Music notes: Mariah Carey, Taylor Swift, Doja Cat and Sara Bareilles

Music notes: Mariah Carey, Taylor Swift, Doja Cat and Sara Bareilles
Music notes: Mariah Carey, Taylor Swift, Doja Cat and Sara Bareilles

Billy Eichner said Mariah Carey was his only choice when it came to soundtracking the club scene for his new gay rom-com, Bros. He told E! News, “It had to be Mariah Carey. It was the only one. Mariah rules. I love her so much.”  

Margot Robbie is part of Taylor Swift’s so-called “squad,” so she loved working with her on the new movie Amsterdam. She told Capital FM, “She’s so lovely, a real girl’s girl!” Margot also got hooked up with some Folkore merch, but her guy friends took it all. “I ended up giving it all to the my guy friends because they were all so excited and they were the way bigger T Swift fans than my girlfriends,” she laughed.

You can now try to win Doja Cat‘s heart — and more — in the popular but raunchy video game House Party.  She is the latest celeb to join the suggestive game. House Party shared a teaser of her crazy storyline, which starts with her trying to sneak into a house party and then putting on an explosive concert.

It’s still hitting Sara Bareilles that she is part of an original Broadway cast recording of Into the Woods. She celebrated on Instagram, “Thrilling is not an adequate word for the feeling of being a part of an original Broadway cast album. I can’t believe it. I’m so happy.” The album is out now.

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ZZ Top’s Billy Gibbons, Peter Frampton auctioning original handwritten song lyrics for charity

ZZ Top’s Billy Gibbons, Peter Frampton auctioning original handwritten song lyrics for charity
ZZ Top’s Billy Gibbons, Peter Frampton auctioning original handwritten song lyrics for charity
Courtesy of Julien’s Auctions

Want to own a handwritten copy of lyrics to famous songs by ZZ Top and Peter Frampton? Now’s your chance.

A variety of music artists, including ZZ Top’s Billy Gibbons and Frampton, have contributed handwritten copies of their song lyrics that will go up for bid starting October 1 at JuliensLive.com as part of an online auction to benefit the Music Health Alliance charity.

Gibbons has donated a sheet with the lyrics to his band’s classic 1983 hit “Sharp Dressed Man,” and a doodle of a skeleton wearing a sombrero and sipping a beer. Frampton has offered up handwritten lyrics to his 1976 hit “Do You Feel Like I Do,” which he co-wrote with John Siomos, Mick Gallagher and Rick Wills.

Among the many other artists contributing to the auction are Train‘s Pat Monahan, Michael Martin Murphey, Vince Gill, Reba McEntire, Loudon Wainwright and George Strait.

This sale marks the third annual installment of the “Handwritten Song Lyrics Benefitting Music Health Alliance” sale, which is hosted by Julien’s Auctions. Bidding closes on October 24.

The Music Health Alliance is an organization that advocates for music industry members’ access to health care and financial support for medical procedures.

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Nick Cannon welcomes baby #10

Nick Cannon welcomes baby #10
Nick Cannon welcomes baby #10
John Sciulli/Getty Images for Amnesty International USA

Just weeks after welcoming his ninth baby, his first with girlfriend LaNisha Cole, Nick Cannon is a dad for the 10th time — with an 11th on the way.

Cannon confirmed the news on his Instagram, revealing the baby’s name is Rise Messiah. The baby boy is his third child with model Brittany Bell. The pair also have a 5-year-old son named Golden “Sagon” and a 19-month-old daughter named Powerful Queen.

Entertainment Tonight reports Cannon’s 11th child is with Abby De La Rosa, the mother of his twin sons, Zion and Zillion.

Nick is also father to twins Moroccan and Monroe with his ex-wife, Mariah CareyLegendary Love with model Bre Tiesi; and Zen with Alyssa Scott.

Zen passed away at 5 months old after battling brain cancer.

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Service, with a ‘Smile’: Inside Paramount’s home run of a guerilla marketing campaign

Service, with a ‘Smile’: Inside Paramount’s home run of a guerilla marketing campaign
Service, with a ‘Smile’: Inside Paramount’s home run of a guerilla marketing campaign
Paramount Pictures

If you’re a baseball fan, you may have noticed an odd pattern recently: patrons seated behind home plate, staring into the camera with a creepy smile on their face for the entire game. 

In some cases, the people wore a brightly colored shirt reading “Smile.”

Even if you’re not a sports fan, the internet certainly noticed, and footage of the folks went viral

Turns out it was part of a pretty savvy marketing campaign for Paramount Pictures’ new horror film Smile. And hey, if you can get Major League Baseball to get the word out about your movie — for free — during must-see games like the New York Yankees vs. the Boston Red Sox, that’s some pretty savvy promo indeed. 

What’s more, it seems to have worked: The modestly budgeted movie made more than $2 million during Thursday night previews, according to Deadline, which predicted it could make as much as $20 million this weekend.

The movie stars Sosie Bacon — daughter of Kevin Bacon and Kyra Sedgwick — and The Boys Jesse T. Usher

The studio teases that Bacon’s character witnesses “a bizarre, traumatic incident involving a patient” and “starts experiencing frightening occurrences that she can’t explain.”

“As an overwhelming terror begins taking over her life [she] must confront her troubling past in order to survive and escape her horrifying new reality.”

The movie’s trailer is even creepier than those planted baseball fans.

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In Hurricane Ian’s aftermath, the new head of FEMA faces a historic challenge

In Hurricane Ian’s aftermath, the new head of FEMA faces a historic challenge
In Hurricane Ian’s aftermath, the new head of FEMA faces a historic challenge
Drew Angerer/Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) — Deanne Criswell was in Florida Friday with Gov. Ron DeSantis, assessing the historic damage from Hurricane Ian and facing her biggest challenge yet as the new head of FEMA — the Federal Emergency Management Agency.

Not only is she the first woman to hold that critical job — the face of FEMA when desperate Americans are demanding help that can never get to them fast enough — the agency, before her time, has been roundly criticized for not delivering on its core mission.

Will Criswell make a difference when FEMA is needed most? Have lessons been learned so it can respond better now?

On Thursday, she voiced confidence when she joined President Joe Biden at FEMA headquarters in Washington to give an update on Ian’s path of destruction, saying her “heart aches” for those whose lives have been devastated.

“As many have said, Hurricane Ian is going to be a storm that we talk about for decades. But from the moment Hurricane Ian became a threat, we already had the right teams in place, who were ready to answer the call of those that need us most,” Criswell said, in a no-nonsense style.

Biden referred to Criswell as the “MVP here these days” and observers have told ABC News that Criswell’s background makes her uniquely qualified for the high-stakes job.

Criswell served in the Colorado Air National Guard for more than two decades, started her emergency management career in Aurora, Colorado and was most recently the commissioner of the New York City Emergency Management Department before being appointed by Biden to head FEMA.

“She is someone who actually has responded to threats. She has experience in the field, she knows what it’s like to be on the frontlines,” said Daniel Aldrich, the director of the Security and Resilience Studies Program at Northeastern University.

But Criswell trails a long list of political appointees who have occupied the high-stakes federal operations post, notorious for its historically difficult nature and outsized prominence during the worst days of calamity around the nation.

Memories are still fresh of the fire and ridicule aimed at Michael Brown, FEMA administrator under George W. Bush, for how critics say he mishandled the Hurricane Katrina response, despite Bush famously telling him, “Brownie, you’re doing a heck of a job.”

FEMA’s past problems

The agency has become nearly synonymous with the federal government’s response to all manner of disasters — floods, fires, pandemics and more. The scale of its work encompasses billions in funding and direct aid, millions of units of food and water and enormous swaths of temporary housing, among other forms of relief.

“Being there to help clear roads, rebuild main streets and so that families can get back to their lives: That’s what FEMA does every single day,” President Biden said last year as he announced $1 billion for a FEMA preparedness project amid extreme weather fueled by climate change.

“As my mother would say, ‘They’re doing God’s work,'” Biden said.

But that work has not been without intense controversy — including with Katrina in 2005, an episode epitomized, to critics, when the agency provided temporary trailers as housing which also included high levels of the carcinogenic formaldehyde. That same issue was later documented in some FEMA trailers provided to victims of wildfires in California in 2007.

Major problems have continued since, though the agency has continued to say it strives to best serve those in need.

FEMA has also been strapped, at various points over the years, both by funding problems and what appears to be an accelerating cycle of weather calamities for which it is called upon to respond.

“They need more people and resources,” Eric Holdeman, the director of the Center for Regional Disaster Resilience for the Pacific Northwest Economic Region, told ABC News. “The frequency of disasters, think about wildland fires that we’ve had, the heat emergencies that have been happening, tornadoes — all of those end up as they become presidentially declared, FEMA’s involved.”

In 2020, the president of the union for FEMA employees acknowledged, “The only thing we can liken this to is 2017, which was one of our busiest years in decades. This is far eclipsing 2017.”

That same year, however, a watchdog found that FEMA had misplaced $250 million in food and supplies for Puerto Rico after it was hit by two hurricanes, Irma and Maria.

The Department of Homeland Security Office of Inspector General found that FEMA “lost visibility” or failed to fully track nearly 40% of shipments to Puerto Rico with a value of nearly $257 million in meals, water, blankets and other supplies. Of the nearly 10,000 shipping containers sent to Puerto Rico, 19 were never recovered.

Aldrich said a major problem for FEMA after Hurricane Maria in 2017 and for Hurricane Katrina in 2005 was a lack of pre-positioning resources.

“FEMA did not take advantage of weather forecasting and simulation models to place things like food, water, bulldozers, evacuation shelters, in communities near or on vulnerable sites about being hit by a shock like a hurricane,” he said.

Perhaps recognizing the agency’s past failures to prepare for extreme weather events, Criswell and Biden have gone to great lengths to highlight the agency’s prepositioning ahead of Hurricane Ian.

Speaking at the White House press briefing on Sept. 27, the day before Ian made landfall in Florida, Criswell said they’d already staged hundreds of thousands of gallons of food, millions of liters of water and millions of meals, as well as personnel.

“The preparation for this storm has been extensive and it has been coordinated,” she said. “It has been a coordinated effort between FEMA, our federal, our state, and our nonprofit partners.”

But just as recently as this summer, in aiding Kentucky after flooding there, FEMA was repeatedly criticized by the state’s governor, Andy Beshear, for what he said was a stupefying inability to process aid claims.

“Too many people are being denied,” Beshear told reporters in August. “Not enough people are being approved. And this is the time that FEMA’s got to get it right. To change what has been a history of denying too many people and not providing enough dollars and to get it right here.”

In response, a FEMA spokesman said, in part, according to the Associated Press: “We know these are incredibly difficult times, and we want to help you. We will continue to work to ensure that every eligible applicant receives every dollar of assistance legally possible.”

The spokesman said then — echoing a promise made by FEMA officials through the years of disaster upon disaster in the U.S. — that responders would remain in Kentucky “as long as it takes.”

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Prince’s estate felt Sinéad O’Connor “didn’t deserve” to use “Nothing Compares 2 U” in new doc

Prince’s estate felt Sinéad O’Connor “didn’t deserve” to use “Nothing Compares 2 U” in new doc
Prince’s estate felt Sinéad O’Connor “didn’t deserve” to use “Nothing Compares 2 U” in new doc
Showtime Documentary Films

A notable omission from Nothing Compares, the new Showtime documentary about Sinéad O’Connor, is the singer’s smash hit recording of the Prince-penned “Nothing Compares 2 U.”  In fact, a message on the screen during the film reads, “The Prince estate denied use of Sinéad‘s recording of ‘Nothing Compares 2 U’ in this film.”  Director Kathryn Ferguson told ABC Audio she wasn’t sure why they turned down the request — but now we know.

One of Prince’s heirs, half-sister Sharon Nelson, explained the decision in a statement to Billboard.

“I didn’t feel [Sinéad] deserved to use the song my brother wrote in her documentary so we declined,” Nelson said.

But there’s another reason: Nelson said in her statement that “nothing compares” to Prince’s 1992 live version of the song — included on his 1993 album Hits 1 — that he recorded with singer Rosie Gaines. The estate just happens to be rereleasing that album on vinyl on November 4.

It’s not clear why Nelson and her siblings felt that Sinéad “didn’t deserve” to use the recording. In Sinéad’s 2021 memoir, Rememberings, she claims that when she met Prince, he criticized her for using profanity in interviews and then challenged her to a pillow fight. She also claims he put something in the pillow that would hurt her. 

After leaving, Sinéad writes of Prince, “I never wanted to see that devil again.” 

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Keke Palmer launches her own digital TV network, KeyTV

Keke Palmer launches her own digital TV network, KeyTV
Keke Palmer launches her own digital TV network, KeyTV
ABC

An already multihyphenate superstar, Keke Palmer is adding yet another notch to her entertainment belt. 

The Nope actress took to social media Friday to announce KeyTV, a new digital TV network for “a new generation of creators.”

Palmer announced the new venture in a fun, short video posted to social media where she reminds viewers of the many entertainment hats she’s worn over the years and emphasizes the need for cultural stories to be told. 

“I want to share everything I learned with you, because this is my greatest dream of all,” says Palmer while sitting in a director’s chair. “All it takes is one of us to unlock a door to unlock a million doors for each other. I’m so excited to introduce you guys to KeyTV.”

Palmer also shared a short video to KeyTV’s YouTube page, emphasizing how behind-the-scenes creators — production designers, sound mixers, photographers — are just as important as those in front of the camera. 

“What if I told you we just need more you,” she says before cutting to a montage of Black creators. 

While not much information has been provided about the network or how to become part of it, Keke promises the new platform will be a place “where our stories matter and where we are represented as the keys to the culture.”

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See the Black Eyed Peas for $15 at this upcoming high school football game

See the Black Eyed Peas for  at this upcoming high school football game
See the Black Eyed Peas for  at this upcoming high school football game
Jerod Harris/GC Images

Football season is here and the Black Eyed Peas are helping students wave their colors at a Super Bowl-like halftime show at the East L.A. Classic match between rival high schools.

Los Angeles Times reports the “I Gotta Feeling” singers will take over the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum on October 21, when Theodore Roosevelt High takes on Garfield High School, for a halftime performance.

will.i.am has a commitment to Roosevelt, as he grew up in Boyle Heights and strives to give back to his community via his i.am Angel Foundation. The musician has several projects going to inspire students, including his I.am.College Track program, which encourages them to reach for their dreams by obtaining a higher education. He also helped found a robotics program at the school.

Garfield football coach Lorenzo Hernandez is happy to welcome BEP to the Classic, an annual event since 1925, noting attendance has significantly shrunk over the past few years from an estimated 25,000 people to 10,000.

“This is going to be the biggest ever meeting with two teams playing well, an historic venue and the Black Eyed Peas halftime show,” he said, stressing the affordable ticket price. “All for $15.”

Tickets are on sale on Ticketmaster; students who take advantage of a presale will pay $12.

The junior varsity match kicks off at 3:30 p.m. while the varsity game takes place at 7:30 p.m.

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R.E.M.’s Peter Buck & Nirvana’s Krist Novoselic guest on new song from rising Cuban artist Hector Tellez Jr.

R.E.M.’s Peter Buck & Nirvana’s Krist Novoselic guest on new song from rising Cuban artist Hector Tellez Jr.
R.E.M.’s Peter Buck & Nirvana’s Krist Novoselic guest on new song from rising Cuban artist Hector Tellez Jr.
Mono Mundo Recordings/Thirty Tigers

 R.E.M. guitarist Peter Buck and Nirvana bassist Krist Novoselic guest on a new single from rising Cuban rock artist Hector Tellez Jr.

The track is called “Silver Blue Jellyfish” and is available now via digital outlets.

“‘Silver Blue Jellyfish’ is a song about hope and how powerful your life can be when you listen to the call of your deepest purpose and how you can inspire others to pursue their desire to lead a life of freedom, love and happiness,” Tellez says.

The collaboration came together after Tellez’s demo found its way to producer Barrett Martin, who played drums in Screaming Trees and the grunge supergroup Mad Season. Upon inviting Tellez to Seattle to record an album, Martin also recruited a few friends, including Buck and Novoselic, to take part, too.

Buck joined Tellez to perform “Silver Blue Jellyfish” during this year’s Hispanic Heritage Awards, which will air Friday on PBS.

Novoselic, meanwhile, performed at the Taylor Hawkins tribute concert in Los Angeles earlier this week, joining his Nirvana bandmate Dave Grohl, members of Soundgarden and The Pretty RecklessTaylor Momsen to play two Soundgarden songs.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Jazmine Sullivan, D’Mile submit original song from ‘Till’ biopic for Oscars consideration

Jazmine Sullivan, D’Mile submit original song from ‘Till’ biopic for Oscars consideration
Jazmine Sullivan, D’Mile submit original song from ‘Till’ biopic for Oscars consideration
Getty

Grammy winners Jazmine Sullivan and Dernst D’Mile Emile have submitted their original new song “Stand Up,” from the upcoming Till biopic, to the Academy Awards for Best Original Song consideration. 

Variety reports the song, which will release October 7, will be featured during the end credits of the true-story film of Mamie Till Mobley, the mother of Emmett Till, the young boy brutally lynched in Mississippi in 1955. 

Sullivan, who performed the new song, says she understands how vital it is to tell the story. 

“I’m honored to be able to contribute to such a powerful film about such a historic and tragic moment in American history,” Sullivan said. “I believe that part of my purpose is to give space for stories that are often ignored and silenced; the Black experience in particular. So I’m glad that the story of Emmett Till and his mother, Mamie Till, is being told so generations old and young can be educated and inspired to make a change. I hope that after people see this film they’ll be moved to stand up against the racism we are still facing today.”

Fresh off her two Grammy wins, including Best R&B album for Heaux Tales, Sullivan has always used her art to uplift and encourage Black women and the Black community. 

“The project became so much more than just my own kind of catharsis for the things that I was going through, it became a really a safe place for Black women,” Sullivan told reporters at the 2022 Grammy Awards. “This project has just done so much for us to kind of come together and just share our stories and not be ashamed about the things that we went through.” 

Till opens in theaters Friday, October 14. 

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