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Tu Meri Main Tera, Main Tera Tu Meri Box Office: Kartik Aaryan & Ananya Panday Will Rewrite ROI History
Bollywood

Kartik Aaryan & Ananya Panday Will Rewrite ROI History With Their Gen-Z Approved Chemistry! [Opinion]

by jummy84 December 4, 2025
written by jummy84

Tu Meri Main Tera Main Tera Tu Meri Box Office: Kartik Aaryan & Ananya Panday’s Chemistry To Yield Great ROI! ( Photo Credit – Instagram )

Kartik Aaryan and Ananya Panday are all set to end the year on a romantic high! Interestingly, this year has been the year of romances, and keeping aside the chest-thumping action spectacles and intense, dark dramas, the audience demanded an antidote. Romance and comedy served the necessary palette cleanser, and Tu Meri Main Tera, Main Tera Tu Meri might be the perfect year-ender at the box office!

The film is not merely a rom-com, it seems to be the guaranteed success that Bollywood needs, and, the box office deserves to end the festive Christmas season! Moreover, the lead pair, has a proven track record at the box office to yield great return on investment!

Kartik Aaryan & Ananya Panday To Repeat Box Office History?

In 2019, Kartik Aaryan and Ananya Panday came together for Pati, Patni Aur Woh, and the film was a huge success, churning out 148% return on its investment and getting picked by the youngsters for their easy-breezy chemistry! The duo is all set to rewrite history and yield good ROI with Tu Meri Main Tera, Main Tera Tu Meri.

Christmas Box Office 2025

Kartik Aaryan has cemented his position as the king of the relatable romance, and he promises entertainment, minimal baggage, and maximum theatrical returns with his romantic comedies. Paired with Ananya Panday, the ultimate sweetheart of Gen Z, this is the most potent festive combination that promises to be a bankable win!

Tu Meri Main Tera, Main Tera Tu Meri is hinting at a very good ending of the year, and it surely deserves to be a Good Newwz at the box office! The audience is liking the vibe of the film already, and this might be a definitive feel-good hit, celebrating their Gen-Z chemistry that is guaranteeing a great ROI at the box office this Christmas! Waiting for them to paint the town red!

Note: Box office numbers are based on estimates and various sources. Numbers have not been independently verified by Koimoi.

Check out the box office collection and latest verdicts of Hindi Films of 2025 here.

Must Read: De De Pyaar De 2 Box Office Day 17: Beats Ek Deewane Ki Deewaniyat & Becomes #2 Romantic Grosser Of 2025!

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December 4, 2025 0 comments
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Watch Ariana Grande and Jimmy Fallon Perform a History of Duets
Music

Watch Ariana Grande and Jimmy Fallon Perform a History of Duets

by jummy84 November 19, 2025
written by jummy84

The pair took on everything from “Ain’t No Mountain High Enough” to “Shallow” on The Tonight Show

Ariana Grande appeared on The Tonight Show ahead of the arrival of Wicked: For Good and took the opportunity to showcase a brief history of famous duets with host Jimmy Fallon.

The duo rolled through a series of duets, including Wicked musical number “For Good,” Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell’s Ain’t No Mountain High Enough,” Lady Gaga and Bradley Cooper’s “Shallow,” and Brandy and Monica’s “The Boy Is Mine.” Their performance spanned both Broadway and film, including animated flicks like Aladdin. They concluded with Bill Medley and Jennifer Warnes’ “(I’ve Had) the Time of My Life.”

Grande also sat down with Fallon to discuss Wicked: For Good, which in theaters Friday, and her upcoming slot hosting Saturday Night Live alongside musical guest Cher. “I’m so excited,” Grande said of SNL. “I didn’t know it was going to be her until like two days before, and I found out and I almost passed out. I had no idea what to do. What an honor.” She added, “This is one of the gayest SNL episodes that has ever happened, right?”

The singer reflected on making both Wicked films at the same time. “It was interesting to watch it so many years after we had finished because shot both simultaneously,” she said of the sequel. “So in my head they’re both one story and one experience.” She added that she’s “grateful” it was split into two movies because “you really get to know Glinda the way that I got to know her and to love her in order to play her.”

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After Wicked: For Good, Grande will prepare to head out on the road for her Eternal Sunshine tour, which will mark her first extended run of concert dates since 2019. But in a new interview on Amy Poehler‘s Good Hang podcast, the singer says she has no plans for another tour in the foreseeable future.

“The last 10 or 15 years will look very different to the ones that are coming up,” she said. “I don’t want to say anything definitive. I do know that I’m very excited to do this small tour, but I think it might not happen again for a long, long, long, long, long time. I’m going to give it my all and it’s going to be beautiful. I think that’s why I’m doing it because I’m like, ‘One last hurrah!’”

November 19, 2025 0 comments
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Twist and pout: Swetha Sivakumar on the history of the lipstick
Lifestyle

Twist and pout: Swetha Sivakumar on the history of the lipstick

by jummy84 November 15, 2025
written by jummy84

It is one of the world’s oldest cosmetics. For thousands of years, people have tinted their lips as part of a beauty regimen. In Ancient Egypt, such mixes were made with henna, crushed ants and natural dyes. Today’s “kiss-proof” variants really do stay on for hours.

Red has, through the centuries, been a favourite shade.

Before we dive into the massive global lipstick industry (worth an estimated $17.4 billion in 2024), let’s take a closer look at the features they were made for: the lips themselves.

Human lips are extraordinary in both form and function. They help us eat, speak and express emotion. They form a seal for sucking, which is vital for breastfeeding infants. Packed with thousands of nerve endings, they are among the body’s most sensitive areas, helping us detect temperature and texture; allowing us to sing, whisper and kiss. Lips also act as a barrier, keeping out dirt and pathogens and holding in saliva and good bacteria.

Their natural pinkish tone comes from their anatomy. The skin here is much thinner than on the rest of the body, only three to five cell layers thick, compared to 16 or more elsewhere. Beneath it, a dense network of capillaries carry oxygen-rich blood close to the surface. Because the skin here contains very little melanin, the red of the blood shows through. This is also why lips are particularly vulnerable to sun damage, and why many balms include a sun protection factor, or SPF.

Lips differ from the rest of our skin in another important way: There are no hair follicles here, no sweat glands and no oil glands. This gives them their smooth, soft texture but also makes them prone to dryness. Licking one’s lips may seem like a quick fix, but the water in saliva dries rapidly, leaving behind salts and enzymes that strip moisture from and irritate the skin. This can lead to a cycle of dryness and cracking.

What lips need, to stay healthier, firmer and fuller for longer, is a mix of water and lipids (oils, waxes or butters) that lock in hydration. This is particularly important as one ages.

As collagen production slows with age, lips tend to lose some of their volume and definition, and can become more susceptible to dryness and sun exposure too. This is where a good lip balm, whether homemade or store-bought, comes in.

The first commercially manufactured lipstick came from France, in 1884. The perfume company Guerlain (set up in 1828, it still makes perfumes and lipsticks) used venison tallow, castor oil, beeswax and colouring agents to make smooth tints that they sold in small pots and tubes. These were applied with a brush or with the fingertips, in a rather messy, unhygienic and wasteful process.

All that changed in the 1910s, when American inventors (there is some debate over who did it first) invented the metal lipstick tube, which allowed the stick to twist upwards for use and then retract neatly. This made the product portable and far easier to use.

Today’s lipsticks remain a complex blend of waxes, oils and pigments that can deteriorate over time. They have to be produced under just the right temperatures. Too hot, and bubbles may form or the stick melt or “sweat”; too cold, and cracks can ruin the whole.

Exposure to air and light can lead to oxidation, affecting fragrance, colour and texture. Though lipsticks contain little water, bacteria and fungi can still survive on the surface, especially when preservatives weaken or storage conditions are poor.

For all these reasons, formulae are tested stringently (and it is a good idea to adhere to expiry dates).

One of the questions I always had was: How do some tints come off the stick and onto the lips so easily, and then adhere to the lips so firmly that one can eat or kiss or stand in the rain and the shade remains largely unaffected?

A key ingredient, I have learnt, is isododecane, a lightweight, fast-evaporating hydrocarbon. Because it readily evaporates at room temperature, it helps spread the colour pigments evenly on the lips, and then, as it dries, sort of locks them in. (The same ingredient is also used in smudge-proof eyeliners and mascaras.)

For that extra-glossy look, chemists turn to R. Where natural oils such as castor and jojoba provide gloss but fade quickly and feel greasy, polybutene, a viscous synthetic polymer, forms a flexible, sticky yet non-greasy film that clings to the lips for hours.

When it comes to the tints themselves, red has, through centuries, been a clear favourite. It continues to signal beauty, glamour, defiance, allure. Red is stunning, but not my colour of choice; I prefer maroon. What shade do you like best?

(To reach Swetha Sivakumar with questions or feedback, email [email protected]. The views expressed are personal)

November 15, 2025 0 comments
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Exploring Wild West History - 'High Horse: The Black Cowboy' Trailer
Hollywood

Exploring Wild West History – ‘High Horse: The Black Cowboy’ Trailer

by jummy84 November 12, 2025
written by jummy84

Exploring Wild West History – ‘High Horse: The Black Cowboy’ Trailer

by Alex Billington
November 11, 2025
Source: YouTube

“If there were no Black cowboys, then America would not exist.” “To reclaim what was stolen from us, we have to tell everyone!” Hear, hear! NBC’s Peacock has revealed an official trailer for a fascinating new documentary series titled High Horse: The Black Cowboy, produced and developed by Jordan Peele’s Monkeypaw Productions. This seems like something Peele has been trying to get made ever since he gave us Nope in 2022, which is also somewhat connected via the old history of Black horse trainers. In this 3-part pop series, Black cowboys’ rich heritage comes alive through their enduring connection to the American West, revealing many remarkable stories of resilience, tradition, & their lasting impact on ranching culture. “A history that has largely been untold.” Jordan Peele also adds: “I’m grateful to Monkeypaw for amplifying the powerful voices and long-standing culture of Black Cowboys and Cowgirls through High Horse… Their history is inseparable from the story of our country — and this project aims to honor and celebrate their lasting legacy.” Well this looks great! Keep an eye out for it – available to watch on Peacock later this month.

Official trailer (+ poster) for Peacock’s docu series High Horse: The Black Cowboy, from YouTube:

High Horse: The Black Cowboy Doc Trailer

High Horse: The Black Cowboy Doc Poster

High Horse arrives in the wake of a national reclaiming of the wild west through art. This 3-part pop culture and historical documentary confronts and reclaims the Wild West while revealing the story of the Black cowboy — a history that has largely been untold. Featuring many original interviews with talent including Jordan Peele, Bun B, Blanco Brown, Pam Grier, Lori Harvey, INK, Tina Knowles, Rick Ross, Glynn Turman, Lynae Vanee and The Compton Cowboys. With an original score by Raphael Saadiq, this series sets the record straight on the American Frontier. High Horse: The Black Cowboy is a doc series directed by filmmaker Jason Perez, also director of Black Coffee previously. Executive produced by Jordan Peele, Win Rosenfeld, Keisha Senter, Jamal Watson from Monkeypaw Productions, Mari Keiko Gonzalez, Liz Yale Marsh, Kadine Anckle, Tom Casciato, Sacha Jenkins, & Keith McQuirter. This doc is premiering at the 2025 DOC NYC Film Festival this month. NBC will then release Jason Perez’s High Horse: The Black Cowboy streaming on Peacock starting November 20th, 2025 coming up. Looks good? Want to watch?

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Find more posts in: Documentaries, Streaming, To Watch, Trailer

November 12, 2025 0 comments
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'Michael' trailer has already become the most-watched music biopic preview in history
Music

‘Michael’ trailer has already become the most-watched music biopic preview in history

by jummy84 November 10, 2025
written by jummy84

The first trailer for Michael Jackson‘s biopic has already become the most-watched music biopic preview ever – find out more below.

  • READ MORE: Quincy Jones, 1933-2024: mega-producer who broke boundaries with a twinkle in his eye

The film, titled Michael, will see the King of Pop’s real-life nephew Jaafar Jackson take on the title role, while Oscar nominee Colman Domingo will play his father, Joe Jackson. It will hit the big screen on April 24, 2026.

Michael‘s first trailer arrived last week (November 6), and has already broken a record to become the most-watched music biopic trailer in history after an initial 24-hour period, per The Hollywood Reporter.

According to statistics provided by WaveMetrix on Saturday (November 8), the trailer drew over 116.2million views globally, making it both the most-viewed music biopic trailer ever, as well as distributor Liongate’s most-viewed movie preview in history.

Watch the trailer for Michael below.

Additional cast members include Miles Teller as attorney John Branca, Kat Graham as Diana Ross, Nia Long as Katherine Jackson, Laura Harrier as Suzanne de Passe, Kendrick Sampson as Quincy Jones and Juliano Krue Valdi as a young Michael.

In May, it was reported that the film could potentially be split into two parts for length, though as of the time of writing, the two-parter has not been confirmed. Following the release of the trailer, Adam Fogelson, chair of the Lionsgate’s Motion Picture Groups spoke of the potential split during a quarterly earnings call with analysts.

“While we’re not yet ready to confirm plans for a second film, I can tell you that the creative team is hard at work making sure that we’re in a position to deliver more Michael soon after we release the first film,” Fogelson said.

The film has already attracted some criticism, including from Dan Reed, the director of the documentary Leaving Neverland, which documented allegations of sexual abuse against Michael. Reed criticised the making of the new biopic, saying it “will glorify a man who raped children”.

Reed later said he had read a draft of the script in which the men who made the allegations in Leaving Neverland were discredited. “Jackson is only ever seen caring for children with childhood cancer, or dancing with a little girl in a wheelchair, or tucking up multiple little boys, mostly his nephews, at sleepovers,” Reed said of the script. “It feels like the creators of the movie have been stuck in a room with John Branca and just told what to write.”

Reports emerged at the start of this year that the film had been delayed after they were forced to reshoot the third act due to its unsanctioned portrayal of the Jordan Chandler case.

Actor Colman Domingo, who will play Michael Jackson’s father Joe in the upcoming biopic, has defended the project, saying that “everyone has a story to tell”. He said the film will look at the “complex human being” behind the star.

November 10, 2025 0 comments
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Mega Millions Jackpot Jumps to $843 Million, 8th Largest in Game History
Celebrity News

Mega Millions Jackpot Jumps to $843 Million, 8th Largest in Game History

by jummy84 November 9, 2025
written by jummy84

Mega Millions Jackpot Jumps to $843 Million, 8th Largest in Game History

The Mega Millions grand prize has climbed to an estimated $843 million, making it the eighth-largest jackpot in the game’s history, lottery officials said. The winning numbers will be drawn Friday at 11 p.m. ET.

According to Mega Millions, Friday’s drawing will be the 38th since the jackpot was last hit on June 27 in Virginia. That run marks the longest stretch without a jackpot winner since the game launched in 2002, surpassing the previous record of 37 drawings set on Jan. 22, 2021, when a $1.050 billion prize was won in Michigan.

“While the jackpot remains elusive, the number of winners – and total prizes won – continues to grow,” lottery officials said. They noted that during the current run, there have been nearly 11.7 million winning tickets across all prize levels, with total payouts exceeding $274 million. Officials attributed the higher overall prize amounts to “significant enhancements in the lower-tier prizes” made after the game changed in April. So far, 256 third-tier tickets — worth between $20,000 and $100,000 — have also been sold in this streak. Even though no one matched all six numbers in the most recent drawing on Nov. 4, officials emphasized that players are still winning substantial amounts. “In the Nov. 4 drawing alone, there were 606,046 winning tickets across all prize tiers, for total nationwide winnings of more than $12.2 million,” Mega Millions said.


November 9, 2025 0 comments
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'Stranger Things' Skirted Controversy & History At Season 5 Premiere
TV & Streaming

‘Stranger Things’ Skirted Controversy & History At Season 5 Premiere

by jummy84 November 8, 2025
written by jummy84

The world premiere of Stranger Things‘ fifth and final season Thursday night was a largely joyous affair for everyone involved (save for the time close to 1,000 invited guests had to spend cooped up in the Chinese Theatre with their phones locked as the screening started an hour late.)

The cast and creators smiled and posed for photos on the red carpet as they appeared to be enjoying each other’s company. That included stars Millie Bobby Brown and David Harbour who hugged and shared a laugh in front of photographers.

The two were closely watched at the premiere, their every movement and word scrutinized, as their reunion came days after a Nov. 1 Daily Mail report that claimed that the British actress, who plays girl with supernatural abilities Eleven on the show, had filed a harassment and bullying complaint against Harbour, who portrays her adoptive father Jim.

The controversy, fueled by the silence by all parties involved and Harbour’s ex-wife Lily Allen’s recently released “revenge album,” threatened to overshadow the premiere. It didn’t happen, with the cast and creators presenting united front, Brown and Harbour arriving together, Netflix releasing video of them and Brown posting a joint photo on social.

Nobody addressed the accusations directly, with Brown and Harbour praising each other in separate interviews and co-creator Ross Duffer telling THR that “nothing matters more than just having a set where everyone feels safe and happy.”

According to sources, there was a tiff between Brown and Harbour, and she did complain about his behavior, however it may not have been as recent as the report suggested but earlier in the series’ run. It was dealt with, and there hadn’t been issues since, sources said.

After posing on the red carpet, Brown, Harbour and the rest of the cast took the stage inside the Chinese Theatre, introduced by the series’ creators, Matt and Ross Duffer.

The Duffer brothers, the series director/executive producer Shawn Levy and Netflix’s co-CEO Ted Sarandos and Chief Creative Officer Bela Bajaria spoke before the screening of the Season 5 premiere episode, all becoming emotional as they did.

“I was in a magical place 10 years ago when Stranger Things was pitched to Netflix,” Sarandos said, noting that while House of Cards put the streamer on the original series map, “our real moment was when we put on Stranger Things,” a show that “moved the culture.”

Stranger Things was the first hit produced and fully owned by Netflix (earlier standouts like House of Cards and Orange Is the New Black came from outside studios), and its massive popularity turned it into a lucrative brand and merchandizing bonanza for the tech company.

The Duffer brothers thanked the people they considered to have played a crucial role in Stranger Things‘ success, including Dan Cohen, the former executive at Shawn Levy’s company who was the first to champion their script after many rejections, Levy who embraced it, Sarandos, who got it on the platform, and the fans who helped to make it into a world phenomenon. They also acknowledged Bajaria for her support of the show over its last two seasons.

The speeches made it seem like Sarandos was the one who took the Stranger Things pitch and greenlighted the series. As Chief Creative Officer at the time, Sarandos did have ultimate greenlight authority, and his role in Stranger Things‘ success is undeniable. There were others, too.

Several years ago, the Duffers presented a different version in an essay for Time Magazine about Cindy Holland, Netflix’s former head of English-language scripted originals under Sarandos.

“When we pitched Stranger Things to Netflix, we were told Cindy Holland was the key,” they wrote in 2018. “As it turns out, she’s also extremely difficult to read in a room. We left the pitch certain of only one thing: Cindy hated it. One day later, she greenlighted our show, and our lives changed.”

There was no mention of Holland in any of the on-stage remarks at the premiere. That is not unusual — it is standard Hollywood practice for executives to be erased once replaced. Still, an occasion such as the end of an extraordinary successful show could call for an exception.

Another detail from the on-stage remarks was not lost on the attendees. The Netflix executives made a point to introduce the Duffer brothers — who are set to leave the streamer in April for a film and TV deal at Paramount that will allow them to make theatrical features and reunite with Holland and another former Netflix exec involved in Stranger Things‘ ascend, Matt Thunell — as being “a big part of the Netflix family.”

Season 5 of Stranger Things premieres Nov. 26 with Part 1, followed by Part 2 on Dec. 25 and the finale on Dec. 31.

November 8, 2025 0 comments
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Bollywood Missed The Moment: India’s Women Made History | Glamsham.com
Bollywood

Bollywood Missed The Moment: India’s Women Made History | Glamsham.com

by jummy84 November 4, 2025
written by jummy84

Bollywood must already be on the phones. Production houses racing to secure rights, writers dusting off their “sports biopic” templates, and actors quietly pitching themselves for roles as Harmanpreet Kaur, Smriti Mandhana, or Shafali Verma, Jemimah Rodrigues, etc.

Because, really, how could they resist? India’s women’s cricket team has delivered the ultimate script — courage, resilience, heartbreak, and triumph — all culminating in a glorious night at the DY Patil Stadium where they lifted the ICC Women’s World Cup.

It’s cinematic gold. And a film will be made — complete with slow-motion shots, a swelling background score, and the patriotic euphoria that Bollywood knows how to bottle perfectly.

But before the film cameras roll, it’s worth asking – where were the real cameras last night? Where were the celebrities who pack VIP boxes at men’s cricket matches, turning stadiums into red carpets? Where were the same stars who flood social media during IPL finals and national team victories?

Because this time, when the women of Indian cricket scripted the nation’s greatest sporting moment in recent years, the stands were tellingly empty of the country’s biggest names — both from Bollywood and from men’s cricket.

Only a handful stood witness: Rohit Sharma, dignified in his presence; Sachin Tendulkar, ever the statesman of sport. The rest — the legends, icons, and influencers — were missing.

Among them, perhaps most notably, the MS Dhoni. The man who gave India its 2011 World Cup glory. The symbol of calm leadership, of composure under fire. His social media congratulation was warm and timely, yes — but cheering through a post isn’t quite the same as showing up in person when history is being written.

The same applies to others — the active stars who command brands, billboards, and broadcast slots; the ones who spend hours shooting commercials about passion, teamwork, and the spirit of cricket. They show up for endorsements, for launches, for photo ops at men’s matches. But when the women brought home the world’s biggest cricketing title, they were nowhere to be seen.

And Bollywood — the same industry that will soon celebrate these women on screen — was no different. Its silence and absence from the stadium echoed a hypocrisy we’ve long normalised: we adore stories of women breaking barriers, but rarely stand beside them as they do it in real time.

This isn’t an indictment — it’s an observation of priorities. Had even a few of the men’s cricketing greats — Dhoni, Kohli, Kapil Dev — been there, it would have created an unforgettable image: the torch of cricket’s legacy being passed across generations, across gender. It would have told every girl that her victory is not a side note in India’s cricketing saga — it is the saga.

Instead, the women stood on that podium, radiant and resolute, celebrating among themselves. Perhaps that’s how it should be — maybe they no longer need validation from the same ecosystem that once overlooked them.

Still, one can’t help but think: what an example it would have set if the biggest faces of Indian cricket — and of Bollywood — had been there to applaud in person.

Presence, after all, is the truest form of respect. And last night, it was the women who turned up — not just to play, but to redefine Indian cricket forever.

As the nation now prepares for the inevitable film, perhaps the industry — both cricketing and cinematic — should pause for a moment of introspection.

Because while Bollywood will soon dramatize this story on screen, the real drama of the night lay elsewhere — in the irony that when India’s women reached the pinnacle of world cricket, the crowd that always claims to love the game, simply stayed home.

November 4, 2025 0 comments
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NBA YoungBoy's 'Make America Slime Again' Tour Surpasses $70 Million + Becomes One Of Rap's Highest-Grossing Tours In History
Celebrity News

NBA YoungBoy’s ‘Make America Slime Again’ Tour Surpasses $70 Million + Becomes One Of Rap’s Highest-Grossing Tours In History

by jummy84 November 1, 2025
written by jummy84

NBA YoungBoy’s ‘Make America Slime Again’ Tour Surpasses $70 Million + Becomes One Of Rap’s Highest-Grossing Tours In History

Big money moves!

NBA YoungBoy’s “Make America Slime Again” Tour is breaking major records and shows no signs of slowing down.

According to Touring Data, the Louisiana rapper’s current MASA Tour has sold over 500,000 tickets across 42 shows, generating more than $70 million in revenue. The milestone places YoungBoy among hip-hop heavyweights like Drake, Kendrick Lamar, 50 Cent, and Jay-Z, who have all topped the list of highest-grossing rap tours in history.

The tour hasn’t been without controversy. A viral video from the Kansas City stop showed a teenage fan punching a staff member after being asked to move seats.

“He was asked to move to another place — because his ticket wasn’t where he was sitting — and immediately he just completely lost it,” a witness said.

Despite viral moments, the MASA Tour continues to dominate, with emotional fan reactions and viral co-signs from influencers like Kai Cenat fueling its momentum.

TJB Crew, have you went to the Youngboy tour?


November 1, 2025 0 comments
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The Complete Oral History of Caravan Palace's
Music

The Complete Oral History of Caravan Palace’s

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

On April Fools’ Day 2014, Caravan Palace arrived in Boston for their first-ever standalone gig in the United States. From the stage of the Paradise Rock Club, singer Zoé Colotis excitedly told the crowd the good news: “We just arrived today. It’s our first gig in the US. So happy to stand around with you guys. Let’s have some fun together!”

The following night at the Best Buy Theater in New York City, the band broke their tradition of never playing a track live before it’s been formally released and gifted the upbeat banger “Lone Digger” to a live audience. In the year that followed, the song and the album that it would later come from would effectively change their lives forever.

(which is often referred to as Robot Face or sometimes just Robot) arrived in the middle of Caravan Palace‘s discography, but quickly took on great importance. The titular “robot” would effectively serve as the group’s branding, their mascot going forward, with each subsequent full-length’s cover art reflecting the retro-mechanical motif in some way. It was very Caravan Palace. In other words, it was perfect.

Initially formed in 2005, Caravan Palace consisted of Charles Delaporte (bass, programming), Hugues Payen (violin, programming), and Arnaud Vial (guitar, programming). Singer Zoé Colotis would join in 2006, while Antoine Toustou (electronics, trombone) and Camille Chapelière (sax/clarinet) showed up in 2007, initially as live support before moving into the songwriting process. Paul-Marie Barbier (keys and vibraphone) would formally join in 2012. The lineup would change over time, and while Chapelière had no songwriting credits on this record, he still toured with the band until 2017.

Caravan Palace were mainly associated with the rising electro swing movement that started in Western countries in the 1990s, wherein the jazz stylings of Django Reinhardt and Lionel Hampton merged with the immediate electro beats of Big Beat acts like Daft Punk and Justice to craft a bridge-building aesthetic that was retro-leaning and contemporary cool all at once.

The Paris-based Caravan Palace were often mentioned alongside the likes of Austria’s Parov Stelar and Ireland’s Kormac, groups who blended samples and live instrumentation with techno percussion to lead a new musical movement. These acts would have sporadic viral moments, but global ubiquity wasn’t always something on the table, as most outfits in this field rarely found an audience beyond blogosphere notices and early YouTube success stories.

Caravan Palace always found success in their native France, with their eponymous 2008 debut reaching as high as #11 on the album charts, but after the extensive tour for their 2012 sophomore album Panic, the need to change up their sound was immediate to all. Nothing overt, mind you, but just slight tweaks to the already-colorful palette to keep things new and interesting.

“Looking back, is that at the time this album felt like a risky move in terms of our fanbase,” admits Vial when reflecting on the album’s development. “We were moving far away from swing, and we had pretty much erased the gypsy jazz side that defined us in the beginning. There were a lot of debates between the composers.”

Although “Lone Digger” felt like a smash-in-the-making when it had its on-stage premiere in 2014, the development of took considerable time, right down to the album title. It was still 2014 when Caravan Palace were exchanging texts in the group chat, and Toustou placed a few emojis—”…”—in the middle of a conversation. Manager Olivier Linglet said he saw a robot and replied with . The group soon agreed to the official title, , only after receiving confirmation that streaming services would allow these characters to serve as the proper formal title.

While tour bus difficulties marred the group’s 2014 US tour (documented extensively on their YouTube channel), Caravan Palace prevailed and took a year off the road once it was finished to work on the record. In June of 2015, “Comics” was released as the teaser single—a thumping, surprising concoction of rising synth lines and warped instrumental passages. Delaporte and Vial often cite it as their favorite track. The original idea was to take the stop-time technique used in 1950s R&B songs and translate it into a more rapping cadence. According to Vial, the song was initially written in the minor key, but was later upgraded to a major key, with no minor notes remaining.

Elements of its eerie original intention remain, most notably during that chorus-breaking line of “Murder!” That line became the centerpiece of a 2019 TikTok video by tinkerprincess0, in which she displayed live-action anime expressions that matched the song’s tone. It gave the song new life and prominence, as many of ‘s tracks would do over time.

The jumpy, bouncy “Mighty” opens with a retro-sounding track trying to define what a “jumping mood” is, as the listener will very shortly get into one. Originally conceived as a more acoustic number with a Les Paul-inspired riff, the song went through multiple iterations before Caravan Palace realized it would work better as a club track. JFTH, an artist who leans toward house/club music, was brought in, using the Lately Bass sound from the Yamaha TX81Z synthesizer to give the song real punch. An extended version of the song would eventually be released as a single in 2016.

When your humble author saw Caravan Palace play the House of Blues in Chicago in 2016, “Comics” opened the show to great aplomb. The audience were lively, energetic, and instantly engaged. While the years since have seen multiple staples carry on through their in-person performances (you can always count on “Brotherswing”!), it’s no surprise that the songs from continue to make up a healthy amount of their live selections. As of 2025, “Comics” has even been upgraded to “encore opener” in some instances. “Mighty”, meanwhile, is often played second-to-last in the primary set. These tracks continue to pack quite the punch.

Flashing back to 2016, animator Alkifeather published a short video using the song “Aftermath” as the basis for an animation that would soon go viral. The swoony, almost dream-like track relies heavily on stop-start dynamics, with a synth break that stops at regular intervals, allowing either drum fills or chugging guitar loops to fill the gaps. A trend emerged in this era, where vocal samples were added to the track’s many drops and took on increasingly darker forms, which Caravan Palace candidly wasn’t a big fan of.

“Wonderland” would also rank as a “2016 single release”, thanks to its distinct swooning horn stabs, which made quite an impression on listeners. Opening with a sample from “Nutcracker Suite” (“Just imagine a trip to a wonderful land of candy, and jam, and iiiiice cream!”), the playfully spooky number alternates between playful entendres (the chorus of “all up in the gut” is revealed to be an abbreviation of “all up in the gutter”), braggadocios power (“I gotta hit that street, you better watch it / With a gat that I cock with a full clip”), and a final twist where this is all imagined (“I’m just a random girl with gentle manners / In my dreams I rock and I rule the wonderland”).

The video, a sly and gorgeously rendered animated tale of a woman coming into her power in various forms, would over time rack up 90 million views (as of 2025) and become another visual touchstone from this heralded era. Much as with the “Lone Digger” video (which we’ll get to in a minute), so much went into its creation. Again, using studio Double Ninja with production by Cumulus, Vial explained their appeal: “Often their scripts are just three lines long. They’re not the kings of storyboarding, but they go for the jugular with scripts that impact and are on the controversial side. And their character design is something else!”

Delaporte goes one step further in talking about the studio: “There is something in their aesthetic that really resonates with Caravan Palace: That playful, offbeat mix of styles and influences. Even if our contexts are different, we share that same taste for blending worlds that don’t usually meet.”

In seeing the final product, Colotis was particularly impressed: “I immediately appreciated its ‘full color/colorful’ aspect (for the energy it conveys) and the aesthetic references that coexist: rap bling and boom-boom shorts vs. Greek columns and an ‘Art Nouveau’ bandstand, against a backdrop of ‘Sims’ scenery and a big Hummer … it immediately looked like a fun and wacky thing, just the way we like them. Being also sensitive to what is ‘graphic,’ I liked the attention paid to the proportions in each shot, the presence of a certain symmetry in the image, and the ‘kaleidoscope’ effects that instantly evoked the Bubsy Berkey films from the 1930s, which I particularly like (the final image is a good example).

“It seemed to me that the evocation of the dream and its cathartic function did justice to our purpose: ‘I know all these things never happen, I’m just a random girl with gentle manners,’” she concludes. Then, as an aside: “For the record, I remember that it was me who asked Arnaud to add this final verse to avoid falling into the first degree ‘violent rap’ which didn’t really resemble us.”

Back on the album, the boppy “Tattoos”, which meshes samples and lively instrumentation for a piano boogie-woogie vibe where a scratchy vocal sample says “I got plenty of tattoos” over and over again, hews as close to the “classic” Caravan Palace sound of the debut more than any track here. Toustou, a dancer who has proven time and time again that he’s unafraid to bring his boogie out onto a concert stage, truly pushed for the track to deliver true lindy hop energy.

Kicking off the album’s proper back half is “Midnight”, a number that starts with spooky piano lines and yearning sax work, right before the vocal sample comes in during the drop to ask, “Why is everybody always pickin’ on me?” The song then explodes into a groovy beatscape, which Caravan Palace ride to a funky conclusion. Inspired by Chopin’s nocturnes, it has a different vibe than their previous work, and the inclusion of that sax line ultimately led to the full adoption of the baritone sax in their live sets.

The plunky, dreamy, downright glittery “Russian” would soon become another staple, taking clear melodic inspiration from tracks like “Do Your Thing” by UK beatmasters Basement Jaxx. Initially thought of as perhaps even too pop and not swing enough for the group, Caravan Palace plowed through recording, and even a fresh vocal take from Colotis brought the pop elements to the forefront. Payen made it his mission to Carvangalize this track, adding more unique sound plops along with a stride piano part recorded by then-pianist Paul-Marie Barbier. The result was a song that may have started in a different universe but ended firmly within that swing-pop wheelhouse.

Are you Mr. Beau or are you Shorty Jones? So rests the quixotic question at the center of “Wonda”, a synth-funk workout that asks the listener to do “the kinky thing”. Payen was aiming for a piano line not too unlike “Superstition” by Stevie Wonder, and a mere piano break wasn’t enough. This is a Caravan Palace original we’re talking about, so you know full well that a track like this ends best with a vibraphone-led outro. That plays directly into the more experimental and expressive back-half of , where there are fewer out-and-out bangers but instead striking moments of fluidity and wonder (or wonda?).

“Human Leather Shoes for Crocodile Dandies” unquestionably wins the award for most distinct song title, but the melodic contents are even more intriguing. A loose and limber guitar loop swings in and out of samples, hovering over atmospheric passages and using sampled vocals to ask what’s the use of jivin’. At around 2:48, the song shifts into a looped, ambient phrase that feels almost Jon Hopkins-esque before reuniting with the central melodic theme, creating an experience that’s as empathetic as it is quietly grandiose, like a close friend telling a big secret.

That reverb-soaked bridge was created entirely by Toustou as Caravan Palace recount, and no one is quite sure how he did it. They have even referred to such sonic wizardry as nothing short of legendary.

Payen was the chief architect of the closer “Lay Down”, and the band have often referred to his songwriting practice as akin to a mad scientist tinkering. Using chopped-and-spliced vocals, the song depicts how the narrator can’t get sick and lie down, for they know their soul is bound for hell. Caravan Palace talk about how the production changes significantly during development: most of the original percussive elements were removed. The “Charles choir” of vocals was part of the demo, and while initially intended to be re-recorded, it was considered so perfect as-is that it was left in the outro. Caravan Palace allegedly spent a long time finding the ideal snare sound, too.

Photo: Andrew Bowles / Le Plan Recordings

The record closes with a smooth swing sample, as the group made it clear to their fans that, despite all the genre experiments and melodic detours, the departing message was simple: “Yes, Caravan is still very much into swing.”

On 16 October 2015, was unleashed onto the world. It would open at #64 in the UK Albums Chart, #51 in France’s SNEP, and reach #3 on Billboard’s Top Dance Albums chart in the US, where it would remain for 65 weeks. Despite all of these achievements, Caravan Palace admit that the album wasn’t an immediate success — it grew very gradually. Yet even with that, the initial “rejection” was painful.

Specifically, they were surprised to learn that some fans of the first album had almost abandoned Caravan Palace entirely by this point. They honed in on the “gypsy swing” elements of those first records: the crisp guitars, the clarinet work, etc. Vial notes that “When the album came out, the online comments were pretty hard to take. ‘Where’s the gypsy guitar?’ ‘When will you get back to swing?’ — that kind of thing… “In the end, a new audience found us,” he beams. “More international, probably younger too. But it took time. […] Not a passing trend, not driven by media hype — just good, honest word of mouth.”

Per Laurent Masset, owner of the record label Le Plan Recordings, he notes that “After landed, there was a lot of banter backstage where I’d come up to Caravan Palace and ask if they’d seen this or that, from social media or the internet. We discovered a lot of internet activity that we didn’t suspect. I’d never heard of TikTok, and then ‘Wonderland’ happened right as it was being rebranded from musical.ly, which I’d not heard of either. I spent the weekend looking at the hundreds of thousands of user-generated content uploaded live with the song, some with hundreds of thousands of comments, just mind blown.

“There’s also the dances, the finger-tutting, the animation memes, video game culture with the Hotline Miami references, or the Undertale mash-up, but also this overflowing creativity of people all over the world, who constantly reinterpret everything,” he continues. “Be it bootleg T-shirts in Mexico City, people creating their own Caravan Palace-related clothes to wear at concerts, or the thousands and thousands of DeviantArt posts. That’s a recent development in the relationship between an artist and their fans, and it’s a creativity that is sometimes a source of inspiration for the band.”

Adds Vial: “The Cosplay universe brought to us by the young audience, mainly American, is super fun. It’s true that the range of characters featured in our videos gives our young fans something to look forward to. I love seeing this, and I really hope this keeps growing.”

Yet much of the album’s success—and Caravan Palace’s legacy—can be tied to that stunning, upbeat opener, “Lone Digger”. While the song was released as a single in September of 2015, the music video wouldn’t drop until November, handled by the Double Ninja production house. The animated clip shows a gang of anthropomorphic cats making their way into a strip club where a series of mishaps leads to a shockingly violent ending. To call it memorable would be an understatement.

Caravan Palace
Photo: Olivier Linglet / Le Plan Recordings

Band manager Olivier Linglet notes that “The band likes to give full artistic freedom to the directors they work with, which means not all videos are to the band’s taste and they rarely match the original meaning of the song. It’s actually happened another time that an MV would have worked better with the lyrics of another song (‘Plume’ vs. ‘Melancolia’).”

Colotis is blunt in her assessment, noting that when she saw the finished video, she “almost cried out of disappointment, because to me it was supposed to be a story for a comic”.

“Originally, I had written something inspired by a strip club in Los Angeles that I went to with a friend, born and raised in LA, whom I was staying with in Highland Park,” Colotis continues. “He introduced me to classic cars and all sorts of cool things in the city. It was during the three months that Toustou and I had decided to spend in LA to improve our English and soak up the American culture. The strip club in question was Jumbo’s Clown Room (I still have the tape!).

“A great place run by women, where a lot of women go because the pole dance acts are very theatrical and athletic. (They say Courtney Love once worked there.) So there have been dozens of interpretations of that song (I don’t think we included them in the album booklet), but originally, it was about a stripper addressing the crowd…”

Thankfully, the gazelle stripper who ends up being the last survivor of the video was a proxy for everything from pushing through the pain to showing the resilience of women in light of more basic and (intrinsically) animal instincts. While her final shot may show her covered in blood, it’s not her own, and this pop-art violent fantasy would soon resonate with the viewers all around the world, transcending even languages.

In an extremely unfortunate bit of timing, a day after the release of the clever-but-violent video, a terrorist attack at Le Bataclan would make world headlines, and Caravan Palace promptly abandoned promotions for the video out of respect for the hundreds of victims. The music video still reached over a million views by the end of that year.

The group continue onward, covering the song “Black Betty” during a taping of the program Taratata, which would soon become a live staple and later a standalone 2017 single that remained closely tied to the era. In the years that followed, even with the release of other Caravan Palace albums, was the gift that kept on giving. They would play on UK television staples hosted by Jonathan Ross and Jools Holland. They’d play St. Petersburg and Moscow. The world opened up to them in a way that it hadn’t for other acts playing within their genre wheelhouse.

“Lone Digger” would eventually crest to over 400 million YouTube views and be certified platinum by the RIAA, becoming a bona fide hit and a generational calling card. They receive accolades for their success, gain a reputation for their riotously fun live shows, and, thanks to “Lone Digger”, inspired an official count of over 10,000 pieces of MV-inspired fan art alone by January 2020.

“I remember one day when my local school called me because my son, who must have been in sixth grade at the time, had gotten into a fight because a kid had told him ‘your dad is a pornographer’ after watching ‘Lone Digger’,” recalls Masset. “It turned into the event of the day at school, with a fight scheduled after class, so there was a crowd, and the police were called. I was a little embarrassed, but secretly quite happy that a Caravan Palace video was reaching out into suburban America.”

The release of 2019’s Chronologic and 2024’s Gangbusters Melody Club was via Caravan Palace’s own sublabel, appropriately named Lone Diggers. “Lone Diggers is our own little lab,” beams Delaporte. “We built it to keep full creative control, from the music itself, the artwork, the visuals, even the timing of releases. […] After years in the industry, we just wanted to run our own ship, release what feels right. It’s freedom, and it sounds like us.”

Caravan Palace
Photo: Andrew Bowles / Le Plan Recordings

Thanks to those wise decisions both creatively and economically, the milestones just kept tumbling towards them: Soon, they’d pass over a billion YouTube views, net hundreds of millions of streams, and continue to be one of the most prominent and active acts in the electro-swing movement, up to the point where “electro-swing” increasingly feels like too limiting of a label for what they’ve been able to accomplish.

Looking back on it all, Vial marvels at how “Lone Digger” and would shape their identities. “It became one of the most popular songs in the genre — and the band’s biggest hit — so that’s kind of reassuring,” he notes. “It’s always worth taking risks.”

“Why deprive yourself of the thrill of ‘unlikely destinations’ and not take the side roads of free creation when you have the opportunity?” Colotis chimes in. “It’s currently a luxury, but I dream of a world where taking risks would be the norm. Where even if it is not always easy, possible or comfortable, we would consider it a ‘duty’ in creative professions and as basic hygiene for any self-respecting artist.”

That first risk was the most important: Caravan Palace breaking their cardinal “no previews” rule and playing “Lone Digger” in front of a New York audience nearly a year before its formal release. April Fools’ Day may have only been the day prior to that first live performance of the classic, but the only fools out there are the ones who doubted such a dynamic outfit would ever make it this big.

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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