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Rick Caruso Lost His Mayoral Election In Los Angeles And People Are Sure Letting Katy Perry Hear It

Katy Perry shared a selfie from inside the midterm elections voting booth earlier this month. She wanted everyone to know that she’d voted for Rick Caruso, a longtime businessman and Republican who registered as a Democrat in January, to be Los Angeles’ next mayor. “I am voting for a myriad of reasons (see the news) but in particular because Los Angeles in a hot mess atm,” Perry captioned the photo. Regardless of her reasoning, she was slammed online.

Perry turned off the comments on her post, but that hasn’t stopped people from letting Perry have it after Karen Bass was officially declared the winner over Caruso last night (November 16). Bass is the first woman and second Black person to serve as LA’s mayor.

“At the end of the day Rick Caruso spent 100 million + dollars to get everyone to hate Katy Perry,” Gareth Reynolds tweeted.

Perry hasn’t explicitly addressed the backlash, but on November 13, she tweeted a particularly interesting meme given the circumstances. “I finally realized it!” it reads. “People are prisoners of their phones. That’s why they are called cell phones!”

Perry wasn’t the only celebrity publicly endorsing Caruso. Others include Snoop Dogg, Chris Pratt, Elon Musk, Kim Kardashian, and Gwyneth Paltrow.

See some of the reactions to Caruso’s (and Perry’s) L below.

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Phoebe Bridgers Shares An Emotional Cover Of ‘So Much Wine’ By The Handsome Family

Yesterday, we got Christian Lee Hutson‘s mournful rendition of “Silent Night” to give us a melancholy introduction to the holiday season. Now, we have none other than Phoebe Bridgers to make us emotional with a cover of The Handsome Family’s “So Much Wine,” a similarly pained holiday soundtrack.

She opens the song with the immediately visceral lines, “I had nothing to say on Christmas day / When you threw all your clothes in the snow / When you burnt your hair, and you knocked over chairs / I just tried to stay out of your way.” She’s known for releasing heartbreaking holiday songs, including “If We Make It Through December,” “Day After Tomorrow,” and more. Proceeds from “So Much Wine” will go to the Los Angeles LGBT Center. It also features vocals from her rumored fiance Paul Mescal, Marshall Vore, Harrison Whitford, and Sebastian Steinberg, plus vocals, violin, and whistling from Andrew Bird.

Though this ballad is dejected, the singer-songwriter opened up earlier this year about trying to write happy songs. “I’m striving to do more stuff like that. I think it’s more challenging to sound smart and write well about happiness than it is about sadness,” she said. “In the interest of not seeming trite, I lean toward darker subject matter, just out of comfort. And I think a challenge to myself, now, is being articulate about things that are good [laughs].”

Listen to her cover above.

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Fans React To Hot 97’s Peter Rosenburg Comparing Kelly Rowland To Beyoncé: ‘She Has Her Own Career’

During a recent interview, Kelly Rowland once again found herself being compared to Beyoncé. Despite having a successful career, people won’t let her escape the pop star’s shadow, and fans are tired.

Rowland stopped by Hot 97, along with Marsai Martin, to chat with hosts Ebro Darden, Peter Rosenburg, and Laura Stylez about their upcoming film, Fantasy Football, which is set to debut later this month via Paramount+. During the broadcast, Rosenburg decided to take the conversation on a different route — well, actually not all that different — asking Rowland to speak on her ability to “play second to Beyoncé.

And that’s when it all went to hell and a handbasket.

“Everyone who gets in the entertainment business gets into to be the man,” he said. “[For example] just me working with Ebro, my ego has to be in check.”

It gets worse.

“And you happen to be standing next to the brightest light on planet Earth,” he continued. “You think Big Boi from Outkast has it tough being next to Andre, and you’re with Beyoncé. Not only did you not fight it, but it also seems you like you really love the position you were in.”

Rowland offered the most incredible response: “Light attracts light, and I am light. So I am a beautiful brown shining light. I don’t think anybody’s light dims anyone else’s,” she said. ” I think that when other people start to compare you, I think that shows how dim they are of themselves.”

Rowland has also had a career spanning nearly two decades, selling over 40 million records in her solo work along with being the first Destiny’s Child member to achieve a Billboard Hot 100 hit and a worldwide number-one single, with”Dilemma” featuring Nelly, and win a Grammy Award as a solo artist.

It’s time to stop comparing. And fans agree.

“Kelly Rowland is a grown woman with her own career, her own accolades, and her own dreams,” one person tweeted. “Pls stop asking her about Beyoncé every time you talk to her.”

“Kelly called him out to his face & he still didn’t get it,” another person wrote. “Even, Marsai Martin caught it. Outside of Destiny’s Child, Thee Kelly Rowland is an international superstar, actress, author & businesswoman! She’s been in this industry 25+ years & in 2022 you’re still comparing?”

One person pointed out the “love” Bey and Kelly have and are glad they don’t let it get to them.

“I’m just glad Kelly Rowland and Beyoncé have mad love for each other cause the way people pit them against each other is crazy.”

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Woodworker mesmerizes millions by crafting a US map out of each state’s official tree

Did you know that there are around 73,000 species of trees in the world?

Most of us go about our days surrounded by trees that just sort of sit in the background of our lives, quietly providing beauty, shade, oxygen, a home for wildlife and more, without us giving them a whole lot of thought.

But it appears that a whole bunch of us have a deep, latent fascination with trees and wood, based on how people have responded to Justin Davies’ unique state tree U.S. map project. Davies, who goes by @justinthetrees on TikTok, has spent months crafting a stunning wall map of the U.S. using wood from the official tree of each state, and he has gained more than a million followers doing it.


Davies tells Upworthy the map idea was one he’d held onto for years, ever since a run on a trail sparked his interest in woodworking.

“While out on a trail run I noticed a tree I’d probably passed thousands of times without really noticing it,” he says, “and was struck by how little I knew about it. Didn’t know what kind of tree it was, didn’t even know its name. And I spend a lot of time out in the wilderness out here in Utah, so it made me just feel really disconnected from the natural places that surround me.

“So I got home and just started digging online until I found the type of tree it was, and I was kinda blown away by how fascinating I found everything I discovered. The properties of the tree, where it grows, its many traditional indigenous uses, and one of the big things was that I just really wanted to know what its wood looked like.”

Davies’ curiosity led him down a creative path that eventually moved him away from a 12-year marketing career and toward creating content focused on trees. Oddly enough, it’s been a great move.

“When I meet new people and tell them I make content about trees, I often get a response like, ‘Trees? Really??’ with a raised eyebrow, implying I’ve never thought about trees before in my life, that sounds boring,” he says. “But you very quickly discover that it takes almost nothing to help people realize they do find trees to be fascinating. Everyone has a tree they love from their childhood. Everyone has types of trees that make them feel at home. So it’s been fun to see that kind of response happen at such a massive scale.”

Davies spent around eight months creating his official state tree map, making a video for each piece in which he shares scientific and historical information about each tree, how Indigenous peoples have used them and interesting anecdotes about them. As it progressed, the map project morphed into a community endeavor, with people from all over the country sending him pieces of the kinds of wood he needed from each state to complete it.

Here is Davies sharing the finished map, which is the best place to start. This video offers a glimpse of the work and community support that went into this project, as well as Davies’ genuine likability that keeps people coming back.

@justinthetrees

Thanks for making this project possible! You’re the best #trees #statetreemap #thankyou

As Davies said, he isn’t actually done. He has also made different countries and Canadian provinces out of native wood, and has started making a whole new larger U.S. map for his followers on YouTube (since the vertical format for video on TikTok isn’t really compatible with YouTube).

And to get a taste of what’s caused millions of people to tune in each time he revealed a new state, here’s the video from the final state he made, Missouri.

@justinthetrees

Reply to @eawilliams1s get to know a state tree: Missouri’s flowering dogwood #trees #woodworking #missouri #statetreemap #learnontiktok #dogwood

Check out Georgia, which attracted nearly 13 million viewers:

@justinthetrees

Reply to @djunamars get to know a state tree: Georgia’s Southern Live Oak #trees #woodworking #georgia #learnontiktok #map #liveoak #statetreemap

And how about Florida, whose official tree is only kind of, sort of a tree (same goes for South Carolina, whose state tree is also a palmetto):

@justinthetrees

Reply to @draphra get to know a state tree: Florida’s Sabal Palm #trees #woodworking #florida #learnontiktok #statetreemap #palmetto

Davies shares that his love of trees goes beyond just their beauty. There’s something about trees native to where we live that tap into something primal within us.

“I find them absolutely fascinating, of course. I think they’re beautiful, of course. But also from a practical sense, we wouldn’t be anywhere without them. We need them to build our homes, to heat our homes, to make furniture, food, the games we play, the art we admire. But ultimately for me, what I love the most is the way different types of native trees and forests have the power to evoke something so personal for different people.

“For me, a large, twisted Utah juniper instantly makes me feel at peace and at home. Same goes for the color of the dancing light coming through the canopy of a quaking aspen grove. I can hear and see and smell those forests and trees that are native to the wild places in my home and they give me something so much different than, say, the exotic beauty of a forest of old-growth redwoods or a cypress swamp. And what I love is how someone from those places will feel entirely the opposite.”

Part of what makes Davies’ videos so engaging is that he really connects with his audience. Check out how he taps into the psyches of his viewers who were incredibly bothered by the empty space where Nevada was supposed to go before he made the piece.

@justinthetrees

I love you all, send me some bristlecone pine wood if you find some lol #statetreemap #woodworking #trees #map

Davies is thrilled with how people of all ages have responded to his videos. He says he gets sent pictures of things kids made in shop class inspired by his work and messages from viewers who say they didn’t care at all about trees before, but who now find themselves out for walks with friends and pointing out things about different tree species. “That kind of stuff is just absolutely amazing,” says Davies.

Seriously, who knew trees were so fascinating?

There’s something so pure about watching someone do woodworking, but adding an interesting educational element and a true love for trees makes it all the more satisfying. You can follow Justin Davies on YouTube, TikTok and Instagram.

P.S. If you really want to watch every state video from the TikTok U.S. map project, he compiled them all here on YouTube:

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Curious Why It Took So Long To Make A Sequel To ‘A Christmas Story’? Let The Film’s Star Explain

You know how long it’s been since A Christmas Story came out? Everyone who saw Ralphie almost shoot his eye out in theaters would have to wait another nine years before Mariah Carey released “All I Want for Christmas Is You.” What did people even listen to during the holidays back then? “Silver Bells”? The horror.

A sequel to 1983’s A Christmas Story also could have been a horror, but apparently A Christmas Story Christmas (which was released on HBO Max today) is pretty good! In an interview with People, star Peter Billingsley explained why it took so long to make a follow-up. “You really want to try to create something that could stand on its own, that’s original,” he said. “In movies, you want to play offense — you want to do something great, you want to have momentum, do great storytelling. But in this one, you gotta play defense too because you have to protect, I think, its association to the original.”

Billingsley also explained that being a father made him want to make a sequel to the holiday classic. “A lot of people have said, ‘Why now?’ for this movie, and definitely being a father in real life [paralleled] being able to channel being a father in A Christmas Story Christmas,” he said. A new generation can learn the power of a triple dog dare.

A Christmas Story Christmas is out now.

(Via People)

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Elegance Bratton Will Accept Your ‘The Inspection’ Praise At A Urinal

The first time I met Elegance Bratton, we were both at urinals, in a small Toronto bathroom with only two urinals, at a bar hosting the after-party for the premiere of Bratton’s feature length debut, The Inspection. I am not someone who enjoys bathroom conversation, but also we were the only two in there and it felt rude not to say something the director of the movie that the whole jamboree was in honor for in the first place. Look, if I’m Bratton, I’d be thinking, “Who is this prick at my party not giving me an accolade?” (Turns out I wasn’t far off.) So I start out by saying, “So, I’m not a bathroom talking guy…,” to with Bratton cuts me off, “This is isn’t the first time I’ve had a conversation with someone with his dick in his hand.” (For the record, this was not technically true. I have more of a hands-off approach to this process.)

Bratton’s film is semi-autobiographical about joining the United States Marine Corps after being homeless for ten years. Complicating this, Bratton is an openly gay man and, back then, we were very much in the “don’t ask, don’t tell” phase for gay people in the armed forces. Jeremy Pope plays Ellis French, who is not entirely Bratton, but large portions are. And what’s interesting is Bratton has a, let’s say, complicated relationship with the Marines. It’s still something that he’s pretty obviously proud of and admits he wouldn’t be where he is without that experience, but that doesn’t mean there weren’t times he was openly oppressed for his sexuality or even feared for his life. But the biggest surprose about The Inspection is the amount of humor in the film. As Bratton says, “If you’ve lived on the brink of tragedy and catastrophe the way I have, very quickly, the things that you cry about become the things that you laugh about.”

But, first, let’s clear up that whole bathroom situation.

We’ve actually met before…

I remember. Refresh me though. Where did we meet? Because you have a very much familiar face.

We met in the bathroom at your premiere party in Toronto. I think I said something like, “I am not a person who talks in bathrooms but wanted to tell you I liked your movie.” And I think you responded something along the lines of, “This is not the first time I’ve spoken to a man while he’s holding his penis.”

“Dick.”

Yes, you did say dick. Which was not technically true, but we did meet in the bathroom.

I do remember that very well. This is why it’s dangerous for me to be in a room full of journalists and alcohol.

But going through my head, I’m thinking that you’re thinking, “This guy is at my party. I’m the only one in here. How does he not mention my movie?” Because if I’m you, that’s what I’m thinking.

I am thinking that. Okay, you’re 100 percent facts. You’re on target with that assessment. That’s exactly how I think.

Okay, so that was the correct action.

When I’m in awkward situation, I’m always going to find a way to make a joke. I just think it’s so funny, the way men talk in bathrooms to me is one of the funniest things in the world. It tickles me to no end. Yeah, I was just playing around.

Well, at least I had something real to say. It wasn’t, “Hey, pretty good weather today.”

“Man, that football game was great. They’re really playing well.”

Speaking of humor, I have to admit, before watching this, with the subject matter I thought this would be a tough sit. This movie is a lot funnier than I expected.

To be honest with you, if you’ve lived on the brink of tragedy and catastrophe the way I have, very quickly, the things that you cry about become the things that you laugh about. I think that that’s a really important part of healing. I think that movies are supposed to be aspirational. In this film there’s an aspiration to provide the audience with the feeling of transcendence, with the possibility of triumph. But you know, triumph doesn’t mean anything if there’s no adversity. If there’s enough adversity and significant enough triumph, it’s going to be pretty funny.

Well, so where does Ellis begin, and you end?

It’s not a Venn diagram, so I don’t know. I can’t necessarily give you a percentage exactly, but at the end of the day, the film is 100 percent autobiographical when it comes to his hopes, fears and desires, primary motivations. Even if it’s not a situation that I’ve been in. And when it’s the stuff with his mother, that stuff is 100 percent out of my life, literally.

Do you talk to anyone who’s still in the Marines?

Yeah.

Now, obviously, “don’t ask, don’t tell,” is gone. I’m curious what the culture is like for gay people now compared to when you were there?

Yeah, the thing is, the military is a microcosm of the United States. All the problems that we wrestle with in our day-to-day lives, political issues that we wrestle with are still a debate in our armed services and armed forces. But the thing is that we have a premise in the military where we have to protect each other, even if we disagree with each other because we are the thing that keeps us alive. That lesson – while people would not expect such a kind of egalitarian lesson to be taught in a place like the military, but nonetheless – I think it’s a lesson that’s very relevant for our times right now. That’s why the film exists.

What is your relationship with the military now? Because it seems very complicated. From watching this movie, it seems that it’s “complicated.”

The fact that it is, I joined the Marine Corps after ten years of being homeless. You’re chosen. It’s the few, the strong, right? But when I joined after being homeless, I thought I was worthless. I thought that my mother was right, that I deserved to be living this life of difficulty because I could not decide to not be a homosexual. I thought that there was no future for me. I was fortunate enough to have a drill instructor in bootcamp tell me the opposite. “Actually you are worth something because you have a responsibility to protect and serve other people, all these people here.” That responsibility was invigorating. It was life-changing to me because I had never been trusted like that. I had never been given the access to do something like that as a Black gay man.

What I’m saying, and when it comes down to it, I came into the Marine Corps and it gave me this sense of renewal and the possibility. I got my college education through it. Life is much, much more better for me. Nonetheless, I still had to deal with oppression. But there’s nothing harder and worse than being a homeless Black gay man in America. There’s nothing worse than that. I grew up in a world where I was met with rejection at every turn and violence at a lot of them. It’s normal for people like me to die young. But, all of a sudden, if you put a uniform on, now a Black gay life is implicated in the struggle of terrorism and things. Mind you, that’s true for every young man in this movie, right? That putting on the uniform elevates them into a cultural conversation. All of a sudden, people are concerned about the fate of poor people in America when they put on a uniform. I think that this film is not pro-military, it’s not anti-military. It’s nonjudgmental. It’s because it’s pro-proof.

I know I said this to you in the bathroom, but almost every character in this movie does something really mean to you, but also something really nice to you at different times.

That’s how family is. My mother is the first person to ever love me completely. She’s also the first person to reject me holistically. More than one thing can be true at once. That’s why I went in the Marine Corps, and that’s why I appreciate being a Marine. I appreciate it, because it was the only place that could not deny me.

Well, and you earned it, too. They don’t just hand that out. You had to earn that title.

Oh, it was tough. It was so intense, but it was so fun too. That’s the other thing. It’s like summer camp, jail. It’s all connected, like a fraternity all combined into one. It’s a lot of fun. You’re running, you’re getting stronger, you’re getting faster, you are getting to know people.

Me being named Elegance, every room I ever walked into in my life, everyone assumed I was gay. They’re right. A lot of times I wasn’t invited to fix the car and play ball and all that stuff that guys do together. Joining the Marine Corps, I finally found a group where I couldn’t be denied. If you deny me, then you may not make the mission and then we all get in trouble. This is why I appreciate it, but I’m also totally understanding of the critique of foreign policy and all that kind of stuff.

You mentioned the drill instructor and you just said a lot of positive things about the drill instructor. In the movie, at one point he tries to drown you.

When I went to boot camp, we were told a story by our drill instructor about someone who died in the pool not long before we were there. I knew that this guy knew that I was gay. I knew that this guy did not really like me. He didn’t see it for me. He thought I was too smart for school. In my head, as a person who’d been abused my whole life for being gay, and not just by my mother, but the world at large, I was worried. What happens if he tries to take this out on me in this water? That’s that fear is where that scene in the movie comes from. But just recently, when I was in Coronado, San Diego over the weekend for their film festival, they gave me the Trailblazer Award…

Oh, congratulations.

Thanks. But what somebody told me that a person died in training with the Navy Seals right before I got there, too. It’s like, this happens when you train in this way. It happens sometimes on purpose, sometimes not on purpose.

Something like that happens in An Officer and a Gentlemen

I love that movie.

So, in real life, the drill instructor probably didn’t like you very much, but it never got as violent as it did in the movie?

It also didn’t get that sexual in real life. I don’t know what kind of publication this is. I don’t want to get too much detail.

Anything’s fine.

I had my chance encounters, crossing in the night type of situations. I definitely had people of higher rank come on to me and things like that. I’m not the hero that Ellis is. I was trying not to go to the shelter by any means necessary. Even if you flirted with me, it would take a real, very specific situation for me to give into it. Nonetheless, I’m with these beautiful men, and mind you, Ellis comes in the Marine Corps through a transactional kind of understanding of love. To him nobody would care about him unless they wanted sex from him. That’s what he is, that’s what he has to offer.

I’m just curious, the real-life drill instructor… Are you expecting a phone call?

Oh, man, I am expecting several phone calls.

I bet.

Oh, man, I would love that phone call. At the end of the day, some of them already seen it. They like it, so.

Oh good.

Hopefully, they’ll like it the next time. We’ll see. But, luckily, they may not have my new number.

Now you’ve got the Trailblazer Award, I bet they’re not going to get that number…

[Laughs] Right…

It was good to talk to you again.

I appreciate it. Well, hopefully, we’ll run into each other…

Not in the bathroom next time though.

‘The Inspection’ opens in theaters on Friday, November 18th. You can contact Mike Ryan directly on Twitter.

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Wizkid’s Prurient Accounts Of Romance On ‘More Love, Less Ego’ Are Meant To Inspire The Heart

The RX is Uproxx Music’s stamp of approval for the best albums, songs, and music stories throughout the year. Inclusion in this category is the highest distinction we can bestow, and signals the most important music being released throughout the year. The RX is the music you need, right now.

Wizkid’s fourth album Made In Lagos was a huge milestone both commercially and creatively for him. For the former, the 2020 project became his highest-charting album, birthed a top-10 single with “Essence,” earned him his first two Grammy nominations as a lead artist, and kept him at center stage for song of the summer conversations in 2021. Creatively, it helped to wipe away doubts about Wizkid’s artistic trajectory after his crossover success in the mid-2010s was stumped by his underwhelming Sounds Of The Other Side album. Made In Lagos confirmed that Wizkid, one of afrobeats’ modern-day princes, had not lost his way in the genre. So much so that it would even be fair to call the album Wizkid’s magnum opus, especially in support of his worldwide appeal.

While Made In Lagos is dedicated to Wizkid’s hometown of Lagos, Nigeria, his latest offering, More Love, Less Ego is a dedication to lust, romance, passion, intimacy, and emotional connections – the type of things that, if more present in the real world, could make for a better and more unified society. On More Love, Less Ego, Wizkid doesn’t directly advocate for us to share more love and to be kinder with each other, rather, he spends 13 songs on a self-centered romance binge. While Wizkid’s craving for love and intimacy, oftentimes in its most raunchy form, drives most of the album, his success in finding it and his enjoyment of it is meant to inspire us to find it in our own lives.

The easiest way that More Love, Less Ego delivers this inspiration is through the album’s production. This credit goes in large part to producer P2J, as well as other names like Juls, Sammy Soso, Tay Iwar, and more. In addition to it being a cohesive and tightly-produced body of work, the sonics of More Love, Less Ego are built to draw the hearts together. Truthfully, that’s just a small piece of afrobeats’ beauty. At its fastest pace, the genre commands listeners to dance and be free of stiff bodily restrictions, and at its slowest, it sets the room for passion, whether timid or red-hot, to float through the air and affect those nearby. On More Love, Less Ego, this is evident between the spectrum of the slow and steamy “Flower Pads” and the lively and upbeat “Bad To Me.”

Enter: Wizkid. The afrobeats mastermind, who’s easily maneuvered through different generations of the genre (“Pakurumo,” “Ojuelegba, “Come Closer,” “Essense,” and “Bad To Me” are different for individual reasons), provides new evidence to back his lasting success. With the perfect canvas set for him, Wizkid wastes no time freefalling into raunchy and slick-mannered soliloquies about love. “Low on your body, dey on your case / Turn up the booty, yeah, yeah, whine up my charge,” he commands over airy amapiano drums on “Balance.” He goes further in his mission to seduce, later adding, “When the body pull up e dey cure my pain / And I no fit pass you like my Mary Jane now.” In the back half of the album, “Balance” is complemented by “Plenty Loving.” Here, Wizkid’s approach is less direct, but his goal remains the same. “Dem dey call me Mr lover / I go give you many loving,” he says in the song’s chorus.

In his most direct moments, Wizkid is a sheer lady’s man with promiscuous habits. The Caribbean influence that found its best life on Made In Lagos lives to see another album thanks to help from Jamaican artists Shenseea and Skillibeng on “Slip N Slide.” The cultures clash for a dripping tale of intimacy and the uncontainable desires that lead to an explosive moment in the bedroom. As Wizkid puffs his chest with lines like “Don’t dеny what you feel tonight” and “And I go f*ck you ’til the morning time,” Shenseea seductively places a finger on his lips to signal less talk and more action, as she says, “Mi nuh inna no long talk / ​​Come make me put it pon ya.” While Wizkid advocates for less ego on his fifth album, his own runs free throughout More Love, Less Ego. The catch is it does so to aid his aspirations in love instead of hindering them.

Elsewhere, the ego sheds itself on More Love, Less Ego and makes room for more gratifying things to take up space on the album. It’s best captured through Wizkid and Ayra Starr’s admitted inability to deal with additional world problems on “2 Sugar” as well as through the optimistic self-reminders for a better tomorrow on “Everyday.” Wizkid, as always, does a wonderful job of bringing artists into his world without stripping them of the things that make them so appealing and without conforming or transforming himself into something indigestible for his niche audience. Naira Marley and Skepta’s authentic contributions inject a jolt of energy that pairs impeccably with Wizkid’s cool demeanor on “Wow.” Don Toliver stays true to himself on “Special,” but thanks to the flavorful and intoxicating guitar strums that ring behind his autotuned croons, Wizkid is also able to dish out sultry compliments that perk up the ear. In its best example, Wizkid creates a similar “Essence” moment, but this time with rising Nigerian singer Ayra Starr for “2 Sugar.” In short, for Wizkid, there’s always enough space to share the spotlight.

“Love liberates / It doesn’t just hold, that’s ego / Love liberates.” These words that appear on “Everyday” from the late poet Maya Angelou couldn’t be more perfect for Wizkid’s message on More Love, Less Ego. His relentless advances for love throughout the album seek this liberation, and he knows it can only be accomplished through reciprocation. It’s why he closes the album with a call for just that on “Frames (Who’s Gonna Know).” “Give me more of you,” he sings. “Give me something / I’ll never want to lose.” There’s always a risk in pursuing a fulfilling offering for the heart, and while those risks may be daunting, embracing them rather than trying to overpower them will serve you well. Quite literally, it doesn’t hurt to approach it with more love and less ego. On More Love, Less Ego, Wizkid fearlessly liberates his desires for love, and in turn, he’ll be graciously awarded for it sooner rather than later.

More Love, Less Ego is out now via RCA/Starboy Entertainment. You can stream it here.

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Mitch McConnell’s Vote Against Protecting Interracial Marriage Is Raising Eyebrows, Due To His Interracial Marriage

The Respect for Marriage Act passed the Senate this week, meaning that same-sex and interracial marriages will continue to be protected and afforded the same rights (along with the responsibilities) as what Candace Cameron Bure considers to be “traditional marriage.” The legislation was a bipartisan effort, which Sen. Rob Portman (R-OH) recently summed in a statement via his website:

“The Respect for Marriage Act is a needed step to provide millions of loving couples in same-sex and interracial marriages the certainty that they will continue to enjoy the freedoms, rights, and responsibilities afforded to all other marriages. Through bipartisan collaboration, we’ve crafted commonsense language to confirm that this legislation fully respects and protects Americans’ religious liberties and diverse beliefs, while leaving intact the core mission of the legislation to protect marriage equality.”

As USA Today reports, the bill passed with 12 Republicans coming together with Democrats to knock this thing into official existence. 37 Republican senators did not agree, and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell happened to be one of them. As many know, McConnell recently dealt with Donald Trump’s “ridiculously racist” attack on Mitch’s wife, Elaine Chao, who is Asian-American and also happens to be the ex-U.S. Secretary for Transportation under the Trump administration.

Mitch voted “no” Respect for Marriage Act, and he probably actually meant to vote no on protecting gay marriage. In effect, though, he also voted against protecting interracial marriage, and that’s causing eyebrows to raise for a few reasons. Real questions here: did he forget that Elaine is Asian-American? Does he consider her to be white? And the suggestions only grow worse from there, so people aired it all out on Twitter.

Mitch recently won his reelection for Senate Minority Leader, so we’ll be seeing plenty of him as usual.

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Bruce Springsteen’s ‘The Tonight Show’ Residency Continues With A Silky ‘Nightshift’ Performance

Bruce Springsteen is making the most of his The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon residency. The Boss dropped his covers album, Only The Strong Survive, last Friday (November 11). He brought “Do I Love You (Indeed I Do),” a Frank Wilson cover, to life with his E Street Band during Monday’s (November 14) show. Springsteen followed that up with a 20-person band backing him for Tuesday’s performance of “Turn Back The Hands Of Time” and last night’s (November 16) silky-smooth rendition of “Nightshift.”

Just like for “Turn Back The Hands Of Time,” the stage was full behind Springsteen. But his distinctively soothing voice stole the limelight. “Marvin, he was a friend of mine,” Springsteen softly sang to open the song. “And he could sing his song, his heart in every line / Marvin sang of the joy and pain / He opened up our minds, I still can hear him say / Oh, talk to me, so you can see what’s going on.’” And Springsteen’s delivery could have fooled anyone that he was singing from personal experience, not covering a 1985 Commodores classic.

Springsteen will again appear on The Tonight Show‘s Thanksgiving episode next Thursday, November 24.

It also was announced yesterday that Springsteen’s two-plus-hour Halloween sit-down interview with SiriusXM’s The Howard Stern Show will air in its entirety on HBO on November 27, then be available to stream on HBO Max. Watch the trailer here.

And watch the 20-time Grammy winner deliver “Nightshift” above.

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‘Act like you’re my mom’: 10-year-old cleverly escapes a woman who was following him home

A quick-thinking 10-year-old boy escaped a woman trying to lure him by pretending that a local store clerk was his mother. ABC 6 reports that Sammy Green was walking home from school in Pottstown, Pennsylvania, on Friday, November 11, when a strange woman started following him.

The woman “started walking with him and asking him where his family was, asking where his dad was,” Sam Green, the boy’s father, told ABC6. The boy didn’t know the woman but she insisted that she knew his family.

She tried to lure him into going with her by promising she’d buy him “anything he wanted” at Wawa, a local convenience store that sells shakes, sandwiches and other treats.

“She was like, ‘I’m going to Wawa, are you going there? What are you getting from Wawa? Where’s your family at?'” Sammy told CBS.


“She said she probably knew me and was going to Wawa and that he was supposed to go with her and he could get anything he wanted,” Sam Green said.

In an attempt to flee the suspicious woman, Sammy walked into Dani Bee Funky, an unconventional gift shop, where he went straight to 17-year-old Hannah who was working the register. “He was like, ‘Pretend like you’re my mom,'” Hannah told CBS, “and I was just like, ‘all right go to the back.’ He didn’t want to leave my side.”

Security footage shows that Hannah then calmly walked up to the store’s front door and locked it, preventing the woman from coming inside. After she was locked out, the woman walked away. “I was still shaking when I was in here,” Sammy said.

The security camera footage is hard for Sammy’s dad to watch. “When we were watching that video, I cried every time I saw it,” said Green.

The shop’s owner has nothing but praise for Hannah’s calm way of handling the dangerous situation. “I am very proud of her. Hannah is a 17-year-old young lady. She did everything correctly,” Small said.

This story is a great reminder for parents to talk to their kids about what to do if they are approached by a suspicious person. The first thing they should know is that it’s OK to say “No!” as loudly as possible to a suspicious person. They should then scream, “Help! This is not my mom or my dad!” to alert the adults around them and then run. If they are grabbed by the person they should bite, punch and kick as hard as they can until they can get free.

Sammy’s dad is proud that his son remembered what he told him to do when confronted by a suspicious stranger. “Think of every scenario and make sure that children know and also practice it,” he reminded parents. “Practice your situations and scenarios just like fire drills.”

For the time being, Sammy is going to have a family friend walk him to and from school. The Pottstown Police have spoken with the woman and she is now getting help for mental health issues.