Lindsey Buckingham hints at possibly working with Stevie Nicks again

Lindsey Buckingham hints at possibly working with Stevie Nicks again
Lindsey Buckingham hints at possibly working with Stevie Nicks again
Singer Stevie Nicks (L) and musician Lindsey Buckingham of Fleetwood Mac perform at The Staples Center on July 3, 2013 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)

Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks revealed back in October that after years of estrangement, they have begun talking again. Now in a new video, Buckingham suggests that this could lead to something — possibly a creative collaboration.

The former Fleetwood Mac star posted a clip to Instagram where he talked about what he has in store for 2026. “Despite what’s going on in Washington, it’s going to be a very good year, or maybe because of what’s going on in Washington,” he said.

As for what projects he’s got coming up, Buckingham added, “I’ve been working on a new solo album for the last couple of years, which is one song away from being finished,” noting, “that’s certainly in the future for this coming year.”

He also mentioned the planned Fleetwood Mac documentary for Apple, directed by Frank Marshall.

“Those are two very specific things that are waiting in the wings for this year,” he said before suggesting something may happen between him and Nicks.

“I think on a more general level, just the energy in terms of what Buckingham Nicks did to sort of create a resurgence of connection between Stevie and myself, I think on a larger scale, that seems to be something that’s in the air,” he said, referring to the 2025 reissue of their 1973 album. “And what that translates to specifically, I wouldn’t want to speculate yet.”

He added, “But I believe with all my heart, it will translate to something good, and something wonderful, and something needed and something extremely appropriate.” 

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Violet Grohl joins lineup for 2026 Reading & Leeds

Violet Grohl joins lineup for 2026 Reading & Leeds
Violet Grohl joins lineup for 2026 Reading & Leeds
Violet Grohl attends the 68th GRAMMY Awards Pre-GRAMMY Gala & GRAMMY Salute to Industry Icons on January 31, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. (Leon Bennett/Getty Images for The Recording Academy)

Violet Grohl has joined the lineup for the U.K.’s 2026 Reading & Leeds festivals.

The daughter of Dave Grohl will play both events, which take place simultaneously over the same weekend, Aug. 27-30.

The previously announced 2026 Reading & Leeds headliners include Florence + the Machine and Fontaines D.C.

Violet’s dad has headlined Reading & Leeds multiple times with Foo Fighters, most recently in 2019.

Violet will release her debut solo album, Be Sweet to Me, on May 29. She’s playing the Shaky Knees Festival in Atlanta in September.

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Juvenile is back with ‘Boiling Point,’ first solo album in more than a decade

Juvenile is back with ‘Boiling Point,’ first solo album in more than a decade
Juvenile is back with ‘Boiling Point,’ first solo album in more than a decade
Terius “Juvenile” Gray performs during 2025 New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival at Fair Grounds Race Course on May 04, 2025, in New Orleans, Louisiana. (Photo by Erika Goldring/Getty Images)

It’s been a little “Slow Motion,” but Juvenile is back with Boiling Point, his first solo project in over a decade.

The album was inspired by the response to his Tiny Desk performance, which helped him reconnect with his fans. 

“It all started from the ‘Tiny Desk’ thing,” he tells Revolt. “I realized what my fans wanted, right? It got me closer to my fans, and we developed this relationship to where I feel like I owe them my album.”

“I owe it not only to them, I owe it to myself and my family,” he continues. “You know, my kids done grew up, so they didn’t have an opportunity to see me and know what it’s like. So, I think it’s great for me and my kids too.”

Boiling Point features guest appearances from Mannie Fresh, Birdman, B.G., DJ Khaled, Swizz Beatz, Timbaland, Jacquees, Trombone Shorty, Dee-1 and Megan Thee Stallion, who appears on the remix to “B.B.B.”

Juvenile says the collaboration came together thanks to fan demand, adding Meg’s team also reached out to make it happen. Megan also spoke to Billboard about the collaboration.

“When I heard the song, I said…’I know this ain’t my Juvie sounding like this,'” Meg recalled. “I was like, ‘Juvenile, you don’t want me to be on this?’… I was like, ‘Oh wait, friend, send me the instrumental, we’re going to go ahead and give the people what they want!'”

“So he definitely owes me one for my album,” she said. “The hotties ain’t ready for that.”

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Billie Eilish and brother FINNEAS to guest on their mom’s new vegan cooking show

Billie Eilish and brother FINNEAS to guest on their mom’s new vegan cooking show
Billie Eilish and brother FINNEAS to guest on their mom’s new vegan cooking show
Maggie Baird in ‘Climate Kitchen: A Recipe for Sustainable Living’ (Courtesy WETA)

Billie Eilish’s mom, Maggie Baird, is venturing into the culinary world.

She’s teaming with public media organization WETA in Washington, D.C., for a cooking series called Climate Kitchen, set to premiere in 2027. Eilish and her brother, FINNEAS, will be among the guests on the show, which is described in a press release as “part cooking show, part lifestyle series, part docuseries.”

Climate Kitchen will feature recipes for affordable plant-based meals, plus features and information about how our meals can either hurt or help the planet. Other guests will include Martha Stewart, FINNEAS’ fiancee, Claudia Sulewski, and sustainable living experts.

Baird told People that she’s created recipe books for both Eilish and FINNEAS, adding, “It makes me so happy when they tell me they made one of the recipes.” One of Eilish’s favorites, she said, is a spicy noodle and tofu soup, to which the singer adds “enough chili flakes in it to heat up a room!”

In a statement, Maggie said the series will show “small, simple behavior shifts can build toward lasting difference in our own health and the health of our planet.” She added, “Plant-based food is not the only solution to climate change, but there is no solution without it.”

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The Kinks’ Dave Davies reveals first reaction to Moby’s ‘Lola’ comments: ‘Who is Moby?’

The Kinks’ Dave Davies reveals first reaction to Moby’s ‘Lola’ comments: ‘Who is Moby?’
The Kinks’ Dave Davies reveals first reaction to Moby’s ‘Lola’ comments: ‘Who is Moby?’
Musician Dave Davies appears in a portrait taken on April 17, 2023 in New York City. (Photo by Al Pereira/Getty Images)

The Kinks’ Dave Davies recently defended the band’s iconic song “Lola” after Moby called the song’s lyrics “gross and transphobic” in an interview with The Guardian.

In a new interview with The Telegraph, Dave says he was “shocked and really quite upset” when he heard about Moby’s comments, noting his first thought when he heard about them was “Who is Moby?”

And when he told his brother, bandmate and “Lola” songwriter Ray Davies about them, he had the same reaction, asking Dave, “Who the f*** is Moby?” Dave adds that Ray “wasn’t happy at all.”

Talking about the tune, which was released in 1970, Dave says when Ray first played it for him he thought it was “fun and beautiful.”

“It was about real people and real people’s antics. There is nothing nasty about it,” he says. “People were quite shocked by it. But we loved it, and the world seemed to love it too. No one mentioned the word transphobia then. I don’t think the word existed.”

Dave says of Moby’s comments, “I worried that it could turn people against us because it can feel like people are becoming weirder by the day.” He added, “They are always quick to judge and make assumptions about others. It is very rigid thinking. They don’t know that there is always a backstory. It can be dangerous to smear people.”

But Dave says he doesn’t hold anything against Moby.

“I don’t bear anyone malice. I think he made a clumsy mistake,” says Dave. “All music, all art, should be applauded. It’s not for me or for anyone else to decide what is right or wrong. We should be grateful that we live in a world where people are free to make music and say what they want to say.”

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Judge hears arguments over seizure of Fulton County 2020 election records

Judge hears arguments over seizure of Fulton County 2020 election records
Judge hears arguments over seizure of Fulton County 2020 election records
Ballots are counted on election night at the Fulton County Elections Hub and Operation Center on November 5, 2024 in Fairburn, Georgia. (Photo by Megan Varner/Getty Images)

(WASHINGTON) — The FBI’s application for the warrant that led to the search and seizure of more than 650 boxes of 2020 election records from a Fulton County, Georgia, election site in January lacked any kind of evidence of intentional misconduct and relied on incorrect information, an elections expert with twenty years of experience told a federal judge Friday. 

Testifying as Fulton County’s first witness in its lawsuit against the Trump administration, Ryan Macias told the court that his review of the claims made by the FBI in their application lacked a “basis in reality.”

“The content of the witnesses is incorrect and in many cases contradictory,” he said. “The information in there is not based in reality.” 

Lawyers with the Department of Justice attempted to cast doubt on Macias’ testimony by arguing he lacks direct knowledge of the testimony in the case and is inexperienced in criminal investigations, though he was only qualified as an expert on election administration. Macias worked for both the federal government and California to administer elections as well as consulted for Fulton County in 2020.

Assistant Attorney General Tysen Duva broadly claimed, without citing any examples, that criminal investigations regularly stem from matters where initial investigations found no evidence of wrongdoing. 

“Are you aware that happens all the time?” Duva asked Macias. 

“No,” Macias responded. 

“That’s because you don’t know,” Duva responded. 

During his direct examination, Macias went through each of the claims made in the FBI’s application for the warrant to debunk and cast doubt on each allegation. 

“Do ballot images have any impact on the final tabulation of ballots?” asked attorney Kamal Ghali, referencing the claim that election officials produced inconsistent numbers of ballot images from the 2020 election. 

“No they do not,” Macias said. 

“Is the absence of ballot images evidence of misconduct?” Ghali asked. 

“No it is not,” he responded. 

Fulton County Superior Court Clerk Ché Alexander testified that the FBI refused her request to help her make an inventory of the election records they seized from her office. She testified that she was at her office during the raid and asked to make an inventory to secure the chain of custody for more than 600 boxes of records, including original ballots from the election. 

“I asked the agent to go box by box to understand what they were taking and they said absolutely not,” Alexander testified, though the FBI likely did an inventory of their own.

“I have a personal interest to do my job to keep those records safe and secure,” Alexander said. “I am under a court order to maintain records I do not have.”

DOJ lawyers sought to cast doubt on her claims, including by playing a video from a 2023 court proceeding when a lawyer for her office urged a judge to allow the removal of the records. According to the attorney, Fulton County wanted to make room for incoming records related to the 2024 election. 

“Her obligation is over at this point,” the attorney for Fulton County said in 2023. “It has a significant impact on operations. The records cannot just be kept there forever.” 

DOJ attorney Peter Cooch argued that the search of the office was effectively doing Alexander a favor, remarking, “Now that the records are sealed, the space is available to you now.” 

DOJ lawyers also played body camera footage from the raid in which Fulton County’s elections director can be heard saying, “If you want to take off 700 boxes of ballots, have at it … They can go play paper airplanes for all I care.”

Attorney Abbe Lowell, representing the Fulton County officials, argued that the search was based on incorrect information from unreliable witnesses related to claims that are years beyond the statute of limitations. 

“A week doesn’t go by without someone in the administration making an allegation of voter fraud,” Lowell said before reminding the judge that the investigation itself originated from an attorney who tried to overturn the 2020 election who was previously sanctioned for making false claims about the outcome. Lowell said the reliance on the unreliable witnesses would make “George Orwell smile in his grave.” 

DOJ attorneys have insisted that the search was based on evidence of potential misconduct and accused Fulton County officials of speculating about “some kind of grand conspiracy.” 

“It just seems like a loosey-goosey theory,” said DOJ attorney Michael Weisbuch. “They don’t like the vibe of what’s happening because that’s not a constitutional standard.” 

U.S. District Judge JP Boulee, a Trump appointee, will decide on Fulton County’s request to force the Trump administration to return the sensitive records taken from the election site. 

After election officials raised concerns about the basis for the January 2026 search, Judge Boulee last month ordered the Department of Justice to publicly release the application for the warrant, which revealed that the investigation was triggered by an attorney and close ally of President Trump who sought to overturn the results of the 2020 election.

According to the unsealed court records, the investigation centers on long-debunked allegations of voter fraud that have already been thoroughly investigated. 

Fulton County election officials have since pushed for the return of the records, arguing that the investigation focuses on “human errors that its own sources confirm occur in almost every election … without any intentional wrongdoing whatsoever.”

“The Affidavit omits numerous material facts — including from the very reports and publicly-disclosed investigations that the Affiant cites — that confirm the alleged conduct was previously investigated and found to be unintentional,” attorneys for the Fulton County officials argued. 

In a late setback ahead of Friday’s hearing, Judge Boulee quashed an attempt to force the FBI agent behind the search warrant to testify, concluding that questioning the agent could reveal “process and scope of the DOJ’s investigation,” which remains ongoing. 

President Donald Trump has long criticized the outcome of the 2020 election results in Georgia, personally pushing to overturn the results after his loss and later being indicted in two criminal cases over his actions. Those cases have since been dismissed, and Trump has continued to push for criminal accountability for what he baselessly alleged was a stolen election. 

Through a call with Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard — who was present at the January raid — President Trump personally addressed some of the agents who conducted the search and told them they were doing great work by investigating Georgia’s elections, ABC News previously reported

“I was at Fulton County, sir, at the request of the president and to work with the FBI to observe this action that had long been awaited,” Gabbard told lawmakers earlier this month when asked about her presence at the search. “It is my role based on statute that Congress has passed to have oversight over election security to include counterintelligence.” 

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Dow closes down nearly 800 points as Iran war hits one-month mark

Dow closes down nearly 800 points as Iran war hits one-month mark
Dow closes down nearly 800 points as Iran war hits one-month mark
Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), March 27, 2026, in New York. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

(NEW YORK) — Stocks closed significantly lower on Friday as the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran showed little sign of an imminent resolution that would end one of the worst global oil shocks in decades.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average plunged 790 points, or 1.7%, while the S&P 500 fell 1.6%. The tech-heavy Nasdaq dropped 2.1%.

The session on Friday marked the end of a woeful week for the major stock indexes. The Dow declined 1% this week, while the S&P 500 fell 2%. The Nasdaq decreased 3%.

Late Thursday, President Donald Trump postponed U.S. attacks on power plants in Iran in an apparent effort to avoid escalation of the Middle East conflict.

In a post on social media on Thursday, Trump said he was “pausing the period of Energy Plant destruction” until April 6.

In the event of such an attack, Iran has said it would carry out strikes against energy infrastructure in neighboring countries, according to Iran’s Fars News Agency state media.

Wall Street appeared to find little solace in the reprieve from large-scale tit-for-tat attacks on infrastructure.

Iran continues to blockade the Strait of Hormuz, a critical waterway for oil delivery. The strait facilitates the transport of about one-fifth of the global supply of crude oil and natural gas.

Global oil prices stood at about $113 a barrel on Friday, marking a staggering 61% rise since war with Iran began a month ago.

Fatih Birol, the executive director of the International Energy Agency (IEA), earlier this week said the current oil crisis had surpassed the combined effect of worldwide energy shocks in the 1970s.

The global economy faces a “major, major threat,” Birol said at an event in Canberra, Australia, noting that no country would be “immune to the effects of this crisis if it continues to go in this direction.”

U.S. Treasury yields climbed on Thursday, suggesting concern about economic instability and inflation stemming from the Iran war.

The yield on a 10-year Treasury bond, or the amount paid to a bondholder annually, stands at about 4.45%, marking a nearly half-percentage point jump from a month earlier.

On Friday, bond yields soared close to levels reached in the aftermath of President Donald Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs last April, when the 10-year Treasury yield peaked at around 4.5%.

Since bonds pay a given investor a fixed amount each year, the specter of inflation risks higher prices that would eat away at those annual payouts.

In turn, bonds often become less attractive in response to economic turmoil. When demand falls, bond yields rise.

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

How police arrested a suspect in the 1990 ‘Lovers’ Lane’ cold case murders in Houston

How police arrested a suspect in the 1990 ‘Lovers’ Lane’ cold case murders in Houston
How police arrested a suspect in the 1990 ‘Lovers’ Lane’ cold case murders in Houston
Floyd William Parrott, 64, was arrested in connection with the 1990 murders of Cheryl Henry and Andy Atkinson, the Houston police said. (Houston Police Department)

(HOUSTON, Texas) — A man who had a history of impersonating law enforcement has been arrested in a 1990 cold case double murder known as the “Lovers’ Lane” killings, authorities said.

Floyd William Parrott, 64, is charged with capital murder for the killings of Cheryl Henry, 22, and Garland “Andy” Atkinson, 21, Houston police said.

The victims’ car was found parked in a cul-de-sac on Aug. 23, 1990, police said. Henry and Atkinson, who had been dating for a few weeks, were found near the car, according to court documents. Both of their necks were cut with knives and they were tied up with rope, documents said, and Henry was raped.

At least 100 people were looked at as potential suspects over the decades, but Parrott was not one of them, Harris County District Attorney Sean Teare said at a news conference on Friday.

In late 2025, a Houston police sergeant was looking into a tip that named Parrott, and the sergeant found a Houston police report from 1996 in which Parrott was named as the suspect in a sex assault, court documents said. Parrott claimed the sex was consensual, documents said, and a grand jury declined to indict, Teare said.

The DNA from the 1996 case was “recently placed” into CODIS, the national law enforcement DNA database, documents said, and that DNA was found to be a match to swabs from Cheryl Henry’s sexual assault exam at her autopsy.

“A June 1990 sexual assault case also had a case-to-case hit,” court documents said.

Teare said Parrott impersonated law enforcement in the late 1980s, the 1990s and the 2000s.

In May 1988, Parrott was arrested for impersonating a police officer, court documents said. He was again arrested for impersonating a police officer in May 1990, and he was out on bond when the June 1990 sex assault and the August 1990 murders occurred, court documents said.

Parrott lived in the Houston area for most of his life and left a few years ago, Teare said. He was arrested in Lincoln, Nebraska, on Wednesday and is awaiting extradition to the Harris County, police said. Investigators interviewed Parrott on Wednesday and he denied knowing Cheryl Henry, according to court documents.

“Cheryl was my best friend. We did everything together,” Henry’s younger sister Shane Henry, said at the news conference.

“Hearing that the person responsible has finally been caught does not bring her back,” she said, “… but it does bring a sense of relief knowing that justice is moving forward.”

Teare said the DA’s office believes Parrott committed “numerous different types of crimes.”

“If you recognize this individual and he pulled you over … call us,” he said.

“If you met him once, if you met him at a club, if you knew him at all, reach out,” he said. 

Teare said the DA’s office can be reached at 713-274-5640.

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

How police arrested a suspect in the 1990 ‘Lovers’ Lane’ cold case murders in Houston

How police arrested a suspect in the 1990 ‘Lovers’ Lane’ cold case murders in Houston
How police arrested a suspect in the 1990 ‘Lovers’ Lane’ cold case murders in Houston
Floyd William Parrott, 64, was arrested in connection with the 1990 murders of Cheryl Henry and Andy Atkinson, the Houston police said. (Houston Police Department)

(HOUSTON, Texas) — A man who had a history of impersonating law enforcement has been arrested in a 1990 cold case double murder known as the “Lovers’ Lane” killings, authorities said.

Floyd William Parrott, 64, is charged with capital murder for the killings of Cheryl Henry, 22, and Garland “Andy” Atkinson, 21, Houston police said.

The victims’ car was found parked in a cul-de-sac on Aug. 23, 1990, police said. Henry and Atkinson, who had been dating for a few weeks, were found near the car, according to court documents. Both of their necks were cut with knives and they were tied up with rope, documents said, and Henry was raped.

At least 100 people were looked at as potential suspects over the decades, but Parrott was not one of them, Harris County District Attorney Sean Teare said at a news conference on Friday.

In late 2025, a Houston police sergeant was looking into a tip that named Parrott, and the sergeant found a Houston police report from 1996 in which Parrott was named as the suspect in a sex assault, court documents said. Parrott claimed the sex was consensual, documents said, and a grand jury declined to indict, Teare said.

The DNA from the 1996 case was “recently placed” into CODIS, the national law enforcement DNA database, documents said, and that DNA was found to be a match to swabs from Cheryl Henry’s sexual assault exam at her autopsy.

“A June 1990 sexual assault case also had a case-to-case hit,” court documents said.

Teare said Parrott impersonated law enforcement in the late 1980s, the 1990s and the 2000s.

In May 1988, Parrott was arrested for impersonating a police officer, court documents said. He was again arrested for impersonating a police officer in May 1990, and he was out on bond when the June 1990 sex assault and the August 1990 murders occurred, court documents said.

Parrott lived in the Houston area for most of his life and left a few years ago, Teare said. He was arrested in Lincoln, Nebraska, on Wednesday and is awaiting extradition to the Harris County, police said. Investigators interviewed Parrott on Wednesday and he denied knowing Cheryl Henry, according to court documents.

“Cheryl was my best friend. We did everything together,” Henry’s younger sister Shane Henry, said at the news conference.

“Hearing that the person responsible has finally been caught does not bring her back,” she said, “… but it does bring a sense of relief knowing that justice is moving forward.”

Teare said the DA’s office believes Parrott committed “numerous different types of crimes.”

“If you recognize this individual and he pulled you over … call us,” he said.

“If you met him once, if you met him at a club, if you knew him at all, reach out,” he said. 

Teare said the DA’s office can be reached at 713-274-5640.

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Report: Biopic about Steve Marriott and Small Faces in the works

Report: Biopic about Steve Marriott and Small Faces in the works
Report: Biopic about Steve Marriott and Small Faces in the works
Steve Marriott (1947-1991) of rock and pop group Small Faces on the set of the Associated Rediffusion Television pop music television show Ready Steady Go! at Wembley Television Studios in London on 4th March 1966. (Photo by Ivan Keeman/Redferns)

A biopic about the late Steve Marriott and his band Small Faces is in the works, according to Deadline.

The film, All or Nothing, will be inspired by the West End musical of the same name, written by actress and writer Carol Harrison. It is based on her friendship with the singer, who she met when she was 8 years old.

According to the film’s description, Marriott’s story is “seen through the eyes of a young female fan,” noting, “through their emotional connection, we uncover the complexities and contradictions that burn beneath the showman’s mask, as Steve struggles to navigate life in the spotlight, disguising his raw private turmoil and vulnerability with arrogance and caustic humor.”

Marriott formed Small Faces in 1965 with bassist Ronnie Lane, drummer Kenney Jones and keyboardist Jimmy Winston. Marriott left the group in 1969 to form Humble Pie. The band went on without him, recruiting Rod Stewart and Ronnie Wood, and renaming themselves Faces. Marriott, who was posthumously inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame as a member of Small Faces, died in 1991 at the age of 44.

The film, due to start production in the fall, will feature Small Faces’ music. Deadline notes that the estates of Marriott and Lane have both given their blessings to the film.

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