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Milo J Shows Off the Beauty of Argentine Folk » PopMatters
Music

Milo J Shows Off the Beauty of Argentine Folk » PopMatters

by jummy84 November 5, 2025
written by jummy84

Despite not fitting the tropical stereotype often attributed to (and intensely exploited by the Latin music industry, Argentina has always found ways to stand out. Historically known for tango and one of South America’s richest rock legacies (thanks to names like Fito Páez and Soda Stereo), the country is also an inexhaustible source of pop culture exports, from iconic telenovelas like Chiquititas and Rebelde Way to a new wave of global pop stars. Milo J stands in an interesting position regarding Argentina’s music scene.

When Latin music had a post-Despacito boom in the 2010s, Argentina’s most visionary artists carved a place in the Latin pop explosion with smart, self-assured moves. Singers like TINI, María Becerra, and Nicki Nicole emerged as A-listers of the movement, shaping their careers around the aesthetics and performance style of global pop stars.

Meanwhile, Argentine producers such as Bizarrap brought an electronic edge to reggaeton and urban pop, merging dance, house, and trap. Argentine music has never thrived only by “riding the wave” of rhythms born elsewhere, however. It has also built its own genres and styles (like RKT and turreo), and artists like Cazzu and Ca7riel & Paco Amoroso have experimented with pop and Latinidades in fresh, creative ways.

At first, the young Milo J seemed to belong to that latter context. After achieving international recognition with “Bzrp Music Sessions, Vol. 57” (2023), many expected him to continue exploring the trendy genre-blending trap-pop that defined his early sound, as seen in Rara Vez (2023), which remains his most significant success to date. Instead, in La Vida Era Más Corta (2025), Milo J went all the way back into the parts of Argentine music that the world is less familiar with: its traditional, folk music.

Those who’ve been paying attention to Milo J may have spotted clues of his musical ambitions in tracks like “Carencias de Cordura” (2023) or “NI CARLOS NI JOSE” (2024). La Vida Era Más Corta, however, is the most straightforward demonstration of the lengths he is willing to go for his artistry, which is impressive for an 18-year-old. 

Perhaps the only unsurprising thing about his new album is his voice: a clean, direct, meslima-free, grounded baritone which sounds almost weightless. Here, Milo J’s timbre finally gets room to breathe. Divided into two discs, this project leaves no room for remixes or collages. Genres such as tango, chacarera, and Argentine folk are presented in their purest form. There’s no heritage-baiting or pop accessibility-chasing here. 

In a 2025 interview with Apple Music, Milo J cited his grandmother from Santiago del Estero (Argentina’s oldest city and its cradle of folklore) as one of the album’s guiding inspirations. Indeed, La Vida Era Más Corta sounds like a musical tapestry woven from the shared roots of the Andino-Platine world, the cultural continuum that connects the South American pampas to the Andes.

There are even a few samba beats in the closing seconds of “Llora Llora”. Perhaps this is meant to be a discreet hint at Brazil, which is also part of that geographic-cultural collective, although not through samba, but through the gaúcho culture of its southern region, instead.

The album’s palette of timbres is colored by instruments such as the Andean flutes of “Solfican12” and by voices including Argentine rap star Trueno, Chilean trap singer AKRILLA, Argentine chacarera icons Cuti y Roberto Carabajal, and Argentine folk singer Soledad Pastorutti, among others. The collaboration with Silvio Rodríguez is also a highlight: the Cuban icon was a longtime idol of Milo J’s grandmother.

Although not stemming from South America, Rodriguez has a long tradition of collaborating with exponents of Latin American cancionero, including Mercedes Sosa, the ultimate voice of Argentine folk across Latin America. Sosa is also present in La Vida Era Más Corta: Milo J’s posthumous duet with her is the album’s closing track. What could better evoke the country’s musical heritage than that?

Nevertheless, La Vida Era Más Corta is far from a cheerful celebration of South American kinship. It’s a melancholic, deeply introspective record, whose tone is set from the first lyrics: “I have some tattoos under my skin that haven’t healed, and others that are reincarnated” (“Bajo de la piel”). That ache, both nostalgic and existential, lingers through the end.

In a way, what Milo J does in La Vida Era Más Corta compares to what Rosalía did in El Mal Querer (the Spanish singer’s stunning flamenco album released in 2018): it’s a display of youth inserting itself in an ancient landscape with more pride in its history than anxiety to modernize it. Thus far, among the most well-shaped Spanish-language albums of 2025, La Vida Era Más Corta arrives at a moment when Latin pop stars with global exposure are embracing their roots with more pride than ever, and Milo J does that for Argentina gorgeously and sincerely. 

November 5, 2025 0 comments
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"Taking a Break Because We’re TIRED, PERIOD."
Music

Taking a Break Because We’re TIRED, PERIOD.

by jummy84 November 5, 2025
written by jummy84

David Draiman is shooting down any notions that his recently announced “nice long break” for Disturbed has anything to do with any controversy surrounding the band. Instead, he insists that the band members are simply “tired.”

Last week, Draiman revealed that Disturbed would be taking an extended break following an extensive tour in support of the 25th anniversary of their multiplatinum debut album, The Sickness.

After the tour’s final show in Glasgow, Scotland, he tweeted, “Headed home!!! Thanks so much to EVERYONE that made #TheSickness25 a tour to truly remember! Crew, Management, Agent, Promoters, and ESPECIALLY my brothers in @Disturbed. Not sure when we will be headed back out. We all need a nice long break. Hope to see you when we do.”

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Draiman and the band made headlines throughout the year due to the singer’s pro-Israel stance, leading one local mayor to cancel the band’s show in Brussels over safety concerns. However, the frontman says the media is reading too much into the rock act’s “nice long break,” and that there’s no tension within the band.

On Wednesday, he tweeted, “For the Record: 1. Taking a break because we’re TIRED, PERIOD. 2. Any spin by the media is just that…spin. We’re all doing great, and are on great terms. 3. The European tour was the biggest of our career. We played to packed arenas every night. Let’s do it again sometime.”

As it was, 2025 turned out to be a whirlwind year for Draiman and Disturbed. In March, the band’s pyro display at the United Center damaged the Chicago Bulls’ championship banners, and in May, Draiman proposed to his girlfriend Sarah Uli onstage in Sacramento. Moreover, the singer engaged in a war of words with pro-Palestinian UK hip-hop act Kneecap.

See David Draiman’s clarification in the tweet below.

For the record;

1. Taking a break because we’re TIRED, PERIOD.
2. Any spin by the media is just that…spin. We’re all doing great, and are on great terms.
3. The European tour was the biggest of our career 🙏🏻🤘🏻. We played to packed arenas every night. Let’s do it again…

— David Draiman 🟦🎗️🇺🇸🇮🇱✡️☮️ (@davidmdraiman) November 5, 2025

November 5, 2025 0 comments
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Travis Mills and Nick Gross of girlfriends. (Credit: All photos by Nathan James)
Music

Girlfriends’ Travis Mills and Nick Gross Want to Take You Back to the Old Neighborhood

by jummy84 November 5, 2025
written by jummy84

“We had to get a death certificate,” says Travis Mills—one-half of pop-punk duo girlfriends, along with Nick Gross—over a video call from Studio City, about getting the rights to the social media handle that would bear the band’s name. 

Before we get into that, however, let’s back up a bit. 

Before girlfriends, Mills, who currently hosts The Travis Mills Show on Apple Music 1, had his own successful music career as rapper T. Mills, and dabbled in acting, starring in such shows as Ghosted: Love Gone Missing and Help! I’m in a Secret Relationship! 

Gross, formerly the drummer for pop-rock band Half the Animal, and a successful entrepreneur, had recently joined the Los Angeles-based punk band Goldfinger before Mills messaged him on Instagram in 2019, asking him if he would be interested in starting a band. 

Gross, who had played a show with Mills in 2015, invited him to his Los Angeles studio, The Noise Nest, to listen to music, talk about what inspired them, and brainstorm ideas for their potential musical collaboration.

“I didn’t go into girlfriends thinking this would be a pop-punk project at all,” says Gross, calling from Laguna Beach, California, where he was born and raised. “But when we first got in the studio to create songs, that’s when we knew immediately this was going to be a project that was this perfect blend of bands that we grew up listening to and using our past influences to bring what girlfriends was to life.” 

After a couple of weeks of hanging out, the duo knew they needed a band name. Mills brought a list of five potential candidates to Gross. The first one was girlfriends. The second was Boyfriends.   

“We went with the first one because it was the best band name of all time,” says Gross. 

“I thought about how funny it would be to be on stage in Arizona or wherever and just be like, ‘Hey, what’s up, Arizona? We’re girlfriends, and it’s just two dudes on stage,’” says Mills, laughing. 

Not to be confused with the all-female band the Girlfriends, who scored their only No. 1 hit in 1964 with “My One and Only Jimmy Boy,” or the emo-math rock project by Jerry Joiner.

“There was a TV show named “Girlfriends” as well,” Mills offers. 

Gross points out that there was also an Atlanta nail salon with the same name that they had to contend with to be able to use the name on social media, and that’s where the death certificate comes in. 

The @girlfriends Instagram page has been dormant since 2013, Mills says. After calling the shop to get permission to use their social media handle, they found out that there was a new owner who didn’t have access to the social media account. 

“We’re like, ‘Cool, can you connect us to the previous owner?’ And they were like, ‘No.’ It was because the owner of the nail salon died,” says Mills. 

Mills and Gross were instructed by Meta to get a letter from the new nail salon owner and, yes, the previous owner’s death certificate, to prove they had indeed died. 

“It was this whole thing, but we got it,” says Mills. 

After releasing their first two albums, girlfriends in 2020 and (E)motion Sickness in 2022, along with two EPs, the two are now celebrating their third album, There Goes The Neighborhood, which came out October 24. “It’s like the great unveiling of the last three years, so we’re pumped,” says Gross, his 95-pound Bernedoodle quietly sitting in his lap, out of camera shot.

Mills and Gross teamed up with friend, collaborator, and longtime Goldfinger frontman John Feldmann to produce the album. Feldmann, who’s co-written and produced for Korn, 311, Good Charlotte, and many other artists, is also the head of A&R for Big Noise Music Group, a music label, distributor, and recording studio founded by Gross.

The duo spent two and a half years working on nearly 60 songs before settling on the 16 tracks that make up There Goes The Neighborhood. 

Mills says having Feldmann—who produced some of their favorite records growing up, like the Used’s self-titled debut album—collaborate on their new record made the process a much more cohesive one because of their already-established relationship.

“To have that kind of resume and that pedigree…he’s more than a friend, he’s a confidant for our band,” says Mills. “It’s really cool to not have to sit down in a room with someone who doesn’t know the history and thinks they’re going to give you something that really isn’t you. It’s like, let’s just get in the studio, pick up instruments, and see what ideas we have for the day.”

Before they had written any songs, Mills and Gross already knew the album’s title.

Mills says knowing that helped inform a lot of the record. 

“The whole theme of the record is the neighborhoods that Nick and I grew up in,” Mills says. “It’s how we grew up. It’s where we grew up. It’s why we grew up the way that we did. I think there’s a nostalgia kind of baked into that…the first time you fall in love, the first time you sneak out, the first time you get your heart broken, the first time you realize that you have a best friend, the first time you realize your parents aren’t superheroes, and the first time you realize that life is kind of fucked up at times, and it’s not everything that you see in the movies or on television.”

Songs such as the anthemic “Garbage,” the guitar-driving “Landslide,” and the yearning-for-the-past “1999” reflect a return to form for the duo, an authenticity and trust-your-gut approach that, according to Gross, was somewhat absent during the making of their second record.  

“The intention we brought into this record was to get into the studio every day, and whatever comes out of the studio from that day is what we’re going to live with,” says Gross. “I think for our second album, there was a bit of that overthinking and pulling too much from other places to influence what girlfriends really was and wanted to be.”

Mills says he hopes that when people listen to this album, it brings back the same kind of memories from childhood that it did for them when they were making it. He wants it to be a time machine, a vessel to transport listeners back to their younger selves, to that time of self-discovery. But, he notes, this album isn’t meant to be a bum-you-out type of record meant to leave you yearning for those simpler times in your life because being an adult sucks. 

“We can miss these things, but it’s also pretty cool to see how far we’ve come,” he says. “The things that I dreamed about in my bedroom growing up, I’ve gotten to check a lot of that off my list, and it’s pretty surreal. When I think back to lying in my bed with posters on my wall, listening to my favorite bands, to then being able to go on the road with some of them and call some of them friends…the shit I thought would never happen, it happened. And that’s pretty rad.”

November 5, 2025 0 comments
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The Black Effect Podcast Network VIBE Digital Cover Story (Nov 2025)
Music

The Black Effect Podcast Network VIBE Digital Cover Story (Nov 2025)

by jummy84 November 5, 2025
written by jummy84

If there’s one thing Charlamagne Tha God has never been accused of, it’s silence.  

For years, the man has made a living — a good living — off the simple act of running his mouth. He’s debated Hip-Hop icons before breakfast, grilled politicians before lunch, and can even be found on Comedy Central sparking national conversation just before your evening nightcap. To the man born Lenard McKelvey, a microphone isn’t just a tool — it’s an instrument, a weapon, and a confessional booth rolled into one.  

It was only a matter of time before he decided to build an empire out of it. In 2020, he launched The Black Effect Podcast Network, a platform dedicated to amplifying Black voices, perspectives, and experiences in all of their complexity. What started as a big idea (and a few bold calls to iHeartMedia) has become a powerhouse — a cultural echo chamber where storytellers, truth-tellers, and comedians all come to do what Charlamagne does best: talk that talk.  

And then there’s Dollie S. Bishop, the Brooklyn-born, South Carolina-raised television maven-turned podcasting pro who makes sure he walks the walk. As President of Production and Creative Development at The Black Effect Podcast Network, Bishop is the steady hand behind the mics who turn all that talk into traction. While Charlamagne might light the spark, Bishop keeps the fire burning — overseeing strategy, partnerships, and the delicate art of keeping a creative network profitable and purposeful. Charlamagne is the mouth, Dollie is the muscle — the one who makes sure ideas turn into institutions. 

Together, they form a rare kind of creative balance — the dreamer and the doer, the provocateur and the planner. But at their core, they’re both storytellers who’ve been hooked on narrative since childhood. Charlamagne credits his mother, who put everything from The Bible to Beverly Cleary novels in his hands as a young man in Moncks Corner, SC, while Bishop conceptualized her own stories, reimagining her life as something greater than her reality. Their shared passion blossomed into communications careers, with Charlamagne’s radio history and time with “OG” Wendy Williams well documented. However, the strategic chatterbox has the late Reggie Ossé to thank for sparking his interest in podcasts with the highly regarded and influential Combat Jack Show. 

“My man Chris Morrow told me 12, 13 years ago I needed to start a podcast, and I’m like, ‘what is a podcast?’” Charlamange tells VIBE from the comfort of The Breakfast Club studio in New York City. “He worked with Reggie Ossé and The Loud Speakers Network, and told me to start listening to Combat Jack. Combat Jack was literally my introduction to podcasts.” 

Even while a fan and admirer of Jack, Charla was hesitant to follow through on Morrow’s advice. “Chris told me, ‘There’s two things you’re gonna have to do. You’re gonna have to write a book, and you’re gonna have to start a podcast.’ I always wanted to write a book. I love reading and storytelling. But I remember being arrogant, saying, ‘Oh, I don’t need a podcast, I do morning radio! The people who do podcasts are the people who can’t get on radio.’ And then I started thinking to myself, ‘I’ve been fired from radio four times, so this would be a good backup plan if I ever get fired from The Breakfast Club.’”  

Morrow, the man who planted the seed, tells VIBE that his insistence stemmed from Charla’s interests and success in other areas, knowing that a podcast could not only amplify those moves, but create new opportunities. While Charla was slow to see the vision, he eventually came around.

“When he saw the value in that, I think it was a significant moment for podcasting,” Morrow tells VIBE. “Prior to that, especially in the Hip-Hop space, there was a feeling that if you were already on the radio, then you didn’t need to do a podcast. Charlamagne changed that perception.” 

And so he went for it, quickly learning that his previous arrogance was not only naïve, but a blessing blocker. He realized with his show Brilliant Idiots that the industry could bring in the bread and stir conversation like the radio of yore. 

“When we started doing it, we were doing it for the love, me and my guy Andrew Schultz,” Charlamagne says of his Brilliant Idiots co-host. “It took off immediately. I remember getting that first check with the advertising dollars, and being like, ‘Oh! You can make real money doing this.’ And then we started doing live shows and selling merchandise and treating this like a legitimate business. Twelve years later, and that’s been very lucrative for me.” 

Bishop, on the other hand, found herself smitten with Oprah Winfrey’s Super Soul Sunday, an interview podcast hosted by the daytime icon that spoke to her own propensity for self-improvement. 

“I’ve always been into self-help content, so anything that I gravitate toward, whether it’s a book or anything in life, the question is ‘how can I be better?’” Bishop tells VIBE. “It just fed my soul in so many ways.”  

After spending over a decade as a television producer, Bishop, like many of us, found herself twiddling her green thumbs when the 2020 Covid pandemic hit. “Everything had shut down at that point,” she explains. “Everybody was trying to figure out how to adapt. I had just been sitting at home for nine months. I was gardening, and I just let go and let God. I wasn’t concerned about work. I had everything I needed.” 

Within his 2017 tome Black Privilege: Opportunity Comes to Those Who Create It, Charlamagne speaks of failure often leading the way to success. In this case, he deems the “failure of the federal government” as a major catalyst for Black Effect’s creation, “Because everybody was at home because of Covid,” including Bishop. 

“So, I was like, Dollie’s in the garden! ‘Dollie! Yo! You want to come run this network?’,” the radio vet recalls of first reaching out to Bishop. “She decided she wanted to do it, and so did every single person I reached out to to be a part of this network. Everybody said yes. Everybody.” 

A rich relationship has been developed between Charlamagne, Dollie and the network’s hosts, no better demonstrated than during the collective’s 5th anniversary party this October, where journalist and Breakfast Club newswoman Loren LoRosa interviewed fellow podcasters under the brand’s umbrella, including reality show HNIC Carlos King, who brought his Reality With The King podcast to the network in July 2025. 

“When I was approached by Dollie to partner with Black Effect for my podcast, it was a no-brainer for me,” King shared with VIBE amid the celebration. “And I thought for myself, it was an opportunity to show the culture that two successful Black men can join forces with no ego involved and really build a partnership together.”  

It should be noted that King’s podcast was highly successful and a regular conversation starter years before bringing his talents to the network. For the gifted interviewer, partnering has provided the manpower – talent bookers, advertising resources, etc. —  that comes with the iHeart banner without impeding on the creative.  

Carlos King (Photo by Carol Lee Rose/Getty Images)

“They allow me to do me,” King states with confidence. “They’re like, ‘look, it ain’t broke. Don’t fix it, okay? We bought into you. You’ve had three successful years of your podcast already, we’re here to help you build.’ And that’s exactly what they’ve been doing.” 

King partnered with Black Effect in the same vein as many of the network’s biggest shows, with behemoths like The 85 South Show, All The Smoke, Drink Champs and even The Breakfast Club having been established prior to the network’s 2020 founding. Securing partnerships with these entities — in addition to the network’s first original pod, Cut To It Featuring Steve Smith Sr. — established the network as the premiere home of Black storytelling within the podcast space, allowing for the development of shows that speak to deeper issues within our communities, including Just Heal With Dr. Jay, and Family Therapy.  

Both Dollie and Charlamagne brag of these titles with the same – if not more – enthusiasm as they do when discussing the heavy-hitters who consume our timelines. There’s a palpable belief in their people that emanates when they speak of platforming voices that are “intentional” in their mission, whether that be to help you heal or crack you up.  

“I saw all of these different podcasts that didn’t necessarily have a home, but they had an audience,” Charlamagne tells me of securing titles ahead of the network’s launch. “No exaggeration, The Breakfast Club is the most downloaded Black podcast, and has been for the last eight, nine years. But it was just out there as an iHeart podcast. You had Drink Champs, The 85 South Show. My whole mindset was, let’s connect the dots for these people on the audio piece with our sales team, and so that’s what we did.” 

Conal Byrne, CEO of iHeartMedia Digital Audio Group, spoke of trusting in Charla’s “unwavering passion and vision,” to successfully turn his dream into a “cultural movement.”

“He brings that bold authenticity he’s known for, and it’s translating into real impact—this network has launched dozens of shows, many of which are running up the charts, and is reshaping the podcast landscape, pushing boundaries, and elevating diverse creators and voices,” Byrne tells VIBE. “That kind of drive and purpose is exactly why we built this with him, and it’s why the network is flourishing.”

Even while having established itself as a premiere podcast network – captivating 45% of the entire Black Male podcast audience and hitting over a billion downloads in 2025 – Black Effect has been made to confront barriers that its achievements and influence have yet to circumvent. This becomes evident when the business partners discuss certain advertisers giving them the cold shoulder over “risqué” shows while sponsoring unseasoned titles in the same category.

“The example I use all the time is WHOREible Decisions with Mandii and Weezy,” Charlamagne explains of the much-discussed podcast that was eventually renamed Decisions, Decisions. “Mandii and Weezy’s audio numbers are through the roof.

“They do millions monthly, but they don’t get the same opportunities as a Guys We F****d or a Call Her Daddy. What’s the difference between what Mandii and Weezy do and what all those other ladies do?”  

“They’re Black,” Dollie quickly responds, with Charlamagne confirming, “That’s it. You can’t just pigeonhole them, and say, ‘well, they talk about sex all the time.’ No, they talk about everything, to the point where they decided to change their name. They changed their name because they felt like WHOREible Decisions was holding them back.  

“Advertisers can look at them getting the same type of numbers and would not want to advertise. Like, ‘Oh, that show’s too risqué,’ but a show called Guys We F****d ain’t? And I love Guys We F****d, I’ve been on the show before, but what’s the difference? Nobody’s able to explain that to me, so I can only assume it’s because they’re Black.” 

Black Effect moves to remedy this issue as much as possible with a business model leveraging its biggest property for the security of all.  

“If you want our top show, which is The Breakfast Club podcast, sure! But you also have to take the entire slate that’s on the network,” Dollie details. “You can’t à la carte and pick what you want, and we do that to ensure that all of our partners are bringing in revenue.  

“They need to understand that Black voices have value, that’s it,” Dollie continues of potential sponsors. “There’s value here. I think we all know it. We all probably don’t want to admit it, but act on it and recognize it, it’s just that simple.” 

“Black equals green,” Charlamagne adds. “There’s no such thing as black money. These are human beings who spend like everybody else spends. So, why wouldn’t you tap into that? And it’s not like we don’t have a white audience. We’re not a niche thing that’s just for Black people. We are what’s cool, we control the cool, and people like to listen to what’s cool. Go to any of the live shows, and look at the audience.” 

It’s true. Pull up to a live taping of any given BE podcast and you’ll see a pretty rare sight in 2025: authentic diversity. In fact, authenticity is what reels most listeners in as charisma-drenched hosts bring it on the mic every week. That authenticity also translates to guests like Vernon “Mad Max” Maxwell during his iconic All The Smoke interview and Young Thug’s quotable-heavy appearance on PERSPEKTIVES WITH BANK.  

“Authenticity is the number one thing to me. There’s not a podcast you can name that has success where the individuals on that podcast aren’t authentic to who they are,” Charlamagne insists. “The most important thing for a podcast is to have something to say. Nothing else matters. What is your intention? And when you have that true, authentic intention, you soar.” 

With strong, authentic voices often comes massive egos, and with so many A-list A-mics on the roster, one could wonder how Bishop manages multiple properties and personalities. Turns out, it actually isn’t too taxing for the former Def Jam intern, whose hustle landed her at the side of legendary music exec L.A. Reid before she went on to produce for various Viacom brands. 

“I’m going to tell the truth girl, it’s really not tough,” Bishop concedes. “My career has been kind of like walking up a staircase, and everything has prepared me for what was next. Interacting with people and dealing with talent has always been easy for me. I think I see people for who they are, and it gives me a good idea of how to deal with them. 

“Now, because I never ran a podcast network before, there was definitely a learning curve just to understand things, but I pay attention. I pay attention to the people who know what they’re doing. I’ve had great teachers throughout my career and I’m a great student, so it hasn’t been difficult at all. It’s just been a powerful course. I’m led by something higher.” 

Tapping into “something higher” has always been the goal for Black Effect, which not only measures its success by the numbers, but by its real-world impact, best demonstrated via their annual Black Effect Podcast Festival and The Thrill of Possibilities HBCU Summit, where students receive mentorship and assistance with everything from headshots to post-collegiate career placement. 

“These initiatives go beyond the bottom line, they showcase Black Effect as a media company that’s not just talking the talk, but walking it, and not just for fun,” says Bishop, who embraces the challenge with enthusiasm and expertise, something that, for Charlamagne, solidifies the businesswoman as the leader of this movement. 

“My definition of a boss is Dollie Bishop, I work for her,” he says with confidence in his presidential pick. “You can’t just say you’re a boss, people have to want to follow your direction because they know you’re leading them somewhere they need or want to be, and that’s Dollie.”  

Another powerful woman with whom BE left a lasting impression is none other than former Vice President Kamala Harris, whose appearance on All The Smoke found its way into her 2025 book 107 Days, a moment of pride for Charla, who was somewhat taken aback by the entry. 

“That’s history, you know what I mean?” he asks, almost in disbelief. “She has a whole chapter in her book about running for office on her experience on one of our podcasts. That’s gonna be set in stone forever.” 

As will Black Effects influence, with Charla and Dollie already noting other podcasts and networks following their blueprint. When asked for names, Charla boldly declares “every single one of them, and I mean that respectfully.” 

“Anyone you see come with a Black-driven podcast network, it was influenced by the success of The Black Effect Podcast Network. And by the way, not just Black. After we came in going Black specific, you started seeing the same thing, but for Latinos, for the Queer community. Now, there’s no Brown Effects or Gay Effects or anything, but other networks are now being created specifically for their communities because people saw the success of Black Effect.” 

Indeed, these inspired collectives are all proof that Black Effect didn’t just change the game, it expanded it. Still, being first carries its own kind of permanence. The Black Effect remains the standard-bearer for culture-led storytelling. And as the audio space evolves into whatever comes next — the network’s foundation ensures its relevance. Because long after algorithms shift and platforms fade, the thing that never goes out of style is a good story, told well, by people who own their narrative. And if there’s one thing The Black Effect has taught the industry, it’s that when Black voices tell their own stories, the whole world listens.

November 5, 2025 0 comments
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The 1975 Remove Song From Streaming Because Matthew Healy Prefers the Album Without It
Music

The 1975 Remove Song From Streaming Because Matthew Healy Prefers the Album Without It

by jummy84 November 5, 2025
written by jummy84

Fans of the 1975 were left puzzled this week by the disappearance from streaming services of “Human Too,” an album track from 2022’s Being Funny in a Foreign Language. Now, Matthew Healy has taken to Reddit to explain its absence: “‘Human Too’ was removed from the album so the album is more how I want it to be,” he wrote. That clears that up, then. The remaining records are safe, Healy added, because he is “pretty happy with them”—with one exception: “What Should I Say” from Notes on a Conditional Form. “So that may also be removed who knows,” he concluded. Catch the latter while you can below.

While it is now commonplace for artists to tweak albums post-release—typically for reasons to do with sample clearance or perfectionism—retroactively wiping a song, three years after the fact, is more of a novelty. Healy notes in his comment, presumably for those unfamiliar with the mechanics of physical media, that “Human Too” still appears on prior physical releases of the album.

November 5, 2025 0 comments
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The Prodigy promise new "fuckin' evil rave" music and to "deliver the punch" for huge 2026 shows
Music

The Prodigy promise new “fuckin’ evil rave” music and to “deliver the punch” for huge 2026 shows

by jummy84 November 5, 2025
written by jummy84

The Prodigy‘s Liam Howlett has spoken to NME about some “fuckin’ evil rave” music on the horizon and what’s in store for their run of huge outdoor shows in 2026.

After their UK and Ireland arena dates this April and May – a 12-date tour that sold out in record time and included two dates at Wembley Arena – the rave pioneers will now be playing some massive ‘Warrior’s Dance’ outdoor gigs next summer. These will mark some of the band’s biggest shows since the death of frontman Keith Flint in 2019.

“Every time we go out for a new tour or big shows like this, we spend a lot of time talking about what is possible – how can we make it better,” Howlett told NME. “We always try to make sure things are different and moving forward , but always delivering the punch, which it will.”

The Prodigy live at Reading 2024. Credit: Andy Ford for NME

The tour will feature what promises to be a riotous Saturday show at Milton Keynes Bowl – made famous by the likes of David Bowie, Queen and Green Day – with the band returning after their legendary appearance at the iconic venue back in 2010.

“That Milton Keynes Bowl ‘Warriors Dance’ gig was like our Oasis at Knebworth,
it was a big moment for us as we had practically broken up during the early 2000’s,” recalled Howlett. “Then we all came back together in the studio to do ‘Invaders Must Die’ [2009], and that gig was the culmination of that album and what we had done before. It was an important and memorable gig for us.”

The founder, songwriter and multi-instrumentalist continued: “One thing that sticks in my mind is we were tearing around the site in golf buggies before it opened, racing around… Keef [Keith Flint] crashed into my one and ran me off the path into a bush.

“Keef was a master on two wheels, superbikes on track and the road, but he was a fucking terrible driver in anything with four wheels, during the mid ’90s Maxim [vocalist], Leeroy [Thornhill, former keyboardist] and me got to the point where we just refused to get in the car with him if he was driving.”

Howlett said that the band had considered playing other venues on the tour, but that the Bowl “just had more meaning for us”.

“A lot of shit has happened since then, and it just feels right to us to be back there to ignite the night once again,” he added.

The Prodigy. CREDIT: Rahul Singh

The iconic DJs Carl Cox and David Rodigan will be on the bill for all four of The Prodigy’s ‘Warrior’s Dance’ shows, while drum’n’bass legend Andy C will play at the Milton Keynes and Manchester shows. Japanese producer ¥ØU$UK€ ¥UK1MAT$U and British trap metal artist SCARLXRD will also be at the Milton Keynes, Manchester and Edinburgh dates.

“We specifically asked Carl, Andy C and David Rodigan to join us on these gigs because each of them have been important figures of inspiration to us at key points with the band over the years,” explained Howlett. “I remember being in a club in London late 1990 and Carl played ‘Everybody In The Place’ from our first EP before it was released. I couldn’t believe it. That was the first time I’d heard my music being played outside the studio. That will always be a memorable moment for me.

“People who are into our band will know that Andy C remixed ‘Firestarter’, which was never gonna be an easy task. I know this because I find it fucking impossible to remix my own tunes, especially that one, but he smashed it apart, gave it a different angle and made a monster of a tune, a classic. Andy was also Flinty’s favourite DJ.”

Howlett also recalled how he would listen to Rodigan on the radio long before The Prodigy had formed. “He has always been there as a figurehead, playing inspirational rare music that I love, which became ingrained in my mind and part of the make-up of what I think about when writing Prodigy music,” he said. “I have a deep respect for all three of them.”

Spotlighting the rest of the support acts, he said: “We are also honoured to have the skills of ¥ØU$UK€ ¥UK1MAT$U direct from Japan, bringing his killer ‘Firestarter’ x ‘Kuliki’ mash-up from his Boiler Room set. And lastly SCARLXRD live, coming with his heavy as fuck mayhem.”

When Howlett last spoke to NME in 2024 (and the year before that), he teased progress on new material – saying that they were “writing bigger tunes and finding different ways to sonically attack the crowd”.

“Yeah, I did tell you that, didn’t I?” replied Hewlett when asked for an update this week, “and yeah, it’s coming along.”

He added: “Before, I described our sound as ‘evil rave’. This time the new tunes sound like ‘fuckin’ evil rave’.”

Asked if Flint’s fingerprints would be across the new record in any way, Howlett told us: “Keef will forever be deeply ingrained in The Prodigy sound. People will feel that when they hear our new music. When I’m writing beats in the studio, he’s always there in my mind, punching the air, spittin’ and snarlin’ in the background.”

So could we finally get some new tunes in 2026?

“Yeah,” replied Howlett. “New prodigy music will be heard next year.”

With a new generation of Prodigy fans to play to, so too are new waves of artists drawing inspiration from the headline-grabbing noise kings. Kneecap, for instance, have drawn comparison to the band for courting controversy while also tearing up festivals and dancefloors with their culture clash of sound.

“Well, there are lots of acts and bands out there doing their thing live,” ended Howlett. “I make sure I see as many as I can when I hear any noise about them, but none of them are The Prodigy.

“The Prodigy have only always been about the music, the escapism, the crowd, chaos, the unity, integrity and the ruckus. And that’s the way it will stay.”

The Prodigy’s full upcoming 2026 tour dates are below, with tickets to the new ‘Warrior’s Dance’ August gigs on general sale from 9am Friday (November 7) and available here.

APRIL 2026
15 – GLASGOW OVO Hydro
16 – MANCHESTER Co-op Live
18 – BIRMINGHAM Utilita Arena
19 – CARDIFF Utilita Arena
21 – BOURNEMOUTH BIC
22 – LEEDS first direct Arena
24 – LONDON OVO Arena Wembley
25 – LONDON OVO Arena Wembley
27 – BELFAST SSE Arena Belfast
28 – DUBLIN 3Arena

MAY 2026
01 – NOTTINGHAM Motorpoint Arena

02 – NEWCASTLE UPON TYNE Utilita Arena

AUGUST 2026
20 – DUBLIN IMMA
22 – MILTON KEYNES National Bowl
29 – EDINBURGH Royal Highland Showgrounds
30 – MANCHESTER Wythenshawe Park

November 5, 2025 0 comments
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Watch Hayley Williams Join Rico Nasty for 'Smack a Bitch' at LA Show
Music

Watch Hayley Williams Join Rico Nasty for ‘Smack a Bitch’ at LA Show

by jummy84 November 5, 2025
written by jummy84

The musicians previously performed Paramore’s “Misery Business” together in 2023

Rico Nasty tapped Hayley Williams as a surprise guest during her show at the Fonda Theatre in Los Angeles last night. The Paramore singer took the stage for a joint performance of Nasty’s 2020 hit “Smack a Bitch,” off her debut LP Nightmare Vacation.

After sharing vocals and dancing around the stage, Rico and Williams hugged as the crowd screamed. “You guys had no idea!” Rico told the audience as Williams waved farewell.

The show at the Fonda marked Rico’s final stop on her Lethal North American tour, which kicked off in September with a performance at Riot Fest. The trek was in support of the musician’s most recent album, Lethal, which dropped in May. It marked her third full-length album and her first for record label Fueled by Ramen.

The rapper and Williams previously joined forces on stage in 2023. Rico made an appearance during Paramore’s headlining concert at the Kia Forum in Los Angeles to perform the band’s hit single “Misery Business.”

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Rico later told Billboard, “It was an amazing experience. And it felt like, I don’t know, my inner child really jumped out. And I hadn’t seen her in a while. Like I hadn’t seen her in a while on stage. I hadn’t seen her in a while backstage, like amongst the team like that. So I was like, ‘Wow, like this feels nice.’ And then I got to talk to Hayley.”

Last month, Williams surprise-released new R&B-inflected song “Good Ol’ Days” just before taking the stage at Rolling Stone’s Musicians on Musicians event in New York. The song is Williams’ latest single from her third studio album, Ego Death at the Bachelorette Party. Back in July, Williams shared 17 songs from the album as individual singles found on an old school web player. A month later, she officially shared the album title for Ego along with new song “Parachute.” The physical album arrives on Nov. 7 with “Good Ol’ Days” and one more unannounced song.

November 5, 2025 0 comments
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Australian Gov’t Approves Content Quotas For Streaming Video Platforms
Music

Australian Gov’t Approves Content Quotas For Streaming Video Platforms

by jummy84 November 5, 2025
written by jummy84

SYDNEY, Australia — More than three-and-a-half years after the siren sounded, the Australian government is activating local content quotas for popular streaming video on-demand platforms operating on these shores.

Confirmed Tuesday, Nov. 4, the new obligation will require those services with over 1 million domestic subscribers to invest 10% of total program expenditure here, or 7.5% of their total Australian revenue, to supporting local storytelling.

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Netflix, Disney, Amazon and other SVOD services will be compelled to comply by the legislation, which will be introduced to Parliament this week, the ABC reports.

Those quotas must pass that bar set by the Australian Content and Children’s Television Standard (ACCTS), meeting or exceeding the same requirements currently applied to commercial and subscription television services.

“We have Australian content requirements on free-to-air television and pay television, but until now, there has been no guarantee that we could see our own stories on streaming services,” minister for the arts Tony Burke remarked.

“Since their introduction in Australia, streaming services have created some extraordinary shows. This obligation will ensure that those stories — our stories — continue to be made.”

APRA AMCOS celebrated the announcement as an “incredible first step for Australia.” Whether the next step is a long-mooted content quotas for streaming music platforms, time will tell.

The Australian-made regulation, says Dean Ormston, CEO of APRA AMCOS, is a critical mechanism “within a global content market where extraordinary local stories and local music can be drowned out by content from major overseas markets.”

Critically, he adds, “the obligation includes requirements to spend on post-production in Australia, opening the door for Australian screen composers and local music to play a central role in telling our stories. This represents a significant new opportunity for Australia’s music creators.”

The Albanese government’s announcement follows the presentation last week of APRA AMCOS’s 2025 Screen Music Awards, and delivers on Canberra’s commitment in its national cultural policy, the five-year action plan dubbed Revive.

With its presentation in January 2023, the federal government mapped out a timeline for legislation that would enforce local content quotas on streaming platforms. “For video streaming,” federal minister of the arts Tony Burke said at the time, “the timeline is locked in.”

The new rules should’ve been implemented in 2024 but were delayed over concerns on how they might create a stumbling block for Australia’s trade agreement with the United States.

The champagne corks aren’t exactly flying, but the Australian creative community has cause to celebrate. The government’s commitment to investing in Australian storytelling comes on the heels of last week’s decision that there would be no exception for big tech in Australia’s copyright regime to allow for text and data mining.

“This announcement marks a landmark day for the Australian screen industry,” enthuses Screen Producers Australia CEO Matthew Deaner. “For too long, our local production sector has operated in an uneven environment where global streaming services could reap the benefits of doing business in Australia without contributing fairly to the creation of Australian stories.”

The commitment is “the result of years of advocacy,” he continues. “It recognizes that Australian stories matter, and that they deserve to be seen and heard on every platform.”

November 5, 2025 0 comments
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Wolf Parade's 2005 Debut Is Still a Revelation » PopMatters
Music

Wolf Parade’s 2005 Debut Is Still a Revelation » PopMatters

by jummy84 November 5, 2025
written by jummy84

Apologies to the Queen Mary

Wolf Parade

Sub Pop

27 September 2005

With the seemingly ever-growing list of “wolf” bands circa 2005 (Wolf Eyes, Wolfmother, Superwolf), Wolf Parade could have been nothing more than a novelty act, especially considering their slapdash formation. This was a time when the indie apparatus felt compelled to churn out hot new bands (ahem, Clap Your Hands Say Yeah) with little regard for their long-term viability.  

Fellow Canadians Arcade Fire, widely considered indie’s next big thing, invited Spencer Krug (then a member of Frog Eyes) to open for them. Krug engaged Dan Boeckner (formerly of Atlas Strategic) and eventually scrapped the drum machine to enlist the talents of Arlen Thompson. That was all prior to the band members learning they had some common ties, in particular having attended Expo 86, the World’s Fair held in Vancouver to celebrate the city’s centennial.  

Following some gigs and self-releases, they began rubbing elbows with Isaac Brock, who had ties to Sub Pop and was able to secure them a signing to the label and record a proper EP. When it came time to record their first full-length, it only made sense for Brock to take the helm as producer. With this setup, it seemed impossible for them to fail. What wasn’t a given is just how superb their first record would be, if not in terms of record sales, at least in the collective mindset of indie enthusiasts who were hearing a hot take on those raucous yet familiar sounds. 

Wolf Parade – “Shine a Light”

Wolf Parade‘s Apologies to the Queen Mary was met with instant praise, garnering a 9.2 from Pitchfork, which likened the experience to hearing Modest Mouse for the first time. It wasn’t entirely the Brock influence either, although his presence can certainly be felt. It was more the excitement of hearing something so groundbreaking for the first time, similar to how people mythologize Arcade Fire’s Funeral today. Moreover, Wolf Parade’s debut record took full advantage of the spotlight. Unwittingly, it paved the way for Band of Horses’ Everything All the Time, where a band could gain instant recognition with just one song, at the risk of their identity being obfuscated in the process.  

As a group formed by two principal songwriters, the Wolf Parade’s LP alternates between the two, a trend that has continued throughout their career. A debate instantly raged about whether Krug or Boeckner was the better songwriter. My friends and I had intense discussions about who was the better vocalist and why, each person leaning toward one camp but willing to concede on certain points. For instance, I consider myself a Boeckner guy through and through, but I maintain that Krug’s “I’ll Believe in Anything” towers above anything in their catalog, whereas a Krug devotee may find Boeckner’s “Shine a Light” equally unmatched.    

Apologies to the Queen Mary arrived prior to the ubiquitous scholarly phrase “not either-or; both-and”. However, that is precisely what Wolf Parade demanded of listeners. Those debates, while a fun diversion, become effectively irrelevant because both singers are great and each makes the other better. What has made the group so brilliant is not only Krug and Boeckner’s contrasts but also how their styles converged. They achieve a certain synergy that can only come from musicians so distinct yet complementary. This duality has made Wolf Parade far more enjoyable than their respective solo endeavors, Sunset Rubdown and Handsome Furs.  

Wolf Parade – “I’ll Believe in Anything”

Wolf Parade’s debut was more than a platform to showcase Krug and Boeckner. There is depth to the songwriting that allowed cohesive themes to emerge. If childhood and death colored Funeral, Wolf Parade ruminated on ghosts and nighttime, with an apparent disdain for modern constructs. They made the case rather simply on “Modern World” (“I’m not in love with the modern world”) but could equally employ a more lyrical turn of phrase.

The anthemic “Shine a Light”, with its churning guitar and steady synthesizer, finds Boeckner lamenting the current state of things: “There is an awful sound, this haunted town / And it will not, it will not, just be quiet.” The song soon shifts to the afterlife, and he alludes to that old Jim Morrison adage: no one here gets out alive. 

Ghosts seem to appear everywhere. They are being pinned down by streetlights and haunting us in domestic spaces, as they witness us succumb to the opiate of the people. There is an urgency to solve the dilemma of life after death. The imagery the band conjures seems to straddle this world and the next. In the blistering “Fancy Claps”, Krug instructs, “When I die, I’m leaving you my feet / When you die, you can stand up for me / We can lie in a homemade canoe / You can put me in your hair, I’ll be happy there.” The visuals are mind-boggling and absolutely brilliant.

Wolf Parade – ” Modern World”

Perhaps the most defining quality of Apologies to the Queen Mary is Wolf Parade’s exuberance. That element can come across as childlike, as heard on “Grounds for Divorce”, or with the ferocious intensity of “We Built Another World”. There are moments of lethargy, like “Same Ghost Every Night”, but the overall impression is that of a band eager to get down to business. That industriousness can be felt with the vulnerable and romantic “This Heart’s on Fire”, which would delight even the most ardent Bruce Springsteen fan.   

Similar to Arcade Fire before them, Wolf Parade’s sophomore album, At Mount Zoomer (2008), didn’t quite live up to the hype. However, upon second or perhaps third listen, it may be that it should have (I would challenge anyone to find a more compelling trio of songs than what closes the record). They would go on to release a handful of meaningful albums, including the underappreciated EXPO 86 (2010). They could reasonably release another stunner today, as they have not officially disbanded.  

Even after 20 years, Wolf Parade’s debut record still titillates. As good as Apologies to the Queen Mary will forever be—and it is a revelation—it will never transcend the standout track: “I’ll Believe in Anything”. Good or bad, the album will be mentioned in the same breath as those first keyboard notes, drum strikes, and yelping cadence. The vigor with which Krug pleads “Your blood / Your bones / Your voice / And your ghost” feels as visceral—as lifelike, if you will—as anything the band (or those who would become their lifelong fans) could have envisioned.

November 5, 2025 0 comments
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Brendan Fraser, Rachel Weisz Set to Revive The Mummy Franchise
Music

Brendan Fraser, Rachel Weisz Set to Revive The Mummy Franchise

by jummy84 November 5, 2025
written by jummy84

Brendan Fraser and Rachel Weisz are reuniting for a fourth installment in The Mummy franchise at Universal.

Fraser starred in the first three films of the franchise, with Weisz appearing in the first two (Maria Bello replaced Weisz for the third entry).

According to Variety, the fourth movie will be directed by Radio Silence, the filmmaking team of Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett, who broke through with the 2019 horror movie, Ready or Not, and revived the Scream franchise with Scream 5 and Scream 6 in 2022 and 2023, respectively.

The original 1999 film The Mummy was a box-office smash, grossing more than $422.5 million and launching a reliable franchise for Universal in the early 2000s. The action-adventure romp that made Fraser a star was a fun, feel-good ride strong enough to land the series on our 50 Best Action Movie Franchises of All Time list.

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After stepping away from Hollywood for a variety of reasons, including an assault allegation against the former HFPA president, Fraser returned to prominence with the 2022 film, The Whale, which earned him an Academy Award for Best Actor.

Last year, it was revealed that Fraser will play Dwight D. Eisenhower in the upcoming movie, Pressure, which is based on the 72 hours leading up to D-Day.

Weisz, who starred as twins in Prime Video’s adaptation of Dead Ringers back in 2023, is set to appear in the upcoming Netflix series, Vladimir, an adaptation of the critically acclaimed, bestselling novel by Julia May Jonas.

November 5, 2025 0 comments
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