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Public Enemy, R.E.M., Blondie, Heart and Tracy Chapman get nods for Songwriters Hall of Fame
Public Enemy, R.E.M., Blondie, Heart and Tracy Chapman get nods for Songwriters Hall of Fame
"I didn’t realize people didn’t know!" said the Film Song of the Year honoree, who came out in a recent Variety cover story. "I just didn’t talk about it."
A new report by the Financial Times says X will now turn to small and medium-sized advertisers to shore up revenue after the company's owner Elon Musk alienated big brands fleeing X over antisemitic content by telling them they could go fuck themselves during an interview at the New York Times DealBook Summit earlier this week. Speaking at the event, Musk told interviewer Andrew Ross Sorkin "What this advertising boycott is going to do is it's going to kill the company," he said with a small nod to the audience. "And what the whole world will know is that those advertisers killed the company and we will document it in great detail."
Despite his youthful appearance, Murphy's been around Hollywood a long time and has some epic stories to prove it.
33 Hot 100 hits. 14 million albums sold. Now a legal battle jeopardizes the most successful duo in pop history.
The legendary Hong Kong action filmmaker has just delivered his first American movie in 20 years.
"You don't know me," the voice declares, "but I know you."
A grueling test of physical and mental stamina proved too difficult for all but a trio of celebs.
As his career reaches literal new heights with the Hoover Dam concert film 'State Line,' the icon reflects on the album that made him the biggest star to emerge from the first wave of U.K. punk.
Everyone had been hoping the Super-Save twist would be used on Lennon VanderDoes, the man who once made John Legend cry. But there were more tears shed by Monday night's end.
It took a decade for the hot young comedian to become an "instant" success.
Teasing and toying with competitors and viewers alike, "DWTS" advances entire field to the finals.
The film linked to "Wonder Woman" star Gal Gadot uses footage from body cams and home security systems from Israeli victims, Hamas militants and emergency responders.
Elon Musk's X, formerly Twitter, has filed a lawsuit alleging defamation by a news organization over claims that major companies had ads appear next to antisemitic content. Media Matters last Thursday published an article with screenshots showing ads from IBM, Apple, Oracle and others appearing next to hateful content — like, full-on pro-Hitler stuff. IBM and Apple have since pulled their ads from X, no doubt a serious blow for a company already facing an exodus of advertisers.
TV typically has "thrived on showing women in competition with one another," author Ellyn Lem tells Yahoo Entertainment.
The disappointing debut comes as CEO Bob Iger attempts to revamp the company's film division.
The former co-stars of the "Glee" actress, who died in 2020, found a special way to raise money for one of her favorite charities.
Amazon has revealed the first glimpse into its Fallout series, which comes out next spring. It's set in what was once Los Angeles, 200 years after a nuclear war. The show is based on the best-selling video game series and stars Yellowjackets actor Ella Purnell.
"Biblical" or blah? From Liam Gallagher to Rolling Stone to Pitchfork, the opinions on the "last Beatles song" are here, there and everywhere.
Elon Musk said "go fuck yourself" to advertisers who recently paused spending on X after he endorsed an antisemitic conspiracy theory on the platform. Onstage at the DealBook conference, Andrew Ross Sorkin asked the X owner about these pauses in advertising. Musk replied, "Don't advertise."
The Canadian pop singer earned serious kudos — and new fans — on "Saturday Night Live."