The spread of the coronavirus has caused the cancellation of major sporting events and concerts throughout the country, causing financial uncertainty for thousands of arena workers.
29.02.2020 - 02:41 / pitchfork.com
Justin Raisen, Jeremiah Raisen, and Justin “Yves” Rothman are countersuing Lizzo over plagiarism claims surrounding the hit song “Truth Hurts,” as The New York Times reports and Pitchfork can confirm via court documents.
In their countersuit, filed today (February 28) in a California federal court, the Raisens and Rothman reassert claims they made online last year that they worked on a demo with Lizzo that eventually became “Truth Hurts.”
The lawsuit includes excerpts from alleged text message
The spread of the coronavirus has caused the cancellation of major sporting events and concerts throughout the country, causing financial uncertainty for thousands of arena workers.
In today’s tv news roundup, Variety obtained an exclusive clip of “Torn From the Headlines: New York Post Reports” and AMC released a new promo for “The Walking Dead: World Beyond” Season 2.
GLAAD could be looking at a loss of $2 million because of the coronavirus outbreak.
Since Wednesday when Washington Governor Jay Inslee issued an emergency declaration banning large events with 250 people or more due to the spreading coronavirus outbreak, a wave of other states including California, Ohio and New York have followed suit. Over the weekend, those states, as well as Illinois and Maryland, have called for the closing of all concert venues, w
NEW YORK -- Cancellations and postponements in the entertainment industry continue to mount as the world reacts to the new coronavirus spreading globally.
Harry Styles continued to prove he’s a Lizzo superfan as he confessed he wishes he’d penned her hit Good As Hell.
Tony Romo will remain with CBS as its top NFL analyst after agreeing to a record extension.
Living in New York City can be as emotionally energizing as it can be destabilizing – oftentimes within the same hour. And it's that frantic dichotomy that Maine-born, NYC-based singer-songwriter Luke Rathborne beautifully captures in "Ordinary Woes," a one-take rocker that deftly teeters between exhilaration and exhaustion over a rush of careening guitar riffage.The video for "Ordinary Woes," premiering below, is similarly animated – literally.
As if there was ever any doubt, Lizzo is still «100% that b**ch.»