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Eddie Murphy Documentary's Biggest Revelations
Music

Eddie Murphy Documentary’s Biggest Revelations

by jummy84 November 12, 2025
written by jummy84

The documentary Being Eddie isn’t a totally exhaustive portrait of Eddie Murphy, but for the generations who have been entertained by him since he exploded into stardom, it offers a lot of fascinating insight into who he is as a person. Says Murphy, at one point, “My biggest blessing is not my comedic talent — my biggest blessing is that I love myself and I knew what I wanted to do really, really early. That’s why I didn’t fall into any traps or anything. Because at the root of it all, I loved myself.”

In extended interviews with Murphy as well as collaborators including Jerry Seinfeld, Dave Chappelle, Arsenio Hall, Pete Davidson, and more, director Angus Wall explores a lot of fascinating topics with the multi-hyphenate, including the wild stories he has after spending 40 years in the spotlight. There’s also, appropriately enough given the title, a lot of musing on how he sees himself as a performer: “I’m not a stand-up comedian. I’m funny, but I don’t go, ‘I’m a comedian,’ like I don’t go ‘I’m an actor’ or ‘I’m a musician.’ I’m an artist that can express himself a bunch of different ways. Sensitivity is the gauge, not how much talent you have. The most sensitive one will be the artist that’s most in tune.”

He then laughs. “I don’t want to get too artsy. I could get really artsy if you let me.”

Below, find 15 of the biggest revelations to come from Being Eddie about Murphy’s career and life, from his earliest days to his current outlook on family, death, and cats. There’s also a wild Yul Brynner story, and some shockingly highbrow context for his love of MTV’s Ridiculousness.


Eddie Murphy’s First “Showbiz Thing” Was a Ventriloquist’s Dummy

Being Eddie (Netflix)

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The Willie Talk dummy he says he received at a young age was a relatively basic puppet: “Willie Talk’s eyes didn’t move. His mouth just moved.” However, Murphy points out, it reveals that even at a young age, he was very interested in exploring the possibilities of playing multiple characters at once.

Later in the documentary, he reveals an idea for a stand-up bit where he’d have Bill Cosby and Richard Pryor marionettes having a conversation, with him sitting between them. “I’d get at least 10 good minutes of jokes out of it,” he adds, and at the end of the movie we actually do get to see that in action: Murphy playing with his Cosby and Pryor puppets, having a laugh.

Eddie Murphy’s Birth Father Was Murdered When He Was Young

Murphy doesn’t share a lot of happy recollections about the time when his parents were together, sharing that “my very first memory is my mother and father fighting — she threw the Virgin Mary at him.” His father died when he was eight years old, and while Murphy doesn’t know all the details, he believes his father was killed by another woman in a “lover’s quarrel.”

Despite the early loss of his father, Murphy does speak fondly about his stepfather Vernon Lynch, “a solid father figure for the rest of my life.”

Eddie Murphy Has a Photo of Himself Punching Muhammad Ali in the Face

Early into the documentary, Murphy’s going through some memorabilia, which leads him to share the memory of punching the iconic boxer in the face one night. “Ali could talk some shit, and every now and then, Ali be talking too much shit,” is what he shares about that incident.

He does go on to call Ali “my hero,” noting that there was “nobody like Muhammad Ali in American history. He looked like he was plugged into the wall — he had this light. He stood up to the government, stood up for what he felt was right.”

The Co-Founder of Quibi Is Responsible for Eddie Murphy’s Movie Stardom

Yes, it was famed producer and studio exec Jeffrey Katzenberg who, while president of production at Paramount, took a chance on Murphy as the star of 48 Hours, his first major role. “The first two weeks of 48 Hours, they wanted to fire me because they were like ‘this isn’t working,’” Murphy says. “And [Katzenberg] came to them like ‘No, don’t fire him, there’s something there’ and they didn’t fire me. and we’ve just been cool since.”

At that point, Murphy says, he “wasn’t thinking I was going to be a movie star.” His belief is that “my stuff took off the way it took off because they’d never seen a young Black person go take charge in the white world.”

Katzenberg made a multi-picture deal with Murphy when he was just 19, and one unexpected benefit of becoming a huge star at that time: Murphy found himself meeting a slew of major Hollywood legends, who were curious enough about him to ask him to lunch. “I met Brando and Charlton Heston, Sinatra — I met all those guys through them calling my agent,” Murphy says.

Everyone Has Been Misinterpreting This One Moment in Beverly Hills Cop for Decades

In an interview, film critic Elvis Mitchell talks about the moment from the 1984 movie where Murphy’s character, Axel Foley, walks by two men wearing leather outfits very similar to his infamous Raw jumpsuit. As Axel passes, he’s seen laughing at them, something Mitchell calls out as a “complex moment in pop culture” — Murphy laughing at himself.

Murphy, meanwhile, would like to re-contextualize that scene now: “Eddie Murphy’s laughing at Eddie Murphy? No, one of those guys… as he walked past, he made a weird face. I was laughing at the face he made.” The way the shot is set up, you can’t see the faces of the men walking away, so we only have Murphy’s word to go on here, but he seems reliable enough.

Eddie Murphy Is Straight-Edge

Murphy reveals that as hard as he might have partied in his youth — “nobody had as much fun as we had in the ’80s” — none of that fun was substance-based. “I’ve never even tried cocaine or touched cocaine or shit like that. I don’t drink, I don’t smoke cigarettes. I was 30 years old when I first smoked a joint.”

And of course he had opportunities to indulge. One story he shares involves him going to a blues bar at the age of 19 with John Belushi and Robin Williams. “They put some blow on a table, and I’m standing there with, you know, two heroes. And I wasn’t even curious. I was just not with it.”

Says Jamie Foxx in an interview, “He’s very introverted. [At a party], he’ll sit in the back of the room with a Coca-Cola.”

Eddie Murphy Has Yul Brynner-Related Regrets

Murphy held his 21st birthday party at the famous New York club Studio 54, and Yul Brynner, star of movies including The King and I, The Magnificent Seven, and Westworld, was also at the club that night with his wife. Brynner, at one point in the evening, asked Murphy, “How would you like to go back to my apartment with my wife and I and party?”

Only later did Murphy realize… “Did he want me to go fuck his wife? Now, I wish I would have went. The story would end better if, you know, ‘Yeah, I went back to Yul Brynner’s spot and fucked his wife and he was watching me fucking, going “et cetera et cetera”…’” The documentary punctuates that moment with a clip of Brynner from The King and I, repeating that famous line.

November 12, 2025 0 comments
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Sabrina Carpenter To Star In 'Alice in Wonderland'-Inspired Musical
Music

Sabrina Carpenter To Star In ‘Alice in Wonderland’-Inspired Musical

by jummy84 November 12, 2025
written by jummy84

Sabrina Carpenter will return to her acting roots by starring and producing in an as-yet-untitled musical inspired by the Lewis Carroll classic Alice in Wonderland. The project will be released by Universal Pictures and both directed and adapted for film by Lorene Scafaria.

Carpenter has never been the top-billed star of a major movie, but spent three-plus years acting in the Disney Channel series Boy Meets World as a teenager and has also appeared in smaller roles in such films as The Hute U Give, Emergency, Tall Girl parts one and two and The Short History of the Long Road.

In September, she signed on to appear in a Muppet Show special helmed by Seth Rogen, which will come out sometime next year on Disney+. Fresh from directing several episodes of and serving as an executive producer on the HBO series I Love L.A., Scafaria will next direct the A24 comedy Jonty, starring Jesse Plemons.

Alice in Wonderland has long proved its mettle as box-office source material, most recently with an eponymous 2010 Tim Burton-directed film that grossed more than $1 billion around the world. A sequel, Alice Through the Looking Glass, came out in 2016.

Carpenter is currently touring in support of her latest Island album, Man’s Best Friend, which debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 in August and was just nominated for six top honors at the upcoming Grammy Awards.

November 12, 2025 0 comments
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Celebrity Inmates That Served Time At Same Prison As Diddy
Music

Celebrity Inmates That Served Time At Same Prison As Diddy

by jummy84 November 12, 2025
written by jummy84

Sean “Diddy” Combs’ federal prison sentence is underway, and while the mogul’s criminal trial has ended, he’s managed to continue to garner headlines, even from behind bars.

Combs, who was found guilty of two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution in July 2025, is currently serving a 50 month sentence in federal prison on those charges

Despite being housed at Federal Correctional Institution (FCI) Fort Dix in New Jersey for less than two weeks, Combs has already made waves for everything from alleged contraband to sightings alongside other notable inmates.

Because of his superstar status in hip-hop, his business empire, and the dramatic nature of the trial, Combs instantly became the most high-profile inmate at the facility, the largest federal prison in the U.S. according to population.

However, he’s far from the first celebrity to call the federal facility home during their incarceration, as multiple stars have spent part of their incarceration walking the same grounds Diddy will for the foreseeable future.

In light of the buzz surrounding Combs’ life behind bars, VIBE compiled a list of several notable inmates that have served time at FCI Fort Dix.

  • Kwame Kilpatrick

    Kwame Kilpatrick
    Image Credit: Bill Pugliano/Getty Images

    Kwame Kilpatrick, the flamboyant former mayor of Detroit from 2002 to 2008, became a high-profile federal prisoner after his 2013 conviction on racketeering, fraud, bribery and extortion charges.

    His case drew national attention not only because of the scale of the corruption but also because a sitting mayor of a major U.S. city was felled by scandal, resigning in 2008 amid a text-messaging sex and cover-up scandal.

    In October 2013 he was sentenced to 28 years in federal prison for orchestrating a pattern of corruption from City Hall that exploited his office and contractors while the city languished.

    In June 2018, Kilpatrick was transferred to FCI Fort Dix, where he served part of that sentence.

  • Martin Shkreli

    Martin ShkreliMartin Shkreli
    Image Credit: Eduardo Munoz Alvarez/Getty Images

    Martin Shkreli — the once-flamboyant pharmaceutical entrepreneur widely known as the “Pharma Bro” — became a high-profile federal prisoner following his 2017 conviction for two counts of securities fraud and one count of conspiring to commit securities fraud.

    In March 2018 he was sentenced to seven years in federal prison after investors were defrauded of more than ten million dollars. Assets including a rare Wu-Tang Clan album were forfeited by Shkreli as part of his conviction.

    In April 2018 he was transferred to the FCI Fort Dix to serve part of his term. He ultimately served nearly the full sentence and was released in 2022.

  • John Forté

    John FortéJohn Forté
    Image Credit: Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images for NBC Universal

    John Forté found himself at the centre of a high-profile federal case when, in July 2000, he was arrested at Newark Airport after accepting a briefcase carrying liquid cocaine.

    The musician was charged with possession with intent to distribute and conspiracy to distribute. He was convicted in the U.S. federal system and received a mandatory 14-year prison sentence in 2001.

    Part of his term was served at the Federal Correctional Institution Fort Dix facility. According to Forté’s own account, he spent approximately seven years and four months behind bars before his sentence was commuted by then-President George W. Bush on November 24, 2008.

    He walked out of FCI a free man on December 22, 2008.

  • George Jung

    George JungGeorge Jung
    Image Credit: Greg Doherty/Getty Images

    George Jung became a high-profile inmate not merely because of his time in prison, but because of his outsized role in the U.S. cocaine trade of the 1970s and ’80s and the fact that his story was dramatized in the 2001 film Blow (in which Johnny Depp portrayed him).

    In 1995 Jung pleaded guilty to federal drug-trafficking charges after having partnered with Carlos Lehder and directed the shipment of thousands of tons of narcotics into the United States. He was later sentenced to a lengthy term that would see him serve 19 years in prison.

    Jung was housed at FCI Fort Dix in New Jersey before his full release in 2014. His capture, conviction and incarceration generated intense media attention because of his celebrity connection, the scale of his trafficking operations, and the film version of his life-story.

  • Casanova

    CasanovaCasanova
    Image Credit: Bennett Raglin/Getty Images for Motown Records

    Casanova (born Caswell Senior) — once a rising Brooklyn rapper signed to major labels — became one of the most-talked-about federal inmates when his work and his alleged gang ties collided.

    In December 2020 he surrendered to authorities after being indicted for his leadership role in the Untouchable Gorilla Stone Nation (Gorilla Stone) gang, accused of racketeering and massive narcotics trafficking.

    A year later, he pleaded guilty (May 11 2022) to conspiracy to conduct the affairs of a criminal enterprise through a pattern of racketeering activity and to conspiracy to distribute more than 100 kg of marijuana. On June 27 2023 he was sentenced to 188 months (15 years 8 months) in federal prison.

    He is currently serving part of that term at the Federal Correctional Institution Fort Dix (FCI Fort Dix) in New Jersey.

  • Joe Guidice

    Joe GuidiceJoe Guidice
    Image Credit: Charles Sykes/Bravo/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images

    Joe Giudice — best known as the husband of The Real Housewives of New Jersey star Teresa Giudice — reported to the Federal Correctional Institution Fort Dix in New Jersey on March 23, 2016, to begin serving a 41-month federal sentence for bankruptcy fraud.

    The charges stemmed from a 2013 indictment in which he and his wife were accused of concealing assets and submitting false loan applications. Convicted in 2014, Giudice’s imprisonment drew significant media attention due to the couple’s reality-TV fame and legal troubles playing out publicly.

    While at FCI Fort Dix, he served nearly three years before his March 2019 release. Immediately afterward, Giudice was transferred to an immigration detention facility because he was not a U.S. citizen, and in October 2019 he was sent to Italy while appealing a deportation order.

  • Christopher Coke

    Christopher CokeChristopher Coke
    Image Credit: AP Photo/David Karp

    Christopher “Dudus” Coke, the notorious Jamaican gangster and former leader of the Shower Posse, began his U.S. prison saga following his extradition in 2010 after a violent stand-off in Kingston, Jamaica.

    In August 2011 he pleaded guilty to charges of large-scale narcotics and firearms trafficking and racketeering. In June 2012 he was sentenced to 23 years in federal prison by a U.S. court. He was later transferred to FCI Fort Dix during his term.

    His scheduled release date has been adjusted to January 25, 2029, after credits under the First Step Act reduced his original July 4, 2030 release.

  • Sebastian Telfair

    Sebastian TelfairSebastian Telfair
    Image Credit: Bruce Bennett/Getty Images

    Sebastian Telfair found himself behind bars again when in July 2025 a judge ordered him to serve six months in prison for violating the supervised-release terms tied to a 2021 health-care fraud case involving the NBA Players Health & Welfare Benefit Plan.

    Telfair — once a top high-school basketball prospect and first-round NBA draft pick in 2004 — reported to the Federal Correctional Institution, Fort Dix in New Jersey on August 12, 2025, as part of that six-month sentence.

    The violation stemmed from his failure to complete court-ordered community service and properly report to his probation officer following his initial plea in March 2023.

November 12, 2025 0 comments
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Sabrina Carpenter To Star In 'Alice In Wonderland' Movie
Music

Sabrina Carpenter To Star In ‘Alice In Wonderland’ Movie

by jummy84 November 12, 2025
written by jummy84

In September it was revealed that Disney Channel alum Sabrina Carpenter would be returning to her acting roots for Seth Rogen’s upcoming The Muppet Show revival. Today, she’s officially adding another acting project to her schedule, as she’s set to star in and co-produce an upcoming Alice In Wonderland movie musical.

The Hollywood Reporter notes that the untitled film for Universal Pictures will be based on Lewis Carroll’s classic 1865 novel. Lorene Scafaria, best known for her 2019 strip club crime-comedy Hustlers, will write and direct the new Alice adaptation, while Wicked mastermind Marc Platt will also produce.

Sources told THR that the movie is a “passion project” for Carpenter, who reportedly approached Universal herself to pitch a new Alice In Wonderland adaptation before Scafaria was attached to the project. I wonder if the Mad Hatter will serve espresso instead of tea.

Meanwhile, Carpenter is also celebrating six new Grammy nominations: “Manchild” is up for Song Of The Year, Record Of The Year, Best Pop Solo Performance, and Best Music Video, while Man’s Best Friend got nods for Album Of The Year and Best Pop Vocal Album.

November 12, 2025 0 comments
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Dry Cleaning Share Video for New Song “Cruise Ship Designer”: Watch
Music

Dry Cleaning Share Video for New Song “Cruise Ship Designer”: Watch

by jummy84 November 12, 2025
written by jummy84

Dry Cleaning have shared the second single from Secret Love, their upcoming album due out January 9 via 4AD. The London post-punk band returns with “Cruise Ship Designer” and its accompanying music video, directed by Cuán Roche. In the clip, bassist Lewis Maynard performs a dance routine—specifically choreographed for the song by Bullyache—in sparkly leggings in front of a dark curtain. Watch the new video below.

Singer Florence Shaw explained the backstory of their track in a statement: “The song is about a cruise ship and hotel designer who’s skilled and paid well, but who doesn’t believe his role has real worth,” she said. “He tries to enjoy it, and invests himself in meeting the challenges of the job.”

Secret Love is Dry Cleaning’s third studio album, following 2023’s Stumpwork. They worked on the 11-track LP at Jeff Tweedy’s Chicago studio, the Loft; at Dublin’s Sonic Studios with Gilla Band’s Alan Duggan and Daniel Fox; and eventually at France’s remote Black Box where Le Bon recorded their album.

Dry Cleaning wrapped up their recent tour, but they still have plenty of live shows on the books for next year, beginning with Rockaway Beach Festival in England on January 3. From there, Dry Cleaning’s 2026 tour heads to the United States, Canada, and many major cities in Europe.

Revisit the Rising interview “Dry Cleaning’s Everyday Surrealism” and read about their debut, New Long Leg, at No. 50 in “The 100 Best Albums of the 2020s So Far.”

November 12, 2025 0 comments
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Living In A Box singer Richard Darbyshire dies aged 65 as former bandmates pay tribute
Music

Living In A Box singer Richard Darbyshire dies aged 65 as former bandmates pay tribute

by jummy84 November 11, 2025
written by jummy84

Richard Darbyshire, the former vocalist of 1980s pop trio Living In A Box, has died aged 65.

Darbyshire joined the group in 1985 after visiting the same Sheffield recording studio as his future bandmates, Anthony ‘Tich’ Critchlow and Marcus Vere. They were recording the song of the same name, which became one of their biggest hits, and invited him to record the vocals – they then officially became a trio.

His family confirmed to the BBC that he died on Monday (November 10), and said, “We are all very sad but his memory and songs will live on.”

His former bandmates also paid tribute to the “incredible talent,” calling him a “pure craftsman and a master of his art.” They said: “Richard, wherever you are, Tich and I will miss you dearly. The laughs we had, the wildcat ride we went on, will never be forgotten.”

No cause of death has been given.

Darbyshire was born on March 8, 1960 in Stockport, growing up in Manchester. When he was 13, he moved to Japan with his parents and attended an American boarding school.

Before joining Living In A Box, he studied English Literature at Oxford University and was in the Manchester band Zu Zu Sharks alongside Adam And The Ants bassist Gary Tibbs.

Two years after joining Living In A Box in 1985, they released the song of the same name as their debut single and it peaked at Number Five in the UK, also becoming their only single to break into the Top 40 of the Billboard Hot 100 in the US. Their debut album, also ‘Living In A Box’, got to Number 25 in the UK.

‘Room In Your Heart’, from their second album ‘Gatecrashing’, also got to Number Five in the UK charts, and he said in 2014 that he was proud of the track because it gave him a rare opportunity to play guitar. Another single from the album, ‘Blow The House Down’, featured guitar from Queen’s Sir Brian May.

Darbyshire left the band in 1989 due to artistic differences and changes to their record label, and they broke up in 1990 before reforming in 2016 with another singer, Kenny Thomas. In 2022, they announced another new vocalist, Bryan Chambers.

Darbyshire, meanwhile, embarked on a solo career and released his debut solo album, ‘How Many Angels’, in 1994. He’s also written songs for artists including Lisa Stansfield, Jennifer Rush and Level 42, and had been holding songwriting workshops in London before his death.

He is survived by his wife, the vocal coach Sonia Jones.

November 11, 2025 0 comments
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Death's Chuck Schuldiner Recorded Madonna's 'Frozen': Listen
Music

Death’s Chuck Schuldiner Recorded Madonna’s ‘Frozen’: Listen

by jummy84 November 11, 2025
written by jummy84

While battling cancer in 1998, Death frontman Chuck Schuldiner recorded an instrumental version of “Frozen”

In 1998, the same year that the pioneering death-metal band Death released their final album, The Sound of Perseverance, Madonna released her ethereal trip-hop pop single, “Frozen.” At some point between Madge’s VH1 dominance and Schuldiner’s cancer-related death in 2001, the death-metal firebrand recorded his own version of the song — unreleased until now.

The track, an instrumental, features Schuldiner playing the song’s Middle Eastern–influenced music and vocal lines on his guitar to a drum machine. It sounds plaintive, understated, and unlike any other music for which Schuldiner is famous.

The recording surfaced when Schuldiner’s nephew, Chris Steele, discovered a CD-R of the song and played it in his car stereo, as seen in an Instagram reel. “Found this today going through some things,” Steele wrote. “Chuck recorded this in the early stages of his battle with cancer, I remember it well. Chuck sitting in his bedroom with his [B.C. Rich Stealth guitar] and a drum machine. I’m not sure how many people outside of the family and a few friends have heard this but it’s all yours: Chuck’s version of Madonna’s 1998 single ‘Frozen.’ 🤘🏻”

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Schuldiner formed his first band, Mantas, in 1983 – the same year Madonna’s self-titled debut was burning up the charts. He and his bandmates drew inspiration from the same New Wave of British Heavy Metal bands that influenced Metallica to invent thrash metal and took the sound a step further with Schuldiner’s demonic, guttural growling. Death’s 1987 debut, Scream Bloody Gore, was a death-metal landmark. Schuldiner and his bandmates fine-tuned and tightened the sound on subsequent albums, hitting a high water mark on 1991’s Human, which landed at Number 70 on Rolling Stone’s list of the 100 Greatest Metal Albums of All Time.

The artist, who also recorded with the groups Voodoocult and Control Denied, was diagnosed with brain cancer in 1999. He died of complications from the disease at age 34 in 2001. A new authorized biography of the artist, Born Human: The Life and Music of Death’s Chuck Schuldiner, by David E. Gehlke will come out this month.

November 11, 2025 0 comments
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Myke Towers' 'Tengo Celos' Tops Three Latin Charts Simultaneously
Music

Myke Towers’ ‘Tengo Celos’ Tops Three Latin Charts Simultaneously

by jummy84 November 11, 2025
written by jummy84

Myke Towers achieves a triple victory with his latest single, “Tengo Celos,” which dominates Billboard’s Latin Airplay, Latin Pop Airplay, and Latin Rhythm Airplay charts (each dated Nov. 15). This marks his second triple-chart win in 2025, following a similar accomplishment on the Aug. 9-dated rankings. It jumps 10-1 on Latin Airplay, 2-1 on Latin Pop Airplay and 4-1 on Latin Rhythm Airplay.

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“Seeing my name at No. 1 on all the radio charts in the United States and Puerto Rico is something that still amazes me, because behind every achievement like this there’s much more than numbers: there are sleepless nights, sacrifices, tough decisions, and above all, a real connection with the people,” Towers tells Billboard.

“Tengo Celos” was released July 17, as part of Towers’ album Island Boyz, via OneWorld International/Warner/Warner Latina. While the set reached No. 8 high on the Latin Rhythm Albums chart then, the song skyrockets 10-1 on the overall Latin Airplay chart after a 43% gain in audience impressions, to 8.1 million, earned in the United States on the week ending Nov. 6, according to Luminate.

The latest victory secures Towers his 16th No. 1 on the Latin Airplay chart. It follows “Soleao,” with Quevedo, which became the first track from Island Boyz to reach the top spot in August. As a solo artist without collaborations, “Tengo Celos” becomes Towers’ fourth chart-topper on the overall Latin radio tally, joining “Lala” (2023) as well as “La Falda” and “La Capi,” both in 2024.

“This No. 1 is for my team, for those who believe, for the radio stations that support me, and for the audience that always stands by me,” Towers adds. “Representing my island and seeing how Latin music continues to grow around the world is a blessing that I never take for granted. We keep working with the same hunger and the same faith as on the first day.”

As “Tengo Celos” secures a triple coronation across the Latin Airplay, Latin Rhythm Airplay, and Latin Pop Airplay charts, it becomes the fourth song to accomplish this feat in 2025. Towers previously hit the same milestone in August with his Quevedo collab, “Soleao.” Earlier this year, Danny Ocean and Kapo’s “Imagínate” topped all three charts (April). Most recently, Maluma joined the list of triple-achievers with “Bronceador” in October.

November 11, 2025 0 comments
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Laufey's Massive Rise Was Just a Matter of Time » PopMatters
Music

Laufey’s Massive Rise Was Just a Matter of Time » PopMatters

by jummy84 November 11, 2025
written by jummy84

Three-quarters of the way through the annus horribilis that has been 2025, as many of us have to strain our minds for the tiniest hint of optimism, a 26-year-old Chinese-Icelandic music prodigy, Laufey, has been packing arenas across North America. Including two sold-out dates at New York’s Madison Square Garden and another pair of sold-out dates in Toronto, all within one week.

It’s the latest in what has been an astonishing ascent for Laufey Lín Bing Jónsdóttir, who in 2020 was just another young person on TikTok during the lockdown, seeking to connect with others. Five years later, she’s in a sparkly Margot Fonteyn-inspired Bode dress, skipping along to a bossa nova tune in front of thousands of adoring fans who sing along to every word. The best part is that she did it on her own terms.

Barely a year removed from her much-ballyhooed multi-show appearance at the Montreal International Jazz Festival, Laufey was back in a venue five times the size, packed with a diverse collection of humanity. Most of the young girls in the audience sported homemade felt crowns and were clad in costumes that matched Laufey’s sparkly aesthetic, while groups of queer youngsters giddily bought merch by the bagful. Peppered throughout the crowd were not just parents of costumed kids, but boomer jazz aficionados, curious Gen-Xers like myself, and clusters of the young “performative males” that Laufey loves to poke fun at.

On more than one occasion, I’ve attempted to describe Laufey to the uninitiated and explain why she’s so popular. “Picture an artist drawing inspiration from the Great American Songbook like Lana Del Rey does, only instead of singing about the death of the myth of the American dream, she’s a band/theater kid who’s into Broadway, Snoopy, matcha, and bunnies.” She didn’t just attend the esteemed Berklee School of Music; she graduated, contrary to the running joke that most famous Berklee alums drop out before completing their studies. 

She plays cello, guitar, and piano. Her resonant voice is a blend of Ella Fitzgerald and Diana Krall, and her compositions draw from the influences of Tin Pan Alley, George Gershwin, Chet Baker, and Norah Jones. To label her as a jazz interloper or worse, “Starbucks music”, does her a disservice; her deep love of mid-20th-century pop and jazz vocals is palpable in every song she sings. 

Laufey’s first swing for the mainstream fences, A Matter of Time is a Technicolor fever dream that embraces the past, present, and future of popular music, expanding her sound well beyond the jazz-folk of 2023’s Bewitched and showcasing her versatility and range as a songwriter, arranger, multi-instrumentalist, and singer. 

The stage design for her 2025 tour, brought to life by London architects Stufish, gracefully reflects the ambition of the record. The main stage represents a palatial ballroom, while a sleek catwalk (inspired by the scroll of stringed instruments) connects to a smaller second stage shaped like a clock, its numbers illuminating one by one during a four-act show to reflect the passage of time. Orchestra risers flanking the main stage house Laufey’s eight-piece backing band, while two curved staircases move to create specific effects, such as a carousel for (you guessed it) “Carousel”, and a stormy Nordic cliffside for the epic “Forget-Ne-Not”.

Accompanied by four dancers, Laufey kicked off the show in full Doris Day mode on the utterly charming “Clockwork”. As someone more accustomed to the huge pop of a superstar’s grand entrance, it was disarming to hear the adoring screams quickly die down, allowing the gentle swing of the music to take over. It was a magical little moment, though the young crowd gave their idol license to take them on a languid musical journey. They were there to listen. No one was screaming lyrics with liturgical fervour; instead, kids dreamily sang along to their favorite numbers and gleefully provided joyous (and surprisingly on-point) claps to punctuate Laufey’s latest twinkly bossa nova revival, “Lover Girl”. 

Photo: Nicole Mago

Later on, “Silver Lining” pulled out all the 1950s pop stops, reminiscent of the starry-eyed ballads of Connie Francis, its gloriously melodramatic chorus becoming a gigantic sing-along. With Laufey on grand piano, the sumptuous “Too Little, Too Late” hints at Carole King. Still, her strong, mid-range timbre actually bears an uncanny similarity to the powerful chest voice of the underrated Ronee Blakley, adding an extra touch of anguish to an already heartbreaking tune.

The smaller second stage became a showcase for Laufey’s “jazz club” second act. Clad in an embroidered miniskirt with copious, flapper-style beaded fringe, she and her jazz trio launched into a cover of 1940s standard “Seems Like Old Times” (famously covered by her hero, Ella), followed by jazz interpretations of early songs “Valentine”, “Fragile”, and “While You Were Sleeping”. 

Back on the main stage, “Carousel” and “Forget-Me-Not” were spectacles in themselves thanks to that understated yet dazzling stage design, which then segued into the surprising inclusion of A Matter of Time’s musical interlude, “Cuckoo Ballet”. A cute medley of the first six tracks on the album (another charming nod to mid-century musical theater), it was an opportunity for Laufey to strut her stuff further, this time performing a cello solo.

The Golden Age of Hollywood was a prominent theme of the show’s giddy fourth act, which focused primarily on A Matter of Time, more contemporary-leaning material. “Mister Eclectic” is a humorous, witty takedown of performative males that translates well to a live setting. “Castle in Hollywood” and “Tough Luck” flirt with modern pop tropes without compromising Laufey’s retrofuturist persona. The brutal, confessional “Snow White” served as a fitting emotional climax to the main set. Laufey’s lyrics about her own body dysmorphia are echoed gracefully by her dancers, choreographing full-body mirrors that stalk the singer during the performance. 

Her beguiling breakthrough single from 2023, “From the Start”, is showing no sign of slowing down, and to no one’s surprise, it received a euphoric reaction from the audience, who were swept away by Laufey’s little scat solo as she danced across the sparkly stage. However, it was A Matter of Time‘s closing track, “Sabotage”, that left a bigger impression.

It wasn’t so much the brilliant execution of the song’s dissonant jump scare, but rather that the jump scare (and the song’s blustery outro) echoes the more abrasive moments of the late Scott Walker, hinting that there’s more to Laufey than self-referential mellow bossa nova tracks and cute bunny mascots. After all, glitter shines brighter when juxtaposed with darkness, and the way “Sabotage” built to its cacophonous crescendo was thrilling to witness in person.

Laufey’s final song was her poignant “Letter to My 13-Year-Old Self”, which includes the line, “I’m so sorry that they pick you last / Try to say your foreign name and laugh.” As soon as she sang it, shouts of “Laufey!” echoed from the darkness, her expression of vulnerability met with a chorus of affirmation that was, frankly, quite moving.

Laufey is a prodigious talent, but also immensely relatable: she’s a nerd, and everyone was at the show because, well, we’re all nerds too. Forty years ago, I was a band geek in junior high and didn’t fit in either. I’m not wild about matcha, but I’ve grown to love musical theater. Snoopy is awesome. Mei-Mei the bunny is indeed super cute. I’ve been humming those bossa nova tunes all year long. I turn 55 tomorrow, and I can’t wait to see what Laufey does next.

Laufey 2025
Photo: Nicole Mago
November 11, 2025 0 comments
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Pope Leo XIV Reveals Favorite Movies Ahead of Vatican Event
Music

Pope Leo XIV Reveals Favorite Movies Ahead of Vatican Event

by jummy84 November 11, 2025
written by jummy84

If you were hoping Pope Leo XIV was partial to movies like The Conclave or The Exorcist, sorry to disappoint. Ahead of a Hollywood gathering at the Vatican, the pontiff has revealed his four favorite films, which are all, unsurprisingly, extremely safe.

In a video posted by Variety, the pope listed 1946’s It’s a Wonderful Life starring Jimmy Stewart, 1965’s The Sound of Music featuring Julie Andrews, 1980’s Ordinary People starring Donald Sutherland and Mary Tyler Moore, and 1997’s Life Is Beautiful (La Vita è Bella) with Roberto Benigni.

Of those four films, three won Oscars, and the fourth was a nominee whose loss is considered one of the Academy’s worst snubs. The Sound of Music and Ordinary People each won Best Picture and Best Director, while Life Is Beautiful received an Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film and Best Actor for Benigni. It’s a Wonderful Life was nominated for five Oscars, including Best Picture, but lost that award to The Best Years of Our Lives in 1946.

Related Video

Perhaps we’ll get a special Criterion Closet episode with deeper cuts next?

As reported by Variety, Pope Leo is set to host a Vatican event on Saturday, November 15th, which will be attended by Hollywood stars including Cate Blanchett, Chris Pine, Viggo Mortensen, Alison Brie, Dave Franco, and Monica Bellucci.

Filmmakers Spike Lee, Gus Van Sant, George Miller, and Giuseppe Tornatore are also expected to attend. The gathering was organized by the Vatican’s culture office as part of the Catholic Church’s Holy Year celebrations.

In a statement, the Vatican said the pope aims “to deepen dialogue with the World of Cinema” while “exploring the possibilities that artistic creativity offers to the mission of the Church and the promotion of human values.”

It’s a clear move to deepen ties with Hollywood compared to his predecessor. While the late Pope Francis hosted late night hosts Conan O’Brien, Stephen Colbert, and Jimmy Fallon in June 2024, Pope Leo seems to be intent on courting Hollywood A-list stars.

Pope Leo has been meeting with several movie stars as of late, including Al Pacino in June and Robert De Niro last week. Last month, he denounced clickbait during a private meeting with media members and urged companies to be proactive in addressing AI.

#PopeLeoXIV reveals his four favorite movies of all-time.

Read the full story on the Pope’s plans for a big Hollywood gathering at the Vatican: https://t.co/yqWaKaM20e pic.twitter.com/roRp1M1jlI

— Variety (@Variety) November 11, 2025

November 11, 2025 0 comments
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