Minggu, 14 April 2019

BTS performed on SNL and fans went crazy - CNN

Sure, "Saturday Night Live" was hosted by Emma Stone and took jabs at Michael Avenatti, Lori Loughlin, Julian Assange and "The View" -- but the spotlight belonged to the seven members of the boy band sensation.
BTS became the first Korean pop, or K-pop, group to perform on SNL. Korean pop music has been steadily growing in popularity. But BTS has elevated the genre into an international movement.
The group's new album, "Map of the Soul: Persona," is expected to smash sales charts.
The group's high-energy dance moves and pitch-perfect vocals as they performed "Boy With Luv" and "Mic Drop," drew screams and applause from the "SNL" audience and lit up social media.
Their fans, collectively known as ARMY, were in full force on Twitter and Instagram during the band's two performances.
"My daughter is making really weird mouth noises watching #BTSxSNL and just had to take her hoodie off because she's sweating. It's a #BTSARMY thing for those not aware," said radio host JJ Ryan.
"Slay!!! Their voices were perfection... They adapted their dancing to that tiny stage. And they were backed by what looked like a Korean band. I feel like a proud auntie. I...even put my cake down for this performance," said Jae-Ha Kim, a journalist for the Los Angeles Times.
"Live band. Killer vocals. Moves for days. Crushed it! That's how you say 'what's up America? #BTSxSNL'" said writer Colleen Nika.
"I screamed in my living room. Not even gonna lie. #BTSxSNL" said actress Angie Grace.
The band's performance also sparked a conversation about the historic and cultural impact.
"I've been watching SNL since the late '70s til I stopped watching in the 90s. Never seeing an Asian face on their staff always stung. But tonight I just saw 7 Korean faces gracing that damn stage and it was the best part of that show so I AM OVER IT. #BTSxSNL," said actor Paul Bae.

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https://www.cnn.com/2019/04/14/us/bts-snl-performance/index.html

2019-04-14 06:32:00Z
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Sabtu, 13 April 2019

Let's not compare Ariana Grande's Coachella performance to Beyoncé's - CNN

This weekend, Ariana Grande will become the youngest artist to ever headline the festival. She's also only the fourth woman to do so. Comparisons to her fellow female headliners -- and to Beyoncé in particular -- will be inevitable.
But let's hope not.
Look, comparisons can be fun. They're cause for friendly debate, make for clickable blog posts and are easy fodder for online polls. But doing so minimizes the unique contributions of each of these strong women. They represent a trope that has proven as unkillable as some cheesy horror movie villain: that successful women are incapable of supporting and sharing a space with other successful women.
"Beyoncé is incredible and so is Ariana Grande," says Enongo Lumumba-Kasongo, a Philadelphia-based rapper best known as Sammus. "So I hope that folks will be smart enough to not buy into [comparisons]."
Even in this sisterhood-forward culture, there are still corners of society that have yet to get the memo that women don't like and don't want to be pit against each other.

Fanning the flames

It happened to Britney Spears and Christina Aguilera because they were both pretty, belly-baring girls who went from Disney child stars to pop stars vying for "TRL" votes in the late '90s and early '00s. It happened to Kelly Clarkson and Carrie Underwood because they both faced the critiques of Simon Cowell at the start of their careers. And continues to happen to others.
Back in the day, Aguilera and Spears tried to stomp out the feud rumors.
Britney Spears and Christina Aguilera at the 2000 MTV Video Music Awards
"It's really sad to see that some tabloid magazines still have to manufacture ill will between Britney and me," Aguilera said in a post on her website in 2005. "If certain journalists want to throw their integrity out the window by spreading false information, then so be it. But I'm not falling for their lies and neither should my fans or Britney's."
Still, one tabloid blazed on its cover, "Britney vs Christina: Why they're still trying to be the sexiest!" This was in 2011.
Times are changing.
Last year, country singer Kelsea Ballerini lambasted an online poll that asked people to vote for the female artist they were most looking forward to seeing perform at an award show, saying the "simple and seemingly harmless" question actually does female artists a disservice.
"It makes us feel like there's only one spot available," she said in a lengthy Instagram post. "This isn't 'Mean Girls,' this is country music. Where you actually CAN sit with us."
With her statement, Ballerini also hit on an idea that women everywhere are increasingly subscribing to: You don't have to cutdown one women in order to compliment another.
Kelly Clarkson and Carrie Underwood at an event in 2018
Clarkson and Underwood similarly stood their ground when a Twitter poll asked which former "American Idol" winner was "most iconic."
"I think we're both winning in life and pretty blessed," Clarkson said on Twitter.
Underwood added: "I do wish more publications would just celebrate women's success without pitting them against each other...Just my thoughts."
Not all feuds are inventions of the media or fueled by fans. Take, for instance, the seemingly real animosity between Cardi B and Nicki Minaj, which came to blows at a New York Fashion Week party last year.
Before the women made peace, the exploitation of their conflict didn't sit well with writer El Hunt at NME, who wrote, "when we see high-profile 'beef' unfolding between female stars, the most common cause, we're told, must be envy."
"While their male counterparts trade blows and quips as part of a wider tradition, we're told that women bitch about one another, and get into petty scraps," she wrote. "We decide they must just hate each other, and look on with glee to see who will triumph."
In the hip-hop genre, Lumumba-Kasongo, who is also a PhD student at Cornell, says healthy competition can "drive innovation in the art form." However, when female hip-hop artists are seen as competitive or possess a healthy ego about their skills, "it's always framed as kind of cattiness."

Different stakes

Male artists get compared to one another, too -- as boy bands and every "white guy with a guitar" who's ever competed on "American Idol" can attest. But the challenges facing male artists are vastly different than those facing women in the music industry.
Male musicians aren't being told to "step up" so they can have the honor of being recognized by their industry. Their magazine profiles don't start with descriptions of their bodies and go on to demean their peers. They're not looking at festival lineups and noticing a stark imbalance.
"This idea that only one woman can exist in a space is something that's institutionalized," Lumumba-Kasongo says. "We wouldn't have this pitting of women against each other if there were multitudes of slots for women to be parts of these spaces."
If women had equal representation at, for example, festivals, she says, the tendency to make female artists feel like they're vying for a precious few slots "wouldn't become an automatic part of the conversation."
"It's continuously, 'well, we've got our women artists, so check.' So, of course, every year, whoever is in that position is going to be compared to the person who was in that position the year prior," she said.
Lumumba-Kasongo, who will release a new album later this year, says she finds social media and general camaraderie to be a useful tools in fighting false narratives about her and her fellow female artists.
"[It] might not work in a way that's easy to quantify, but I do feel like it pushes the culture forward when people see, you know, an Ariana Grande and a Nicki Minaj hanging out or Beyoncé and a Rihanna being in the same area," she says. "That changes the conversation."
Grande and Beyoncé seem to share admiration for each other.
Grande pointed to Destiny's Child as a musical inspiration in a V magazine article in 2014, saying "That's where I discovered my range. I grew up listening to Destiny's Child. I would try so hard to mimic all Beyoncé's little runs and ad-lib things. They are so precise. It's like math....Thank you, Destiny's Child!"
Beyoncé, meanwhile, once included Grande on a curated playlist in honor of her own birthday, comprised of what Queen B called "some of the great musical talents born in the month of June."
Accomplished in her own right, Grande is Billboard's Woman of the Year and notched her fourth No. 1 album in February, but it didn't take long for a competition between the two to be teed up when she was announced as the 2019 headliner for Coachella.
There's no denying that on stage last year, Beyoncé gave a spectacle of sound, a layered masterclass on black culture and a show that some will say cannot possibly be topped in our lifetimes.
The beauty is, whatever Grande decides to do when she takes the stage at Coachella will be a creation all her own, truly comparable only against her other performances.
It's past time for a notable change in how women are written and talked about as performers. Enough with fostering animosity between powerful, successful women. It leaves a bitter taste -- you know, something akin to lemonade without sweetener.

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https://www.cnn.com/2019/04/13/entertainment/ariana-grande-coachella/index.html

2019-04-14 00:47:00Z
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Star Wars: Jedi Fallen Order Release Date, Trailer, Gameplay Details Revealed - IGN

Apex Legends developer Respawn Entertainment unveiled its new Star Wars game.

After a couple of teases, EA and Respawn Entertainment have finally revealed the first details about Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order, including its release date and on what platforms players can expect it.

EA has given Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order a release date of November 15, 2019, and it will be released on Xbox One, PS4, and PC via EA Origin. As Respawn, the studio behind Titanfall and Apex Legends, and EA announced in the hours leading up to the panel, Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order is a single-player game with no multiplayer elements or microtransactions.

Watch the full Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order story trailer below.

Exit Theatre Mode

Jedi: Fallen Order’s story falls on the timeline of Star Wars canon shortly after Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith. EA has previously revealed the story will focus on a young Padawan, but Respawn confirmed today that character is Cal Kestis, who will be played by Shameless and Gotham’s Cameron Monaghan. Here's everything we learned about the game from its Star Wars Celebration 2019 panel.

Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order Story Details

Cal has survived Order 66, the Emperor’s decree to eliminate the Jedi. According to EA and Respawn, “Players must pick up the pieces of Cal’s shattered past to complete his training and master the art of the iconic lightsaber - all while staying one step ahead of the Empire and its deadly Inquisitors.”

Jedi: Fallen Order will feature new locations in the Star Wars universe, including Bracca, where Cal’s story begins. Respawn has confirmed that Jedi: Fallen Oder will also feature iconic Star Wars locations, in addition to familiar gear, weapons, and enemies.

Be sure to check out our immediate reaction to Jedi: Fallen Order from the Star Wars Celebration showfloor.

Exit Theatre Mode

He’s hiding out there, but forced to go on the run after his Force powers are exposed. A story trailer, viewable above, showed off a bit of Cal's journey, his efforts to keep a low profile, and what happens when his powers are discovered. The trailer also confirmed Cal will, at some point, have a blue lightsaber.

The rest of Jedi: Fallen Order’s official story description, per EA's official release, reads:

“Along the way, Cal will make new friends, like his mysterious companion Cere, as well as run into some familiar faces, all while being accompanied by his faithful droid BD-1. Cal’s flight from the Empire is made even more dangerous as he is being pursued by the Second Sister, one of the Empire’s elite Inquisitors, who seeks to hunt Cal down and extinguish this surviving Jedi. Assisting the Second Sister are the terrifying Purge Troopers, special Imperial forces trained to seek out Jedi and aid the Inquisitors in their dastardly work.”

Check out our full Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order character breakdown for more.

Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order Gameplay Details

As the title suggests, Jedi:Fallen Order will put an emphasis on the Jedi, and particularly lightsaber combat. EA and Respawn say “Players will use their Jedi training to create different melee combinations with an innovative lightsaber combat system and Force abilities.”

Jedi: Fallen Order will also feature some platforming abilities for traversal, as players will need to “overcome opponents and solve puzzles in their path.”

Exit Theatre Mode

Star Wars: Jedi Fallen Order Preorder and Release Date Details

Star Wars: Jedi Fallen Order is set for a November 15, 2019 release date for PC, Xbox One, and PS4. It is currently available for preorder, and preordering will give players unique cosmetic content for the game.

Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order is available for preorder on PS4Xbox OnePC, and its deluxe edition is also available for preorder for Xbox One and PS4. And check out our complete guide to Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order preorder bonuses for more.

If you buy something through this post, IGN may get a share of the sale. For more, read our Terms of Use.

You can also of course read about the Jedi: Fallen order artwork that leaked ahead of this reveal, including all the clues we thought we caught about what the Jedi: Fallen Order art may reveal.

And of course, we have plenty more coverage from Star Wars Celebration, including our comprehensive coverage on everything we've learned so far about Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker.

Stay tuned to IGN for more details on Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order.

Jonathon Dornbush is IGN's News editor, talk to him about how hyped you are for Jedi: Fallen Order on Twitter @jmdornbush.

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https://www.ign.com/articles/2019/04/14/star-wars-jedi-fallen-order-release-date-announced-gameplay-story-details-revealed

2019-04-14 00:21:00Z
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‘Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order’ Is a Single-Player Jedi Fantasy Story Game - Collider.com

star-wars-jedi-fallen-order-news

Electronic Arts and Respawn Entertainment showed off their brand new game, Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order, at Star Wars Celebration today and it looks like it will deliver for anyone looking to take a step away from the multi-player format and dive into a single-player story. The game is set shortly after the events of Revenge of the Sith and centers on a young Padawan who managed to survive Order 66, an order that branded all Jedi traitors to the Galactic Republic and targets for execution by the Grand Army of the Republic’s clone troopers. Electronic Arts has had a rough go with the Star Wars franchise as of late for a variety of reasons, but at this point, it does seem as though Fallen Order has a chance of getting the company back in the fandom’s good graces.

Jedi: Fallen Order is no Star Wars: Battlefront. There is no multiplayer and no micro-transactions; it’s a single-player Jedi fantasy story game, and it’s a labor of love for the folks at Respawn who took the stage to unveil the game. As they explained, the goal was to tell a Jedi story and put a lightsaber in the player’s hand. That simple yet powerful concept is what started it all, but developing a detailed canon story took a significant amount of time and collaboration.

star-wars-jedi-fallen-order-cameron-monaghan

Image via EA Star Wars

Meet the main character, Cal Kestis played by Shameless and Gotham star Cameron Monaghan. He’s the young Padawan who survived Order 66 and now he’s on the run during some very dark times when the Empire is at the height of its power. Cal must evade the Empire’s Inquisitors but he chooses to do so while secretly continuing his training with his lightsaber and Force powers. We begin our journey with Cal on the planet Bracca. After an incident that requires him to reveal his Force-wielding abilities, Cal is forced to pick up and make a run for it again.

Monaghan describes Cal as someone with grit to him. He’s street smart, wary, and has been through a lot. But despite the tragedy he’s experienced, Cal is still someone with a sense of optimism and a good heart. Even though Cal did feel a bit isolated during the Jedi: Fallen Order trailer, he’ll have some allies by his side throughout the story including Cere and also a droid named BD-1. 

Cere is played by Debra Wilson and was described as a mysterious companion and former Jedi Knight. They said she will act as a mentor to Cal, but don’t expect the traditional Padawan/Jedi Master relationship we’ve seen before. Apparently there’s a “strange family” that’s formed in the game, a team that bands together to explore the galaxy and Cere is part of it.

There’s also my personal favorite reveal of the panel, the new droid BD-1, which stands for Buddy Droid 1. And that’s essentially what he is to Cal, a buddy! They’re best friends. BD-1 isn’t a sidekick. They’re equals on their journey and they learn to lean on one another. BD-1 also provides a little light in a story that takes place during such dark times. The team even got legendary sound designer and voice actor Ben Burtt to do BD-1’s vocalizations.

star-wars-jedi-fallen-order-second-sister

Image via EA Star Wars

Another character to keep an eye out for is Second Sister, an elite Inquisitor trying to hunt Cal down. Second Sister is actually a nice nod to the collaboration happening between different Star Wars departments because that character has already been teed up in Marvel Comics’ Darth Vader #19.

She’s also got a new kind of Stormtrooper at her disposal, the Purge Trooper. With only so many Inquisitors to go around, these Purge Troopers are trained to deal with Jedi and are the ones who are dispatched first to investigate, and then the Inquisitors are called in. A significant group of traditional Stormtroopers can pose a threat, but when it came to the gameplay in Jedi: Fallen Order, the developers wanted foes who could offer up meaty one-on-one fights, and so the Purge Troopers were born.

And speaking of the game play, the key here for Respawn was the importance of touch and feel. They’re developing “thoughtful combat;” you have to size up your enemy and identify their weaknesses. They’re working to ensure that the combat is easy to pick up so that anyone can get right into the game, but, if you put the time in, you can master the techniques.

star-wars-jedi-fallen-order-debra-wilson

Image via EA Star Wars

Monaghan also stressed how the performance capture experience differed from his pre-conceived understanding of motion capture. He said that the technology used to create Cal is more in-depth with the capability of picking up subtle changes in emotion, body and movement to deliver a nuanced and detailed performance. While playing Cal in the performance capture suit, Monaghan said that his only limitation was his own imagination.

Shortly before the end of the panel, the host asked about Cal’s lightsaber and the response was a cryptic, “How do you know that’s Cal’s lightsaber?” The group wouldn’t go much further than that but they did tease that the lightsaber is tied to the story and that over the course of the game, it’ll grow and evolve. They dubbed it a reflection of Cal.

You can give the Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order trailer a watch for yourself below. The game will be released on Xbox One, PlayStation 4, and PC on November 15, 2019.

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http://collider.com/star-wars-jedi-fallen-order-news/

2019-04-13 22:01:02Z
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Respawn's 'Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order' arrives November 15th - Engadget

Respawn Entertainment/EA

Respawn has pulled back the curtains on Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order after months of teases. The single-player game is now due to launch on November 15th and follows Cal Kestis, a Padawan trying to survive Emperor Palpatine's command to execute the Jedi -- including the Inquisitors hunting the last remnants of the once-great order. He starts as a scrapper trying to keep his head down, but he's invariably roped into a larger story and learns to embrace his Force powers instead of keeping them suppressed.

The company hasn't shown off gameplay just yet. However, it's teasing an "innovative" combat system with melee combos and, of course, lightsabers and Force powers. You'll also need to rely on some acrobatics to counter enemies and solve the puzzles in your way. There will be a mix of new and "iconic" places, equipment and foes, including Purge Troopers that help the Inquisitors investigate the Jedi.

It should be available for PC, PS4 and Xbox One.

Respawn is eager to avoid the pitfalls that have clouded EA's earlier Star Wars titles. This is strictly a single-player game, and there are no microtransactions. You won't be goaded into buying new skins for Cal or your droid (BD-1, if you're curious). It's a bit of a departure for Respawn given its reputation for multiplayer-first games like the microtransaction-laden Apex Legends, but then Titanfall 2 is widely considered a cult hit for its storyline. That strong pedigree bodes well.

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https://www.engadget.com/2019/04/13/star-wars-jedi-fallen-order/

2019-04-13 19:54:37Z
52780265293530

Respawn's 'Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order' arrives November 15th - Engadget

Respawn Entertainment/EA

Respawn has pulled back the curtains on Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order after months of teases. The single-player game is now due to launch on November 15th and follows Cal Kestis, a Padawan trying to survive Emperor Palpatine's command to execute the Jedi -- including the Inquisitors hunting the last remnants of the once-great order. He starts as a scrapper trying to keep his head down, but he's invariably roped into a larger story and learns to embrace his Force powers instead of keeping them suppressed.

The company hasn't shown off gameplay just yet. However, it's teasing an "innovative" combat system with melee combos and, of course, lightsabers and Force powers. You'll also need to rely on some acrobatics to counter enemies and solve the puzzles in your way. There will be a mix of new and "iconic" places, equipment and foes, including Purge Troopers that help the Inquisitors investigate the Jedi.

It should be available for PC, PS4 and Xbox One.

Respawn is eager to avoid the pitfalls that have clouded EA's earlier Star Wars titles. This is strictly a single-player game, and there are no microtransactions. You won't be goaded into buying new skins for Cal or your droid (BD-1, if you're curious). It's a bit of a departure for Respawn given its reputation for multiplayer-first games like the microtransaction-laden Apex Legends, but then Titanfall 2 is widely considered a cult hit for its storyline. That strong pedigree bodes well.

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https://www.engadget.com/2019/04/13/star-wars-jedi-fallen-order/

2019-04-13 19:36:11Z
52780265293530

Selena Gomez returns to the stage and joins Cardi B at Coachella in surprise performance - Fox News

Selena Gomez made a surprise appearance Friday during DJ Snake’s set at Coachella, joining Cardi B and Ozuna for their hit “Taki Taki.”

The performance marks Gomez’s first appearance on stage since she sought mental health treatment last year following a few hospital stays. The singer, who has lupus, revealed last year that she’d undergone a kidney transplant as a result of her diagnosis. The appearance is also her first as a performer at the desert festival.

Cardi B posted a photo of the pair along with DJ Snake on her Instagram story, captioning it, “Coachella and I love them.”

Gomez will appear later this year in Jim Jarmusch’s “The Dead Don’t Die,” which will open Cannes in May, and is slated to voice a role in Universal’s “The Voyage of Doctor Dolittle” alongside Robert Downey Jr.

The singer announced her kidney transplant last year in an Instagram post.

“I’m very aware some of my fans had noticed I was laying low for part of the summer and questioning why I wasn’t promoting my new music, which I was extremely proud of,” Gomez wrote alongside a photo of herself holding hands with actress Francia Raisa, her friend who donated the kidney. “So I found out I needed to get a kidney transplant due to my lupus and was recovering. It was what I needed to do for my overall health.”

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https://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/selena-gomez-cardi-b-coachella

2019-04-13 19:23:11Z
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