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PHOTOS: Alia Bhatt Dazzles in a Vintage Bob Mackie Gown at Dubai Event With Ranbir Kapoor
Bollywood

PHOTOS: Alia Bhatt Dazzles in a Vintage Bob Mackie Gown at Dubai Event With Ranbir Kapoor

by jummy84 November 13, 2025
written by jummy84

Alia Bhatt is currently in Dubai with Ranbir Kapoor. They attended an event together on November 12, 2025 and posed with delegates. Now, Alia took to social media to share a closer look at her ensemble.

The actress wore a shimmery dress with whimsical styling. The vintage dress is designed by American couturier Bob Mackie. The gown features a nude base with detailed designs of pearls, rhinestones, ivory sequins and more. The fitted ensemble flaunts Alia’s physique and the high neckline, along with the thigh high slit add drama and elegance.

Alia shared the fashionable clicks with the caption, “when in dubai.” One fan commented, “Queen! Looking like ’90s hottie.” Another fan wrote, “Oh my gosh, she’s so beautiful.”

On the professional front, Alia is currently gearing up for two releases, Yash Raj Films’ ALPHA and Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s Love & War.

Take a look at Alia’s latest photos below:

November 13, 2025 0 comments
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Bob Iger on Disney Deal Standoff With YouTube TV 'Working Tirelessly'
TV & Streaming

Bob Iger on Disney Deal Standoff With YouTube TV ‘Working Tirelessly’

by jummy84 November 13, 2025
written by jummy84

It’s two weeks into the YouTube TV blackout of Disney networks — including ESPN and ABC — and the Mouse House’s top brass say they’re hunkering down to fight for as long as it takes to reach terms that are acceptable to the media company.

Disney CEO Bob Iger, speaking on the company’s September quarter earnings call, said, “We care deeply about our consumer and our priority has always been to remain on their service without interruption, to close a deal on a timely basis so that interruption does not occur. The deal that we have proposed is equal to or better than what other large distributors have already agreed to. So we’re not trying to really break any new ground, and while we’ve been working tirelessly to close this deal and restore our channel to the platform. It’s also imperative that we make sure that we agree to a deal that reflects the value that we deliver, which both YouTube, by the way, and Alphabet, have told us, is greater than the value of any other provider.”

Iger continued, “So we’re not trying to break new ground. The offer that’s on the table is commensurate with deals that we’ve already struck with, actually distributors that are larger than they are. We’re trying really hard, as I said, working tirelessly to close this deal, and we’re hope, we were hopeful that we’ll be able to do so on a timely enough basis to at least give consumers the opportunity to access our content over their platform.”

Disney CFO Hugh Johnston, in an interview with CNBC earlier Thursday, took a more adversarial stance. “Obviously, as we entered the year, we knew this was going to be a challenging battle and we prepared ourselves for it, and we’re ready to go as long as they want to,” he said.

On the company’s earnings call, Johnston didn’t provide much additional insight into when there might be a deal reached on a YouTube TV renewal. “Obviously, I’m not going to comment much on ongoing negotiations that are live right now. The only thing I would say is, in terms of our guidance, we built a hedge into that with the expectation that that these discussions could go for a little while,” he told analysts.

Johnston added that in terms of “the dollar impact” on Disney’s bottom line, he said: “Keep in mind, there’s two pieces to it. There’s the piece that we’re not getting paid for [from YouTube], and then the piece that we’re picking up by virtue of subscribers moving elsewhere. But beyond that, I don’t want to comment because it is a live negotiation right now.” This week Disney extended Johnston’s employment agreement through 2029.

Such carriage fights are not uncommon in the pay-TV business. But Google and Disney have gone into this dispute deeply entrenched in their positions, and still don’t seem to be very close to a resolution. Disney’s networks went dark on YouTube TV service just before midnight ET on Thursday, Oct. 30, after Disney and Google were far apart on a deal before the expiration of the previous contract.

As is almost always the case, the companies are fighting over price. Google says Disney is asking for an unprecedented fee hike in order to “reset” the market and be able to charge other distributors the same high rates. Disney has countered that Google is “refusing to pay fair rates for our channels.”

The economic pain is likely setting in for both sides. Disney is losing an estimated $30 million per week in revenue because of the YouTube TV blackout, Morgan Stanley has estimated, and the loss of viewers on the platform appears to be cutting into Disney’s TV ratings. Meanwhile, Google is clearly facing a rising tide of irate YouTube TV subscribers, which will only grow the longer the standoff continues.

YouTube TV customers have already missed two straight weeks of “Monday Night Football” on ESPN and ABC (Philadelphia Eagles vs. Green Bay Packers on Nov. 10 and Arizona Cardinals at Dallas Cowboys on Nov. 3), not to mention two Saturdays of college football and other sports, plus ABC primetime shows and more.

This past Sunday, YouTube TV began alerting subscribers about how to manually apply a one-time $20 credit to their account because of the Disney carriage dispute, a move to try to mitigate cancellations.

November 13, 2025 0 comments
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Billy Bob Thornton, Sam Elliott on Taylor Sheridan’s Exit, Landman's Future
TV & Streaming

Billy Bob Thornton, Sam Elliott on Taylor Sheridan’s Exit, Landman’s Future

by jummy84 November 12, 2025
written by jummy84

Landman stars are opening up about Taylor Sheridan‘s future departure.

Last month, The Hollywood Reporter reported that Sheridan, the co-creator and writer, would be leaving the show’s home at Paramount for NBCUniversal, with a film deal set to begin next year. However, his TV deal with Paramount doesn’t start until the end of 2028, and then, he will go to NBCUniversal.

While premiering the second season of the hit Paramount+ series Landman, Billy Bob Thornton, who plays oil crisis manager Tommy Norris, shared his thoughts on Sheridan’s move. “I think the shows that are at Paramount, stay at Paramount, so I don’t think those are affected,” Thornton told THR on the red carpet. “His deal is for the future. And who knows what that holds. Taylor is a brilliant guy, and I’m sure wherever he goes, whatever he does is gonna be successful, at least I know it’ll be real.”

Landman newcomer for this season, Sam Elliot, who plays T.L. and is Tommy’s (Thornton) father, offered a similar take to Thornton. “It’s not gonna impact the future of this series because everything that Taylor had at Paramount is gonna stay at Paramount. It’s not like he’s taking it there,” Elliot told THR. “The Universal thing, as I understand, it’s a whole new deal, so it’s just great for Taylor’s world. I think it’s fantastic.”

When Landman season one premiered in November of last year, it drew 5.2 million viewers, the top Paramount+ series debut in two years since Sheridan’s additional series, Yellowstone prequel 1923, drew 7.4 million cross-platform viewers in December 2022. Thornton went on to describe how he “absolutely” felt pressure to have the second season live up to its predecessor.

“Anytime you have a success and it’s going to continue, there’s always pressure to make sure that it continues. If you’re making movies, you do a sequel, theres always pressure,” he told THR. “So, we felt it, but once you start, you just have to forget that and go out there and do your job.”

Thornton’s TV daughter, Michelle Randolph, who plays Ainsley Norris, thinks Landman won’t be stopping anytime soon. “There’s so many stories to tell. There’s so many really distinct characters, I feel like we could go on and on and on because what I always have to remind myself — the first season was 10 days in the show so I’m like, we could film the show for so long because it’s not like it’s one season, taking place over a year or anything,” she told THR. “There’s so much room for growth in every single character; they’re all deeply flawed in their own ways, which is what makes them really enticing to watch because it’s very human.”

Randolph also described what it was like to welcome Demi Moore back to the ensemble, this time with a larger role. “I love working with Demi. And also, Pilaf was on set, her cute little dog,” she said. “Horoscope-wise, it was the luckiest day of the year, everyone kept telling me, and I was on set with Demi, Sam Elliott, Andy Garcia, Billy Bob, Ali Larter — I just had to pinch myself.”

Landman season two debuts on Paramount+ Nov. 16.

(L-R) Kayla Wallace, Sam Elliott, Demi Moore, Billy Bob Thornton, Ali Larter, Michelle Randolph, Andy García and Paulina Chávez at Paramount+’s ‘Landman’ season two premiere at Alice Tully Hall, Lincoln Center on Nov. 11, 2025 in New York.

Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images

November 12, 2025 0 comments
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Bob Dylan: Through the Open Window: The Bootleg Series Vol. 18 Album Review
Music

Bob Dylan: Through the Open Window: The Bootleg Series Vol. 18 Album Review

by jummy84 November 8, 2025
written by jummy84

In one of the finest moments of sequencing on this set, the next song up is “Boots of Spanish Leather,” an outtake from the Freewheelin’ sessions with Tom Wilson (Dylan would eventually re-record it for The Times They Are A-Changin’ in 1964). The contrast between the rousing chorus of “Blowin’ in the Wind” and the stillness of “Boots” is jarring enough to bring out new aspects of each song, with “Boots” sounding even lonelier, even more despairing. Written during a trip to Italy as his relationship with Suze Rotolo appeared to be crumbling, it sounds intimate and unguarded, intensely private rather than public; he needs a quiet moment to himself in order to rouse an audience with his friends.

Though known in folk circles, Dylan was still struggling to find a larger audience and break through to the pop market. He signed with Columbia in late 1961, which is roughly where Act II begins. He recorded his self-titled debut with John Hammond producing, but it was not the breakout anyone expected. Here’s where you might want to place your bookmark and give that album another listen, just to get a feel for how this young man presented himself to the world; unexpectedly, Bob Dylan might work better as an addendum to this bulky novel than as a standalone release. Even Dylan considered it a failure, both commercially and creatively, and he was moving so fast that these traditional tunes and talking blues were old news by the time it was released.

His follow-up, The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan, did not come easy. He worked through a series of aimless sessions over several months, finally piecemealing an album that wasn’t too dissimilar from his debut. At the last minute Columbia decided that “Talkin’ John Birch Society Paranoid Blues” was potentially libelous and removed it from the album. Dylan was irate, but it worked out in his favor, as it gave him a chance to quickly record several new songs and redo about half the album, including “Girl from the North Country” and “Masters of War”—two of his best compositions from the era. The new tracklist sharpened his Cold War fears while also introducing more intimate struggles, in particular his insecurities about Rotolo. The album toggles gracefully between the public and the private, each lending weight to the other, which contributes to its status as Dylan’s breakthrough as well as just one of the best folk albums ever made.

November 8, 2025 0 comments
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Bob Dylan’s Publisher Seemingly Responsible for Takedown of Zohran Mamdani’s “Times They Are a-Changin’” Ad
Music

Bob Dylan’s Publisher Seemingly Responsible for Takedown of Zohran Mamdani’s “Times They Are a-Changin’” Ad

by jummy84 November 6, 2025
written by jummy84

On the eve of his New York mayoral election victory, Zohran Kwame Mamdani posted an ad on social media soundtracked by Bob Dylan’s “The Times They Are a-Changin’.” The video, like much of Mamdani’s campaign, went viral, as its “New York is a-changin’” slogan rapidly spread across social media. By the following morning, however, it had been removed from X with a takedown notice: “This media has been disabled in response to a report by the copyright holder.” Unsurprisingly, this was not a snub by Dylan himself but an apparent decision by Universal Music Publishing Group (UMPG), The New York Times reports. In a statement, UMPG, which acquired Dylan’s songwriting catalog in 2020, said, “As a longstanding policy, we do not license Bob Dylan compositions for projects involving political figures.”

The publishing company has previously denied a request by the Mamdani campaign to license the song, The Times reports, citing two anonymous sources briefed on the matter. UMPG did not explicitly say it had ordered the ad’s removal; copyright violations are sometimes detected electronically, prompting automatic takedowns. As of Thursday morning (November 6), the video is still available on Instagram and TikTok.

5 Songs That Define Zohran Mamdani’s Campaign for New York Mayor

November 6, 2025 0 comments
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Bob Dylan Rings in His Ears » PopMatters
Music

Bob Dylan Rings in His Ears » PopMatters

by jummy84 November 5, 2025
written by jummy84

W

What did you hear? Really. Blonde on Blonde’s nasally whine or Nashville Skyline’s country croon? Which one is Bob Dylan’s real voice? Despite, or perhaps because of, Dylan’s vocal masks, his voice rings true. Or, according to Steven Rings, author of What Did You Hear? The Music of Bob Dylan, you believe it does. Yes, Dylan is an impersonator, weaving lies to tell truths, bolstered through imperfections, changing from nothing to one—a prestidigitator. You’re believing his every word.

Steven Rings, an Associate Professor of Music and the Humanities at the University of Chicago, has written a highly engaging and accessible book in What Did You Hear?, without compromising depth and theory. Its main proposal is that Dylan’s sonic imperfections are key to understanding his songs and their impact, offering a refreshing and new framework through which to view Dylan’s music.

Also, it is a framework that is seemingly close to Bob Dylan’s modus operandi, in which the emotional weight of a song—for example, “No More Auction Block”, where Dylan’s pathos-laden moans and cyclical guitar strumming contain the cruel fate that awaited thousands of American slaves—matters more than technical perfection. Additionally, in 1979, Dylan saw humanity’s imperfection revealed through God’s light. “Talk about perfection, I ain’t never seen none,” Dylan fulminates in “Ain’t No Man Righteous, No Not One”.

The Carver-esque book title playfully asks, “What Did You Hear?” It seems simple. Obvious. Intrusive. Once you read What Did You Hear?, though, you realize that it is a question with a purpose: to investigate what we are hearing. With an adept ear and an in-depth understanding of music theory, Rings helps readers understand Dylan the performer, rather than the lyricist or songwriter. In other words, it isn’t about Dylan’s compositions but rather a breakdown of how he performs them, live or in the studio.

Bob Dylan’s Perfect Imperfection

Have you ever wondered about Dylan’s upsinging in the wee small hours? How does the music inform the pronunciation of a lyric? No? I understand—you have a life. However, for those of us who don’t, music theorist Rings provides these answers. Furthermore, Rings showcases Dylan’s multifaceted techniques on various instruments, including voice, guitar, harmonica, and piano, all of which are explained without being overly saturated with music theory, and thus potentially denuding Dylan’s music of its poetic appeal.

Helpfully, especially for a book concerned with sound, Rings has a website, which includes all of the book’s audio and video examples. For certain, this is useful, though the book works just as well without referring to the audio examples.

What Did You Hear? is a welcome and indispensable addition to Dylan scholarship—not an easy task, due to the abundance of books written on the elusive subject. What makes this different, though, is that it puts Dylan as a performer first and foremost, with a particular emphasis on his live performances.

In the introduction, Rings postulates that there has been little written about Bob Dylan’s music; instead, the focus has either been on Dylan’s lyrics or him as a cultural/political figure. However, when Rings creates an inventory of books, with its focus primarily on Dylan’s music, it does not cite Todd Harvey’s 2001 book, The Formative Dylan: Transmission and Stylistic Influences, 1961-1963, which seems worthy of inclusion (Harvey is cited on p. 267 and in the references).

Further in the introduction, Rings posits that, in the early 1960s, Bob Dylan blended African American influences with white folk musicians, such as Woody Guthrie, which is, of course, correct. However, what is incorrect, as Rings implies, is that the two sources of Dylan’s influences were separate. Although influenced by white musicians, such as the Carter Family and Jimmie Rodgers, Guthrie was also influenced by African American musicians: Blind Lemon Jefferson and T-Bone Walker; the latter inspired Guthrie’s vocal phrasing.

Apart from the above-mentioned oversights, What Did You Hear? is scrupulously detailed and exhaustively researched. One of the central premises of What Did You Hear? is that, despite many vocal and musical changes, as well as various personae, Dylan always sounds like himself. To a certain extent, this is a novel idea, as Dylan is often portrayed as a shapeshifting figure with each iteration a stranger to the last.

Yet, it makes sense that there would be distinguishable characteristics of Bob Dylan in each of his transformations; this is not unlike what Dylan writes about Dion DiMucci in his 2022 book The Philosophy of Modern Song (a text filled with self-referential remarks), “Dion DiMucci evolved throughout his career, changing outwardly but maintaining recognizable characteristics across every iteration.”

As Rings writes, “…the critical commonplace that Dylan’s voice is merely a series of ‘masks,’ with no persisting core voice. But any fan also knows that one can always perceive Dylan within or behind the mask.” Also, Rings establishes that the quiddity of Bob Dylan is best personified when the singer-songwriter imitates other singers. Put differently, Dylan, paradoxically, becomes more identifiable himself when adopting different personae and masks. This is just one of the numerous astute observations Rings makes in What Did You Hear?

The most interesting section of What Did You Hear? is Part 1: Voicing, especially chapter four. There Rings delineates a spectrum between speech and song, in which he lists five different nodal points: metered speech (e.g., “Frankie Lee and Judas Priest”); syllable-emphatic style (e.g., “Memphis Blues Again”); chant (e.g., “Subterranean Homesick Blues”); contour-inventive style (e.g., “Jokerman”); conventional melody (e.g., “Make You Feel My Love”). In his syllable-emphatic (Rings’ coinage) delivery, Dylan seizes on syllables that we would typically accent, but exaggerates the contrast to the point of mannerism. As Rings writes, “we hear the contours of everyday speech, but in a funhouse mirror.”

Rings addresses another misconception that Dylan’s “true” voice is raspy. As stated by Rings and others, Dylan’s “Nashville Country voice” can be heard in the bootleg recorded at the apartment of Karen Wallace in St. Paul, Minnesota, in May 1960, which, obviously, precedes his rough-hewn folk voice. Thus, what is Dylan’s true voice?

As it is known, Bob Dylan was a rock ‘n’ roller before he became a folk artist, but the two are not mutually exclusive, as Rings points out. The influence of rock ‘n’ roll can be found in his folk period, and vice versa.

As Rings suggests, Dylan’s pedal-to-the-metal acoustic guitar strumming during his folk period was like Buddy Holly, while he was strumming like a folkie when he played the electric guitar in live performances in 1966, which Robbie Robertson disliked. At the Newport Folk Festival, when Dylan went electric, he barely played the electric guitar; it was a symbolic move. Instead, it was Mike Bloomfield, the primary guitarist of Howlin’ Wolf, who made his guitar bleed and scream like Willie Johnson. 

One of the main ideas in What Did You Hear is “flaw imperfection” and “change imperfection”. Essentially, the former refers to an imperfection as a flaw, although it can be purposefully incorporated in old-time music and bluegrass. In contrast, the latter is the difference that arises from repetition, such as when Dylan performs live. Or, as Rings put simply, “he repeats and he differs”.

What Did You Hear? is the musical and vocally equivalent of Christopher Ricks’ book Dylan’s Visions of Sin (2004). Whereas Ricks gave a close reading of Dylan’s lyrics and contextualized them in a literary tradition, mostly in Elizabethan and Romanticism literature, and modernism (cue, T. S. Eliot), Rings exemplifies how Dylan’s music and vocals work in the context of predecessors within different genres: folk, blues, and rock ‘n’ roll.

There has been a paradigm shift in Dylan scholarship aimed at bridging the gap between academia and popular writing, as seen in historian Timothy Hampton’s Bob Dylan: How the Songs Work (2019), one of the best books ever written on Dylan. Indeed, What Did You Hear? showcases that Rings has a sharp mind, abetted by his generosity of spirit. He never overexplains or treats the reader like a fool; he makes his points with a deftness.

There are moments in What Did You Hear? when Rings lets go of formality and becomes a writer with a gut-punch swagger. For example: “There is still some wobble in the voice, but the overall tone is one of fuck-you confidence, of definitely claiming an identity in the face of bourgeois reproach. Instead of balled fists, a middle finger.”

These sections are surprising as they are refreshing; they punctuate the text with a humanity, and display a writer who takes his ideas—not himself—seriously. (For What Did You Hear?, Rings hasn’t thankfully adopted academic writing, which is often as lifeless as a mortuary, leaving you feel as dead as the body of the text, and wishing that you were dead, as at least then you wouldn’t have to read desiccated prose.)

There is a scintillating idea on p.186, where Rings links Dylan’s harmonica playing to the accordion, after reading a quote by Dylan, in which he said he plays the harmonica like an accordion. Rings traces it to Robert Zimmerman’s childhood in Hibbing, when, in the 1950s, polka bands performed in taverns on Saturday nights. However, I wished Rings had expanded on the point (I like the idea; I’m already half-convinced), and listed examples of polka artists/bands Zimmerman would have heard—Six Fat Dutchmen, Whoopee John Wilfahrt, and Harold Loeffelmacher—and linked them to his harmonica playing, if, of course, the theory holds up.

In the postscript, Rings interestingly states that Bob Dylan’s sounds approach a second-order perfection in their fidelity to imperfect life, an emotional truth which is perhaps a kind of perfection. Indeed, What Did You Hear? carries a lot of emotional truth. Is What Did You Hear a perfect book? I‘ve never read one, and, like listening to Bob Dylan’s imperfect voice, I don’t expect that I ever will.

November 5, 2025 0 comments
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Sydney Sweeney's ‘Bleached Suede’ Hair is the Perfect Blonde for a Fall Bob
Fashion

Sydney Sweeney’s ‘Bleached Suede’ Hair is the Perfect Blonde for a Fall Bob

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Sydney Sweeney has hopped onto the fall bob bandwagon—and she found the perfect blonde to match it.

On October 25, the 28-year-old actor unveiled a completely fresh look on the Christy premiere red carpet, starting with a chin-length chop by celebrity hairstylist Glen Coco Oropeza. According to Oropeza’s Instagram post, the transformation from mermaid hair to chin-length waves took an entire week and began when she was still rocking her dark blonde hair. You can watch his video—and check out the Kerastase products he used to achieve the blunt bob—here.

Now let’s talk about the color crafted by celebrity hair colorist Jacob Schwartz. According to a press release, the bright “bleached suede blonde” transformation was developed to suit her new bob, brightening her her previous “dark suede” tone to create a “luminous pale blonde with soft golden undertones that still feels natural and dimensional.”

Sydney Sweeney on October 18, 2025.

John Shearer

Sydney Sweeney on October 25 2025.

Sydney Sweeney on October 25, 2025.

Maya Dehlin Spach

This is the part you send to your own stylist. To achieve this look on Sydney Sweeney, Schwartz stared by “lifting the base” with Schwarzkopf Professional Igora Royal before adding highlights using Schwarzkopf Professional Igora Vario Blond Super Plus Lightener. He then used Schwarzkopf Professional Igora Vibrance to “subtly blend the roots and base, creating a seamless transition and glossy finish.”

Finally, Schwartz utilized the balayage technique to further brightening the ends of her bob, et voilà. You can find the exact formulas and timing on his Instagram post.

Sydney Sweeney arrives at the 2025 AFI Fest “Christy” premiere at TCL Chinese Theater on October 25 2025.

Sydney Sweeney arrives at the 2025 AFI Fest “Christy” premiere at TCL Chinese Theater on October 25, 2025.

Steve Granitz

October 27, 2025 0 comments
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Bob Vylan hit back at "scare tactic" of British Airways dropping sponsorship of Louis Theroux podcast
Music

Bob Vylan hit back at “scare tactic” of British Airways dropping sponsorship of Louis Theroux podcast

by jummy84 October 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Bob Vylan frontman Bobby Vylan has hit back at British Airways after it pulled its Louis Theroux podcast sponsorship.

At this year’s Glastonbury Festival, the punk duo delivered a controversial performance on the West Holts Stage, using their platform to voice their support for the people of Palestine, call out the Israeli military and criticise the BBC, as well as the UK and US governments.

In the most provocative moment of the set, Vylan told the huge crowd, “have you heard this one?”, before leading a chant of “death, death to the IDF”. It led to a criminal investigation from Avon and Somerset Police, as well as the cancellation of multiple international shows and the revocation of their US visas.

Earlier this week, he gave his first in-depth interview on the subject on The Louis Theroux Podcast, in which he said he was “not regretful” of his remarks at Glasto, adding: “I’d do it again tomorrow, twice on Sundays. I’m not regretful of it at all.”

This has since led to British Airways withdrawing its adverts from the podcast, saying that the content breached its sponsorship policy.

Make no mistake, this is a scare tactic. I went on the podcast and as hard as the lobby groups and media tried, they couldn’t twist anything I said. So they have resorted to lobbying for Louis’ sponsorship to be pulled in an attempt to scare others out of giving me a platform. https://t.co/lxmsX0aZlt

— Bob Vylan (@BobbyVylan) October 26, 2025

Taking to X, earlier today (October 26) Vylan hit back at the move, writing: “Make no mistake, this is a scare tactic. I went on the podcast and as hard as the lobby groups and media tried, they couldn’t twist anything I said. So they have resorted to lobbying for Louis’ sponsorship to be pulled in an attempt to scare others out of giving me a platform.”

In a follow up tweet, he wrote: “They thought they were going to get a dumb angry punk ranting. Instead they got articulate and considered responses to each question with facts to back it up when needed. Their hope to further vilify me couldn’t run, so they target Louis to make an example for sitting with me.

“The lobby groups, the British government and media are determined to make an example of me, all because I dare to want an end to a genocidal occupying force guilty of war crimes.”

The lobby groups, the British government and media are determined to make an example of me, all because I dare to want an end to a genocidal occupying force guilty of war crimes.

— Bob Vylan (@BobbyVylan) October 26, 2025

Upon removing the sponsorship, a spokesperson for BA said via The Guardian: “Our sponsorship of the series has now been paused and the advert has been removed.”

“We’re grateful that this was brought to our attention, as the content clearly breaches our sponsorship policy in relation to politically sensitive or controversial subject matters,” the statement continued.

“We and our third-party media agency have processes in place to ensure these issues don’t occur and we’re investigating how this happened.”

NME has contacted BA for a response on Bobby Vylan’s latest comments.

In the podcast with Theroux, Vylan said the backlash he had faced was “minimal”, adding: “It’s minimal compared to what people in Palestine are going through. If that can be my contribution and if I can have my Palestinian friends and people that I meet from Palestine that have had to flee, that have lost members in double digits of their family and they can say: ‘Yo, your chant, I love it.’ Or it gave me a breath of fresh air or whatever.”

He also said that he did not want to overstate the importance of the chant. “That’s not what I’m trying to do, but if I have their support, they’re the people that I’m doing it for, they’re the people that I’m being vocal for, then what is there to regret? Oh, because I’ve upset some rightwing politician or some rightwing media?”

Earlier this week, the duo rescheduled their headline shows in Manchester and Leeds “due to political pressure” from MPs and Jewish leaders.

The gigs were originally set to be the first two stops on the London punk-rap duo’s 2025 ‘We Won’t Go Quietly’ UK and Ireland tour. They had been scheduled to perform at Leeds’ O2 Academy on November 4, before heading to Manchester Academy the following night (5).

The duo also recently released their new single, ‘Sick Sad World’, where they called out Prime Minister Keir Starmer and “the BBC’s lies“.

October 26, 2025 0 comments
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Sydney Sweeney Unveils A Short Bleached Bob
Fashion

Sydney Sweeney Unveils A Short Bleached Bob

by jummy84 October 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Tonight, Sydney Sweeney continues her press run for her upcoming biopic, Christy, with a premiere in Los Angeles. In honor of the exciting moment, the star chose to do something drastic—chop and dye her waist-skimming locks. Of course, her go-to hair team, colorist Jacob Schwartz and hairstylist Glen Coco, were on hand for the transformation.

“Sydney was looking for a change and wanted to have a big hair moment for the red carpet to support her new movie, Christy,” says Schwartz, who worked with Schwarzkopf Professional products to do the color transformation in a single day. “It felt like the perfect time to do something bold.”

And bold it was. Schwartz described Sweeney’s hair as a “dark suede blonde”—natural and rooty. This look is much more monochromatic and overall a much brighter blonde than before. “It’s more of an icy blonde,” Schwartz adds. “The color really makes her eyes and features pop and complements the cut so well.”

In the film, Sweeney’s character goes through her own hair transformations, including a brunette curly mullet, a shaggy pixie, and blonde box braids. But when it comes to real life, Sweeney chose to join Team Bob (other fans include Zoe Kravitz and Pamela Anderson).

“This is a transformation,” Coco says of the blunt, chin-skimming haircut, adding that it’s the shortest that her hair has ever been. “Christy has a lot of underlying tones of resilience, transformation, and power. Sydney herself transformed herself for this role, and I wanted to morph her into this updated version of herself in real life. Something new and fresh to close out the rest of the year.”

Sydney Sweeney’s Hair Throughout the Years

Europa Press News/Getty Images

October 26, 2025 0 comments
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Final Trailers for Texas Oil Series 'Landman' - Season 2 with Billy Bob
Hollywood

Final Trailers for Texas Oil Series ‘Landman’ – Season 2 with Billy Bob

by jummy84 October 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Final Trailers for Texas Oil Series ‘Landman’ – Season 2 with Billy Bob

by Alex Billington
October 24, 2025
Source: YouTube

“You don’t even know the game you’re playing, do you?” Paramount+ has revealed one final official trailer for the next thrilling season of the West Texas oil series called Landman, created by Taylor Sheridan. The first season dropped in November last year – the second season is already lined up to drop in November this year. The first was a huge hit and Sheridan moves fast – it’s shot entirely on location in Texas and he loves to go big when something clicks with audiences. Billy Bob Thornton is returns again as an oil man in this series based on the “Boomtown” podcast series (and real stories from the oil biz down in Texas). “You think you understand how this business works, but you don’t.” Things are heating up in this season of Landman. Tommy faces new pressures at home and also at M-Tex Oil, where Cami pushes him to the brink. Don’t be surprised if something – or someone – breaks. The returning cast includes Thornton with Demi Moore, Ali Larter, Jacob Lofland, Michelle Randolph, Paulina Chávez, Kayla Wallace, Mark Collie, and James Jordan. Major new roles in Season 2 include Colm Feore, Andy Garcia (from the end of Season 1), and Sam Elliott. This looks even more intense to watch! Crime and corruption and oil go hand-in-hand.

Here’s all three trailers (+ final poster) for Taylor Sheridan’s series Landman – Season 2, from YouTube:

Landman Season 2 Trailer

Landman – Season 2 picks up after the shocking events of the show’s Season 1 cliffhanger… In Season 2, Tommy faces new pressures at home and also at M-Tex Oil, where Cami pushes him to the brink. Don’t be surprised if something – or someone – breaks. Landman is a series created and written by acclaimed writer / producer Taylor Sheridan (Sicario, Hell or High Water, Wind River, “Yellowstone”, “1883”, “1923”, “Tulsa King”, “Lawmen: Bass Reeves”) & podcaster Christian Wallace. Based on the “Boomtown” podcast hosted by Christian Wallace. With episodes directed by TV director Stephen Kay (“Covert Affairs”, “Coyote”, “New Amsterdam”, “Yellowstone”, “Mayor of Kingstown”, “Lioness”). Made by MTV Studios, 101 Studios, Bosque Ranch Prods, Imperative Development. Executive produced by Christian Wallace, Taylor Sheridan, David Glasser, David Hutkin, Ronald Burkle, Bob Yari, Geyer Kosinski, Dan Friedkin, Jason Hoch, Scott Brown, Megan Creydt, Peter Feldman, Michael Friedman, Stephen Kay, J. K. Nickell. Paramount will debut Season 2 of Landman series streaming on Paramount+ starting November 16th, 2025. Ready for more?

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