
ASAP Rocky returns to the stage — via helicopter — at Rolling Loud California
Wearing dark sunglasses, walnut-sized diamond earrings and a T-shirt with a bulletproof vest printed on it, the rapper, style maven and professional wife guy began his headlining set at this weekend's Rolling Loud California festival by descending down a cable hanging from a helicopter suspended over the show's main stage as his song 'ASAP Forever' blared across the grounds of Inglewood's Hollywood Park.
'I'ma be honest with y'all — I'm so happy to see y'all right now, y'all don't even understand,' he told the crowd once he'd reached the stage. 'It was real hectic for a n— recently. It got real sticky real quick.'
Saturday's performance was ASAP Rocky's first since he was acquitted last month in a high-stakes trial in Los Angeles in which he faced two counts of felony assault after being accused of shooting a former friend and collaborator near the W Hollywood hotel in 2021. The 36-year-old Harlem native made headlines throughout the trial, both for the extravagant outfits he wore to court and for the presence in the courtroom of his partner, the pop superstar Rihanna, with whom he shares two young sons. Yet a guilty verdict threatened to derail the career of a hip-hop A-lister who in some ways had already moved on from music.
With a bleary, almost hallucinatory sound that blended elements of rap from New York, L.A., Houston and Atlanta, Rocky was a key figure in the 2010s dismantling of hip-hop's once-rigid style orthodoxies; his early music — singles like 'Peso' and 'Purple Swag' and his debut album, 'Long. Live. ASAP,' which topped the Billboard 200 in 2013 — laid crucial groundwork for many of the young disrupters who now dominate the genre (not least Playboi Carti, who's set to headline Night 2 of Rolling Loud on Sunday).
As his inheritors have taken over, Rocky has focused on his fashion deals with Puma and Ray-Ban, on his acting gig in an upcoming Spike Lee movie and on his relationship with Rihanna, whom he frequently — and endearingly — turns up in public to cheer on, as at her Super Bowl halftime show in 2023. His most recent album, 'Testing,' came out nearly seven years ago, though he's been promising that a new LP is coming soon.
All of which has left his place in music uncertain enough that Drake felt compelled to take a shot at Rocky during his recent feud with Kendrick Lamar. 'I ain't even know you rapped still 'cause they only talking 'bout your fit again,' Drake said in his song 'Family Matters,' 'Probably gotta have a kid again before you think of dropping any s— again.'
This performance at rap's biggest festival franchise, then, wasn't just an opportunity for Rocky to celebrate his acquittal but a chance to reassert his musical standing — something of a tradition at Rolling Loud, which hosted Travis Scott in 2023 in the wake of his ill-fated Astroworld festival and which hosted Kanye West last year after a series of antisemitic remarks led many in the entertainment industry to sever ties with him.
By the miserable standards of the latter gig — in which Kanye simply milled around a stage as his records played over the festival's sound system — Rocky's set Saturday was a success insofar as he had a microphone and he actually used it. But the show, which started an hour after it was scheduled and lasted only 45 minutes, still felt somewhat underwhelming (at least after the helicopter moment).
He did a boisterous 'Riot (Rowdy Pipe'n)' that had guys jumping on cars as they waved upside-down American flags, and he jumped on a car himself for 'Tailor Swif,' in which he recounts his hard-won come-up; he brought out Skepta for 'Praise the Lord (Da Shine)' and did 'Highjack,' a 2024 collaboration with the folk-pop singer Jessica Pratt that shows he can still assemble unlikely combinations.
Yet new songs like 'Stop Snitching' and 'Your Honor' — both clearly shaped by his experience in the criminal justice system — were pretty lumpy; neither had much of a chorus nor a coherent political argument, which is what he led you to expect by surrounding himself for the former with men holding flashlights and wearing tactical gear and by doing the latter from behind a speechmaker's podium.
'In America it's a lot of s— separating us right now, but when I look in this crowd, I see unity,' he said, which — OK.
Rocky also skipped most of the striking old hits that established his place in hip-hop: no 'Peso,' no 'Goldie,' certainly no 'F— Problems,' which feels these days like a relic of a lost age given that it featured both Drake and Lamar. Indeed, given Rolling Loud's teenage and 20-something audience — not to mention the preponderance of young acts onstage including Sexyy Red and Peso Pluma — you can understand why he might not have called attention to his age. But here it wasn't obvious what he wants to do instead.
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Business Insider
5 hours ago
- Business Insider
Sharon Stone will play the villain — on one condition
Sharon Stone has been asked to play the villain so many times in her career that she's lost count. But she gets it. Her most famous role, playing the ice-pick-wielding seductress Catherine Tramell in the 1992 sensation "Basic Instinct," turned her from a 1980s B-movie starlet into an international sex symbol, while her character instantly became an iconic movie villain. So when she got the call recently from Universal asking if she'd be up for playing the baddie in "Nobody 2," the sequel to the ultra-violent 2021 thriller starring Bob Odenkirk as an unlikely assassin, she was ready to pass. "I just don't want to play a cookie-cutter villain, which is something that I really have a thing about," Stone, 67, told Business Insider over Zoom from her home, sporting light blue shades she'd often take off when she got excited while telling a story. "After 'Basic Instinct,' everybody wanted me to play a villain. But that was not cookie-cutter; it was a villain that touched upon the zeitgeist of the moment. That was why it was so specifically successful, and why it remains interesting to watch." So Stone came back to the studio with an idea for a character she'd been thinking about playing since watching her three sons play violent video games during the pandemic. "It was like living in a frat house, they were all screaming out of their rooms while they were playing," Stone recalled. "There is no cruelty like the kind that came out of those computers. So this character I made up came through that. I said, 'I want to play a character that essentially comes right out of social media.'" It resulted in Stone delivering a ruthless and delightfully unhinged performance as Lendina, a crime boss who causes trouble for Odenkirk's character Hutch while he's vacationing with his family. Stone's recollections of "Nobody 2" were just a warm-up for the stories she told me while reminiscing about her legendary career. From breaking down her confrontational first meeting with Michael Douglas before auditioning for "Basic Instinct," to sharing her reaction to getting slapped by Gene Hackman in " The Quick and the Dead," to plotting to play the late comic legend Phyllis Diller in a biopic, Stone's decades in Hollywood have been as fruitful as they are colorful. Below, she looks back at some of her most memorable roles. On roller-skating to auditions and getting cast by Woody Allen Sharon Stone: I'm still modeling, and I still make more money today modeling than in film. It's still a huge part of my reality. But back then, I wanted to be a director. But the pesky vagina has stood in my way. Because how could you possibly have a brain and a vagina? It seems to have confounded so many. How did you land that now-memorable shot of you inside the train in Woody Allen's "Stardust Memories"? The casting agent Riccardo Bertoni cast extras in New York. He was a guy who really saw talent. He helped Sly [Stallone] get "Rocky" made. He saw me and said, "Girl, you're a star, and I'm going to get you in front of people." I didn't have any money, so I would rollerskate to all my modeling appointments. This was back in the Studio 54 period of New York City. I went over to Riccardo's and he told me that Juliet Taylor was casting extras for this Woody Allen movie. He told me to go to this bus stop. Woody was actually sitting at the bus stop. Juliet had a podium placed in front of it, and she would look at everyone's headshots. So I rollerskated over there and had my giant modeling portfolio with me and showed it to her. She turned around and passed it to Woody in the bus stop. Then she said, "Woody would like you to sit down with him." So I skated into the bus stop and sat with Woody, and he looked at my stuff and didn't say anything, and handed it back to me, and I skated away. And I later found out I got the job. On the day of shooting, the 1st AD came out and he said, "Sharon, there was a girl who was going to play a part and she's sick, Woody's going to come out and talk to you." Woody comes over and tells me, "I want you to do this job, it's today." I was self-conscious, I was 19, and they put me in this tight dress, and I was so awkward about my body. The hair person put a real gardenia in my hair. It really meant the world to me that she did that. It made me feel important. And then Gordon Willis was the DP, the man who shot "The Godfather." It was an amazing experience. On her contentious first encounter with Michael Douglas before they co-starred in 'Basic Instinct' Did Paul Verhoeven ever bring up "Basic Instinct" to you when you two made "Total Recall"? No. And what happened was I wanted the part, but nobody would give me the script. So my manager, Chuck Binder, broke into the office by picking the lock with his credit card and stole the "Basic Instinct" script for me. I read it and I said, "I'm having this part." Everyone they went out to would turn it down. But the thing was, Michael Douglas did not want to put his bare ass out on the screen with an unknown. And I understood that. He wouldn't even test with me. But that was also for a different reason; we had an argument prior to that. This was at Cannes. A bunch of us were all sitting, and he was talking about someone and their kids. I really, really knew this person he was talking about. So I said something and he responded to me, saying, "What the fuck do you know?" It was in regard to a father/child relationship. Clearly, it triggered him. So he screams this at me across a whole group of people. And I'm not the person who goes, "Oh, excuse me, superstar." I pushed back my chair and said to him, "Let's step outside." That's how we first met. Did you two step outside? Yeah. And I explained to him what the fuck I knew about this family he was speaking about, and that I was best friends with the children and the parent. And then we parted, I wouldn't say as best friends, but amicably. So, fast forward to casting "Basic Instinct," I don't think he wanted me to be his costar. [ Laughs.] (Editor's note: Michael Douglas did not reply to a request for comment.) But I would imagine that tension between you two fueled the dynamic your characters had in the movie. It worked great, because I was not rattled if he yelled at me. That was interesting for the character, because Michael has a temper, and I didn't care. That worked very well in our dynamic. Eventually, we became the greatest of friends, to this day. I admire him tremendously. The role of Catherine Tramell made you an icon, but you had a price to pay. From the way you learned what was shown in the leg-crossing scene to the custody battle you endured afterwards with your child, if you could do it all over again, would you take the role? It made me an icon, but it didn't bring me respect. But would I do it again? We don't get to make these choices in life. I don't participate in the fantasy world in this way. What I did with what happened is exactly the way I wanted to do it. Verhoeven and I have a wonderful relationship. I would work with him again in a second. We both understand, even though we have different public ways of discussing it, we understand very well what happened regarding the crotch scene. I very much believe that none of us knew at the time what we were getting in regard to that shot, and when Paul got it, he didn't want to lose it, and he was scared to show me. And I get that. Once I had time to calm down, I didn't make him take it out of the movie when I had the legal right to. So I did have the chance to do it differently and I didn't, because once I had the chance to step back, I understood, as the director, not the girl in the film, that that made the movie better. On getting slapped by Gene Hackman in 'The Quick and the Dead' and Robert De Niro getting under her skin in 'Casino' Is the legend true that while shooting "The Quick and the Dead," the scene where Gene Hackman slaps you was improvised? Yes. And it's also true that right after he did it, I grabbed him by his lapels and picked him up off his feet. The people who played our bodyguards in the scene didn't know what to do, so they all cocked their rifles. And [director] Sam [Raimi] yelled, "CUT! CUT! CUT! EVERYBODY CALM DOWN!" [ Laughs.] Did Gene give any explanation for why he slapped you? No, and I don't think there should be. I think it's good. I have worked with actors who really get cranked up in their performances and can get violent in their work. We talk before we work, or I know going in. In "Casino," was it more fun working across from Robert De Niro or Joe Pesci? It's apples and oranges. Joey really, really fought for me to be seen and get the job. So I have a serious loyalty to Joey because he's always backed me. It was always Joey and Jimmy Caan. They backed me since I was 19. I always wanted to work with Bob. I had auditioned with him many times before "Casino." It was my dream to work with De Niro and hold my own. There's a scene in the movie where we're sitting across a table arguing and he says to me, "You're a good actress, you know that?" And I remember in that scene when he said it, how furious it made me because it was my dream to do it, and then he challenged me at the table. I remember thinking, "Oh, buddy. Not today, pal." He knew every button to go for with me because he is the greatest observational actor. He can crawl under your skin and get in there. On wanting to make a Phyllis Diller biopic and learning her laugh Do you want to play Phyllis Diller one day? I do want to play Phyllis Diller very, very badly. She and I were very close friends. She cooked me dinner a lot of times. That woman could cook. I told her I wanted to play her, and she sat down and taught me her laugh. She made me practice her laugh! Phyllis made little paintings for all my kids. Are you actively trying to get a biopic off the ground? I'm trying. You know, she didn't hit it big until she was 49. She lived in a trailer park with 5 kids and her schizophrenic husband, and practiced her act on women at the laundromat. It's unbelievable. I think there are great actors who could play Bob Hope, Red Buttons, Johnny Carson. Sam Rockwell could play Johnny in his sleep. We were tight. Yes, I'm desperate to play her. This interview has been condensed and edited for clarity. "Nobody 2" hits theaters August 15. More from this series
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15 hours ago
- Travel + Leisure
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Instead of Polka Dots, Buy Madewell Striped Mini Skirt, $70 (originally $98) Madewell Striped Mini Skirt, $70 (originally $98) Instead of Barrel Jeans, Buy Levi's 501 '90s Straight-leg Ankle Jeans, $98 Levi's 501 '90s Straight-leg Ankle Jeans, $98 Instead of Bloomers, Buy Stratus Lace-trim Satin Shorts, $67 with code SHOPSALE (originally $148) Stratus Lace-trim Satin Shorts, $67 with code SHOPSALE (originally $148) Instead of Mesh Flats, Buy Dsevht Crochet Ballet Flats, $50 Dsevht Crochet Ballet Flats, $50 Instead of Sneaker Mary Janes, Buy Puma Speedcat OG Sneaker, $100 Puma Speedcat OG Sneaker, $100 Instead of Toe-ring Sandals, Buy Wnshonzy Metal Hardware Flip-flops. $45 From satin skirts to sweet midi dresses, polka dots are the biggest print of the season. The nostalgic style adds a feminine touch to any outfit, and I've loved seeing it paired with more masculine pieces. I have a polka dot skirt myself, but I have a feeling it will burn out quickly. 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Whether you splurge on the Reformation Fern Satin Shorts or dare to wear the $13 Ekouaer Satin Pajama Shorts in daylight, satin styles are so much more timeless than bloomers—and fashion people are starting to wear them in lieu of more traditional short styles. Eyelet shorts are another more versatile option that still exudes plenty of style; try these eyelet shorts from Madewell that can be dressed up or down and are on sale for just $47. Last year, I spotted mesh flats on a select few of the most fashionable of New Yorkers. This year, they're everywhere. I'm predicting that by next year, we are all going to hate the trend, and resale shops will fill to the brim with the discarded mesh flats we've grown tired of. Instead, I found unique ballet flats that are so much better. If you still want to show some skin, the Dsevht Crochet Ballet Flats are a great choice (and will make you look so in-the-know). Shopping for something truly timeless? The red Dream Pairs Ballet Flats make a statement, and they'll be in style for years. Shop even more of my top picks, below. Low-profile sneakers and Mary Jane flats had an ultra-trendy baby, and it's the most polarizing shoe of the season. Whenever two trends come together to create a hybrid trend, I'm wary of its lifespan, but something tells me this one will be especially short-lived. Instead of buying a pair of 'sneakerinas,' I recommended either buying sneakers or Mary Janes (or one of each!) that are just as cute and comfortable—but won't look dated in a year or two. In place of Puma's Speedcat Ballet Shoes, I'm opting for the original sneaker version that's just as trendy. Plus, I've found a Mary Jane mule that's just as unique, and it comes from one of the comfiest shoe brands around. Keep scrolling to discover your new staple shoe. I can't deny it: I'm obsessed with toe-ring sandals. My favorite pairs feature metal detailing on the toe loop, resulting in an elevated yet laid-back look. As much as I love the trend, however, I've been holding back on purchasing a pair for myself. In all honesty, I don't think I'll be pulling these sandals out of my closet to wear next summer. While the toe-ring style may die out soon, I'm predicting that metal hardware is here to stay. I found four gorgeous pairs of sandals with statement hardware, including flip-flops, gladiator sandals, and travel-ready slides. These pairs are versatile enough to dress up or down, and I'm willing to bet you'll be wearing them for years to come. Love a great deal? Sign up for our T+L Recommends newsletter and we'll send you our favorite travel products each week.
Yahoo
16 hours ago
- Yahoo
Cooper wipes away tears over murder victim as ninja sword ban takes effect
Yvette Cooper shed tears as she became emotional discussing the victim of a ninja sword stabbing in Wolverhampton. As a ban on the weapons came into effect, the home secretary described the mother of Ronan Kanda, 16, showing her the last moment she shared with her son before he was murdered. 'His mother, Pooja, showed me the CCTV from outside her house. [It was] the last time she saw her son. It was the honour of her showing me their affectionate goodbye … then he goes off and she doesn't see him again,' Ms Cooper told The Times as she wiped away tears. Ronan was stabbed through the heart with a ninja sword in a case of mistaken identity in Wolverhampton in 2022. CCTV of the attack showed Ronan smiling at his phone with his headphones in when he was attacked with the weapon that two 16-year-olds had bought online. Pooja went on to launch a campaign urging ministers to ban ninja swords and knives with blades longer than 14 inches, with a single, straight cutting edge and a tanto-style point. She was awarded an OBE in the King's birthday honours for services to knife crime prevention. Ms Cooper unveiled the ban shortly after Labour came into power last July under a package titled Ronan's Law. Speaking as it came into effect, she said: 'I can talk you through all the targeted policing we're doing but in the end it is about what [victims'] families are experiencing and the change they want to see.' Those caught with ninja swords now face up to six months in prison, a sentence which will rise to two years under Labour's Crime and Policing Bill. 'Since day one, we have acted with urgency to turn the tide on knife crime, which destroys lives and devastates communities,' Ms Cooper told The Times. Reacting to the ban when it was tabled in parliament, Ms Kanda said: 'Since losing our beautiful boy Ronan, we have relentlessly campaigned for a ban on ninja swords – the lethal weapon which took his life. 'We believe ninja swords have no place in our society other than to seriously harm and kill. Each step towards tackling knife crime is a step towards getting justice for our boy Ronan.' Ninja swords can be handed over in knife-surrender bins or local police stations under a surrender scheme running in July. Under Ronan's Law, the Home Office has also announced a raft of measures, including making retailers report bulk or suspicious sales to police, and increasing the jail sentence for selling weapons to children, or illegal blades such as zombie knives, to two years.