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David Letterman Gets Poignant Inducting Warren Zevon Into Rock Hall
TV & Streaming

David Letterman Gets Poignant Inducting Warren Zevon Into Rock Hall

by jummy84 November 9, 2025
written by jummy84

David Letterman, who in 2002 hosted Warren Zevon‘s final television appearance before his death, paid tribute to his friend Saturday night with a lengthy induction speech at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame that lasted several times as long as the musical salute by the Killers that followed. The former late-night host mixed werewolf jokes with a recollection of breaking down in tears at the end of his final encounter with Zevon.

Letterman told the story of having Zevon on his program shortly after the rocker was diagnosed with terminal lung cancer and given only months to live. It was there that Zevon issued his famous “Enjoy every sandwich” advice, and Letterman spoke of following the singer-songwriter to his dressing room. There, he said, Zevon handed him the electric guitar he had used in his many appearances on the show, saying, “Take care of this for me.” “I know what’s supposed to happen now,” Letterman said, “and sure as hell, it did happen. I started to sob uncontrollably.”

Letterman stood beside the guitar in question and said, “For 22 years, I have taken care of the guitar. … By God, tonight it’s going back to work.” To Dave Keuning, lead guitarist of the Killers, he said, “It’s all yours, sir.” And at that point, it was left to the Killers — with special guest Waddy Wachtel, who played guitar on most of Zevon’s most famous records — to close the tribute out with their version of one of the honoree’s signature songs, “Lawyers, Guns and Money.”

It was only a one-song tribute, and his most famous song, “Werewolves of London,” did not factor into it — save for a couple of “Ah-oooh!” phrasings that Brandon Flowers worked in near the end of “Lawyers” as a semi-subtle interpolation.

Read the entire text of Letterman’s speech, following:

“I’m Dave ‘They Call Me the Breeze’ Letterman. I mean, honest to God. How cool is this, folks? How can you not feel a little let down after Salt-N-Pepa? I don’t blame you. Let’s wrap the show up and go home. Now, I can’t tell you how much fun this is for me, one, to just be out of the house, but two, to be here. And I want to thank the people who invited me to be part of this, to represent Warren Zevon, to represent his family, and to represent the people who love Warren’s music.Thank you very much for that.

“About a week ago, I talked to Warren’s son, Jordan, and I said, ‘Jordan, first of all, I’m honored beyond belief to be part of this, and thank you again. Are there things you would like me to mention that particular night?’ And Jordan said, ‘Yes. There are three things I want you to mention: When Warren was a kid he studied with Igor Stravinsky, the classical composer.’ ‘Okay,’ I said, ‘I’ll do that.’ I said, ‘By the way, when I was a kid, I had a paper route,’ and we kept going. He said, ‘Also, I want you to mention Stumpy the gangster.’ I said, ‘Okay, got it. Stumpy the Gangster.’ He said, ‘Next, I want you to mention Bev the Mormon.’ ‘Okay. Stumpy the gangster, Bev the Mormon. Got that.’ And I said, ‘By the way, Jordan, those are my two favorite songs.’ He said, ‘Those were his parents, dumbass.’

“Oh, by the way, Igor Stravinsky is still waiting for his nomination.

“I first knew of Warren Zevon’s music when there was an article in Rolling Stone, a big front-page feature on Warren Zevon. It was called ‘The Crack Up and Resurrection of Warren Zevon.’ That was the title of the article of the story; the subtitle was ‘How he saved himself from a coward’s death.’ Well, then, by God, this got my attention, and so I read the article because I enjoyed the man’s music, and at one point in the article we realized that Warren is having some trouble with addiction. He’s tortured. He has emotional difficulties and he’s addicted and he’s struggling, and we all know that these stories sometimes don’t end well. It turned out at one point, he got very drunk, took a gun and started shooting up his own record albums. Now, at the time I had been a TV weatherman, so this was completely out of my league of experience. But because of that, Warren was able to struggle through with the help of his family, with the help of his friends, and he did save his own life. And I just wonder, is it more difficult to save your own life or save the life of somebody else? Or is that equal? But by God, the fact that Warren existed through this, tortured as he was, and saved his own life, to me, listening to the man’s music, I found it to be even more valuable.

“When I then got to know Warren in person. I used to have a TV show on NBC. Hands if you remember NBC. Warren would be a guest on the program and he often would fill in for our musical director, Paul Shaffer. And it was a delight for me to have these two around, listening to Warren and talking to and getting to know Warren. And I was taken by an album that Warren had done in the ‘70s. It was called ‘Stand in the Fire.’ It was recorded at the Roxy on Sunset Blvd., and it was a live album, and the energy of that album would come off the record in those days and jump on you and knock you down. It was amazing. And I was talking to Warren on the show about that album and I said, ‘Warren, that was so great, “Stand in the Fire.” The music on that live album, I couldn’t get enough of that. It was tremendously dynamic.’ Warren looked at me and he said, ‘Well, you know, honestly, Dave, when it comes to the ‘70s, there’s really not much I can remember,’ kind of explaining his struggle. But then the music that we listened to, Warren playing with our band… and forgive me for this, but being right there in that studio, it was my own version of ‘20 Feet From Stardom.’ It was delightful,

“You know, in music, many pretend, but Warren is a poet leaving few of life’s vagaries unaddressed. Warren’s music is dense with historic illusion, love and sadness, tinted with unexpected whimsy. Delivered with third-rail voltage rock ‘n’ roll, or sweet, heartbreaking, lush, symphonic melodies, either version of the man’s music is classic.

“Rock ‘n’ roll… Ask any of Warren’s peers — Bruce Springsteen, Don Henley, Jackson Browne, Bob Dylan. Hell, ask Igor Stravinsky. Warren Zevon is in my Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, actually his own wing.

“I had an idea; you’re gonna have to bear with me on this. I am so consumed with the work of Warren Zevon that when I was coming over here tonight in the Way-mo, I decided I better make a list of Warren Zevon songs and explain some of these to this audience… And keep in mind, thank you, I’m not a musicologist, I’m not the professor of rock. I’m just Dave. Are you ready for this? Here we go. Now this is not a complete list. And I’ve divided ’em into three categories.

“The first category: Warren Zevon, global and personal strife. ‘Roland, the Headless Thompson Gunner’ — we all know that this is about a Norwegian mercenary and Patty Hearst. We know ‘Excitable Boy’ — this is about a boy who gets very excited about pot roast. ‘I’ll Sleep When I’m Dead’ — and boy, if this doesn’t get you in the Hall of Fame, stop trying.

“Category number two: love songs. ‘Mutineer.’ Oh my God, this makes people cry. ‘Reconsider Me.’ This also makes people cry. ‘Searching for a Heart.’ Whenever I listen to this song, it’s always like the first time I’ve heard it and then I start to cry.

“Okay, the third category of Warren Zevon songs: Songs about werewolves. That’s right. This is about a werewolf in London, and I don’t know if this is a true story, but there you have it.”

A tribute reel followed that featured Bruce Springsteen, Jackson Browne, Don Henley and Jorge Calderon, among other friends and contemporaries, talking about Zevon’s impact, interspersed with performance clips that included Linda Ronstadt doing one of her many covers of his work. Then Letterman returned.

David Letterman speaks onstage during the 2025 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony at Peacock Theater on November 8, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.

Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for RRH

“The thing about ‘Enjoy every sandwich’ — you know that that’s easy, but it’s deeply meaningful. And there’s not a person in this room who hasn’t considered that, but nobody can hang on to that on a daily basis. But by God, isn’t that true of life around the planet? Enjoy every sandwich.

“I have a joke here I want to try: Oh my God, I’m surrounded by Killers and they’ve captured Waddy Wachtel. Oh, brother.

“So that night, with Warren on the show, that was 22 years ago, the last time I saw Warren after the show, Warren goes up to his dressing room and I follow Warren to the dressing room myself. And I’ve been warned never to follow people to the dressing room, but I go up to Warren and we’re in the dressing room and he’s changed his clothes and he’s taking his stuff and he’s putting it away. And he’s got a guitar there that he’s used every time he’s appeared on our show. And as we’re chatting, he picks up the guitar and he puts it in the guitar case. And then he flips up those two little guitar clippies on a guitar case. How long do I need to do this? He closes the guitar case, he hands it to me and he says, ‘Take care of this for me.’ So in my head, I think I’ve seen this movie. I know what’s supposed to happen now, and sure as hell, it did happen. I started to sob uncontrollably. Warren and I hugged and I said, ‘Warren, I just love your music.’

“So for 22 years, I have taken care of the guitar. This is the guitar right here… You know, in a way I’m glad the guitar gets a bigger reaction than the ‘I’m surrounded by Killers’ joke. This is the guitar, and by God, um, tonight it’s going back to work. Dave [Keuning, lead guitarist of the Killers], it’s all yours, sir. So now to put Warren right in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, it’s gonna be the Killers. Congratulations, Warren. Thank you for everything. Enjoy every sandwich”

November 9, 2025 0 comments
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Nine best moments 2025 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony
Music

Nine best moments 2025 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony

by jummy84 November 9, 2025
written by jummy84

The Los Angeles Dodgers weren’t the only winners in town this week. Returning to City of Angels for the first time since 2022, the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame ushered in a new class of inductees during its 40th annual induction ceremony Saturday night (Nov. 8).  

“Welcome to the second-best thing to happen to Los Angeles in the past week,” said John Sykes, chairman of the R&R Hall of Fame, welcoming the audience at the Peacock Theater in downtown Los Angeles.

The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame is officially middle aged and to celebrate the 40th induction ceremony, a 10-minute sizzle reel spanning the four decades played prior to the official start of the proceedings, which, thanks to a more streamlined process when honoring the musical excellence and non-performer categories, came in at a relatively brisk four-and-a-half hours.

Beamed live on Disney +, the Rock Hall honored Bad Company, Chubby Checker, Joe Cocker, Cyndi Lauper, Outkast, Soundgarden and The White Stripes in the performer category, Salt-N-Pepa and Warren Zevon for musical influence; Thom Bell, Nicky Hopkins and Carol Kaye for musical excellence, and longtime Warner Records executive Lenny Waronker with the Ahmet Ertegun Award (named after the Atlantic Records co-founder). A primetime trimmed- down special will air on ABC on Jan. 1, 2026.  

Many of the 2025 honorees were not in attendance: Of course, Zevon, Cocker, Hopkins and Soundgarden’s Chris Cornell were inducted posthumously, and legendary Wrecking Crew bassist Kaye declined in advance to attend. Though the White Stripes’ Jack White referenced her and even dedicated part of his speech to her, his former bandmate, Meg White, did not attend. At 84, Checker was still doing what he does best and passed up his induction to keep a regularly scheduled paying gig, though he delivered his acceptance speech from the show before going into a shortened version of his biggest hit, “The Twist.” After initially hoping to attend and even reunite with his band Bad Company, lead singer Paul Rodgers pulled out for health reasons.  

But there was still a dazzling amount of star power in the room from the honorees who were present and the nearly 40 artists who helped induct them.

Below are nine highlights from the evening.

  • Take Us Higher

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    The evening got off to an electrifying start with a salute not to a current inductee but to 1993 honoree Sly Stone, who died in June. Launching with the undeniable bass-heavy thump of 1967’s “Dance to the Music” courtesy of Red Hot Chili Peppers’ Flea and Stevie Wonder on vocals, the band, which also included Beck, Questlove and Leon Thomas III, then flowed into “Everyday People” with Maxwell, who also sang “Thank you (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin),” before Jennifer Hudson coming out for “Higher,” hitting ear-shattering high notes.  It set the bar almost impossibly high for any performance coming afterwards.

  • Fight for Your Rights

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    After an exhilarating performance of their ‘80s and ‘90s hits “Let’s Talk About Sex,” “Whatta Man” (joined by En Vogue”) and “Push It,” during the trio’s acceptance speech, Salt-N-Pepa’s Cheryl “Salt” James brought it back into the present by bringing up the group’s lawsuit, filed in May,  against Universal Music Group to regain control of their masters, alleging that the record company has not honored Salt N’ Pepa’s copyright clawback rights and has punished them by taking their music off streaming. “We’re in a fight for our masters that rightfully belong to us…After 40 years, our streaming music has been taking down from all streaming platforms because the industry doesn’t want to play fair,” she said, as the crowd cheered in support, before adding, “Salt-N- Pepa has never been afraid of a fight.”

  • Olivia Rodrigo Loves Some Old Time Rock & Roll

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    Olivia Rodrigo may only be 22, but she’s proved an old soul when it comes to her love for music made before she was born. In her third time paying tribute to an inducted artist following Carly Simon in 2022 and Sheryl Crow in 2023, she returned this year to honor the White Stripes. In a video, she declared the duo’s “Seven Nation Army” “iconic,” before taking the stage to perform a lovely, harmony-filled version of the pair’s 2001 tune, “I Think We’re Gonna Be Friends” with Feist, trading verses and then singing beautifully together. Once she returned to her seat, she could be seen singing along to almost every performance.

  • Outkast Outshines

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    Outkast’s Big Boi and Andre 3000 shared the stage for their acceptance speech, but, unfortunately, no musical reunion was forthcoming as only Big Boi participated in the musical tribute. But it was gloriously high-octane, nonetheless. Backed by a 13-piece band including a vibrant horn section, Big Boi and guests raised the roof as they ran through a medley of Outkast’s greatest hits, starting with “ATLiens,” where Big Boi was joined by J.I.D. A graceful Doja Cat joined for “Ms. Jackson before Tyler, The Creator bounced around the stage delivering a ferocious “Bombs Over Baghdad.” Janelle Monae turned the segment into a full-on dance party with “Hey Ya,” accompanying herself on an acoustic guitar, before Sleepy Brown joined for a group sing-along for “I Love the Way You Move” that had the crowd on its feet.

  • Sentimental Journey

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    Sly Stone wasn’t the only past honoree given his own segment: Elton John took to the stage for a tender tribute to Brian Wilson, who was inducted in 1988 with his band, The Beach Boys, and who died in June two days after Stone. He recalled meeting Wilson in 1970 when he and songwriting partner Bernie Taupin went to his house. “We were scared sh-tless,” John said. “He was my idol. He influenced me more than anyone else when it came to writing songs on the piano. Throughout my career and my life, we became friends, we sang on each other’s records, we loved each other, and I can’t think of anyone else I’d rather pay tribute to.” Backed by Benmont Tench and Don Was, John then played a delicate, languid version of Wilson’s finest tune, Pet Sounds’ “God Only Knows.”

  • Cyndi Lauper Takes Us to Church

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    After being inducted by Chappell Roan, Cyndi Lauper provided the evening’s most emotional moment during the beginning of her performance. Singing “True Colors,” with the stage bathed in rainbow colors, she stopped the song and simply held her fist in the air in silence for at least 30 seconds in solidarity with the gay community. It as a stirring, heartfelt moment, before she asked everyone to turn on the lights on their phone, adding “there’s a community of light. Don’t forget that if it gets really dark,” before segueing into “Time After Time” with British singer RAYE. Her performance felt the loosest and the most relaxed of the night as she was joined by Avril Lavigne and then Salt-N-Pepa for a jubilant “Girls Just Wanna Have Fun.” In her acceptance speech, she thanked those who came before her. “I know that I stand on the shoulders of the women in the industry that came before me and my shoulders are broad enough to have the women that come after me to stand on mine,” she said, adding, “the little kid in me still believes that rock and roll can save the world.”

  • The Souls of the Departed

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    The presence of the artists inducted posthumously loomed large throughout the night, as David Letterman gave a moving tribute to his friend Warren Zevon and brought with him the blue electric guitar that Zevon gave to him 22 years ago after Zevon’s last appearance on Late Night with David Letterman. Zevon, who knew he was dying of lung cancer, told Letterman, “Take care of this for me,” Letterman recounted, before adding, “By god, tonight, it’s going back to work.” And sure enough it did, with The Killers’ Dave Keuning playing it on a solid version of “Lawyers, Guns and Money.” Jim Carrey, who was close to Cornell and eloquently described his intense affection for the band’s music during his induction of Soundgarden, even talked about not being able to look Cornell directly in his piercing blue eyes. Similarly, the members of Soundgarden sent their love to Cornell, with original bassist Hiro Yamamoto saying, “Chris Cornell, we are so missing you tonight on this stage.” Drummer Matt Cameron accepted the award “on behalf of the fans of our music and also the misfits, the loners and the interlopers who found comfort and solace in the layers and music of my hero and bandmate, Chris Cornell.” Guitarist Kim Thayil gave Cornell credit for his adventurous spirit. “If one of us ever hesitated sharing an idea, Chris would be the first to say, ‘Let’s just try it out.’ I miss him. I love him.” Bryan Adams inducted Joe Cocker with great fondness, recalled drinking “Joe Colas,” with him, a potent mixture of Coca Cola and rum that would quickly end any recording session.  

  • Soundgarden Reimagined

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    The members of Soundgarden were then joined by The Pretty Reckless’s Taylor Momsen, who has performed with the band a number of times over the last six or so years, for a howling, bone-rattling version of “Rusty Cage,” before Brandi Carlile joined for a driving take on their signature hit, “Black Hole Sun.” Like Momsen, Carlile has played with the band several times, including at a Cornell tribute concert in 2019. It wasn’t hard to imagine how great it would be to see the two women trade off lead vocals at a full Soundgarden show.

  • With a Little Help From His Friends

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    Even though Cocker was obviously not in attendance, there was never really any doubt that the evening would conclude with his induction if, for no other reason than to be able to close the night with “With a Little Help from My Friends,” the Beatles’ tune he made famous in 1969. Before the finale though, the Tedeschi Trucks Band were joined by Nathaniel Rateliff and Teddy Swims for rollicking, burly versions of “The Letter” and “Feelin’ Alright.” Then, Lauper, Black Crowes’ Chris Robinson and Bryan Adams (the latter two had taken part in the Bad Company tribute earlier in the evening), returned for the finale, which closed the evening on just the right note.

November 9, 2025 0 comments
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Jack White Passes on Meg White's Regards as White Stripes Enter Rock Hall
TV & Streaming

Jack White Passes on Meg White’s Regards as White Stripes Enter Rock Hall

by jummy84 November 9, 2025
written by jummy84

The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inducting the White Stripes did not result in the reunion of the long-dissolved duo, as many had hoped, with Meg White remaining out of the spotlight, as she has been since they announced their split nearly 15 years ago. But if she was absent from the Hall of Fame proceedings at Los Angeles’ Peacock Theatre, her presence was very much felt in remarks from Iggy Pop, who formally inducted the pair, and especially from Jack White, who accepted on both their behalfs and even read a fable he wrote down this week about their origin story.

Following the speeches, here were also salutes offered by two twosomes: Olivia Rodrigo and Feist, who sang “We Are Going to Be Friends” as a tender duet, and Twenty One Pilots, one of the few other true duo acts in the recent history of rock, recreating “Seven Nation Army” as a bass-and-drums-only rocker.

Speaking to his former drummer’s absence, White said: “I spoke with Meg White the other day, and she said that she’s very sorry she couldn’t make it here tonight, but she wanted me to tell you that she’s very grateful. And to all of the folks who supported her in all the years, it really means a lot to her. She also helped me write all this… I sent these things to her. She checked it for me for a lot of punctuation and corrections. She’s pretty good at that.”

He continued by sharing a random thought of Meg’s: “She said, ‘Do you remember, Jack? We used to walk around and animals, for some reason, would stare at us. They would stop and stare at us for some reason. Even at the Detroit Zoo, an elephant did the exact same thing one time.’ She just wanted me to tell you that,” he explained, to crowd laughter.

White gave props to some other iconic duos — representing non-musical disciplines — that preceded the White Stripes onto the national artistic stage.

“There was a duo of songwriters important around the time of the birth of rock ‘n’ roll called Leiber and Stoller, and they wrote a lot of songs that a lot of people probably never heard of, but they also wrote a couple that really connected with folks, like ‘Jailhouse Rock’ and ‘Stand By Me,’ and you for sure heard those songs,” White said. “There was once a duo called Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, and they were a comic-book-hero writing team who came up with all kinds of heroes you’d never heard of — Slam Bradley and Dr. Occult and so forth — but they also came up with this character that really connected with people: Superman, I’m sure you heard of. And there was once a comedy duo called Abbott and Costello that I remember hearing from my father as a child that had thousands of jokes kept on white cards in a file cabinet, jokes and routines that nobody had ever heard before and they never got to perform, but they also developed a joke that for some reason really connected with people, and the routine was called ‘Who’s On First?’ I know you’ve heard that one.”

Making the connection, White added: “I myself have been in a lot of bands that you probably never heard of, but for some reason people especially connected with this one two-piece duo project that I was in called the White Stripes. We don’t know why these things connect with people, but when they do, it’s the most beautiful thing you can have.”

White read off a litany of musicians he wanted to thank as influences, including such varied names as Loretta Lynn, Fugazi, the Misfits, Jethro Tull, the Troggs, Emerson Lake & Palmer, Arthur Lee and Love, the Flat Duo Jets, Dick Dale, Ritchie Blackmore’s Rainbow, the Sonics, Pavement, Black Flag, Sleater-Kinney, the Breeders, the Cramps, Merle Haggard, the Hives, Them, the Damned, the Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Minor Threat and Captain Beefheart.

There were other thanks to give. “To the factories and tools and electricity and vacuum tubes, we say thank you. To the Coney Islands of Detroit and the honky-tonks of Nashville and the corner pubs of London, we say thank you. To the homeless and the powerless and the forgotten, we always say thank you.”

As advice, he offered, “To the young artists, I want to say: get your hands dirty and drop the screens and get out of your little room and get obsessed. Get obsessed with something… We all want to share in what you might create.”

Jack White at 2025 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony at Peacock Theater on November 8, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.

Gilbert Flores/Variety

And then, a parable, which he said Meg White would be hearing for the first time along with the audience.

“I was gonna send this to Meg, but I didn’t get around to it, so I thought I’d read it to you all tonight,” White began. “One time a girl climbed a tree and in that tree was a boy — her brother, she thought — and the tree looked so glorious and beautiful, but it was just an oak tree. And these two so loved the world that they brought forth a parade float, one they built in their garage behind the oak tree with their own bare hands. And the boy looked at this giant peppermint on the wheels and felt pride. Pride that it was produced in the Motor City, just like in the big factories, but it was just in their garage. He looked at the girl — his sister, he thought — and like the Little Rascals, they said, ‘Let’s put on a show.’ And they paraded this float through the Cass corridor, standing atop the peppermint pulled by white horses, or maybe it was a RedVanLines van. And many of the blocks they traveled were empty, but some had people. And some of those people cheered, and some laughed, and some even threw stones.

“And with their bare hands,” White continued, “the two started to clap and sing and make up songs. And some people kept watching and swaying and moving. And then one person even smiled. And the boy and the girl looked at each other and they also smiled and they both felt the sin of pride, but they kept on smiling. Smiling from a new freedom, knowing that they had shared and made another person feel something. And they felt the person smiling at them was a stranger. So they didn’t even know. But it wasn’t just a stranger, it was God.”

Keeping up the sibling theme to the end, he concluded: “My sister thanks you and I thank you.”

In his intro, fellow Detroit native Iggy Pop said, “The first time I saw them was in a photograph… grinning like they had some kind of fun secret, like they stole some cookies from a cookie jar. Basically I was looking at a 20th century Adam and Eve who had started a rock ‘n’ roll band… Cute ckids, they’ll probably go places,” he remembered thinking.

Pop saluted “Meg White, who is a timeless beauty. Meg White, who gave her name to the group, was a charismatic, naturally likable person. I met her once and she had the most genuine and charming smile. She gave the drum kit a good whack like Fred Below did for Muddy Waters and Chuck Berry. I think it was Meg’s support that helped launch the rocket of racket that was Jack White.

“Jack could screech like an owl. He could twang like a hillbilly… I hear echoes of the Who, the Small faces, the Beatles, art-rock and country-blues in his playing. He could do it all. And the writing he is capable of was something that was not typical of the great Detroit bands of the ‘60s and ‘70s —  this was more melodic, more hooky. After all, it was a new century, and the White Stripes’ music was coming from a foundation of love instead of revolution.”

In the video tribute that the Rock Hall put together for the duo, Rodrigo offered a younger generation’s appreciation of the pair — and the highest possible veneration for “Seven Nation Army” in particular: “Do you hear those seven notes? There’s no question what it is. ‘Seven Nation Army’ is the most iconic song of all time — it’s just so ingrained into who we are as humans.”

November 9, 2025 0 comments
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White Stripes Celebrated by Olivia Rodrigo, Iggy Pop at Rock Hall
Music

White Stripes Celebrated by Olivia Rodrigo, Iggy Pop at Rock Hall

by jummy84 November 9, 2025
written by jummy84

It’s official: The White Stripes are in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. The induction took place on Saturday in Los Angeles, with Jack and Meg White honored for their indelible, decade-long mark on music.

As expected, Meg did not attend the ceremony — she has completely left the music industry and public life in general since the White Stripes broke up in 2011 — but thankfully a handful of artists were on hand to help fill the void left by the essential artist, one of Rolling Stone‘s 100 Greatest Drummers of All Time.

Olivia Rodrigo and Feist teamed up for a rendition of the White Blood Cells classic “We’re Going to Be Friends,” while Twenty One Pilots, themselves a guitar-drums duo like the White Stripes, delivered a rendition of the ultimate stadium rocker “Seven Nation Army.”

Feist and Olivia Rodrigo perform onstage during the 2025 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony

Amy Sussman/WireImage

The White Stripes were inducted into the Rock Hall by fellow Motor City rock icon Iggy Pop, who took the stage and led the crowd through a chant of “Seven Nation Army.” He held his speech in his hands and joked, “Let me see if I can read this shit.”

Pop described the duo as “a 21st century Adam and Eve, who had started a rock & roll band,” and praised Meg’s drumming ability, saying it was her support that launched “the rocket of racket that was Jack White.”

Next, Jack himself took the podium for his induction speech, thanking “Uncle Iggy.” Standing in a red suit and white tie, he revealed that he’d been talking to Meg about being honored, and that Meg made “punctuation and corrections” to his speech. “I spoke with Meg White the other day; she said she’s very sorry she couldn’t make it tonight, but she’s very grateful for the folks who have supported her throughout all the years, it really means a lot to her tonight,” he said.

Jack thanked the White Stripes’ musical heroes, and also named other iconic duos in pop culture: Leiber and Stoller, Siegel and Shuster, and Abbott and Costello. “I myself have been in a lot of bands that you’ve probably never heard of,” he said. “But for some reason, people especially connected with this one two-piece duo project that I was in called the White Stripes. We don’t know why these things happen, but when they do, it’s the most beautiful thing you can have as an artist or musician when people are responding and sharing with you.”

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“To young artists, I want to say, get your hands dirty and drop the screens and get out in your garage or your little room and get obsessed,” he added. “Get obsessed with something, get passionate. We all want to share in what you might create.”

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Iggy Pop and Jack White onstage during the 2025 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony

Amy Sussman/WireImage

Rodrigo, who was born just two months before the White Stripes released Elephant since April 2003, has long praised the group, saying she grew up listening to the album and especially “The Hardest Button to Button.”

“Meg’s drums really shine on that one, and from there I dove into all their other incredible albums and became a massive fan,” Rodrigo told Elle in 2023. “Meg’s drumming and the White Stripes in general [provided] a huge lesson to me on the value of simplicity in music. They taught me that a truly great song doesn’t need to have crazy production or layers of sound. It just needs to move you.”

November 9, 2025 0 comments
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Bad Company's Rock Hall Performance Features Chris Robinson, Bryan Adams, Joe Perry, Nancy Wilson
Music

Bad Company’s Rock Hall Performance Features Chris Robinson, Bryan Adams, Joe Perry, Nancy Wilson

by jummy84 November 9, 2025
written by jummy84

Bad Company were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame by Mick Fleetwood on Saturday night at the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles.

After Fleetwood sang the praises of the band during his speech, founding Bad Company drummer Simon Kirke was joined onstage by the Black Crowes’ Chris Robinson, Heart’s Nancy Wilson, and Aerosmith’s Joe Perry for a performance of “Feel Like Makin’ Love” that started out with a little technical glitch.

Bryan Adams then took over the mic for “Can’t Get Enough,” and while Robinson and Adams both gave it their all, it’s hard to match the powerhouse vocals of legendary Bad Company singer Paul Rodgers.

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Unfortunately, Rodgers had to bow out of the ceremony a week ago due to health reasons, stating, “My hope was to be at the Rock & Rock Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony and to perform for the fans, but at this time I have to prioritize my health. I have no problem singing, it’s the stress of everything else.”

Following the performance, Kirke accepted the honor from Fleetwood, and immediately acknowledged Rodgers, calling him one of the greatest singers of all time. The drummer also paid tribute to late member Mick Ralphs, who died earlier this year, and Boz Burrell, who passed away in 2006.

A video message from Rodgers followed, who dedicated the honor to the band’s fans, ending with, “My prayer for us is that we all choose love.

The 2025 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony aired live on Disney+ on Saturday, November 8th, and will be available to stream on-demand following the ceremony. Find our full coverage here.

November 9, 2025 0 comments
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Twenty One Pilots to cover The White Stripes in tribute at Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame 2025 ceremony
Music

Twenty One Pilots to cover The White Stripes in tribute at Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame 2025 ceremony

by jummy84 November 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Twenty One Pilots will perform ‘Seven Nation Army’ to honour the induction of The White Stripes into the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame.

The annual ceremony is taking place at the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles next Saturday (November 8), and Jack and Meg White will be one of the inductees, alongside OutKast, Soundgarden, Cyndi Lauper, Chubby Checker, Bad Company and Joe Cocker. The show will be streamed live on Disney+.

One performance at the ceremony will be a rendition of The White Stripes’ signature 2003 track ‘Seven Nation Army’ by Twenty One Pilots, another high-profile singer/drummer duo. Bad Company will also play at the show, while the surviving members of Soundgarden will be joined by Brandi Carlile, Taylor Momsen and members of Alice In Chains, Pearl Jam and Heart.

It has not been confirmed whether either Jack or Meg White will perform or appear at the ceremony in person.

In addition to the above inductees, Salt-N-Pepa and Warren Zevon will also be given the Musical Influence Award at the ceremony, Thom Bell, Nicky Hopkins and Carol Kaye will be presented with the Musical Excellence Award and Lenny Waronker will pick up the Ahmed Ertegun Award.

Last year saw Cher, Ozzy Osbourne, Kool & The Gang, Peter Frampton, Foreigner and Dave Matthews Band, Mary J Blige and A Tribe Called Quest inducted.

Presenting the #RockHall2025 Inductees…
Bad Company ⭐ Thom Bell ⭐ Chubby Checker ⭐ Joe Cocker ⭐ Nicky Hopkins ⭐ Carol Kaye ⭐ Cyndi Lauper ⭐ Outkast ⭐ Salt-N-Pepa ⭐ Soundgarden ⭐ Lenny Waronker ⭐ The White Stripes ⭐ Warren Zevon pic.twitter.com/rcLtTrgg0Y

— Rock & Roll Hall of Fame (@rockhall) April 28, 2025

This week, Jack White shared a viral cover of ‘Seven Nation Army’ being performed on the streets of Iran, as filmed by journalist Afshin Ismaeli. The busking band can be seen playing the tune in Tehran with a swarm of locals surrounding them.

Recently Jack White also joined IDLES on stage to perform ‘Never Fight A Man With A Perm’ at Riot Fest. The band’s frontman Joe Talbot told the crowd it was “a great honour” to play with White, before White launched into a raucous breakdown.

White also appeared with Ringo Starr to perform The Beatles‘ ‘With A Little Help From My Friends’ at Bourbon & Beyond 2025 in Louisville, Kentucky.

As for Twenty One Pilots, they recently appeared to fans for the safe return of a USB drive that had “significant meaning for the band and its history”.

They are also set to headline Electric Castle 2026 alongside The Cure in Transylvania from July 16 through 19. You can find any remaining tickets here.

November 2, 2025 0 comments
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Diana Ross Makes Ovation Hall Her "House" During AC Performance
Music

Diana Ross Makes Ovation Hall Her “House” During AC Performance

by jummy84 November 1, 2025
written by jummy84

Diana Ross remains the ultimate diva, entrancing her beloved audience during her most recent Beautiful Love Tour stop in Atlantic City, New Jersey.

Taking over Ocean Casino Resort’s Ovation Hall Saturday (Oct. 25), the “Queen Of Motown” brought Hollywood glamour, New York elegance, and Detroit charm to a sold-out crowd of adoring patrons, many of whom were heard covering the icons classic tunes as they bopped into the venue with spirited anticipation.

Diana Ross au Montreux Jazz Festival le 11 juillet 2025. (Photo by Lionel FLUSIN/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images)

Clips of the legend’s rise to stardom and highlights of her illustrious career greeted the crowd as her band, back-up, and crew hit the stage, just ahead of Ross making her grand entrance to — you guessed it — “I’m Coming Out.” And did she ever, in an opulent orange gown and coat that screamed both fall and fierce!

Stage presence was on ten as she broke in and out of song on occasion to acknowledge fans, all while keeping the show moving at a smooth pace. With hits spanning over five decades, it would only make sense that many were cut short, but she still manages to touch on all the known classics while giving her more die-hard followers treats from projects like Lady Sings The Blues and The Wiz.

Diana Ross au Montreux Jazz Festival 2025 (Photo by Lionel FLUSIN/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images)

She’s also a beacon of gratitude, a refreshing trait in someone so accomplished. Sharing her own mantra with the crowd, highlighting her band several times throughout the night, bringing out daughter Rhonda for a sweet duet, these are the moments when you realize why she’s been in the business for so long. It’s not just the obvious talent and beauty, but an understanding of how community, collective care and humility will keep one sane enough to withstand the storms, even while living in your gift and dismissing the nonsense. It radiated through her smile the entire evening, mirroring the brilliance of the fab fashions she quick-changed into and out of throughout the night.

The evening was thee highlight of a weekend spent on the luxe boardwalk resort venue, that boasts acts ranging from Ross and Smokey Robinson to John Legend and Lenny Kravitz. Catch Ross in a city near you here and check out what Ovation Hall has to offer at Ocean Casino Resort.

November 1, 2025 0 comments
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Chappell Roan performs during the 67th Annual Grammy Awards at Crypto.com Arena on February 2, 2025 in Los Angeles. (Credit: Maya Dehlin Spach/FilmMagic)
Music

Rock Hall Ceremony Adds Chappell, Donald Glover

by jummy84 October 30, 2025
written by jummy84

The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony just got a lot more crowded. Ahead of the Nov. 8 extravaganza in Los Angeles, 17 additional presenters and performers have been confirmed, including Chappell Roan, the Killers, Donald Glover, Jim Carrey, Avril Lavigne and Janelle Monáe.

The list is rounded out by Bryan Adams, En Vogue, Feist, Gina Schock, Hurby Luv Bug Azor, Aerosmith’s Joe Perry, the Revolution’s Lisa Coleman, Mick Fleetwood, Heart’s Nancy Wilson, Nathaniel Rateliff and Tedeschi Trucks Band. Pearl Jam guitarist Mike McCready, Alice in Chains’ Jerry Cantrell and the Pretty Reckless’ Taylor Momsen are expected to perform with Soundgarden, based on rehearsal photos from drummer Matt Cameron on Instagram.

Roan will induct Cyndi Lauper, saying yesterday on social media that the artist “has inspired me with her fashion and her hair, and of course, her makeup, her music. I actually auditioned with ‘True Colors’ for America’s Got Talent when I was 13. I didn’t make it, but the song is still incredible. I’m so excited. Thanks for having me.”

Beyond Soundgarden and Lauper, this year’s induction class is comprised of Bad Company, Chubby Checker, Joe Cocker, Outkast and the White Stripes. The event will be streamed live on Disney+. Next-day viewing will be available on Hulu, with an ABC special to follow on Jan. 1.

Among the previously announced performers and presenters are Beck, Brandi Carlile, David Letterman, Doja Cat, Elton John, Flea, Iggy Pop, J.I.D, Killer Mike, Maxwell, Missy Elliott, Olivia Rodrigo, Questlove, Raye, Sleepy Brown, Teddy Swims and Twenty One Pilots.

Outside the core inductions, Salt-N-Pepa and the late Warren Zevon will receive the Musical Influence Award, while hit-making R&B producer Thom Bell and studio musicians Nicky Hopkins and Carol Kaye will be honored with the Musical Excellence Award. The Ahmet Ertegun Award for impactful, non-performing industry professionals will be presented to former Warner Bros. Records president/DreamWorks co-founder Lenny Waronker.

October 30, 2025 0 comments
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Filmfare OTT 2025
Bollywood

Exclusive: Sonja Weißer Reveals What to Expect From Maxton Hall Season 2, Teases Season 3

by jummy84 October 23, 2025
written by jummy84

After the breakout success of the first season, the elite boarding school drama Maxton Hall: The World Between Us is returning with its much-anticipated second season. Ahead of its release, we caught up with Sonja Weißer, who plays Lydia Beaufort, the ambitious twin sister of the lead character, James Beaufort (Damian Hardung). This season, Lydia continues to navigate personal struggles while chasing her ambitions and fighting to be taken seriously in a world that often dismisses her dreams.
Played with quiet strength, Sonja’s Lydia emerged in Season 1 as more than a side character, ending the season in turmoil after her affair with teacher Mr Sutton and an unexpected pregnancy came to light. As season 2 expands her storyline, we asked Sonja whether she drew on any personal experience to portray Lydia’s evolution.

She answers, “I can relate to it as a woman in this society. I can see myself in Lydia in moments where she has to adapt to patriarchal structures and has to try to break out of them. I can identify with that, and I think almost every woman can. She’s evolving, she’s getting braver, she’s trying to have her own way and to break out of the structures that she was brought up in.”

The German show is based on the 2018 novel titled Save Me by Mona Kasten and follows the collision between Ruby Bell (Harriet Herbig-Matten), a hardworking scholarship student with dreams of getting into Oxford, and James Beaufort, the arrogant heir to a wealthy family empire. When Ruby accidentally uncovers Lydia’s affair with their teacher Graham Sutton, she is thrust into the ruthless world of privilege, secrets, and manipulation.

Sonja continues, “Lydia is a great character, she is a great woman. I’m very pleased to play her because I think she has a lot of nuances to her. She has such a fierce personality, but at the same time, she’s very loyal and also passionate and creative. What I’m also excited about is the friendship that she’s building up with Ruby, Lin (Andrea Guo) and Ember (Runa Greiner). And that was very fun to play as well because we haven’t seen her with any friends yet. And she was always quite alone or with her brother. So, to explore this new formation for Lydia was very exciting, and I’m very pleased for everybody to see that.”

Sonja

Talking about some of her memorable moments from the sets, she continues, “A great day we had was when we shot a scene with the girls where he released sky lanterns. That was Harriet’s birthday as well. We were outside on a summer day, and there was a great energy. I loved filming with those girls because before I was just filming with boys, which was fine too. But that was a nice energy we had together.”

As the new season builds toward bigger emotional stakes and deeper character arcs, Lydia finds herself at the centre of key turning points that will shape what comes next.

When asked about the possibility of a third season, she answers, “I wish I could tell you, but I think you will be satisfied with watching the whole of season two and everything that’s coming up with it. And for season three, we can say that it’s going to happen. When it’s going to happen, I sadly cannot tell. I don’t know, but I can be excited for it.”
She also told the audience what to expect from season 2. “You can expect a lot of dark emotions, a lot of drama, a lot of trust that is getting broken, grieving, but new friendships, new spotlight on other characters, and just exploring the conflicts and the different protagonists even deeper.”

Maxton Hall season 2 will return on Prime Video starting November 7.

Exclusive: I Was Lucky to Have Aryan Khan Direct Me- Neville Bharucha on The Ba***ds of Bollywood

October 23, 2025 0 comments
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Radio Hall of Fame 2025 Inductees List: Alice Cooper, Martha Quinn
Music

Radio Hall of Fame 2025 Inductees List: Alice Cooper, Martha Quinn

by jummy84 October 16, 2025
written by jummy84

UPDATE (Oct. 16): Kim Komando, one of the most successful self-syndicated radio hosts and digital media entrepreneurs in the U.S., is set to host the 2025 Radio Hall of Fame induction ceremony at the Swissotel Hotel in Chicago on Thursday, Oct. 30. Komando was inducted into the Radio Hall of Fame four years ago.

Komando is best-known for hosting The Kim Komando Show, the largest weekend radio show in the U.S. It airs across 420 radio stations to an estimated six million plus listeners. Komando is also host of the Daily Tech Update and Digital Life Hacks reports, heard on 390 radio stations across the U.S. Komando hosts a tech-business oriented radio show each week on SiriusXM. With more than 700,000 subscribers, The Current — Komando’s daily newsletter — commands one of the highest open rates in digital media. She has also been a columnist for USA Today since 2002, and with the Daily Mail since 2020. 

Tickets to the 2025 Radio Hall of Fame induction ceremony are on sale now at www.radiohalloffame.com. A portion of ticket purchases is a tax-deductible charitable donation to the Museum of Broadcast Communications.

PREVIOUSLY (June 30): Alice Cooper, host of Nights With Alice Cooper and Alice’s Attic, and Martha Quinn, host of The Martha Quinn Show, are among the 2025 inductees into the Radio Hall of Fame.

Cooper, who topped the Billboard 200 in 1973 with his album Billion Dollar Babies, was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2011. He is just the second person who was inducted as a performer in the Rock Hall to also be admitted to the Radio Hall of Fame, following R&B legend James Brown. (Four other Radio Hall inductees were honored by the Rock Hall in the non-performer category:  Alan Freed, Sam Phillips, Dick Clark and Don Cornelius.)

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Quinn gained pop-culture immortality as one of MTV’s five original VJs when that culture-shaking channel launched in 1981, along with Mark Goodman, Alan Hunter, J.J. Jackson and Nina Blackwood. Quinn is the first of these five VJs to join the Radio Hall of Fame.

On Monday (June 30), the Museum of Broadcast Communications announced the selection of 10 new inductees – nine individuals and one team (Bob Lacey and Sheri Lynch of The Bob & Sheri Show) – into the Radio Hall of Fame for 2025. They will be honored at the in-person 2025 Radio Hall of Fame Induction ceremony on Thursday, Oct. 30 at the Swissotel Hotel in Chicago.

Six of the 10 inductees were determined by a voting participant panel comprised of more than 900 industry professionals. The other four inductees were voted on by the Radio Hall of Fame 2025 nominating committee.

“Our 2025 Induction Ceremony and Celebration will be a special, standing-room-only, event honoring the talents, history and contributions of 11 incredible people,” Kraig Kitchin, co-chair of the Radio Hall of Fame, said in a statement. “I cannot wait to celebrate the careers and impact of these men and women who’ve made a forever positive impact on the radio industry!”

Related

Chart Beat Podcast featuring: Martha Quinn

Dennis Green, co-chair of the Radio Hall of Fame, added: “These Radio Hall of Famers have entertained us, informed us, and helped to bring special moments to our lives through a medium that does this better than any other.”

The Radio Hall of Fame was founded by the Emerson Radio Corporation in 1988. The Museum of Broadcast Communications took over operations of the Hall in 1991.

Tickets for the 2025 Radio Hall of Fame Induction ceremony are on sale now at the Radio Hall of Fame site. Individual tickets are $595 per person. A portion of ticket purchases is a tax-deductible charitable donation to the Museum of Broadcast Communications, home to the Radio Hall of Fame.

Here’s the full list of 2025 Radio Hall of Fame inductees:

INDUCTED

Tom Carballo (Mojo), Mojo in the Morning – WKQI FM / Detroit

Alice Cooper, Nights With Alice Cooper/Alice’s Attic

Colin Cowherd, The Herd with Colin Cowherd

DeDe McGuire, DeDe in the Morning

Mike McVay, McVay Media

Martha Quinn, The Martha Quinn Show, iHeartMedia

Bob Lacey and Sheri Lynch, The Bob & Sheri Show

Scott Simon, Weekend Edition Saturday, National Public Radio

Shelley “The Playboy” Stewart

Julie Talbott, Premiere Networks

For the record, here are 2025 nominees who were not inducted this year:

Related

Radio Hall of Fame

NOT INDUCTED

Bert Weiss

Big D & Bubba

Bob and Sheri

Bob Sirott

Bob Stroud

D.L. Hughley

Enrique Santos

Funkmaster Flex

Joey Reynolds

John Garabedian

John Kobylt & Ken Chiampou, co-hosts of The John & Ken Show

Kevin Matthews

Kid Leo

Larry Elder

Laurie De Young

Mark “Hawkeye” Louis

Raul Brindis

October 16, 2025 0 comments
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