Yes, Kate Bush is an icon when it comes to music, but she’s also an icon when it comes to doing whatever you want. After her first tour, in 1979, she didn’t perform another concert until 2014. She’s produced most of her own music, has long handled her publishing and management in-house, and these days doesn’t get out of bed for anyone but herself. So when you hear that Kate Bush isn’t attending her own overdue Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction on November 3, you can’t be too surprised — you almost have to admire it.
In honor of President Obama’s first full day of his second term, we have the trailer for Olympus Has Fallen, a movie where the POTUS is kidnapped by terrorists. Jeez, they haven’t even cleaned up all the confetti yet and now we have to be all worried. Or maybe we shouldn’t be, as the President (Aaron Eckhart) has a former secret service agent (Gerard Butler) to surf a big wave coach his son to a soccer victory save the day.
Curtain bangs may have already earned their spot in the Hair Hall of Fame (the chop has over 4 billion views on TikTok) – but now, the ‘curtain cut’ is here to take things a step further.
Right now, layered, voluminous hair is having a moment. ‘70s influences like Farrah Fawcett flicks, shags and flipped fringes have collided with our ’90s hair infatuation (see: The Butterfly Cut, The Sachel, The Bouncy Blow Out) to give us a whole collection of trending cuts.
Cuba is suffering through a summer of dire shortages, from food and electricity to medicine. Fed-up Cubans are taking to the streets in unprecedented protests — and they're voicing their outrage through a song called Patria y Vida — homeland and life.
The slogan is a spin on the communist regime's decades-old slogan of "patria o muerte" — homeland or death. In strong terms, the song accuses the government of destroying the quality of life in Cuba, a message that quickly found traction with protesters who are demanding change.
The biggest news to come out of Wednesday's high-profile federal court hearing on the "deflategate" saga had nothing to do with the NFL or Tom Brady's pending four-game suspension.
Veteran courtroom sketch artist Jane Rosenberg is grabbing most of the attention for her depiction of the New England Patriots quarterback. And of course the interwebs responded in kind, unleashing countless memes of the now-infamous sketch.
Outside the Manhattan courtroom on Wednesday, Rosenberg defended her work.