Savannah and Chase Chrisley had unique childhoods -- considering they were on television. Now cast members of the reality show "Chrisley Knows Best," the two opened up to People magazine about what it was like to grow up in front of America.
23.06.2020 - 19:59 / billboard.com
This Pride Month, Billboard connected queer artists with some of their musical heroes and biggest influencesHow can you help LGBTQ people succeed in the music industry? One easy step: Share your networks and make introductions. So for Pride Month, Billboard is connecting queer artists with some of their musical heroes — who also happen to be major allies to the community — to get career advice.
Here, alt-pop singer-songwriter Chaz Cardigan — who this year released the Vulnerabilia EP and is
Savannah and Chase Chrisley had unique childhoods -- considering they were on television. Now cast members of the reality show "Chrisley Knows Best," the two opened up to People magazine about what it was like to grow up in front of America.
Page Six said today that Liliana Barrios, from Black Ink Crew: Chicago Crew, was apprehended by authorities due to allegations of abuse. The reality star reportedly came home to find her girlfriend in bed with a different woman.
Leo Barraclough Senior International CorrespondentThe head of the film commission in the Czech Republic, which recently hosted shows like “Carnival Row” for Amazon and “The Falcon & Winter Soldier” for Marvel/Disney Plus, has written to Hollywood studios to reassure them that the European Union ban on U.S.
Nearly 48 hours following his controversial performance at Petros' historic Brushy Mountain State Penitentiary outside of Nashville, Chase Rice has responded to complaints about the lack of social distancing at the show that drew more than 1,000 people.
Billboard connected queer artists to their biggest musical heroes (who also happen to be major LGBTQ+ allies) to get career advice.Alanis Morissette talked Maddie Ross through writing about heartbreak, Jay Som picked Carly Rae Jepsen's brain on creative freedom, and Mandy Moore told Samir all about balancing acting with music.
Phillip Keene often celebrates Pride at the famed Los Angeles Pride parade. But with the COVID-19 pandemic everybody is doing their part to help flatten the curve by staying at home.
How can you help LGBTQ people succeed in the music industry? One easy step: Share your networks and make introductions. So for Pride Month, Billboard is connecting queer artists with some of their musical heroes — who also happen to be major allies to the community — to get career advice. Here, pop-punk upstart Maddie Ross — whose debut album, Never Have I Ever, was one of the best rock
How can you help LGBTQ people succeed in the music industry? One easy step: Share your networks and make introductions. So for Pride Month, Billboard is connecting queer artists with some of their musical heroes — who also happen to be major allies to the community — to get career advice. Here, Vincint — who released his debut EP, The Feeling, in February — gets tips on navigating the
How can you help LGBTQ people succeed in the music industry? One easy step: Share your networks and make introductions. So for Pride Month, Billboard is connecting queer artists with some of their musical heroes — who also happen to be major allies to the community — to get career advice. Here, RuPaul's Drag Race alum Trixie Mattel — whose latest album, Barbara, fuses surf-rock, country
How can you help LGBTQ people succeed in the music industry? One easy step: Share your networks and make introductions. So for Pride Month, Billboard is connecting queer artists with some of their musical heroes — who also happen to be major allies to the community — to get career advice. Here, indie-rock darling Jay Som — who released her critically acclaimed second album, Anak Ko,
How can you help LGBTQ people succeed in the music industry? One easy step: Share your networks and make introductions. So for Pride Month, Billboard is connecting queer artists with some of their musical heroes — who also happen to be major allies to the community — to get career advice. Here, electro-pop breakout L Devine — who also hosts the podcast L Devine's Growing Pains and
How can you help LGBTQ people succeed in the music industry? One easy step: Share your networks and make introductions. So for Pride Month, Billboard is connecting queer artists with some of their musical heroes — who also happen to be major allies to the community — to get career advice. Here, rising pop star Gia Woods — who's readying her upcoming Cut Season EP after dropping
How can you help LGBTQ people succeed in the music industry? One easy step: Share your networks and make introductions. So for Pride Month, Billboard is connecting queer artists with some of their musical heroes — who also happen to be major allies to the community — to get career advice. Here, genre-bending phenom Shamir — who just released "On My Own," from his upcoming studio album,
How can you help LGBTQ people succeed in the music industry? One easy step: Share your networks and make introductions. So for Pride Month, Billboard is connecting queer artists with some of their musical heroes — who also happen to be major allies to the community — to get career advice. Here, “spook-pop” singer Sean Augustine — who writes, produces and engineers music under the name
How can you help LGBTQ people succeed in the music industry? One easy step: Share your networks and make introductions. So for Pride Month, Billboard is connecting queer artists with some of their musical heroes — who also happen to be major allies to the community — to get career advice. Here, songwriter-producer Bronze Avery — who's spent the year releasing dreamy dancefloor-ready
With movie theaters around the globe still partially or fully closed, more and more movies are making the move to streaming for distribution. The latest one may be Aaron Sorkin‘s “The Trial of the Chicago 7,” as Netflix is negotiating a deal to acquire the film’s distribution rights from Paramount Pictures.