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Louis C.K. Defends Performing at Riyadh Comedy Fest
TV & Streaming

Louis C.K. Defends Performing at Riyadh Comedy Fest

by jummy84 October 4, 2025
written by jummy84

Louis C.K. is explaining why he decided to take part in Saudi Arabia‘s Riyadh Comedy Festival.

During his Friday appearance on Real Time With Bill Maher, he defended his choice to perform at the comedy festival that has stirred up controversy since it kicked off last Friday. The topic of comics being prohibited to not make jokes about certain themes came up in his conversation with Bill Maher, to which C.K. said the fellow comedians he know who have been at the fest have “been really surprised by what’s going on.”

“When I’m talking to the other comedians who have been there, they’ve been really surprised by what’s going on. There’s a woman who’s a lesbian and Jewish, who did a show there, and she got a standing ovation. So, there’s stuff going on that’s unexpected in this thing,” he said. “People have been playing Saudi Arabia for years. Comedians have been going and playing Arab countries. There was a film festival there recently, it’s kind of opened up. But I’ve always said no to Arab countries.”

C.K. continued, “And when this came up, they said there’s only two restrictions — their religion and their government, I don’t have jokes about those two things. It used to be when I got offers from places like that, there would be a long list, and I’d just say, ‘No, I don’t need that.’ But when I heard it’s opening, I thought, that’s awfully interesting. That just feels like a good opportunity. And I just feel like comedy is a great way to get in and start talking.”

Riyadh Fest began Sept. 26 and will end Oct. 9. Alongside C.K., Bill Burr, Dave Chappelle, Jimmy Carr, Kevin Hart, Pete Davidson, Whitney Cummings, Russell Peters, Gabriel Iglesias and Andrew Schulz, among others, are featured on the lineup.

Last week, Atsuko Okatsuka shared details from her offer to appear at Riyadh, which outlined “censorship rules” against performing jokes on outlined topics. David Cross, too, slammed those who chose to perform, writing on his website, “I am disgusted, and deeply disappointed in this whole gross thing. That people I admire, with unarguable talent, would condone this totalitarian fiefdom for…what, a fourth house? A boat? More sneakers?”

Before that, Marc Maron spoke out against those participating in the comedy festival.

“I mean, how do you even promote that? You know, like, ‘From the folks that brought you 9/11. Two weeks of laughter in the desert, don’t miss it!’” Maron said. “I mean, the same guy that’s gonna pay them is the same guy that paid that guy to bone saw [journalist] Jamal Khashoggi and put him in a fucking suitcase. But don’t let that stop the yucks, it’s gonna be a good time!”

The Emmy winner acknowledged the wider conversation about the festival. “I had mixed feelings about it too. I struggled about going once I heard what everybody was saying,” C.K. said. “There’s some good in it, maybe some bad in it. But for me, I think it cuts toward going. That’s my decision, and I know where it’s coming from, because I can see right inside myself.”

C.K. added, “I love stand-up comedy, and I love comedians. So, the fact that that’s opening up and starting to bud, I wanna see it, I wanna be part of it. I think that’s a positive thing.”

The six-time Emmy winner is slated to perform at Riyadh Fest on Monday alongside Carr.

October 4, 2025 0 comments
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Lola Young Collapses Onstage During All Things Go Fest Performance
Music

Lola Young Collapses Onstage During All Things Go Fest Performance

by jummy84 September 28, 2025
written by jummy84

Lola Young collapsed onstage while performing at All Things Go in New York City on Saturday. The singer suffered a medical emergency while singing “Conceited” and was carried offstage by a medical team.

Remi Wolf later appeared onstage, where she addressed the crowd, stating, “That was really f—— scary.” She added, “My friend Lola is backstage, and she is okay.” The crowd cheered in support.

A few hours later, Young uploaded an Instagram story where she wrote, “For anyone who saw my set at all things go today, i am doing okay now. Thank you for all of your support Lola xxx.”

Earlier in the set, Young spoke about how she “had a tricky couple of days,” adding: “Sometimes life can really make you feel like you can’t continue, but you know what, today I woke up and I made the decision to come here, and I wanted to be cool … and sometimes life can throw you lemons, and you just gotta make lemonade.”

A rep for Young did not immediately respond to Rolling Stone‘s request for comment.

The incident came one day after Young pulled out of Audacy’s We Can Survive concert in Newark, New Jersey, on Friday night. Hours before the start of the charity show, Young’s manager Nick Shymansky revealed on Young’s Instagram story that he advised her not to perform as a “protective measure to keep her safe.”

“Unfortunately due to a sensitive matter I have advised Lola Young to pull out of performing at Audacy – We Can Survive @ Prudential [Center] this evening,” Shymansky wrote. “Lola is very open about her mental health and there are very occasionally days when myself and my team have to take protective measures to keep her safe.”

Shymansky ended the statement by adding, “She is an incredible person and always takes her fans, career and performances seriously. I can only send huge apologies for the inconvenience caused.”

A spokesperson for Audacy shared their support for the singer in a statement to Rolling Stone: “We support Lola and her mental health and wish her the very best. We thank fans for their understanding.”

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Young has described her battles with mental health in the past. “It’s very important that I’ve been open about it because it’s given the leeway for other people to be open about it and the drive for other people to reach out and say how much it has helped them,” she told Rolling Stone, citing occasional episodes that have taken place in front of collaborators, and how writing through them has resulted in some of her most raw work to date.

Friday’s canceled show comes just a week after the singer released her new LP,  I’m Only F**king Myself. Young had a breakout hit with the 2024 track “Messy,” and previously released the 2023 album My Mind Wanders and Sometimes Leaves Completely and the 2024 album This Wasn’t Meant for You Anyway.

September 28, 2025 0 comments
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Post Malone, Lainey Wilson Pull Up For Stagecoach Fest
Music

Post Malone, Lainey Wilson Pull Up For Stagecoach Fest

by jummy84 September 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Post Malone, Lainey Wilson and Cody Johnson will headline the annual Stagecoach festival on April 24-26 at Empire Polo Club in Indio, Ca., as part of a wildly diverse lineup that moves ever farther from the event’s country roots.

Although genre mainstays such as Bailey Zimmerman, Brooks & Dunn, Riley Green, Lyle Lovett, Wynonna Judd, Little Big Town and Red Clay Strays will be in attendance, Stagecoach will also play host to borderline head-scratchers such as Journey, Pitbull, rappers BigXthaPlug and Ludacris, Third Eye Blind, the Wallflowers and Counting Crows.

In addition, Diplo will return for the sixth year of his Diplo’s HonkTonk, and chef Guy Fieri will reprise his Stagecoach Smokehouse with BBQ tastings and cooking demos. Tickets go on sale Oct. 2 for the fest, which sold out in advance in 2025 and takes place at the same venue that hosts the Coachella festival the prior two April weekends. Amazon Music is back as the livestream partner.

“My first Stagecoach was in 2022 on the SiriusXM Stage at 2:30PM in the afternoon,” recalls Wilson. “Look how far we’ve come, y’all! I’m honored to headline this year. This is a career highlight and I can’t wait to see everyone there.” Adds Johnson, “I’ll never forget the first time I got the call to play Stagecoach. We were on one of the smaller stages and I remember wondering if anyone would even know our songs. Now, here we are invited back to headline the Mane Stage. What a ride. I hope y’all bring the energy, because it’s gonna get western.”

Meanwhile, the winner of the CBS competition show The Road, which premieres Oct. 19, will perform on the Mane Stage and take home a $250,000 prize.

September 26, 2025 0 comments
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Riot Fest 2025 Was a Celebration with Green Day, Blink-182: Review + Photos
Music

Riot Fest 2025 Was a Celebration with Green Day, Blink-182: Review + Photos

by jummy84 September 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Last week, Coachella dropped its 2025 lineup and, unsurprisingly, it sparked quite a bit of discourse. Echoing sentiments lobbed at Lollapalooza in previous years, many felt like Coachella’s three pop star headliners marked a shift away from the festival’s alternative roots. Luckily, there’s a festival in the Windy City that has dug its feet into the ground, remained independent, and kept the ethos of its founding days intact: Riot Fest.

The punk-leaning event celebrated its 20th anniversary this past weekend at Douglass Park in Chicago, boasting a pop punk holy trinity of headliners in Blink-182, Weezer, and Green Day, as well as an impressive undercard consisting of both scene veterans and exciting newbies. The whole shebang was certainly grander in scale than Riot Fest’s earliest editions, but its spunky core remains — RIOT FEST SUCKS, as they say. Acts like The Effigies, Alkaline Trio, Smoking Popes, Bad Religion, and a host of others were even ripped right from lineups of Riot Fest’s past; say what you want about punk rockers, but if Riot Fest has proven anything over the past two decades, it’s that they’re remarkably consistent.

Get Weezer Tickets Here

With a deep lineup, an everlasting spirit of rebellion, and the final payoff for years of John Stamos jokes, this year’s edition was a celebration to be proud of. Better yet, it was a celebration that was damn fun to take part in.

For those looking to relive the three days of festivities, or who missed out on all of the hoopla, here’s everything that went down at Riot Fest 2025 (plus, scroll on for a photo gallery of action shots).

September 23, 2025 0 comments
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John Stamos Appears at Riot Fest After Organizers' 12-Year Pursuit
Music

John Stamos Appears at Riot Fest After Organizers’ 12-Year Pursuit

by jummy84 September 21, 2025
written by jummy84

A dozen years after organizers failed to book fictional Full House band Jesse and the Rippers in 2013, the actor finally takes the Riot Fest stage via the Beach Boys

John Stamos finally made his debut at Chicago’s Riot Fest on Saturday, performing alongside the Beach Boys in an appearance that was a dozen years in the making.

Organizers had been pursuing Stamos since 2013, when they first offered a set to the actor’s fictional Full House band Jesse and the Rippers. The overtures became increasingly more aggressive and madcap: A statue of Stamos made out of butter, dubbed “Butter Stamos,” was constructed, while additional headline-grabbing stunts — like a John Stamos art show in 2017 — were staged in subsequent years to grab the actor’s attention.

Earlier this summer, Riot Fest revealed that they had finally found a loophole to force Stamos to visit the festival: By recruiting the Beach Boys, who currently employ the actor as a touring member. Stamos “begrudgingly” accepted the invite.

However, Stamos dictated a list of outlandish demands in August in order to secure his participation: Riot Fest founder Riot Mike must get a tattoo of the actor (which he did last month), a local Chicago pizza place must offer a Greece-themed pie, a Stamos lookalike contest, Stamos-approved merch, a festival-wide mandate that no one make eye contact with his hair, etc.

With his demands met, Stamos finally took the Riot Fest stage on Saturday. “WE DID IT,” the festival exclaimed on social media.

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In addition to performing with the Beach Boys, the actor partook in many of the Stamos-themed festivities, including posing alongside “Butter Stamos” and wearing merch bearing his own name.

Stamos later shared his own post on social media featuring highlights from his long-awaited day at the festival. “‘Wouldn’t It Be Nice’ if I went to Riot Fest?” he quipped.

September 21, 2025 0 comments
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Riot Mike hard at work with his many whiteboards. (Photo courtesy of Riot Fest.)
Music

Riot Mike Talks Riot Fest at 20

by jummy84 September 21, 2025
written by jummy84

In 2005, what began as a modest multi-venue, fan-driven punk event in Chicago has morphed into a large-scale outdoor event that continues to mark its territory as one of the most impressive independent music fests in the country.

Over the years, it’s ballooned in popularity thanks to its anything goes and everything happens here reputation. Where else could you see this year’s lineup of Jack White, “Weird Al” Yankovic, Idles, Mac Sabbath, Hanson, and Rilo Kiley play on the same bill? What other event offers carnival rides, a wedding chapel, arcade, wrestling match, and museum to catch in between acts? Who else would stalk John Stamos for 12 years in a bid to try to get the fictional Jesse & The Rippers to reunite? (Organizers played the long game well as Uncle Jesse has finally agreed to make an appearance this year with the Beach Boys.) Riot Fest has led the charge in actual impressive reunions, too, like goading the Replacements, the Misfits, and Jawbreaker to take the stage together again. And they’ve been instigators for a range of exclusive full album plays—this year alone features Weezer playing the Blue Album, the Pogues delivering Rum Sodomy & The Lash, and Bad Religion doing a front to back of Suffer, among a dozen other bands taking part.

A view of the crowd during Riot Fest 2021 at Douglass Park on September 17, 2021, in Chicago. (Credit: Daniel Boczarski/Getty Images)

This is all to say it’s unfathomable that it almost never happened. Co-founder Mike Petryshyn (aka Riot Mike to many in the music community) can still remember a time when he never saw the homegrown event getting past a year-one fling.

“After 2005 was done, I didn’t want to do it anymore,” he admits during a recent call from Riot Fest HQ on the west side of Chicago. In the beginning, he was just a fan who worked days at a law firm and had a pipe dream to see all his favorite punk rock bands like Dead Kennedys, the Misfits, and the Germs play the same weekend. By the end of it, though, he was exhausted, stressed to the max and wanted out. “I didn’t know anything. I didn’t know the music business. I just did it by cold calling bands,” he adds. But one MySpace message in the spring of 2006 changed everything.

It was from Eric Spicer, drummer of Naked Raygun, Chicago’s legendary punk rock band whose influential sound—a blend of near-hardcore and melodic hooks with an underbelly of lyrical realism—helped develop a local breeding ground, extending its tentacles in Pegboy, the Effigies and Steve Albini’s Big Black while fostering a future line of descendants like Rise Against, Fall Out Boy, and Alkaline Trio. “They were the most important band to ever come out of this city. … And they changed the trajectory of Chicago music. One case in point is me,” says Petryshyn. When he got the memo from Spicer, Petryshyn recalls, “I didn’t believe it was real. He was like, ‘I saw what you did last year. I thought it was pretty cool. Would you ever consider Naked Raygun for it?’” At the time, the band had been dormant since 1992. But within a few months, Spicer, vocalist Jeff Pezzati, guitarist Bill Stephens and late bassist Pierre Kezdy were rehearsing again and Riot Fest was back on. “Without them, there’d be no Riot, nope. Zero chance,” says Petryshyn. “I would have never done year two.”

(Courtesy of Riot Fest)(Courtesy of Riot Fest)
(Courtesy of Riot Fest)

Riot Mike is just one of a handful of card-carrying members in the Naked Raygun fan club. Another is Dave Grohl. In his Sonic Highways documentary, Grohl tells of catching a pivotal 1982 show from the punk rockers at Chicago’s Cubby Bear club, which laid the seeds for his own music career. “And Billie Joe,” pipes in Petryshyn. “Every time Green Day plays Chicago, it’s always, ‘This song goes out to Naked Raygun.’”

When it comes to the band’s legacy, which will be told in a forthcoming biography on PM Press in 2027, Petryshyn has his own point of view. “They are one of the smartest bands I’ve ever seen. What I love about Naked Raygun is that you could always tell who wrote the song. I mean, clearly you have Jeff who’s the main songwriter. But Eric’s songs are phenomenal. Pierre’s songs are deep and a lot are not what you think they’re about. But besides that, they have their own sound. Nobody sounds like them … it was very experimental and when you hear [albums] All Rise and Understand? and Jettison, they sound like Chicago.”

He adds, “In many ways, there’s this parallel to Minneapolis, and not that they sound like the Replacements or Hüsker Dü, they really don’t. But that same kind of feeling, like we’re not from L.A. or New York … They are of a working-class kind. They’re from Chicago. It’s tough. Chicago has always been an island. But the influence lived on years later into Nirvana, to Jawbreaker, because the music resonated. … Before anybody knew what Riot Fest was in the early years, if a band or somebody heard about Naked Raygun, it was like, holy shit that’s cool.”

Naturally, the punk vets will help fete Riot Fest’s milestone year this weekend with a just-announced closing night after show at Chicago’s Metro on Sunday. “There was no better way to end it than with the band that really started it all,” says Petryshyn of the full-circle moment, which truly began when he first heard their music after picking up their CD at Home of the Hits in his native Buffalo, New York. “Daryl [Taberski] from Snapcase was working there because the band was in between tours. I went in and was like, ‘I’m tired of everything I’m listening to. Give me something different.’ And he was like, ‘You gotta listen to Naked Raygun.’” Years later, Petryshyn’s first time seeing the band live was their very first Riot Fest rehearsal in 2006, and it’s the only band he’d proudly tell the tale of breaking some ribs for while stage-diving.

“We did a couple of legendary secret shows. I saw [Pegboy’s] Larry Damore show up and stage dive. And he’s big, he’s like a linebacker. … So when he dove and he got caught, I’m like okay, I’m gonna pick my spot,” Petryshyn recalls. “One of my favorite songs is ‘Treason’ and when it gets quiet into that guitar solo … the best guitar solo in punk rock, that’s when I was like I’m going to do this. But yeah, nobody caught me and I slammed right into that hard floor at [Chicago’s] Cobra Lounge. I didn’t know right away that I broke anything. It wasn’t until the next day I went to the hospital and got an X-ray because I was having trouble breathing.” But if you ask Petryshyn if it was all worth it—the broken bones, the 20 years of making Riot Fest the unique unicorn it continues to be, he’s quick to answer: “Oh, absolutely.” 

September 21, 2025 0 comments
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Blink-182 joined by Descendents' Stephen Egerton and reunite with Alkaline Trio's Matt Skiba at Riot Fest 2025
Music

Blink-182 joined by Descendents’ Stephen Egerton and reunite with Alkaline Trio’s Matt Skiba at Riot Fest 2025

by jummy84 September 21, 2025
written by jummy84

Blink-182 were joined by the Descendents’ Stephen Egerton and reunited with Alkaline Trio’s Matt Skiba at Riot Fest 2025 – watch below.

The 20th anniversary of the punk festival took place this weekend in Chicago’s Douglass Park, with Green Day and Weezer topping the bill on the other two days.

During their Friday night headline show (September 19), Blink-182 were joined by longtime Descendents guitarist Egerton for a cover of the latter band’s classic 1982 track ‘Hope’, from their influential debut album ‘Milo Goes To College’. The song has been a regular presence on Blink setlists in 2025, although before this year they had not played it since 2003.

Watch fan-captured footage of the cover here:

Elsewhere in the set, Blink were joined by Alkaline Trio frontman Skiba, who was also a member of Blink-182 as a replacement for Tom DeLonge from 2015 to 2022. They played ‘Bored To Death’ – the first song the band released with Skiba as a co-vocalist, and a track that has appeared on Blink setlists sporadically in 2025. Watch here:

Blink-182 played: 

‘The Rock Show’ 
‘First Date’ 
‘Josie’ 
‘Anthem Part Two’ 
‘Online Songs’ 
‘M+M’s’ 
‘Fuck Face’ 
‘Dumpweed’ 
‘Feeling This’ 
‘Down’ 
‘Turpentine’ 
‘Bored To Death’ (with Matt Skiba) 
‘Wishing Well’ 
‘Stay Together For The Kids’ 
‘Roller Coaster’ 
‘Dance With Me’ 
‘I Miss You’ 
‘More Than You Know’ 
‘Hope’ (with Stephen Egerton) 
‘What’s My Age Again?’ 
‘All The Small Things’ 
‘Dammit’ 

Alkaline Trio have been the opening band on Blink-182’s current ‘Missionary Impossible’ tour, which kicked off in late August and has dates remaining across the country before its conclusion in Palm Desert, California on October 4. See all the dates and ticket information here.

When DeLonge left Blink in 2015, Skiba stepped in on guitar and vocals, recording two albums: 2016’s ‘California’ and 2019’s ‘Nine’. Upon DeLonge’s return to the band, Skiba departed, but he did join them again for ‘Bored To Death’ during their Los Angeles wildfire benefit concert earlier this year.

After DeLonge rejoined, he wrote an open letter to Skiba in which he said, “Hi Matt, Tom DeLonge here,” he wrote. “I wanted to take a minute and say thank you for all that you have done to keep the band thriving in my absence. I think you are enormously talented (I still love and listen to your band to this day).”

For his part, Skiba said he was “truly happy” for his former bandmates and DeLonge.

Speaking to NME about joining Blink-182, Skiba said he got a lot of hate for stepping into DeLonge’s shoes, but “it only lasted until we started playing shows.”

He added: “The overwhelming amount of support and graciousness the fans have shown me overpowers any hate or shit-talking. It feels like our band – Mark, Travis, me and the fans. It’s not the same band without Tom but it has the same name, and I think there’s a good reason for that.”

As for Descendents, they played a joint UK and European tour earlier this year with Circle Jerks.

September 21, 2025 0 comments
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Hawaii Film Fest To Open With ‘Rental Family’; Screen ‘No Other Choice’
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Hawaii Film Fest To Open With ‘Rental Family’; Screen ‘No Other Choice’

by jummy84 September 18, 2025
written by jummy84

EXCLUSIVE: This year’s Hawai’i International Film Festival (HIFF) will open with Rental Family, starring Brendan Fraser, and has set Park Chan-wook’s No Other Choice as its Centrepiece Film. 

Fraser stars as a down-and-out American actor adrift in Tokyo in Rental Family, which was filmed in Japan. The film is directed by Japan-born, US-based filmmaker and former actress Hikari, who has also directed episodes of Tokyo Vice and Netflix series Beef. No Other Choice, fresh from critical acclaim at the Venice and Toronto film festivals, has also just screened as the opening film of Busan International Film Festival.

Park is also being honoured with the Vision In Film Award at HIFF, which will also present a Career Achievement Award to New Zealand actress Melanie Lynksey (Pike River) and Maverick Award to Japanese director and action choreographer Kenji Tanigaki (The Furious). Japanese comedian Yuriyan Retriever will receive the festival’s New Vanguard Award. 

In addition, the creative team behind Apple TV+ series Chief Of War – inspired by Native Hawaiian history and co-created by Jason Momoa and Thomas Pa‘a Sibbett – will be presented with a Trailblazer Award. The team also includes producer Brian Keaulana and many members of the Kānaka Maoli and Pacific Islander community. 

HIFF is also launching its first ever industry conference in Honolulu, which will bring together Hawai’i’s creative community with visiting filmmakers and film agencies from across the Asia Pacific Rim. 

Keynote speakers set to attend HIFILM Industry Conference (October 24–26) include former Amazon Original Movies head of physical production Glenn Gainor, who has launched new outfit Hollywood Ventures; and Oscar-winning documentary director Ben Proudfoot (The Queen Of Basketball), who recently directed The Eyes Of Ghana, produced by the Obamas. The conference will also present a deep dive into the writing and production of Chief Of War.

“This new platform brings together a cross-section of professionals from across the industry – Sundance alums, Academy Award winners, Hollywood execs, international co-production experts, and cultural workers to examine how production impacts real communities, both above and below the line,” said HIFF Artistic Director Anderson Le.

“At a time of massive paradigm shifts, especially in Hawai’i, it’s vital we explore these real-world effects and anticipate the trends shaping the future of storytelling as it pertains to authenticity and the global marketplace.”

In total, HIFF will screen 72 features and 143 short films from 44 countries. The festival has expanded its shorts programming as it’s the only festival in the State of Hawaii to be an Academy Award qualifier for short films. Two awards will be handed out in the shorts categories – Best Short Film and the Best Made in Hawaii Award, dedicated to short films from Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders.

HIFF will also present the HIFF Kau Ka Hōkū (Shooting Star) Award to the best emerging filmmaker at the festival and the Pasifika Award for Best Feature Film, which focuses on films with a Pacific Islander perspective. The nominees for both awards are listed below. 

Other highlights include titles from Sundance, Cannes, Toronto and Busan film festivals along with major films from the Asia Pacific Rim that will screen at HIFF before their domestic releases. Best of fest titles include Jafar Panahi’s It Was Just An Accident, Lav Diaz’ Magellan, Oliver Laxe’s Sirat, Mascha Schlininski’s The Sound Of Falling and Kleber Mendonca’s The Secret Agent.

“HIFF45 continues our legacy of showcasing the most exciting and groundbreaking voices in global cinema, while also creating a vital hub for industry exchange through our inaugural HIFILM Industry Conference,” said HIFF Executive Director Beckie Stocchetti. 

The fest is scheduled to run October 15-26 in Honolulu and October 28-30 in West O`ahu, followed by screenings on Maui (Oct 19-20), Lana`I (Oct 21-23),  Kaua`I (Nov 1-3), Big Island (Waimea, Nov 7-9), Maui (Nov 8-9) Big Island (Hilo, Nov 13-16) and Moloka`I (Nov 14-16). 

HIFF45 KAU KA HŌKŪ (SHOOTING STAR) AWARD NOMINEES:

A Paradise Lost (Hawai’i, US)
World Premiere
Director: Laurie Sumiye
 
Ainu Puri (Japan)
North American Premiere
Director: Takeshi Fukunaga
 
Before The Bright Day (Taiwan)
US Premiere
Director: Shih-Han Tsao
 
Before The Moon Falls (Hawai’i, US)
US Premiere
Director: Kimberlee Bassford
 
Food Delivery: Fresh From The Philippine Sea (Philippines)
US Premiere
Director: Baby Ruth Villarama
 
Fwends (Australia)
North American Premiere
Director: Sophie Somerville
 
Ky Nam Inn (Vietnam)
US Premiere
Director: Leon Le
 
Left-Handed Girl (Taiwan)
Hawai‘i Premiere
Director: Shih-Ching Tsou
 
Lucky Lu (US, Taiwan)
Hawai‘I Premiere
Director: Lloyd Lee Choi 
 
Mag Mag (Japan)
Hawai‘i Premiere
Director: Yuriyan Retriever
 
Nika And Madison (Canada)
US Premiere
Director: Eva Thomas
 
Rosemead (US)
Hawai‘i Premiere
Director: Eric Lin

HIFF45 PASIFIKA AWARD NOMINEES:

A Paradise Lost (Hawai’i, US)
World Premiere
Director: Laurie Sumiye

Before The Moon Falls (Hawai’i, US)
US Premiere
Director: Kimberlee Bassford

Indigenous Na‘Au (Hawai’i, US)
World Premiere
Director: Ku’ulei Ka’ili

Kōkā (Aotearoa New Zealand)
US Premiere
Director: Kath Akuhata-Brown

Mālama Mākua (Hawai’i, US)
World Premiere
Director: Mikey Inouye

Mārama (Aotearoa New Zealand)
US Premiere
Director: Taratoa Stappard

Remathau: People Of The Ocean (Hawai’i, US)
World Premiere
Director: Daniel H. Lin

September 18, 2025 0 comments
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Pingyao Film Fest Unveils Crouching Tigers & Hidden Dragons Entries
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Pingyao Film Fest Unveils Crouching Tigers & Hidden Dragons Entries

by jummy84 September 18, 2025
written by jummy84

China’s Pingyao International Film Festival (PYIFF) has unveiled its full selection, including the titles for its Crouching Tigers competition, which will screen 11 films including Cannes award winners My Father’s Shadow and The President’s Cake.

The President’s Cake, from Iraq’s Hasan Hadi, won the Camera d’Or at this year’s Cannes film festival, while My Father’s Shadow, directed by Nigeria’s Akinola Davies Jr, received a Camera d’Or Special Mention. Crouching Tigers will also screen Akio Fujimoto’s Lost Land, which won the Special Jury Prize in the Horizons section of this year’s Venice film festival. 

Crouching Tigers selects first, second and third films from international directors, while the festival’s Hidden Dragons competition focuses on films from emerging directors making Chinese-language films. This year, the Hidden Dragons line-up of 11 films includes Singapore filmmaker Tan Siyou’s Amoeba, fresh from its world premiere in Toronto, and Li Dongmei’s Guo Ran, which premiered in Rotterdam (see full line-up below). 

The festival has also set Paul Thomas Anderson’s One Battle After Another as the opening film of its Galas section, which will screen nine international films. The Galas line-up also includes Cannes award winners such as Kleber Mendonça Filho’s The Secret Agent and Joachim Trier’s Sentimental Value; and Sho Miyake’s Locarno Golden Leopard winner Two Seasons, Two Strangers (see full line-up below). 

Special Presentations at the festival include documentary Mr. Kim Goes To The Cinema, directed by Busan International Film Festival co-founder Kim Dong-ho; Chinese director Feng Xiaogang’s 2004 action comedy A World Without Thieves; Andrea Segre’s documentary short The Great Ambition and Zhang Dalei’s short film Happy New Year Mr Wood. 

Founded by Chinese auteur Jia Zhangke and held annually in the UNESCO heritage site of Pingyao, Shanxi province, the festival aims to showcase emerging Chinese talent as well as bring prestige international cinema to Chinese audiences. 

The festival also features a Made In Shanxi section, screening six world premieres from filmmakers based in Shanxi, also Jia’s home province. This year’s Cinephile screening is Yu Shui’s blockbuster animation Nobody, which has grossed $222M at the China box office. 

Pingyao film festival is scheduled to run September 24-30. The festival will announce its closing film and Pingyao Surprise Selection in coming days. 

PINGYAO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL 2025:

CROUCHING TIGERS:

Rebuilding (US) AP
Dir: Max Walker-Silverman

The Last Blossom (Japan) AP
Dir: Baku Kinoshita
[Animation]

My Father’s Shadow (Nigeria, UK) CP
Dir: Akinola Davies Jr

Wild Foxes (France. Belgium) CP
Dir: Valéry Carnoy

The Massacre Of Gilles De Rais (Portugal) WP
Dir: Juan Branco

Reedland (Netherlands, Belgium) CP
Dir: Sven Bresser

Lost Land (Japan, France, Malaysia, Germany) AP
Dir: Akio Fujimoto

The World Of Love (South Korea) AP
Dir: Yoon Ga-Eun

Adam’s Sake (Belgium, France) CP
Dir: Laura Wandel

Dandelion’s Odyssey (Francem, Belgium) AP
Dir: Momoko Seto
[Animation]

The President’s Cake (Iraq, US, Qatar) CP
Dir: Hasan Hadi

HIDDEN DRAGONS:

Jet Lag In Summer (Hong Kong, China, US) WP
Dir: Yan Kun-Ao

Happy Girls (China) WP
Dir: Meng Xing

Guo Ran (China) AP
Dir: Li Dongmei

Amoeba (Singapore, Netherlands, France, Spain, Korea) AP
Dir: Siyou Tan

The Toddling Youths (China) WP
Dir: Qi Yanyan
[Documentary]

A Long Way Home (China) WP
Dir: Zheng Xusong
[Documentary]

Nighttime Sounds (China) AP
Dir: Zhang Zhongchen

Deep Quiet Room (Taiwan, China, Italy) WP
Dir: Ko-Shang Shen

#4 Road To Vendetta (Hong Kong, China) AP
Dir: Njo Kui Ying

Another World (Hong Kong, China) AP
Dir: Tommy Ng Kai Chung
[Animation]

West Border (China) AP
Dir: Luo Yan

GALAS:

One Battle After Another (US)
Dir: Paul Thomas Anderson
[OPENING FILM]

Love On Trial (Japan)
Dir: Kôji Fukada

Two Seasons, Two Strangers (Japan)
Dir: Sho Miyake

The Secret Agent (Brazil, France, Germany, Netherlands)
Dir: Kleber Mendonça Filho

Woman And Child (Iran, France)
Dir: Saeed Roustayi

Dear Stranger (Japan, Taiwan, China, US)
Dir: Tetsuya Mariko

Sentimental Value (Norway, France, Denmark, Germany, Sweden)
Dir: Joachim Trier

Case137 (France)
Dir: Dominik Moll

The Mastermind (US, UK)
Dir: Kelly Reichardt

September 18, 2025 0 comments
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LimeWire has acquired Fyre Fest but is "not bringing the festival back"
Music

LimeWire has acquired Fyre Fest but is “not bringing the festival back”

by jummy84 September 17, 2025
written by jummy84

LimeWire has acquired the infamous Fyre Festival brand – find out more below.

  • READ MORE: The 10 most WTF moments from Netflix’s jaw-dropping Fyre Festival documentary

In July, Fyre founder Billy McFarland announced that the Fyre Festival brand and all of its IPs had been sold to a bidder on eBay for just under a quarter of a million dollars. McFarland shared at the time that he was working on a “tech platform designed to capture and power the value behind every view online,” and told followers that it’s “coming soon”.

Now, the bidder that purchased Fyre on eBay has been revealed as the revived early 2000s pirating platform, LimeWire. LimeWire initially launched in 2000 as an illegal peer-to-peer file-sharing and pirating platform. It was ultimately shut down, but resurfaced in 2022 as a crypto company.

Fyre Festival founder Billy McFarland rides a jet ski in Netflix’s ‘Fyre’ documentary. Credit: Netflix

LimeWire’s purchase of Fyre was confirmed in a press released per Deadline, which reads: “Once synonymous with disruption in their own very different ways, LimeWire and Fyre are now poised to begin an entirely new chapter – one grounded in technology, transparency, and a sense of humour.”

LimeWire CEO Julian Zehetmayr saying: “LimeWire’s acquisition is not about repeating past mistakes – it’s about saving one of the internet’s most infamous cultural memes from extinction and turning it into something new. Fyre became a symbol of hype gone wrong, but it also made history.”

Zehetmayr also clarified that “we’re not bringing the festival back – we’re bringing the brand and the meme back to life. This time with real experiences, and without the cheese sandwiches.”

Fyre Festival
Fyre Festival (Picture: Netflix)

The tech company’s COO Marcus Feistl added: “Fyre became a symbol of everything that can go wrong. Now it’s our chance to show what happens when you pair cultural relevance with real execution.”

Additionally, it is reported that actor Ryan Reynolds‘ creative agency Maximum Effort also made a bid for the Fyre brand, though the amount it offered remains disclosed. Reynolds said of LimeWire’s winning bid in a statement, per Rolling Stone: “Congrats to LimeWire for their winning bid for Fyre Fest. I look forward to attending their first event but will be bringing my own palette of water.”

The original Fyre Festival was first developed by McFarland eight years ago, and was planned to run over two weekends on a private beach in the Bahamas. That edition in 2017 was reportedly set to include performances from Blink-182, Major Lazer, Disclosure, Migos, Pusha T, Tyga and more.

It made headlines when it was revealed to be fraudulent, with punters arriving on the scene and facing inadequate conditions and a lack of food and water. The ordeal was then captured in the now-iconic Netflix documentary FYRE.

McFarland was sentenced to six years in prison in 2018 for defrauding investors and was released after just four years in 2022. Fyre Fest 2 was originally set to run between May 30 and June 2 on an island in Mexico, before the tourism board and local officials claimed that no such festival existed.

Before it was cancelled, the second edition of Fyre Fest saw tickets sell for between $1,400 and $25,000 (£1,081-£19,305), while premium packages were priced as high as $1.1million (£850,000). Ahead of the planned second instalment, former Fyre Festival investor Andy King warned of “a lot of red flags” over the event’s planned reboot. In May, it was revealed that the Fyre Festival brand was looking to launch a hotel experience later this year, marketed as a Caribbean getaway in Honduras in September.

September 17, 2025 0 comments
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