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Meg edited Jack White's speech ahead of The White Stripes' Rock Hall induction
Music

Meg edited Jack White’s speech ahead of The White Stripes’ Rock Hall induction

by jummy84 November 11, 2025
written by jummy84

Meg White helped edit her ex-husband Jack’s speech ahead of The White Stripes‘ induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame last weekend.

  • READ MORE: Jack White – ‘No Name’ review: surprise album is maestro’s punkiest outing since White Stripes

Last weekend (November 8) saw the annual Rock Hall ceremony take place at Los Angeles’ Peacock Theater, with inductees including OutKast, Soundgarden, Cyndi Lauper, Chubby Checker, Bad Company, Joe Cocker and Jack and Meg White.

Meg wasn’t present at the ceremony, as she has stuck to keeping out of the spotlight since The White Stripes broke up in 2011. Instead, Jack accepted the honour on behalf of her, and revealed during his speech that he had spoken to Meg “the other day” ahead of the ceremony, when she helped him edit his speech.

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

Later on in his speech, he thanked her for their time together – both as a band and as romantic partners – and rounded off his speech by reading out a story about the band that he had wanted to send to Meg, who was hearing it for the first time along with the audience.

“I was gonna send this to Meg, but I didn’t get around to it, so I thought I’d read it to you all tonight,” White began. “One time, a girl climbed a tree, and in that tree was a boy — her brother, she thought. And the tree looked so glorious and beautiful, but it was just an oak tree.

“And these two so loved the world that they brought forth a parade float – one they built in their garage behind the oak tree with their own bare hands. And the boy looked at this giant peppermint on wheels and felt pride – pride that it was produced in the Motor City, just like in the big factories – but it was just in their garage. He looked at the girl — his sister, he thought – and, like the Little Rascals, they said, ‘Let’s put on a show.’

“And they paraded this float through the Cass Corridor,” the White Stripes frontman continued, “standing atop the peppermint pulled by white horses – or maybe it was a red Econoline van. Many of the blocks they travelled were empty, but some had people. And some of those people cheered, some laughed, and some even threw stones. And with their bare hands, the two started to clap and sing and make up songs.

“And some people kept watching and swaying and moving. And then one person even smiled. The boy and the girl looked at each other, and they also smiled, and they felt — they both felt – the sin of pride. But they kept on smiling. Smiling from a new freedom, knowing that they had shared and made another person feel something.

“And they thought the person smiling at them was a stranger, someone they didn’t even know. But it wasn’t just a stranger. It was God.”

Olivia Rodrigo, Feist, and Twenty One Pilots also performed at the ceremony to honour The White Stripes. Rodrigo and Feist took on an acoustic duet of ‘We’re Going To Be Friends’ from 2001’s ‘White Blood Cells’, which was the song the White Stripes played in their final performance on Late Night With Conan O’Brien back in 2009.

Twenty One Pilots then covered ‘Seven Nation Army’, the track Rodrigo dubbed the “most iconic song of all time” in a video that preceded White’s speech. Both wearing fringed face masks, Pilots bassist and singer Tyler Joseph and drummer Josh Dun switched to keys mid-song, earning a standing ovation from Flea.

November 11, 2025 0 comments
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Rock Hall Welcomes Soundgarden, White Stripes, Outkast
Music

Rock Hall Welcomes Soundgarden, White Stripes, Outkast

by jummy84 November 9, 2025
written by jummy84

Soundgarden, the White Stripes, Outkast, Cyndi Lauper, Bad Company, Joe Cocker and Chubby Checker were enshrined in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame last night (Nov. 8) during a Los Angeles ceremony flecked with superstar contributions from Olivia Rodrigo, Stevie Wonder, Elton John, Chappell Roan and Missy Elliott.

“When the Seattle music scene exploded, it resurrected rock and roll for me,” actor Jim Carrey professed while inducting Soundgarden’s surviving members Matt Cameron, Kim Thayil, Ben Shepherd and Hiro Yamamoto. “When I heard Soundgarden for the first time, I wasn’t just excited — I wanted to put a flannel shirt on and run into the streets screaming, my mother smoked during pregnancy!”

The Pretty Reckless’ Taylor Momsen stepped in for late frontman Chris Cornell on “Rusty Cage,” with an assist from Pearl Jam guitarist Mike McCready, while fellow Seattle veteran Jerry Cantrell of Alice in Chains joined when Brandi Carlile fronted the band for “Black Hole Sun.”

“I am just really, really happy that he got to make music with his friends,” Cornell’s daughter Lily said after Carrey’s speech. “At the end of the day, that’s what it’s all about. I know how much purpose that gave him, and how much it’s meant to people who have heard that music. That’s what I’ll be holding in my heart tonight.”

His younger daughter Toni, 21, also sang “Fell on Black Days” with guitar accompaniment from Heart’s Nancy Wilson. “I just wish he were here to see this tremendous honor for himself,” she said. “I know how proud he would have been, but he’s the only reason why I do music, so being here and being able to share my voice because of him is amazing.”

Jack White represented the White Stripes amid the absence of reclusive drummer Meg White during their induction, the speech for which was given by fellow Detroit rocker Iggy Pop. “I hear echoes of the Who, Small Faces, the Beatles, hard rock and country blues in Jack’s playing,” Pop offered. “He could do it all. And the writing he is capable of was something that was not typical of the great Detroit bands of the ’60s and ’70s. This was more melodic, more hooky. After all, it was a new century and the White Stripes’ music was coming from a foundational love instead of revolution, and with time to turn a page.”

Feist and Olivia Rodrigo at the 2025 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony (photo: Kevin Kane / Getty Images for RRHOF).

In his acceptance speech, White acknowledged he’d spoken with Meg “the other day” and that “she’s very sorry she couldn’t make it tonight, but she’s very grateful for the folks who have supported her throughout all the years. To young artists, I want to say, get your hands dirty and drop the screens and get out in your garage or your little room and get obsessed. Get obsessed with something. Get passionate. We all want to share in what you might create.” The duo’s music was repped by guest performers Rodrigo and Feist on “We’re Going To Be Friends” and Twenty One Pilots on the inescapable “Seven Nation Army.”

Both members of pioneering rap duo Outkast were in the room for their induction last night, but they also chose not to stage together for what would have been their first performance since a 2014 reunion tour. Instead, Andre 3000 watched from the audience as Big Boi led a guest-filled run through “ATLiens” with J.I.D., “Ms. Jackson” with Doja Cat (who forgot the words at one point), a sizzling “B.O.B.” with Tyler, the Creator, a shaky “Hey Ya!” with Janelle Monae, “The Way You Move” with Sleepy Brown and “The Whole World” with Killer Mike.

To begin the show, Wonder, the Roots’ Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson, Flea, Beck, Maxwell and Jennifer Hudson teamed for a Sly Stone tribute of “Dance to the Music,” “Everyday People,” Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin)” and “Higher.” Another fallen legend from 2025, Brian Wilson, got his own salute by John, Tom Petty keyboardist Benmont Tench, drummer Kenny Aronoff and bassist Don Was on the Beach Boys’ “God Only Knows.”

Lauper focused her induction speech on the influence “of the women in the industry who came before me. My shoulders are broad enough to have the women that come after me stand on mine, and the little kid in me still believes that rock’n’roll can save the world.” The artist was inducted by Roan, who dusted off a Lauper-inspired outfit for the occasion and even accidentally said the “F word” during her remarks (“I messed up so bad by refusing to get contacts,” she joked).

“Cyndi embodies every quality of an artist that I admire,” Roan said. “She’s a born performer and a revolutionary songwriter. A forever fashion icon and a fierce advocate and ally. From the very beginning, she owned every ounce of who she was.” Lauper then performed with a pickup band including Go-Go’s drummer Gina Schock and ex-Smashing Pumpkins bassist Ginger Pooley on “True Colors,” “Time After Time” with rising U.K. singer RAYE and “Girls Just Want To Have Fun” with the latter, Avril Lavigne and Salt-N-Pepa.

Bad Company singer Paul Rodgers was too ill to attend the induction, leading to drummer Simon Kirke carrying performances of “Feel Like Makin’ Love” and “Can’t Get Enough” with assistance from the Black Crowes’ Chris Robinson, Bryan Adams, Aerosmith’s Joe Perry and Nancy Wilson. Cocker, who died in 2014, was feted by Bryan Adams (“It’s one thing to cover a song — it’s another to make it your own,” he said of his famed cover of the Beatles’ “With a Little Help From My Friends”), and Elliott helped welcome Salt-N-Pepa as the first female rap group in the Hall.

Warren Zevon, Lenny Waronker, Carol Kaye, Thom Bell and Nicky Hopkins were also inducted this year via special categories.

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

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

by jummy84 November 9, 2025
written by jummy84

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Gilbert Flores/Variety

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

by jummy84 November 9, 2025
written by jummy84

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

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

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

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

Amy Sussman/WireImage

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

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

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

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

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

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

Amy Sussman/WireImage

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

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

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

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

by jummy84 November 2, 2025
written by jummy84

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

November 2, 2025 0 comments
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