King Charles is set to make a very significant change to this year's Trooping the Colour parade which is due to unfold on June 15.
16.05.2024 - 15:45 / nme.com
Cardi B has revealed she will not be releasing her highly-anticipated second album this year.In a since-deleted tweet on Tuesday (May 14), the Bronx rapper agreed with a fan who said Cardi’s transparency had “backfired” because of “her fans’ weirdo entitlement”. They also suggested the star should “pull back from social media”.Cardi replied: “Exactly and I tell myself this all the time.
I hate that I fall back and start interacting again and it bites me in the ass.”She went on to confirm that her long-awaited second record would not be coming out in 2024 as previously promised.“Anyway, NO album this year. I don’t care,” Cardi wrote.
“I’m relaxing this year. [I’m] dropping these features I already committed to and travelling and enjoying my summer.” See a screenshot of the post below.Cardi B says no new album in 2024: "I’m relaxing this year" pic.twitter.com/csO4DtQGMV— HipHopDX (@HipHopDX) May 14, 2024In another tweet celebrating four of her songs garnering over one billion streams on Spotify, Cardi B teased new music – still giving hope to fans that there will be more solo material soon.“Wooow FOUR songs that hit the billion mark on Spotify!!,” she wrote on X/Twitter.
“Women lie, men lie… numbers don’t. I’m so excited to put out new music and reach even more milestones.”She added: “Thank you everyone for listening, it really means a lot..
can’t wait for you to see and hear what’s next.”Cardi previously assured fans that she would drop her second LP this year. In March, the ‘Bodak Yellow’ star revealed she has “like 100 songs” stored away – some were recorded as early as January 2023.She said at the time: “I’m not letting my anxiety, I’m not letting what haters say, I’m not letting what fans say… If I do a song, Imma
.King Charles is set to make a very significant change to this year's Trooping the Colour parade which is due to unfold on June 15.
Martin Freeman has candidly discussed his return to eating meat after spending 38 years as a vegetarian.The 52 year old actor, famed for his roles in The Office and Sherlock, alongside Benedict Cumberbatch, opened up about his dietary shift on the podcast Dish, hosted by Nick Grimshaw and Angela Hartnett. He revealed: "I've come off being a vegetarian.
The latest statistics from the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) show the State Pension currently provides regular financial support for nearly 12.7 million older people across the country, including over one million retirees living in Scotland. This payment is available for those who have reached the UK Government’s eligible retirement age, which is currently 66 for both men and women, and have paid at least 10 years' worth of National Insurance Contributions.
Alex Ritman XYZ Films has acquired U.S. rights to the classic Cannes Directors’ Fortnight title “The World is Yours” directed by Romain Gavras from StudioCanal and to the TIFF hit film “We Gotta Get Out of This Place,” directed by Simon Hawkins and Zeke Hawkins.
Seven people were arrested today - Tuesday - as part of an ongoing police investigation into the theft of electricity said to be worth 'tens of thousands of pounds' over years.
Rebecca Rubin Senior Film and Media Reporter “Super/Man,” a documentary about the life of Christopher Reeve, will hit the big screen in the fall. The film, which was widely embraced at Sundance and sold to Warner Bros. Discovery for roughly $15 million, will play in select theaters on Sept.
Cardi B has said the rapper will drop her long-awaited second album this year, despite tweeting otherwise.Last week in a now-deleted tweet, Cardi B said she was delaying the release of her sophomore record.“Anyway, NO album this year,” she wrote. “I don’t care.
Anne Hathaway– and Jessica Chastain-starring psychological thriller “Mothers’ Instinct” is set for release in Chinese theaters. Directed by cinematographer-turned-helmer Benoît Delhomme, the 1960s film depicts a pair of model homemakers and next-door neighbors whose close friendship is severely undone by sudden tragedy. The film is an English-language remake of the 2108 French-language effort by Belgium’s Olivier Masset-Depasse’s film, which was an adaptation of the 2012 novel “Derriere La Haine” by Barbara Abel. The film will release in China on May 24 on 2,500 screens.
Love Island star Shaughna Phillips has shared a nifty hack to help keep your little ones cool this summer.The mum of one, who welcomed her daughter Lucia last April, has shared a delicious snack kids can enjoy in the garden which will cost you just £5 for six. The TV star who has often been open about motherhood since welcoming her first child, took to Instagram to reveal her budget hack that she's trying with her daughter this summer.
Ellise Shafer Cate Blanchett‘s new film “Rumours” took its name from the iconic Fleetwood Mac album, it was revealed on Sunday at a Cannes Film Festival press conference. The dark comedy, directed by Guy Maddin, Evan Johnson and Galen Johnson, follows a group of world leaders who meet at the G7 — a political and economic meeting of the minds between Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States — but get lost in the woods while trying to compose a joint statement.
He might be best-known for his music career, but Harry Styles‘ acting career has well and truly taken off!
Bright Light Bright Light is back with a brand new album, and it’s full of fabulous features!
Ryan J. Sloan‘s “Gazer” is a classic thriller that will surely have Cannes audiences on the edge of their seats when it world premieres in competition in Directors’ Fortnight at this year’s festival. Set in New Jersey and starring Sloan’s partner Ariella Mastroianni, “Gazer” is the story of Frankie, a young mother with a rare degenerative brain condition called dyschronometria.
Alex Garland’s Civil War has been set for a June 7 theatrical release date in China. This marks the first time an A24 production will officially hit cinemas there. The dystopian thriller was acquired by Huahua Media in the market with Alibaba set to partner on the local release.
Patrick Frater Asia Bureau Chief Alex Garland’s critically-acclaimed “Civil War” has confirmed a theatrical release in mainland China. Marking the first A24 production to be released in China, it will arrive in cinemas from June 7. Huahua Media took rights to the film for China. Tech and entertainment giant Alibaba will also be partnering with Huahua throughout the release. Depicting a dystopian future America, the film’s story follows a team of military-embedded journalists as they race against time to reach Washington DC before rebel factions descend upon the White House.
Eurovision this year “until the last second”.This year’s song contest has seen multiple controversies arise in the build up to the finale, which aired last Saturday (May 11).On top of the shock disqualification of Dutch entry Joost Klein, Eurovision organisers the EBU (European Broadcasting Union) had faced significant criticism for the inclusion of Israel amidst the Israel-Palestine crisis.Additionally, there were reports of a “crisis meeting” between four countries and the EBU just hours before the finale was due to begin. These four countries were later revealed to be the United Kingdom, Portgual, Ireland, and the eventual winner of this year, Switzerland.Now, Norway’s entry Gåte have spoken to Norwegian media about their own threat to pull out.
Colin Jost is reacting to Marvel pulling back on their yearly releases!
A Quiet Place: Day One is nearly here!
Michael Schneider Variety Editor at Large “The Bear,” “Bluey,” “Reservation Dogs,” “Last Week Tonight with John Oliver,” “The Last of Us” and “Jury Duty” are among the series set to receive this year’s Peabody Award, the org was set to announce on Thursday morning. The Peabody Awards’ board of 32 jurors have selected 34 winners, all of which received unanimous vote from TV, podcast/radio and web/digital nominees in entertainment, news, documentary, arts, children’s/youth, public service, and interactive programming.
finally available to stream on Disney+ this week.Was it worth the 54-year wait?Well, yes — and no.Some context is needed here first: If you watched “The Beatles: Get Back” — the three-part, eight-hour docuseries directed by none other than Oscar-winning “Lord of the Rings” director Peter Jackson that also premiered on Disney+ in 2021 — you’ve already seen a lot of this.And seen it in the kind of exhaustive detail — from the same footage that Jackson used from “Let It Be” director Michael Lindsay-Hogg — that you can probably break down the level of scruffiness in Paul McCartney’s faux-badass beard.But thankfully — whether or not you’ve already watched the tedious-at-times “Get Back” — this is only 80 minutes versus eight hours of your time.For anyone but the biggest of Beatlemaniacs, that math is math-ing.But here’s the real difference: Whereas “Get Back” captured every bit of Liverpudlian shade, side-eye and Yoko Ono rock-blocking, this “Let It Be” is all about the music that was made in the slow fade of the Fab Four.For most of this film — which documents The Beatles working out songs for what would turn out to be their final album, 1970’s “Let It Be,” in January 1969 — it’s just like being a little four-winged insect on the wall of those sessions at their Apple Corps headquarters in London.Rehearsing, working out songs and just jamming — even with all the mounting tension which is actually more between McCartney and George Harrison than Sir Paul and John Lennon (for all those who still blame Ono for the Beatles’ breakup) — it’s a magical mystery tour behind the scenes of what many consider to be the greatest band of all time.When McCartney and Lennon are in such easy harmony and camaraderie on “Two Of Us” — with the