All posts tagged: Grammys

Major star Peabo Bryson dies aged 75

Major star Peabo Bryson dies aged 75

Disney legend and R&B icon Peabo Bryson passed away on June 2 surrounded by his family, after suffering a stroke days prior. The 75-year-old, best known for his Disney collaborations, “transitioned peacefully at 5:00 p.m. ET,” according to a statement from his representative.  “We are tremendously moved by the outpouring of love, prayers and support from fans, friends, and colleagues around the world,” his family said. “While our hearts are broken, we find comfort in knowing how deeply Peabo was loved and how many lives were touched by his voice and his generous spirit. His legacy and music will live on for generations to come.”  Peabo was raised in South Carolina and showed a penchant for music from a young age, before becoming a member of the group Moses Dillard and the Tex-Town Display in the ’70s.  © Getty ImagesPeabo was a legendary R&B artist and Grammy winner He released his first album in 1976, and achieved his first top 10 R&B hit with “Reaching for the Sky” in 1978. Over the years, the crooner became …

Drake Albums: ‘Iceman,’ ‘Habibti,’ and ‘Maid of Honour’ Review

Drake Albums: ‘Iceman,’ ‘Habibti,’ and ‘Maid of Honour’ Review

The rollout of his big comeback project wasn’t exactly auspicious. Drake foreshadowed one of the releases by erecting a giant sculpture of ice blocks in his native Toronto that, when melted, would reveal the date of Iceman’s drop. Ultimately, the ice sculpture was removed and destroyed by Toronto fire officials after being deemed a public safety hazard. To quote an ever popular and enduring meme, in many ways Drake came into the release of Iceman, Habibti, and Maid of Honour “at his lowest…fat, nasty, and broke. Career in shambles.” But surprisingly, the best tracks off these albums are the ones on which he lets go of that anger and gets a little silly. While it debuted at No. 3 on the chart—making it the lowest-ranked of Drake’s three new offerings—Maid of Honour is the best album of the trilogy, the one on which he largely lets go of his bitterness and resentment and has some fun again. Drake has always had many facets as an artist, and he’s a prolific one at that. There’s the …

Bad Bunny Turns Up As Benjamin Bunny for the Met Gala, Age Spots and All

Bad Bunny Turns Up As Benjamin Bunny for the Met Gala, Age Spots and All

Bad Bunny showed up to the 2026 Met Gala more like a Bad Rabbit. The recent album of the year Grammy winner showed up to fashion’s biggest night made up to look about 50 years older than he actually is, complete with old age prosthetics, grey hair, and a cane. Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue His prosthetics were made by Mike Marino, the makeup artist also been behind many of Heidi Klum’s most memorable costumes. Per Vogue, Marina hand-sculpted every blemish and wrinkle on Bad Bunny’s face, from his pock marks to his sags. The result is an uncanny look at how Bad Bunny, born Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio, might look almost half a century into the future. Bad Bunny was obviously inspired by the Met’s exhibit, “Costume Art,” which runs from May 10 through January 10, 2027, and explores the “dressed body” an embodied art form. “Perhaps reflecting our fear of having to face our own mortality, the youth-oriented fashion industry has traditionally ignored the aged body,” reads a plaque included in …

Lizzo Didn’t Have Sex Until After Her First Grammy Win In 2020

Lizzo Didn’t Have Sex Until After Her First Grammy Win In 2020

Lizzo has shared that she kept a promise to herself not to have sex until after winning a Grammy. The Good As Hell singer is the latest guest on the Friends Keep Secrets podcast, where she disclosed that she was a “late bloomer” when it came to having sex for the first time. Admitting that this was something she “lied about” for “a long time”, Lizzo eventually said that her first time was in 2020, when she was in her early 30s. “Isn’t that crazy?” she remarked, admitting that sex was a subject she “wasn’t even thinking about” until that point. The chart-topping star noted: “I promised myself when I was younger that I wouldn’t have sex until I won a Grammy.” In January 2020, Lizzo picked up her first Grammy Awards in the Best Pop Solo Performance category for her hit Truth Hurts, Best Traditional R&B Performance for the album track Jerome and Best Urban Contemporary Album (now known as Best Progressive R&B Album) for her release Cuz I Love You. She added during …

70s star is incredibly ageless in ultra-rare appearance

70s star is incredibly ageless in ultra-rare appearance

Joni Mitchell made a breathtaking return to the spotlight on Sunday night, stepping out for a rare public appearance at the 2026 JUNO Awards held at TD Coliseum in Hamilton, Ontario.  The legendary singer-songwriter, now 82, proved that true icon status never fades as she graced the red carpet with quiet elegance and unmistakable presence. Dressed in a richly textured black velvet ensemble adorned with intricate patterns, Joni completed her look with a matching beret, statement jewelry, and a walking cane.  © Getty ImagesJoni Mitchell attends the 2026 JUNO Awards Her silver-blonde hair was styled in soft waves over one shoulder, while her glowing complexion and warm smile captivated fans. Despite keeping a relatively low profile in recent years, Joni’s appearance was met with widespread admiration, with many praising her enduring beauty and strength. The Canadian music icon’s presence at the JUNOs felt especially significant given her extraordinary legacy, which has shaped generations of artists and redefined the boundaries of songwriting. © Getty ImagesJoni’s presence at the JUNO Awards was truly inspirational Rising to prominence …

Stolen Land At The Grammys: How Hollywood Groupthink Threatens Democracy

Stolen Land At The Grammys: How Hollywood Groupthink Threatens Democracy

Authored by Patrick Keeney via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours), Commentary Among the consolations of youth is the certainty with which one holds beliefs about the world. There is comfort in the conviction that one’s moral bearings are firmly set, that one’s understanding of complex questions is not only sincere but also correct. The world appears legible; right and wrong seem sharply drawn; doubt and nuance are dismissed as weakness or evasion. The 68th Grammy Awards Premiere Ceremony at Peacock Theater in Los Angeles on Feb. 1, 2026. Photo by Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images for The Recording Academy There is rarely a single moment when these certainties collapse. They loosen instead through the slow accumulation of experience. Over time, one discovers that life resists easy judgments. Circumstances complicate principles. Good intentions collide with unintended consequences. Our friends betray us. The world proves denser, more conflicted, and less amenable to neat and tidy conclusions than youthful confidence would suggest. This recognition of complexity, fallibility, and the limits of one’s own certainty is among the quiet achievements of …

Critics Mock Trump’s Super-Triggered Meltdown Over Bad Bunny

Critics Mock Trump’s Super-Triggered Meltdown Over Bad Bunny

“Nobody understands a word this guy is saying,” Trump griped on his Truth Social website about Bad Bunny’s performance, which ― like his award-winning music ― was almost entirely in Spanish. Trump also complained that the performance was “an affront to the Greatness of America” and “a ‘slap in the face’ to our Country.” Bad Bunny’s performance wasn’t overtly political. Other than one sequence of dancing and singing atop mock electrical poles – which many took to be a reference to Puerto Rico still battling power outages nearly a decade after Hurricane Maria – the closest the show came to politics was a message on the video screen at Levi’s Stadium that said: “The only thing more powerful than hate is love.” It was a callback to his speech at the Grammy Awards in which Bad Bunny said “ICE out” as he slammed Trump’s immigration crackdown while appealing for unity and love. However, he also shouted “God bless America” and extended that sentiment to all the nations of the hemisphere as he name-checked each one. …

Was Bad Bunny Wearing a Bulletproof Vest at the 2026 Grammy Awards?

Was Bad Bunny Wearing a Bulletproof Vest at the 2026 Grammy Awards?

And yet all some corners of the internet seem to be able to talk about is whether or not Bad Bunny was wearing a bulletproof vest underneath his tuxedo. A TikTok video captioned “Bulletproof vest at the red carpet THIS ISN’T NORMAL” by the account @itsjustgirlstuff, states that the artist was wearing a bulletproof vest at the Grammys “due to threats and political issues.” The video, which cites no sources, currently has 1.6M likes and 10.5M views. “I’m so scared for him because he represents everything they hate,” a comment with 293.1K likes reads. The clip features a video of Bad Bunny on the red carpet with a song from The Hunger Games superimposed with a voice over of Donal Trump speaking as its soundtrack. It’s not the only video that has caught wind. An explainer video has racked up 1.9M views, and there is even a video featuring an AI-generated voice over that mimics Bad Bunny’s voice that sees him explaining why he was wearing the vest. Except that he wasn’t. There are no …

Bad Bunny Tops Grammys 2026 Fashion Power Rankings

Bad Bunny Tops Grammys 2026 Fashion Power Rankings

One man upended perhaps the biggest trend set over three years of The Hollywood Reporter‘s Red Carpet Power Rankings — but if anyone excels at breaking boundaries, it’s Bad Bunny. At the 2026 Grammys Sunday night, the superstar born Benito Antonio Martinez Ocasio became the first artist to win album of the year for a project not in English, the Spanish-language Debí Tirar Más Fotos — and anyone who fell in love with what Bad Bunny was wearing surely identified with the album title — which translates to “I should’ve taken more photos” — an understandable sentiment given how well the star and his style performed in the Power Rankings. His Grammy victories and the frenzied interest reflected in these numbers also set him up nicely for his much-discussed halftime performance Sunday at Super Bowl LX. He also busted a key streak in THR‘s annual analysis of how luxury brands perform in earned engagement during the awards season. Simply put, women and what they’re wearing have always performed better than men on the red carpet …

Justin Bieber Shredded the Competition at the Grammys, Awards or No Awards

Justin Bieber Shredded the Competition at the Grammys, Awards or No Awards

This is an edition of the newsletter Pulling Weeds With Chris Black, in which the columnist weighs in on hot topics in culture. Sign up here to get it in your inbox every Thursday. The 68th annual Grammy Awards (“Music’s Biggest Night,” according to the Grammy Awards) took place this past Sunday at the still-hilariously-named Crypto.com arena in Los Angeles. As usual, this year’s ceremony—the last one before the telecast moves to ABC, Hulu, and Disney+ in 2027, ending the Grammys’ 50-plus-year partnership with CBS—was a mixed bag. It was (mercifully) Trevor Noah’s last time hosting after six years, and he was unable to muster a single funny joke, even when he leaned on the famous faces in the crowd. Sidling up to the beloved Kendrick Lamar only to make a Drake joke felt dated and lame, but expectations were on the floor. Addison Rae performed her song “Fame Is a Gun” in the loading-dock underbelly of the arena, but somehow made it seem pretty cool in her Y2K-revival way, even though no one believed …