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Watch The Maccabees bring out Jamie T for 'Marks To Prove It' and 'Sticks 'N' Stones' at All Points East headline gig
Music

Watch The Maccabees bring out Jamie T for ‘Marks To Prove It’ and ‘Sticks ‘N’ Stones’ at All Points East headline gig

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

The Maccabees were joined by Jamie T during their All Points East headline show. Check out the footage below.

The indie band topped the bill at Victoria Park last night (August 24), after first announcing the gig in October 2024 and ending their eight-year hiatus. The huge gig also coincided with the 10th anniversary of their fourth and final album, ‘Marks To Prove It’, which was released back in 2015.

To celebrate, they brought out Jamie T for a surprise performance of the LP’s title track – marking the first time they’ve played it with him since their 2017 “final” gig at Alexandra Palace.

Two years prior to that, Jamie T also joined them during their Glastonbury 2015 set to perform the track.

He also stuck around to play his 2009 hit ‘Sticks ‘N’ Stones’ with the newly reformed band. Ahead of this gig, he brought out The Maccabees‘ guitarist Hugo White to perform the song during his huge 2023 Finsbury Park show, and before that, at Glastonbury 2022. White also produced Jamie’s T 2022 album ‘The Theory of Whatever’.

Check out the moment below.

So so good to have The Maccabees back what a band! What a surprise to have Jamie T and stick “n” stones! What a moment! pic.twitter.com/NvF73lfi7o

— Steven George (@steven_george) August 24, 2025

 

In the run-up to their All Points East gig, Felix White and co. also reunited for a huge show at this year’s edition of Glastonbury and, before that, played their first gig back on June 20 at London’s The Dome for a charity gig in aid of MS Society.

While at their South London practice space, the band told NME that it felt like “no time has passed” in their eight-year hiatus. “It’s so strange,” Felix told us in January. “In the chunk [of time] from the last show, you could conceive of The Maccabees as a different existence, but as soon as we started playing, it was as if we hadn’t stopped.”

When asked about the possibility of new music then, he added: “The plan is to do [All Points East] and see how much we love it.” Sam Doyle then chimed in, jokingly saying that they were reluctant to look too far ahead as they “might hate each other by August.”

The Maccabees live at Glastonbury 2025. Credit: Derek Bremner for NME

More recently, Felix said that announcing the band’s return “almost felt embarrassing” after their “definitive” break-up, and confirmed that they are “not writing anything at the moment”.

While at Glastonbury, the band spoke to NME again about playing their first show back together earlier this year. “There was a lot of feeling in that room. It surprised me, actually, because I was finding that on stage, in a split second, I was euphoric and then I was actually crying at Tufnell Park Dome and then feeling other things,” Felix said.

“You felt all this feeling inside your body that the action of playing the music brings out in us, and it was all happening in there and just felt amazing.

At their Glasto set, The Maccabees were joined by Florence Welch, who provided guest vocals on ‘Love You Better’ before performing Florence + The Machine‘s ‘Dog Days Are Over’. NME gave the performance a full five stars and praised the slot as “their most euphoric show to date”.

The band currently have no future performances lined up, but did recently say that they are “tempted” by the idea of recording new music together.

August 25, 2025 0 comments
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Neil Young Performs Reagan-Era Protest Song 'Long Walk Home': Watch
Music

Neil Young Performs Reagan-Era Protest Song ‘Long Walk Home’: Watch

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Midway through his set at Jones Beach Theater in Wantagh, New York, on Saturday night, Neil Young sat at the piano and performed his Reagan-era protest song “Long Walk Home” for the first time since 1989.

The lyrics were largely faithful to the original version on Young’s 1987 LP Life with one crucial difference. “From Vietnam to old Beirut/If we are searching for the truth/Why do we feel that double-edged blade/Cutting through our hand” from the album was changed to “From Canada to Old Ukraine/We broke our word and left the pain/Why do we feel that double-edged blade/Cutting through our hand.”

Young and his wife, actress Daryl Hannah, are very vocal supporters of Ukraine. When Hannah appeared at the Oscars earlier this year, she made the peace sign with her hands and said, “Slava Ukraine.” This means “Glory to Ukraine,” and has become a battle cry for supporters of the embattled nation. Young originally planned on beginning his 2025 Love Earth Tour with a show in Ukraine, but ultimately pulled the plug.

“We had a good venue, close to the shelter, but the changing situation on the ground was too much,” Young wrote in a letter to fans. “I could not in good conscience take my crew and instruments into that area. My apologies to call. Ukraine is a great country with a good leader. Slava Ukraini.”

When Young originally recorded “Long Walk Home” in 1987, it was a sign that his early support for Ronald Reagan was a thing of the past. “I was never a Reagan supporter in a total blanket sense,” he told MTV in 1990. “I was one of those who felt that some ideas he had were good ideas. He had one point that he was stressing in the first six months of his job that he thought the people in the communities and neighborhoods should pull together and try to do things on their own more than depending on government to do it for them. And I thought that was a hell of an idea and here’s this old guy and he’s kind of got this image, of this fatherly image, telling all these people in their neighborhoods to pull together and get your own daycare centers happening, and get this and that happening.”

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If there were any lingering doubts about his political views after “Long Walk Home,” he got rid of them in 1989 with the release of “Rockin’ in the Free World.” It’s a furious screed against George H.W. Bush that took his famous “Thousand Points of Light” speech from the 1988 Republic National Convention, along with his inaugural pledge to “kinder the face of the nation and gentler the face of the world,” and twisted it into, “We have a thousands points of light/For the Homeless Man/We’ve got a kinder and gentler/Machine-gun hand.” (And that was a gentle song compared to his 2006 response to the elder Bush’s son.)

At the Jones Beach show on Saturday, Young closed out the night with “Rockin’ in the Free World,” and added in the “Take America Back!” chant he originated in April at a Los Angeles Bernie Sanders/Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez rally.

Earlier in the night, he played “Singer Without a Song” for the first time in 12 years. The super deep cut appears on no album, and only surfaced on the 2012-13 Crazy Horse Alchemy Tour, along with a handful of benefit gigs later in 2013. “It’s been a long time since we’ve done this one,” he told the crowd. “Never.” (Earlier in the day, Young and the Chrome Hearts soundchecked it a number of times since no member of the band had ever played it before.)

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The two rarities weren’t the only unusual aspect of the Jones Beach show. The lingering impact of Hurricane Erin produced a high tide that event organizers knew would flood the pit midway through Young’s set. (The amphitheater sits directly on Zach’s Bay, and the pit is below sea level.) Fans with general admission pit tickets were presented with the option of accepting refunds or receiving unsold reserved seats in the stands. It created a very unusual scene where the large area directly in front of the stage was completely empty, and it indeed slowly filled with water throughout Young’s set.

The tour continues Monday night at the site of the original Woodstock Festival in Bethel, New York, which is now known as the Bethel Woods Center for the Arts. Things were pretty wet the first time that Young played there back in 1969, but there shouldn’t be any flooding this time around.

August 25, 2025 0 comments
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Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds Set 2026 ‘Wild God’ Tour of Australia, NZ
Music

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds Set 2026 ‘Wild God’ Tour of Australia, NZ

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds are coming home in early 2026.

The alternative rock legend and his formidable band will embark on a tour of Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand next January and February, their first dates in these parts since 2017.

Produced by Supersonic, the 10-show trek will visit a string of outdoor cultural spots, kicking off Jan. 17 at Fremantle Park, WA. Along the way, Cave’s Wild God Tour will visit Adelaide Entertainment Centre, The Domain Sydney, Brisbane’s Victoria Park, Melbourne’s Alexandra Gardens, and head east for two shows at TSB Arena in Wellington, the New Zealand capital.

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Tickets go on sale this Friday, Aug. 29 at 10am local time from nickcave.com.

“I can’t wait to get to Australia and New Zealand with The Bad Seeds and to bring you our epic Wild God show,” Cave comments in a statement. “It’s been a long time coming, and I’ve missed both Australia and New Zealand very much. It will be a wild and mighty joy.”

The alternative rockers’ setlist will include songs from their 18th and latest studio album Wild God, alongside songs spanning their four-decade career, a statement reads.

Cave has no shortage of classics in his repertoire. In the U.K., his adopted homeland, the band has landed seven top 10 albums, including Wild God, which opened and peaked at No. 5 last year. Cave was inducted into the ARIA Hall of Fame in 2007.

Produced by Cave and Bad Seeds/Dirty Three collaborator Warren Ellis, and mixed by David Fridmann, Wild God hit No. 66 on the Billboard 200, one of his nine titles to impact the albums chart.

Wild God, released through Cave’s own label Bad Seed, via a new, exclusive worldwide licensing agreement with Play It Again Sam, an imprint of the independent [PIAS] label group, was nominated for a raft of awards, including two Grammy categories (best alternative music album and best alternative music performance), best alternative rock record at the Libera Awards and the 2024 Australian Music Prize.

Before heading Down Under, Cave will complete his pan-European solo jaunt with a string of shows in Germany, Luxembourg and elsewhere.

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds ‘The Wild God Tour’ Australia And Aotearoa New Zealand 2026
Tickets on sale Friday, August 29 at 10am local time from nickcave.com.

Presented by Supersonic Australasia

Jan. 17 — Fremantle Park, Perth WA
(Presented By The City Of Fremantle)

Jan. 20 — Adelaide Entertainment Centre, SA

Jan. 23, 24 –The Domain Sydney, NSW

Jan. 27 — Victoria Park, Brisbane, QLD

Jan. 30, 31, Feb. 1 — Alexandra Gardens, Melbourne, VIC

Feb. 5, 6 — TSB Arena, Wellington, Aotearoa New Zealand
(In association with Aotearoa New Zealand Festival of the Arts)

August 25, 2025 0 comments
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Bruce Springsteen's Born to Run: Every Song Ranked
Music

Bruce Springsteen’s Born to Run: Every Song Ranked

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

In celebration of Bruce Springsteen turning 50, we revisit Dan Caffrey’s ranking of The Boss’ classic album Born to Run. This article was originally published in 2015.

Ranking the Album is a feature in which we take an iconic or beloved record and dare to play favorites. It’s a testament to the fact that classic album or not, there are still some tracks we root for more than others to pop up in our shuffles. Today, in honor of the 50th anniversary of Bruce Springsteen’s Born to Run, we rank the iconic LP from best to greatest.

Born to Run turns 50 today. If you’re interested in the arduous making of the album — a sort of last-ditch effort for Bruce Springsteen to reach the superstar status he craved (working-class roots be damned) — or how it represented the decline of the American dream, there’s no shortage of great retrospectives out there from many other reputable publications. While these chronicles are more than worthy in their own right, I’m also not interested in how many guitar overdubs were recorded for the title track, or regurgitating the “lyrics by Dylan, sung by Orbison, and produced by Spector” line (although I guess I just did). Both of these bits of lore — and many other stories surrounding the album — are true, but that’s just what they are this late in the game: lore. The Springsteen mythology has been endlessly picked over, reassembled, torn apart, then built up again over the years, usually into a bigger, stronger, more godlike statue.

So for this installment of Ranking the Album, I’d like to put the grown-up critic in me to sleep and let my inner nine-year-old stay up past his bedtime. That’s the age when I first heard Born to Run during a road trip or two to Cocoa Beach, Florida, on my dad’s stereo while he was lifting weights, and just playing around the house whenever my family was cleaning, eating, or doing nothing at all. I’m sure I heard it all in one sitting at some point, but when you’re a kid, you can only remember one or two songs at a time. As such, I recall Born to Run slowly revealing itself across several months. That’s how I remember it, so for all intents and purposes, that’s how it happened.

And don’t worry, I didn’t write this in the tone of a precocious elementary schooler with purposely bad grammar and the verbal cadence of a propeller beanie spinning around and round on his head. I tried instead to channel those thoughts that bloom when hearing an album you love for the first time — intangible and more akin to images and pangs and colors than a refined analytical vocabulary. Some analysis, cynicism, and hindsight still crept in there, naturally, and there are several leaps and backpedals into time (I’m a 31-year-old man these days), but for the most part, it’s hard for me to not still hear this album the way I first heard it. I know “Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out” has nothing to do with the show Taxi, and “She’s the One” has little association with the film Heavyweights, but, as you’ll soon read, those connections, silly as they are, will always exist for me.

So let’s do it together. Let’s take a stab at music-lover romance as we disappear down Flamingo Lane or Thunder Road or Tenth Avenue or whatever your preferred Springsteen may be. Thanks for joining me.

– Dan Caffrey
Senior Staff Writer

8. NIGHT

Max Weinberg’s driftwood-on-oil-drum snaps are always jarring after the fading boardwalk party of “Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out”, and as a kid, this bothers you. As you get older, you learn that music critics call these sorts of dips “filler” and that they’re a necessary device. Every great album needs a a valley where you can come down from the mountain and take a breather. Born to Run just happens to be an album so anthemic that one of its valleys is a song like “Night” — still one of the fastest and most urgent tracks on the record.

As you get older yet again, you learn that great albums don’t actually have filler at all, and that “gems” or “deep cuts” are perhaps more accurate descriptors, even if The Boss did the guy-getting-off-work thing better on his next album, Darkness on the Edge of Town. Your mom and dad play this CD around the house, too, and even at nine, you could tell that the two works were markedly different, despite containing similar stories: Springsteen the idealist versus Springsteen the realist. And when it comes to getting-off-work songs, you’ll eventually prefer realism, especially once you start working yourself. For the record, this will always be at an office, not a factory.

7. SHE’S THE ONE

In 1995, a kids movie about a fat camp will come out. It’s called Heavyweights. You haven’t watched the film much since then because you remember it being great and are afraid you’ll feel otherwise if you revisit it. You remember there being a montage set to a song called “I Want Candy”. It sounds an awful lot like “She’s the One”, which, you’ll find out later, is because they both utilize the syncopated “Bo Diddley Beat”.

You don’t know any of this as a nine-year-old, so whenever you hear “She’s the One”, you have visions of chubby kids running around the woods, tying domineering counselors to trees, and pigging out on sweets they’ve stashed around their cabin. It doesn’t matter that the song has nothing to do with this. As an adult, you’ll tell fellow critics it’s one of your least favorite tracks on Born to Run because of its repetition (it’s the only song that feels long to you), and for the fact that Springsteen wasn’t yet old enough to accurately write about love (a stance you cribbed from both Robert Christgau and Pitchfork’s Mark Richardson).

But those are lies. The real reason “She’s the One” kind of irks you is because it reminds you of a camp counselor getting punched in the balls. That’s still pretty funny, but it breaks up Born to Run’s consistent imagery of muscle cars, motorcycles, factories, boardwalks, rumbles, and bank heists.

6. TENTH AVENUE FREEZE-OUT

This is the one your parents always sing along to, except for the one line sung-said by Clarence Clemons. “And kid you better get the picture,” he purrs soothingly and almost inaudibly. Out of all the songs on the album, it’s the one that reminds you most of the ’70s — Steven Van Zandt’s horned-out intro and bridge touched with just a sprinkling of desperation, aka a young Springsteen’s ceaseless quest to be a rock star, even if it means trudging through the snow to a gig after the band’s van breaks down.

That image of vehicular malfunction is a far cry from the other auto-related icon the intro and bridge remind you of: the theme from Taxi. This will become a less accurate comparison as you get older, but the footage of an automobile successfully making its way to and from New York becomes an apt metaphor for the career of Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band following the success of Born to Run.

August 25, 2025 0 comments
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Kendrick Lamar Makes Surprise Appearance With Clipse In L.A.
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Kendrick Lamar Makes Surprise Appearance With Clipse In L.A.

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

During a break between the European leg of his Grand National tour with SZA and the Sept. 23 Mexico City launch of a South American segment, Kendrick Lamar dazzled the audience at Los Angeles venue Novo last night (Aug. 23) by joining rap duo Clipse for the first song of their show.

Pusha and No Malice had already begun performing “Chains & Whips,” the studio version of which features Lamar, when the artist himself emerged from the back of the stage to rhyme his verse. Afterward, he took a moment to salute the influence of Clipse, whose recent album, Let God Sort Em Out, was their first in nearly 16 years.

“This is our home city,” he said. “It’s such a privilege to be in front of motheruckin’ legends, man. I’ma be out there watching with y’all.. These are my motherfuckin’ people from day one. Love y’all.”

Clipse are on a North American tour in support of Let Got Sort Em Out through Sept. 11 in Baltimore. European dates are on tap beginning Nov. 5 in Tilburg, Netherlands.

Watch fan-shot footage of the Clipse/Lamar performance below.

August 25, 2025 0 comments
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John Amos' Children Prepare Legal Battle Over Actor's Estate
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John Amos’ Children Prepare Legal Battle Over Actor’s Estate

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

John Amos‘ daughter has taken legal action against her brother with accusations of mistreating their father, which ultimately resulted in his death. According to The Hollywood Reporter, Shannon Amos is suing Kelly Christopher Amos (K.C.) for elder abuse, fraud, and wrongful death. John Amos’ former caretaker Belinda Foster, close associate Eugene Brummett, and his production banner, Step and One Half Productions, are also named in the pending litigation.

The outlet reported Shannon Amos claimed K.C. manipulated John Amos into signing multiple legal documents that gave him control of the estate, all while ignoring the actor’s failing health. Allegedly, K.C. began to keep John away from others in 2019 and impersonated him in text messages and email conversations.

“This calculated and cruel isolation was explicitly designed to render John Amos entirely dependent on K.C. Amos for all of his personal, financial, and critical medical decisions,” exclaimed the filing. Brummet and Foster are accused of assisting K.C. in his alleged fraudulent behavior.

Granddaughter Quiera Williams, honoree actor John Amos, his daughter Shannon Amos, and son K.C. Amos arrive at the 1st Annual “A Celebration of Heroes” Power Heroes Gala at the Four Seasons Hotel on December 3, 2008 in Los Angeles, California.

Brian To/FilmMagic

“What K.C. Amos, Belinda Foster, and Eugene Brummett did in the last years of my father’s life is unfathomable, cruel, and beyond my comprehension,” said Shannon Amos in a statement to THR.

The Good Times actor died in August 2024, although the news was not revealed to the public until October of that year. Shannon claimed to have learned of his death on social media, 45 days after his passing. A statement from Foster alleged that John Amos wanted to delay his death announcement as his final wish, specifically so that his daughter did not “turn his death and interment into a circus.” 

“At the time of his death, John was concerned that Shannon might turn his death and interment into a circus as she had done with other aspects of his life… It was John who requested the delay in announcing his death to Shannon and the rest of the world,” claimed Foster.

John Amos speaking

John Amos attends the Althea screening and panel discussion at One Time Warner Center on October 5, 2015 in New York City.

Craig Barritt/Getty Images for Time Warner Inc.

John Amos was cremated in the days following his death. Shannon has refused to rule out foul play, although the 84-year-old’s cause of death was listed as congestive heart failure. No autopsy was performed.

In June 2023, Shannon claimed John Amos to be a victim of “elder abuse and financial exploitation.” The actor reportedly refuted the allegations. The next month, K.C. Amos was taken into custody after allegedly sending threats to his sister, including images of guns, videos of him shooting the firearms, and claims of gang affiliation.

VIBE has reached out to a rep for John Amos for a statement regarding Shannon Amos’s lawsuit.

August 25, 2025 0 comments
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Vampire Weekend Call Out Victorious Festival Organizers After Mary Wallopers Set Cut Short
Music

Vampire Weekend Call Out Victorious Festival Organizers After Mary Wallopers Set Cut Short

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

On Friday, August 22, Irish folk band the Mary Wallopers had their set at Portsmouth, England’s Victorious Festival cut short after flying the Palestinian flag onstage and leading a chant of “free Palestine.” Several artists, including the Last Dinner Party, subsequently pulled out of their scheduled performances in protest, and now Vampire Weekend, who are among this year’s headliners, have called out the festival’s organizers.

As reported by Portsmouth News, Ezra Koenig addressed the crowd during Vampire Weekend’s set last night (Saturday, August 23). “If someone was punished for flying a flag, that is wrong and they deserve an apology,” Koenig said. “The terrible suffering of the Palestinian people deserves all of our sympathy.”

Writing to NME, representatives for Victorious originally claimed to have cut off the Mary Wallopers’ sound because they “used a chant which is widely understood to have a discriminatory context.” The band then responded with their own statement alongside footage of the stage during their set: “The festival have released a misleading statement to the press claiming they cut our sound because of a discriminatory chant and not the band’s call to Free Palestine.”

The statement continues: “Our video clearly shows a Victorious crew member coming on stage, interfering with our show, removing the flag from the stage and then the sound being cut following a chant of “Free Palestine.” The same crew member is later heard in the video saying “you aren’t playing until the flag is removed.” Victorious Festival then released a second statement apologizing to the band. Read both in full below.

In June, British punk-rap duo Bob Vylan had their U.S. visas revoked after a controversial Glastonbury set where frontman Bobby Vylan led the crowd in a chant of “Death, death to the IDF.” Irish rap trio Kneecap, whose performance at Coachella 2025 featured pro-Palestine and anti-Israel messages, have since been removed from the lineup of Glasgow’s TRNSMT music festival, banned from Hungary, and had one of their members, Mo Chara, charged with a terror offense for allegedly displaying the Hezbollah flag during a 2024 concert. Both groups are currently being investigated by British police following their sets at Glastonbury this year.

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August 25, 2025 0 comments
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The Wire's David Simon says he can no longer get a series made
Music

The Wire’s David Simon says he can no longer get a series made

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

The Wire‘s David Simon says he can no longer get a show made, but also reveals details of new projects he would be keen to work on.

He said he “can’t get anything made” at the moment, explaining that he has been struggling to land a show at HBO.

Speaking to The Observer, the screenwriter and producer opened up about the struggle to find a home for shows and projects he would like to make.

“I’ll never write anything that’s going to be a franchise,” Simon told the publication. “I was having lunch with the boss there and I said: ‘You know, I’m not sure you guys are the home for what I do any more. You’re not going to take the David Simon Harry Potter miniseries about a bureaucratic Hogwarts that can’t function.’”

He later said that there are more shows and projects he hopes to be able to work on, including a musical using music by The Pogues. He said:  “You know, I’m 64. I had a good 25-year run. But on my shelf, there is [still] a series about the history of the CIA and American foreign policy since the second world war.

“There’s a miniseries about the first Muslim FBI agent and how he got run out of the bureau. There’s another piece [about] child protective services and the family courts. There’s a punk musical using the music of the Pogues.”

 

Back in 2021, Simon penned a tribute in an open essay to the show’s late actor Michael K Williams.  Simon took to Twitter to post a tribute in the New York Times after the actor was found dead in his home in Brooklyn, New York. He was 54.

“A short remembrance for a talent, a genuine collaborator and a true friend. What I hope never gets lost is the awareness that Mike genuinely wanted his work to matter; not for fame or reward, but for leaving us all better humans in its wake,” The Wire creator wrote in the post.

The essay centres around a conversation Williams had about his character Omar Little, and the HBO series itself, with the writers prior to the acclaimed show’s second season, which the actor felt was straying fundamentally from the acclaimed first season.

Also in 2021, The Wire was named the greatest TV series of the 21st century in a poll. The critically acclaimed drama ranked first in a BBC list ranking the best shows of the last 21 years, based on an aggregate poll of TV critics.

Reacting to the win, The Wire creator David Simon said: “I’m glad the show has a shelf life. We weren’t interested in whether characters were good or bad. The writers had in their heads the idea, ‘If a society is going to have a law enforcement arm, what’s the job of that institution? What are the police doing?’

“If you write a show like that, it will have a shelf life for as long as those systems are in play.”

August 25, 2025 0 comments
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Clipse, Kendrick Lamar Perform ‘Chains & Whips’ at L.A. Show: Watch
Music

Clipse, Kendrick Lamar Perform ‘Chains & Whips’ at L.A. Show: Watch

by jummy84 August 24, 2025
written by jummy84

Standout track appears on Pusha T and Malice’s long-awaited new LP Let God Sort Em Out

Clipse surprised fans in Los Angeles at the Novo on Saturday when they brought out Kendrick Lamar. The trio performed “Chains & Whips” from Clipse’s long-awaited album, Let God Sort Em Out, which arrived last month.

As fan-filmed clips reveal, Pusha T and Malice were in the midst of performing the song, and then the stage went dark briefly before a spotlight unveiled Lamar onstage. Then, Lamar delivered his scene-stealing verse. As he rapped the opening lines, “I’m not the candidate to vibe with/I don’t fuck with the kumbaya shit/All that talent must be godsent/I send yo’ ass back to the cosmics,” the hometown crowd went wild and screamed along to his rhymes.

Afterward, Lamar addressed the audience. “This is our home city, it’s such a privilege to be in front of motherfucking legends, man,” Lamar said, before shouting out and hugging Malice and Pusha T onstage. He then gestured to the audience and said, “I’m going to be out there watching with you all, these are my motherfucking people.”

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Clipse are in the midst of their North American tour. Like their album, it’s their first since 2009. “I’m excited about getting back out here and seeing those people that supported us the whole time, and the people that have expressed their anxiousness to hear the Clipse,” Malice told Rolling Stone. He added: “This one is for the fans, those that waited around, those that were looking to see if we would ever come back and do music together.”

Their tour continues through West Coast cities through the end of August, before it heads south and continues on with dates in the Midwest in September. 

August 24, 2025 0 comments
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'KPop Demon Hunters' Gives Netflix First Box-Office Win
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‘KPop Demon Hunters’ Gives Netflix First Box-Office Win

by jummy84 August 24, 2025
written by jummy84

Netflix appears to have its first No. 1 box-office title in the streaming company’s 18-year history thanks to the sensation of KPop Demon Hunters.

Rival studios on Sunday (Aug. 24) estimated KPop Demon Hunters led all films over the weekend with $16-18 million in ticket sales. Distribution executives from three studios shared their estimates for the Netflix phenomenon on condition of anonymity because the streaming company has a policy of not reporting ticket sales.

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Following a dominating few weeks as one of the most popular Netflix releases ever, the streamer put the film into 1,750 theaters for sing-along screenings Saturday and Sunday. Studios are able to accurately estimate ticket sales for all releases on Sunday morning, though the uncommon nature of the KPop Demon Hunters release means a wider variance. Some estimates were as high as $20 million.

It amounted to a victory lap for KPop Demon Hunters, arguably the biggest hit of Hollywood’s summer, and an ironic success for Netflix, whose emphasis on streaming, not theatrical release, upended the movie industry. Another sore spot for Hollywood: The film was developed and produced by Sony Pictures, which sold it to Netflix.

Not all exhibitors went along. AMC, the largest theater chain in North America, declined to show the movie. But that didn’t stop Netflix from claiming the box-office title its more traditional competitors typically own.

David A. Gross, who runs the movie consulting firm FranchiseRe, called it “a completely unique two-day musical event.”

“It may turn out to be higher,” said Gross. “Theater owners are quick on their feet and can add capacity according to demand.”

The theatrical release, though limited, is out of the ordinary for the streaming giant, which has long stressed a commitment to subscriber releases. The movie debuted on the platform in late June and is currently Netflix’s most-watched animated original film.

The film centers on HUNTR/X, a K-pop superstar trio doubling as demon hunters. The members, Rumi (Arden Cho), Mira (May Hong) and Zooey (Ji-young Yoo), must protect their fans and face their biggest enemy yet: a rival boy band made up of demons in disguise.

Zach Cregger’s horror hit Weapons maintained strength in the box office during its third weekend, bringing in $15.6 million domestically. The buzzy horror movie has proved its staying power, raking in over $100 million globally since its release.

Disney’s Freakier Friday landed behind the horror movie once again, earning $9.2 million in North American theaters.

The two films are “real bright spots” as the box office heads into a “rather quiet finish” for the summer, said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst for the data firm Comscore. Both films, which premiered simultaneously earlier this month, had a minimal 36% drop from last weekend.

“I think we have to look at the currency of the goodwill generated by people having these great summer moviegoing experiences,” Dergarabedian said. “We have to look at that as a more important metric than just the bottom-line dollars and cents.”

The Fantastic Four: First Steps earned $5.9 million domestically during its fifth weekend. The movie enjoyed a strong $118 million debut but has experienced a steady decline.

Newcomer Honey Don’t! opened in 1,317 North American theaters with a weekend gross estimate of $3 million, in line with expectations. The movie made it to the top 10, right above The Naked Gun.

The dark comedy stars Margaret Qualley as Honey O’Donahue, a small-town private investigator who investigates a slew of strange deaths tied to a church in Bakersfield, California.

Top 10 movies by domestic box office

With final domestic figures being released Monday, this list factors in the estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Comscore:

1. Weapons, $15.6 million
2. Freakier Friday, $9.2 million
3. The Fantastic Four: First Steps, $5.9 million
4. The Bad Guys 2, $5.1 million
5. Nobody 2, $3.7 million
6. Superman, $3.4 million
7. Honey Don’t!, $3 million
8. The Naked Gun, $3 million
9. Jurassic World Rebirth, $2.1 million
10. Relay, $2 million

August 24, 2025 0 comments
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