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Doja Cat Thinks People Discredit Her Creativity Because Of The Way She Dresses

Despite recent moments of controversy, Doja Cat knows how to craft an alter ego. The singer has adopted a recognizable aesthetic: pink accessories, e-girl makeup, and, of course, her signature cat ears. But there’s more that goes into Doja’s persona than her looks alone, and the singer thinks focusing too much on her style can lead to her talent being overlooked.

Doja recently teamed up with Vevo for the mini-documentary titled The Tale Of Becoming Doja Cat. Throughout the 5-minute profile, Doja explains all that goes into creating her character. Speaking about her artistic aesthetic, the singer said her racy outfits can lead to people discrediting her creativity and intellect:

“I think if you’re sexy or if you show a great amount of skin, people will use that against you. Sometimes the way I dress or the way I talk, people think that I’m not as smart as I am or as creative as I am. I’ve always used what I’ve had, as far as my Instagram or my livestream or my Macbook or my phone or my keyboard or my looks. I use what I have. And I feel like I get discredited because of that. As Doja Cat, I want to change people’s minds about what rap or pop music can be. I’m never going to do the same thing every day, so whatever box people want to put me in, I’m always going to break out of that.”

Elsewhere in the mini-doc, the singer said she finds herself most creative when she fosters a “stir-crazy” environment for herself. “I’ve had moments in my life where I really felt crazy: being alone, being reclusive, and locking myself away,” Doja said. “Those are my most creative times. I like to drive myself to be stir crazy and restless. I like the feeling of feeling like Beethoven a little bit, and being stuck in one isolated spot. That feeling of being up and that drunken feeling of being tired and not having anything to do, it makes me want to work and it makes me to make music for some reason.”

Watch The Tale Of Becoming Doja Cat above.

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Brad Garrett Blasts Ellen DeGeneres’ Apology For Her Toxic Workplace: ‘It Comes From The Top’

Following allegations of a toxic workplace environment at The Ellen DeGeneres Show, WarnerMedia launched an internal investigation into accusations that managers and producers had created an environment rife with intimidation, mistreatment, and racism. On Thursday, DeGeneres issued an apology to her staff, to whom she accepted blame for losing touch on what was happening behind the scenes, especially regarding the allegations made against some producers.

However, one person isn’t buying DeGeneres’ apology. In a blunt statement on Twitter, Everybody Loves Raymond star Brad Garrett didn’t mince words on who he believes is to blame for the toxic environment.

“Sorry but it comes from the top ⁦@TheEllenShow,” Garrett wrote. “Know more than one who were treated horribly by her.⁩ Common knowledge.”

Garrett’s tweet also arrived on the heels of another damning report for the beleaguered talk show. Also on Thursday, BuzzFeed News published an expose on “rampant sexual misconduct,” citing dozens of former Ellen employees. While the accusations include a new list of writers and producers mistreating employees, the report also includes producer Ed Glavin, who was reportedly fired in the lead-up to DeGeneres apology:

In all, 47 former employees who spoke to BuzzFeed News said Glavin led with intimidation and fear on a daily basis. One former employee said when they turned in their notice, Glavin flipped over a table and chair while screaming.

Five former employees also said they saw Glavin use a button at his desk to remotely shut his office door “as an intimidation tactic” during reprimands. “It seemed like a power move, more than anything,” one former employee said. Ex-workers also said they were uncomfortable when Glavin used his private shower in his office bathroom.

As the reports of toxicity behind the scenes at Ellen began to mount, Glavin’s name has been consistently named in accusations. However, and despite her apology, DeGeneres’ time under the microscope doesn’t appear to be ending anytime soon.

(Via Brad Garrett on Twitter, BuzzFeed News)

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Scottie Pippen Talks About The NBA’s Return And His Second Life As A Basketball Commentator

If you were to construct the ideal basketball player for the modern era, you’d start with that coveted combination of size and agility. You’d want someone who can dribble, pass, shoot, and defend multiple positions. You’d want someone who prioritizes teamwork, who is selfless nearly to a fault, yet capable of taking over and dominating when necessary.

Many players are blessed with physical gifts. Few are able to develop the tool-set required to transcend their natural ability. Fewer still realize that — like so many evolutionary outliers — one of the early prototypes for what we’ve come to consider the contemporary stretch-four was a product of chance and circumstance.

Scottie Pippen, legendary Bulls icon and arguably one of the greatest players of all time, started his basketball career as a 6’1 point guard at the University of Central Arkansas. Pippen arrived in Conway equipped with the type of speed, ball-handling, and court vision that endeared him to the coaching staff and earned him a spot as a walk-on. But beyond that, his prospects were mostly unremarkable.

That is, until a fortuitous growth spurt changed the trajectory of his life and career. Pippen grew seven inches over the course of a single summer, and armed with the point guard skills he’d been honing in obscurity, went on to become a standard bearer for future generations of do-it-all, multi-positional wing players.

His resume is unimpeachable. Alongside Michael Jordan, Pippen comprised one of the best duos in basketball history, winning six titles in the 90s and, in the process, cementing his status as one of the all-time greats. We recently caught up with Pippen this week to talk about the NBA’s return, the toughest player he ever had to guard, his second career as a basketball commentator, and much more.

Tell us about this promotion you’re doing with Michelob to get us started.

Yeah, sure. First of all, I’m a huge fan of Michelob Ultra, and I was very excited to hear that Michelob Ultra is the official beer of the NBA now. So that was just announced. And they’re going to be bringing some joy to the fans for the return of the NBA, which is why they announced “Michelob Ultra Courtside.” It’s a digital experience that’s virtual; it brings fans inside the arena. More than 300 fans each game will be invited to appear live on screen surrounding the court, which will be seen by the players and on television. And fans can also virtually interact with one another during the game.

I was wondering how they were going to do that. That’s interesting to see how they’re going to work the fans into the mix.

Pretty amazing.

It’s been more than four months since just about everything went on hiatus, but basketball is finally back. How have you been keeping your sanity during all this?

Well, I’m having a lot of fun. I’ve got three boys at home with me, so we’ve been training really hard. My oldest son, 19, he was a starting point guard at Vanderbilt last year. So we’ve been training for him to get back to normal life this season. And I got a 17-year-old going into his senior year. And I got a 15-year-old. He’s going to be a freshman. So we’ve just been at home preparing and trying to stay safe as much [as possible]. And just trying to stay busy. It’s been strange, obviously, with no sports on TV. But my kids have been able to manage playing a lot of video games and working out and getting outside, shooting some hoops. So it’s been pretty productive for us.

I’m always curious what it’s like for a player of your caliber who has children who also play basketball. That must create kind of a unique bonding experience. Are they impressed by your accomplishments, or are you just kind of dad to them at this point?

Well, they didn’t really have a chance to watch my career. But I think they’re impressed by my career. And if nothing else, I think having a chance to sit at home these last few months and watch the documentary helped to kind of give them an opportunity to relive my career. But for the most, I’m really just dad to them.

You’ve been on ESPN for a few years now and have kind of settled into a nice second career as a commentator. I was wondering, do you watch the game any differently now than when you were a player?

I mean, I watch it the same way. When I played the game, I kind of was more of a floor general. Very vocal, a leader out on the floor. So, I kind of see the game the same way. I’m a guy that anticipates what’s going to happen. I see plays, see the execution and things of that nature. I look at it from both sides. From the offensive side, as well as from the defensive side.

You’ve been a regular on The Jump for a while now, obviously one of the most popular NBA shows. I feel like it’s kind of distinguished itself from other sports shows in that the conversations are a little more calm, more rational discussions about hoops, more focused on what makes the league entertaining, as opposed to firing off hot takes about everything. How intentional is that? Or, what goes into maintaining that ethos?

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Well, I mean, I would give credit probably to the producers and Rachel [Nichols]. But our show is mostly players that have played the game. And so we’re not the normal analyst who’s going to go at people…wanting to take a shot at a player because they didn’t get their chance to go play. I think players that have been in the moment or have been in the game have a better understanding, a bit more respect for what’s going on inside the game and how players handle themselves. Each situation is handled differently. You don’t have to do the same thing in each situation regarding the game, whether it’s your leadership or a decision that you make on the basketball court.

Today, we tend to talk about you as sort of an ideal player for the modern NBA, someone at your size who can shoot, pass, dribble, defend, etc. But it seems like some of it happened by chance. After developing all those point guard skills, you had a late growth spurt in college that ended up sort of defining who you became as a player and how your career turned out.

I think it has everything to do with who I became as a player. Being a kid that was 6’2, 6’3, I didn’t get a lot of respect. I had all the skills that I had, but when you put height, size, length, however you want to say it, with a person with skills, now you’re creating a whole different monster. That’s really what I was able to take away from my growth spurt is that I became real long, real range-y. It just helped me offensively. But more so, it built my confidence to the point where I felt like that I could pretty much play any position, but not only that, I could guard any position.

Talking about guarding, you’re easily one of the best defenders of all time. I wanted to ask you…obviously you have to have the physical gifts we just talked about — the length, the reach and all that. But if you had to put your finger on it, what’s that extra thing that you and other elite defenders, say, like Tony Allen or Kawhi, those types of guys, what is the mentality that separates you from everyone else?

I think we all sort of strive for the same thing. It’s the hunger. It’s that hunger, that superior confidence. And when I watch guys like Tony Allen when he played, Kawhi, they have superior confidence on both ends of the basketball court. I think that they feel like they can take the ball back from you, that they can stop you. And that’s really what it is. It’s really you becoming a complete player from a mental standpoint, as well as a physical standpoint.

When you think back on it, who is the hardest player you ever had to guard? Who’s the one guy that you feel like just really gave you fits?

Probably Dominique Wilkins.

Oh, interesting.

Yeah. He was kind of before his time. He was right there with Michael for the scoring titles, and he could come in any night and try to get 35 or 40 points on you. And dunking crazy. So he was always a bit of a freak. He could shoot the ball. And you didn’t know what shot he was going to take because he never met a shot he didn’t like.

I feel like we don’t talk about Dominique as much as we should anymore. He’s kind of been brushed to the side a little bit…

I think he’s definitely one of those guys that kind got [overshadowed]. A lot of guys that played in that Michael Jordan era sort of got overshadowed because so much attention was drawn to Michael.

I wanted to talk a little bit about the restart. You’d mentioned recently that you thought restarting the season wasn’t worth the health risks involved. How do you think we’ll look back on this decision in the future?

Well, I mean, you can’t knock anything that the NBA is doing. I mean, even though we feel like that this is a strong health issue going on globally, they’ve been excellent in terms of what they set out to do to protect the players, to protect the game, and continue to keep the game moving. So, the NBA has always been a trailblazer in terms of setting the bar high. And what they’re doing right now is pretty amazing. So this is pretty special to see this going on.

Just thinking about it from a player’s perspective, with all the weird circumstances — no fans, being cooped up all the time, etc. — how do you have to approach that? What kind of mindset do you have to have to put all that aside and still go out there and perform?

I think it’s a pretty good situation. I think people outside see that they’re in a bubble and it’s bad, but they’re in the safest place in the world, to be honest. And they’re getting the opportunity to do something that they love, they enjoy doing. And they’re hanging out with people who they love to be around. Other than them not being with their family, they’re enjoying being around their team. So I think this is a very unique situation that the league has created for them. Under these circumstance, I think they’re in a very good place.

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‘Obsessed:’ Three Must-Stream (And Must Re-Watch) Movies For This Summer

The summer of streaming is here and Obsessed’s trend-spotters Taylour Chanel and Britt Ellis are ready to curate the top of your must-watch list.

The year 2020 has brought plenty of changes and sure, Hollywood’s blockbuster season looks a bit different, but the one thing we can always count on is streaming. We’ve got more time at home to tap into shows, films, visual albums, and even hit Broadway productions so, in this latest episode of Obsessed, Ellis and Chanel are breaking down the very best additions you need to add to your bingeing line-up, ones that deserve a second viewing, or a third, or a fourth, or a fifth, or … you get it.

Those probably (read: definitely) include Hamilton, which landed on Disney+ this July and continues to dominate the pop culture conversation. Lin-Manuel Miranda’s visionary reimagining of our founding fathers changed the game when it launched on Broadway a few years ago, but seeing it on our screens offers a different, still powerful viewing experience. According to Ellis, you’ll probably learn a lot about U.S. History, and according to Chanel, you’ll get to see a Broadway show use hip-hop music in a way that won’t make you cringe. Win, win.

Other picks from the hosts include Andy Samberg’s much-buzzed-about sci-fi tinged rom-com Palm Springs. It’s an inventive, modern interpretation of Groundhog’s Day, with Samberg playing a guy stuck in the time-loop of a dreamy Palm Springs-set wedding who reluctantly falls for Cristin Milioti’s misbehaving maid of honor. Ellis and Chanel think you’ll love the comedy, chemistry, and quantum physics of it all. Bonus: There are dinosaurs and a lot of cool things to discover even if this isn’t your first watch.

Rounding out this list of dope films that deserve a watch (and rewatch, and then yet another rewatch) is Beyonce’s Black Is King which lands on Disney+ at the end of the month. The peerless creative genius delivers another high-concept interpretation of her music, but this time, that bit of visual storytelling will focus on her soundtrack for the live-action Lion King remake. Ellis and Chanel are loving how the artist weaved the movie’s sounds with a gripping narrative that explores what it means to be Black and empowered in our world right now.

Check out the video above for more from Ellis and Chanel on these films.

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‘Honey Whiskeys’ Good Enough To Flip Your Flavored Whiskey Stigmas

Spiced or sweetened whiskeys get a bad rap. Sure, there are some overly saccharine abominations out there. And of course, there’s the argument from purists that “flavored” whiskey isn’t really whiskey at all. But all of that aside, the genre exists for a reason. People like variety. And while I’m not a huge fan of the flavored or spiced stuff myself, even I have to admit that it has its place.

Nowhere is that quite so evident than in the case of honey whiskeys.

What is a “honey whiskey” exactly? Well, that depends. Most of the time, a distiller will make a honey liqueur and cut their whiskey with it. This adds a textural and flavorful variation to the tipple that can be very tasty (when not overdone). Other distillers are toying with a more subtle approach — like aging their juice in barrels that once stored actual honey, creating an elevated version of the style.

The 12 bottles below — personally selected by Zach Johnston (me!), Chris Osburn, and Steve Bramucci — represent some honey whiskeys we were surprised by and genuinely enjoyed. With an open mind, you’re sure to find one you like amongst the options below.

– Zach Johnston, Deputy Editor, UPROXX Life

Zach’s Picks:

Drambuie

ABV: 40%
Distillery: Morrison Bowmore Distillers, Glasgow, UK (William Grant & Sons)
Average Price: $35

The Bottle:

Drambuie might be the original honey-spiked whisky. The Scottish invention blends scotch with heather honey, Scottish herbs, and mild spices. It’s sort of like a bottled cocktail if you wanted to get technical about it. It’s also a key component of a Rusty Nail cocktail. Regardless of how you classify it, Drambuie is a good place to start a honey whiskey journey.

Tasting Notes:

There’s a real sense of floral honey up top. The sip can err a little rough around the edges at first but is immediately smoothed out by notes of orange, fresh herbs, and a mild sharpness from the spice with a very distant note of fatty nuts. The sip’s ultimately svelte texture helps it linger on your senses.

Bottom Line:

Give it a shot, literally. Try this as a shot then drink a Rusty Nail.

Belle Meade Honey Cask Bourbon

ABV: 55.9%
Distillery: Nelson Green Brier Distillery, Nashville, TN
Average Price: Sold Out

The Bottle:

I was lucky enough to try this year’s very limited release and it’s the best bottle on this list by a country mile. As part of Belle Meade’s new Bourbon Craftsman Cask Collection, this dram is equal-measure experimental and expertly crafted.

Eleven-year-old Belle Meade bourbon barrels were emptied and sent to a local honey maker and filled with wildflower honey, which was allowed to age in those bourbon-seasoned barrels. Once those barrels were emptied, they were sent back to Belle Meade where they were refilled with nine-year-old bourbon. That juice rested in those barrels for a few more months until it hit just the right spot.

Tasting Notes:

Floral honey dances with a sense of dry cedar bark, bourbon caramel, and a mild hit of cinnamon spice. A honey-glazed doughnut bespeckled with orange zest and more cinnamon dominates the palate with an echo of buttery toffee on the back end. The sip embraces the honey aspects as it slowly fades out with pings of spice, zest, and cedar reappearing.

Bottom Line:

Pray that when they bring this back next year, it’s as a year-round expression.

Bushmills Irish Honey

ABV: 35%
Distillery: Old Bushmills Distillery, County Antrim, UK (Casa Cuervo)
Average Price: $25

The Bottle:

This entry from Northern Ireland is more in line with Drambuie than a honey liqueur. Triple-distilled Bushmills is blended with Irish honey and a matrix of spices. The result keeps the focus on the whiskey with the sweetness of the honey working as a subtle accent.

Tasting Notes:

The dram opens up like a glass of standard Bushmills with hints of florals next to vanilla and mild spice. The honey arrives as a sweet spot that wouldn’t be out of place in any well-barreled whiskey. That mild sweetness does start to build toward the abbreviated end of the sip with a clear sense of florals, spice, and that Irish honey.

Bottom Line:

If you’re into Irish whiskey, this is a perfectly fine bottle to try. The price is fair and the quality is high. It also works surprisingly well in a highball.

Dewar’s Highlander Honey

ABV: 40%
Distillery: Aberfeldy Distillery, Aberfeldy, UK (Bacardi)
Average Price: $25

The Bottle:

While Drambuie is iconic, this bottle more follows the lineage of modern interpretations of honey whiskeys. Dewar’s White Label is spiked with distilled heather honey from the countryside around Aberfeldy, Scotland and then “natural flavors” are added to round out the dram. This is as close as you can get to a solid blended scotch spiked with honey, and it absolutely works.

Tasting Notes:

A bit of stone fruit, citrus, oak, wet malt, and honey greet you. The sip really reminds you of Dewar’s White Label with a flourish of honey sweetening things up around all that citrus, peach, and oaky spice. Interestingly, the citrus and honey join forces on the warm end and really help this one shine.

Bottom Line:

Makes a hell of a highball but is more of a novelty bottle to break out at a party than an everyday sipper.

Jack Daniel’s Tennessee Honey

ABV: 35%
Distillery: Jack Daniel’s Distillery, Lynchburg, TN (Brown–Forman Corporation)
Average Price: $25

The Bottle:

When Jack Daniel’s released this bottle back in 2011, they started a honey whiskey craze. Basically, they take good ol’ No. 7 Tennesee whiskey and blend it with their own honey liqueur. That’s it. It’s simple, easy-to-drink, and will probably surprise you.

Tasting Notes:

Classic Tennessee whiskey notes of mild spice, oak, vanilla, and banana create a solid base for the flourish of honey that’s present. Wildflowers, lemon zest, buttery toffee, and more honey follow but are balanced by each other and never overpower the whole. There’s a mild sense of bitter dark chocolate that leans towards espresso near the end as the honey, spice, fruit, and vanilla slowly fade away.

Bottom Line:

You’ll be pleasantly surprised by this bottle. It makes for a decent sipper on the rocks and one hell of a Horse’s Neck.

Jim Beam Honey Bourbon Whiskey

ABV: 35%
Distillery: Jim Beam Distillery, Clermont, KY (Beam Suntory)
Average Price: $20

The Bottle:

Jim Beam is always a solid (and affordable) choice for standard bourbons. Their Honey Bourbon cuts their bourbon with real honey liqueur and a few “natural flavors.” The result is an easy sipper that won’t break the bank.

Tasting Notes:

Honey. This is probably the sweetest honeyed whiskey on the list. That’s not necessarily a bad thing but it can be off-putting to some. The classic bourbon notes of vanilla, caramel, and oak are present with a hint of spice. The honey does really carry the sip from the top to bottom with a clear sweet edge.

Bottom Line:

This works nicely in cocktails, in the sense that you can omit using simple syrup if you’re using this.

Wild Turkey American Honey Sting

ABV: 35.5%
Distillery: Wild Turkey Distillery, Lawrenceburg, KY (Campari)
Average Price: $20

The Bottle:

Wild Turkey’s American Honey is often lauded as the best-flavored whiskey on the market. This expression takes that well-crafted blend of Wild Turkey bourbon and honey and ups the ante by adding a dash of ghost pepper. It’s kind of ingenious and works.

Tasting Notes:

There’s a sense of honey that’s bolstered by sprigs of fresh mint and fields of wildflowers on the nose. The ghost pepper lurks in the background until you take a sip and it bites at your tongue. It’s never over-powering whatsoever and the matrix of bourbon vanilla, caramel, and oak with that fresh mint and honey makes for a great combination of flavors that linger on your senses.

Bottom Line:

Try this one on the rocks and then give it a good spot in your regular bottle rotation.

Chris’ Picks:

Barenjager Honey and Bourbon

ABV: 35%
Distillery: Barenjager, Cedar Knolls, NJ
Average Price: $35

The Bottle:

When you taste Barenjager, you might start wondering why a liqueur-like Jagermeister gained so much popularity and this bottle remained largely forgotten. The recipe is based on one from 18th century Germany and, as the name suggests, it was originally created to lure bears out of caves by hunters (or so the legend goes).

Tasting Notes:

This combination of honey liqueur infused with bourbon is made using no artificial flavors or ingredients. This all-natural honey whiskey tastes more like schnapps than whiskey and deserves to be enjoyed slowly either neat or over ice. These are the best ways to get the most of out this offering with its ever-present sweet honey nectar along with subtle oak, cinnamon, and corn sweetness from the bourbon.

Bottom Line:

Personally, we wouldn’t waste this honey whiskey on woodland creatures. We’ll keep it for ourselves.

Bluebird Honey Whiskey

ABV: 40%
Distillery: Bluebird Distilling, Phoenixville, PA
Price: $40

Story:

Made in Phoenixville, Pennsylvania, Bluebird touts itself as a grain-to-glass distillery. Its honey whiskey is truly unique and highly complex. It’s made up of a mix of four-grain bourbon, straight rye, and wheated whiskey that is then blended with locally sourced wildflower honey.

Tasting Notes:

While the combination of three different whiskeys gives this spirit a well-balanced backbone, it’s the honey that shines through. The result of this combination is a highly floral, rich whiskey with hints of toasted vanilla, sticky toffee pudding, honeysuckle, and buttery caramel sweetness.

Bottom Line:

Make a killer highball with this one for the rest of the summer. Then when winter comes, it’ll make the perfect Hot Toddy base.

Evan Williams Honey

ABV: 35%
Distillery: Heaven Hill, Bardstown, KY
Price: $15

Story:

Evan Williams is one of the most underrated bourbon brands on the market. If you ask any bartender to tell you a bottle that deserves more hype, they’ll likely tell you Evan Williams Black Label or Evan Williams Bottled in Bond. But while those two get a lot of love from the bartending community, you shouldn’t sleep on Evan Williams Honey and its blend of Kentucky straight bourbon and natural honey.

Tasting Notes:

Evan Williams Honey is more than just a simple honey-flavored whiskey. In fact, it’s highly complex. It all starts with the high-quality, easy to drink Kentucky straight bourbon base that slowly evolves into hints of dried orange peel, floral honey sweetness, rich vanilla, toasted caramel, that all ends in a flourish of subtle peppery spice.

Bottom Line:

Perfectly suited for mixing into a cocktail or sipping neat.

Bird Dog Jalapeno Honey

ABV: 40%
Distillery: Western Spirits, Bowling Green, KY
Price: $20

Story:

Unlike many of the brands on this list, Bird Dog is all about the flavored whiskey. In fact, that’s pretty much all the brand makes — touting itself as “the most awarded flavored whiskey.” One of its best and most award-winning whiskeys is Bird Dog Jalapeno Honey. It’s so well-received that it even won a gold medal at the San Francisco World Spirits Competition.

Tasting Notes:

This one is a little different than the others on this list as it has two very different flavors. The combination of rich, floral honey, and spicy, vegetal jalapeno has just the right amount of mellow sweetness to pleasing heat. On top of the initial flavors, your palate is also met with hints of toasted vanilla beans, caramel, and a warming spicy finish.

Bottom Line:

This is a great way to take the next step in the honey whiskey game by adding some serious warmth from that chili spice.

Editor’s Pick:

Garrison Brothers Honey Dew

ABV: 40%
Distillery: Garrison Brothers Distillery, Hye, TX
Average Price: $85

The Bottle:

The name here — Honey Dew — is a play on the famous “honey, do” lists (as in, “Honey, do me a favor”) that Southern wives give their husbands. In this case, the bourbon itself was the list — being made at the insistence of Nancy Garrison, business partner and wife to Dan Garrison.

The expression is infused with 100% Texas-made Burleson’s wildflower honey. How they do that is sort of dizzying. The (perhaps overly) complex process involves full bourbon barrels emptied into a steel vat, cubes cut from those barrel staves dipped in honey, and a massive teagbag of these honey-soaked wood cubes being dipped back in the vats daily for the span of six months.

There must be easier ways to get honey into straight bourbon but the result is tough to argue with.

Tasting Notes:

You get that almost liqueur-level honey hit on the nose with a little bit of dried apricot. On the palate, the dried stone fruits get a little more lively — with fresh peaches at the fore. The honey is present throughout the sip but the touchstones of a good bourbon aren’t masked. You get some oak on the palate and a nice little bit of florals (lavender-ish). The finish is rich and warming, with the honey leading the way and the floral notes fading slowly.

With a little water, this sip opens a little wider and brighter and becomes a very relaxing front porch summer’s eve dram.

Bottom Line: Use it in four-ingredient whiskey cocktails for people who will appreciate the lighter nature (this is only 80 proof) and sessionability. Or sip it on the porch with two clunky ice cubes as a hot day fades.

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Phoebe Bridgers Said Producers Tried To Make Her Music Sound Like R&B Before ‘Stranger In The Alps’

Before Phoebe Bridgers came to dominate the somber ballad niche of indie rock music with her acclaimed 2017 debut album Stranger In The Alps, the singer worked with several producers to flesh out her sound. Though it seems Bridgers was born to write sad songs, it wasn’t always that way. In fact, Bridgers recalls a time there were many who tried making her music lean towards an R&B genre.

In a recent interview with the New York Times’ Diary Of A Song series, Bridgers and her producers Tony Berg and Ethan Gruska talked about their process of writing the Punisher song “Kyoto,” as well as songs from her debut record. Bridgers said that before meeting Berg, she had worked with a handful of other producers who tried adding a trap beat over her vocals: “I had been playing, since I was a teenager, once or twice a month and then I graduated high school and it was just constant. I thought that was what it was. I met a lot of ‘producers,’” Bridgers said with air quotes, “that were like, ‘I’m going to put a trap beat over your voice. And Tony was the first producer — I think he’s the reason that my music sounds the way it does.”

Berg recalled meeting Bridgers for the first time, saying he instantly knew she was going to be a star. “She just found this way to sing heartbreaking stuff in an alluring way,” he said. “And that’s really been the story of her career I think. […] I signed Beck 25 years ago and this was the first time since that I heard one song and I go, ‘Okay. I’m In.’”

Watch Phoebe Bridgers talk about how she wrote her song “Kyoto” above.

Punisher is out now via Dead Oceans. Get it here.

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My father trafficked me throughout my entire childhood. It looked nothing like people think.

I saw this poster today and I was going to just let it go, but then I kept feeling tugged to say something.

Melanie Cholish/Facebook

While this poster is great to bring attention to the issue of child trafficking, it is a “shocking” picture of a young girl tied up. It has that dark gritty feeling. I picture her in a basement tied to a dripping pipe.

While that sounds awful, it’s important to know that trafficking children in the US is not all of that. I can’t say it never is—I don’t know. What I do know is most young trafficked children aren’t sitting in a basement tied up. They have families, and someone—usually in their family—is trafficking them.


I’m pretty open about my story. My father trafficked me from the ages of about 5 or 6 until I was a teenager. Knowing this, I can say, I was never once tied up in a dark place such as this picture. It’s important for people to educate themselves on what trafficking can really look like.

Many, many times I walked into an amusement parks dressing room—Hershey, Dorney, etc.—with my father, told to wait in the stall, and a few minutes later another man came in acting like he was looking for his daughter. And that easily, a “drop” was made. Out I would walk holding his hand, nothing anyone would think twice about. Usually I’d be given something like an ice cream cone, etc.

And like me, these children are often not treated “badly.” I mean, yes, they’re treated awfully and violated beyond words. I mean they’re are not hit, tied up, or beat up. Most of the time, they’re treated with fake kindness (which really fucks up children’s trust later on in life). But they’re often praised, given treats, and made to feel like what is happening is a good (and normal or because they’re special.

How many vacations we went on where I was left for a minute at the pool, until a man came and I left with him for a while. Airports where I was passed over to another man in a crowd, looking like any girl going from her dad or uncle to her dad or uncle. Again, a public drop and nothing suspicious.

Most children trafficked in the US are so conditioned they don’t know anything else. It’s their normal. I think back as an adult and think, “Why didn’t I scream out for help? Make a scene?” But I had to forgive my inner child. There was no reason I knew to scream out for help. I wasn’t in danger; this was just my normal life.

I say all of this to simply say, it’s really important we bring attention to child trafficking in the US. VERY important. And posters like this can get the conversation going, but we also need to educate people that it doesn’t all look like this. I lived in Robesonia, a tiny nothing town. My father was a little league coach. My mother knew and helped some with these happenings; and she was just a stay-at-home, small town mom. These things happen everywhere and can look very normal.

Best thing we can do is talk to children. We don’t need to be graphic; but teachers, schools, need to talk to children about things like this in a child-safe way. Assume these children aren’t being taken to doctors. Teachers can make a huge difference. Talk to children. Go with your gut. Schools need to not be scared to act on what they feel. Conrad Wesier had a social worker in the elementary school who pulled me out of class on more than one occasion after teachers noticed “things” and it went nowhere. Social services were never notified. And they should have been. Period.

And what you can do is watch. Pay attention. Be mindful. If you’re waiting in line at a park, notice who goes in and out with what child. If you see something; speak up. If you’re wrong, fine you ruined someone’s day, apologize. If you’re right, you saved someone’s life.

This post originally appeared on Melanie Cholish’s Facebook page. It has been edited lightly for publication.

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Nike’s newest ad is an incredible visual effects feat with a beautiful message

You know when see an ad that’s so good you stop caring that it comes from a big corporation that’s just trying to sell you things and just marvel at the impressiveness of it all?

That’s the way this new Nike ad feels.

The ad (which Nike calls a “film) is the third the sportswear giant’s “You Can’t Stop Us” series. It features 53 athletes (both elite status and everyday folks) in 24 sports, shown in a series of split screen moments that blend different athletes and sports into one. Narrated by U.S. Women’s Soccer star Megan Rapinoe, the film celebrates sport and the human spirit, with a fitting message fo the moment we are in.

And the overall impact is, well…just watch.



You Can’t Stop Us | Nike

www.youtube.com

Much has been made of the film’s video editing, which is clearly deserving of accolades. But as one of our own video experts pointed out, creating this film involved far more than just editing. Nike has shared that 4,000 action sequences were researched to find the right shots to pull together to make the final cut of 72, which was undoubtedly done by a team of assistants. Visual effects specialists had to have done painstaking, frame by frame work to manually get the timing right and portions of the videos to line up perfectly. The sheer number of hours this must have taken is mind-boggling.

The whole crew who pulled this together did an incredible job. We need inspiration and hope more than ever right now, and this creative work hit those marks beautifully.

Rapinoe added her own thoughts that perfectly sum it all up:

“Players may be back on the pitch, but we are not going back to an old normal. We need to continue to reimagine this world and make it better. We have all these people in the streets, using their voices, and those voices are being heard. I ask people to be energized by this moment and not let up. I believe it’s everybody’s responsibility to advocate for change.”

Well done all around, everyone.

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NBA Bubble Watch Week 3: Ice Cream, Pool Parties, Oh, And Basketball Too

Some more basketball is back! Yes, I know, this is the official NBA Bubble Watch column but, if you have not been watching the WNBA in its triumphant return, I don’t know what to tell you. It’s so good! Fast, relentless, competitive, the skill and the moves are frankly unmatched. And just so cool? But sure, NBA basketball has also started this week, too.

It was a slightly slower week in the Bubble given this return to regular play. Guys spent their downtime close to home (hotels) instead of exploring the world (big pond full of stocked fish, golf course), but there was still some decent downtime to chronicle.

Chris Paul

Let us begin with the prince of darkness himse—just kidding! CP3 sat back this week with a stack of flappers, and queued up his e-reader for the world to see. This isn’t Jeffrey Russell on good vs. evil throughout history, nor is it the vaguely prophetic, antichrist conspiracy theories of Grant Jeffrey. This is the largely unknown story of Jeremiah G. Hamilton, the first Black millionaire on Wall Street. It’s a good book and its author, Shane White, had to scour endless ancient newspaper clippings to find enough on a man the largely white tellers of history did not want to talk about.

Rating: If we’re talking real ratings it 3.6 on Goodreads (those reviewers are a little much at the best of times, tbh) and 4 ½ stars on Amazon. But this is a 10/10 reading situation from Paul.

Kyle Lowry

Best in the business, most tenderhearted and underrated— no, none of this is biased — Kyle Lowry was stoked for the WNBA restart, propping up his VERY, uh, well-loved iPhone to catch the first games of the Wubble season restart. Something about all those gashes and nicks, this angle, makes Diana Taurasi, who is already hard as hell, look harder as hell. Here for it.

Rating: Surely Lowry has honoured his 3-year minimum Canadian absolute highway robbery phone contract and is due for an upgrade?

Jayson Tatum

I love to toss a real gut-wrencher into these things to keep your tears fresh and sense of loss sky-high! Tatum brought all his son’s favorite books into the Bubble so that he could read them alongside him every night before bedtime.

Rating: This was Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See? and it was a banger.

P.J. Tucker

Tossing two gut-wrenchers in here, for good measure. Tucker, the only living man who is allowed to call having his kids draw on his sneakers a “collaboration”, showcased the end results. Zoe, his daughter, drew a better rendition of the Rockets logo than the actual Rockets logo, did a toe covered in multicolored bubbles for the Bubble, emphasized words like “Splash” and “Fire!” with water and flames, and wrote Stinkabutt, which Tucker revealed is his nickname for her. King on the other hand got wild and weird. He slapped down a bunch of stick figures (“I have no idea who this guy is,” Tucker said pointing one out who looked to be holding a 7-tier ice cream cone) and gave the Jumpman a lightsaber.

Rating: He’s gotta wear these every game, right? Or else we gotta get new ones every month the Rockets hang on.

Jimmy Butler

Look I know this doesn’t really count for player activity but if you picture Butler having a listening party for one to folklore, wearing his cowboy boots, tapping on the floor and making the person in the room under him call the snitch line AGAIN on him, then it does.

Rating: This isn’t even a music website, this is the Guinness Book of World Records website. I just realized Butler probably has this as his homepage, checking for who he can challenge at anything, in any given moment.

Paul George

OK, but picture this and it’s Kawhi.

Rating: Actually Kawhi should do realistic masks where it looks like his mouth in a lil smile. Free million dollar idea for you, New Balance.

Donovan Mitchell

The big mail days continue in earnest for Mitchell, who has been having packages pile up outside his hotel room door for weeks now. Some have been, worryingly, manhandled to all hell. I know one of the rules of the Bubble would be that mail delivery was on players, but is it arriving via Dumbo without his magic feather?

Rating: Because he falls without the feather, you know?

Luka Doncic

This guy loves the long joke. Doncic was back at it again this week, tagging places he was in and things he was doing in them at Disney as much more remote and tropical locations. This duck got to be in Puerto Rico for a short while, I hope it enjoyed itself.

But finally we see the very nice resort pools being made use of. It’s too blurry to see who all’s in the background but I picture them playing Marco Polo as Doncic hushes them over the concentration he must pay to the game of kings in the hot, swampy, Orlando sun.

Rating: This pool, I can smell its aquamarine tang (just chlorine) from here.

Jamal Murray

Murray had been one of the last to get out on the water and try his hands at the ancient art of angling. Poor guy. He didn’t have much luck but he treated a lot of lucky fish to dinner this one, magic night.

Rating: The Arthur meme hand clench, see it?

Myles Turner

The portable ice bath has become the real unsung hero of the bubble. A lot of guys have upgraded from hotel room bathtub and infinite ice buckets of ice machine ice to inflatable kiddie pools set out off the well-kempt paths of the park. Turner made a point to highlight his being a “Bigg Recovery Guy”, and then a lurking Mo Bamba made a better point.

Got his ass.

Rating: Please let me know if you’d like to join my new Myles Turner fan club, Myles Turner Overdrive. We never meet, but we’re always Takin’ Care of Business.

Kent Bazemore

Baze loves golf so much he’s wearing it on his face.

Rating: Wear a mask!

Josh Hart

Hart had an eventful week. He took care of his chompers and paid a visit to the Disney dentist. I know you want to picture Goofy and the gang in dentist scrubs and gloves, holding the tooth cleaner and waterpik close up and approaching your mouth, but also quit picturing that because it would be so much scarier than the regular dentist already is! They’ve got no depth perception or fine motor control. Jk I don’t think he went to see a dentist, I think this was just some extra protective PPE he tossed on.

To take the edge off after his “appointment”, he went bowling with a bunch of the Pelicans. You can’t see it too well from the still, but he’s holding a giant slurpee cup in one hand and he’s just spun and flung the ball one handed, behind his back, with the other down the lane.

Rating: Whether or not there will be a Best Bubbler award at the end of all this, Hart is certainly acclimatizing with the greatest of ease.

Jordan Clarkson

This is just a picture of Jordan Clarkson grinning in a hotel ballroom turned practice court.

Rating: Figured maybe you needed it.

Kyle Kuzma

It was Kuzma’s birthday this week and his very thoughtful gf, Winnie Harlow, rented a plane to toot around the sky over Disney with a lil message for him.

Rating: How does this work? You pay in intervals of time? Asking for me, of course, and the way I’m going to announce Myles Turner Overdrive to Myles Turner in an ice bath.

Boban Marjanovic

Bobi was zooming around the Bubble by land, sea, and oh, I guess air too, when his feet left the ground during scrimmages before this week’s official restart. There’s no stopping Marhanovic. John Wick knew it, and now you know it too.

Rating: It’s me Boban!!! Is something you can scream out loud, for free, any time you want to.

Robert Covington

Another guy who is taking the Bubble in stride is Rob Covington. Take a good, long moment to take in the details of this photo. His “who me?” shrug with a fish very casually in one hand, his “STUPID IS AS STUPID DOES” visor which is at once very loud but incredibly subtle, somehow.

He later retired to his room to find an all-time snack delivery and thanked his mom, who sent it all through. It’s hard to keep the “It’s like summer camp!” thing about the Bubble going when it’s really a many multi million dollar, high intensity experiment, but this let me believe it for a second.

Rating: You dropped this Snack, King.

Jarrett Allen

Allen is a man of few words and many broken hearts (mine, thousands of times over!) and here’s another one. Co-opt the NBA slogan and slap it over a melting Mickey Mouse head made of chocolate and ice cream, I’m right here with you.

Rating: Are these things… gratis?

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Beyonce Is The Music Industry Tastemaker That Can Transform A Career

As the world’s biggest and best entertainer, Beyonce’s presence is regal in nature and everything she touches turns into gold. Her taste in fashion and music puts her in the realm of trendsetter and someone who fans can trust to put them onto things that are neat and she is fully aware of her power.

Over the course of her career, Queen Bey has taken this power and used it for good. Recently she put out a list of Black-owned businesses people should patronize and she is also known for giving opportunities to little-known creators and musicians on projects such as her just-released visual album Black Is King. A co-sign from Beyonce is like a co-sign from Jesus. The loyalty of her fans, aptly known as the Beyhive, support everything she does and they trust her because she has never let them down, especially when it comes to music. The power she has to change an aspiring musician’s life into something they’ve always dreamed of is real and she has done it countless times to much avail.

Here are a few superb acts that Beyonce has shined a light on, thus exposing them to the possibility of becoming not just national stars, but renown acts all across the globe.

Chloe x Halle

Chloe and Halle Bailey, the burgeoning R&B duo known as Chloe x Halle, were relatively unknown outside of YouTube before Beyonce became aware of their existence. Impressed by their ability to sing, Bey put them through artist and development (a rarity nowadays), much like what she went through with Destiny’s Child. The result of that is clear by the feel of their extremely creative roll out for their album Ungodly Hour. This includes their consistency of engaging with fans through charming Instagram Lives, allowing for fans to connect with the seemingly elusive sisters while still getting live performances done right in their living room. Clearly, Beyonce’s work ethic permeates through these two young women.

Signing to Bey’s label Parkwood Entertainment in 2016, Chloe and Halle immediately got to work with their debut EP Sugar Symphony and also joined her on The Formation Tour and later, On The Run II with Jay-Z. Two years later, they joined the cast of Grown-ish and released their debut album The Kids Are Alright, which earned the Bailey sisters Grammy Award nods for Best New Artist and Best Urban Contemporary Album. Chloe, who provided most of the production work on The Kids Are Alright, lent her beat-making talents to Ungodly Hour as well. Beyonce peeped the potential in these girls and she was absolutely right in believing in them. Now, with Ungodly Hour out, they have two of the most popular songs this year with “Do It” and “Forgive Me.”

Boots

Boots came through with all the vibes on Beyonce’s self-titled, game-changing surprise album release. Though the world had no clue who he was, Beyonce did and her choosing him to help craft her project resulted in the musician, born Jordan Asher Cruz, nabbing a Grammy nomination for Album Of The Year. His moody and dark production represents over half of the album, including “Haunted,” “Jealous,” “Flawless” and “Superpower.”

Shortly after Beyonce‘s release, Boots shared a beautiful duet between the two titled “Dreams” to his SoundCloud. The same vibe was maintained on the tracks he worked on with her for Lemonade, which earned him a second Grammy nod for Album Of The Year. He’s since gone on to work with Run The Jewels, Sir, and Kelela. The power of Beyonce believing in you is real.

Megan Thee Stallion

Megan Thee Stallion ran 2019 with her Hot Girl summer movement. This year, she essentially owns TikTok thanks to her viral hit “Savage” off her Suga EP and its accompanying dance created by Keara Wilson. Seemingly out of nowhere, however, Beyonce took it upon herself to hop on the track for the remix.

This unexpected move transformed the hottest song of the year into pure flames. It’s the inevitable Houston collaboration that fans had been waiting for and is also a great look for the city. Beyonce’s added excitement to the song, with her shocking rhymes co-signing “demon time” and OnlyFans, boosted the track, giving Megan her first No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100. In June, “Savage” was certified Platinum and remains one of the hottest songs in the streets and on TikTok.

Dram

The Nintendo-esque, salsa production and essence of Dram‘s “Cha Cha” off his debut EP #1Epic was cool enough to catch the attention of Beyonce before the rest of the world caught wind of the song. Randomly, Queen Bey posted a video of her twisting her hips and having fun to the track on her Instagram page to her more than 150 million followers along with the caption, “This song makes me happy.” Once that happened, the talented singer admittedly lost his mind and things for the Virginia native consequently blew up.

“I literally stood on the closest bench and hassled random people walking down the street, being like, ‘HEY, BEYONCÉ LIKES TO CHA CHA!!!,’” he annotated on the lyrics found on Genius. His next single, “Broccoli” featuring Lil Yachty, earned a Grammy nod for Best Rap/Sung Performance off his debut album Big Baby Dram.

O.T. Genasis

O.T. Genasis is a West Coast hero consistently coming with the bangers since he came on the scene from 2014’s “Coco” to 2015’s “Cut It.” In 2018, during Beyonce’s Coachella performance christened as Beychella, the singer chose to bless O.T. Genasis with a major stamp of approval by incorporating his braggadocio track “Everybody Mad” into her electric performance. The use of the song came as a surprise to the rapper who expressed immense gratitude that Queen Bey had an entire dance routine to his song.

“This is lit right here,” the Long Beach native said in an interview with TMZ. “I sat there and I was like ‘not only did she play my song, but the band played to it.’ You actually have to put that together and be at rehearsal. That’s just dope, especially since I didn’t really get the credit I felt I deserved for the song when I made it.”

The song currently boasts over 19 million views on YouTube and sits as one of his most viewed videos.

Big Freedia

Big Freedia is a New Orleans treasure and it should come to no surprise that Beyonce, who has Louisiana roots, would at some point connect with the bounce music legend. In 2017, Bey made it happen by using her voice on her surprise Lemonade single “Formation.” “I did not come to play with you hoes,” Freedia says with a thick NOLA drawl. “I came to slay, bitch! I like cornbread and collard greens, bitch! Oh yas, you besta believe it!” She was also featured on Beyonce’s Formation Tour just to help perform the track.

Though Big Freedia already had her own show on Fuse back in 2013, no doubt her association with Beyonce put her in the graces of a more mainstream audience.

In 2018, Drake used her voice on his No. 1 hit “Nice For What” and was slated to head out on tour with pop star Kesha until the pandemic hit. Nevertheless, Beyonce’s shining a major light on Freedia has been huge for the rapper as she continues to make dance hits for the club.

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.