Taylor Swift, an increasingly vocal pop star and supporter of the LGBTQ community, appeared during the Friday (June 26) Stonewall Day livestream to commemorate the day and speak out against trans erasure.
08.06.2020 - 18:35 / perezhilton.com
The graduating class of 2020 may not have been able to celebrate their achievements in person due to the coronavirus pandemic, but they did get one last send-off on Sunday by a star-studded cast!
YouTube Originals‘ Dear Class of 2020 brought together Katy Perry, Beyoncé, Taylor Swift, Lady GaGa, Lizzo, Barack and Michelle Obama, Justin Timberlake, Shawn Mendes, Alicia Keys, Maluma, BTS, U2, as well as Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates for memorable commencement speeches and inspiring
Taylor Swift, an increasingly vocal pop star and supporter of the LGBTQ community, appeared during the Friday (June 26) Stonewall Day livestream to commemorate the day and speak out against trans erasure.
June 2020 has been no ordinary Pride Month. What is typically a colorful commemoration of love, community, and the richness of LGBTQ+ identity has been largely overshadowed by an ongoing pandemic, which has forced gay bars to close, parades to be canceled, and people to celebrate from home.
Katy Perry knows how to bring the fun to any event! The pregnant singer delivered a funky and fabulous «Daisies» remix as part of P&G and iHeartMedia's on Thursday. Showing off her burgeoning baby bump, the performance included a mashup of her songs «I Kissed a Girl,» «Peacock,» «Walking on Air» and «Swish Swish.»The glowing expectant mother cradled her bump in a ruffled neon green, body-hugging dress.
Celebs were keeping busy this week, from Katy Perry preparing to put on a special live concert on BeApp for a good cause, to Rose Byrne, Nicole Kidman, Danielle Macdonald and more welcoming guests to the virtual premiere of Babyteeth, to Scarlett Johansson looking stylish in The Hamptons.
Taylor Swift and Demi Lovato are among the stars coming out in support of the LGBTQ+ community for Pride Live’s Stonewall Day global live stream.The singers join an A-list line-up of musicians and entertainers, including Kesha, Cynthia Erivo, Katy Perry, Luke Evans, and Nico Tortorella, for the event, which will “raise critical funds for LGBTQ+ organizations severely affected by COVID-19 and the recent events highlighting the need for fair and equal treatment under the law for all”.The event
Barack Obama, Taylor Swift and Donatella Versace are among the A-list celebrities joining forces to celebrate Stonewall Day via a streaming event.On Friday June 25, celebrities are coming together to take part in Pride Live’s event to mark the anniversary of the historic Stonewall Riots of 1969 and on the fifth anniversary of the Supreme Court’s ruling in Obergefell v. Hodges for marriage equality.Obama is expected to deliver a message to the LGBTQ+ community during the livestream.
Father's Day, and stars can't help but celebrate. Celebs like Khloe Kardashian, Michelle Obama, Jenna Bush Hager, Willow Smith, Meghan McCain and more took to social media on Sunday to send love to the dads in their lives. Kardashian took the opportunity to honor her late father, Robert Kardashian, as well as her former stepfather, Caitlyn Jenner, on her Instagram Story.
There's just something undeniably attractive about sad songs that we're drawn to regardless of our mood. Many artists, over the years, have used their own personal life struggles as inspiration to pen the most heartbreaking lyrics, add melody to it and make it into a chart-topping song.
Danielle Young is happy to see people around the country celebrating Juneteenth.She spoke with ET on Friday, just hours after Taylor Swift shared a video on Twitter about the significance of June 19 and why it should be celebrated as a national holiday. That video was a piece Young originally filmed for back when she was working for them in 2017.«I got a message from the editor-in-chief, Danielle Bilson, over at.
Taylor Swift has joined calls for Juneteenth, the date which marks the official end of slavery in the US, to be made a national holiday.
In an election year crucial for the future of the United States, a number of A-list stars joined Rock the Vote's Democracy Summer campaign Thursday (June 18) with a two-hour virtual concert, encouraging viewers to register to vote.
Annie Lennox, who founded the feminist NGO The Circle in 2008, launched The Circle Music Auction Tuesday (June 16) to raise funds for women around the world who are disproportionally impacted by coronavirus.
LGBTQ+ stars and allies including Adam Lambert, Katy Perry, Billy Porter, Big Freedia, and Sia are teaming up this month to keep the legacy of Pride alive in 2020, despite social-distancing restrictions forcing most would-be celebrations to shut down. On June 25, a live-streamed virtual COVID-19 relief event called Can’t Cancel Pride will air via iHeartRadio.
Katy Perry shared several photos of herself on her official Instagram account, where she wore a gorgeous white, Alexandre Vauthier gown. The photos were in promotion of Katy’s appearance in the epic “Dear Class of 2020” YouTube original video that joins political leaders, entertainers, and celebrities who hosted a virtual graduation celebration for those who couldn’t celebrate with their schools, friends, and graduating class due to the Coronavirus pandemic.
Lady Gaga, Katy Perry, Taylor Swift and the cast of Schitt’s Creek are among the stars who have offered messages of hope to young people graduating from schools and universities across America.
Making this year’s graduation ceremony extra special, some of the biggest celebrities in the entertainment industry joined YouTube’s virtual graduation and celebrated the Class of 2020. The long list of stars included Beyoncé, BTS, Katy Perry, Taylor Swift, Barack and Michelle Obama, Lizo, Jennifer Lopez, Lady Gaga, and many more.
coronavirus crisis, but the stars aligned — and teamed up — to make sure the students felt inspired and appreciated nonetheless.As part of the YouTube Originals event dozens of musicians, actors, artists and public figures shared messages of hope and solidarity with all those graduating amid a global pandemic and unprecedented social activism.From a jazzy, orchestra-backed opening number from Lizzo to three separate messages from Barack and Michelle Obama, to speeches and calls to action from