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Sean Penn Honors Jack Nicholson at Lyon's Lumière Festival
TV & Streaming

Sean Penn Honors Jack Nicholson at Lyon’s Lumière Festival

by jummy84 October 12, 2025
written by jummy84

Introducing “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest,” the curtain-raiser at this year’s Lumière Film Festival in Lyon where he is guest of honor, Sean Penn gave an emotional speech about his friend, the film’s lead actor Jack Nicholson. 

“I heard my name a lot tonight,” he said. “But I’ve been very comfortable with it in the sense that knowing “Cuckoo’s Nest” was going to play, there was no question I was going to be able to find great humility under the circumstances. One of the great, magic moments in my life in cinema was the first time I saw Jack Nicholson in Miloš Forman’s ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest.’”

 “I was very privileged in so much as being able to have worked with Jack twice,” he continued. With both ‘The Pledge’ and ‘Crossing Guard,’ he was an angel on my shoulder and I still can’t quite get over, I still can’t quite imagine that McMurphy [Nicholson’s character in “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest”] has worked with me,” he smiled.   

The film has more than stood the test of time, Penn told the crowd, recalling the first time he saw it as a teenager in Los Angeles when it was released in 1975. 

“There was a little cinema out by the beach in Los Angeles where I would go. At the time, in the late ‘70s, it seemed that each film that came out was sort of an event. But still, today, I wouldn’t think twice about sharing this movie with a 16 or 17 year-old because it would hold up – even with those that get bored very quickly,” he quipped, drawing chuckles from the crowd gathered in Lyon’s 5,000-seat Tony Garnier show hall, one of the festival’s key venues.   

Asked by Lumière director Thierry Frémaux, who also heads the Cannes festival, whether it is still possible to make films like that today, Penn replied: “I have been part of the culture of complaint about where cinema has been going for a long time. But then things happen: there are two films that I am sharing here at the festival – ‘Manas’ and ‘Sentimental Value’ – and [when] you see what an independently minded director still does, ignoring all the complaints, you see it’s all still possible.”   

Earlier in the day, Penn attended the Lyon premiere of this year’s Cannes Grand Prix winner “Sentimental Value” together with director Joachim Trier. He will also present Marianna Brennand’s debut feature, “Manas,” which he executive produced. 

Penn has a packed schedule while in Lyon, where he will present a new subtitled copy of his 2007 hit “Into the Wild” and sit down for a masterclass with a Lumière audience. Taking the stage to introduce the opening film, the actor-director seemed momentarily lost for words in the vast, sold-out concert hall: “I didn’t expect… [Thierry] didn’t explain to me how big this situation is, I didn’t realise it was like this….” 

The remark echoed the feeling of many first-timers at Lumiere, which draws several hundreds of thousands to see classics and contemporary films on big screens across some 30 venues. 

Walking the red carpet ahead of the opening ceremony, director Scott Cooper – who will premiere his new film “Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere” at Lumière – said: “It’s wonderful, I wish we had more [festivals like this] everywhere,” prompting a cry of: “Lyon, the birthplace of cinema!” from Jeremy Allen White, the two-time Emmy winner who stars as The Boss in Cooper’s film.

Faithful to tradition, the festival’s 800 volunteers were feted with a walk-around the concert hall to the sound of a brass band, before guests were invited to the stage to officially open the festival by reading a sentence in unison – a joyous cacophony that drew complicit laughter from the crowd. 

Among the celebrities crowding the stage alongside Penn, Cooper and White were Taiwanese actor and filmmaker Shu Qi, Travis Knight, the head of Laika Studios, Costa-Gavras, Valeria Golino, three-time César-winner Dominique Blanc, and one enfant terrible of French cinema Bertrand Bonello (“Saint Laurent,” “The Beast”).

The Lumière Film Festival runs in and around Lyon until Oct. 19.

October 12, 2025 0 comments
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Rap Artists Whose Music Honors Assata Shakur's Revolutionary Spirit
Music

Rap Artists Whose Music Honors Assata Shakur’s Revolutionary Spirit

by jummy84 October 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Hip-Hop, at its very foundation, has always been more than beats and rhymes — it has been a vessel for survival, resistance, and rebellion.

Born in the Bronx during the 1970s, the culture emerged as a way to channel poverty, oppression, and sociopolitical strife into creative expression and communal strength. That defiant spirit mirrored, and in many ways carried forward, the ethos of the revolutionary movements that preceded it.

The music and the figures behind it were spiritual successors to the Black Panther Party and Black Liberation Army of the late ’60s and ’70s, organizations that dared to empower young people of color to challenge authority, reclaim their dignity, and speak truth to power.

Among the most iconic figures to emerge from that revolutionary era was Assata Shakur. Born Joanne Chesimard in New York, she became active in activism during her college years, first joining the Black Panther Party before transitioning to the Black Liberation Army.

Outspoken and unyielding in her defense of Black lives, Shakur became a polarizing figure in the eyes of the American government.

In 1973, she and two other BLA members were involved in a violent shootout with New Jersey State Troopers on the New Jersey Turnpike. One officer was killed, another was wounded, and one of the BLA members was fatally shot.

Assata Shakur

Bettmann / Contributor

Though Shakur maintained her innocence, she was convicted of first-degree murder in 1977 and sentenced to life plus 26 to 33 years. Two years later, she staged one of the most famous prison escapes in U.S. history, ultimately finding political asylum in Cuba in 1984.

While the FBI branded her a fugitive and threat to society, Hip-Hop embraced her as something far greater: a freedom fighter, a survivor, and a symbol of uncompromising defiance against systemic oppression.

Considered an “aunt” to the late Tupac Shakur, Assata was revered not only by her nephew but also by countless artists who found in her story a reflection of Hip-Hop’s own struggle — marginalized voices fighting to be heard in the face of power.

Assata Shakur

Bettmann / Contributor

Her revolutionary spirit continues to echo through the music, referenced in verses and honored in interviews, a reminder that Hip-Hop is inseparable from the struggle that birthed it. To this day, Assata Shakur remains a beacon of love, resilience, and pride for Black people — a figure whose life, though fraught with controversy, has forever shaped the cultural consciousness of Hip-Hop.

Following her passing on Sept. 25, 2025, at the age of 78, she leaves behind not just a legacy of resistance, but a blueprint for artists who dare to stand defiantly against the forces that seek to silence them.

In celebration of her life and legacy, VIBE highlights more than 50 artists who kept Assata Shakur’s name alive in exile through their music. These lyrics and displays of homage will continue to resonate and introduce her to future generations of listeners and potential revolutionaries.

  • 2Pac

    Tupac Shakur
    Image Credit: Steve Granitz Archive/WireImage

    “New Afrikan Panthers, America’s nightmare/ Mutulu Shakur, America’s nightmare/ Geronimo Pratt, America’s nightmare/ Assata Shakur, America’s nightmare.” – 2Pac, “Words of Wisdom”

    –

    “Assata Shakur?”/ Another auntie, I miss her though/ Please thank Mr. Castro for keepin’ her safe bro/ How many more of us die before we can see the light/ It’s time brothers work it out, unite for a bigger fight.” – 2Pac, “Tearz of a Clown”

  • Nas

    Nas
    Image Credit: Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images for Tribeca Festival

    “Y’all dudes will never see me down/ Reading everything, books and body language/ Du Bois, Baldwin, and Chavis/ Assata, John Hope Franklin, Angela Davis.” Nas, “Stay Chisel”

    –

    “Football wives, basketball wives/ Mistresses slash more tires with knives/ They lookin’ for a dollar/ I’m lookin’ for a JoAnne Chesimard to turn to a shotta.” – Nas, “Royalty”

  • Killer Mike

    Killer Mike
    Image Credit: Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images)

    “When I surface on the streets I can hear the crowd yelling/ And see the neighborhood snitches pointing and telling/ I’m bailing like a felon or Assata Shakur/ Before the law leave me stinking like a bag of manure.” – Killer Mike, “Don’t Die”

    –

    “The U.S. government has a million dollar bounty on the head of Assata Shakur/ Y’all ni**as go on the internet, check that sh*t out, man/ That was Pac aunt, she in exile right now in Cuba/ Don’t let them bring our mamas home man and put her in no cage/ Just a little consciousness for all y’all wanna be rap trap motherf**kers.” – Killer Mike, “Long A** Outro”

    –

    “Thick with her a**, she in some Betty Shabazz, pretty as Coretta Scott/ All that I got, she got the face of a model/ She got the heart of Assata/ She from the gutter, my ni**a/ Wife and a mother, my ni**a/ Winnie Mandela, my ni**a.” – Killer Mike, “Down By Law”

    –

    “Black lives matter? Then prove it/ Grab a black Glocker, make them coppers face the music/ They try to tell me, ‘Mikey, but your papa was a copper’/ I tell ’em, ‘Suck my d**k because my auntie is Assata’/ And then I double down and tell them something twice as hard/ Jesus is a fraud, the black woman is god.” Bobby Sessions featuring Killer Miker, “Black Neighborhood”

  • Common

    Common
    Image Credit: Rebecca Sapp/Getty Images for The Recording Academy

    “In the Spirit of God/ In the Spirit of the ancestors/ In the Spirit of the Black Panthers
    In the Spirit of Assata Shakur/ We make this movement towards freedom/ For all those who have been oppressed/ And all those in the struggle.”
    – Common, “A Song For Assata”

    –

    “My man went to Cuba/ Caught in a political triangle, Bermuda/ The same way they said she was the shooter/ Assata Shakur, they tried to execute her/ I went to Cuba to see her/ We should free her, like we should Mumia.” – Common featuring JAY-Z, “Open Letter Pt. II”

    –

    “Child of a fresher God/ Influenced by the life of the former, Joanne Chesimard/ Assata Shakur, I gotta do more/ The light-skinned spook who got in the door/ I got in here for the same thing Cassius Clay uses pottery for.” – Common, “Pyramids”

  • Rapsody

    Rapsody
    Image Credit: Emma McIntyre/Getty Images for Billboard

    “I came through the rain, and I came through the thunder/ I push through the pain; I’m laughin’ at summer/ My hell was way hotter—I feel like Assata/ Escape with my truth; I came back like Nirvana.” – Rapsody, “Back In My Bag”

    –

    “Nobody know nada/ We all know the fate of Assata if Cuba don’t harbor/ Nobody know I’m harder on myself than lonely fathers/ Watching Mrs. Parker, these days nobody know who authored/ Rhymes of rappers on carpets.” – Rapsody, “Nobody”

    –

    “Bullets burn; they Holocaust us, ashes to our daughters/ Pray our sons have granddaughters and live to be grandfathers/ Dedicated to Assata, broke our fourth chakra/ In memory of the Rasta who forewarned us for Breonna.” – Rapsody, “He Shot Me”

  • Black Thought

    Black Thought
    Image Credit: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for GQ

    “Dear white people, I am not your negro/ Yeah, Black people, y’all just got your hero/ All these rap demons I’m about to Deebo/ Me and Assata, my ATLien alter ego.” – Sa-Roc featuring Black Thought, “The Black Renaissance”

    –

    “It’s a long drawn out saga, like The Godfather/ Coming up this hard, it made a n**ga rock solid/ Now I be the top shotter, heart of a Rottweiler/ The boss that learned to move cautious as Assata.” – DANGERDOOM featuring Black Thought, “Mad Nice”

  • Public Enemy

    Public Enemy
    Image Credit: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images


    “Flow on, the project, the pop off/ Low tempo to go off/ COINTEL better go to hell/ Bout that time hear the bell y’all/ Gotta lotta nerve never knowing Assata/ Gotcha mind wading in the water.” Public Enemy – “Gotta Give The Peeps What They Want”

  • Talib Kweli

    Talib Kweli
    Image Credit: Bryan Bedder/Getty Images for Ozy Fusion Fest 2017

    “The highest caliber make it a night to remember like Shalamar/ Then escape to Havana with Assata I do what I gotta/ Planes get shot down in Cuban air space over the water/ I got insight it’s a clear case of reading your aura.” – Reflection Eternal featuring Yasiin Bey, Mr. Man, “Fortified Live”

    –

    “She’s earth, wind and fire, don’t tempt her to show her power/ Turning all weeds to flowers/ Looking into her wise eyes will make a blind man see/ How can you dare name a eurocentric girl after me?/ Assata Shakur Barbara Jordan Nikki Giovanni and Angela Davis/ Look it up!/ These are the real symbols of liberty.” – Talib Kweli, “Manifest Destiny”

    –

    “I got love for every artist, I’m more than just a product/ I’ve been a prisoner, see Mumia, I’ve been to Cuba to see Assata/ Way before Mr. and Mrs. Carter went on a dinner date/ I had to send the lyrics ahead of time before I hit the stage.” – Talib Kweli, “5AM In Brooklyn

  • Dead Prez

    Dead Prez
    Image Credit: Evan Agostini/Getty Images

    “This is for Mumia and Sundiata, Herman Bell, we got ya/ Mutulu Shakur, we want you free with Assata/ And Giuliani, yo, you can swim with the lobsters/ I hope you mobsters lose your livers to the vodka.” – Dead Prez, “Together”

    —

    “Yes, they really invading your home/ And if you’re really looking for Assata Shakur/ She right here, it’s me, her and 2Pac over here having a beer/ Cheers, a toast to a lovely revolution/ What’s hush hush they know what we doing.” – M1, “Confidential”

  • Fatal Hussein

    Fatal Hussein
    Image Credit: Johnny Nunez/WireImage

    “Roddy shot Yak, Mu took the Shahada/ I had another baby girl, and I named her Assata/ Her middle name your last name, her family tree/ I can’t help but think where we would be.” – Fatal Hussein, “Letter To Pac”

    –

    “If I don’t make it home tonight/ Kiss Assata and tell her daddy got it on tonight/ If it’s meant to be I be back the same way she was sending me/ And I ain’t gotta finish the century, gotta ’em history.” – Fatal Hussein, “Blocka Blocka”

  • Sean Price

    Sean Price
    Image Credit: Mike Lawrie/Getty Images

    “Slap a, bi**h boy knock his tooth out his grill/ Sean Price be the truth in the ‘Ville, listen/ If ya, knock on my door I’m cockin the four/ Great escape from the law like Assata Shakur.” – Sean Price, “King Kong”

  • Shock G

    Shock G
    Image Credit: Earl Gibson III/Getty Images

    “Afrika Bambaataa, Miles motherf**king Davis/ Sister Assata Shakur, once known as Joanne Chesimard.” – Digital Underground, “Heartbeat Props”

  • Rome Streetz

    Rome Streetz
    Image Credit: Gary Gershoff/Getty Images

    “Went platinum off the product to pay the rent, and cop the Prada/ My bi**h a model but she down to pop it like Assata/ Vow to let no snake in the grass divide us/ Dip the bogie in the juice if they tryin to buy dust.” – DJ Mugg featuring Rome Streetz, “Ace Of Swords”

  • Sa-Roc

    Assata Shakur
    Image Credit: Paras Griffin/Getty Images for BET

    “They try to censor me, instantly on a hundred/ Named Assata, makes sense I’ma be the most wanted/ Wanna send for me, got the sentry on the hunt/ With that rrah soundin’ like a freaking symphony, son.” – Sa-Roc, “40 And A Mule”

    –

    “I ain’t new to this profession, I’m established in it/ Any challenge to the status quo would be a cataclysm/ Cuz I’m Assata with the good hair-9 ether/ I have em pissing lemonade when I arrive eager.” – Sa-Roc, “Queen Ting”

  • Kxng Crooked

    KXNG Crooked
    Image Credit: Tiffany Rose/Getty Images for Smoke Big Documentary

    “Conspiracy theories fueled the rumors/ Slaughterhouse faked they death and moved to Cuba/ Yeah, they with Assata now, the group is not around/ Ni**as went solo like Bobby Brown.” – KXNG Crooked, “Sorry”

  • Styles P

    Styles
    Image Credit: Paras Griffin/Getty Images for ESSENCE


    “They say payback’s a motherf**king ni**a/ That explains why I’m sick of getting treated like a goddamn step-child/ Living like Assata, I’m an exile/ Gotta climb out of my skin, just like a reptile.” – Styles P, “Cause I’m Black”

  • Flatbush Zombies

    Flatbush Zombies
    Image Credit: Johnny Nunez/WireImage

    “My grandfather, he live through me/ In the night, sometimes I feel like his voice is talkin’ to me/ Connected to a higher power, they couldn’t find me like Assata/ Weh dem a do like Mavado, and I’ma shoot if I gotta.” – Flatbush Zombies featuring RZA, “Quentin Tarantino”

  • JID

    JID
    Image Credit: Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images


    “Y’all need some lovin’ in your life/ A little Giovanni by your side/ A little of Assata’s all I need/ A little bit of Angela Davis and Ruby Dee.” – Alkebulan, “W4R” by JID & 6LACK featuring OG Maco

  • Stephen Marley

    Stephen Marley
    Image Credit: Ethan Miller/Getty Images

    “It’s foul how the youth glued to the television/ Ain’t heard of Assata but twitter following Paris Hilton/ It’s only right we want to be more than poor and righteous but/ Even the rich today can’t ignore the crisis in Babylon.” – Stephen Marley, “Babylon”

  • Freddie Gibbs

    Freddie Gibbs
    Image Credit: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images

    “Prick my finger, Alfredo, Illuminati/ Joe Pesci, pushing product/ You ni**as is sweeter than Joe Exotic/ On the run like Assata, so f**k the police/ As a ni**a be chillin’ in La Habana.” – Freddie Gibbs & The Alchemist, “1985”

  • Yasiin Bey

    Yasiin Bey
    Image Credit: Arturo Holmes/Getty Images

    “All our loved ones behind the walls/ All of those still in the struggle/ Assata, Mumia/ Sundiata/ My man Jamil, life is real/ To all the real soldiers, black people/ We family, y’all Let it be bright.” – Yasiin Bey, “Sunshine”

  • Vic Mensa

    Vic Mensa
    Image Credit: Paras Griffin/Getty Images for BET

    “Rockin’ Prada leathers bought my chick a Saffiano/ Gelato in the fronto, it’s thick as a Cubano/ Touched down in Havana, just to holla at a Assata/ When they stop me at customs, I know nada.” – Vic Mensa, “Clipse Freestyle”

  • Billy Woods

    Billy Woods
    Image Credit: Facebook

    “Is that stupid or gangster?/ Is that flight or bammer?/ Mumia, if I had a hammer/ You’d be with Assata in Havana.” – billy woods, “High Treason”

    –

    “Temple Grandin, keep the cattle calm/ Side-saddle, took Carrie to the prom/ Joanne Chesimard, windows open, nights warm/ Power cuts, no ice, so the cuba libre’s strong.” – billy woods, “Smith + Cross”

  • Noname

    Noname
    Image Credit: Emma McIntyre/Getty Images for Coachella

    “We seen ’em murder the indigenous, the Passage Middle/ The Constitution, a life for a bag of Skittles/ So when we bleed, I load the sacred pistol/ And if you need, I’ll read Assata with you/ And if you rich, I pray that God forgive you.” – Anderson .Paak featuring Noname, “Lockdown (Remix)”

  • Nick Cannon

    Nick Cannon
    Image Credit: Robin L Marshall/Getty Images for ESSENCE

    “This for Rosa and Coretta, Assata and Loretta/ Betty, Roseta, Angela, Mahalia/ Dr. Bethune, Sojourner, she the truth/ I do it for the culture, the new Oprah in the booth.” – Nick Cannon, “The Invitation Is Cancelled”

  • Smino

    Smino
    Image Credit: Paras Griffin/Getty Images for BET)


    “Silk the chakra, I’m tuned in with Assata/ From womb, been a lil prodigy/ New boo, like Rapunzel/ I love her the long way like PeeWee/ Spit shine like kiwi, for a hour, it make life more easy.” – Smino, “Black Luv Ain’t Dead”

  • Arrested Development

    Arrested Development
    Image Credit: Monica Schipper/Getty Images for The Recording Academy)

    “Freedom is our right, we demand that/ Possessed with the spirits of the Black Panthers/ The MOVE Organization/ Nat Turner/ Assata/ David Walker.” – Arrested Development, “Pride”

  • Denzel Curry

    Denzel Curry
    Image Credit: Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images

    “Anti-American, I’m pro-Assata/ Write rhymes like a scholar, all about a dollar/ Dollar equals Allah, put away the scouters/ You won’t see my power, this your final hour.” – Denzel Curry, “Hate Government”

  • Grand Puba

    Grand Puba
    Image Credit: Johnny Nunez/WireImage

    “Now if this falls short, I’ll try harder/ A wisdom to me is someone like Assata/ I’d like to say peace to Bambaata.” – Grand Puba, “Brand Nubian”

  • Paris

    Paris
    Image Credit: Raymond Boyd/Getty Images

    “So many things that I seen on tour/ Took a trip down to Cuba, met Assata Shakur/ Had dinner with Fidel, talked about hard times/ And now America’s steady tryna destroy minds.” – Paris, “Check It Out Ch’All (Alternate Version)”

    —

    “We the same thang/ That’s why the media is givin’ us the same names/ Convicts strikin’ Assata, the same game/ Settin’ up the same circumstances in the barrio and in the hood ’til we gangbang.” – Paris, “One Gun”

  • Saul Williams

    Saul Williams
    Image Credit: Jason Mendez/Getty Images

    “Yeah, I became militant too/ So it was clear on every level I was blacker than you/ I turned you on to Malcolm X and Assata Shakur/ In my three quarter elephant goose with the fur.” – Saul Williams, “Black Stacey”

  • Saigon

    Saigon
    Image Credit: Brad Barket/Getty Images

    “They said all I had to do was just follow the for-/Mula you does, and you gon’ be popular boy/ See, what they fail to realize is I rhyme for the cause/ And got the same mind frame as Assata Shakur.” – Saigon, “The Game Changer”

  • Blu

    Blu
    Image Credit: Chelsea Lauren/WireImage

    “Al Sharpton, Fred Hampton, Oprah Winfrey/ Barack Obama, Assata Shakur, Tupac Shakur, Biggie/ And everyone else creating black history/ That lives with me everyday, until I’m gone.” – Blu & Exile, “Roots Of Blue”

    –

    “Yeah and ain’t an artist as pure behind bars like Assata Shakur/ Slap cops, peace to Zsa Zsa Gabor, tell ’em pardon my gore/ Had flashbacks, started a war/ What a loss got caught in a storm.” – Blu, “BeGo(o)D!”

    –

  • Killah Priest

    Killah Priest
    Image Credit: Roy Rochlin/Getty Images


    “Taught to pray hard, he would answer/ But he never answered the prayers from the Panthers/ From Stokely Carmichael, Geronimo Pratt, Assata Shakur/ We adore.” – Killah Priest, “The Beloved (DJ Wool Remix)”

  • Meshell Ndegeocello

    Meshell Ndegeocello
    Image Credit: Roy Rochlin/Getty Images for Tribeca Film Festival

    “If you desire to be confrontational like Sojourner Truth/ If you wish to be audacious like Audrey Lord, antagonistic like Angela Davis/ Gangsta like Winnie Mandela, angry like Assata Shakur/ Come roar with us in the corner, sit beside us in schools/ Chant with us in church, vote with us and for us at the pole.” – Meshell Ndegeocello, “Tsunami Rising”

  • Chino XL

    Chino XL
    Image Credit: Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images


    “I took a deep breath leaving everything I knew behind/ The country air, the green grass and my piece of mind/ Harassed by white cops on our way, we’re pulled out our car/ Mistook my mom for Joanne Chessimar, now I’m really scarred.” – Chino XL, “What Am I?”

  • Blackalicious

    Blackalicious
    Image Credit: Rick Diamond/WireImage

    “I am the might of common law/ Kumbaya Chronicle/ Got piranha flow/ Jungles beside a hole/ Songs that Assata told Geronimo Pratt.” – Blackalicious, “Aural Pleasure”

  • Mr. Muthaf**king’ Exquire

    Mr. Muthafucking' Exquire
    Image Credit: Roger Kisby/Getty Images

    “Start out with her brain/ Not so that she’s trained but to make sure that she’s sane/ Funny like Kim Wayans/ But strong Assata Shakur.” – Mr. Muthafucking’ Exquire, “Build A Bi**h”

  • MARCO PLUS

    MARCO PLUS
    Image Credit: YouTube

    “Black panther in the booth, Fred Hampton picked my suit/ And then I smoked a spliff with Huey and Queen Assata did my hair/ Yo team silent, we the livest up in here/ So keep quiet cuz I speak knowledge but I preach violence up in here.” – MARCO PLUS, “Lately”

  • Lowkey

    Lowkey
    Image Credit: Martin Pope/Getty Images

    “Men make them, but the women get harmed in wars/ I pray for a heart as pure as Assata Shakur‘s/ We put them down, but on the pedestal we should put them/ Behind every good man, there’s a good women.” – Lowkey, “Something Wonderful”

  • Marlon Craft

    Marlon Craft
    Image Credit: Johnny Nunez/WireImage

    “We live in a time when something’s gotta be more/ Where everyone who post a meme is Assata Shakur/ Where we live on explore pages but don’t gotta explore/ And everything they got in store, they done got in a store.” Marlon Craft, “Bars On I-95 Freestyle”

  • Brother Ali

    Brother Ali
    Image Credit: C Flanigan/Getty Images

    “Trying to open eyes, organize, and build power/ I know all about the hell I’m trying to get out of/ Two million dollars on sister Assata’s head/ It’s when you really get it poppin’ that they want you dead.” – Bambu featuring Brother Ali & Odessa Kane, “Illuminotme”

  • Nick Grant

    Nick Grant
    Image Credit: Paras Griffin/Getty Images for Universal Studios

    “If I take this peace sign, and I aim it at the coppers/ Would they take me for a threat, or just lay me out unconscious?/ Can’t explain this to my mamma/ No relation to Assata/ But these women strong and black, they been this way since a minor.” – Nick Grant, “Window Seat”

  • Cambatta

    Cambatta
    Image Credit: Johnny Nunez/WireImage

    “Aim it at their black 750 arm strong and steady/ Let off one shot for every song on the Makaveli/ I’m sorry for your mom Afeni/ I like your aunt Assata heavy/ If you live I hope you go to Cuba/ I hope they got my million dollars ready.” – Cambatta, “Tupac Murder Confession”

  • Jasiri X

    Jasiri X
    Image Credit: Roy Rochlin/Getty Images for Tribeca Festival

    “See Trump then gun but him now he’s really deaf/ That light skinned rapper blacker than Biggie’s neck/ Militant hardcore like them boys in Quantico/ With Assata in the chopper coming to close Guantanamo.” – Jasiri X, “P.O.W.E.R.”

  • Jamila Woods

    Jamila Woods
    Image Credit: Bennett Raglin/Getty Images for Slow Factory

    “Sojourner was a freedom fighter/ And she taught us how to fight/ Assata was a freedom fighter/ And she taught us how to fight.” – Jamila Woods, “Blk Girl Soldier”

  • Truck North

    Truck North
    Image Credit: YouTube

    “It’s automatic/ The devil calls it magic/Nah this ain’t no Harry Potter more like Garvey and Assata/ Tussle with wicked warriors from Africa to Georgia/ Watts to Copenhagen, slaughter pagans up in Persia.” – Truck North & The 3rd, “Out There”

  • Zion I

    Baba Zumbi
    Image Credit: Miikka Skaffari / Contributor

    “Yo, renegade rap writer/ Cadillac rider/ Track inside, I spray verbal Mac hot/ Blast the gat, lick a shot/ Then run like Assata/ Head to the hills, post no bills Don Dada.” – Zion I, “Target Practice”

  • Elucid

    Elucid
    Image Credit: YouTube

    “The Wi-Fi name is Assata Is Safe Here/ The pass code transposed and notated between kick and the snare/ For whosoever believe, feelin’ Beastie, Paul Revere/ It’s all gone square, sand shiftin’, a brief history.” – Armand Hammer, “Tread Lightly”

  • Bambu

    Bambu
    Image Credit: Instagram

    “And later as I grew up/ I found more connection in a book than in the hood I grew up/ Girls I used to fuck with used to bug/ When I request that we skip the DVDs and grab Assata off the shelf.” – Bambu, “Books”

  • PHZ-Sicks

    PHZ-Sicks
    Image Credit: X

    “My Angela Davis. black women/ My Nikki Giovanni, black women/ My Michelle Obama, black women/ My Maya Angelou, black women/ My Assata Shakur, black women/ My Josephine Baker, black women.” PHZ-Sicks, “Black Women”

October 2, 2025 0 comments
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Who Were Honored At The 71st National Film Awards?
Bollywood

Shah Rukh Khan, Rani Mukerji & Mohanlal Earn Major Honors — Check Out The Complete List Of Winners!

by jummy84 September 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Who Were Honored At The 71st National Film Awards?
Check Out The 71st National Film Awards Winners List! (Photo Credit – Instagram)

The 71st National Film Awards of 2025 finally shed a much-needed light on a few of the finest films and performances of the year 2023. Conducted at Vigyan Bhawan in New Delhi and chaired by President Droupadi Murmu, the ceremony awarded talent from all of India. From powerful acting performances to technical expertise, the awards honored the diversified palette of Indian films.

Film enthusiasts and fans eagerly awaited for the announcement of the awards. In this article, we will discuss which actors and films were honored at the 71st National Film Award. Check out the complete list of winners (retrieved via Mathrubhumi.com):

71st National Film Awards: Major Honors

  • Best Actor: Vikrant Massey and Shah Rukh Khan both won the award for their respective performances in 12th Fail and Jawan. Both impressed fans with their characters and their added depth and detail.
  • Best Actress: Rani Mukerji received the award for Mrs. Chatterjee vs Norway, giving a performance that impressed critics and viewers equally.
  • Best Feature Film: 12th Fail won the top honor after being met with applause for its story and direction.
  • Best Director: Sudipto Sen for The Kerala Story was awarded for his outstanding direction.
  • Best Popular Film Providing Wholesome Entertainment: Rocky Aur Rani Kii Prem Kahani took home the award because of mass appeal.
  • Best Feature Film Promoting National, Social, and Environmental Values: Vicky Kaushal-led Sam Bahadur won the honor.
  • Dadasaheb Phalke Award: Mohanlal, a seasoned actor, bagged the lifetime achievement award.

71st National Film Awards: Other Important Categories

  • Best Documentary: God Vulture and Human by Rishiraj Agarwal
  • Best Short Film: Giddh (The Scavenger) by Manish Saini
  • Best Debut Film of a Director: Aatmapamphlet by Ashish Avinash Bende
  • Best Children’s Film: Naal 2
  • Best Child Artist: Sukriti Veni Bandreddi for Gandhi Tatha Chettu, Kabir Khandare for Gypsy, and Treesha Thosar, Shrinivas Pokale, Bhargav Jagtap for Naal 2.
  • Best Actor in a Supporting Role: Vijayaraghavan for Pookkaalam and M. S. Bhaskar for Parking.
  • Best Actress in a Supporting Role: Urvashi for Ullozhukku and Janki Bodiwala for Vash
  • Best Film in AVGC (Best Visual Effects): HanuMan

71st National Film Awards: Regional Cinema Winners

The awards also highlighted regional talent:

  • Best Hindi Film: Kathal – A Jackfruit Mystery
  • Best Telugu Film: Bhagavanth Kesari
  • Best Tamil Film: Parking
  • Best Kannada Film: Kandeelu: The Ray of Hope
  • Best Gujarati Film: Vash
  • Best Bengali Film: Deep Fridge
  • Best Marathi Film: Shyamchi Aai
  • Best Malayalam Film: Ullozhukku
  • Best Assamese Film: Rongatapu 1982
  • Best Odia Film: Pushkara
  • Best Punjabi Film: Godday Godday Chaa

71st National Film Awards: Musical & Technical Honors

  • Best Male Playback Singer: P.V.S.N. Rohit for Baby (Premisthunna)
  • Best Female Playback Singer: Shilpa Rao for Jawan (Chaleya)
  • Best Lyrics: Kasarla Shyam for Balgam
  • Best Action Direction: Nandu-Prudhvi for HanuMan
  • Best Cinematography: Prasanthanu Mohapatra for The Kerala Story
  • Best Editing: Midhun Murali for Pookkaalam
  • Best Screenplay: Sai Rajesh for Baby and Ramkumar Balakrishnan for Parking
  • Best Dialogues: Deepak Kingrani for Sirf Ek Bandaa Kaafi Hai
  • Best Choreography: Vaibhavi Merchant for Rocky Aur Rani Kii Prem Kahaani (Dhindhora Baje Re)
  • Best Make-Up: Shrikant Desai for Sam Bahadur
  • Best Costume Design: Sachin Lovalekar, Divvya Gambhir, Nidhhi Gambhir for Sam Bahadur
  • Best Production Design: Mohandas for 2018
  • Best Film Critic: Utpal Dutta (Assam)

The 71st edition of the National Film Awards is an ode to not just individual excellence but the entire talent pool of Indian films. With a mix of mainstream hits, big performances, and regional gems, the awards reflected the effervescent talent pool of the film world.

For more such stories, check out Bollywood News

Must Read: Hi Arshad Warsi, Watched You Twice In A Single Day & Here’s My Petition To Our OG Circuit Bhai – Please Keep Our Moods Jolly With Class Acts! [Opinion]

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September 25, 2025 0 comments
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2025 Americana Honors and Awards: Complete Winners List
Music

2025 Americana Honors and Awards: Complete Winners List

by jummy84 September 11, 2025
written by jummy84

The roots music world celebrated its notable artists, albums, and songs of the year when the 24th annual Americana Honors & Awards were held Wednesday night at the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville.

Sierra Ferrell, the Grammy-winning West Virginia songwriter, repeated as Artist of the Year, while Nathaniel Rateliff and the Night Sweats took home Album of the Year for their LP South of Here, produced by Brad Cook.

Other winners included Gillian Welch & David Rawlings, for Duo/Group of the Year, and MJ Lenderman, who was named Emerging Act of the Year.

The 2025 Americana Honors are the centerpiece of the Americana Music Association’s annual AmericanaFest, held every September at a venue around Nashville. Actor-singer John C. Reilly hosted this year’s ceremonies, which included performances by Rawlings and Welch, Rateliff, Noeline Hoffman, Old 97’s, Emmylou Harris, Dawes, and the winners for Song of the Year, I’m With Her, who won for their composition “Ancient Light.”

Trending Stories

ALBUM OF THE YEAR
Lonesome Drifter, Charley Crockett; Produced by Charley Crockett & Shooter Jennings
Foxes in the Snow, Jason Isbell; Produced by Jason Isbell & Gena Johnson
Manning Fireworks, MJ Lenderman; Produced by Alex Farrar & MJ Lenderman
South of Here, Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats; Produced by Brad Cook
Woodland, Gillian Welch & David Rawlings; Produced by David Rawlings

ARTIST OF THE YEAR
Charley Crockett
Sierra Ferrell
Joy Oladokun
Billy Strings
Waxahatchee

DUO/GROUP OF THE YEAR
Julien Baker & TORRES
Dawes
Larkin Poe
The Mavericks
Gillian Welch & David Rawlings

EMERGING ACT OF THE YEAR
Noeline Hofmann
MJ Lenderman
Medium Build
Maggie Rose
Jesse Welles

INSTRUMENTALIST OF THE YEAR
Fred Eltringham
Alex Hargreaves
Megan Jane
Kaitlyn Raitz
Seth Taylor

SONG OF THE YEAR
“Johnny Moonshine,” Maggie Antone (Written by Maggie Antone, Natalie Hemby & Aaron Raitiere)
“Ancient Light,” I’m With Her (Written by Sarah Jarosz, Aoife O’Donovan & Sara Watkins)
“Wristwatch,” MJ Lenderman (Written by MJ Lenderman)
“Sunshine Getaway,” JD McPherson (Written by Page Burkum, JD McPherson & Jack Torrey)
“Heartless,” Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats (Written by Nathaniel Rateliff)

September 11, 2025 0 comments
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Ernie Isley Honors Legacy For Maui Music & Food Experience: Recap
Music

Ernie Isley Honors Legacy For Maui Music & Food Experience: Recap

by jummy84 September 4, 2025
written by jummy84

Ernie Isley is the secret sauce of The Isley Brothers, but he’s far from underrated. Just ask him. As a visionary and legend in his own right, the 73-year-old recently co-headlined the second annual Maui Music & Food Experience (MMFE) with funk band, Dumpstaphunk, as part of a tribute to the late, indelible Jimi Hendrix. 

His history with the influential guitarist dates back to his youth. Isley met Hendrix at the tender age of 11 when he joined the Isley Brothers’ backing band, the I.B. Specials, for a few years. Hendrix lived in their family home and was “never charged for his room [or] whatever food he ate.” Isley emphasized this tidbit in our conversation, noting that he was the only band member afforded that “privilege.”

Isley praised his talents and couldn’t help, but to smile while reflecting. “Nobody plays like him. He’s left-handed, [and played] the guitar upside down,” he said still in awe, later calling him an “electric guitar deity.”

He remembered the band watching The Beatles on Ed Sullivan with Hendrix sandwiched between him and his brother, Marvin. There was no thunderous applause for him yet, but [O’Kelly Isley Jr.] knew Hendrix was special. 

According to Ernie, Kelly declared, “These guys, this English band, that’s legit. It’s not hype. I don’t know what’s going to go on with any of the other American artists, but I think we’re going to be all right because we got Jimi.” Isley recalled, “I looked over at Jimi when he said that, and Jimi was grinning ear to ear because it was true.”

Isley, himself, became a self-taught guitar player at age 16. He played the bass on “It’s Your Thing” and later helped create hits including “Fight the Power,” “The Love of You, “Voyage To Atlantis,” “Footsteps in the Dark”, “Climbin’ Up the Ladder,” and “Between The Sheets.” 

“We already know Ronald’s gonna be singing everything, but when you start talking about the songs, [meaning] ‘Where’d the songs come from?’ They say, ‘Oh, a lot of that comes from Ernie,’” he explained. 

When speaking on some of those hits, Isley recalled “inspiration comes, however,” but distinctly remembered one moment. “The first time I played ‘Voyage to Atlantis,’” he shared, “I apologized to Kelly and Ronald, because I said, ‘Okay, this isn’t going to sound like ‘For the Love Of You’ or ‘Make Me Say It Again,’ or ‘Hello, It’s Me,’ but it is a love song. And when they heard it, [they said], ‘Oh, how did you come up with that one?’ It turned out to be one of our standard Isley Brothers songs.”

The Maui Music & Food Experience was founded by entrepreneur and philanthropist Gary Grube, who also founded the Hua Momona Foundation and Farms. The two-day experience is an extension of both aforementioned endeavors. The farm started to help “donate produce to those with food insecurity and to the homeless shelters prior to COVID.” When the wildfires happened, the Foundation provided 6,000 free hot meals per month to the local community of Lahaina for over a year.

Both led to the creation of the MMFE, which Grube explained is “a multi-year effort to provide an additional source of much-needed funds and to provide some comfort, love, and Aloha to the people of the community.”

Isley fell in love with Maui back in 1999 when he honeymooned there with his wife, Tracy. However, he became particularly fond of Lahaina, a historic town on the coast of Maui that was tragically affected by a series of wildfires in August 2023. For the bassist, he acknowledged the “grief and sadness” that clouded the beautiful city, but welcomed the chance to partake in rebuilding the city through the celebration of music and food.

With Hawaii being such a romanticized destination, though, Grube urges tourists and transplants to first “understand the Hawaiian culture, [which includes] caring for community, family, and the land.” He added, “Helping to preserve that identity is crucial. As a first-time visitor to Maui, you see the unique and diverse beauty and begin to learn about the culture, such as saying ‘Aloha.’ Over time, on return visits, you become more familiar with the community. Everyone has been through a lot with COVID, the fire, and the economy. Living here or visiting here is a privilege, and saying Hawaiian phrases a little more often will make it an even nicer place to be. Like the late renowned chef and restaurateur Mark Ellman said, ‘Practice Aloha.’” 

Grube has plans to expand the experience into other cities. Initially, he hoped to bring it to Los Angeles and San Antonio first, but with each city experiencing its own set of natural disasters, he felt “the timing was not right.” However, the first expansion will occur in Chicago this November.

September 4, 2025 0 comments
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Francis Ford Coppola Honors Werner Herzog at Venice Opening Ceremony
TV & Streaming

Francis Ford Coppola Honors Werner Herzog at Venice Opening Ceremony

by jummy84 August 28, 2025
written by jummy84

Francis Ford Coppola doesn’t have a film premiering in Venice this year, but the 86-year-old Oscar winner is duly present for the 82nd edition. His pal Mike Figgis’ behind-the-scenes portrait “Megadoc,” about the production of Coppola’s 2024 cinematic cause célèbre “Megalopolis,” debuts out of competition this week. And at the festival’s opening ceremony Wednesday night, Coppola took to the dais to champion his longtime friend, the German filmmaker Werner Herzog, recipient of the festival’s honorary Golden Lion for lifetime achievement. (“Vertigo” icon Kim Novak will also receive one later this week.)

Herzog’s new film “Ghost Elephants,” about an elusive herd of the Angolan creatures, debuts in Venice this week as part of the festival’s robust documentary slate, which also includes new films from Laura Poitras and Sofia Coppola.

La Grazia

“One must celebrate that someone like him can exist,” said Coppola of Herzog, the 82-year-old documentary and fiction auteur whose films have spanned everywhere from the Caves of Lascaux in “Cave of Forgotten Dreams” to pushing a steamboat up the Andes with Klaus Kinski in “Fitzcarraldo,” or alongside conservationist Timothy Treadwell in his last days for “Grizzly Man.”

“His work burst into my life with ‘The Enigma of Kaspar Hauser’ [from 1974], ‘Aguirre, the Wrath of God,’ and ‘Fitzcarraldo.’ I have never seen such films as these, all unique and very different from one another, and all magnificent,” said Coppola, who put up a penniless Herzog at his San Francisco house to finish the script for “Fitzcarraldo.”

“He’s written operas, he’s directed roles, he’s acted. He not only can fill the pages of an encyclopedia — Werner is one so, so filled with exuberant creativity. … We all joined together at my home in San Francisco, where there was always fun conversations and much learning and enthusiastic discoveries. I was working on a play at that time, and remember introducing one of the cast members, Lena, who eventually became his wife. So when it comes down to is this: If Werner has limits, I don’t know what they are. Werner’s life and his very existence send a challenge to everyone out there: copy, if you can. And all of us truly wonder if anyone ever will. Werner, I will eat my hat if anyone comes [along] who can do it.”

VENICE, ITALY - AUGUST 27: Werner Herzog poses with Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement Award after the opening ceremony during the 82nd Venice International Film Festival on August 27, 2025 in Venice, Italy. (Photo by Andreas Rentz/Getty Images)
Werner Herzog poses with the Golden LionGetty Images

A tearful Herzog took to the stage at the Sala Grande on the Lido di Venezia. “Francis has been extremely kind and generous to me,” Herzog said. “We know each other for half a century by now. He’s been generous, inviting me at a time when I didn’t have money to pay for a hotel room. I stayed at his house in San Francisco and wrote my screenplay of ‘Fitzcarraldo.’ Both of us came very close to making a very big film about the conquest of Mexico together, seen from the perspective of the Aztecs, a film project that did not materialize, but it’s a wonderful time when we plotted about it. And, of course, without Francis, I would not have met my wonderful wife, Lena. In fact, it is not true that we are 30 years together. Now it is to be correct: 29 years, 11 months, and nine days.”

Herzog — whose “Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans” and “My Son, My Son, What Have Ye Done?” both played Venice in competition in 2009 — concluded, “I have always tried to strive for something that goes deeper beyond what you normally see in movie theaters. Go into a deep form of poetry that is possible in cinema, searching for truth in unusual ways. Truth is always somehow in cinema. It’s mysterious and elusive, and I always try to do something which was sublime or something transcendental. This may sound a little bit lofty. So in fact, I do believe that all this has similar reasons. I always wanted to be a good soldier of cinema.”

Later in the opening ceremony, competition jury president Alexander Payne took to the stage hours after navigating questions about Gaza during the jury press conference. Protests surrounding the ongoing genocide in Gaza are roundly expected to dominate event space and news chatter throughout the fest.

The jury also includes filmmakers Stéphane Brizé, Maura Delpero, Cristian Mungiu, and Mohammad Rasoulof, and actors Zhao Tao and 2025 Best Actress Oscar nominee Fernanda Torres, who together will look at 21 films from the likes of Paolo Sorrentino (whose “La Grazia” opened the festival), Yorgos Lanthimos, Noah Baumbach, Park Chan-wook, Kathryn Bigelow, Guillermo del Toro, Olivier Assayas, Mona Fastvold, Benny Safdie, Jim Jarmusch, and more.

“My fellow jurors and I express our great honor of being asked to serve on the jury of this year’s Venice Film Festival, and we offer our greatest respect and warmest congratulations to all the superb filmmakers whose work we have the privilege of seeing with virgin eyes,” Payne said following a tribute reel montaging moments from his career, from “Sideways” to “The Descendants.” “I encourage my fellow jury members and myself to consider that we know something about cinema, but also nothing at all, to look at each movie simultaneously with the eyes of a professional but also with the eyes of a child who is perhaps seeing a film for the very first time. We know that each of the films will be some kind of miracle, as the existence of cinema itself is a miracle, and we approach our work with the spirit of great joy.”

August 28, 2025 0 comments
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Mastodon Honors Brent Hinds at First Show Since Guitarist's Death
Music

Mastodon Honors Brent Hinds at First Show Since Guitarist’s Death

by jummy84 August 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Mastodon is honoring the memory of their late bandmate and co-founder Brent Hinds.

On Friday (Aug. 22), the heavy metal band paid tribute to the guitarist during a performance at the Alaska State Fair, part of the ConocoPhillips Alaska Concert Series at the Borealis Theatre in Palmer, Alaska.

At the end of the set, drummer and vocalist Brann Dailor stepped to the front of the stage to deliver a heartfelt message about Hinds, who died earlier in the week following a motorcycle accident in Atlanta. He was 51.

“We lost somebody very special to us yesterday,” Dailor told the crowd. Brent Hinds, 25 years with us as our guitar player, one of the most creative, beautiful people that we’ve ever come across in this world, tragically left us. Very, very unfortunate. We loved him so, so, so very much.”

“We had the ups and downs of a 25-year relationship. You know what I mean? It’s not always perfect, it’s not always amazing, but we were brothers to the end. And we really loved each other and we made a lot, a lot of very beautiful music together. And I think that that’s gonna stand the test of time, evidenced by you people here tonight.”

Dailor aslo reflected on the band’s decades-long journey with Hinds. “So we will continue to play Brent’s beautiful, beautiful music that he helped us make, that we formed this band together and traveled the world together, slept in a van together, laid our heads down on beds of f—king kitty litter, got way too drunk to remember anything the next day about a thousand, million times over and over again with the love that we shared and the beauty, all the audiences that we played, for all the stages we stepped on,” he said.

He concluded, “I don’t know. We’re just at a loss for words. We’re absolutely devastated and crushed to lose him and to be able to never have him back again. But you guys made it okay for us to come on stage and do this tonight. So that was for f—king Brent, okay? Thank you guys so much. We will see you real soon.”

Hinds co-founded Mastodon in 2000 in Atlanta alongside bassist Troy Sanders, guitarist Bill Kelliher and Dailor. Over a 25-year career, the band released nine albums that charted on the Billboard 200, including The Hunter (2011), Once More ’Round the Sun (2014), and Emperor of Sand (2017) — the latter two peaking at No. 1 on Billboard’s Top Rock Albums chart. In 2018, Mastodon won a Grammy for best metal performance for “Sultan’s Curse.”

In March, Mastodon announced that Hinds would be stepping away from the lineup. The band initially claimed the decision was mutual, but Hinds later said he was “kicked out” of the group.

Following his passing on Wednesday (Aug. 21), Mastodon shared a statement on Instagram.

“We are in a state of unfathomable sadness and grief… Last night, Brent Hinds passed away as a result of a tragic accident,” they wrote. “We are heartbroken, shocked, and still trying to process the loss of this creative force with whom we’ve shared so many triumphs, milestones, and the creation of music that has touched the hearts of so many. Our hearts are with Brent’s family, friends, and fans. At this time, we kindly ask that you respect everyone’s privacy during this difficult time.”

August 23, 2025 0 comments
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Vanessa Bryant Honors Kobe Bryant in Birthday Tribute
Celebrity News

Vanessa Bryant Honors Kobe Bryant in Birthday Tribute

by jummy84 August 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Vanessa Bryant Shares How Daughter Capri Is Following in Kobe Bryant’s Footsteps

Vanessa Bryant will always honor her late husband Kobe Bryant’s legacy.

More than five years after the NBA star died at age 41 in a helicopter crash alongside his and Vanessa’s 13-year-old daughter Gigi Bryant and seven other people, his wife paid tribute to the pair on what would have been Kobe’s 47th birthday.

“We love and miss you and Gigi so much,” Vanessa wrote on Instagram Aug. 23 alongside a throwback photo of her kissing the basketball legend on the cheek. “Sending our love to you. Happy birthday, baby.”

Vanessa’s emotional tribute to Kobe comes just one month after the 43-year-old—also mom to Natalia Bryant, 22, Bianka Bryant, 8, and Capri Kobe Bryant, 6—shared a glimpse into how their youngest has been following in his athletic footsteps.

“Like father, like daughter,” she wrote on a July 24 Instagram post, which featured a split image of Capri—whose middle name is a nod to her dad—emulating Kobe’s stance while holding a basketball. And if her spot-on pose wasn’t enough proof, Vanessa also referred to her little one as, “Baby Mamba” and her nickname “KoKo Bean.”

August 23, 2025 0 comments
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