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How To Buy The New Nike Air Jordan 11 Retro 'Rare Air' Sneakers Online
TV & Streaming

How To Buy The New Nike Air Jordan 11 Retro ‘Rare Air’ Sneakers Online

by jummy84 November 5, 2025
written by jummy84

If you purchase an independently reviewed product or service through a link on our website, Variety may receive an affiliate commission.

When Michael Jordan came back to the NBA after two years away from the game, he took the Chicago Bulls to the Eastern Conference Semifinals in 1995. While Jordan and the Bulls lost the series to the Orlando Magic, he was wearing the now-iconic Nike Air Jordan 11 sneakers.

And 30 years later, Nike is rereleasing the Air Jordan 11 Retro “Rare Air” sneakers on Wednesday, Nov. 5 at 10 a.m. ET/7 a.m. PT.

Priced at $235, the Nike Air Jordan 11 Retro “Rare Air” sneakers are rubber sole adds to their lightweight cushioning with a look that’s clean and retro, especially with a slick and shiny deep royal blue patent leather wraparound. The sneakers are also lightweight and made from a blend of real and synthetic leather paired with a fabric upper for durability.

In addition, the signature shoes feature Michael Jordan’s No. 23 is “hidden” at the top of each heel, as well as the “Jumpman” logo on their heels and bottoms. In fact, the eyelets spell out “Jordan” going up and down each sneaker. The silhouette is just classic, while these sneakers come in a deep royal blue, sail, black and fire red colorway.

Nike

Nike Air Jordan 11 Retro ‘Rare Air’ Sneakers

Release date: Nov. 5 at 10 a.m. ET/7 a.m. PT

And if you’re a Nike Member, you can get free shipping on orders over $50 and more. But if you’re not a member, then your order has to be more than $75 to get free shipping.

You can sign up to be a Nike Member to get benefits from the sports apparel retailer, such as free shipping, expert advice on sports and style, exclusive experiences, early access to new drops, special discounts and deals, no receipt returns and much more. Sign up is free for those with an email address.

Available on Wednesday, Nov. 5 for $235, the Nike Air Jordan 11 Retro “Rare Air” sneakers are unisex and come in various sizes. The shoes also come in sizes for big kids with prices starting at $190 at Nike.com.

November 5, 2025 0 comments
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Rochelle Jordan: Through the Wall Album Review
Music

Rochelle Jordan: Through the Wall Album Review

by jummy84 October 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Jordan is a master of restraint and subtle expression. She doesn’t belt; she breathes, trusting her phrasing to carry the heat. On the sugary highlight “Sweet Sensation,” she slips out of Brandy-esque melisma to assert that smolder can stand alone. On “Crave,” a love song produced by Chicago house legend Terry Hunter, Jordan struts exquisitely; club music was always about feeling as much as stimulation, and Jordan is tapped into the heart of its lineage. Songs like “Crave,” “TTW,” and “Sum” keep steady four-to-the-floor rhythms that invite slink, not sprint.

The record’s polish comes from curation as much as performance. Jordan doesn’t just hire producers; she maps a dance diaspora of contemporary pop, Chicago and Detroit house, and UK garage, and threads herself through it. Standout favorite “Bite the Bait” gets a chrome‑sleek electro sheen from Jimmy Edgar that lets her cool vocal glide like lip gloss; “Around” draws on producer Hamdi’s UK bass sensibility, and Jordan rides the low end, sounding featherweight and self-assured. “I’m Your Muse” sharpens her chanteuse era into a point. Over KLSH and Machinedrum’s lithe kick, she purrs instructions, blurring ad‑lib and hook until the whole thing feels like an invitation and a boundary at once: “Just say you love me/Say you use me/Say you’re feening.” Elsewhere, KLSH keeps the pulse clean (“Ladida,” “Never Enough”), and the snap of Machinedrum and WaveIQ’s beat for “On 2 Something” gives her space to flirt in the margins. Jordan’s scene knowledge reads lived-in, not borrowed, and her voice remains the constant center of gravity.

If you come craving rupture or the feral edge of club experimentalism, you might want to look elsewhere. There are moments—especially for fans of her more edgy cuts—where you expect the veneer to crack. But the choice here is deliberate: restraint as seduction, control as heat source. Through the Wall makes its case without grandstanding, proof that command can be quiet. Jordan has always balanced sultry R&B with a steady impulse steeped in UK dance; the difference now is how serene she sounds in these choppy waters. Through the Wall isn’t the loudest record in the room, but it’s among the most replayable at 2 a.m.—and by that time, it’s only true party people in the house.

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Rochelle Jordan: Through the Wall

October 2, 2025 0 comments
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Cinematographer Kira Kelly on new Jordan Peele production 'Him'
TV & Streaming

Cinematographer Kira Kelly on new Jordan Peele production ‘Him’

by jummy84 September 19, 2025
written by jummy84

Jordan Peele‘s Monkeypaw Productions has become known for making some of the most visually and narratively adventurous studio horror films of the last 10 years, from Peele’s own “Us” and “Nope” to movies the company has shepherded by other directors like Nia DaCosta’s “Candyman.”

Their latest offering, the hallucinatory football freakout “Him,” is one of Monkeypaw’s boldest offerings to date thanks to director Justin Tipping’s audacious merging of sports iconography and horror tropes; his story of a traumatized young athlete whose second chance at greatness turns into a nightmare combines the jittery energy of Gatorade ads with the creeping unease of a Stanley Kubrick or David Lynch film.

Leonardo DiCaprio, Martin Scorsese, Jennifer Lawrence

The cinematographer tasked with translating Tipping’s concepts into vivid imagery is Kira Kelly, an Emmy-nominated (for Ava DuVernay’s documentary “13th”) director of photography whose work here is her best to date and puts “Him” alongside “Sinners” and “One Battle After Another” as one of 2025’s great visual achievements. By finding inspiration in wildly varied reference points ranging from Alejandro Jodorowsky’s “The Holy Mountain” to Nike commercials, Kelly has created a distinctive cinematic language for “Him” that powerfully conveys its young hero’s mental and physical breakdown.

“Early on, it was clear that Justin wanted to do something really different,” Kelly told IndieWire. “When we were shooting, there were scenes where I would look at him and be like, ‘Is this too much?’ And he would be like, ‘No, more.’ He really pushed us.” The key for Kelly was finding a visual language that would put the audience directly in the consciousness of Cameron Cade (Tyriq Withers), the rising football star who starts to wonder if he’s at the mercy of evil supernatural forces when he arrives at fading pro Isaiah White’s (Marlon Wayans) compound for a highly unorthodox training session.

“We really tried to play with the idea of levels,” Kelly said, explaining that the lighting and production design were intended to express Cameron’s literal and metaphorical descent once he gets to Isaiah’s compound, a place that seems to spiral down into the ground. “He just keeps going deeper and deeper into this maddening place, and the lighting is very integrated into the location.” Kelly begins Cameron’s journey on the football field with dynamic camerawork and bright lighting, but as he spends more time at the compound, the compositions become more static and oppressive, with locked frames and more chiaroscuro lighting.

“We were going with a lot of graphic frames, a lot of center punching,” Kelly said. “I think I drove my camera operator Scott Dropkin crazy asking him, ‘Okay, are we totally centered?’” Kelly also relied heavily on top light in the film’s early scenes to give the movie an almost religious feeling; then, as Cameron plunges into hell, the halo gives way to more shadows and color combinations — like a beautiful but eerie juxtaposition of greens and blues in a hyperbaric chamber where Cam is confined — that subliminally evoke a sense of unease and danger.

HIM, from left: Marlon Wayans, Tyriq Withers, 2025.  © Universal Pictures /Courtesy Everett Collection
‘Him’©Universal/Courtesy Everett Collection

Finding a new cinematic language meant finding new cinematic tools, and Kelly credits collaborators like key grip Rudy Covarrubias and lens technician Dan Sasaki with inventing ingenious solutions to the movie’s myriad technical challenges. For scenes in which Kelly wanted to create a visceral sense of Cam’s energy on the field, for example, the crew created a rig designed to capture the speed of the sports action in an atypical way. “We could have the camera moving as fast as the ball,” Kelly said. “40 miles an hour or something like that.”

Tipping’s desire to see the action from the point of view of the ball led to the creation of the “boomerang” rig. “It was just this crazy amount of truss where we underslung the camera and then used this winch system that let the camera loose so it would fly to the other end,” Kelly said. The camera department also attached RED Komodo cameras to Withers to capture his perspective during intense sports scenes, and at other moments simply attached a football helmet to the lens and had Wayans yell into it to replicate Cam’s point of view.

In terms of lenses, Kelly worked closely with Panavision’s Dan Sasaki, who customized T-series anamorphics to give the cinematographer the unique look she imagined. “He figured out a way to have the lens flares take on the color of whatever light source hit them,” Kelly said. “Historically, with anamorphic, you get a blue flare, and he was able to change the color of that flare.” Sasaki also modified lenses to make the most of Kelly and Tipping’s decision to rely heavily on centered and symmetrical compositions for their emotional effects.

“He created a beautiful fall-off on the sides of the lenses that really lent itself to that center-punching,” Kelly said, adding that the most extreme example of this was a lens Sasaki created that came to be known as the “ghost” lens. “It’s an old D portrait lens that’s 50mm where the center is resolved, but at the sides the bokeh smears in this crazy way.”

That lens is used extensively in a party scene after Cam takes a drink that is most likely spiked and feels his already tenuous grip on reality completely slipping away, one of many sequences in the movie where lenses and lighting are used to put the audience in a state of psychological terror. There’s also a recurring image in the film of Cameron being hit and the camera presenting an impressionistic view of the inside of his head as he suffers a concussion — it’s one of the most horrifying and unique motifs in the movie, and another one that required an unusual technical approach.

HIM, Tyriq Withers, 2025.  © Universal Pictures /Courtesy Everett Collection
‘Him’©Universal/Courtesy Everett Collection

“Jordan and Hoyte van Hoytema had just done all of their stereoscope day for night footage in ‘Nope,’ so there was a conversation about whether or not there was a way we could shoot that footage with both a thermal camera and the Alexa 35,” Kelly said. Covarrubias built a rig where a FLIR thermal camera was mounted directly on top of the Alexa, allowing the filmmakers to capture a thermal image that could be seamlessly cut into at moments of impact to show Cam’s concussions.

“It took two ACs, one pulling focus on the FLIR and one pulling focus on the Alexa,” Kelly said. “Our first AC Megan Noche 3D printed a focus ring to hot glue onto it, it was the craziest homemade setup. But once we started seeing how it was all working, it was really exciting.” Kelly experimented with various forms of ice and heat to get varying looks on screen, and in visual effects, more imagery was added — “brains sloshing and all that stuff” — to finalize the harrowing depiction of Cameron’s physical trauma.

“There was a lot of just trying to figure out how to make these images happen,” Kelly said. “Justin created an environment that inspired a lot of out-of-the-box visual storytelling. That made the project really gratifying, especially given what we ended up pulling off with the amount of time we had and the budget. It’s really exciting.”

Universal Pictures will release “Him” in theaters on Friday, September 19.

September 19, 2025 0 comments
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Montell Jordan Gives Heartbreaking Health Update - Says Prostate Cancer Has Returned: 'I Know God Is Healer'
Celebrity News

Montell Jordan Gives Heartbreaking Health Update – Says Prostate Cancer Has Returned: ‘I Know God Is Healer’

by jummy84 September 4, 2025
written by jummy84

Montell Jordan Gives Heartbreaking Health Update – Says Prostate Cancer Has Returned: ‘I Know God Is Healer’

Montell Jordan is once again battling health struggles.

The “This Is How We Do It” singer appeared on The Today Show, where he revealed that his prostate cancer had returned. However, he remained optimistic.

“Fully confident. I know God is healer. I also know that I have the greatest of care, professionals and people that are alongside of me,” he shared.

Back in December 2024, he credited early detection with helping him catch the cancer before it spread. He underwent surgery, though sadly, the illness returned.

Prayers on a speedy recovery for Montell.


September 4, 2025 0 comments
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Jordan Peele's post-'Nope' horror film removed from Universal's 2026 schedule
Music

Jordan Peele’s post-‘Nope’ horror film removed from Universal’s 2026 schedule

by jummy84 September 3, 2025
written by jummy84

Jordan Peele‘s highly anticipated next project has been removed from Universal Pictures’ 2026 release schedule.

  • READ MORE: ‘Nope’ review: say yes to Jordan Peele’s genre-hopping comedy-horror

The currently untitled horror film – which will serve as the eagerly awaited follow-up to 2022’s Nope, and will mark the filmmaker’s return to directing after four years – was most recently slated for a release sometime around Halloween next year.

Now, however, it has been reported via Variety that Universal Pictures has removed it from its 2026 release schedule, and has yet to set a new date for the film. The film was first meant to premiere around Christmas last year, but was put on pause in 2023 due to the SAG-AFTRA strikes in Hollywood.

Daniel Kaluuya in ‘Nope’. CREDIT: Universal

The film was then pushed to October 23, 2026, but has been removed from Universal’s roster. According to Variety‘s sources, Peele is still working on the project, and has yet to begin the filming process.

Details surrounding the film, including its cast and premise, have yet to be made public, though Peele opened up about the project at the start of last year, calling it his “favourite” of all his works so far.

After a successful career in comedy, Peele made his directorial debut with 2017’s Get Out, for which he received the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay, and numerous other nominations, including Best Picture and Best Director.

Peel then produced  BlacKkKlansman in 2017, before returning to directing and writing for the acclaimed horror movies Us (2019) and Nope (2022), reuniting with Get Out’s Daniel Kaluuya for the latter. He also co-wrote the 2021 sequel to 1992’s Candyman, directed by Nia DaCosta.

Ali Plumb
Daniel Kaluuya in ‘Get Out’. Credit: Universal

He has since produced two films – Monkey Man and HIM – via his Monkeypaw production company, and is rumoured to have fired his management team after they were unable to secure producer rights for the acclaimed horror film Weapons.

Peele’s last directed film, 2022’s Nope, scored a four-star review from NME: “From the movie’s unpredictability, patterns and motifs emerge; something as simple as the one-word title becomes part mantra, part running joke, part time-keeping metronome. It turns out that Peele’s background as a sketch comedian doesn’t just make him aware of certain genre tropes, or able to inject humour into tense situations (though both of those things are true). At times, he seems to imply that comedy and horror are both ways of processing the perverse mysteries of the world—and looking at things we shouldn’t be looking at. This also makes Nope a film that rewards repeat watching.”

September 3, 2025 0 comments
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Claudia Jordan Says Tracey Edmonds 'Has No Issue' w/ Karrueche Amid Deion Sanders Relationship Rumors: "There's No Beef
Celebrity News

Claudia Jordan Says Tracey Edmonds ‘Has No Issue’ w/ Karrueche Amid Deion Sanders Relationship Rumors: “There’s No Beef

by jummy84 September 1, 2025
written by jummy84

Claudia Jordan Says Tracey Edmonds ‘Has No Issue’ w/ Karrueche Amid Deion Sanders Relationship Rumors:
“There’s No Beef

Claudia Jordan is setting the record straight about her recent comments on Karrueche Tran and Deion Sanders’ rumored relationship.

The media personality was recently asked whether she had spoken to her friend Tracey Edmonds after publicly criticizing Karrueche during an episode of her podcast Accidentally Informed. Claudia had called Karrueche out for not having an adult conversation with Tracey, who dated and was engaged to Deion Sanders for over a decade, despite the two women being friendly with each other.

Speaking with paparazzi, Claudia confirmed that she has spoken with Tracey, who thanked her for having her back and clarified that she personally has “no issue” with Karrueche. Claudia added:

“She doesn’t think that Karrueche stole him or did anything inappropriate… there’s no beef.”

Claudia went on to say that she personally “enjoys both women,” and explained that her comments were meant to highlight the importance of women having mature, “civil” conversations, without drama or fighting. She also shared that she felt her remarks were taken out of context and that people missed the bigger message she was trying to convey.

What are your thoughts? Was Claudia just keeping it real, or should she have stayed out of it?


September 1, 2025 0 comments
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