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Shahid Kapoor, Kareena Kapoor, Kiara Advani mourn Kamini Kaushal's death and pen heartfelt tributes: ‘Rest in light’
Bollywood

Shahid Kapoor, Kareena Kapoor, Kiara Advani mourn Kamini Kaushal’s death and pen heartfelt tributes: ‘Rest in light’

by jummy84 November 15, 2025
written by jummy84

Veteran Bollywood actor Kamini Kaushal died at the age of 98 on Thursday night, and a close friend of the family confirmed the news. Soon after this, Shahid Kapoor and Kiara Advani, who worked with her in Kabir Singh, penned heartfelt tributes mourning the actor’s death on social media.

Kareena Kapoor, Shahid Kapoor and Kiara Advani mourn the demise of Kamini Kaushal.

Bollywood actors pay tributes to Kamini Kaushal

On Friday, Kiara took to Instagram and, sharing a picture of Kamini Kaushal, wrote, “It was an honour to work with you. Your grace, humility and talent inspired generations and left an unforgettable mark on Indian cinema. Rest in peace, Kamini Kaushal Ji.”

Kiara Advani pays tribute to Kamini Kaushal.
Kiara Advani pays tribute to Kamini Kaushal.

Shahid also reacted to the death of his on-screen grandmother in Kabir Singh, Kamini Kaushal, and wrote, “Rest in light ma’am.” Kareena also shared a picture of Kamini on Instagram and added a red heart, rainbow and folded hands emoji to pay her tribute to the veteran actor.

Kareena Kapoor's post for late veteran actor Kamini Kaushal.
Kareena Kapoor’s post for late veteran actor Kamini Kaushal.
Shahid Kapoor mourns the death of Kamini Kaushal.
Shahid Kapoor mourns the death of Kamini Kaushal.

About Kamini Kaushal and her death

Kamini was a popular Indian actor who started her career with Chetan Anand’s film Neecha Nagar in 1946, which went on to win the Palme d’Or (Golden Palm) at the Cannes Film Festival. With hits like Aag, Shaheed, Nadiya Ke Paar and Ziddi, she became one of the highest-paid actresses of the late 1940s.

She went on to work alongside Bollywood superstars like Raaj Kumar, Dev Anand, Dilip Kumar and others. In her career spanning over seven decades, she was part of several films including Do Raaste, Laaga Chunari Mein Daag, Heer Raanjha, Beti, Waaris, Chennai Express, Kabir Singh and more. She was last seen in Aamir Khan’s film Laal Singh Chadha, in a cameo role.

On Friday, Sajan Narain, a close associate of the family, told PTI, “She died at her Mumbai home late on Thursday night. She would have turned 99 in February.” The cause of her death remains unknown. The veteran actor is survived by her sons, Shravan, Vidur and Rahul Sood, who are yet to release any official statement.

November 15, 2025 0 comments
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Bhad Bhabie Fires Back At Social Media User Claiming She’s "Turned" Light-Skinned (PHOTOS)
Celebrity News

Bhad Bhabie Responds To Claims That She “Turned” Light Skin

by jummy84 November 12, 2025
written by jummy84

Bhad Bhabie keeps the internet talking whenever she drops new pictures on the timeline. Whether it’s her hair or body enhancements, the rapper always checks anyone with something to say. This time, the internet is focused on the ongoing debate about her skin color.

RELATED: Moving On? Bhad Bhabie Sparks Breakup Speculation With Le Vaughn Following New Post (PHOTO)

Bhad Bhabie Addresses Claims About Changing Her Skin Tone 

On Monday, Bhad Bhabie shared a post from a social media user who compared a photo from her “cash me outside” days, when she appeared on the Dr. Phil show, to her most recent pictures on social media. The user wrote, “Y’all didn’t tell me she ‘turned light skinned’! OMG, when did this happen?!” Bhad Bhabie quickly shut down those claims, saying she actually looked darker in her older photos. She wrote, “I would say the right pic looks darker, but ok. Used the color picker to swatch both skin tones. The younger me was darker, so???? And I was 13 lol.”

She later clarified, “Lol, I meant left obviously. That was when I lived in Florida. I was by the beach and in the pool, always outside every day. I was definitely darker then than I am in the photo they used. You can clearly see it.”

Social Media Reacts 

Folks gathered under The Shade Room Teens post to analyze the photos Bhad Bhabie shared. Some agreed she looks lighter. Others said it’s not just about skin tone, pointing to her enhanced features. They claimed she looks more Hispanic than Black. A few commenters simply said to leave the girl alone.

Instagram user @lisadelva9518 wrote, “She look more Hispanic to me, but she looks beautiful and there’s nothing wrong with upgrading your look ❤️”

Instagram user @whatsabria added, “Shes Italian y’all like wtf 3 people do ask my Sicilian bestie if she’s mixed all the time”

While Instagram user @xclsv.a wrote, “d@mn her features couldn’t change as she got older ???”

Instagram user @decemberrrrxo wrote, “Girl they not talking about your skin color specifically but the look open the schools …for everybody immediately”

Instagram user @_.XOimaya added, “They talk about us black ppl so much but wanna be us !! “

While Instagram user @nellydttnorb4l wrote, “it’s the contour”

Instagram user @theloveheartsmile wrote, “whos wants to be black ? remember when she asked you guys that”

Instagram user @adalyc95 added, “This is a kardashian copy and paste. They all look the same!”

While Instagram user @_alaysianichole wrote, “omg, please leave this girl alone 🙄”

Bhad Bhabie Is Letting the Haters Be Mad at Her Success

While the internet keeps Bhad Bhabie’s name in the mix, that isn’t stopping her from flexing on the haters. A few weeks ago, the rapper took to X with a bold message, writing, “The funny thing is, a lotta industry people can’t go m for m w me… the MAJORITY.” 

Not long after, still applying pressure, she fired off another tweet that got the net talking again: “My run needs to be studied. Be mad.”

RELATED: Been THAT Girl! Bhad Bhabie Shuts Down The Internet After Unveiling Fresh NEW Look (PHOTOS)

What Do You Think Roomies?

November 12, 2025 0 comments
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Jon Bon Jovi’s Son Jesse Bongiovi, Jesse Light Welcome Baby
Celebrity News

Jon Bon Jovi’s Son Jesse Bongiovi, Jesse Light Welcome Baby

by jummy84 November 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Jon Bon Jovi’s Rare Comments on Millie Bobby Brown, Jake Bongiovi’s Baby Will Warm Your Heart

Jesse Bongiovi’s heart is like an open highway.

After all, the Hampton Water co-founder—Jon Bon Jovi and wife Dorothea Hurley’s oldest son—announced that he and wife Jesse Light welcomed their first baby, a daughter named Blair Lucy Bongiovi.

“Our sweet girl has arrived, and we couldn’t be happier,” the couple wrote on their Nov. 10 Instagram post, adding a touching photo of their baby girl holding Light’s finger. “Welcome to the world, baby Blair bear.”

Light and Bongiovi, 30, weren’t the only members of the family to embrace Blair’s arrival. Bongiovi’s uncle Matthew Bongiovi sweetly wrote in the comments, “Welcome to the family sweet Princess Blair,” while his daughter Bella Bongiovi chimed in with, “Congratulations!” 

Tish Cyrus Parcell also sent the growing family well wishes, writing, “So so happy for you guys!! Sending you so much love!!” 

November 10, 2025 0 comments
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Balakrishna, Naga Chaitanya films defer updates in light of Chevella tragedy, which left 19 dead: ‘Deeply saddened’
Bollywood

Balakrishna, Naga Chaitanya films defer updates in light of Chevella tragedy, which left 19 dead: ‘Deeply saddened’

by jummy84 November 3, 2025
written by jummy84

Updated on: Nov 03, 2025 03:38 pm IST

The teams of NC24 and NBK111 announced on Monday that they are postponing updates of Naga Chaitanya and Balakrishna’s films. 

A massive road accident near Chevella in Rangareddy district of Telangana on Monday left 19 people dead and 22 others injured. As numerous people took to social media to mourn these deaths, the teams behind Naga Chaitanya’s NC24, directed by Karthik Dandu, and Balakrishna’s NBK111, directed by Gopichand Malineni, announced that they’re deferring film announcements in light of the tragedy.

Announcements for Balakrishna and Naga Chaitanya’s films have been deferred due to the accident in Rangareddy district.

Naga Chaitanya, Balakrishna film defer announcements

“Team #NC24 stands in solidarity with the families affected by the unfortunate incident in Chevella. Wishing strength, recovery, and peace to all,” announced the team of Chaitanya’s next, releasing a note on social media. The note read: “We are deeply saddened by the tragic incident that occurred in Chevella, Rangareddy district. Our heartfelt condolences to the families who lost their loved ones and prayers for a speedy recovery to the injured.”

The note further read: “In light of this unfortunate event, Team #NC24 has decided to postpone the reveal of Meenakshi Chaudhary’s character poster to tomorrow. May strength and peace be with everyone affected by this tragedy.” Balakrishna’s film’s team also deferred the announcement about the female lead of his film, writing, “In view of the heartbreaking incident near Chevella, the announcement planned for today at 12:01 PM is being held back. Team #NBK111 extends its deepest sympathies and prayers to the families affected.”

Director Anil Ravipudi also posted condolences for the victims of the Chevella accident on social media.

What happened in Chevella?

A tipper lorry carrying gravel collided head-on with a public transport bus on Monday. Officials told PTI that the tipper collided with the RTC bus near Chevella, about 50 km from Hyderabad. 19 people, including 13 women and a girl child, died, and 22 suffered injuries. The drivers of both vehicles died in the accident.

Cyberabad Police Commissioner Avinash Mohanty noted that a head-on collision occurs when one of the vehicles is on the wrong side of the road. The cause of the accident will be determined following an investigation. With the gravel from the tipper falling onto the bus, several passengers were trapped inside, and officials had to implement relief measures to bring them out.

News / Entertainment / Telugu Cinema / Balakrishna, Naga Chaitanya films defer updates in light of Chevella tragedy, which left 19 dead: ‘Deeply saddened’

November 3, 2025 0 comments
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Diwali 2025: How many diyas to light on Dhanteras, Choti Diwali and Badi Diwali for prosperity and positivity
Lifestyle

Diwali 2025: How many diyas to light on Dhanteras, Choti Diwali and Badi Diwali for prosperity and positivity

by jummy84 October 18, 2025
written by jummy84

Diwali 2025: Diwali, also known as Deepawali or the Festival of Lights, is one of India’s most celebrated Hindu festivals, marked with joy, lights, and festive cheer. It falls on the 15th day of Kartik in the Hindu lunar calendar, on the Amavasya Tithi, and this year, it will be observed on Monday, October 20, 2025. The celebrations span five days, beginning with Dhanteras and ending with Bhai Dooj. (Also read: Dhanteras 2025: Why you should buy broom on Dhanatrayodashi? Know significance, best time to buy and rituals to follow )

Diwali 2025: Diwali marks the triumph of light over darkness with diyas. (Pixabay)

A central Diwali tradition is lighting diyas, small clay lamps, which symbolise the victory of light over darkness. Hindu customs provide guidance on the number of diyas to light each day, with variations for Diwali, Choti Diwali, and Dhanteras. Keep reading to find out the proper way to honour each day with diyas this festive season. (Also read: Diwali 2025 calendar: When is Choti Diwali, Diwali, Bhai Dooj? Check dates for all 5 days of Deepawali )

Dhanteras

On Dhanteras, it’s customary to light 13 diyas, each carrying a unique meaning and placed with intention. Diyas are often positioned at the entrance to welcome prosperity and guests, in the kitchen to symbolise health and abundance, and in the puja room to honour the divine and seek blessings. Each lamp radiates positive energy, filling the home with light for the festive season.

Lighting diyas on Diwali represents hope for a bright future. (Image created by Google Gemini)
Lighting diyas on Diwali represents hope for a bright future. (Image created by Google Gemini)

Choti Diwali (Kali Chaudas)

During Choti Diwali, it is considered auspicious to light 14 diyas in a thoughtful arrangement. Place 11 diyas around the edge of a plate with a four-faced diya in the centre, which should be lit first, followed by the others. Some also add a touch of sugar or sweets to the diyas, symbolising a wish for sweetness and prosperity in life, enhancing the blessings of the festival.

Diwali (Badi Diwali / Lakshmi Puja)

On the main day of Diwali, it’s customary to light numerous diyas across the home and courtyard, symbolising hope for a bright and prosperous future. Many also light diyas on balconies, spreading joy and warmth to neighbours and passersby.

Remember, these are general guidelines, not strict rules. Some families may light more or fewer diyas depending on personal traditions. What truly matters is lighting diyas with a pure heart and a sincere wish for goodness, positivity, and light in life.

Safety tip: Always ensure diyas and candles are never left unattended so you can enjoy a safe and joyful celebration.

October 18, 2025 0 comments
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Doc 'Come See Me In The Good Light' Trailer - About Poets & Cancer
Hollywood

Doc ‘Come See Me In The Good Light’ Trailer – About Poets & Cancer

by jummy84 October 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Doc ‘Come See Me In The Good Light’ Trailer – About Poets & Cancer

by Alex Billington
October 16, 2025
Source: YouTube

“My story is one about happiness – being easier to find once we realize we do not have forever to find it.” Apple TV has revealed the first official trailer for the documentary film titled Come See Me In The Good Light, made by the award-winning doc filmmaker Ryan White (also of The Case Against 8, Serena, Ask Dr. Ruth, Assassins, Good Night Oppy). This doc already won the prestigious “Festival Favorite Award” at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival earlier in the year – making it the favorite of ALL the films at the fest voted by the public. Come See Me In The Good Light is a poignant and unexpectedly funny love story about the poets Andrea Gibson and Megan Falley facing an incurable cancer diagnosis with joy, wit and an unshakable partnership. Through laughter and unwavering love, they transform pain into purpose, and mortality into a moving celebration of resilience. Sadly, Andrea Gibson passed away a few months back at age 49 of ovarian cancer, meaning this doc about her is now being released posthumously. Gibson was appointed as the Poet Laureate of Colorado in 2023. This moving film is not only about the struggles of dealing with cancer, it is also about poetry and hope and progress – and all the beauty that is found in this world thanks to real love.

Official trailer (+ poster) for Ryan White’s doc film Come See Me In The Good Light, from YouTube:

Come See Me In The Good Light Doc LGBTQ Trailer

Come See Me In The Good Light Doc LGBTQ Poster

Come See Me in the Good Light is a poignant, unexpectedly funny love story about poets Andrea Gibson and Megan Falley facing an incurable cancer diagnosis with joy, wit and an unshakable partnership. Through laughter and unwavering love, they transform pain into purpose, and mortality into a moving celebration of resilience. The film features an original song performed by Grammy Award-winner and Emmy Award-nominee Sara Bareilles and Grammy Award-winner, Emmy Award-winner, and Academy Award-nominee Brandi Carlile. Come See Me In The Good Light is a documentary directed by filmmaker Ryan White, director of the doc films Pelada, Good Ol’ Freda, The Case Against 8, Serena, Ask Dr. Ruth, Assassins, Good Night Oppy, and Pamela: A Love Story previously, plus the mini-series “Into the Fire: The Lost Daughter”. Produced by Jessica Hargrave, Tig Notaro, Stef Willen, Ryan White. This initially premiered at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival earlier this year. Apple TV will debut Ryan White’s doc Come See Me In The Good Light streaming on Apple TV+ on November 14th, 2025 coming soon this fall. Want to watch?

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

October 16, 2025 0 comments
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'A Beacon of Light to a Generation'
Music

‘A Beacon of Light to a Generation’

by jummy84 October 15, 2025
written by jummy84

Before the release of Lauryn Hill’s masterful solo debut, The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill, the singer met with D’Angelo to record one of the album’s most captivating tracks, “Nothing Even Matters.” The duet would play a part in expanding and nurturing soul’s rebirth in the Nineties, while both artists as individuals would make even deeper impacts felt across genres today. HIll’s record took home five Grammy Awards, while D’Angelo would go on to release 2000’s Voodoo and 2014’s Black Messiah (following his own debut, Brown Sugar).

On Tuesday, Hill penned a letter to D’Angelo following the visionary’s passing on Oct. 14 at the age of 51 following a long battle with cancer. “People need reflection,” began Hill in her tribute. “I regret not having more time with you,” she continued. “Your undeniable beauty and talent were not of this world, and a presence not of this world needs protection in a world that covets light and the anointing of God. You sir, moved us, stirred us, inspired and even intimidated others to action with your genius.”

She continued, “Thank you for being a beacon of light to a generation and beyond who had no remembrance of the legacy that preceded us. Thank you for charting the course and for making space during a time when no similar space really existed. You imaged a unity of strength and sensitivity in Black manhood to a generation that only saw itself as having to be one or the other.”

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“It is my earnest prayer that you are in peace, far away from selfishness, fear and/or controlling interests. Far from possessiveness, far from greed, far from manipulation, far from exploitation, far from intentionally designed chaos and that you Brother are in peace, in bliss and in eternal light and fulfillment with our Father in heaven,” Hill wrote. “I Love you and I miss you. May God grant peace and shelter to your family, true friends and genuine appreciators, Brother, King.”

When speaking to Rolling Stone in 2008, D’Angelo looked back at this time working with Hill, calling her “warm and sweet.” “Originally, we were going to swap tunes for each other’s projects because I was working on Voodoo at the same time and my keyboardist James Poyser was also working with her,” D’Angelo recalled at the time. “I went to her house in New Jersey, she played a lot of songs for me and gave me a rough copy to listen to. When Lauryn and I went into the studio together, I laid down my vocals in the course of an hour.”

October 15, 2025 0 comments
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Norman Lear’s Swan Song 'Boots' Shines Light on Military Homophobia 
TV & Streaming

Norman Lear’s Swan Song ‘Boots’ Shines Light on Military Homophobia 

by jummy84 October 13, 2025
written by jummy84

Norman Lear’s last credit before his death in 2023 was executive producer of “Boots,” an eight-part adaptation of Greg Cope’s memoir “The Pink Marine.” Based on the latter’s experiences as a closeted U.S. Marine Corp in an era when it was illegal for homosexuals to serve in the military, the Netflix original may be set in 1990, but in the wake of Donald Trump’s transgender ban and Pete Hegseth’s claims that gay recruits are part of a Marxist agenda, it proves that even as a 101-year-old, the sitcom pioneer possessed the uncanny ability to stay ahead of the societal curve.   

Unlike Amazon’s underrated “Clean Slate” (the last Lear project to be completed in his lifetime), in which Laverne Cox’s trans woman is largely welcomed home with open arms, “Boots” is less warm-fuzzies and more cold-blooded aggression. The cast must have required a boxful of Chloraseptic by the shoot’s end, considering how a good third of the dialogue is shouted at intense decibel-shattering levels.  

The view from Trilith Studios

Created by Andy Parker (“Tales of the City”), “Boots” centers on Cameron Cope (Miles Heizer), a sensitive gay teen cajoled into joining Marine boot camp by his supportive straight best friend Ray McAffey (Liam Oh) during a summer in which possibilities can seem both excitingly infinite and depressingly limiting. While the latter quickly takes to military life, motivated by the desire to please his overwhelmingly stern war veteran dad (the father figures here are uniformly awful), the former immediately starts ruing the day he signed up.   

“Boots” gets plenty of comic mileage from this fish-out-of-water scenario. “We’ve only been here one day?,” a crestfallen Cameron queries following a baptism of fire in which he’s forced to shave his head, scavenge leftovers from the trash, and contend with superiors gleefully proclaiming they’ll “snap your head off and s**t down your neck.” In a narrative device which, while gimmicky, helps to signal his shift in personality, he also regularly converses with the slightly more effeminate, ever-disapproving alter-ego he spends 13 weeks desperately trying to mask.  

It’s a shame this side doesn’t appear more often.

While it’s impressive that Heizer can still convincingly pass as an 18-year-old at age 31 — this isn’t a Ben Platt in “Dear Evan Hansen”-style embarrassment — his performance feels a little too muted to connect. Sure, we get why Cameron would repeatedly stifle his true self in front of the drill sergeants who bark the “other” F-word like it’s going out of fashion. Likewise with the emotionally stunted bros whose idea of entertainment is a toilet-based challenge dubbed the Brown Bomber (don’t ask). But even in the scenes with Ray, the only person he’s outed himself to, he’s something of a blank canvas. And when he does assume a little more agency later on, his actions — particularly his willingness to drink the Kool-Aid — make him difficult to root for. 

Luckily, his fellow tryouts are a little more charismatic. Having spent his entire life in the shadow of Cody (Brandon Tyler Moore), the far more athletic twin brother primed for combat by their sadistic dad, John (Blake Burt) cuts a far more sympathetic figure. Late transfer Jones (Jack Cameron Kay) serves as the anti-Cameron, a confident almost-openly gay man who treats all the ultra-macho machinations with the contempt they deserve. Kieron Moore provides the necessary boo-hiss factor as Slovacek, a Czech-American meathead who accepts the comparisons to Ivan Drago as a badge of honor. 

BOOTS. (L to R) Liam Oh as Ray McAffey and Miles Heizer as Cameron Cope in Episode 102 of Boots. Cr. Alfonso
‘Boots’Alfonso “Pompo” Bresciani/Netflix © 2023

“Boots” also fails to convey exactly why Cameron would subject himself to the whims of such a toxic environment. Unlike his comrades, his family life is more dysfunctional than deeply troubled. Although mom Barbara (a sadly under-utilized Vera Farmiga) takes several days to realize her son hasn’t just popped out for some milk, she’s no Norma Bates-esque monster. She undoubtedly cares — see how she castigates the world’s most brightly-colored recruitment office for signing up someone so transparently ill-equipped (“These aren’t boys to you… they’re cannon fodder for when the country needs a good distraction”). While a heartfelt late-in-the-day monologue, the kind which may have graced an Emmy clip had her character been more fleshed out, expresses regret at how she’s handled raising such a sensitive soul.   

In fact, the show’s messaging is muddled throughout, as if it’s never quite sure whether it’s serving as a Marines recruitment ad or an active deterrent. The sergeants act so relentlessly inhumane they make the “Full Metal Jacket” lot look as menacing as Pee-wee Herman. Yet there are occasions when the show appears to justify their extreme “man up” approach as a means to an end, as if all the wayward recruits needed was some racial and homophobic epithets to whip them into shape.  

Furthermore, the one issue you’d expect to take front and center is often relegated to the background. Indeed, Cameron’s desires are barely addressed beyond a few furtive glances in the shower (anyone looking for a clandestine romance to ship should stick to “Heartstopper”). And other than ignoramus Slovacek, the recruits seem an unusually tolerant bunch with no qualms about leaning into the naturally homoerotic.

Instead of sticking the boot into military homophobia, the show initially seems determined to tiptoe around it. It’s only when delving deeper into the backstory of Sgt. Sullivan (Max Parker), a cartoonishly humorless ex-Recon who takes Cameron under his incredibly warped wing, that it starts exploring the hardships of an era when even the Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell policy seemed enlightened.

It’s also here where “Boots” finally appears to find its stride, hitting just the right balance of sitcom-esque quips and emotional beats while also posing an arsenal of tough questions. Let’s hope that Netflix gives the show a chance to reveal the answers. The closing scene’s breaking news of the Iraq War certainly gives plenty of scope for a second season. And with a bit more spit and a bit less polish, it might even be fit enough to tie the laces of Lear’s finest.  

All eight episodes of”Boots” Season 1 are now streaming on Netflix.

October 13, 2025 0 comments
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Taylor Momsen of the Pretty Reckless performs during AC/DC's Power Up Tour at Nissan Stadium on May 21, 2025 in Nashville, Tennessee. (Credit: Tibrina Hobson/Getty Images)
Music

Magic, Music, and Movies: Taylor Momsen Is Seeing Things ‘in a New Light’

by jummy84 October 11, 2025
written by jummy84

Taylor Momsen sits at a desk in her New York City apartment, the place she’s called home since she was 12, a sign hangs just beyond her right shoulder: “love” written in cursive pink neon. “Welcome to my home,” she says, fresh faced and smiling, a natural beauty in black wide-rimmed glasses. In August, her band the Pretty Reckless released their newest single “For I Am Death,” and in the video Taylor personifies death itself, morphing into a slithering Middle-earth-esque manifestation, slick in all-over black body makeup.

When Taylor and I talked last year for the 10th anniversary of Going to Hell, we discussed the original art applied to her back for the iconic album cover. “There’s something very freeing and pure about being as vulnerable and as exposed as possible,” she says, because actual nudity is often a non-option. “I use paint in different forms to cover up. I think that’s why it’s a recurring theme as we keep making music.”

The paradox of power and vulnerability may just define Taylor in many ways. On October 10th, she’s re-releasing the sweet song she sang as Cindy Lou Who for 2000’s How the Grinch Stole Christmas, “Where Are You Christmas?.” The fact that it’s the film’s silver anniversary is a complete coincidence, but rather a result of—in addition to finally acquiescing to pleading fans—a storied journey that brought her to revisiting and embracing her past. 

Taylor with Jim Carrey in a scene from ‘How The Grinch Stole Christmas,’ 2000. (Credit: Universal/Getty Images)

While Jim Carrey played the title character, it was 6-year-old Taylor, with a wigged blonde basilica on her head, who is the beating heart of the film. The Grinch is highly stylized and vividly fantastic, but little Taylor, who’d started acting when she was 2, shines with genuine hope and fortitude, purity and joy. 

In a Grinch promo interview for WFAA, Taylor, who’d tuned 7 by the time the film was released, stated: “I love fantasy no matter what story it is.” 

“I stand by that,” Taylor says, not recalling the interview. “I stand by that statement today. It’s just proof that you never really change as a person. You’re born the way you are, and you grow and you evolve, but you’re that same person for the rest of your life. At least that’s true with me. I think you’re born with certain instincts and values. I guess values are taught, but inherently, you’re born with some kind of center. I think that’s the key to life. 

“If you can manage to not lose that as you get older, that’s everything. Especially as a musician, as an artist, I spend a lot of time trying to maintain my childlike mind to a degree, because it’s so important and so necessary for writing, and yet still be an adult with responsibilities and bills and all the things that come with being a grown-up. I think that’s the key. I think that’s the key that everyone forgets. You’ve got to remember who you were as a kid, and if you can hold on to that, you’ll always be good.”

Despite audience requests, she resisted the idea of reviving “Where Are You Christmas?” since starting the Pretty Reckless at 14; the initiative, for her, had to come with a purpose. It wasn’t until 2020, going through a time she describes as “a very difficult period…with a lot of loss. COVID had just hit. We were in lockdown, and it’s the holidays again.” And she was with her band, hanging out, and the requests for a rock version of the song she sang 20 years earlier kept coming in. So, they (probably, somewhat begrudgingly) played through the song. “By the end of [“Where Are You Christmas?], these four miserable, jaded, pissed-off, depressed people had giant grins on our faces. Just undeniable, couldn’t help it, huge smiles, laughing, having the best time. We all turned to each other and we went, ‘Was that just great? I think that was just magic. I think there was something really special about what just happened, and I think we have to do this now.’ That was the jumping-off point with COVID, of going back to my childhood and realizing, after having been through such a hard time, wanting things to be simple again and wanting things to be joyful. This song and this memory of filming this movie and being a part of this, I never had a tainted memory about it. The Grinch was something that I hold very dearly and have very fond memories of.” 

The experience inspired Taylor to write an entire Christmas record. “It’s this little coming-of-age story and this full circle moment of me accepting my past and embracing it and realizing that you never really do change, with the intent of just wanting to purely spread joy to everyone. It’s a very hard time for everyone right now if we’re being real about it, and I just wanted to bring happiness. I wanted to bring joy to the world, to quote another Christmas song.”

The new version of “Where Are You Christmas?” “morphs” childhood Taylor’s original vocals into her own now, a concept she says exemplifies the magic of one’s childhood self. “To be a part of something that is so universally loved feels surreal, now, 25 years later, and also has been very cool. I wanted to continue that joy and bring fresh life to it from my own perspective as a grown-up Cindy Lou Who.”

But music, she says, was always her everything—not acting—knowing from a very young age she wanted to write songs, something she did while filming The Grinch. (Young Taylor was clearly an avid animal lover, as one song was about her father’s dead dog, and another was called “Rescue a Pet.”) With all the fluctuation from her early childhood acting career, songwriting provided an all-important grounding. “Writing was this place where I could truly be me without any affect, without having to be this version of me, or this version of me. It was the purest form of myself because it wasn’t for anyone. It was just for myself, and it still remains that. My notebook was my best friend.”

(Credit: Steph Gomez)

The Grinch also provided Taylor with her first experience in a professional recording studio, with none other than legendary film composer James Horner (Titanic, Braveheart). The entire experience, she says, changed her life. “I left that experience going, ‘That’s what I want to do.’ That was magic. That was everything. There’s a really great photo of me, holding a stuffed animal, sitting at the console with my chin on my fist listening to the song with James Horner sitting next to me. Fast forward years later, there’s another photo of me and our producer, Kato, sitting at the console, and I’m doing the exact same thing. It’s a mirrored image, except I’m now 20-something. It just reassured me that all my crazy decisions in life of quitting a career [in acting] and pivoting and joining a rock band to go on the road and grind it out, and all those things, that was my path. That was the path that I always wanted. I fought for it and went for it, and now I’m doing that.” 

There’s a scene in The Grinch where little Cindy Lou Who is walking up a mountain to the Grinch’s nefarious lair. Director Ron Howard later told her the story. “It was a big mountain. I actually am walking up the mountain, so it was a very long shoot, but there was no dialogue or anything. I was miked. I shoot the scene. I come down, and everyone’s laughing, and I don’t understand why everyone’s laughing.

“I’m going, ‘Why is everyone laughing? What’s so funny?’ Turns out I was humming the entire time up the mountain, not knowing it because I was always singing. I was always humming. I was always writing songs. I always had music in me, which I feel very blessed about because it’s just something that came really naturally to me.” 

Taylor in a scene from ‘The Grinch.’ (Credit: Getty Images)

Today, she says she’s in a good place, well-earned after some dark and difficult years, the same that inspired the Pretty Reckless’s fourth studio album, 2021’s Death by Rock and Roll. “Living in that space, I had to make a very conscious decision at one point of I was on a very bad path, and I was going to die. I had to choose if I was going to live or die, and I made a very conscious decision to move forward.”

That was the beginning of Taylor looking back at her childhood in an attempt to rediscover her true self. “When I lost some of those people, I couldn’t listen to music anymore. It brought me so much pain I couldn’t deal. To lose an outlet like that, where this music has been such a solace for me, to not have that anymore was terrifying. I felt like I really lost myself.” She says she began almost in chronological succession identifying and reintroducing the things that brought her joy in her early years, starting with the first band she fell in love with: the Beatles. 

And part of this process included going back into her past film and TV work, “accepting them and seeing them in a new light.” 

She says she’s comfortable now, stronger. 

“I was always very me, but…you go through phases. I had my rebellious youth, where I was extra angsty. I wanted to be something and was fighting for that, and now I just kind of am, and that’s just a really nice place to be. I just feel very comfortable in my own skin and all aspects of myself, and I’m not living in a place where I’m shutting off any part of me. I’m firing on all cylinders, and it’s good.

“I’m still that little girl humming, walking up the mountain. I really am.”

October 11, 2025 0 comments
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"Don’t wait for the world to give you the green light to do what is inside you"
Music

Don’t wait for the world to give you the green light to do what is inside you

by jummy84 September 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Wolf Alice drummer Joel Amey has spoken to NME about the band being ambassadors for this year’s National Album Day, being the most nominated act for the Mercury Prize ever, the power of the format and the importance of expression in these fractured times.

The band, fresh from becoming the most-nominated band for the Mercury Prize ever after being shortlisted for their recent fourth LP ‘The Clearing’, were asked along with Nova Twins, Architects and Iron Maiden to be ambassadors for National Album Day 2025 – with this year focussing on rock music.

“We’re never shy of the fact that we love albums,” Amey told NME of their role. “I don’t know if it’s a generational thing but I remember going out and buying them, and there’s a romance about the importance of them. I also live with the great privilege that I can go into the studio for a few months and make one. I love that and feel very lucky.

“I’ve got nothing against the ‘singles’ culture and mixtapes are so important, but records mean a lot to me, that’s why I’m selfishly thinking they’re very important. They’re snapshots of where your artist’s head is at. It’s a moment of time. In an age when music is being treated as so disposable by corporations that shall not be named, it’s still important to put albums at the forefront because they’re your lifeblood and your connection to your audience. They’re what make you real.”

He added: “We’re lucky to be able to get up on stage, but we only got there because of our albums.”

Wolf Alice. CREDIT: Press

National Album Day returns on Friday October 18, with events to celebrate the format alongside vinyl re-releases of classic records by the likes of Liam Gallagher, Iggy Pop, Manic Street Preachers, Patti Smith, Hole and many more.

Check out the rest of our interview with Amey below, where he told us about why the album still matters as a body of work, the importance of speaking out and making your voice heard, as well as advice for young artists, and his own favourite new and all-time records.

NME: Hello Joel. You recently received your fourth Mercury Prize nomination – making you the most shortlisted artist ever, as well as having won it already. How does that feel?

Joey Amey: “That’s what someone told me the other day. I was like, ‘That can’t be right? What about Arctic Monkeys?’ I Googled it, and apparently we are. That’s cool! I didn’t realise it. The Mercury Prize has a history with it, and it’s still hard to believe we won it [in 2018 for ‘Visions Of A Life’]. It puts the spotlight on a lot of different genres and some underground stuff alongside the mainstream. It’s cool to see all of that presented together.”

What do you make of your chances of winning this year?

“I reckon I’d put £500 on CMAT. I love that album [‘Euro-Country’]. I think she’s awesome. When I listened to that album, it just really connected to me. Ellie [Rowsell, singer] was telling me about the title track, and it’s such a brilliant song. The way she approaches sonics on that record is so fucking brilliant. I wouldn’t be putting money on us.”

What would you spend the prize money on if you won again?

“We still haven’t spent the last lot! We have plans on what to do with it and what it should be invested in. We want to make sure that we don’t spend it frivolously. Can it help somebody else make an album? It would be nice. If we won again, not that we should, it would be great to put it with the last lot and use it to help people that maybe aren’t at that stage of their career but could be.”

It’s hard to keep people’s attention in playlist culture. How do you respond to that? How do you break through the noise?

“I’m part of playlist culture; I’ve discovered some of my favourite new albums from playlists. It’s really hard. It’s a push and pull. We’ve just got to keep supporting new artists and outlets for them to express themselves and create a career. There will be a certain song that becomes massive because it was playlisted in a certain way, but making an album is how you evolve as a writer, a lyricist, a poet, a drummer, whatever. It’s so important to culture and the evolution of the artists we have today.”

A good album is a world you can jump into. How would you describe the world of ‘The Clearing’? Did that reveal itself as you were making it?

“We had more conversations about it than we’d ever done before. It felt like an experiment to me because we chose to write differently to how we’d done in the past. Our previous records are all quite different, but it’s quite ‘Wolf Alice’ to go away, everyone writes, then we pull together what we think is exciting. That has really benefitted the band before. But with your fourth album, you ask, ‘What’s going to be exciting for us?’ It was this idea of making a cohesive body of work where the songs come together more coherently than before. That was a challenge for us. It really made us focus on our songwriting and every single chord change. ‘Do we need to stack 85 guitar tracks to get the same point and emotion across? Joff [Oddie] is an incredible guitar player, why don’t we just challenge him to do that?’

“We wanted all the parts to be chosen and more bespoke to the song. It was about honing in on what was important. It was a really fun thing, but we evolved out of our limitations. ‘The Clearing’ is our most experimental album in that sense, because we’ve never made one like it.”

Wolf Alice live at Glastonbury 2025, photo by Andy Ford
Wolf Alice live at Glastonbury 2025. Credit: Andy Ford for NME

As you said, albums are a capsule of a time and a very important mode of expression. That becomes a more important vehicle when the world is on fire. Wolf Alice have been vocal supporters of Palestine and said that doing so should allow others to feel less afraid and alone. Do you feel like the backlash is lessening through so much artist solidarity, and that the focus is shifting from the culture war to the atrocities themselves?

“I don’t know, because I’ve seen certain people use their platform and gone to see what kind of response they’ve had, and it can be volatile and violent. There are artists who screenshot DMs they’ve received just for speaking out. I don’t know. I just know that I’ve learned a lot from seeing people use their platform. It doesn’t mean that you have to agree exactly with what they say, but it’s about having a conversation. That conversation matters. We need to remind ourselves that it’s OK to have a conversation with someone with different opinions to yours. It’s OK to use your platform if you feel comfortable to do that and you see a moral cause. You learn that privilege as an artist.

“I applaud anyone who’s using their platform in today’s day and age to try and get a resolution to what people are experiencing.”

Wolf Alice have also been staunch in fighting for artist rights and the grassroots. Do you feel as if some good may come about now that the industry seems more open to that conversation?

“It will only get better with action. Everything seems to fall on the responsibility of the artist sometimes, which can be quite overwhelming. It’s got to pan out on so many different levels: from labels to government to music being taught in schools more, so people can find a love and respect for it. We’re gonna do our bit, I hope more people do theirs, and that’s where the hope comes from.”

What advice would you give to a young artist who might think that ever making an album is a pipe dream?

“You can make an album, fine! Don’t wait for the world to give you the thumbs up to be creative. Don’t wait for the world to give you the green light to do what is inside you. I applaud anyone who has time to make something any way they can. What is a conventional method these days? They’ve all been completely chewed up and spat out and rightly so. Good art always finds a way. Just have fun with it. Make a band with your friend. Make art on your own. There’s no right or wrong way to do it. I used to sit in my teenage bedroom and dream about what I’m doing now.”

Is there an album that gets played on the Wolf Alice tour bus without any skips or arguments?

“My favourite record that’s just come out is that new Die Spitz album [‘Something To Consume’]. I think they fucking rock. ‘Throw Yourself To The Sword’ is my favourite song at the moment. We’re also touring with a songwriter called Willy Mason who we’ve all been fans of forever and ever. We just reached out to him and he agreed to do it. That made me rediscover his record from 2007, ‘If The Ocean Gets Rough’. Everyone in the band listens to that record. There’s a track called ‘Save Myself’ and it’s incredibly poignant. People should go listen to that.”

What three albums would you take to a desert island?

“Oh shit. I’m gonna take ‘Surf’s Up’ by The Beach Boys, the first self-titled album by The Bronx, and Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young’s ‘Déjà Vu’.”

National Album Day 2025 is on Friday October 18. Visit here for more information. 

‘The Clearing’ by Wolf Alice is out now, with the band currently on tour in North America before returning to the UK and Europe for an arena run in the winter and Australia and New Zealand in the new year. 

September 26, 2025 0 comments
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