Billie Eilish, Rihanna and Ariana Grande are among hundreds of music industry personnel who have signed an open letter calling for New York state to repeal statue 50-A, a civil law that conceals police misconduct records from public scrutiny.
27.05.2020 - 19:31 / variety.com
By Jem Aswad
Senior Music Editor
“Growing up in public” has been the story of Billie Eilish’s life in the four-plus years since she rose from SoundCloud star to global phenomenon — but she’s using her platform to make a powerful statement about body shaming and assumptions people make about her and other young women with a new spoken-word video called “Not My Responsibility.”
In the months since she became famous, much has been made about Eilish’s “realness” and her disinclination to glam
Billie Eilish, Rihanna and Ariana Grande are among hundreds of music industry personnel who have signed an open letter calling for New York state to repeal statue 50-A, a civil law that conceals police misconduct records from public scrutiny.
Ariana Grande, Billie Eilish and hundreds in the music industry are calling for police reform in New York.
Hundreds of members of the music community, including artists, managers, publishers, trade groups, executives and record labels, signed an open letter Monday (June 8) calling for New York state to repeal statute 50-A, the state law that shields police officers’ personnel and disciplinary records from public view.
Billie Eilish is getting brutally honest about her body image issues and the dark reason behind her signature look.
Billie Eilish opened up about her body image issues by delivering a powerful message against body-shaming in the arena tour video earlier this year. In the moving video that was posted on YouTube on May 26, the 18-year-old songstress can be seen slowly stripping off her clothes while addresses body shamers in the background.
Billie Eilish has opened up about her body confidence struggles.The 18-year-old discussed her issues surrounding body image in a new interview with British GQ magazine and opened up about her battle to accept herself after a tumultuous few years. “I still have huge issues with my own body,” the Bad Guy hitmaker explained.
Billie Eilish is going down a rabbit hole like the rest of us during quarantine. In a wide-ranging interview with British GQ Eilish says being locked down due to COVID-19 is "pretty bad, but with good reason."
Billie Eilish opened up about her past relationships, body confidence and her fashion choices in a candid new interview. The 18-year-old singer told British GQ for its July/August cover story that she's learning to love her body as she gets older and her decision to not show it off is her realization of her power.
Billie Eilish kept a low profile when she attended a protest for George Floyd and Black Lives Matter in Los Angeles on June 4. She kept her presence at the protest off of social media, aside from one video, which she posted to her Instagram Story. Billie doesn’t appear in the video herself, as she’s filming the hundreds of other protesters who are joining her to fight against racial injustice.
Billie Eilish is opening up about the way she dresses and how body confidence factors into the decision.
Billie Eilish has said she has “never felt desired” in relationships and sometimes feels trapped in the persona she has created because “people view me not as a woman”.
Last year, BTS scored the most-liked tweet courtesy Jungkook. Kookie posted a video on the band's official Twitter account where he was dancing to Billie Eilish's Bad Guy. The ARMY showered him with love and as a result, the "Duh" tweet made history. However, he wasn't the only Korean celebrity who was hooked to the English song last year. We've discovered a video on Lee Min Ho's official Instagram account that shows the lead of The King: Eternal Monarch that shows he also enjoyed the song.
Billie Eilish is using her platform to send a message to the All Lives Matter movement.
Billie Eilish took another thinly veiled shot at body shamers -- and this time the clap back came in the form of a new short film. In the project, titled “Not My Responsibility," which first debuted during her "Where Do We Go?" world tour, the 18-year-old pop music superstar carefully disrobes as she responds to negative image comments strewn her way about her figure and her choice to don baggy clothing as a mechanism of defense to the hate.
Back in early March — you know, when concerts were still possible — Billie Eilish shared an amazing video to kick off her Where Do We Go? tour.
You go, girl! Billie Eilish continues to clap back at body shamers and her most recent call out is epic.
Though she's since had to postpone the remainder of the dates on her Where Do We Go? World Tour, Billie Eilish's massive global trek kicked off earlier this year with a powerful statement. Back in March, at a show in Miami, Eilish unveiled a short film meant to combat body-shaming as a preface to her song "All the Good Girls Go to Hell." Now, she's shared that film — which had previously only been found circulating in fan-captured footage — in full on her YouTube page.
Billie Eilish is known for her singularly unsexy fashion sense — but now she’s hitting back at body-shamers in a new short film that bares . . . her soul, mostly.