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    Bad Bunny Looking Forward to Bringing the Best Shows in History After Pandemic Ends

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    The ‘Un Dia’ hitmaker vows to create shows that are ‘the best in the world’ and ‘the best in history’ when he returns to the stage after the Covid-19 crisis is over.

    Dec 25, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Bad Bunny has promised to bring a “totally new energy” and create the best shows “in history” when he is allowed to play in front of audiences again.
    The Puerto Rican rapper has assured his fans they will be in for a treat when he is able to tour again once the coronavirus crisis comes to an end.
    Asked what his future shows will be like, Bad Bunny said, “The best in the world, the best in history – I swear that’s how I feel and what I want.”
    “Just before the pandemic and lockdown, we were getting all the details and experiences down for the next tour, and it had been incredible to see everything coming together.”

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    “Now, with all that’s happened, the feeling is different. When we do finally get onstage, it’s going to be a totally new energy. It’s going to feel really special, I think, taking everything we had already planned and adding what we’re thinking about now.”
    The “Un Dia” hitmaker, whose real name is Benito Ocasio – was recently named Spotify’s most-streamed artist of the year but he’s not letting the achievements go to his head.
    He told Rolling Stone, “The truth is, I enjoy (making music): it’s what I like the most. If there’s recognition with that, it’s extra. I’m satisfied just with getting to do what I do and having people around me who listen and support my ideas. But obviously, it feels great and makes me proud.”
    Bad Bunny admits that he needs to come up with some other hobbies in 2021 as he devotes so much time to making music.
    He explained, “I spend so much time creating, and I have more plans to keep working. Outside of music, I don’t know. I need to come up with new hobbies. I don’t have a hobby that isn’t music – it’s my work, my play, my way of relaxing. I need to sit down and find some other stuff to do.”

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    Dolly Parton's Regret for Jimmy Fallon Is the Reason Behind Collaborative Christmas Song

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    Back in October, the country music queen joined forces with the late night host to record a cover of Mariah Carey classic ‘All I Want for Christmas Is You’ for ‘A Holly Dolly Christmas,’

    Dec 25, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Dolly Parton has comedian Jimmy Fallon to thank for kickstarting work on her new holiday album, because she always regretted turning down the opportunity to sing with the funnyman years ago.
    The country music queen recruited the U.S. late night host to record a cover of Mariah Carey classic “All I Want for Christmas Is You” for “A Holly Dolly Christmas”, and it was only after hitting the studio together that Parton decided to make it into a full duets project.
    “I didn’t think about doing a bunch of duets at the start,” she confessed.
    “When I was on (‘The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon’) a couple of years ago around the holiday season, he had asked me if I would sing with him, Mariah Carey’s song… and I didn’t know it good enough to sing it, and I didn’t want to mess it up, so of course I said no… and it really bothered me.”

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    After teaming up with Fallon, Parton called on pals including Willie Nelson, Billy Ray Cyrus, Michael Buble, and her goddaughter Miley Cyrus to get into the festive spirit with her.
    “Then I got to thinking, ‘Well, maybe I’ll get all these other guys to sing with me’,” she continued.
    “It was just one of those perfect storms, where everything fell like it was supposed to.”
    Released in October, the song opens with Dolly aksing Jimmy, “Hey, Jimmy. I don’t know how to say this without sounding all mushy and romantic.” Later, Jimmy is heard replying, “I kinda like mushy and romantic.” She then responds, “You do?” she responds, to which he says, “Yeah, especially this time of year.”

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    Carrie Underwood in Christmas Spirit Throughout 2020 for 'My Gift'

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    The country singer reveals in an interview that she headed into a winter wonderland-decorated studio over the summer to lay down her vocals for the hit album.

    Dec 25, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Country superstar Carrie Underwood has spent much of 2020 in the spirit of Christmas as she began working on her first holiday album at the start of the year.
    The singer admits working on recording and promoting “My Gift” helped to take her mind off the coronavirus pandemic and the global shutdown – and she was glad for the festive distraction.
    “I do feel like I’ve been living Christmas all year long,” she said, revealing she headed into a winter wonderland-decorated studio over the summer to lay down her vocals.
    “So I have been living in Christmas land all of 2020, which is a much better place than being in 2020 itself,” Carrie laughed.

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    And getting to record a new version of “Little Drummer Boy” with her five-year-old son Isaiah was a really special moment she will always treasure – because she didn’t expect the session to go so well.
    “I didn’t know how it was gonna work,” Carrie confessed. “I’d asked him if he wanted to be a part of the Christmas album, just come sing a song with me, and I was like, ‘I don’t know if he’ll be able to, he might get frustrated, or you know, be bored… he’s five!'”
    “So I kind of warned everybody, ‘I’m not sure what we’re gonna get, but even if we don’t get anything, and he doesn’t feel like doing it, at least I got to bring my kid to work with me, he gets to see what I do, because really I don’t think he has that much of an idea of what my job is… It was all that I could have hoped for and more. We did have a wonderful day in the studio…”
    [embedded content]
    “He sings his heart, he doesn’t know any other way… it was just so pure and joyful and I was honoured to get to be in the room with him while he did that.”

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    Migos: Releasing New Album in 2020 Doesn't Make Sense

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    Quavo, Offset, and Takeoff have completed their next studio installment but they wait until next year to release it because they want to be able to promote it properly.

    Dec 25, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Migos will release their new album “at the top of the year.”
    The trio – comprising Quavo, Offset, and Takeoff – had been expected to release the follow-up to 2018’s “Culture II” early in 2020 but the record was delayed due to the coronavirus pandemic, and now they have confirmed that work on the LP is complete and fans shouldn’t have to wait too much longer for it.
    Quavo explained the group had taken the decision to delay the record because they want the “commotion” of being able to promote it properly and to perform in front of their fans.
    Speaking on The ETCs podcast, he said, “We done with the album, we just waiting on 2021, man, so everything can crank up. We don’t wanna drop it right now. We want the commotion, we want to move, we want to be outside. We want to drop it and go on tour. We want to have an album listening and have people in the thang and really hearing the album.”

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    “I can’t drop no album and let the internet judge my album. It just don’t make sense. I just want to be with the people. I want to touch the people and that’s what we gon’ do at the top of the year.”
    And the rapper admitted he’s ready for social distancing measures to end so he can perform and get close to fans.
    “I’m ready to crowd surf. I’m ready to go crazy again… moshpit,” he grinned.
    Although the “Bad and Boujee” hitmakers previously insisted the album wouldn’t be called “Culture III” as expected, Quavo referred to it by that title throughout the new interview.
    “Culture II” featured guest appearances from the likes of Nicki Minaj, Cardi B, Post Malone, and Travis Scott, but it’s not yet been revealed who will feature on the new record.

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    Snoop Dogg Appears to Respond to Eminem's 'Zeus' Diss

    WENN/Instar/Abel Fermin

    The ‘Drop It Like It’s Hot’ emcee previously provoked Slim Shady with his controversial remarks during his appearance on ‘The Breakfast Club’ back in July, saying that Em ‘had zero respect in rap.’

    Dec 24, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Snoop Dogg may have been clapping back at Eminem following his diss on the song “Zeus”. Snoop, who has been making use of his Instagram account to share some inspirational quotes, appears to respond to the shade in one of his posts featuring a quote being hated.
    “Back in the day if someone hated you, it meant you did something WRONG. now a days it means you did something RIGHT!!” read the quote that the “Drop It Like It’s Hot” emcee shared on the photo-sharing site. Alongside that, the rapper wrote in the caption, “Carry on.”

    While he didn’t name any name on the post, fans quickly speculated that it was Snoop’s response to Eminem’s diss. Suggesting the rapper to respond with a new song instead of a subliminal post, one person wrote in the comment section, “Subs are weak Snoop, pick up the mic or the phone.”

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    Further slamming Snoop, another user added, “Eminem is twice the rapper ull ever be.” Someone even thought that “Snoop is scared of Eminem,” while one user believed that “em beat” him.
    “I love snoop but come on u can’t say s**t about someone who was brought up by the same person are u, dre built u like he did em without Dre u wouldn’t be relevant just another dope rapper forgot in the 90s who didn’t have the rep to stay in the eyes of the people,” another person opined, referring to Dr. Dre. Meanwhile, actress Viola Davis showed a strong agreement to Snoop’s quote as she wrote, “Yup!”
    On the song “Zeus”, which os off his surprise new album “Music to Be Murdered By – Side B”, Em rapped in the third verse, “Diplomatic as I’m trying to be, last thing I need is Snoop doggin’ me, man, dogg, you was like a God to me, nah, not really, I had ‘dog’ backwards, but I’m starting to think, all these people takin’ shots at me, s***, it’s no wonder.”
    The tension between Snoop and Em started after the former made some controversial remarks during his appearance on “The Breakfast Club” back in July. “Eminem, the great white hope. White rappers had zero respect in rap,” Snoop said at the time. “Dr. Dre has probably put Eminem in the position that he would be considered one of the top 10 rappers ever. I don’t think so, but the game thinks that he’s [in the] top 10 lyricists and everything that comes with it. That’s just because he’s with Dr. Dre.”
    He went on adding, “There’s some n****as in the 80s that he couldn’t f**k with. Like Rakim, like Big Daddy Kane, like KRS-One, like LL Cool J, like Ice Cube.”

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    Kid Cudi Breaks Record on Billboard Chart With 'Man on the Moon III' Song

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    The ‘Day ‘n’ Nite’ hitmaker makes history as he’s climbing Billboard music chart with the opening song of the final installment of his ‘Man on the Moon’ album series.

    Dec 24, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Kid Cudi has scored a new U.S. chart record with a 37-second song.
    “Beautiful Trip”, the opening song of his new album “Man on the Moon III: The Chosen”, has become the shortest song to chart on the Billboard Hot 100.
    The track sneaks into the countdown at number 100, beating the previous record of 45 seconds, held by Japanese comedian Piko-Taro’s “PPAP (Pen-Pineapple-Apple-Pen)”.
    Meanwhile, “Man on the Moon III: The Chosen” is at number two on the Billboard 200 chart, one place behind Taylor Swift’s “Evermore”.

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    A follow up to his albums “Man on the Moon: The End of Day” (2009) and “Man on the Moon II: The Legend of Mr. Rager” (2010), “The Chosen One” came four years after Kid Cudi’s sixth studio effort “Passion, Pain & Demon Slayin'”.
    Back in 2016, the rapper initially said he was unsure about doing another “Man on the Moon” album.
    But in a new interview recently, he said he was able to deliver the long-overdue project because “the whole flow of my life is like so in tune with like everything that I want it to be.” He told Apple Music host Zane Lowe, “Everything’s in place. And I’m happy, you know?”
    “I truly believe that my heart is in the light and that’s who I am,” he went on. “As long as I keep focus on the mission, write music that helps kids, pushing myself to make new experiences and try new things and be a better artist and a better man in their life, whether it’s to my girlfriend or to my baby mom or to my mother or to my sister – [I’m] just trying to be better.”

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    Rebecca Luker, a Broadway Star for Three Decades, Dies at 59

    AdvertisementContinue reading the main storySupported byContinue reading the main storyRebecca Luker, a Broadway Star for Three Decades, Dies at 59Her Broadway career, fueled by her crystal-clear operatic soprano, brought her Tony Award nominations for “Show Boat,” “The Music Man” and “Mary Poppins.”Rebecca Luker as Maria, surrounded by the von Trapp children, in the 1998 Broadway revival of “The Sound of Music.” She also starred in hit revivals of “Show Boat” and “The Music Man.”Credit…Sara Krulwich/The New York TimesDec. 23, 2020Rebecca Luker, the actress and singer who in a lauded three-decade career on the New York stage embodied the essence of the Broadway musical ingénue in hit revivals of “Show Boat,” “The Sound of Music” and “The Music Man,” died on Wednesday in a hospital in Manhattan. She was 59. The death was confirmed by Sarah Fargo, her agent. Ms. Luker announced in February that she had amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, commonly known as A.L.S. or Lou Gehrig’s disease.Ms. Luker’s Broadway career, fueled by her crystal-clear operatic soprano, brought her three Tony Award nominations. The first was for “Show Boat” (1994), in which she played Magnolia, the captain’s dewy-fresh teenage daughter, whose life is ruined by marriage to a riverboat gambler. The second was for “The Music Man” (2000), in which she was Marian, the prim River City librarian who enchants a traveling flimflam man who thinks — mistakenly — that he’s just passing through town.In between, Ms. Luker delighted critics by playing against type in a 1997 Encores! production of “The Boys From Syracuse.” As Adriana, the neglected wife who gets her groove back (with her husband’s long-lost twin brother), she wore slinky 1930s gowns and exuded what Ben Brantley, in his review for The New York Times, called “a disarmingly confectionary sexiness.”Ms. Luker, center, with Debbie Gravitte, left, and Sarah Uriarte Berry in the 1997 Encores! production of “The Boys From Syracuse.” Credit…Sara Krulwich/The New York TimesPlaying Adriana was fun, Ms. Luker admitted. “For the first time in my life, I got to do a bit,” she told The Times in 1998. “Learning to turn to the audience, learning to hold for laughs — I ate it up with a spoon.”But by the end of that year, she was deep into ingénue territory again, playing Maria, the undisciplined novice nun turned live-in governess of seven, in “The Sound of Music.”When she earned her third Tony nomination, this one for best featured actress in a musical, it was for playing Winifred Banks, a married Englishwoman with two children and a gifted nanny, in “Mary Poppins” (2006).For all her success in musicals, Ms. Luker did not identify as a show-tunes type. “I am so not a musical theater person,” she told Playbill in 2003. “I love rock music and jazz. I love the ’70s stuff I grew up with.”Rebecca Joan Luker was born on April 17, 1961, in Birmingham, Ala., and grew up in Helena, a small town nearby. She was one of four children of Norse Doak Luker Jr., a construction worker, and Martha (Baggett) Luker, the local high school’s treasurer. Rebecca sang in her church choir (First Baptist of Alabaster) and was a member of the Thompson High marching band.In high school, she entered a beauty pageant. Singing “Much More,” the ballad of girlish dreams and determination from “The Fantasticks,” she won a college scholarship as first runner-up to Alabama’s Junior Miss.That took her to the University of Montevallo, just 14 miles from her parents’ home, where she was a music major and received her diploma in 1984. Graduation was a year later than planned because she took a break to work with Michigan Opera Theater, where she met her future New York agent. Just five years after college, she was on the Broadway stage, assuming the lead female role in “The Phantom of the Opera”— Christine, the chorus girl who is the object of the phantom’s affections.“Phantom” was her Broadway debut; she began as the understudy to the original star, Sarah Brightman; became an alternate; and took over as Christine in 1989. She remained with the show until 1991.Ms. Luker moved on immediately to another Broadway show: She played a ghost, the little orphan girl’s dead Aunt Lily, in “The Secret Garden.” In his review in The Times, Frank Rich singled out “I Heard Someone Crying,” Ms. Luker’s haunting trio with Mandy Patinkin and Daisy Egan, for special praise.Ms. Luker in performance at the Allen Room of Jazz at Lincoln Center in 2005. In addition to her theater work, she had a thriving cabaret career.Credit…Rahav Segev for The New York TimesIn several of her later Broadway roles, Ms. Luker replaced the original actress in a long-running hit. She took over as Claudia, the director-protagonist’s movie-star muse, in “Nine” (2003); Marie, the temperamental fairy godmother, in “Cinderella” (2013); and Helen, the frustrated wife and mother who misses being an actress — just as Mrs. Banks had in “Mary Poppins” — in “Fun Home” (2016).She grew older gracefully in a number of her later Off Broadway roles. Twenty years after starring in a 1996 revival of “Brigadoon” as Fiona, a Scottish lass so rare she really does come along only once a century, she played a droll Buffalo matron in A.R. Gurney’s comic drama “Indian Blood” (2006). In 2011, she was an Italian duchess grieving her son’s death in Maury Yeston’s musical “Death Takes a Holiday.”Ms. Luker also had a thriving cabaret career, appearing at intimate venues like Café Carlyle and Feinstein’s/54 Below, but she professed a special love for “the live experience in front of an orchestra.”The stage was always her first home, but she did finally make her screen acting debut in her late 30s when she appeared in “Cupid and Cate” (2000), a Hallmark Hall of Fame television movie in which she played the heroine’s perfect and perfectly sensible sister. Between 2010 and 2020, she had guest roles on series including “Boardwalk Empire” and “N.C.I.S. New Orleans” and appeared in three feature films, including “Not Fade Away” (2012), a drama about a teenage rock band.Her final stage role was as a small-town minister’s narrow-minded wife in a 2019 Kennedy Center production of “Footloose.” She performed at a concert in honor of the lyricist Sheldon Harnick in March 2020.Ms. Luker at home in 2015 with her husband, the actor Danny Burstein.Credit…Tony Cenicola/The New York TimesHer last performance was in June, via Zoom, in a prerecorded benefit performance, “At Home With Rebecca Luker.”“When I sing,” she told The Times shortly before that show, “I think it heals me. It helps me feel like I’m still a part of something.”Ms. Luker married Gregory Jbara, an actor, in 1993; they divorced in 1996. In 2000 she married the actor Danny Burstein, whom she met when they starred together in “Time and Again” in San Diego.Mr. Burstein survives her, as do two stepsons, Zachary and Alexander Burstein; a brother, Roger; a sister, Suzanne Luker; her mother, Martha Hales; and her stepfather, Lamar Hales. Another brother, Stephen, died last year.Looking back on her career in a 2016 Theater People podcast, Ms. Luker expressed gratitude for the roles she’d had but admitted that she probably should have broken out of the leading-lady mold — studied acting longer and more seriously, appeared in more plays, done more comedy.“I wish I had branched out a little more,” she said cheerily. “Maybe played a bitch or something.”Alex Traub contributed reporting.AdvertisementContinue reading the main story More

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    Megan Thee Stallion Thinks Men Are Against 'WAP' Due to 'Fear and Insecurity'

    This is not the first time for either Megan and Cardi B to defend the hit song from criticism with the ‘Bodak Yellow’ femcee weighing in on the matter during her appearance on Australia’s ‘The Kyle and Jackie O’ show.

    Dec 23, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Megan Thee Stallion is weighing in on the criticism over her and Cardi B’s collaborative song “WAP”. In a new interview for British GQ magazine, the “Good News” artist revealed that people, especially men, oppose the raunchy song because they “just don’t know what to do when a woman is in control and taking ownership of her own body.”
    She went on saying, “I feel like for a long time men felt like they owned sex and now women are saying, ‘Hey, this is for me. I want pleasure. This is how I want it or don’t want it,’ it freaks men the hell out.” The Houston raptress also noted that “it just comes from a place of fear and insecurity, like why would anyone be mad about my WAP? It belongs to me.”

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    This is not the first time for either Megan and Cardi to defend the hit song from criticism. During her interview on Australia’s “The Kyle & Jackie O” show, the “Bodak Yellow” femcee weighed in on the matter, saying, “The people that the song bothers are usually conservatives or really religious people. But my thing is…I grew up listening to this type of music. To other people it might be vulgar, but to me, it’s almost really normal.”
    Cardi was also aware that the song is not for children, noting that she didn’t want her 2-year-old daughter Kulture, whom she shares with rapper Offset, to listen to it. “Of course I don’t want my child to listen to the song. But, it’s like, it’s for adults!” she said. “It’s what people want to hear. If people didn’t want to hear it, if they were so afraid to hear it, it wouldn’t be doing so good.”
    Among those who publicly criticized the song was hip-hop vet Snoop Dogg. The “Mac and Devin Go to High School” actor shared his two cents on “WAP” during his virtual interview with host Julissa Bermudez for Central Ave on Thursday, December 10. Alluding that the song is too raunchy for his taste, Snoop opined, “Oh my God. Slow down. Like, slow down. And let’s have some imagination. Let’s have some, you know, privacy, some intimacy where he wants to find out as opposed to you telling him.”
    He went on saying, “To me it’s like, it’s too fashionable when that in secrecy, that should be a woman’s…that’s like your pride and possession. That’s your jewel of the Nile. That’s what you should hold onto. That should be a possession that no one gets to know about until they know about it.”

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