expect from a new iteration. Maybe I’m dumb, but I didn’t expect Ghostbusters: Afterlife it to be what it is — which is, essentially, an 80s-style kids movie in the vein of The Goonies.

In retrospect, Finn Wolfhard from Stranger Things joining the cast should’ve been a tipoff. Ghostbusters: Afterlife, directed by Jason Reitman, whose dad directed the original, is more of a Muppet Babies take on the material, attempting to restart the franchise with both a younger cast and a younger audience. Reitman, the seemingly overqualified director of Juno, Up In The Air, Young Adult, etc., turns out to have a knack for 80s-style Amblin Entertainment-style filmmaking. Afterlife looks great, and I can imagine loving it if I was 9. As an adult it’s merely so-so, something you’d happily sit through with your kid and probably forget the next day.

Ghostbusters began, of course, as a strange, “supernatural comedy,” starring Dan Aykroyd, Harold Ramis, Bill Murray, Ernie Hudson, and the gang. Aykroyd has always been a little kooky, and Ghostbusters felt a bit like his buddies all got together to humor him, partly indulging his obsession with the supernatural, partly just having fun with it even if they didn’t entirely buy-in. The resulting movie is very strange, but just amiable enough to work, a zany take on demons and ancient myth stapled together with wry smirks and, I assume, lots of cocaine. It was 1984 after all, and the climax of the movie involved a possessed marshmallow destroying New York City.

Yet it was kooky and fun, and because it was so easy to brand, with a catchy theme song and a perfect logo, it almost instantly became a phenomenon. So it was we got the sequel, the cartoon, 2016’s gender-swapped version, etc. Which naturally raises the question: what is Ghostbusters now? A comedy franchise? A Halloween costume? Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles? Is it still in some way an eccentric Canadian’s drug-addled fever dream?

Before 2016 there was at least a decade of various people working on sequel ideas. Sony spent millions going to increasingly elaborate lengths just to cajole an apathetic and notoriously aloof Bill Murray into reading a script. At some point, he seems to have signed off, and with Murray, Aykroyd, and Hudson featuring prominently in the advertising for Ghostbusters: Afterlife, I guess I assumed it was going to be more of a direct sequel to the original, closer to the movie Dan Aykroyd probably wanted before he got talked into Ghostbusters 2016. Instead, Afterlife is more like a kids adventure film, beautifully crafted but also a bit confused.

The plot concerns Egon Spengler, who has died as a recluse on a ramshackle farm in the fictional village of Summerville, Oklahoma (it was actually shot in Alberta). He has bequeathed his crumbling house full of wacky ghost gadgets to his estranged heirs — daughter Callie, played by the luminescent Carrie Coon, grandson Trevor, played by Finn Wolfhard, and granddaughter Phoebe, a budding scientist and spitting image of the old man (by which I mean they wear the same glasses) played by McKenna Grace.

Evicted from their apartment, the Spengler heirs are forced to try to make a new life in this podunk town on the plains where strange doings seem afoot. Nerdy Phoebe soon makes a friend, in the form of “Podcast” (Logan Kim), an obnoxious kid with bouffant hair and too many layers of clothes whose shtick is constantly recording a podcast. Podcast seems like he escaped from one of those insufferable Nickelodeon sitcoms where the kids are all wildly overstyled and loudly snarky, like an OshKosh B’Gosh showroom possessed by the ghost of Joss Whedon. (85% of kids shows are like this now, please make it stop.)

Phoebe finds a mentor in her Summer school teacher, Mr. Grooberson, played by Paul Rudd. Meanwhile, Trevor — all sharp angles and shaggy hair, like Wiley Wiggins from Dazed and Confused crossed with a young Freddy Mercury — meets his crush while working at the local drive-in: Lucky, played by Celeste O’Connor.

The picturesque setting is a fresh twist and the best thing about Ghostbusters: Afterlife is probably Reitman’s flair for texture and tone. The ’80s gave us a bounty of goofy kids adventures shot with the care of seventies auteur cinema, and, at least texturally, Afterlife is a worthy homage. It has that Earth-toned analog tape deck sensibility that so many contemporary movies lack, where you can feel the dirt on your skin and the breeze on your face when you watch it.

Yet pretty quickly, Reitman slams headlong into The Child Actor Problem. Someday we’re going to replace most actors under 18 with older actors with glandular disorders and Andy Serkis in his mo-cap ballsuit, and then we’ll look back on headshots like this as strange curios from a barbaric age. Until then, we must suffer, pretending this is normal.

McKenna Grace, it should be said, is fantastic, and Celeste O’Connor is solid in a lesser role. but the rest of the young actors just aren’t quite up to the task. And can you really expect them to be? The original worked partly because it starred some of 1984’s most skilled comedic improvisors. You just can’t recreate that with a handful of little kids. The kids in the audience probably won’t mind, but their parents will groan a little on the inside.

With Reitman’s direction, Carrie Coon, Paul Rudd, JK Simmons in a blink-and-you’ll miss-it role, and even Coon’s real-life husband, Tracy Letts in a cameo, it’s hard not to fantasize about how good an adult version of Ghostbusters: Afterlife could’ve been. But why work hard to create a better one-off when your true goal is a long-running franchise and ancillary revenue streams?

Therefore Afterlife is mostly about the kids, and like virtually all iterations of Ghostbusters since 1984, it ends up slightly adrift in the swirling tides of corporate fashion. Whereas 2016 Ghostbusters got caught up in the gender-swap craze, Afterlife feels like an attempt at a kids-ified Bill and Ted: Face The Music meets the Marvel Universe.

It relies heavily on our familiarity with the material, never seeming to notice or attempt to explain just how damn weird that source material is. Again, maybe I’m dumb, but what the hell actually is Slimer? Afterlife never attempts to answer, skipping straight to Slimer’s successor, Muncher, a gluttonous ghost who eats metal and is apparently voiced by Josh Gad, though I don’t remember him using any English words. Is Muncher a demon? Is he the spirit of a dead fat guy? Why does he eat metal? Ditto Afterlife‘s army of vaguely demonic mini-marshmallow men. Which Ghostbusters would I need to rewatch in order to understand this?

Reviewing these modern franchise movies, I always feel a little like being asked to rate the phone support technician at the end of a call with my cable company. I just endured a Kafkaesque hell, screaming “OPERATOR” at a voice recognition system that only works in theory and waiting on hold for 40 minutes just to troubleshoot some software glitch, and now you want me to rate it all based on the politeness level of an individual Bangladeshi? That human isn’t the problem. The problem is the absurdist farce competing market forces have made out of something that used to seem fairly simple.

Did Jason Reitman do a good job directing Ghostbusters: Afterlife? Yes, he performed wonderfully. The problem is the contradictory corporate whims he’s been asked to satisfy here, asking him to create something that is simultaneously an homage, a sequel, an adult comedy, a kids adventure, a teaser for future movies, and a requiem for Harold Ramis. Is this even really the best way to make money nowadays? What if we just gave creative people money to tell stories, rather than forcing them to try to reanimate the ghost of dead IP?

Anyway, three and a quarter stars, solid B+.

‘Ghostbusters: Afterlife’ hits theaters November 19th. Vince Mancini is on Twitter. You can check out his film review archive here.

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The WNBA Is Changing Its Playoff Format To Get Rid Of Byes And Single-Elimination Games

For years, players around the WNBA have been calling for the playoff format to be changed, as the single elimination format for the first two rounds, while exciting, has not exactly been a favorite of the players themselves. The 1-1-5-5 format, with best of five series for the semifinals and finals after two straight single elimination rounds, with the top-2 seeds earning double byes and the 3rd and 4th seeds earning single byes, will finally be changed for the 2022 season.

The league announced the changes on Thursday, as seeding will continue to be done regardless of conference affiliation, with the top 8 teams in the league earning playoff appearances, but no longer will top seeds earn byes. Instead, a traditional bracket style playoffs will be introduced, with the first round being a best of three series, followed by a best of five semifinals and a best of five Finals.

Rather than reseeding after each round, teams will be locked into their bracket, with 1 v. 8 and 4 v. 5 on once side and 2 v. 7 and 3 v. 6 on the other. It’ll be interesting to see what the overall reaction from fans is, as there have been some calling for a change like this, while others have grown fond of the chaos of single elimination. Players, though, will likely be pleased by the changes to have a series format for each round and while single elimination is gone, fans should be excited about getting to see the best teams in action from the start of the playoffs rather than sitting out with byes.

The new format also seems to create a structure that could more easily support breaking seeding into conferences once expansion arrives, as there is plenty of interest and hope for expansion in the near future, and if the league jumps from 12 teams to 16, it would stand to reason that they might weight conference affiliation more in the future for seeding should the schedule no longer be balanced the way it is.

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Jamie Miller Absolutely Belts It For Intimate Performances On ‘The Eye’

The Eye is a video series that brings music’s finest up-and-comers into a simple studio space for performances that put the artist and their songs front and center. The latest talent to take part in the series is Welsh singer-songwriter Jamie Miller, who offered renditions of “Here’s Your Perfect” and “Hold On ‘Til We’re Old.”

Miller is actually already a familiar face for multiple reasons. He appeared on The Voice UK when he was just a teenager and was one of his season’s last contestants standing. After his run on the show, he got a co-sign from Khloé Kardashian, who was so impressed with his vocal abilities that she shared a video of him to her followers in 2017 (she had about 68 million of them at the time). That seemed to have caught the attention of Atlantic Records, as the label went ahead and signed him not long after that major bit of exposure.

Now, Miller finds himself on The Eye. He doesn’t have a huge pool of released songs to draw from yet, as his first singles just came out in 2020, but he still has some quality tunes under his belt already. He performed a couple of them here, including “Here’s Your Perfect” (which found top-five chart success in Malaysia and Singapore this year). The original recording is a grand and emotional ballad, and while the acoustic guitar-led instrumental takes on a more intimate energy, Miller still sings his heart out.

He also sang another one of his 2021 singles, “Hold You ‘Til We’re Old.” The performance takes on a similar energy as Miller keeps his vocal intensity sky-high to stand out over the sparse arrangement. It’s obvious he’s really feeling it as he sings, “Kiss me like the first time / Even at the worst times / Even whеn it hurts, I swear you keep me young / I’ll hold you ’til we’rе old.”

In an interview with Songkick, Miller speaks about his journey towards recording his debut album, saying, “It’s been three years of hard work and I feel like along the way, you just learn who you want to be, what you want to say. I feel like I’m finally at the point where I’m ready to tell my story. The story that I want to tell on my album… the songs I listen to are the heartbreak songs, and I feel like I had to get my heart broken, unfortunately, to write the music that I’ve always wanted to make. Now I listen to my music and I just can’t wait for the world to hear it, because I feel like I’m writing stuff that everybody can relate to.”

Watch Miller perform “Here’s Your Perfect” and “Hold You ‘Til We’re Old” for The Eye above.

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

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KenTheMan Menaces Her Way Through Her UPROXX Sessions Performance Of ‘No Name’

Some UPROXX Sessions performances are upbeat and fun, while others are somber and reflective. Then, there are those that go for a different vibe entirely. KenTheMan’s performance of her threatening song “No Name” falls into that category, as the Houston-bred lyricist steps to the mic like a seasoned slugger, looming and leering while she menaces her foes and asserts her impending dominance over the rap game.

Last year, Ken generated some significant buzz with her debut EP 4 da 304’s, telling Uproxx’s Cherise Johnson that she switched to writing more raunchy raps because “Sex been selling. Trina, Kim, Foxy, all them, they real grimy with they words and they really sell sex. I just don’t see why it’s such a shocker that people still selling sex… I just feel like power to us, power to the pussy right now.”

She followed up that project this year with “What’s My Name?” expanding the range of her writing with tracks like “I’m Perfect” and the motivational “Love Yourself,” as well as, of course, “No Name.” Now signed to Asylum and with her buzz building by the day, Ken is in prime position to live up to her name and become “the man” in hip-hop — as in the boss, the leader, the number-one. Stay tuned.

Watch KenTheMan’s UPROXX Sessions performance of “No Name” above.

UPROXX Sessions is Uproxx’s performance show featuring the hottest up-and-coming acts you should keep an eye on. Featuring creative direction from LA promotion collective, Ham On Everything, and taking place on our “bathroom” set designed and painted by Julian Gross, UPROXX Sessions is a showcase of some of our favorite performers, who just might soon be yours, too.

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