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Mariah Carey displays her jaw-dropping curves in a figure-hugging white crochet dress as she leaves her hotel in London
Mariah Carey displays her jaw-dropping curves in a figure-hugging white crochet dress as she leaves her hotel in London

Daily Mail​

time15-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mail​

Mariah Carey displays her jaw-dropping curves in a figure-hugging white crochet dress as she leaves her hotel in London

Mariah Carey turned heads as she showed off her toned curves in a figure-hugging dress while departing her hotel in London on Saturday. The music legend, 56, looked jaw-dropping in the white crochet number which perfectly enhanced her ample cleavage. The Obsessed With Me hitmaker looked radiant as she made a quick stop to greet dedicated fans and onlookers on her way out. The Songbird Supreme completed her classy look with a pair of nude Louis Vuitton platform wedges. Mariah added oversized dark shades and accessorised with a butterfly ring - a nod to her long-time symbol of personal freedom and transformation. From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the DailyMail's new Showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop. Her outing in London comes after Mariah announced she is returning to Australia this year to headline Fridayz Live, marking her first tour Down Under in over a decade. Daily Mail Australia exclusively revealed that the pop star will play shows in Sydney and Melbourne later this year. And this October, Fridayz Live hits the road for a massive Australian tour after a year off, bringing a string of major artists to Sydney, Brisbane, Melbourne and Perth. Five-time Grammy winner Mariah, who was recently on tour in Asia for the 20th anniversary of her album The Emancipation of Mimi, will perform alongside US rapper Wiz Khalifa and Pitbull. 'I missed you terribly, certainly the fans and the people, the beautiful land and the animals, you know, it's Australia, c'mon!' she said. Mariah is bringing her dazzling glamour and a setlist stacked with chart-topping tracks to Fridayz Live including Fantasy, Always Be My Baby and We Belong Together. The pop favourite is also set to bring her Celebration of Mimi tour, commemorating the 20th anniversary of her acclaimed 2005 album The Emancipation of Mimi, to international audiences, with Australian dates expected to be announced soon. 'Mariah has been eager to reconnect with her Australian fans,' an entertainment promoter told Daily Mail Australia. 'The Celebration of Mimi tour is the perfect opportunity to do so, and plans are underway to include Australia in the tour itinerary later this year.' Mariah recently teased fans with an Instagram video featuring an Australian flag and kangaroos marked on a calendar, hinting at upcoming tour dates in the country. This follows the cancellation of her planned 2018 Australian tour due to a 'scheduling conflict'. While official dates and venues are yet to be confirmed, fans are encouraged to stay tuned for announcements. Tickets are expected to sell quickly once released, given the singer's enduring popularity and the anticipation surrounding her return to Australian stages.

Snoop Dogg reveals his family has suffered a devastating loss
Snoop Dogg reveals his family has suffered a devastating loss

Daily Mail​

time13-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mail​

Snoop Dogg reveals his family has suffered a devastating loss

Snoop Dogg revealed he was reeling from a personal tragedy on Thursday. The 53-year-old rap icon shared on Instagram that his much-loved French Bulldog Juelz had died after being with his family for nearly 11 years. 'Miss my dogg @juelzbroadus,' Snoop captioned a video slideshow featuring images of the adorable pooch throughout the years. Juelz became an essential member of his family and a perfect complement to his other French Bulldog, Frank, over their decade together. The tiny dog came into Snoop's orbit after his good friend Wiz Khalifa gave him Juelz as a birthday present in 2014, when the Gin And Juice rapper turned 43. The tragedy follows a triumph for Snoop after his longtime friend Dr. Dre helped present him with the Ultimate Icon Award at the BET Awards on Sunday, where other stars including Mariah Carey and Jamie Foxx were also honored. In another post, Snoop wrote, 'Rip @juelzbroadus 😢 thank wiz for giving him to me 🌹🕊️.' The rapper and cultural icon has had numerous dogs throughout his lifetime. In addition to Juelz and Frank, he owned the Pitbulls Lil Snoop and Mamba, as well as several other dogs and Siamese cats named Miles Davis and Frank Sinatra. But Juelz may have been his most high-profile pet, as the cute pooch boasted his own Instagram account for years. Shortly after receiving the Frenchie, Snoop began documenting ever cute thing he did for tens of thousands of fans. But he appears to have lost interest in the account in recent years, and the last post was from June of 2021. In his memorial slideshow, Snoop featured photos of Juelz going all the way back to when he was just a puppy. The hitmaker, who was clearly in love with the sweet pooch, was also joined by Wiz in some of the photos. Snoop previously found himself in the news due a scary incident with one of his other dogs. In January 2022, his Frenchie Frank went missing in LA, but a couple found him and reunited them just days later Snoop previously found himself in the news due a scary incident with one of his other dogs. In January 2022, his other Frenchie Frank left his family devastated when he went missing. Snoop alerted his fans on social media and posted missing signs with the location in Los Angeles that his dog was last seen before escaping. Tragedy was averted days later when he revealed that a couple in the area had found Frank and facilitated their reunion. He was so grateful to the 'lovely couple' for finding his dog that he promised some 'gifts' were on the way for them. Snoop has also combined his love of dogs and his friendship with Martha Stewart when the two joined forces to host — and even coach — multiple installments of the Puppy Bowl in recent years.

Ab-Soul Dishes Out Key Ingredients To ‘Soul Burger'
Ab-Soul Dishes Out Key Ingredients To ‘Soul Burger'

Yahoo

time06-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Ab-Soul Dishes Out Key Ingredients To ‘Soul Burger'

For Ab-Soul, rapping is not only his musical gift but a tool to honor his past, present, and future, while depicting life's highs and lows through metaphors, hyperbole, and personification. With each album release, the 38-year-old finds himself drawing inspiration from pockets of hope, lived experiences, pits of despair, and pursuits of solace, and that's all apparent in his most recent release. On his latest album, Soul Burger, he fuses his talents with the spirit of his close friend and collaborator, the late Armon 'Doe Burger' Stringer, who was killed in December 2021. Through 15 tracks, Ab-Soul ensures his brother's creative legacy lives on. While sitting backstage before his performance at Red Bull's BC One tournament in Denver, VIBE sat with him and explored the inspirations behind some of the album's stand-out tracks. The Carson native's smile was just as sharp as the fresh braids neatly fashioned on either side of a deep center part. Despite his dark sunglasses, worn due to legal blindness caused by Stevens-Johnson syndrome, suggesting a sense of mystique, one thing became clear: Ab-Soul is an open book for those willing not to judge its cover. For nearly half an hour, the father of two engaged in conversation. We laughed, reflected, hugged, and connected on the unique ingredients that went into Soul Burger, how he prepared for the Good Vibes Only Tour: Smoker's Edition with Wiz Khalifa, Dom Kennedy, Earl Sweatshirt, and others, and much more. VIBE: Congrats on the tour. How excited are you for that, and what cities are you most excited to hit? Ab-Soul: I'm always always excited. I'm always appreciative and always looking forward to going out and touching the people, and actually feeling a response from the projects because it's literally kinetic. It's a really strange energy, and it's so important to me versus just releasing me when I should be chillin. I actually be feeling the energy, so that was very important. I don't have any particular cities that I'm looking forward to, but of course I love New York. I lived in the Bronx for a couple of years. That's where they say Hip-Hop started…That's what I heard. But, yeah, definitely looking forward to it, man. It's a blessing. With this being The World Famous Soul Burger Tour, can fans expect the album top to bottom? Are you gonna bring some old stuff or new stuff? I'm planning to come to see you in Atlanta. What am I looking forward to when I pull up to this show? Expect the best, man. Prepare for the worst. The worst meaning I said the craziest. It became crazier and crazier and crazier. You said Atlanta, right? Yeah, you see it? You'll get it later. But you know, I got collabs all over the place. I've got a tour coming with Wiz Khalifa. We just hit Red Rocks for 4-20. Wiz is really cool, man. Real cool dude. This is personal because you were gone for a minute, and life was life-ing. But with your last couple of projects, that momentum is coming back. You're outside more. What does the last few years feel like compared to prior years? To be perfectly honest with you, at this point in my life, it's kinda like second nature. Like I said, man, I'm just grateful to still be alive, man. As you know, I done been through some sh*t. I've lost some important people to me. Like you said, life, lifing and all that. But Hip-Hop definitely keeps me going. It gives me purpose. To get up and keep trying and keep doing it and trying to be of service. Because no matter what I'm going through, I know somebody else is going through that. Going through something similar or worse. And if I can get up and keep going, then so can they. So I think that's the best way I could put that. I want to talk a little bit about some of the songs on Can you talk about some of the collaborations on the album and how some of these tracks came to be? The first one that comes to mind is '9 Mile.' That was very therapeutic for me. I wanted the album to come off sounding like Belly. The beat switch with the Eight Mile aesthetic was magical. It just happened. And that's how I like to let it happen organically. Come to find out, it's a Soul II Soul sample. Didn't think about that. And the song was about a near-death experience, and the album actually dropped on the same day as Eight Mile. [everyone laughs] That was planned. Absolutely not. I'm just a vessel. I'm like, it's not my fault. It was written… That's one of those that's one of those joints that just give me confidence or even faith in knowing that everything is as it should be. So it leads to 'California Dream.' Ninth Wonder, one of my favorite producers of all time. For sure. Shout out to the big homie. Hearing Vince [Staples] over Ninth Wonder was just crazy to me. Not that you haven't heard him over soul samples or anything like that, but that was just like a dope aesthetic for me personally. And he delivered as he does. And that was dope. The story behind 'Crazier' is that it was actually JID's record first. He asked me to get on it. Now what happened was, and shout out to the homie, Kal Banx. What happened was, Kal, I guess, just over time, I guess there was some kind of miscommunication, and he sold the beat to someone else. So JID's like, 'What's up with your man ?' [Ab-Soul impersonates JID]. So some time had passed, and then JID sent me another record to get on. JID, he goes so crazy, man. Shout out to the homie. The song he sent me didn't even need a feature on it. It was like, 'Yo, you sure you want me to rap on this as well?' He's like 'Yeah man, trust me.' So, I'm like, 'All right. Well, listen. If I do this, man, you gotta let me have Crazier.' He's like, 'Alright, say nothing.' And then sure enough, I link up with Kal later on down the line, and he played me this 'Crazier' beat. We recreated it, extended it, and just made it Crazier. So that's the story there. The beat was called 'Pakistan.' I be paying attention. You gotta pay attention to the producers too. You gotta pay attention to how they label their stuff too. Sometimes they'd be spot on. That's a crazy story. Funny thing. Are we getting a music video for it? We thought about it. It could still happen. You know what I'm saying? And I believe I'm on his upcoming album as well. So look out for that. Anything could happen. My favorite song from the album at the moment is 'Saudi Sweats.' What was your creative inspiration or your motivations behind that one? It's actually very simple. 'Saudi Sweats' is actually… Because Soul Burger is not me. It's a fusion of me and my brother, Doe Burger. And one of our favorite artists is this kid Asaad. One of his nicknames is Saudi. He's into fashion, he's a designer. And he has these dope sweats. I still ain't even got me none. I need to get me some. They're like a stack a pair, man. Get your money out [laughs]. So he's just amazing. I really encourage everyone to check him out. And he's a real hidden gem, I think, by choice. He likes to be a rarity. The last album we listened to was his album New Black History Month. That was the last album that we listened to together before he passed. And so it was important for me to channel Saudi. You 'stealing Saudi Money's whole flow.' That wasn't even me. Shoutout to Saudi. You know the movie The Pursuit of Happyness? I like how he pointed out the fact… He was talking about how it's life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Because happiness is not tangible. It's not something that you can hold in your hand. It's fleeting. And so you have to just have to enjoy your moments of happiness or peace with these things because they're momentous. You can't appreciate happiness without the journey. So anyway. I think I heard my auntie say, 'I ain't got time to be happy.' I think I actually got that from my auntie. 'I ain't got time to be happy right now. I gotta make you happy.' And it stuck with me. It stuck with me, too. See what I'm saying? You just got to… You can't chase it. You gotta appreciate it when it happens. Can you tell me a little bit about that 'All That' With JasonMartin and Thirsty P? It was very organic. I was in the studio. Lately, because I've been known to be so cerebral. I'm like Jackson Pollock right now, man. I just throw paint, and let it fall where it may, versus trying to be so meticulous, so specific, so calculated. I just really try to express myself in the most organic way. I don't even pick beats no more. I let the homies pick them for me. I tell all my guys, 'Yo, just send me three or four beats you need to hear me on.' Don't overwhelm me and send me 30 beats. I'm gonna get an aneurysm. Send me three or four joints that you need to hear me on. No. I don't have a vibe. No, I'm not on anything. I'm trying to find it. Help me.' And that was one of the joints my man Rascal sent me. I think he collaborated with Tae Beast on that one. I just went in there, just did my two-step on it, and it just sounded crazy. I think [my tour manager] Matt [Miller] walked in like, 'See, this is what I'm talking about. We need more beats like this. This is the sh*t that's gonna work, man if you're trynna win.' I think it is more so just about not thinking. It tends to happen when I stop thinking. I think even Jason said that when you start thinking, that's when you're forcing music. You're not even supposed to think. It's supposed to just happen. Quincy Jones said, 'Melody is the voice of God.' Find the melody, find the flavor, find that. And let the words or the poetry or the bars fall where they may. And I think that's the most important thing to me right now. More from DJ Akademiks Clowns Ab-Soul For Being Legally Blind In Response To Diss Track Ab-Soul Adds To Joey Bada$$ Vs. West Coast Feud On Untitled Track Ab-Soul Speaks On Joey Bada$$ And West Coast Rap Feud: "It's A Sport" Best of 10 Rap Albums Snubbed Of The Grammys' Album Of The Year Award 21 Black Entertainers Who Are Almost EGOT Winners 11 Black-Owned Games To Play At The Next Function Or Kick Back

Wiz Khalifa doesn't care if the music industry loves him — his fans do
Wiz Khalifa doesn't care if the music industry loves him — his fans do

CBC

time02-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • CBC

Wiz Khalifa doesn't care if the music industry loves him — his fans do

Hip-hop culture might glorify materialism and fame, but Wiz Khalifa was never interested in that. The multi-platinum selling rapper recognizes that being a great artist is about staying dedicated to your work, not chasing validation from celebrities. "I don't really care about the outside noise," Khalifa says in an interview with Q 's Tom Power. "I'm into real life. And the realest thing ever is my fans, and the connection with them. And I'm on the road. I am on the internet every day. Nobody is putting this together for me. So nobody can pull the rug from underneath me if I tell them no." WATCH | Wiz Khalifa's full interview with Q's Tom Power: Wiz Khalifa models his career after legendary rapper Snoop Dogg. Like Snoop, Khalifa has expanded beyond music into acting, plus he has his own signature weed strain for sale. He says he looks up to Snoop's success, but more importantly, he's inspired by his relentless drive. "I learned about staying active from Snoop," Khalifa explains. "He's got everything that anybody could wish for, when it comes to legacy and respect and all of that. And he still gets up every day, and he works…. And he extends himself and he makes other people's lives better." The 37-year-old rapper says that See You Again ft. Charlie Puth is one of his most meaningful songs. It was a huge hit — See You Again was No.1. on the Billboard Hot 100 for 12 weeks — but also, Khalifa says it's an emotional song that many people hold close to their heart. He's honoured to have a track that resonates with his fans so deeply. "Unfortunately, a lot of people deal with a lot of loss… I think that song helps people cope," says Khalifa. "Artists wish they had a song that impactful and that successful… and that will be here forever. I'm blessed to have one of those records and I feel really grateful.... People cry every time I perform it." WATCH: Official music video for See You Again ft. Charlie Puth When he reflects on his rap career, Khalifa is proud of everything from his breakout mixtape Kush & Orange Juice in 2010, to his newest record Kush + Orange Juice 2. But he doesn't look back for too long. Khalifa is focused on the future: he just keeps doing the work, and he encourages the next generation of artists to do the same. "Stay consistent, learn your audience, and trust your vision," Khalifa says. "A lot of the things that are gonna keep you around later are the things that you're doing now… the stuff that people don't see. So just watch where you place your values, and really set yourself up to win in the long run."

Kendrick Lamar Breaks His Tie With Eminem And Ed Sheeran
Kendrick Lamar Breaks His Tie With Eminem And Ed Sheeran

Forbes

time27-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Forbes

Kendrick Lamar Breaks His Tie With Eminem And Ed Sheeran

Kendrick Lamar and SZA's 'Luther' spends a thirteenth week atop the Hot 100, breaking its tie with ... More hits from stars like Eminem, Ed Sheeran, Usher, Halsey and more. GLASTONBURY, ENGLAND - JUNE 26: Kendrick Lamar performs as he headlines the Pyramid Stage during day five of Glastonbury Festival at Worthy Farm, Pilton on June 26, 2022 in Glastonbury, England. (Photo by Samir Hussein/WireImage) As of this week, Kendrick Lamar and SZA have ruled the Hot 100 for 13 weeks with their so-far unstoppable smash "Luther." The tune has dominated the list of the most consumed songs in America for what has turned out to be a very lucky 13 frames, and it is one of only 17 tracks in history to hold on to the throne for that long. As the two superstars match several other gargantuan smashes, they also break a tie with a number of other popular cuts that topped the ranking for an even dozen periods — including some of the most successful rap tracks of the decade and in the more than half-century-long tenure of the Billboard charts. Eight songs stopped ruling the Hot 100 after 12 weeks, which is still a rare sight on the tally. Each of those cuts has now been demoted slightly on the list of the longest-running successes in Hot 100 history as Lamar and SZA move forward. All of the following smashes stepped aside after an even dozen frames at No. 1 on the Hot 100: "Shape of You" by Ed Sheeran, "Closer" by The Chainsmokers and Halsey, "See You Again" by Wiz Khalifa and Charlie Puth, "Blurred Lines" by Robin Thicke, T.I., and Pharrell, "Boom Boom Pow" by The Black Eyed Peas, "Yeah!" by Usher, Lil Jon, and Ludacris, "Lose Yourself" by Eminem, and "Smooth" by Santana and Rob Thomas. Now that "Luther" has commanded the most important songs ranking in the U.S. for 13 weeks, it ties two other generation-defining hits: "The Boy Is Mine" by Brandy and Monica and "End of the Road" by Boyz II Men. Both spent 13 weeks at No. 1 on the Hot 100 during their reigns in the '90s, but no more. It's likely that "Luther" won't make it to 14 stays atop the tally, as it looks like Morgan Wallen is set to conquer the Hot 100 when Billboard refreshes its rankings tomorrow (May 28). His stAY could go on for weeks at a time – or it might only last a few days — thanks to the excitement around his new album I'm the Problem. "Luther" could return to the summit after one frame away, and if it does, the collaboration will match "Uptown Funk" by Mark Ronson and Bruno Mars, "I Gotta Feeling" by The Black Eyed Peas, "We Belong Together" by Mariah Carey, "Candle in the Wind 1997"/"Something About the Way You Look Tonight" by Elton John, "Macarena" by Los del Río, "I'll Make Love to You" by Boyz II Men, and "I Will Always Love You" by Whitney Houston — all of which spent an incredible 14 weeks at No. 1.

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