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Dakota Johnson Debuts as a Valentino Woman at Vogue World 2025: Hollywood
Fashion

Dakota Johnson Debuts as a Valentino Woman at Vogue World 2025: Hollywood

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Last night, Vogue World 2025 took over the famed Paramount lot to explore the expansive relationship between fashion and film. Dakota Johnson took the moment to debut her Valentino partnership, and pay tribute to her own longheld creative collaboration with designer Alessandro Michele.

Johnson wore look 40 from Michele’s spring 2026 ready-to-wear collection: a long pink gown that clings close to the body, with fanning, crystal floral appliqués, and a tulle-ruffled neckline. It hit all of the marks of a Dakota Johnson look, with exquisite detailing and sheer elements.

Look 40 from Alessandro Michele’s Valentino spring 2026 collection.

Photo: Alessandro Lucioni / Gorunway.com

While the night’s look was ever-so-slightly parred back, Johnson just recently defended her love of a naked dress in an interview with Vogue Germany: “I really don’t care,” she said about her penchant for sheerness. “I’ve been able to wear some of the most beautiful dresses, and I feel beautiful in them, so I wear them.”

Johnson wore her trademark bangs and her brunette hair long and straight, accessorizing with simple drop earrings and a rectangular, black Valentino clutch bag.

Dakota Johnson Vogue World Hollywood 2025  Arrivals

Photo: Getty Images

October 27, 2025 0 comments
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Vogue World 2025: An Exclusive Look Inside the Show
Fashion

Vogue World 2025: An Exclusive Look Inside the Show

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Talk about a fashion fantasia! On Sunday night in Los Angeles, Vogue World: Hollywood transformed the Paramount Studios lot into an active runway, flooded with new and custom designer looks on high-flying top models; original costumes from iconic films; nods to iconic personalities and characters from Hollywood history; and no small number of A-list stars.

Beyond tapping houses like Alaïa, Balmain, Louis Vuitton, Marc Jacobs, Miu Miu, McQueen by Seán McGirr, and Valentino to whip up ensembles inspired by the movies, the sprawling fashion team that brought Vogue World: Hollywood to life also sourced wardrobe elements, props, and other set dressings from eBay, Vogue’s official pre-loved partner. (Thrillingly, a selection of items from the show—and a wider curation of goods—is headed to a Vogue x eBay vintage pop-up in West Hollywood on November 1. More on that here.)

The event’s livestream, helmed by Emmy Award-winning and Grammy-nominated director Mark A. Ritchie of Southpaw Productions, was a total wonder—but for a closer look at the lights, cameras, and action on the ground at Vogue World on Sunday, scroll on. Below, photographers Hunter Abrams, Poupay Jutharat, and Sinna Nasseri deliver the goods—from candid shots of celebrity attendees to the best moments you didn’t see at home.

October 27, 2025 0 comments
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Joe Jonas Reacts to Backlash Over Jonas Brothers’ World Series Set
Music

Joe Jonas Reacts to Backlash Over Jonas Brothers’ World Series Set

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Jonas Brothers, who are Stand Up to Cancer ambassadors, gave a surprise performance during the 2025 World Series that had some baseball fans taking to social media to criticize their appearance.

On Saturday, the Toronto Blue Jays and Los Angeles Dodgers competed in Game Two of the World Series at Toronto’s Rogers Centre. After the fifth inning, the game was paused for a Stand up to Cancer tribute. A Major League Baseball tradition since 2009, the tribute features those in attendance holding up placards honoring people who have been affected by cancer. At the game yesterday, baseball fans and players alike participated in the moment.

Then, the band were surprise-introduced by an announcer, who said Jonas Brothers would perform “I Can’t Lose,” which was “dedicated to everyone standing up to cancer.” Kicking their performance off with Joe Jonas holding up a placard for their dad, who was diagnosed with colon cancer in 2017, the band delivered their performance in the stadium in an area overlooking the field.

While they performed, they were surrounded by fans who sang along, but once they were done, it appeared some baseball fans were less enthusiastic about their surprise set. Some who were displeased took to the internet. One person posted “Do this pregame… not interrupt the World Series” and another wrote “This is the World Series not the All Star game” in the comments on the MLB YouTube video featuring their performance.

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Over on Instagram, their appearance was also taken to task. “Horrible idea to have a half time show AFTER a moment of silence for those impacted by cancer, in the middle of the WORLD SERIES. So bad,” wrote one person, while another called it the “worst part of the whole broadcast.” Another was more diplomatic, writing, “They might be good performers, but please never do this in the middle of a game again. Do it to start the game. This just changes the entire atmosphere.”

Joe Jonas appeared to take it all in stride, humorously posting, “Why these guys ?” on MLB’s Instagram post. And despite the backlash from some, thousands of others “liked” Jonas’ response and hundreds of others commented in support of him and the band. Besides, there was at least one pretty evident reason why they were there with the sign he held up at the beginning of their performance, given their dad, Kevin Jonas Sr., is a cancer survivor. Perhaps a better battle to pick is a unified one against cancer rather than over a band’s surprise set.

October 27, 2025 0 comments
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Vogue World Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection
Fashion

Vogue World Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

© 2025 Condé Nast. All rights reserved. Vogue may earn a portion of sales from products that are purchased through our site as part of our Affiliate Partnerships with retailers. The material on this site may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, cached or otherwise used, except with the prior written permission of Condé Nast. Ad Choices

October 27, 2025 0 comments
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Culture at heart of Blue Jays’ World Series run
Celebrity News

Culture at heart of Blue Jays’ World Series run

by jummy84 October 26, 2025
written by jummy84

TORONTO – Whether it was at the draft, the trade deadline, or during free agency, Ross Atkins has always emphasized the importance of values during his decade as general manager of the Toronto Blue Jays.

Every time there was a potential addition to the team, Atkins never failed to mention their “high character.”

He believes that policy has paid off in 2025, with the Blue Jays reaching the World Series for the first time in 32 years in large part thanks to their cohesiveness and dedication to each other.

“I’ve always been taught and learned and believed strongly that hiring and identification of — whether it be players, coaches, scouts, anyone that’s helping support the organization — that hiring’s the most important thing we do,” said Atkins during a news conference on Friday before Game 1 of the World Series. “If you do that with values that are important to you, then over time, that’s going to pay off for you.”

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Atkins said that centring the team’s personnel policy and the resulting atmosphere is something that he and manager John Schneider actually spoke about earlier in the week.

“The thing that I think about the most is the relationships, the people that we have hired and the people that we have grown with together,” said Atkins, who was hired as the team’s GM in December 2015. “I’ve always felt there’s a big group of people here that I’m working with that will, for sure, be lifelong relationships and lifelong friendships.

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Blue Jays fall 5-1 to LA Dodgers in Game 2 of World Series




“This success — albeit we’re not done, with work to do — not just this year, but well beyond, I think just emboldens that feeling of how powerful these relationships will be.”

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Toronto led all of Major League Baseball with 49 come-from-behind wins in the regular season, with 12 of those victories coming when the Blue Jays trailed by at least three runs.

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They also rallied from a 2-0 deficit to the Seattle Mariners in the best-of-seven American League Championship Series. The climactic Game 7 in Toronto was capped by George Springer’s three-run homer in the seventh inning, undoing Seattle’s early 3-1 lead in that series finale.

“I think that’s what forms a good team. It’s talent and it’s players, but it’s people,” said Schneider before the World Series began. “I think that we’ve done such a phenomenal job of creating a culture where people are just welcome.


“It’s what we’ve grasped on to, the standard we’ve set. Not just the type of player we want, but the type of people we want in here, too.”

Schneider has been with the Blue Jays organization since 2002 when he was drafted in the 13th round of that year’s draft. He retired from playing after the 2007 season due to three concussions suffered that year, then became a minor-league manager for the rookie-level Gulf Coast League Blue Jays in 2008, working his way up through the franchise’s different levels of ball.

He said that the relationships that have been built in Toronto during Atkins’s tenure has helped create the culture that made the Blue Jays (94-68) playoff run possible.

“I think that when you’re trying to establish a winning environment and a winning organization that can do it repeatedly, that people come into play,” said Schneider. “People that are going to push things forward and not be satisfied.

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“Even this year, when we acquired (infielder Andres Gimenez) and signed (Anthony Santander) and signed Max (Scherzer), we were talking about what that would do for people around them too and where the people that we had already were in their career and in their lives.”

Schneider said it was also a factor in July as Major League Baseball’s trade deadline approached and the Blue Jays were gearing up for a deep post-season run.

“It was cool to have those conversations with Ross, understanding what we were doing at the time, and not trying to disrupt that,” said Schneider. “You want to try to add people that are going to help.

“So Seranthony (Dominguez), who is about as selfless as there is, Louis Varland, Ty France, they’re good pieces for what we already have, too. We made it a point to be really aware of it this year and, again, it’s been a couple years in the making to get to this point.”

Varland and France were traded to Toronto by the Minnesota Twins on July 31 for Alan Roden and Kendry Rojas. Varland, who has become a fixture in the Blue Jays bullpen in the post-season, said that the strong culture on his new team was immediately apparent.

“From the coaching staff to the players to the support staff to the chefs, like everybody’s great, everybody’s friendly, welcoming,” he said. “I saw this the other day, ‘the Glue Jays.’

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“That’s, like, a perfect way to sum it up. Everybody’s so close and everybody’s a great guy or girl.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 26, 2025.

&copy 2025 The Canadian Press

October 26, 2025 0 comments
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A Sci-Fi Movie Searching for Truth in the Modern World
TV & Streaming

A Sci-Fi Movie Searching for Truth in the Modern World

by jummy84 October 26, 2025
written by jummy84

While “Orion” is an ambitious indie space saga, its examination of human nature is decidedly earthbound.

The film stars Andrew McCarthy as Jim, a NASA bigwig tasked with helping Apollo (Drew Van Acker), an astronaut with memory loss, figure out what happened to cause his ship to crash and leave the other crew dead. Their back-and-forth makes up the core of the film, as twists, turns and discoveries gradually unfold.

Director Jaco Bouwer found plenty of grounded elements in Anne Vithayathil’s script for “Orion.” Audiences will set sail on the film’s maiden voyage when it has its world premiere at FilmQuest in Provo, Utah, on Oct. 25.

“I don’t think we have an absolute truth anymore in this world,” he says. “This really touches on that without being super on the nose. Science fiction intrigues me a lot. I like the genre because it’s a little bit more of an expressionistic way of going about emotions.”

Bouwer credits his collaborators for helping walk the film’s tricky tightrope of making a largely two-hander feel expansive. He cites McCarthy’s curiosity about the script — which is miles from the Brat Pack roles that first made him famous — as one big benefit.

“He needs to know exactly what’s going on,” Bouwer says of McCarthy. “He really portrays Jim in a good way: There’s a cerebral aspect to him, he’s the master manipulator. In our film, there’s a moment towards the end where we do see some part of humanity behind it. I find him really professional, and I think his range is much bigger than we’ve seen before.”

Beyond the dialogue, Bouwer and his cinematographer David Kruta were eager to make the contained film feel taut and dynamic — no easy feat on an indie production.

“We actually used quite a few different lenses,” Bouwer says. “For the flashbacks, we used anamorphic, and we also changed the ratio. We sometimes went extreme wide-angle. Most of the effects were done in-camera. For me, it’s always performance first, so it’s important that the actors feel that. Because everything happens under one roof, the movement is motivated. So I would come in in the morning and we would block it in a way, and once we’ve done that, then I had a meeting with my DP to see how we can best choreograph the camera to suit them. Sometimes it’s purely for a visual, but mostly it was plotting their journey and letting the camera follow them or capture them in the best way.”

Also critical were the sparingly-used glimpses of the further regions of outer space, which helped to convey the scale of the story — including a stunner of a final scene.

“Especially that shot at the end, you pull back and just see the smallness and the scale of it,” Bouwer says. “There’s something really great for me, and emotional and sad as well, about that image. It’s kind of subliminal, but it was always in the back of my mind to make it feel that there is something bigger around. It makes the world bigger, although it’s a two-location film.”

And while the vastness of the universe is worth considering, Bouwer had the most fun conjuring all of the fun and thrills out of a small-scale story.

“I was really trying to mislead the audience in subtle ways,” he says. “I think it boils down to performances. If the performances weren’t believable, you’re in big trouble. So I was very happy to have Drew and Andrew as my main guides through this maze of twists and turns.”

Watch the first footage of “Orion” below.

October 26, 2025 0 comments
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Everything You Need to Know About Vogue World 2025 in Hollywood, California
Fashion

Everything You Need to Know About Vogue World 2025 in Hollywood, California

by jummy84 October 26, 2025
written by jummy84

When Vogue World made its debut in New York three ago, a stretch of downtown Manhattan turned into an open-air runway parade, complete with Vogue models, Howard University dancers, and Fendi baguettes. In 2023, the event headed to London’s historic Theatre Royal Drury Lane, where Annie Lennox serenaded the crowd, Tom Sturridge and Sophie Okonedo performed Shakespeare, and the Supers enjoyed a super reunion. Then, June 2024 saw Vogue World transform Paris’s Place Vendôme for a thrilling celebration of fashion and sport starring Bad Bunny, Kendall and Gigi (on horseback!), and 683 fashion looks called in for models, dancers, athletes, and orchestra players.

Tonight, October 26, Vogue World will return Stateside, this time taking place in sunny Los Angeles. Vogue World: Hollywood will celebrate the rich conversation between film and fashion, centering the most inspiring characters in cinema history. Count on high style, high drama, and even more special performances.

Vogue World has uplifted local communities since its inception, to date donating more than $3 million. For Vogue World: Hollywood, 100% of ticket proceeds will go to the Entertainment Community Fund, with a focus on supporting costume community professionals impacted by the Los Angeles wildfires. Vogue will work with the Costume Designers Guild and E.C.F. to identify those most directly affected.

Below, everything you need to know about Vogue World: Hollywood.

When is Vogue World: Hollywood?

Vogue World: Hollywood will take place tonight, October 26, 2025.

Where will Vogue World: Hollywood be held?

The fashion and film tribute will take place on the Paramount Pictures Studios Lot in Hollywood—one of the oldest film studios in the world and the last still headquartered in the famed Los Angeles district. Famous films shot there include Sunset Boulevard, Psycho, Breakfast at Tiffany’s, and Indiana Jones.

Where will Vogue World: Hollywood be livestreamed?

Tonight’s livestream—directed by Emmy– and Grammy Award–winning director and executive producer Mark A. Ritchie—can be viewed right on vogue.com! Showtime is at 6 p.m. PDT.

How will Vogue World: Hollywood differ from previous versions of the event?

“Vogue World: Hollywood will be a one-night-only show with a huge cast of models and actors, setting great film costumes next to brilliant fashion collections,” Vogue global editorial director and Condé Nast chief content officer Anna Wintour shared at a March 2025 press conference. “By mixing fashion and the arts and culture in the center of a city, and by raising money for a cause, Vogue World has become a runway show-as-rallying cry—a way to fix the attention of a huge global audience, to bring awareness, and sound an unmistakable note of positivity, creativity, and hope.”

Will there be performances at Vogue World: Hollywood?

Yes! Tonight’s show will include special performances by Doja Cat—whose fifth studio album, Vie, was released last month—and Vogue Spain’s November 2025 cover star, Gracie Abrams.

October 26, 2025 0 comments
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Missed the Vogue World: Hollywood Pop-Up? Shop the Vogue x Fear of God Collaboration Here
Fashion

Missed the Vogue World: Hollywood Pop-Up? Shop the Vogue x Fear of God Collaboration Here

by jummy84 October 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Los Angeles is the place to be this week. Ahead of Vogue World: Hollywood, a celebration of fashion and film taking over Paramount Studios on Sunday (tune into the livestream at 6 p.m. PDT!), Vogue brought the excitement street side with an exclusive pop-up in the heart of Hollywood for one day only, on October 24. The shop offered an exclusive chance to shop the highly-anticipated collaboration with Fear of God IRL—a brand that embodies the city’s distinct blend of laid-back cool and cinematic glamour. ICYMI, or just couldn’t get your hands on the right size, the eight-piece collection is still available in-store exclusively at Maxfield LA, and online at Fear of God.

Founded by 2025 CFDA Innovation Award recipient, Jerry Lorenzo, Fear of God has long sought to distill the essence of Los Angeles in its DNA—fittingly, this capsule serves as a love letter to the brand’s hometown. “Los Angeles is home for Fear of God and a constant source of inspiration,” Lorenzo says. “From the creative energy of the Eastside to the quiet ease of kids surfing the waves in Venice; from the heart of the city in Inglewood to Hollywood’s red carpets. This partnership pays tribute to the diverse communities that define Los Angeles and the spirit of American luxury shaped through the California lifestyle.”

Photo: Courtesy of Fujio Emura

Missed the Vogue World Hollywood PopUp Shop the Vogue x Fear of God Collaboration Here

Photo: Courtesy of Fujio Emura

The collection features Fear of God’s signature unisex staples–a tank top, oversized T-shirts, long-sleeves, and hoodies rendered in neutral tones and adorned with dual Vogue and Fear of God logos. On the back, find an homage to the city’s iconic neighborhoods, with star detailing along the sleeves calling to mind Hollywood’s Walk of Fame. These are modern staples that feel just at home courtside as they do on Sunset Boulevard, where stardom meets seaside calm.

As Vogue global editorial director, Anna Wintour, described “Vogue World: Hollywood will be a one-night-only show with a huge cast of models and actors, setting great film costumes next to brilliant fashion collections…a runway show-as-rallying cry—a way to fix the attention of a huge global audience, to bring awareness, and sound an unmistakable note of positivity, creativity, and hope.”

Couldn’t make it to the pop-up? No worries. Shop the exclusive capsule at Maxfield Los Angeles or online at fearofgod.com.

Vogue x Fear Of God

Hollywood long sleeve tee

October 25, 2025 0 comments
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Shots heard around the world: The wonder that was the West Indies
Lifestyle

Shots heard around the world: The wonder that was the West Indies

by jummy84 October 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Michael Manley, Jamaica’s prime minister from 1989 to 1992, and the son of the country’s first premier Norman Manley, was, like most West Indians, an ardent cricket fan and a student of the game. His painstaking work, A History of West Indies Cricket — written in 1987 (when the Caribbean islands enjoyed a decade of dominance that world cricket, world sport, or world anything, had rarely seen before); and revised in 1994 (soon after Brian Lara changed batting records forever with his singular hunger for runs) — has been a majestic constituent of my personal library for over two decades.

It wasn’t what they did but how they did it, breaking barriers in every country they visited. (Above) The legend Vivian Richards, and fast-bowler Joel Garner. (Getty Images)

This month, the meek capitulation of the once-mighty West Indies — they entered India almost unnoticed for a one-sided two-Test series nestled between a deeply political Asia Cup in Dubai and a fiercely marketed one-day series against Australia — prompted me to pick up the volume. For, if you are a cricket follower of my vintage, the West Indies story remains the crescendo in the symphony that is world cricket.

The goosebumps came as early as the dedication page:

“To Learie Constantine who opened the door of international cricket.

To George Headley who entered the building with such style.

To Frank Worrell who showed it could be occupied with distinction.

To Clive Lloyd who very nearly took permanent possession.

And, of course, to Garfield Sobers who dazzled all who dwelt therein with the range of his talents.”

The names are important: Constantine was Trinidadian, Headley and Worrell were Jamaicans, Lloyd is Guyanese, and Sir Garry was from Barbados. Together they are a symbol of unity and a common Caribbean identity that could likely never have been established without cricket.

Juggle these players with those whose exploits are celebrated in the pages that follow (Everton Weekes and Clyde Walcott; Rohan Kanhai; Vivian Richards; Michael Holding, Malcolm Marshall, Joel Garner and Andy Roberts; Gordon Greenidge and Desmond Haynes; Curtly Ambrose and Courtney Walsh) and the pulse quickens.

It takes the mind back to a heady mix of race, revolution, art, music and colour — green, for the land itself; yellow, for the gold that was stripped; red, for the blood that was shed — that gave West Indies cricket its power and its glory. It brings back flashes of a time from the 1970s when students were marching on the streets, Bob Marley & The Wailers were composing tunes, and Viv Richards was walking in to bat, chewing gum.

It evokes memories of how a group of people, charged by this rare confluence of events, coalesced to enthral the world.

For, with a nod to CLR James, what do they know of West Indies cricket who only cricket know?

CHIMES OF FREEDOM

The Caribbean islands figure as tiny dots on the world map. From Jamaica in the west to Trinidad in the east to the northern coast of South America in Guyana, 15 nations that were once under British rule come together to form the West Indies cricket team. The name comes from Christopher Columbus’s great fallacy — he sailed west across the Atlantic in his quest to “discover” the Indies, which lay to his east across the Indian Ocean.

Cricket in the region gradually grew under the influence of British officers in the late 1700s and early 1800s, transformed into inter-colonial contests between the islands by the 1860s, led to the creation of an all-West Indies team in the 1890s, and eventually to Test status in 1928.

Respect, especially from cricket’s White overlords, was harder to earn. It should have come through the batting of George Headley in the 1929-30 home series against England (three centuries and a double) and an unbeaten 270 in Kingston in 1935 that gave West Indies its first innings win over its colonial masters.

But Headley was quickly dubbed the “Black Bradman” by British and Australian columnists. He was venerated, put on a pedestal as an anomaly, and used as the yardstick to measure all great West Indian batters of the future, including the “Three Ws” (Worrell, Weekes and Walcott) in the ’40s and ‘50s.

It took the arrival of the master-of-all-trades Sobers to change the paradigm.

There have been many great all-rounders through the ages but never has there been a cricketer as complete as Sobers. He batted at an average of over 57, grabbed 235 wickets in 93 Tests, transformed the art of close-in fielding, and carried himself with the air of a global statesman. It was a time when the Caribbean islands were gaining independence from British rule, and for a region in need of an ambassador, Sobers emerged as world cricket’s most influential figure of the 1960s. So much so that anyone who would come close to matching his all-round abilities later — Jacques Kallis is a notable contender — was likely to be called the “White Sobers”.

CRICKET, LOVELY CRICKET

And so, after the hunt for respectability in the 1930s and the quest for self-determination in the 1960s, West Indies was ready to dominate by the 1970s and ’80s. It came through the leadership of Lloyd, the brilliance of Richards, and the most fearsome and technically perfect pace battery (Andy Roberts, Colin Croft, Holding, Marshall and Garner) ever assembled before or since.

What West Indies cricket achieved in that era is unmatched, even by the Aussie Invincibles led by Bradman in the 1930s and captained by Steve Waugh and Ricky Ponting in the 2000s.

It wasn’t what they did but how they did it, breaking barriers in every country they visited.

Which is why watching the West Indies cricket teams of the present flounder repeatedly is a dagger through the heart. It’s as if the sport has lost its soul in the Caribbean, with no great mission or movement to fuel the passion anymore. Left behind in a haze of new-age computer analyses that offer mico-improvements on every front. Trailing in a new wave of professionalism its cricket establishment has been unable to embrace. Managing to barely stay afloat in the shorter formats and gasping in the ultimate test.

The once-mighty West Indies need to dig deeper and find something extra, if not from the present then from their glorious past. Michael Manley’s treatise may offer some reminders, like this one from calypsonian Lord Beginner about the first West Indies victory on English soil, in 1950:

“Cricket, lovely cricket

At Lord’s where I saw it

Yardley tried his best

But West Indies won the Test

With those little pals of mine

Ramadhin and Valentine.”

(The views expressed are personal.)

October 25, 2025 0 comments
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2026 Sick New World Festivals in Las Vegas and Forth Worth: Lineups
Music

2026 Sick New World Festivals in Las Vegas and Forth Worth: Lineups

by jummy84 October 22, 2025
written by jummy84

After a 2025 edition was called off six months to go , the Sick New World festival will be back in 2026 with two huge one-day concerts in Las Vegas and Fort Worth, Texas, with System of a Down headlining both events.

Explore

See latest videos, charts and news

The Vegas show will take place on April 25 at the Las Vegas Festival Grounds, and in addition to SOAD, the show will feature Korn, Bring Me the Horizon, Ministry, AFI, Evanescence, Acid Bath, Underoath, Coal Chamber, Knocked Loose, Cypress Hill, KMFDM, the Melvins, Filter, Clutch, Danny Elfman, Marilyn Manson and others.

Fans can sign up now for a pre-sale for the Vegas date that kicks off on Thursday (Oct. 23) at 10 a.m. PT.

The Forth Worth show will take place at Texas Motor Speedway on Oct. 24 with SOAD at the top of the bill, along with Deftones, Slayer — celebrating 40 years of Reign in Blood — Evanescence, Ministry, AFI, Underoath, The Prodigy, Mastodon, Knocked Loose, Power Trip, Down, Melvins, Orgy, Filter, Kittie, Snot, P.O.D. and many more.

Fans can sign up now for a pre-sale that starts on Friday (Oct. 24) at 10 a.m. CT.

Sick New World debuted in 2023 at the Las Vegas Festival Grounds with SOAD as its headliner along with fellow hard rockers Korn, Deftones and Incubus and a similar mix of metal, industrial, hardcore and goth rock. It returned the next year with SOAD again at the top, joined by Alice in Chains, A Perfect Circle, Swans, Primus, Code Orange and Knock Loose, among others.

The 2025 edition, which was to feature Metallica and Linkin Park, was slated to take place in April of that year, but was cancelled in Nov. 2024 due to “unforeseen circumstances.”

Check out the full lineups below.


Billboard’s Live Music Summit will be held in Los Angeles on Nov. 3. For tickets and more information click here.



October 22, 2025 0 comments
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