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"It's really important that they are here, adding their voice"
Music

It’s really important that they are here, adding their voice

by jummy84 August 28, 2025
written by jummy84

Festival Republic boss Melvin Benn has reassured fans Kneecap won’t be censored at their upcoming Electric Picnic slot.

  • READ MORE: Kneecap on the cover – giving peace, protest and partying a chance

The Irish language trio have come under intense scrutiny for their critiques of Israel and vocal support of Palestine, and are set to perform this Saturday (August 30) at Electric Picnic in Co Laois.

Speaking ahead of their slot at Ireland’s largest music event, Benn said promoters behind Electric Picnic felt that adding Kneecap to the line-up was “really important” (via Belfast Live).

“Musically, you know [they are] fantastic, but in terms of what’s going on in the world, it’s really important that they are here, adding their voice. I will hasten to remind people that they headlined the Hazelwood stage in 2018, so we’ve had a long history with Kneecap.”

When asked whether the festival had a policy in place for handling Kneecap’s performance, he insisted: “No, mics won’t be switched off.”

Kneecap’s Mo Chara and Móglaí Bap perform at Glastonbury 2025. Credit: Andy Ford for NME

His comments come in light of the BBC making a U-turn on their decision to show the band’s incendiary set at Glastonbury live. That gig, which was available to stream after they performed, saw the band hit out Prime Minister Keir Starmer – who argued that it was “not appropriate” for the them to be appearing at the festival.

“The Prime Minister of your country said he didn’t want us to play, so fuck Keir Starmer,” Mo Chara said. Additionally, Kneecap played a new track and reaffirmed their solidarity with Palestine and the activist group Palestine Action – now a proscribed terrorist group under UK law.

Benn added that Kneecap were “great lads, they’ve got really important songs, they’re brilliant live, but they’ve also got really important messages”.

He continued: “They didn’t do anything wrong at Glastonbury, it’s yet to be proven whether they have done anything wrong anywhere else in the world. So, you know, they are on home territory here and I think they will be really relaxed and the crowd will be really appreciative of it.”

Benn was also asked about a recent incident that saw Irish The Mary Wallopers have their sound cut by Portsmouth’s Victorious festival organisers and the Palestinian flag they had on stage taken away, a decision that was met with furious responses from both the band themselves and many of the other artists on the bill.

The West Holts stage at Glastonbury
The West Holts stage at Glastonbury on June 28. CREDIT: Andy Ford for NME

Several acts, including The Last Dinner Party, The Academic, Cliffords and Esme Emerson, decided to boycott the festival as a result.

Benn described the incident as “shocking”, and said he was “glad that artists ended up withdrawing as a result of it,” adding that “it definitely won’t be my policy”.

Even more recently, Reading Festival – an event Benn also runs – took place over this past weekend and saw several artists call for a free Palestine, with Hozier using his headline set to defend Kneecap, saying: “Irish musicians rapping or supporting the people of Palestine is not an act of terrorism.”

Fans went on to criticise the fact that his performance was not livestreamed on BBC iPlayer.

Hozier performs at Reading Festival 2025, photo by Derek Bremner
Hozier performs at Reading Festival 2025. CREDIT: Derek Bremner for NME

Benn’s comments in defence of Kneecap come shortly after the band cancelled their sold-out 2025 US headline tour earlier this week, news that came shortly after Mo Chara’s terrorism case was adjourned until next month at his second court hearing at Westminster Magistrates’ Court in London last Wednesday (August 20).

Gigs had been scheduled in New York, Nashville, Washington D.C., Boston, Chicago and other cities across the US throughout October. Chara (real name Liam Óg Ó hAnnaidh) first appeared in court in June, when he was released on unconditional bail.

The terrorism charges were levelled against him in May for allegedly displaying a Hezbollah flag on stage at a London show last November. The rapper is yet to enter a plea, but has denied any wrongdoing.

His lawyers are seeking to throw out the case, arguing that the terror charge against him was brought outside the time limit. They claim that it was brought a day after the six-month limit for such charges.

However, prosecutors say the charge was brought exactly within the required time limit.

Responding to the terror charge in May, Kneecap denied the offence and vowed to “vehemently defend ourselves”. “This is political policing,” they wrote. “This is a carnival of distraction. We are not the story. Genocide is.”

Kneecap have since returned to the stage for a defiant set at Rock en Seine, where pro-Israel protestors attempted to disrupt their performance.

Earlier this month, the trio led chants of “fuck KKR” at Øya Festival 2025 before condemning the “hate-filled” Hungarian Prime Minister in a video broadcast at Sziget in Budapest.

August 28, 2025 0 comments
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Colmesneil,TX -January 1:  Country Music Singer Songwriter George Jones and Nancy Jones sit on bed in their home on January 1, 1985 in Colmesneil,TX (photo by Beth Gwinn/Getty Images)
Music

He Stole George Jones’ Widow’s Heart. Then He Allegedly Stole Millions

by jummy84 August 28, 2025
written by jummy84


K
irk West didn’t look like a man trying to slip out of town unnoticed. Dressed in a $350 black-and-gold Versace-style shirt with a dragon perched on a champagne bottle on the back, the six-foot-six entrepreneur carried himself with the same air of confidence he’s projected for years. Yet, as the 58-year-old moved through Nashville International Airport on July 24, his life was about to implode. 

His downfall had begun weeks earlier, triggered by the discovery of an affair. Nancy Jones — the 78-year-old widow of country legend George Jones — threw him out of the contemporary European-style mansion they shared after she suspected him of cheating. The infidelity soon revealed a deeper betrayal: a stockpile of $400,000 in cash and a ledger containing $11.6 million in cryptocurrency missing from her safe, according to police and court records.

The discovery shattered a silver lining that came in the months after Jones’ death at 81 of hypoxic respiratory failure in April 2013. Considered one of country music’s greatest and most influential singers, Jones had dozens of hit songs, including “White Lightning,” “Near You,” with his ex-wife Tammy Wynette, and the heart-rending 1980 classic “He Stopped Loving Her Today,” widely considered one of the greatest country songs of all time.

Yet it was Nancy — Jones’ fourth wife and the June Carter Cash to Jones’ Johnny — who helped salvage his ailing reputation and pulled him out of his decades-long battle with alcohol and drug addiction to preserve and resurrect his legacy. The fiery, Louisiana-born mother was so determined to see Jones through his sobriety that she even sparred with local “cocaine pushers” in Alabama who were keeping Jones hooked on the drug, Jones wrote in his memoir, I Lived to Tell It All. “God put me with him to help him get the devil out of him,” Nancy reflected to The Tennessean in 2015. “God put me there to do a job, and I did it.”

Nancy had been distraught when the honky-tonk crooner died, and cherished what seemed to be a genuine friendship with West in the immediate months after Jones’ death that quickly blossomed into romance. But after 12 years together, Nancy now believes her chance meeting with West in the summer of 2013 wasn’t a coincidence. Instead, she claims, she was deliberately preyed upon.

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It was West’s well-established “modus operandi” to use his looks, gentlemanly manners, and veneer of a successful real estate career to exploit “wealthy, potentially vulnerable women,” according to Nancy’s July lawsuit against West to reclaim her missing fortune. (Through her attorney, Nancy declined to be interviewed for this article. “Due to pending proceedings, we can’t comment on the matter at the time,” her attorney Chris Thorsen says in a statement to Rolling Stone.)

Kirk West’s arrest

via Franklin Police Department

Nancy reported the theft to the police. The next day, deputies raced to intercept West at the airport, where he was holding a one-way ticket to the Philippines and accompanied by a woman in her forties, three well-placed sources who requested anonymity due to privacy concerns tell Rolling Stone. He was led away in handcuffs and charged with felony theft. (He has pleaded not guilty and faces between 15 and 60 years in prison if convicted.) 

The arrest made local headlines and on country-music websites for the bizarre situation that seemed like a cross between the scheming TV show Nashville and CNBC’s American Greed. But several people from West’s past tell Rolling Stone they weren’t surprised to learn of Nancy’s ordeal once they heard who was involved.  

“I never trusted him,” an old friend of Nancy’s who knew the couple for more than a decade, tells Rolling Stone. “George had just passed, and all of a sudden this guy shows up hanging around with Nancy; it’s kind of obvious what he was looking for. It seems to me that he was just looking for the widow’s money. But he’s hung around for a long time. I guess he was playing the long game.” 

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Over the past two decades, West — whose birth name is Kirk R. Leipzig — has left a trail of broken promises and financial ruin, nearly 10 former associates, ex-girlfriends, and people who knew him tell Rolling Stone. He is linked to a string of civil lawsuits, defaulted bank loans, a federal fraud conviction, and an arrest for violating a restraining order, on top of the recent theft charge. (Rolling Stone reached out to West’s attorney Dana C. McLendon with a detailed list of questions regarding Nancy’s claims, the criminal case, and accusations raised against West in various lawsuits, but the attorney declined to comment. “Neither Mr. West nor I will be making any comments to media at this time,” McLendon wrote in an email.)

The smooth talker has long been accused of convincing people to invest their life savings in his real estate opportunities and promising six-figure returns from flipping homes, only to hoard the profits. He especially targeted single mothers, sources allege, to prey on their vulnerabilities and milk them and their loved ones of cash before moving on to his next target.

“He is a guy that reads obituaries and preys on people,” says one former ex-girlfriend. “And I’m fairly confident that’s how he managed to get in touch with Nancy.”

Nancy Jones attends the George Jones Monument unveiling at the Woodlawn-Roesch-Patton Funeral Home and Memorial Park on November 18, 2013 in Nashville, Tennessee.

Rick Diamond/Getty Images

Auspicious Beginnings

In August 2013, Nancy Jones was in mourning after Jones’ death. Just two weeks before the singer was rushed to the hospital, Jones had taken the stage for what would be his final performance at a packed venue in Knoxville, Tennessee. A signature twinkle in his eye, Jones shifted into showman mode — a persona he first learned busking on the streets of East Texas as a kid. He cracked jokes and rose from his seat to deliver a poignant rendition of “He Stopped Loving Her Today.” Upon his death, country greats including Loretta Lynn, Alan Jackson, Merle Haggard, and Dolly Parton all heralded Jones as a defining voice of country music.

After three decades of marriage, Nancy was now left to oversee Jones’ legacy and manage Country Gold, their nearly 80-acre estate. Loving portraits of the couple graced its walls, a parlor organ sat untouched in a sunny room, and Jones’ fully functioning barber shop lost its lone patron. It all seemed too much to handle alone. “Our once vibrant home now seemed like a museum with George Jones memorabilia all over it,” Nancy wrote in her 2023 memoir, Playin’ Possum: My Memories of George Jones. “Friends stayed in touch and many visited often, but at night, when George and I had often snuggled in bed watching movies, the loneliness grabbed me by the heart and wouldn’t let go.”

As Nancy became serious about selling the home that summer, West pulled up for a tour, accompanied by Britney Spears’ father, Jamie Spears. “I arrived home just as they finished up and were walking through the backyard near the house,” Nancy wrote in her book. “I greeted them cordially and stepped over to shake hands with them.… Then Kirk West, the taller of the two men, smiled and said, ‘I’m a hugger.’ He gave me a great big bear hug.”  

West introduced himself as a real estate investor with a strong track record of delivering sizable returns. Along with some other investors, he said, he was interested in purchasing the storied estate. 

There was a Midwestern charm about the Wisconsin-raised West. He was polite and vocal about his faith in Christ, a trait that appealed to the religious Nancy. Although West didn’t strike a business deal that day, he earned something that would prove vastly more lucrative: Nancy’s trust and friendship. He began texting her, readily offering himself up to the widow, according to the lawsuit, whether she needed guidance or just as an emotional crutch during a difficult time.

But it was West who needed the support. Within a few weeks of their first meeting, according to Nancy’s lawsuit, West confessed he wasn’t the high-flying investor he had pretended to be. He allegedly claimed to be “penniless” and didn’t even have his own home. Not used to being alone in an empty 9,651-square-foot home, Nancy allowed West to move into a separate wing of the house that September. “Our relationship was strictly platonic, at least until Mr. West seduced me,” Nancy wrote in a court-submitted declaration. The following month, they were dating. 

It wasn’t long before people around Nashville learned about West’s relationship with Nancy. He had been spotted cruising around town in one of Jones’ cars — the country star’s infamous nickname “No Show” emblazoned on the license plate. 

A Trove of Lawsuits

Apart from news of his arrest, West keeps a low profile online. His LinkedIn is defunct, he has no obvious business websites, and only scraps of his background are public. What can be pieced together shows a man who reinvented himself repeatedly, leaving wreckage behind each time.

He began as a grocery store manager before recasting himself as a job-placement guru, a pivot that brought him to Nashville in the early 2000s. The business cycled through several names, but the one that stuck was JL Kirk Associates. At different times, West told people the “JL” stood for “Jesus Lord” or “Jesus Loves.”

George and Nancy pose at their Country Gold Farms in 2004.

George Walker IV/The Tennessean/USA TODAY NETWORK/Imagn

“More like Jesus laughs,” scoffs Tennessee blogger Katherine Coble, who tried to warn others about West back in 2007. Her husband had been cold-called by the firm with promises of securing a better-paying, executive role at a company — if he paid nearly $5,000 in headhunting fees upfront on a credit card. The intake interview, she wrote in a blog post, felt more like a predatory, emotional beatdown than a helpful consultation.

“I would discourage anyone who stumbles across this entry from even going through the JL Kirk & Associates ‘interview process,’” Coble added. Weeks later, Coble said she received a cease and desist from West’s attorney, demanding the post be removed or face a defamation lawsuit. Undeterred, Coble posted the demand letter in full on her blog. 

The entries drew hundreds of comments, and by year’s end, West quietly shuttered the office, according to an investigation by local news outlet NewsChannel 5. The station reported the Better Business Bureau received “dozens of complaints” from customers who claimed they had paid thousands of dollars each for jobs that never materialized. (The state Attorney General’s Office confirmed to the news station it had been investigating the firm, but no action was ultimately taken.)

By then, West had pivoted full-time. “Kirk Leipzig is turning foreclosed homes into cash,” a glowing 2008 Forbes write-up said. “All it takes is legwork, a line of credit, and a lack of emotion.”

The article painted West as a property shark with “a five-year cash hoard in the bank” and an eye for distressed properties. West boasted about flipping two homes within six weeks, making nearly half a million dollars in profit. The spread became a calling card for West, referring potential investors to the flattering piece as proof of both his trustworthiness and track record. 

But within a few years, lawsuits began stacking up, creating a complicated and extensive trail of court records. Some cases directly name West as the defendant, while others link back to his various LLCs and trust accounts. The lawsuits often contain hundreds of filings, with submissions of deeds, dense real estate contracts, and email correspondence.  

Banks accused West and his various LLCs of defaulting on mortgages. Mercedes-Benz came after him for skipping out on a $33,000 payment. The local paper claimed he stiffed them on advertising payments. His second wife sued him for $25,000 in unpaid child support. And investors alleged he was using their funds to buy properties, make cosmetic renovations, flip them fast, and pocket everything without even letting them know the house had sold. At least two lawsuits labeled West’s practices as Ponzi schemes. (According to court records, West vigorously defended himself against accusations of skipping out on payments to the paper and elsewhere, and denied he was running any Ponzi scheme.)

A middle-aged couple laid out West’s alleged scheme in a 2013 lawsuit against the entrepreneur. After reading West’s Forbes article, the husband and wife withdrew from their retirement fund, used a portion of their savings, and borrowed money from their adult son to invest $150,000 in a home West was flipping in August 2010. Allegedly promised a doubled return, they learned West sold the house a year later and never shared the profits. Only after confronting West did they manage to recoup $115,000, filing suit for the remaining $35,000. (West denied the claims of fraud, and the case was dismissed in late 2013 after the couple failed to meet a court deadline.)

Even West’s own attorney sued him. Scott Johannessen said he successfully fought off several fraud litigation claims against West, but after the house Johannessen was living in (which he rented from West) suddenly went into foreclosure, he filed suit in February 2014. Hoping to block the foreclosure of his family’s home, Johannessen listed seven alleged Ponzi schemes West was allegedly involved in between November 2011 and August 2013. 

He alleged West followed the same pattern in each instance. After West was “threatened by an attorney with a civil action and potential criminal prosecution for allegedly orchestrating and participating in a Ponzi scheme,” Johannessen claimed, West would settle “with monies [West] borrowed and/or otherwise secured from one or more third parties.” (The case was eventually moot after West’s LLC that was controlling the property declared bankruptcy.)

In early 2015 — nearly a dozen lawsuits later — West applied to change his last name from Leipzig legally, listing the reason as: “Don’t like my name. Always misspelled. Too hard,” according to court documents.

“If I would have googled his name, I would have stopped dead in my tracks,” says a former associate who says they lost their life savings and home because of West in the 2010s. 

Raising Suspicions

From the outset of their relationship, Nancy financially supported West. A nurturer to her core, she covered their living expenses, footed the cost of vacations to Cancun and Jamaica, and paid for his new Mercedes-Benz, according to her lawsuit.

Outfits and personal items from George Jones’ life at the George Jones Museum in Nashville, Tenn. in 2015.

Joe Buglewicz/The New York Times/REDUX

In return, West was Nancy’s confidant, advisor, business partner, and a spiritual mentor — she credited West with recementing her faith in Christ. West became so enmeshed in Nancy’s businesses that she entrusted him to help run the George Jones estate, although he “knew next to nothing about country music,” Nancy wrote in her book. Eventually, Nancy was able to net a reported $4.4 million from the sale of Country Gold, roughly the same amount she paid for the building that would house the George Jones museum.

West helped conceive the museum, which included a restaurant, gift shop, event space, and roofdeck bar. Named as general manager, he pulled shifts at the busy restaurant in the heart of Nashville right beside Nancy, who cleaned toilets and waitressed. When Nancy struck a deal with publishing company Concord Bicycle Music to purchase Jones’ music catalog for a reported $30 million in January 2016, West was listed as secretary for the record company and described himself as business manager for the estate. 

As West’s stock grew in the Nashville entertainment scene, his background and prior business dealings began to raise suspicions among Nancy’s closest friends. The concern materialized into a third-party investigative firm digging into West’s past to produce an extensive due-diligence background report. The October 2014 findings, obtained by Rolling Stone, were brutal, tracing more than a dozen state and federal lawsuits filed against West in Wisconsin and Tennessee.  

But the background report never made its way to Nancy. “I really didn’t trust him,” the old friend who ordered the report says. “Time went by, and she was still with him. I just let it be. I never showed it to her, because it seemed like she was happy.” 

There were other odd signs. In November 2013 — a month after West had moved in with Nancy — five items of jewelry had vanished from Nancy’s master-bedroom closet from the top of her safe, according to a police report obtained by Rolling Stone. The report listed West as a suspect, but the case seemingly went nowhere and was shut. (“Refus[al] to cooperate” was listed as the reason the case was concluded.)

But some did try to warn her about her new lover’s reputation. “I was frantically trying to get in touch with [a mutual friend] and say, ‘Look, you gotta help her — she’s getting ready to get swindled,” says one of West’s ex-girlfriends. “[Nancy] wouldn’t hear it.” 

‘Hell on Fire’ 

Nancy wasn’t the first woman to be swept up by West’s charm. 

“Here you go baby,” West emailed a woman who would later declare bankruptcy after going into a real estate deal with him in the 2010s. “I think I got it ready for your signature.” West walked her through the process so she could “be safe and have no worries of anyone ever touching” her belongings. He signed the note, “Daddy.”

Those who knew West describe him as being charming and outgoing. “You’d think he’s the nicest person in the world,” one well-placed source says. “But he’s really — believe me — very conniving, very wise in making you believe anything that he wanted you to believe.” 

Two ex-girlfriends, who wished to have their names withheld due to privacy reasons, claim West lovebombed them as he aggressively pursued them in the 2010s. (The women’s relationships with West overlapped, but they do not know each other.) Both were recently single mothers when they met West, who would turn up to volunteer around the house and gift them diamond jewelry. 

As the relationships soured, both claim West harassed and threatened them. One said she had to call the police, describing the scene with her children present as “hell on fire.” The other woman said she began sleeping with a pistol in her bedside table after claiming West dangled her from her home’s balcony, followed her in his car, and peered into her windows at night. 

Their claims echoed a restraining order filed against West by his third wife in July 2004, just a few months after he moved to Nashville. Filing for a divorce on grounds of adultery, inappropriate marital conduct, and irreconcilable differences, according to court records, the woman accused West of being controlling, as well as verbal and emotional abuse throughout their five-year marriage. (The woman declined to be interviewed by Rolling Stone.)

“Husband also has a violent temper and has for the last years of this marriage had an especially violent temper, cursing [at] the Wife and referred to her as ‘f…ing stupid’ and has used other vile and crude remarks,” the complaint, obtained by Rolling Stone, alleges. (West denied aspects of his ex-wife’s complaint in his own court submission and accused her of taking money from their joint account, but ultimately agreed they should divorce.) Simultaneously, she obtained an order of protection against him, claiming he had kicked down her locked bedroom door, left more than a dozen “harassing phone messages,” and threatened he would “hunt her down if she did not return his calls.” (West was arrested for violating the order, but the misdemeanor charge was later dropped.) 

The third ex-wife’s daughter and West’s former stepdaughter, Alesia Porter, tells Rolling Stone that her mother’s marriage to West was financially, emotionally, and verbally abusive, and that West isolated the mother and daughter from their relatives. There were two sides to West, she explains: the God-fearing, jovial family man, and the man they came to fear. “He never cracked in front of other people,” Porter says. “But as far as at home, he was always very abusive.” 

He was also a cheater, Porter claims. “He told my mom that he was going on a spiritual retreat, and she followed him to the airport and found another woman’s luggage tag and [that he was taking the woman on] a $10,000 vacation on [their] anniversary,” Porter says. 

“He has no remorse for anything, absolutely nothing,” she adds. “He thinks that he is untouchable. He thinks that he is his own God, and that everyone is beneath him.”

Luck Runs Out 

By July 2016, West’s luck finally ran out. Already named in more than a dozen federal and state lawsuits, Tennessee criminal prosecutors came knocking. He was charged with two counts of bank fraud for lying on a loan application to secure a mortgage on an investment property. Prosecutors said West inflated his income and net worth, posing as a real estate investor earning $300,000 a year, and submitted “fraudulent and forged documents,” according to the indictment.

Kirk West (third from left) posing with Nancy Jones in a press photo showing their Midsouth Emmy Awards 

Via Jeremy Westby/2911 Media

Nancy covered his legal fees, and that September, West pleaded guilty to the fraud charges. He was sentenced to a year of house arrest and ordered to pay nearly $1 million in restitution, a debt he allegedly persuaded Nancy to front. According to her lawsuit, West promised to pay her back but never did. 

West seemed to have her wrapped around his finger — an anomaly for the fearless Nancy, who once took a journalist on a three-wheeler ride just to dump them in a creek over what she said were false tabloid-style reports they’d penned about Jones and his tumultuous relationship with Wynette. In August 2021, West pushed Nancy to buy an over-the-top home listed at $5.9 million, complete with a temperature-controlled wine room, home bar, and billiards area, a well-placed source says. “He had a big say in it,” they say. “She went along with whatever he said because he could convince her into anything. He was that type of person.”

He also persuaded Nancy to get involved in cryptocurrency, becoming an “expert” while he served his house arrest from her home. Upon his insistence, Nancy bankrolled investments in a range of tokens, including DOGE and Ethereum. “Mr. West volunteered to access my accounts with [crypto-trading platforms] … in light of his assertion that I was far too inexperienced,” Nancy wrote in a sworn affidavit. “Each investment was funded by assets transferred from my personal bank account(s) and was performed by Mr. West on my behalf and for my benefit.”

From the outside, life looked stable after West’s conviction. He stuck by Nancy’s side after she caught a near-fatal case of Covid-19 in 2021, losing her hair and 70 percent of her lungs after they moved into their new home. Nancy said she died for 15 minutes before regaining consciousness. As she worked toward recovery, she had to learn how to walk again. West was her “warrior and defender throughout the hospitalization and rehabilitation,” Nancy wrote in her memoir. 

By February of this year, the couple appeared smiling together, posing with their Midsouth Emmys for executive producing Still Playin’ Possum, a George Jones tribute concert. But Nancy says the façade collapsed when she discovered West’s affair — and her missing money — in late June. 

West allegedly tried to pacify Nancy in the days after she learned about the stolen ledger, according to police documents, promising to “send five million dollars of the cryptocurrency funds back to her bank account” but was firm that was “all she would get.” That wasn’t good enough. Nancy filed a police report and hired a cryptocurrency forensic service firm to recover the funds and wrestle back more than $10 million worth of tokens. Nancy uncovered West’s affair at a fortuitous juncture: West seemed to have had every intention of hightailing it out of the country.

Kirk West’s mugshot photo

Franklin Police Department

Unbeknownst to Nancy, a woman who worked at a local store in the Nashville area had been telling co-workers about a new wealthy man who had entered her life, says a source who worked with the woman and asked not to be named for privacy reasons. (Rolling Stone is choosing not to name the woman and has reached out to her for comment.) In late April, she posted a video of a massive oval-cut diamond ring, marking herself “engaged” on Facebook. “Choose a man who cherishes God and loves you like no one ever could,” she wrote. On June 22, she uploaded a video that her “babe” surprised her with a beautiful floral arrangement and congratulation balloons to celebrate her last day of work. She was thrilled to be “embracing my new life as a full time wife and moving back to my country,” she wrote. 

By August, the woman appeared to have moved back to the Philippines. Last week, she was pictured smiling with family members. Taped to the wall was a large poster of West, the woman, and her teenage son. “Welcome home,” the sign read in cursive lettering. 

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But West never made it to the gathering after police caught up to him at the airport. Pleading not guilty to the Class A felony theft charge, West sat around in the county jail for two weeks until his attorney managed to reduce his $1 million bond down to $400,000 on July 29. (West bonded out on Aug. 5, with his next court date set for Oct. 7.)

For many who crossed paths with West, the reckoning feels overdue. “He is an emotional, financial, soul-sucking succubus,” says his former stepdaughter Porter. “He will latch onto you and take you for everything.”

August 28, 2025 0 comments
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Weezer's Brian Bell Is Excited to See Oasis
Music

Weezer’s Brian Bell Is Excited to See Oasis

by jummy84 August 28, 2025
written by jummy84

Game knows game. Weezer and Oasis are solid proof. Oasis, the record-smashing Britpop heavyweights who set the record with the U.K.’s fastest-selling album (with 1997’s Be Here Now) and saw all seven of their studio albums reach the summit on the national chart, took time out to praise Weezer and its frontman Rivers Cuomo. Liam Gallagher in 2005 called Cuomo his “favorite rock star,” rare kudos for the famously surly singer.

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The love goes in both directions. “We think very highly of them as well,” Weezer’s Brian Bell tells Rolling Stone Australia. The Weezer rhythm guitarist, keyboardist, backing vocalist, and occasional lead vocalist,  recounted a moment at a rehearsal space in London during the ’90s. The American indie band was taking time out in a common area when Liam strutted past and shouted, “Buddy Holly. Top tune, mate!”

“That kind of respect and accolade from someone that you revere,” Bell enthuses, “is the best thing you could possibly hear from somebody. Those kind of things matter by somebody you revere. So whatever he thinks of us, we think highly of them as well. If they think lowly of us, we still think highly of them.”

Bell has bought tickets for Oasis’ Live ’25 Tour date at Rose Bowl Stadium next month, having briefly entertained the idea of seeing the Brits play in Scotland to experience the “cultural phenomenon” in full.

Oasis isn’t the only beloved ’90s band hitting the road this year. Weezer have live dates across the Americas through November, then the indie rockers head down under for a headline stint on the Good Things festival tour, which visits Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane in early December.

“We’re doing great. We’re kind of having a renaissance in a way. It’s an exciting time for us creatively and in the band,” Bell explains over a Zoom call. “We’ve never got along so well, and everybody’s very happy. So it’s a good time.”

That excitement might explain the band’s impressively productive spell during the pandemic, during which Weezer released six albums, including the Van Weezer project and the four album saga, Seasons.

And an unexpected lift came last year, when Weezer’s self-titled collection (also known as the Blue Album) marched into Billboard 200 chart, at No. 87, following its 30th-anniversary deluxe reissue. Even a mysterious Weezer film is said to be in development. Cuomo got tongues wagging at Coachella earlier in the year, when he told the audience, “we’ve been busy making the Weezer movie back in L.A. the last couple weeks.”

Bell admits “it’s possible” that new music could be premiered on international stages this year. “Anything’s likely,” he says. “We’ll play hits and things that people want to hear, but we also want to really enjoy the experience as well.” There’s “one song” he says the band has been brewing, which could make a setlist for a show near you. “It’s a great time to be alive for us.”

August 28, 2025 0 comments
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But I'm a Cheerleader Now Available in 4K Ultra HD
Music

But I’m a Cheerleader Now Available in 4K Ultra HD

by jummy84 August 28, 2025
written by jummy84

The 1999 comedy But I’m a Cheerleader, now available as a 4K release, wasn’t a box office smash when it was first released. But the charming film directed by Jamie Babbit proved that Natasha Lyonne had movie star juice, while also proving to be a groundbreaking one for LGBTQ+ cinema, as a coming-out story with some joy to it.

In the movie, Lyonne plays 17-year-old Megan, who has no idea her parents suspect her of being gay until they send her to a conversion therapy camp to “cure” her. Thankfully the camp is a lot less barbaric than most real-life ones, and Megan becomes close with her fellow campers, eventually coming to terms with her own sexuality.

But I’m a Cheerleader is available now on 4K Ultra HD via Amazon: Come for the vivid production design, stay for the bonkers cast, including Clea DuVall, Melanie Lynskey, RuPaul Charles, Richard Moll, Cathy Moriarty, and Michelle Williams, with Mink Stole (Serial Mom) and Bud Cort (Harold and Maude) playing Megan’s parents. These days, Lyonne’s become a much more high-profile star, with her work in the Peacock series Poker Face earning her some well-deserved acclaim.

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August 28, 2025 0 comments
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Michael Jackson’s Son Prince Proposes To Longtime Girlfriend, Molly
Music

Michael Jackson’s Son Prince Proposes To Longtime Girlfriend, Molly

by jummy84 August 28, 2025
written by jummy84

Prince Jackson, the eldest son of the late Michael Jackson, is getting married.

The 28-year-old revealed on Tuesday (Aug. 26) in an Instagram post that he and longtime girlfriend, Molly Schirmang, are engaged. The two recently celebrated eight years together as a couple.

“8 years down, [infinity] to go. Molly and I have spent a lot of time together and made incredible memories. We’ve traveled the world, graduated and grown so much together. I’m excited for this next chapter in our lives as we continue to grow and make great memories. I love you babs,” the caption read.

In the intimate carousel, Prince shared several pictures of their life together — including moments while hiking, kayaking, and celebrating their college graduations. There’s also adorable photos of them sitting with Jackson family matriarch, Katherine, outside of the family home in Encino, California, and of them cosplaying as Mario and Princess Peach.

His sister, Paris, sent the couple well wishes and commented, “Warms my heart to see how much joy you two bring each other. Happy anniversary love y’all.”

Kevin Winter/Getty Images

Prince and Molly began dating while he was a student at Loyola Marymount University in 2017. They celebrated their first anniversary in March 2018 by taking a trip together to San Francisco.

That year, he told PEOPLE, “I think that I’m a certain way, and she’s very — I don’t want to say opposite — but complementary in a way that we balance each other out. I’m more aggressive, she’s a little softer. It helps us stay well-rounded.”

He’s mostly kept his relationship out of the public eye.

August 28, 2025 0 comments
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Earl Sweatshirt: Live Laugh Love Album Review
Music

Earl Sweatshirt: Live Laugh Love Album Review

by jummy84 August 28, 2025
written by jummy84

If IDLSIDGO became known as the Earl is sad album, there might be a tendency to label Live Laugh Love the Earl is happy now album, but it’s more complex than that. His excitement for marriage and fatherhood has the all too real fear of What if I fuck it all up? and yet, with the comic timing of a long-winded standup, he gets out of his own head with jokes. On “exhaust,” that comes in the form of taking a break from all of the personal meditations with a play on an old 2 Chainz hook: “Ya love stank bitches that’s your fuckin’ problem.” While on “Crisco,” Earl digs into the childhood anger that’s still affecting him to this day, but just before that, he declares, “Get these white girls out my home like Babyfather.” Dr. Umar would be proud.

The way his flow has become a lot more loose and unpredictable helps him draw out certain emotions, too. In the final few moments of “Static,” the disgusted pause he takes before he says “It didn’t shock me” turns some seemingly ordinary shit talk into a devastatingly funny lecture, in a DOOM kind of way. Speaking of DOOM, Earl still has a splash of the masked villain in his cadence, but mixed in with so many contemporary references done with his own flavor. When he spouts out, “Affogato cream and coffee, wally walker out the bottle drinkin’, I never got on LinkedIn” on “Heavy Metal aka ejecto seato!,” the sensible gibberish reminds me of California street rap, specifically the first few bars of WhoHeem’s “Dum Hands.” Also, “Live,” where over a Black Noi$e beat that is like haunted Backwoodz vibes meets sputtering StepTeam drums, Earl slurs his words almost as hard as Veeze. And not for no reason, that flow makes the song sound so deeply insular.

It’s a lot. Live Laugh Love is equal parts heart and style, and is as much about Earl the grown man as Earl the hip-hop head. Earl shouts out friends, blots the album with relationship details that maybe only a few other people in the world would fully comprehend, and brings up his emotional bond with his son. These are his touchpoints, so it makes sense that everything else—the word-association marathons, the flowery punchlines—seems like an inconsequential blur. There are a few moments that ground it all even further: the dream he mentions on “Heavy Metal aka ejecto seato!” that he had years before his son was born, in which the baby was walking on the ceiling; on “Tourmaline,” the best song on the album, when in a romantically woozy rap-sing he goes, “She found me on the streets, she vowin’ to keep my feet grounded for my sweet child” so earnestly. There’s so much musical and personal inspiration colliding at once, you can feel the passion even when you can’t quite crack it all.

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Earl Sweatshirt: Live Laugh Love

August 28, 2025 0 comments
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Tomorrow X Together's Yeonjun to release new solo album in November
Music

Tomorrow X Together’s Yeonjun to release new solo album in November

by jummy84 August 28, 2025
written by jummy84

Tomorrow X Together‘s Yeonjun will reportedly be releasing a new album before the year’s end – find out more below.

  • READ MORE: Tomorrow X Together – ‘The Star Chapter: Together’ review: separate paths, shared destination

Per South Korean news outlet Soompi, the Tomorrow X Together member has been hard at work at a new solo album, and is currently overseas filming music videos. He is also reportedly actively involved in the album’s production cycle.

Big Hit Music has since confirmed in a statement that Yeonjun is indeed working on a new record: “Yeonjun is currently working on a solo album, targeting a November release.” A confirmed release date or other information surrounding the album have yet to be announced.

It will mark Yeonjun’s official solo debut album, having previously released the mixtape ‘GGUM’ in September last year.

Late last month, Yeonjun and TXT released ‘The Star Chapter: Together’, a collection of solo tracks from each member of the group. For his solo offering, Yeonjun released ‘Ghost Girl’, which was co-produced by Yungblud.

Tomorrow X Together’s ‘The Star Chapter: Together’ scored a four-star review from NME, with Rhian Daly writing: “Whether subtly or explicitly, as on ‘The Star Chapter: Together’, you can expect TXT to continue to emphasise and explore connection, and use it to form a bright spot in our dark world.”

Daly wrote of Yeonjun’s ‘Ghost Girl’ in the same review: “Yeonjun’s dub-infused, Yungblud-produced rock cut ‘Ghost Girl’, takes things to extremes, depicting a connection so strong, it’s all-consuming. “Darling, if I’m with you / I’ll walk through the dark,” he rasps. “So what if I’m crazy / I breathe because of you.”

August 28, 2025 0 comments
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Hilary Duff Celebrates 'Metamorphosis' Anniversary, Drops Cryptic Hint
Music

Hilary Duff Celebrates ‘Metamorphosis’ Anniversary, Drops Cryptic Hint

by jummy84 August 28, 2025
written by jummy84

The actress and singer released her second studio album in 2003, topping the Billboard 200

Hilary Duff looked back at the record that launched her on an “epic adventure” on Wednesday. Marking its 22nd anniversary, the singer and actress took to social media to celebrate the release of her second studio album, Metamorphosis.

In a caption posted alongside a series of throwback photos from the early aughts, Duff wrote, “Clearly I had to go digging around the internet for pictures from this time as I’m not sure camera phones even existed.” The artist, whose Y2K looks were wildly popular at the time, joked, “Sadly all my hairstyles ARE very documented.”

She called this era in her career “a huge change in my being,” adding that she “was embarking on something I had no idea would make such an impact on peoples lives, and mine.” Duff said that although she doesn’t think Metamorphosis “doesn’t hold the emotional depth I look for today,” she knows her “14/15 year old self meant every word.”

“It sure as hell also landed on people at the right moment in time and set me off on a pretty epic adventure,” she said. “I remember some of my first shows being in a skate park in San Jose, and very shortly after, stepping out on stage in arenas.” Before signing off, she thanked fans for “showing up the way that you did,” and teased, “To be continued…”

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Following her cryptic sign-off on Wednesday, fans reveled in the possibility of new music and hopes of a tour. In an X post, @sarahstarrdust wrote, “is hilary duff doing a metamorphosis anniversary tour?? because that would legitimately heal me.” Another X user, @jdonohue91, remarked, “Hilary Duff literally never acknowledges album anniversaries and now she has posted about two of them this year! Music comeback incoming!!”

Duff last released an album in 2015 with Breathe In. Breathe Out, which debuted at Number Five on the Billboard 200.

August 28, 2025 0 comments
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'AGT' Quarterfinals Round 2: See Who Advances
Music

‘AGT’ Quarterfinals Round 2: See Who Advances

by jummy84 August 28, 2025
written by jummy84

America voted, the results are in. And for seven unfortunate acts, the America’s Got Talent dream dries up.

Following Tuesday night’s second Quarterfinal, the live results show revealed three more talents who advance to the Semifinals.

It was a nervy wait, but a great result for Bay Melnick Virgolino, the 10 year old rock and blues guitarist; Leo High School Choir; and dance troupe Unreal, whose names were read out by host Terry Crews.

It’s the end of the line, however, for Duo Stardust, Ben Hightower, Alain Simonov, Alex Zinger, Jonglissimo, Boston Dynamics, EDT Dance Team, all of whom are sent home after their QF efforts.

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The artists that move ahead in NBC’s talent competition will return to the AGT stage on Tuesday, Sept. 16 to compete in the Top 12, where they’ll be joined by the three acts that won America’s vote last week: Jourdan Blue, LightWire, and Sirca Mare. The remaining six will be determined during the next two weeks of competition.

As previously reported, Mama Duke cruises all the way to the Final, after winning Mel B’s Golden Buzzer on Tuesday night’s live elimination spot.

“You know what,” the Spice Girl remarked, “Missy Elliott better be watching out for you because you’re coming right now.” And with that, the British pop star slammed down the Golden Buzzer.

Judges Simon Cowell, Howie Mandel and Sofia Vergara were also effusive in their praise of the aspiring hip-hop artist.  “I loved your audition,” Cowell remarked. “This might have been actually better. You have what I call it. Can’t explain what it is, it’s a feeling. You just know it and you have it. And this is going to be big, honestly. I really really like you.”

The Top 12 will chase seven available positions the Final, which include one Semifinal Golden Buzzer, six America’s votes, and the four Quarterfinal Golden Buzzer Acts. The ultimate winner gets more than bragging rights; they’ll collect a $1 million prize.

Earlier during the results special, LSU Tigers star and AGT alum Flau’Jae performed her original rap number, “Remember When,” a tribute her to father, the late Savannah rapper Camoflauge (Jason Johnson) who was killed in 2003 before she was born. Watch below.

August 28, 2025 0 comments
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Jürgen Bartsch, Founder of Metal Band Bethlehem, Has Died
Music

Jürgen Bartsch, Founder of Metal Band Bethlehem, Has Died

by jummy84 August 28, 2025
written by jummy84

Jürgen Bartsch, the founding and one constant member of pioneering German extreme metal band Bethlehem, has passed away after an undisclosed illness. The news was shared by current Bethlehem singer Yvonne “Onielar” Wilczynska.

On Instagram, Onielar wrote (as translated from German), “He has died many times… But death was only temporary. After a serious illness, perseverance, and great fighting spirit, our beloved friend and esteemed founder of Bethlehem – Jürgen Bartsch – passed away on August 27, 2025. In deep sorrow and with a broken heart, In the name of Bethlehem, We will never forget you, Jürgen. Rest in peace.”

Bartsch was the founding bassist and chief songwriter of Bethlehem, whom he founded in 1991. The band is credited with pioneering the DSBM (Depressive Suicidal Black Metal) genre, combing black metal with doom metal on a series of influential 1990s albums, including its debut Dark Metal (1994) and its follow-up Dictius te necare (1996).

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Overall, Bethlehem has released 10 albums, most recently 2022’s The Gospel According to Alexander, with their sound evolving over the years. Two of the band’s songs appeared on the soundtrack to Harmony Korine’s 1997 cult movie Gummo.

In a 2017 interview, Bartsch was asked about Bethlehem being called the forefathers of the DSBM genre, to which he responded, “Yes, we are! [laughs]. Basically, we don’t have anything in common with that scene, but yes, we are their godfathers! … In the nineties, we were playing in front of ten people. People were saying: ‘This is shit! It’s not black metal, it’s about suicide, what kind of shit is this?’ So yeah, we were lucky that somehow some kids got interested in that.”

Our condolences go out to Jürgen Bartsch’s family, friends, and bandmates during this difficult time.

August 28, 2025 0 comments
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