This mother-daughter feud doesn’t show any signs of resolving any time soon.
30.04.2021 - 19:12 / variety.com
A.D. Amorosi Like open fire hydrants and Mediterranean fruit flies, a new set of DJ Khaled collabs with a sleek, star-crowded full-length to follow is the surest sign of spring’s slide into summer.
DJ Khaled all but created The Event Album, just as Jerry Bruckheimer or James Cameron-crafted Event Cinema. Only Khaled’s is more of an annual/semi-annual bash with buddies bellying up to the bar and the loudest members of the party toasting the longest.
Drake will be there, as will Lil Wayne. Khaled
.This mother-daughter feud doesn’t show any signs of resolving any time soon.
Kourtney Kardashian may be caught up in all kinds of drama with Travis Barker’s ex Shanna Moakler, but that hasn’t stopped her from stepping up for his kids.
Alabama Barker, 15, accused Shanna Moakler, 46, of being an absent mother last week — and this week she revealed to her TikTok followers that she’s “cut off family” amid the on-going feud with her mom.
and pick a potluck dish or hostess gift.To make it easier on you—because planning the damn thing isn’t so simple, either—we spoke to two party-planning experts about the best summer party themes.If the pandemic has given us anything, it’s more TV time. “This year has seen many of us confined to our homes with the company of our TVs,” says designer and calligrapher .
Feuding family. Shanna Moakler and her two children with ex Travis Barker are no strangers to butting heads on social media.
Chris Willman Music WriterA boxed set can include dozens or even hundreds of unreleased tracks, never-before-seen photos and copious historical liner notes, but sometimes it really only needs one raison d’etre to justify its sprawling existence.
Daddy’s Home (★★★☆☆), Annie Clark unpacks the drama of her father’s time in prison through a filter of her own half-imaginary version of New York City in the 1970s, making for an album that is every bit as romantically gritty as its setting.Notwithstanding Jack Antonoff’s returning co-producer credit, Daddy’s Home has a sound that is so markedly different from her last album that she sounds almost reinvented.
Chris Willman Music WriterFor St. Vincent, “home” is a relative thing; she doesn’t often touch exactly the same base, musically, and no one will ever accuse her of making the same album twice.
Jem Aswad Senior Music EditorShaed are a Washington DC-based trio who scored a massive hit two years ago with “Trampoline,” a song from their second EP that featured Zayn on the remix.
Brandon Yu How does a star exit the stage gracefully? Rare is it to leave on one’s own terms, legacy intact, remembered in retirement. The more common route is perhaps to fade into obscurity with a constellation of diminishing successes.
We the best music. DJ Khaled’s newest album is on top.
Another one!
A.D. Amorosi Twenty years since the release of her first album, Miranda Lambert still happily confounds country’s hardcore traditionalists as to who she is, precisely, while maintaining Texas and Nashville’s interest and fandom.
The Casting Society of America will host two virtual town halls this month as part of its Asian American Pacific Islander Initiative. Celebrating Asia Pacific American Heritage Month, CSA says the town halls and roundtable discussions – on May 10 and 17 – “are designed to affect concrete change in how creatives, in this historically underrepresented community, have been perceived, what they have achieved, and how we all can create systemic change to move the needle of progress forward.”
A major fashion event is making a comeback this year after being halted due to COVID-19. This September, the Met Gala is all set to return and you will be surprised to find out who is in talks for being the co-host for the show.
He has the answers. DJ Khaled cleared the air after he shared a photo of Kanye West wearing his wedding band that sparked plenty of chatter on social media.
Jem Aswad Senior Music EditorThe track records of Bonnie “Prince” Billy — a.k.a. former Palace frontman Will Oldham — and guitarist-singer Matt Sweeney reach back some 30 years and create a dense discographical tangle that takes as long to read as most of the albums take to listen to.