The “Congratulations” rapper and his girlfriend are reportedly expecting their first child together.
In a statement obtained by TMZPost Malone, born Austin Post, said “I’m excited for this next chapter in my life, I’m the happiest I’ve ever been, and for since I could remember I was sad.”
“Time to take care of my body and my family and friends, and spread as much love as we can every day,” the 26-year-old added.
Malone and his girlfriend, who hasn’t been publicly identified, celebrated with friends and family over the weekend, according to the outlet.
Dua Lipa is embracing a healthier lifestyle and recently revealed she’s finally quit smoking.
Speaking on the newest episode of her At Your Service podcast, the “Levitating” hitmaker answered questions from fans and one asked how she manages “the physical toll” of her demanding tour schedule.
“I’ve had to make health changes in my lifestyle when embarking on this tour,” Dua explained. “I actually had laryngitis in December and that kinda kickstarted me quitting smoking a month earlier than I was supposed to!”
“I did it and I have stuck to it,” Dua proudly declared, adding she has a “habit tracker” on her phone to help her stick to her goals. “Every night I tick off all the good things I’ve done for my body and the things I’ve done for myself.”
Dua said quitting smoking is one way she’s stayed on top of her mental health and that it “energizes” her to keep up the good work.
The “New Rules” singer is currently on her pandemic-delayed Future Nostalgia tour, which played over 70 dates since starting in February. It runs into the fall, with a final stop planned in Peth, Australia on November 16.
Prior to Grammy-winning musician PJ Morton‘s release of his latest album, Watch the Sun, he alerted the music world about two important aspects of its creation process: the legendary special guests like Jill Scott, El DeBarge and Alex Isley who contributed to the collection of original songs; and the challenge he imposed upon himself to create an unapologetic and vulnerable body of work.
“I’m being more honest, more authentic, more open than I’ve been in the past,” Morton said in a statement ahead of the album’s release last Friday. “As much as people know about me, I’m pretty private about specifics, but these were some real things going on in my life. So it manifested with lyrics that pushed myself.”
To make the 11-track album and its songs, including “Biggest Mistake” and “Still Believe,” the Maroon 5 keyboardist ventured away from his New Orleans home to Bogalusa, Louisiana’s historic Studio in the Country, where music greats such as Betty Davis and Stevie Wonder have recorded in the past.
In conversation with ABC Audio about his experience working alongside Stevie Wonder as well as Nas on the album’s third single, “Be Like Water,” Morton says the collaboration was a “dream come true.”
“It’s a huge honor, obviously, to have two GOATs,” he said. Having previously collaborated on Stevie Wonder’s 2013 single, “Only One,” Morton said they’ve “developed a great relationship” over the years. And after hearing the song and expressing that he loved Stevie Wonder, “like we all do,” said Morton, Nas joining the track was a no-brainer.
Watch the Sun has been two years in the making and now that it’s out, Morton hopes listeners can “connect in a deep way” and experience the same vulnerability he did in creating it.
Beastie Boys member Adam “MCA” Yauch died 10 years ago Wednesday.
Yauch, Michael “Mike D” Diamond and Adam “Ad-Rock” Horovitz made up the three main members of the pioneering hip hop/rock group, which made history with 1986’s Licensed to Ill, the first-ever rap album to hit number one on the Billboard 200. Licensed to Ill spawned the hit single “(You Gotta) Fight for Your Right (To Party!),” and was certified Diamond by the RIAA in 2015.
The Beasties followed Licensed to Ill with 1989’s experimental Paul’s Boutique. While it didn’t reach the commercial heights of Licensed to Ill, Paul’s Boutique became a critical darling and is now considered to be highly influential.
Eventually, the trio found themselves back atop the charts with 1994’s Ill Communication, which included the single “Sabotage.” Ill Communication kicked off a streak of three straight number-one Billboard 200 albums, followed by 1998’s Hello Nasty and 2004’s To the 5 Boroughs.
After a one-off instrumental record in 2007, the Beasties released Hot Sauce Committee Part Two in 2011, which would turn out to be their final album. Yauch, who’d announced in 2009 that he’d been diagnosed with cancer, died May 4, 2012, at age 47.
About a month before Yauch died, Beastie Boys were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. Yauch did not attend, but sent in a speech read by Horovitz at the ceremony.
Yauch’s death was mourned by artists throughout the music world, and he was memorialized with a park named after him in his hometown of Brooklyn, New York. Horovitz and Diamond have since disbanded Beastie Boys.
Matt Winkelmeyer/MG22/Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue
After keeping silent for months, Sophie Turner officially confirmed to Elle UK that she is expecting her second child with husband Joe Jonas.
The Game of Thrones alum, who already shares 10-month-old daughter Willa with Joe, reveals in the magazine’s June edition, “We’re so excited to be expanding the family. It’s the best blessing ever.”
“It’s what life is about for me — raising the next generation,” she continues. “The greatest thing in life is seeing my daughter go from strength to strength.”
Turner, 26, and Jonas, 32, began dating in 2016 and tied the knot in 2019.
The actress’ baby bump was on full display at Monday’s Met Gala in New York City.
(NEW YORK) — Here are the scores from Tuesday’s sports events:
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
INTERLEAGUE
Texas 6, Philadelphia 4
Chi White Sox 3, Chicago Cubs 1
Kansas City 7, St. Louis 1
Pittsburgh at Detroit (Postponed)
San Diego at Cleveland (Postponed)
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Boston 4, LA Angels 0
Tampa Bay 10, Oakland 7
NY Yankees 9, Toronto 1
Minnesota 7, Baltimore 2
Houston, 4 Seattle 0
NATIONAL LEAGUE
NY Mets 5, Atlanta 4
NY Mets 3, Atlanta 0
Arizona 5, Miami 4
Milwaukee 6, Cincinnati 3
Washington 10, Colorado 2
LA Dodgers 3, San Francisco 1
NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION PLAYOFFS
Boston 109, Milwaukee 86 (Series tied 1-1)
Memphis 106, Golden State 101 (Series tied 1-1)
NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE PLAYOFFS
Washington 4, Florida 2 (Washington leads 1-0)
Pittsburgh 4, NY Rangers 3 (3 OT) (Pittsburgh leads 1-0)
Colorado 7, Nashville 2 (Colorado leads 1-0)
Calgary 1, Dallas 0 (Calgary leads 1-0)
(NEW YORK) — A former Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor accused of sexual harassment withdrew his candidacy for a position at New York University Langone Health, after news of his potential hiring received backlash from the NYU community.
Dr. David Sabatini, a biologist, resigned from MIT last month after a review found he violated its workplace policy on consensual relationships and recommended his tenure be revoked. Sabatini allegedly failed to disclose a sexual relationship he had with “a person over whom he held a career-influencing role” and didn’t take any steps to “relinquish his mentoring and career-influencing roles,” according to a letter by MIT President L. Rafael Reif.
The committee conducting the review also had “significant concerns regarding his unprofessional behavior toward some lab members,” the letter added.
Sabatini has denied allegations of sexual harassment and has said the relationship at the center of the investigation was consensual. He has sued his accuser, as well as others, for defamation. His accuser has also countersued.
Sabatini said he was withdrawing his name from consideration, but maintained that he will “eventually be vindicated.”
“False, distorted, and preposterous allegations about me have intensified in the press and on social media in the wake of reports last week that New York University Langone Health was considering hiring me. I understand the enormous pressure this has placed on NYU Langone Health and do not want to distract from its important mission. I have therefore decided to withdraw my name from consideration for a faculty position there,” Sabatini said in a statement to ABC News on Tuesday.
He added, “I deeply respect NYU Langone Health’s mission and appreciate the support from individuals who took the time to learn the facts. I remain steadfast in believing that the truth will ultimately emerge and that I will eventually be vindicated and able to return to my research.”
NYU Langone Health, the university’s academic medical center that includes the school of medicine, said in a statement Tuesday that both Sabatini and the NYU Grossman School of Medicine “reached the conclusion that it will not be possible for him to become a member of our faculty.”
“Our overarching mission at NYU Grossman School of Medicine is advancing science and medicine to save lives. That is what compelled us to give careful reflection to hiring Dr. Sabatini after he initially reached out to us,” NYU Langone Health said.
It added, “In the course of our due diligence, we heard voices of support from many dozens of Dr. Sabatini’s colleagues, lab alumni, and peers who described their first-hand experiences working with him. But we also heard clearly the deep concern from our own faculty, staff, and trainees. Our thorough review and deliberate approach was essential for us to make an independent evaluation consistent with our institutional priorities.”
News that Sabatini may be hired by NYU was first reported on science.org, which also reports that Sabatini has been forced out of or fired from three leading institutions for sexual harassment or for violating workplace or consensual sexual relationship policies.
Members of the NYU community, including its union for graduate workers, a group for women in STEM and a group of STEM researchers planning on forming a union, organized a protest against Sabatini’s hiring last week.
A petition against Sabatini’s hiring had gathered more than 400 signatures as of Tuesday. As long as Sabatini was being considered for a position, signatories pledged to not give or attend any talks, seminars, conferences or symposia hosted by NYU Langone Health. They also vowed not to teach any courses at NYU Langone or collaborate with any labs at NYU Langone.
If you can’t make it to Southern California’s 2022 BeachLife Festival later this month, you can still enjoy the beach vibes from the comfort of your own home.
Select sets from the three-day event, which will be held May 13-15 on Redondo Beach, will stream live online for free. Among the artists you’ll be able to watch include Weezer, The Smashing Pumpkins, Steve Miller Band, 311, Sheryl Crow, Vance Joy, Black Pumas, Stone Temple Pilots and Cold War Kids.
The Rolling Stones have partnered with the LEGO Group on the creation of a new LEGO set that celebrates the band’s classic tongue-and-lips logo in honor of the British rock legends’ 60th anniversary.
The set, which is part of the LEGO Art series, features 1,998 pieces that when put together creates a 3-D depiction of the Stones logo. It will be released on June 1, and will be available at LEGO.com and all LEGO retailers. The set is priced at $149.99.
LEGO designers have incorporated special surprise content into the set that can be accessed by fans — a soundtrack that includes music and an exclusive interview with graphic designer John Pasche, who created the original Rolling Stones tongue logo back in 1970.
“Who would have believed, 50 odd years ago…that design would be made into a LEGO piece. Wow!” Pasche said after he first saw the LEGO Art set.
The LEGO logo set measures over 22 inches long by 18.5 inches wide, and includes two hanger elements so that it can be affixed to a wall for display.
(TULSA COUNTY, Okla.) — A judge in Oklahoma ruled Monday that a Tulsa Race Massacre reparations lawsuit may proceed. The decision by Tulsa County Judge Caroline Wall was welcome news to 107-year-old Viola Ford Fletcher and two other survivors of the 1921 massacre.
Fletcher is the oldest living survivor of the destruction that ensued when white mobs attacked the prominent Greenwood District of Tulsa, Oklahoma. Incensed crowds flooded the streets of what is often referred to as Black Wall Street, killing the prosperous neighborhood’s Black residents and demolishing their homes over two days.
Fletcher said she and her family never returned to Tulsa after they fled the night of May 31, 1921. Her home had been ravaged by fire, leaving her and hundreds of others without any of their possessions and livelihoods.
“There wasn’t anything to come back to,” she told ABC News.
She recalls the sounds of shooting and people screaming as she walked past neighbors lying dead in the street. Those memories have stayed with her, sometimes waking her up at night.
“We still have fear,” she said.
She and her co-plaintiffs, Lessie Benningfield Randle, also 107, and Hughes Van Ellis, 101, were all young children at the time. Fletcher will celebrate her 108th birthday on May 10.
The plaintiffs are suing for a victims’ compensation fund, pushing for “whatever it takes to replace our loss,” according to Fletcher.
Judge Wall partially denied Tulsa’s motion to dismiss the public nuisance civil court lawsuit on Monday. Oklahoma’s public nuisance statute allows authorities to be sued for what attorneys say is their role in endangering the safety of Greenwood’s residents and their property. The plaintiffs must show that the “comfort, repose, health, or safety” of Greenwood’s residents was harmed, and that Tulsa officials failed to perform their duties to protect Greenwood and its residents from that harm.
However, some officials are hesitant to pay monetary reparations to the victims and their families seeking restitution.
“I am not opposed to cash payments to descendants and the victims. It’s where the money comes from that for me is important,” Tulsa Mayor G.T. Bynum, who led the effort to help find missing Tulsa victims, said to ABC News, before adding that he is ”opposed to levying a tax on this generation of Tulsans who are at no fault.”
The Mayor’s office declined to comment on the judge’s ruling as the lawsuit is under litigation.
Driesen Heath, a Tulsa-born reparations researcher and advocate, spoke with ABC News about the need for reparations to be paid to the massacre’s survivors.
“The city of Tulsa and the state of Oklahoma have documented culpability in the massacre and they need to repay in all forms that are necessary, the harms that they have perpetrated and facilitated,” Heath said.
Heath said the consequences of these harms are still affecting families 100 years later, causing some intergenerational pain while others accrue intergenerational wealth.
“People make arguments about not wanting to pay for the sins of their forefathers and their ancestors, but they want to benefit from those sins continually,” she said.
If won, the lawsuit could mean hundreds of millions of dollars awarded to victims, accounting for financial losses that Damario Solomon-Simmons, an attorney for the survivors, said “would have made a tremendous difference” in the lives of those affected.
“I have children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren. And I really want this for my younger generation, something that I wasn’t able to do for them,” Fletcher said.
Over a century later, this lawsuit may be the last known living survivors’ last chance to see justice served for the racist decimation of their community that left over 300 people dead, hundreds more injured, and countless more marked by the devastation.