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Inside the Fan Insanity Unleashed by The Life of a Showgirl
Music

Inside the Fan Insanity Unleashed by The Life of a Showgirl

by jummy84 October 8, 2025
written by jummy84

When I worked as a Digital Culture Reporter at Business Insider, we had an expression for how we’d cover the buzziest new stories: Flood the zone. Like a faulty fire hydrant, or a vacuum cleaner whizzing up and down with the uncontrollable hysteria of a feral raccoon, our directive was to suck up as many clicks as possible through every angle imaginable. I recall this happening during the early days of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the Titan submersible implosion in 2023, when social media was completely engulfed by updates every minute. Even if your beat wasn’t geopolitics or the economic structure behind deep-sea tourism, you were supposed to drop everything and help perpetuate the flood, or find a way to work it into your coverage, however contrived. I wrote a story about how people were making Zelenskyy fancams and dissected the way TikTokers were spreading misinfo about the war by using fake violent audios.

Taylor Swift is the Titan submersible implosion of music journalism—or a series of them, or one endless sustained ultrabuzz spectacle—driving a rapturous surge of media coverage by churning out so much material. It’s an increasingly rare kind of cultural domination—even at the height of the Beatles or Michael Jackson, there was always a pantheon of other deities. Swift has a monopoly on monoculture, she’s the Elon Musk super-entrepreneur of music. It’s why Gannett, the country’s biggest newspaper chain, hired a dedicated Taylor Swift reporter.

There have been hundreds of positive and punitive articles published about her online since The Life of a Showgirl was released on Friday. People alone has written dozens in the last week, from individual pieces cataloging every song to a story written about a single comment Travis Kelce left on an Instagram post made by Kameron Saunders, a backup dancer in the the video for Swift’s song “Fate of Ophelia.” (“You killed it as always Kam!!” he wrote. That’s the story.) Other article concepts include ELLE Australia’s “213 Truly Chaotic Thoughts I Had While Listening to The Life of a Showgirl for the First Time” and Parade Magazine’s “Big Words in Taylor Swift Songs and What They Mean.” Rolling Stone caught immense flak on release day for touting their first ever “homepage takeover” and turning the site into an elaborate “immersive experience” in honor of Swift’s transcendent magnificence. When you visited the site, it was mint green—the palette for Showgirl—and every visible article was something about the record (which they immediately scored a five out of five) or how it slotted into Swift’s ongoing and ever-accumulating legacy.

During our catch-up call last week, my editor made an unusual request: “So, uh, and this is the only time I’ll ask this,” he said with a hint of agitation in his voice. “Is there a Taylor Swift Rabbit Holed angle?”

October 8, 2025 0 comments
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Blondshell's 'Another Picture' album to feature new song 'Berlin TV Tower', covers by Conor Oberst, Gigi Perez and more
Music

Blondshell’s ‘Another Picture’ album to feature new song ‘Berlin TV Tower’, covers by Conor Oberst, Gigi Perez and more

by jummy84 October 8, 2025
written by jummy84

Blondshell has announced ‘Another Picture’, a companion to her recent album ‘If You Asked For A Picture’, featuring Conor Oberst, Gigi Perez and others.

The Los Angeles musician – real name Sabrina Teitelbaum – released her second album ‘If You Asked For A Picture’ in May, which NME named as one of the best albums of 2025 so far.

Now, she has announced that the companion album ‘Another Picture’ will be released on November 14, and it will feature the new song ‘Berlin TV Tower’, which has been a fixture on Blondshell setlists this year, as well as covers of songs from the album by Conor Oberst, Samia and Folk Bitch Trio. Pre-order the album here.

Also included is ‘Arms’, a reworking of the ‘If You Asked For A Picture’ track recorded alongside NME The Cover alumnus Gigi Perez. The new version, which you can listen to below, trades in the heavy, sludgy guitars of the original for delicate acoustics, with the vocal interplay of the two singers accentuating the song’s themes of power dynamics.

Speaking about the collaborations on ‘Another Picture’, Teitelbaum has said: “Every single artist on the project is someone whose music I’m genuinely a massive fan of so I feel so excited and grateful. I have loved Gigi’s music for years so it’s so special to get to do ‘Arms’ with her.”

“John Glacier had one of my favorite records of the year, same with Folk Bitch Trio, Samia, and Conor’s record last year with Bright Eyes. I’m blown away by their interpretations of these songs.”

‘Another Picture’ tracklist: 

  1. ‘Berlin TV Tower’ 
  2. ‘T&A’ (ft. John Glacier) 
  3. ‘23’s A Baby’ (cover by Samia) 
  4. ‘Arms’ (ft. Gigi Perez) 
  5. ‘Change’ (cover by Folk Bitch Trio) 
  6. ‘Event Of A Fire’ (cover by Conor Oberst) 
  7. ‘Thumbtack’ (live from Vevo) 

Blondshell is playing the final leg of her 2025 world tour in North America in November. See the dates below and find any remaining tickets here.

Blondshell will play: 

NOVEMBER 2025 
10 – Phoenix, Crescent Ballroom 
13 – Austin, Mohawk 
14 – Houston, House Of Blues 
15 – Dallas, The Studio at The Bomb Factory 
17 – Kansas City, The Truman 
18 – St Louis, Delmar Hall 
20 – Detroit, El Club 
21 – Pittsburgh, Mr. Small Theatre 
22 – Cleveland, Beachland Ballroom & Tavern 

FEBRUARY 2026 
4 – Sydney, Factory Theatre 
5 – Brisbane, Crowbar 
7 – Melbourne, Max Watt’s 

APRIL 2026 
11 – Coachella 
18 – Coachella 

NME spoke to Teitelbaum about ‘If You Asked For A Picutre’. Explaining the transition away from her self-titled 2023 debut, she said: “I think I feel pretty masculine as a person, and my relationship with gender has been somewhat complicated. On the first album, I wanted to show people who I was for the first time, and so it was important for me to really hit you over the head with it so that you understood who I am and how I feel inside. With this album, I realised that the idea I had that softness would cancel out my masculinity isn’t true. Not every moment of my life is spent being angry.”

‘If You Asked For A Picture’ earned a four-star review from NME, which noted: “After the success of her first album, Teitelbaum was faced with a challenge. Its songs hit so hard because they felt like you had lived them just by listening. How could she capture that same emotional punch but without oversharing and putting every detail of her life up for public consumption? ‘If You Asked For A Picture’ is the answer, still as sharp and impactful but focused more on the spaces in between her stories than the plots themselves.”

As for Perez, she recently told NME’s The Cover about her plans for the near future. “I’m very interested to see what I’m going to be pulled towards,” she said. “Because I haven’t worked on any solo work since I put out the album. I have some things that I’m sitting on that are a little…experimental.”

October 8, 2025 0 comments
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See PinkPantheress Cover Charli XCX's 'Apple' for BBC Live Lounge
Music

See PinkPantheress Cover Charli XCX’s ‘Apple’ for BBC Live Lounge

by jummy84 October 8, 2025
written by jummy84

Singer takes on Brat standout before releasing Fancy Some More? remix album this Friday

PinkPantheress served up a cover of Charli XCX’s “Apple” during the singer’s appearance on BBC Radio 1 Live Lounge .

Ahead of the release of her Fancy Some More? remix album, PinkPantheress delivered a rendition of the Brat favorite that upped the Nineties dance vibes. During the two-minute performance, PinkPantheress also attempted the viral “Apple Dance” while holding the microphone in one hand.

Fancy Some More? arrives this Friday with a stacked guest list that includes Kylie Minogue, Bladee, Seventeen, Nia Archives, Sugababes, JT, Groove Armada, Basement Jaxx, Rachel Chinouriri, Kaytranada, Jade, Anitta, and many more. The release serves as a companion album to PinkPantheress’ 2025 mixtape Fancy That, which was named one of Rolling Stone’s Best Albums of 2025 So Far. 

The mixtape features the hit single “Tonight” that she also performed during her Live Lounge visit.

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The Live Lounge performance and PinkPantheress’ recent Tiny Desk concert have served as a preview of the singer’s upcoming An Evening With PinkPantheress tour that kicks off later this month in Brooklyn.

That tour marks a return to the road for PinkPantheress, who previously canceled all of her scheduled 2024 appearances last year. “I was full up. There was something that I needed to address, and so I had to leave,” the musician told Zane Lowe on Apple Music 1 earlier this year. “And I did that for my own good. And obviously it was a very sad moment for people that wanted to see me but couldn’t see me. But obviously, what goes around comes around, and I’ll be back again.”

October 8, 2025 0 comments
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Save up to 51% Off Online, Deals
Music

Save up to 51% Off Online, Deals

by jummy84 October 8, 2025
written by jummy84

All products and services featured are independently chosen by editors. However, Billboard may receive a commission on orders placed through its retail links, and the retailer may receive certain auditable data for accounting purposes.

If you’re looking for premium headphones, we found excellent deals on select pairs from Beats by Dre for Prime Day.

On Amazon, shoppers can save up to 51% on select Beats Studio Pro and Beats Solo4 headphones, as well as Beats Studio Buds wireless earbuds. But act fast and shop now, these deals are set to expire at the end of Prime Big Deal Days.

However, these Beats by Dre deals are only active for Prime members only.

Not a member? Sign up for a 30-day free trial to take advantage of all that Amazon Prime has to offer, including access to Prime Video, Prime Gaming and Amazon Photos; fast free shipping in less than two days with Prime Delivery; in-store discounts at Whole Foods Market; access to exclusive shopping events — such as Prime Day and Black Friday — and much more. Learn more about Amazon Prime and its benefits here.

Keep reading to shop some of the best Beats by Dre headphones and earbuds deals online now.

Beats by Dre

BEST DEAL

Beats Studio Pro Wireless Bluetooth Noise Cancelling Headphones

Beats by Dre is no stranger to the audio game, as the company has been pioneering top-rated headphones, earbuds and speakers for more than 15 years. Now, one of the company’s newest products is on sale along with some of its older releases.

Music-wise, Beats has always been known for dynamic, wide-ranging sound, and these headphones deliver, with a well-balanced mix of highs and mids, and full, pulsating bass. The Studio Pro features up to 40 hours of battery life and is available in four colors: black, brown, navy and sandstone.

A single charge gets up to 40 hours of playtime, but a quick, 10-minute charge gets you up to four hours of play. Beats headphones are great for commuting, for the office, or for travel. With noise-cancelling, they’re great when you want to put on some music and tune out your roommates or family members too.

Beats Studio Pro headphones are on sale for $169.95 (regularly $349.99), and Beats Solo4 are on sale too.

Best Beats Headphones Sale 2025: Save up to 51% Off Online, Deals

Beats by Dre

Beats Solo4 Wireless On-Ear Headphones

Want an upgrade? The Beats Solo4 are also on sale and offer up to 50 hours of battery life. The noise-cancelling headphones feature pure Adaptive Noise Canceling technology (ANC), which works to actively block out external noises like traffic, birds and conversation. You’ll get a quieter, more immersive listening experience when you turn the ANC feature on. Beats Solo4 are available in matte black, cloud pink and slate blue.

Regularly $199.95, Amazon’s limited-time deal has the new Solo4 headphones on sale for $129.95 here. The deal includes the wireless headphones, a carrying case, 3.5mm RemoteTalk cable, Universal USB charging cable and quick start guide.

Looking for a discount on earbuds? Beats Studio Buds are on sale for $129.95 — a 35% discount.

Best Beats Headphones Sale 2025: Save up to 51% Off Online, Deals

Beats by Dre

EARBUDS DEAL

Beats Studio Buds True Wireless Noise Cancelling Earbuds

Beats Studio Buds offer eight hours of playtime and up to 24 hours with the charging case. Similarly, Beats Powerbeats Pro Wireless Earphones offer up to nine hours of listening time — and they’re nearly 50% off their list price on Amazon.

Want more? For more product recommendations, check out our roundups of the best Xbox deals, studio headphones and Nintendo Switch accessories.

October 8, 2025 0 comments
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Dar Williams
Music

Dar Williams Commits to the ‘Hummingbird Highway’ » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 8, 2025
written by jummy84

Dar Williams toured a spice farm in Belize set amid pristine jungles and primordial Mayan ruins. At a bumpy junction, the driver informed the passengers that there were three possible options: steering east, veering west, or staying on the middle road, which he referred to as the Hummingbird Highway. The instant wholly seized Williams‘ attention. Something about the trail choices resonated, especially the enticing description of the middle one, which struck her as a vivid metaphor for human life.

Dar Williams, one of folk music’s most cherished gifts, titled her newest album, Hummingbird Highway, a homage to the interdependence of boundless getaway and eternal return, another impressive offering from someone whose heart first journeyed to music long ago, and whose emotional vigilance and poetic vigor seem to only intensify with age. Indeed, the more Williams thought about the variety of roads, the more similarities she hit upon between herself and the hummingbird. “Hummingbirds have these fantastic migrations and hummingbirds need constant fueling,” said Williams.

Shortly after the Belize trip, Williams met a woman who told her that she and her daughter had matching hummingbird tattoos, which the woman described as symbolic of distance and closeness, departure and arrival, the desire to fly in every direction with an understanding that the lucky ones can always ground again at home. Williams treasured the richness of all of this imagery. Once again, she contemplated the hummingbird, finding numerous analogies to the human experience and extracting her own correlations.

“Curiosity, love, longing, we’ve got all of these ways of getting around,” notes Williams. “And it’s not always going forward. Like an artist, the hummingbird goes upside down and goes inside out. Flexibility, creativity, fastness, and travel all make for a complicated person and parent. Hummingbird Highway was written from the perspective of a child, one with a peripatetic, depressed, perhaps bipolar, frenetic, creative, generous, loving parent.”

In a recording career that began with a demo tape in 1990 titled I Have No History, Williams has long leaned on songwriting (Hummingbird Highway is her 11th album) and other forms of writing (she has written several travelogues and non-fiction books) to cast off and expose her blood and beauty to the world. Her creative journey was nurtured early in childhood, bolstered by the support of parents who, as she said, “leaned into the commons culturally”. Born and raised in Westchester County, New York, music was always in the air at home. So, too, was love and praise.

Her mother, a preschool teacher, believed in letting her students and children choose their instruments first and then take lessons to learn how to play them, not the other way around. Her parents always supported their community’s arts programs; on one occasion, they even sold grapefruits to raise funds for the local orchestra.

“I think that that influenced my love of working with coffeehouses,” said Williams. “It has influenced my love of things like art spaces that somehow figured out how to run a complex sound system, places that were community crowdfunded by a bunch of people who retrofitted it themselves from an old shoe store.”

Most of the music shaping Williams’ preferences she first heard long ago in her parents’ vinyl collection. At age 17, home from school one afternoon, she pulled out a couple of Judy Collins‘ records. She fell in love with Collins’ 1967 album, Wildflowers, which featured powerful orchestral arrangements by Joshua Rifkin and included her nourishing tone on songs by Joni Mitchell and Leonard Cohen. She remembers lines to “Sons Of”, a track from the 1970 album Whales & Nightingales, as if she had just heard them moments ago.

“On these two albums by Judy, there were songs about lost sons and going to war and never coming back and brilliant, classical arrangements by Rikfin. There was poetry, peace, Pete Seeger, Leonard Cohen, Jacques Brel, a song with whales in it … Music made around that time, the musicians literally considered themselves to be turning the wheels of life and death, of culture and civilization. I wanted to be a part of that fabric.”

Williams treasured the pomp and flaming fire of Marvin Gaye, his charged, sexualized characteristics, his Motown expression, as well as his connection to the wider world of society and humanity. Because of him, music became more to her than just what was present in her home and town. Music now represented the fullness of the planet. She was no longer merely listening to voices and sounds but comprehending human dignity. Simon and Garfunkel were also key early influences.

“Paul Simon‘s iconography of urban life and ordinary things, buildings, people, and food, influences me to this day,” said Williams. “The idea of trying to create a sacred landscape from our daily lives comes directly from Simon and Garfunkel.”

Committing to Worlds, Finding Inner Blueprint

Hummingbird Highway is classic Dar Williams, a fresh supply of drink from the ever-flowing spring, exemplifying all of the strong points that make her music enjoyable in all its words and ways. Spot on humility supplies the nourishment of every song. Some express gladness, some are heavy, some are weightless, and others reflect her attempt to reconcile everything within herself. Breadth and beauty reside in all of them, displaying and epitomizing a songwriting mantra that Williams has practiced for a while, which is to allow the song the latitude to grow and shine on its own terms.

“My personal motto is to stick to writing the song that you are writing,” said Williams. “You shouldn’t just bat away a perfectly delightful song about a dragonfly landing on your shoulder, right? You can get to the bottom of a song, whether it is a lighthearted or not-so-lighthearted song. Just keep yourself in the shoes of the characters, and find out what’s really happening. Songwriting is committing to the world that you find yourself in.

“We go to music that makes us cry, helps us laugh, helps us bang our heads around, and makes us forget things, or makes us be in the ecstatic moment and escape from the murky depths. Feel that first inspiration and keep on going. It ends up being deeper than you thought anyway, even if it’s a flaky song. It’s a way into your inner blueprint, and there is a reason it surfaced at that moment. Who are we to say what’s deep and what’s not deep?”

Williams doesn’t journal or write every single day. She does, however, seek to be inspired daily, constantly looking for something surprising or special in the ordinary flashes of day-to-day life, a need that she can satisfy sitting at a museum or on a park bench.

“That’s part of the honest struggle between pedestrian things and poetic things,” said Williams. “The artist decides all of that on a personal level and decides what in their life it is that they would like to turn into poetry.”

Photo: Carly Rae Brunnalt / Hello Wendy

Archeology of Life’s Work

The deeper she delves into her career, the more Dar Williams realizes that there is a holy motion guiding every recording, pushed forward by an intention that’s both specific and cumulative.

“Music is like archaeology, where there are a lot of layers,” said Williams. “And each album is a layer, and an album is an eon of my life. Looking back, I can pinpoint times in my life depending on which album I was writing or touring with and what issues were coming up. Like archaeology, it all sort of seems to make sense in its own world, even though it doesn’t at the time it [the record] comes out. There is a certain palate, a certain feel, a certain personality, and a certain neuroses attached to each album. It is another way to keep a chronicle of a life and another way to gauge a life.”

Many of the songs on Hummingbird Highway were written during the pandemic and hold numerous references to birds, indicative of a point when Williams spent hours alone staring at and refilling the bird feeder in the garden. Songs include “Tu Sais Le Printemps”, a French bossa nova tune, and “All Is Come Undone”, a piece of writing which came to Williams as she was breaking up earth in the backyard, attempting to convert an idle spec of dirt into a thriving meadow, listening to Thomas Hardy’s poem “The Later Autumn”.

Dar Williams’ stab at modern Americana, “Put the Coins on His Eyes”, was inspired by the storied history of early labor unions, movements, and revolutions in the US, and all of the agitation, suppression, and violence marking their expansions and downfalls.

Magic of Making Music Together

The joy of taking a batch of new songs on the road is still undeniable to Dar Williams, who approaches every night with an alchemist’s urge for transformation, a reverence for experimentation, and a spiritual curiosity about the essence of things.

“It is a great thing to walk out and feel the energy of the people,” said Williams. “It’s best when there is no skepticism and no suspicion. But some audiences are tentative. You can feel it within the first couple of songs, like a massage therapist who feels tension; you feel the accretion of awareness for what kind of energy field you are walking into. The goal is to get to another place musically together with the audience.”

October 8, 2025 0 comments
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In the Taylor Swift Economy, Fans Are the Product
Music

In the Taylor Swift Economy, Fans Are the Product

by jummy84 October 8, 2025
written by jummy84

Greed knows no bounds, and neither does Taylor Swift. Don’t hate me, Swifties! I know your eyes are finally opening, too. Please, allow me to give 10s where they’re due: Your fave is likely one of the biggest pop stars the world will ever see. But her business acumen might end up being more historical than her actual art.

After the release of her latest album, The Life of a Showgirl, Swift has broken records with her biggest sales week ever: 2.7 million sales in the first 24 hours alone. Are you reading what I’m writing? This feat also marks the second-largest sales week for any album since 1991, when modern chart methodology began. Only Adele’s 25 has surpassed that number, selling 3.378 million copies in its first week in 2015. And again, Swift’s numbers are based on one single day of sales.

To call Taylor Swift an industry titan would be an understatement. She is the behemoth who stands above all. She makes history with her tours, her theater experiences, her merchandise, and chiefly, her ability to convince the same fans to buy the same album over and over again. A proclaimed self-made billionaire, Swift has made it to the top of her mountain of money by relating deeply to her fans, then convincing them to crack those pretty little wallets open. With Showgirl, Swift has done this multiple times over.

Related Video

“File this under ‘save your best for the finale,’” Swift wrote on an Instagram post on October 4th, promoting multiple CD variants of her latest album that separately feature acoustic tracks not found on the standard version of Showgirl. “I think my favorite moments from the tour were the acoustic surprises. So I went back into the studio with Max and Shellback to record acoustic/unplugged versions of a few of the Showgirl songs with brand new vocals and production! Cannot WAIT for you to hear.”

On October 6th, Swift would post something similar while hawking an additional deluxe version of the album, this time available only on iTunes for 24 hours! In addition to iterations found online, that makes for at least 11 different CD variants, and nine different vinyl editions released of the album. One exhaustively curated spreadsheet puts the total count at 28. These captions read like a gift to fans, but let’s call them what they actually are: sales pitches. You cannot WAIT for people to spend that bread, girl!

Taylor Swift has arguably the most loyal contemporary fanbase, the Swifties, which is the closest thing to a rival of Michael Jackson’s collective of stans, in terms of scale and fervor. Her appeal has always been emotional transparency. For years upon years, Swift has been able to depend on her ability to turn heartbreak into parasocial intimacy into empire. But it seems even Swifties get tired, as evinced by the comments on the official Taylor Nation Instagram fan page.

“This is so upsetting,” one stan wrote on a post pushing the limited CD variants. “I love Taylor, I do. But for the love of God why do you need so many variants? Why does one hard working fan have to buy seven different versions of an album instead of just having all of the songs be on one complete album? You have millions of dollars. Give us broke fans a break.”

A personalized, world-spanning battalion of money spenders is hard not to mobilize. Taylor Swift is aiming to break every record imaginable, and it starts with getting her product into the hands of the masses. In the Swift economy, fans are more than mere listeners — they’re shareholders, and Taylor rewards them accordingly. Not with the authentic intimacy that Swifties are constantly seeking, but with artificial access. You can own a piece of her empire, as long as you’re willing to pay for it.

October 8, 2025 0 comments
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GIVE ME A KISSA - SPIN
Music

GIVE ME A KISSA – SPIN

by jummy84 October 8, 2025
written by jummy84

“Ride this train to Roseburg, Oregon,” says Johnny Cash in his gravelly intro to “Lumberjack,” the third track of his 1960 concept album, Ride This Train. Over the blare of a rail whistle, Cash continues: “Now there’s a town for you — and you talk about rough.”

Rough this southern Oregon town still can be, and unashamedly redneck with flotillas of pick-up trucks routinely lifted high enough for drivers to slam dunk a basketball merely by reaching out the window. Gun sellers outnumber bookstores at least 10 to 1 (and that’s a used bookstore).

So imagine my surprise finding a sake and record bar. Japanese rice wine and new vinyl albums here? 

Yes! Long and slim, lined with framed music photography and album racks jam-packed with collectors’ wet dreams, Reverie Record Shop is a corridor drawing the wanderer away from SE Jackson St. and, at the rear, sake (the fridge stocks a dozen varieties), coffee, craft beer on tap, easy chairs and an ever-spinning, lamp-lit, VPI Aries turntable.

Newcomers may wonder if this is a serious business or money-laundering exercise. It’s legit and in the black, declare owners Michelle and Albert, refugees from LA. 

Migraine-free since the switch to sake, says Michelle pictured here with Albert, at Reverie in Roseburg. (Photo by Sierra and Isaiah Miller)

“All you have out here are bars,” says Albert. “Like bars. And not everybody’s into bars.” Albert means the ubiquitous dive bars, Roseburg police-log perennials like the Idle Hour, the Scoreboard, and Rumors. “And there was no dedicated record store here in Roseburg, so we decided to merge the two,” with coffee thrown in, Italian style: strong and straight with no bullshit syrups. 

“The idea really came from the Japanese kissa bars,” he says. “After World War II, it was not easy to find hi-fi systems, so these kissa bars started where people could go listen to jazz on good systems with good speakers. Things changed in the ‘70s when vinyl was more accessible, but these bars have a pretty big spot in Japanese culture.”

Is the sake out of a respect for tradition? Not exactly. “I love wine,” Michelle says, “but it gives me migraines. Doesn’t matter if I drink a glass or a bottle — major migraines. We started diving into sake to check it out: no migraines.”
So they threw together all the stuff they like — booze, coffee, and music (on vinyl, “the way God intended,” says Albert) — and found that plenty enough folks wanted a kissa.

October 8, 2025 0 comments
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Tyrese’s Grandmother Detained After Dog Attack, Singer Surrenders
Music

Tyrese’s Grandmother Detained After Dog Attack, Singer Surrenders

by jummy84 October 8, 2025
written by jummy84

Tyrese Gibson turned himself in to Atlanta police last Friday (Oct. 3) after his dogs were allegedly involved in a fatal attack that left a neighbor’s small dog dead. It has now also been revealed that his grandmother was briefly detained during the investigation.

According to Fulton County court records, an arrest warrant for the R&B singer was issued on Sept. 22. Bodycam footage obtained by TMZ captured officers conducting a search of Gibson’s property that same day, during which his grandmother was temporarily placed in the back of a police vehicle.

Gibson was charged with cruelty to animals, taken into custody, and later released on a $20,000 bond.

The incident occurred on Sept. 18, when Gibson’s four Cane Corso dogs were reportedly seen roaming his Atlanta neighborhood before allegedly fatally attacking a Cavalier King Charles Spaniel named Henry. Harrison Parker, Henry’s owner, told Good Morning America that he let his dog out for a quick bathroom break around 10 p.m. and found him lifeless in the driveway just minutes later.

“The pack of those four dogs were there minutes before I found Henry’s body,” Parker said. “There was absolutely no cars, no humans, just the dogs. And he was dead. And the fact he died like that alone in the darkness at night and I wasn’t there… it’s just horrible.”

A police report detailed the attack, noting that Henry had broken ribs, internal bleeding, and puncture wounds. Security footage allegedly captured Gibson’s dogs running toward the property just before the attack. Another neighbor had also called animal control that evening to report the Cane Corsos blocking her from leaving her home.

Youtube Screenshot

According to the American Kennel Club, Cane Corsos are “smart, trainable, and of noble bearing,” but stresses that proper socialization and training are essential. Gibson is reportedly cooperating fully with authorities as the investigation continues.

In the days that followed, Fulton County police and animal control visited Gibson’s home to retrieve the dogs. Gibson, who was not present at the time, reportedly told officers over the phone that he would need “a few days to figure out what to do” before surrendering them. Ultimately, Gibson rehomed his two adult dogs and their three puppies in safe, loving homes. Police reportedly took custody of his small Pomeranian, who he said “takes medication.”

According to the police report, Gibson acknowledged that his dogs were responsible and admitted there had been ongoing issues with them escaping the property. Through his attorney, Gabe Banks of Banks Weaver Law Firm, Tyrese issued a formal statement extending condolences to the Parker family and accepting responsibility for his dogs.

“On behalf of my client, Mr. Tyrese Gibson, we wish to extend our deepest condolences to the family who lost their beloved dog in this tragic incident,” Banks said. “Tyrese’s heart is truly broken, and he has been praying for the family constantly, hoping they may one day find it in their hearts to forgive him. While he was out of town when the incident occurred, he accepts full responsibility for his dogs. The liability of keeping them was simply too great, and he could not bear the thought of anything like this ever happening again.”

Gibson also addressed the tragedy directly on Instagram. “After nearly 40 years of being a passionate dog lover—raising everything from Pomeranians, Yorkies, Shih Tzus, Maltese, to larger breeds like Shar Peis—my dogs have only ever been treated as family,” he wrote. “They’ve never been trained to harm, never spent a single day in attack or protection training, and they’ve grown up playing with kids and smaller dogs in my home. That’s why this incident has left me shocked, devastated, and heartbroken for the family affected.”

“As an empath, my heart hurts deeply for their unimaginable loss, and I’ve been trying to reach out directly to express my sorrow and condolences,” he expressed.

Gibson also made it clear that he was not at his residence during the time of the attack because he was still grieving with his family over the recent loss of his father. “I’m here in LA with my family, still mourning the loss of my father just 15 days ago,” he explained. “To the family who lost their beloved pet: please know that I am praying for you, grieving with you, and will continue to face this tragedy with honesty, responsibility, and compassion.”

The 46-year-old also clarified misinformation circulating online: “Please note: The blogs and the media are using images of Cane Corso dogs that are NOT my actual dogs to paint a very different picture…. This is not about me. This is about the family that’s dealing with a very unexpected tragedy. I just wanted to post this and give some clarity… May the Lord Jesus Christ continue to cover their family and my family—no one wanted or expected to wake up to any of this.”

Court records show this wasn’t the first time Gibson’s dogs had been an issue. A Fulton County police captain noted the Cane Corsos had been seen roaming freely at least five times in recent months, and Gibson had received a warning earlier in September. He had also been notified about needing a special permit for owning more than 10 dogs, though the current number of dogs in his care is unclear.

October 8, 2025 0 comments
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Mobb Deep: Infinite Album Review
Music

Mobb Deep: Infinite Album Review

by jummy84 October 8, 2025
written by jummy84

On paper, every dial imaginable has been set back. Outside of a stray COVID mention and a dumb Havoc bar about getting canceled for joking about someone’s chromosomes, references are either era-specific (“Taj Mahal” is named for the formerly Trump-owned casino) or universal enough to not matter. Instead of the stable of producers behind Infamous, Havoc handles 11 of the album’s 15 beats, with Alchemist embracing his grimy Murda Muzik and Infamy roots on the other four.

The best Havoc beats from Mobb Deep’s prime took familiar sounds and bent them into menacing shapes. Here, tracks like “The M. The O. The B. The B.” and “Mr. Magik” mix that menace with the muted drum patterns he used on Kanye’s The Life of Pablo, giving the low-end even more depth. Alchemist, for his part, falls back on the style that made him famous—all gutter drums and echoing samples. The glitzy fuzz of “Taj Mahal,” in particular, sounds like it was pulled off a lesser-known Street Sweepers mixtape, while “Score Points” and “My Era” wouldn’t sound out of place on his collaborative albums with Prodigy.

Prodigy has no half-way appearances, either; he has at least one verse on every song, and does the hooks for a chunk of them. P’s delivery is as curt and chilling as ever (“RIP, you can’t son me/My pop’s dead,” he deadpans on “My Era”), even when his writing treads well-worn ground. There were seams to tighten and holes to fill, but Havoc and Alchemist handle his vocals with care. Most importantly, Havoc and Prodigy’s chemistry remains intact. Neither has ever been a particularly showy writer or lyrical gymnast—their respective appeal comes from their pugilist directness and the way their personalities stayed burrowed deep in the cement of LeFrak City, no matter how high their stars ascended. In this sense, “Mr. Magik” gets the closest to vintage Mobb Deep, particularly when the two trade the mic every few bars to go in on their enemies while dodging CIA agents and laying up with mistresses. The same could be said for the shuffling “Easy Bruh,” anchored by a drumbreak, faint keys, sirens, and the tightest Prodigy raps on the whole album (“Niggas mad? Put a cape on ’em/Now they super mad” got a good laugh out of me). At its best, Infinite feels effortless in a way Mobb Deep hasn’t for years, the pair comfortable in their older, wearier skin.

October 8, 2025 0 comments
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Will there be a 'Peacemaker' season three? 
Music

Will there be a ‘Peacemaker’ season three? 

by jummy84 October 8, 2025
written by jummy84

Peacemaker season two is coming to an end, but can fans expect to see a third season in the future? Find out below.

The John Cena-driven superhero series began as a spin-off from the 2021 film The Suicide Squad, which was part of the DC Extended Universe at the time. The first season aired in early 2022 and followed the jingoistic mercenary Chris Smith, aka Peacemaker.

Since then, the new incarnation of DC Studios has launched, with James Gunn at the head, and the new DC Universe opened with Gunn’s Superman earlier this summer.

Peacemaker season two is the first live action television series in the DC Universe, with episodes having aired weekly on HBO Max in the US. The season finale drops on Thursday (October 9). In the UK, episodes have been airing the following day on Sky Max and NOW.

Alongside Cena are returning stars Danielle Brooks, Freddie Stroma, Jennifer Holland, Steve Agee and Robert Patrick, as well as newcomers Michael Rooker, Frank Grillo and David Denman.

Will there be a Peacemaker season three?

Despite the warm reception for the second season of Peacemaker, there has been no official word about a possible return for a third run.

Indeed, in a recent interview with Deadline, showrunner James Gunn disclosed that while key characters from the Peacemaker universe will continue to have a presence in the DCU moving forward.

When asked whether there would be a third season of the show, Gunn said: “You’re gonna find out more in episode eight because it’s not necessarily that.”

“Some of these characters will continue, but also, it’s not exactly Peacemaker 3,” he continued. “I’m not ruling it out. You’ll see [episode] eight and maybe you’ll find out a little bit more.”

When season two was first commissioned in February 2022, Gunn had been expected to write and direct the entire run, but by the time filming was due to begin a year later, it was put on hold as Gunn had been installed as co-CEO of DC Studio and switched his focus to Superman.

At that point, a series focusing on Viola Davis’ Suicide Squad character Amanda Waller was given priority, but development was slow and in March 2024, Gunn announced that attention had switched back to Peacemaker season two.

Whether Gunn is hinting at a return to the Waller character for the next season in this world or not, it appears that the Peacemaker characters will be back on screens soon, even if the show itself is not.

October 8, 2025 0 comments
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