Benson Boone, the singer behind "Beautiful Things," only has one album to his name: 'Fireworks & Rollerblades'. That album has an atrocious cover and title.
Welcome to the 2025 Imagine 2200: Climate Fiction for Future Ancestors collection. For four years, this contest has celebrated stories that invite us to imagine the future we want — futures in ...
The 1954 'Oxblood' Gibson Les Paul was pictured on the cover of Beck’s classic 1975 album Blow By Blow. The guitar had a pre-auction estimate of £300,000 - £500,000. A representative of auctioneers ...
The wait is over: There was no Oscar nomination for “All We Imagine as Light,” the Indian movie that won the Grand Prix at the Cannes Film Festival but was snubbed by the country’s own film ...
K-pop group Got7 dropped its comeback EP, Winter Heptagon, along with the music video for the album's lead track, Python, on Monday (Jan 20). This marks the group’s first release since the self-titled ...
The iconic album cover features a man who is squinting at the camera while smoking a cigarette. He has previously admitted that he wishes he got paid '10p of every album sale', because let's face ...
Time magazine released its inauguration cover on Sunday ahead of Donald Trump's return to the White House, an animation of the incoming president shoving everything off the Oval Office Resolute ...
Even still, 2021’s terrific tenth album As The Love Continues felt like a natural culmination. Cementing their transformation from bratty, tracksuit-clad upstarts to revered elder-statesmen ...
Mac Miller died in 2018 after an accidental overdose at his home in LA For the second time in the seven years since his death, Mac Miller fans have the chance to listen to a new album. The US ...
“Imagine” encapsulates a secular worldview very well: “Imagine there’s no Heaven / It’s easy if you try / No Hell below us / Above us, only sky.” Wow — no accountability. We can make up all the rules.
The New Yorker editor Susan Morrison on Lorne Michaels, the producer who still runs “S.N.L.” with an iron hand. Plus, Tina Fey reads The New Yorker’s review of the show from Season 1. From ...
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