BRIT Awards 2026 logo (Courtesy The BRIT Awards 2026 with Mastercard/The BRIT Trust)
If you’re wondering what you can expect from Harry Styles‘ upcoming Together, Together tour, he’ll be giving fans a preview in February.
Harry’s official return to live performance will take place Feb. 28 at the BRIT Awards, the U.K. equivalent of the Grammys. The show will be held in Manchester, England, at the Co-op Live, a venue in which Harry is an investor.
Harry joins Olivia Dean as a performer on the show. It’ll be his first time at the BRITs since 2023, when he scored four trophies and performed. His appearance comes shortly before he releases his new album, Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally., on March 6.
Harry’s Together, Together tour gets underway May 16 in Amsterdam and will travel to London, Sao Paulo, Mexico City, New York City, Melbourne and Sydney, with multiple shows in each city.
: Bruce Springsteen performs at the AFI FEST 2025 Presented By Canva Opening Night “Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere” Premiere at TCL Chinese Theatre on October 22, 2025 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Rodin Eckenroth/Getty Images for AFI)
Bruce Springsteen has released a brand-new song, “Streets of Minneapolis,” written in response to what’s been happening in Minnesota, including the fatal shootings of two protesters.
“I wrote this song on Saturday, recorded it yesterday and released it to you today in response to the state terror being visited on the city of Minneapolis,” Springsteen wrote on Instagram. “It’s dedicated to the people of Minneapolis, our innocent immigrant neighbors and in memory of Alex Pretti and Renee Good,” the two Minneapolis residents who were fatally shot by federal agents.
He signed it, “Stay free, Bruce Springsteen.”
“Oh our Minneapolis, I hear your voice singing through the bloody mist/ We’ll take our stand for this land and the stranger in our midst,” Springsteen sings. “Here in our home they killed and roamed in the winter of ’26/ We’ll remember the names of those who died on the streets of Minneapolis.”
Springsteen also sings of “King Trump’s private army from the DHS,” and calls out what he calls the “federal thugs” who killed Pretti and Good.
This isn’t the first time Springsteen has spoken out about what’s been happening in Minnesota. At the Light of Day Winterfest concert in Red Bank, New Jersey, in early January he dedicated the song “The Promised Land” to Good, and reiterated what Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey has said, that “ICE should get the f*** out of Minneapolis.”
Luke Bryan’s Farm Tour 2026 (Courtesy Luke Bryan/Schmidt Relations)
Even before Luke Bryan launches his Word on the Street Tour in the spring, he’s heading back to California for three Farm Tour dates.
“We had such a great response to the shows out West last year that we decided to come back,” he says. “It was so impactful to learn from the farmers about what affects their operations and families, and our hope is to shine a little spotlight on them for all they do for America.”
Luke will kick off his 17th Farm Tour May 14 at Sillect Farms in Shafter, California, before heading to Clovis on May 15 and Elk Grove on May 16.
Presales start Feb. 2, before tickets go on sale to the public Feb. 5.
Look for special guests to be announced in the future, as well as Luke’s traditional Farm Tour dates in the fall.
The son of a peanut farmer, Luke launched his first Farm Tour in 2009 and has since provided 90 college scholarships to students from farming families.
Luke’s Word on the Street Tour kicks off May 29 in Gilford, New Hampshire.
Jason Sudeikis and Hannah Waddingham in ‘Ted Lasso’ season 4. (Apple TV)
Believe it — the first look and release window for Ted Lasso season 4 has been revealed.
Apple TV has announced that the fourth season of its hit comedy series will make its global debut in summer 2026. The streaming service also shared first-look photos of the new season, which is currently in production.
According to the streamer, season 4 finds Ted returning to Richmond to coach a second division women’s football team. The official description calls it Ted’s biggest challenge yet.
“Throughout the course of the season, Ted and the team learn to leap before they look, taking chances they never thought they would,” the synopsis reads.
Jason Sudeikis is back starring as the titular coach. Also returning are fan-favorites Hannah Waddingham, Juno Temple, Brett Goldstein, Brendan Hunt and Jeremy Swift.
New to the show this season are Tanya Reynolds, Jude Mack, Faye Marsey, Rex Hayes, Aisling Sharkey, Abbie Hern and Grant Feely.
The new photos show off Ted standing outside an airplane with Rebecca (Waddingham); Ted at football practice with a new assistant coach, played by Reynolds; and Ted at the Crown & Anchor pub with his son, Henry, who has been recast and is now played by Feely.
Apple TV renewed Ted Lasso for a fourth season back in March 2025. At the time, Sudeikis teased what is to come in the new batch of episodes.
“As we all continue to live in a world where so many factors have conditioned us to ‘look before we leap,’” Sudeikis said in a press release, “in season four, the folks at AFC Richmond learn to LEAP BEFORE THEY LOOK, discovering that wherever they land, it’s exactly where they’re meant to be.”
Dove Cameron on ‘The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon’ on Tuesday, January 27, 2026. (Todd Owyoung/NBC)
Getting engaged to the star of your favorite Disney Channel original movie may sound like the plot of a Disney Channel original movie, but it’s real life for Damiano David.
The Måneskin frontman’s fiancée, Dove Cameron, told Jimmy Fallon on The Tonight Show Tuesday that he has “a deep, deep love and reverence for the Descendants franchise.”
Cameron, of course, starred in the Descendants movies as Mal, the daughter of the Disney villain Maleficent. The first film premiered in 2015, nearly 10 years before David and Cameron reportedly started dating in 2023.
“[David] loves Descendants in, like, a way that’s almost divorced from his relationship with me,” Cameron said, adding that the first one is his favorite.
David and Cameron announced their engagement in January.
(L-R) Chris Robinson and Rich Robinson of The Black Crowes perform in concert during the “Happiness Bastards Tour” at ACL Live at The Moody Theatre on November 11, 2024 in Austin, Texas. (Photo by Rick Kern/Getty Images)
The Black Crowes have announced a new set of co-headlining tour dates with country rock band Whiskey Myers.
The Southern Hospitality tour, featuring special guest Southall, will hit over 40 cities, kicking off May 17 in Austin, Texas. It will also visit Nashville, New York, Cincinnati, Denver, Detroit, Dallas and more, before wrapping Aug. 20 in Mountain View, California.
The tour will also include a special show at the Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles on Aug. 17 with additional headliner Tedeschi Trucks Band. This will mark the first time all three bands have headlined the iconic venue.
A presale for tickets begins Feb. 3 at 10 a.m. local time, with tickets going on sale to the general public on Feb. 6 at 10 a.m. local time.
To coincide with the announcement, The Black Crowes have released another single off their upcoming album, A Pound of Feathers, which drops March 13. “It’s Like That,” which is also featured on ESPN on ABC’s NHL campaign, is available now via digital outlets.
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell speaks during a press conference following the Federal Open Markets Committee meeting at the Federal Reserve on December 10, 2025 in Washington, DC. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
(NEW YORK) — The Federal Reserve on Wednesday is set to announce its latest decision on the level of interest rates, marking its first rate move since news surfaced of a federal criminal investigation into Fed Chair Jerome Powell.
The investigation ratcheted up an extraordinary clash between the nation’s top central banker and the White House, which has urged the Fed to significantly reduce interest rates.
The central bank is widely expected to hold interest rates steady on Wednesday. The anticipated move would end a string of three consecutive quarter-point rate cuts, aligning with a cautious approach outlined by Powell last month, before reports of the investigation into his conduct.
“We’re well positioned to wait and see how the economy evolves,” Powell said at a press conference in Washington, D.C., on Dec. 10.
Futures markets expect two quarter-point interest rate cuts this year, forecasting the first in June and a second in the fall, according to CME FedWatch Tool, a measure of market sentiment.
The federal probe appears to center on Powell’s testimony to Congress last year about cost overruns in a multi-billion-dollar office renovation project. Powell, who was appointed by Trump in 2017, issued a rare video message earlier this month rebuking the investigation as a politically motivated effort to influence the Fed’s interest rate policy.
The investigation follows months of strident criticism leveled at the Fed by Trump. The president denied any involvement in the criminal investigation during a brief interview with NBC News hours after the Fed posted Powell’s video.
Over the past year, hiring has slowed dramatically while inflation has remained elevated, risking an economic double-whammy known as “stagflation.” Those conditions have put the Fed in a difficult position.
The central bank must balance a dual mandate to keep inflation under control and maximize employment. To address pressure on both of its goals, the Fed primarily holds a single tool: interest rates.
The strain on both sides of the Fed’s mandate presents a “challenging situation” for the central bank, Powell noted last month.
“There’s no risk-free path for policy as we navigate this tension between our employment and inflation goals,” Powell said.
If the Fed raises interest rates as a means of protecting against elevated inflation, it risks a deeper slowdown of the labor market. On the other hand, by lowering rates to stimulate hiring, the Fed threatens to boost spending and worsen inflation.
The criminal investigation into Powell raised concern among some analysts and former top Fed officials, who said it poses a threat to central bank independence.
In the event a central bank loses independence, policymakers tend to favor lower interest rates as a means of boosting short-term economic activity, analysts previously told ABC News. Such a posture could pose a major risk of yearslong inflation fueled by a rise in consumer demand, untethered by interest rates.
Federal law allows the president to remove the Fed chair for “cause” — though no precedent exists for such an ouster. Powell’s term as chair is set to expire in May, but he can remain on the Fed’s policymaking board until 2028. Powell has not indicated whether he intends to remain on the board.
Editor’s note: This story has been updated, and will be updated again with the Fed’s rate decision.
Noah Kahan performs at CMA Fest. (Disney/Larry McCormack)
Noah Kahan‘s next album officially has a title and release date.
The record is called The Great Divide and will arrive on April 24.
“The songs are the words I would say if I could,” Kahan writes in an Instagram post. “They are the fears I dance with in the moments before I drift off to sleep.”
“The music here is my best attempt to delve deeper into the people, places, and feelings that have made me who I am,” he continues. “I am grateful for all of it, for all of you, for listening to them, if you choose to do so.”
Kahan previously teased a song called “The Great Divide,” which is set to premiere on Friday.
The album The Great Divide follows Kahan’s breakout album, Stick Season, which was first released in 2022 and later expanded in various deluxe editions. The record spawned a hit in the title track, as well as collaborations with Hozier, Post Malone, Sam Fender, Gracie Abrams and Kacey Musgraves, among others.
Noah Kahan performs at CMA Fest. (Disney/Larry McCormack)
Noah Kahan‘s next album officially has a title and release date.
The record is called The Great Divide and will arrive on April 24.
“The songs are the words I would say if I could,” Kahan writes in an Instagram post. “They are the fears I dance with in the moments before I drift off to sleep.”
“The music here is my best attempt to delve deeper into the people, places, and feelings that have made me who I am,” he continues. “I am grateful for all of it, for all of you, for listening to them, if you choose to do so.”
Kahan previously teased a song called “The Great Divide,” which is set to premiere on Friday.
The album The Great Divide follows Kahan’s breakout album, Stick Season, which was first released in 2022 and later expanded in various deluxe editions. The record spawned a hit in the title track, as well as collaborations with Hozier, Post Malone, Sam Fender, Gracie Abrams and Kacey Musgraves, among others.
“Afraid of the Dark” single artwork. (Roadrunner Records)
Motionless in White has premiered a new single called “Afraid of the Dark.”
The track reflects on the band’s 20th anniversary as frontman Chris Motionless sings, “Every scar is a badge of a lesson I’ve learned/ That took me twenty f****** years to earn.”
“I want the story of MIW to inspire anyone listening to not fear the unknown, but to run head first into it with everything they’ve got,” Chris says. “This song is about taking control of your destiny and writing the script of your own future without any doubt or apprehension.”
“For those of you who have been with us for any part of the last 20 years, this one is for you,” he adds. “If you mean it, you will make it.”
“Afraid of the Dark” follows Motionless in White’s 2022 album, Scoring the End of the World.
Motionless in White will be touring North America alongside Bring Me the Horizon starting in April.