Bruno Mars to open Fenway Park’s new music hall with three-day spectacular

Bruno Mars to open Fenway Park’s new music hall with three-day spectacular
Bruno Mars to open Fenway Park’s new music hall with three-day spectacular
Emma McIntyre/Getty Images for The Recording Academy

Bruno Mars is coming to Boston for a three-day spectacular to celebrate the opening of an all-new music hall.

The Grammy winner will officially open MGM Music Hall at Fenway, which seats 5,000 people, starting September 7.  The opening night will be followed by two more shows on September 9 and September 11.  

The new venue is located steps away from historic Fenway Park, which is the home of the Boston Red Sox.  According to the press release, the MGM Music Hall at Fenway is being billed as “the new, state-of-the-art, multi-purpose performing arts center, occupying roughly 91,500 square feet on four levels.”

The “Leave the Door Open” singer has lately been directing his full attention on his Silk Sonic partnership with Anderson .Paak and the duo are currently performing their An Evening With Silk Sonic Vegas residency at Park MGM, which runs through May.

Tickets go on sale starting Friday at 10 a.m. ET on Ticketmaster.com.

While Bruno will be the first artist to christen the music hall, a line of performances is already building. 

Lil Nas X announced last week he’s bringing his Long Live Montero tour to the venue, which stops in Boston on September 18.  Other big acts heading to the venue include “Beggin'” singers Måneskin and country group Lady A, among many others.

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“Be free, my beautiful mother. Be free”: Ashley Judd shares moving post in honor of mother Naomi Judd

“Be free, my beautiful mother. Be free”: Ashley Judd shares moving post in honor of mother Naomi Judd
“Be free, my beautiful mother. Be free”: Ashley Judd shares moving post in honor of mother Naomi Judd
Jason Kempin/Getty Images for Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum

Ashley Judd is taking a walk down memory lane as she reflects on the passing of her mother, Naomi Judd

The actress took to Instagram following The Judds‘ induction into the Country Music Hall of Fame to share how the family has been honoring the memory of Naomi, who passed away on Saturday at the age of 76 due to mental illness. 

In the loving post, Ashley shared a photo of her and sister Wynonna Judd with their backs to the camera, looking at the bronze plaque of The Judds that sits in the rotunda at the Country Music Hall of Fame, along with a photo of Carly Pearce performing at the ceremony. 

Ashley then takes viewers inside the Judds’ home, sharing a photo of the altar she created in her mother’s honor that includes a picture of her silhouette from when she was 11 years old, surrounded by flowers and a book titled Grief Therapy. She also shares a video of Naomi’s husband, Larry Strickland, singing “How Great Thou Art,” along with a throwback photo from childhood of the sisters with their mom at Little Cat Creek in their home state of Kentucky. 

“Speechless,” Ashley begins in the caption. “Your outpouring is reaching me. Thank you for every thought, prayer, message, text, email, post, expression. We each are alone and we are in fellowship, broken and held, protected from nothing and sustained in everything. It’s the beginning of an old story, life and death, loss and life. Be free, my beautiful mother. Be free.” 

Ashley and Wynonna were both present at the Country Music Hall of Fame induction ceremony in Nashville Sunday, where they paid a tearful tribute to their late mother, who died one day before the event.

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With Supreme Court poised to reverse Roe, most Americans support abortion rights: POLL

With Supreme Court poised to reverse Roe, most Americans support abortion rights: POLL
With Supreme Court poised to reverse Roe, most Americans support abortion rights: POLL
Ting Shen/Bloomberg via Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) — Amid reports of a draft Supreme Court opinion that would overturn Roe v. Wade, an ABC News/Washington Post poll finds that majorities of Americans support upholding Roe, say abortion should be legal in all or most cases and — by a wide margin — see abortion as a decision to be made by a woman and her doctor, not by lawmakers.

The national survey was completed last week, in advance of a report by Politico Monday night that a proposed first draft of an opinion, apparently by Justice Samuel Alito, called for reversing Roe in a case challenging Mississippi’s ban on abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy.

See PDF for full results, charts and tables.

In this poll, by contrast, 57% of Americans oppose a ban after 15 weeks; 58% say abortion should be legal in all or most cases; and 54% say the court should uphold Roe, compared with 28% who say the ruling should be overturned.

Support for upholding Roe is 6 percentage points lower than it was in an ABC/Post poll last November. Preference for reversing it is essentially unchanged; instead, more in this survey express no opinion, 18%.

Moving the question outside a legal framework, 7 in 10 say the decision whether or not a woman can have an abortion should be left to the woman and her doctor; this also is down from November, by 5 points. Twenty-four percent instead say abortion should be regulated by law. Even among those who say abortion should be illegal in all or most cases, a substantial share, 41%, also say it should be left to the woman and her doctor.

Trends are not consistent. While support for abortion rights is down slightly in the two items noted above, it’s higher than previously (up 12 points from 2011) “when the woman cannot afford to have a child,” and unchanged in other measures.

Legal or illegal?

Basic views on whether or not abortion should be legal have been more or less stable in polling going back 27 years. The 58% who say it should be legal in all or most cases is very near the average, 56%, in nearly three dozen ABC/Post polls since mid-1995, ranging from 49% to 60%. This includes 26% who now say it should be legal in all cases, exceeding the average, 21%; and 33% who say it should be legal in most cases.

Thirty-seven percent in this poll, produced for ABC News by Langer Research Associates, instead say abortion should be illegal in most cases (21%) or all cases (16%). That’s less than the long-term average, 42%, with a range from 36% to 48%. (Five percent have no opinion on this question.)

Circumstances

Considering specific circumstances, substantial majorities say abortion should be legal when the woman’s physical health is endangered (82%), when the pregnancy was caused by rape or incest (79%) and when there’s evidence of serious birth defects (67%).

The public divides on another circumstance: When the woman cannot afford to have a child, 48% say abortion should be legal, 45% illegal. Support for legal abortion in this case is its highest in six polls dating back to 1996.

On another front, the poll finds most Americans are unaware of new abortion restrictions in their states. In the 22 states that have passed abortion restrictions since 2020, just 30% of residents are aware that this has occurred; more, 44%, think not, with 26% unsure. An open question is how people who favor legal abortion may react if and when they learn their state has taken a different tack.

State laws

Regarding state-level action, 36% say laws on access to abortion in their state should be left as they are now and 33% say access to abortion should be easier than it is now. Fewer, 25%, say abortion access should be harder than it is currently.

Support for greater restrictions is muted, 30%, even in the 26 states that are reported by the Guttmacher Institute as likely to ban legal abortion if Roe v. Wade were overturned. This shrinks to 21% in other states.

Testing two specific restrictions, almost identical numbers say they’d oppose a law in their state making abortions legal only in the first six weeks of pregnancy (58%) or, as mentioned, only in the first 15 weeks (57%); 36% alike support each prospect. At least 12 states have passed six-week bans (most of which have been struck down or blocked by the courts) and five states have passed 15-week bans, with partial passage in a sixth.

Groups

Sixty-two percent of women and 55% of men say abortion should be legal in all or most cases. The gap widens on the shares who say it should be legal in all cases — 33% of women, compared with 19% of men, a wider gap than typical.

Support for legal abortion is highest among liberals (82%), people with no religious preference (80%), Democrats (79%), those with post-graduate degrees (74%) and Northeasterners (72%). It’s lowest among strong conservatives (20%), evangelical Protestants (28%) and Republicans (33%).

As noted, Americans by 54-28% say the Supreme Court should uphold Roe; it’s a similar 51-32% in the states where abortion bans or severe restrictions are anticipated if the ruling were overturned. Among groups, support for overturning Roe reaches a slim majority only among conservatives, 52%. Perhaps surprisingly, support for overturning the precedent reaches only 44% among Republicans and 45% among evangelical Protestants, two of the groups most apt to say abortion should be illegal.

Methodology

This ABC News/Washington Post poll was conducted by landline and cellular telephone April 24-28, 2022, in English and Spanish, among a random national sample of 1,004 adults. Results have a margin of sampling error of 3.5 percentage points, including the design effect. Partisan divisions are 29-25-40%, Democrats-Republicans-independents.

The survey was produced for ABC News by Langer Research Associates, with sampling and data collection by Abt Associates. See details on the survey’s methodology here.

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Judge refuses to dismiss Johnny Depp’s defamation suit against Amber Heard; trial to resume

Judge refuses to dismiss Johnny Depp’s defamation suit against Amber Heard; trial to resume
Judge refuses to dismiss Johnny Depp’s defamation suit against Amber Heard; trial to resume
Paul Morigi/Getty Images

(NOTE CONTENT) In a Virginia courtroom today, attorneys for Amber Heard were unsuccessful in their motion to lobby Judge Penny Azcarate to dismiss the $50 million defamation lawsuit leveled against the actress by her ex-husband Johnny Depp.

As reported, Depp is alleging a 2018 op-ed in The Washington Post that obliquely accused the actor of physical and sexual abuse, was not only false, but it devastated his reputation and career.

Attorneys for both parties took turns in oral arguments to the judge without the jury present, with Depp’s attorneys mounting a longer, point-by-point defense of why the case should proceed, including a recap of the testimony detailing how the ACLU helped Heard craft her controversial op-ed, and the abuse the Pirates of the Caribbean star allegedly suffered at the hands of the Aquaman actress.

“She even lied about the final insult left on the marital bed,” one of Depp’s attorneys added, regarding the testimony about the poop Depp’s camp says Heard left in their bedroom.

In the end, Judge Azcarate ruled for the plaintiff, Depp, noting, “if there is a scintilla of evidence that a reasonable juror could weigh, then the matter survives a motion to strike.”

She added, there is, “evidence that jurors could weigh that the [op-ed] statements were about the plaintiff, that the statements were published and that the statement was false,” and “that the defendant made the statement knowing it to be false or…made it so recklessly as to amount to willful disregard for the truth…”

The judge then declared the case will resume following a lunch break.

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Stevie Wonder, Nikole Hannah-Jones to be honored at the 34th National Equal Justice Awards

Stevie Wonder, Nikole Hannah-Jones to be honored at the 34th National Equal Justice Awards
Stevie Wonder, Nikole Hannah-Jones to be honored at the 34th National Equal Justice Awards
Emma McIntyre/Getty Images

The Legal Defense Fund will hold its 34th National Equal Justice Awards (NEJAD) dinner, an event hosted to highlight the fund’s social justice advocacy and advancements and to celebrate Black community leaders who work to advance civil rights. 

Of the honorees to be presented with special awards at the ceremony in New York on May 10, is legendary musician Stevie Wonder, who will be receive the inaugural Icon Award for his philanthropic contributions over the course of his career. 

In a statement obtained by Billboard,  the fund said Wonder will be honored “in recognition of his steadfast work throughout his illustrious career, spanning over half a century, which embodies LDF’s values and demonstrates his commitment to confronting the barriers that face Black Americans and other marginalized communities.”

Likewise, Pulitzer prize-winning journalist, Nikole Hannah-Jones, will receive the Spirit of Justice Award in honor of her courage and dedication to civil rights, including her pioneering and groundbreaking collection of slavery stories illustrated in the 1619 project. LDF will also recognize their outgoing president, Sherrilyn Ifill, with the Thurgood Marshall Lifetime Achievement Award.

“Since the organization’s founding in 1940, the Legal Defense Fund has been an ardent defender of civil rights, advocating for the social, political, educational, and economic advancement of Black Americans,” LDF’s president and director-counsel, Janai S. Nelson, said. “Our honorees have unapologetically used truth as power. They have refused to back down when others tried to silence them. And they have held their convictions fiercely and been unyielding to false narratives. Most importantly, they have used truth to shape outlooks, inform mindsets, and touch souls.”

Former first lady Michelle Obama and civil rights activist Colin Kaepernick will attend the ceremony virtually, by sharing video messages that speak to this year’s theme of “Truth Is Power.”

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Mariah Carey releases her exclusive Pride merchandise

Mariah Carey releases her exclusive Pride merchandise
Mariah Carey releases her exclusive Pride merchandise
KMazur/WireImage

Pride Month begins June 1, and Mariah Carey is giving her lambs plenty of new clothes to celebrate.

The “Fantasy” singer dropped her 2022 Pride Collection on Tuesday, which fans can purchase now on her official online store.   Among the new, colorful goodies up for grabs are matching sweat sets, crop hoodies, muscle tanks, hats, water bottles, folding fans, rainbow neon lights and so much more.

Mariah also re-released a special vinyl edition of her 1999 Rainbow album, which features the songs “Thank God I Found You” and “Heartbreaker.”  It’s retailing for $31.98 on Mariah’s store.  

The singer commemorates some of those hit singles on special wardrobe pieces, such as an “Obsessed” crop hoodie and “Heartbreaker” tees and tank tops. 

Mariah also celebrated the outfit she wore on the Rainbow album with an all-new body tee, which allows fans to wear a stylized version of Mariah’s body on both the front and the back, for $60.

Prices range between $15 and $115 on Mariah’s new merchandise set, which is available to purchase now.

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Missing Alabama inmate, corrections officer had ‘special relationship’: Sheriff

Missing Alabama inmate, corrections officer had ‘special relationship’: Sheriff
Missing Alabama inmate, corrections officer had ‘special relationship’: Sheriff
Lauderdale County Sheriff’s Office, Alabama

(FLORENCE, Ala.) — The corrections officer and escaped murder suspect who have been missing for days had “a special relationship,” the local sheriff confirmed.

Inmate Casey White and Lauderdale County Assistant Director of Corrections Vicki White — who are not related — went missing from Florence, Alabama, on Friday.

“Investigators received information from inmates at the Lauderdale County Detention Center over the weekend that there was a special relationship between Director White and inmate Casey White,” Lauderdale County Sheriff Rick Singleton said in a statement Tuesday. “That relationship has now been confirmed through our investigation by independent sources and means.”

Vicki White “participated” in the escape with Casey White, Singleton said Monday, adding, “Whether she did that willingly or she was coerced, threatened … not really sure.”

Casey White was charged with two counts of capital murder in September 2020 for the stabbing of 58-year-old Connie Ridgeway, authorities said. He could face the death penalty if convicted, the sheriff said.

On Friday morning, Vicki White allegedly told her colleagues that she was taking Casey White to the Lauderdale County Courthouse for a “mental health evaluation,” though he didn’t have a court appearance scheduled, Singleton said. Vicki White violated policy by escorting Casey White alone, the sheriff said.

Vicki White also allegedly told her colleagues that she was going to seek medical attention after dropping the inmate off at court because she wasn’t feeling well, but Singleton said his office confirmed that no appointment was made.

Vicki White had been talking about retiring for the last few months and turned in her paperwork on Thursday, Singleton told ABC News. Friday — the day the two went missing — was set to be her last day at work, he said.

The U.S. Marshals Service is offering up to $10,000 reward for information leading to Casey White’s capture and a $5,000 reward for information leading to Vicky White.

Marty Keely, U.S. marshal for the Northern District of Alabama, noted that Casey White may stand out due to his height — he’s 6 feet, 9 inches tall. Anyone who sees them is urged to call 911, Keely said.

Singleton called Vicki White, a 17-year veteran of the sheriff’s office, “an exemplary employee.”

“The employees are just devastated,” the sheriff said. “Nobody saw this coming.”

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Justin Bieber says John Mayer contributes “mind-blowing” guitar to his new album

Justin Bieber says John Mayer contributes “mind-blowing” guitar to his new album
Justin Bieber says John Mayer contributes “mind-blowing” guitar to his new album
Kevin Winter/Getty Images for Coachella

In an interview with Apple Music’s Ebro Darden that will be posted in full later Tuesday, Justin Bieber says his next album is nearly finished, and reveals it includes a number of features — including one with none other than John Mayer.

In a clip of the interview posted on Billboard, Justin says he’s “wrapping up” his next album: “It’s almost done. I got a lot of cool features and it should be dropping not too long from now.”

Mentioning John Mayer as one of the features, Justin says he contributes a “wicked guitar solo,” adding, “He’s someone I’ve looked up to for a long time.” 

Justin goes on to describe John laying down his solo, adding, “It was mind-blowing to be able to see him operate in his gifting like that…being able to see him first-hand, because he is on another level, like, it’s just insane.”

In the interview, Justin, now 28, also discusses his status as sort of an “elder statesman” of pop, and how it’s important for him to support, as he puts it, “the Kid LAROIs of the world…these young cats.”  He says he’s committed to helping up-and-comers “get their music out there, because I know what it’s like to have this vision and want people to hear your music.”

The full interview drops at 3 p.m. ET.

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Blac Chyna loses defamation lawsuit against Kardashian-Jenner family

Blac Chyna loses defamation lawsuit against Kardashian-Jenner family
Blac Chyna loses defamation lawsuit against Kardashian-Jenner family
Leon Bennett/FilmMagic

The Blac Chyna/Kardashian-Jenner court saga has finally come to a close, and the ruling in Chyna’s defamation lawsuit sided in favor of the famous reality TV family. 

The Los Angeles jury hearing the suit on Monday awarded no monetary damages to Blac Chyna, who was suing the family for allegedly detailing her career as a reality TV star.

According to People, Chyna showed up in court on Monday alongside her lawyer, Lynne Ciani. Ciani didn’t speak much about Chyna’s reaction to losing the lawsuit but did mention some key points in the case, including the fact that jurors had to re-deliberate on a couple of questions they had “accidently skipped.”

“I’ve never seen in my career before a jury have to go back and deliberate on four questions,” she said. “The victory is that Chyna did not physically abuse her fiancé, Rob [Kardashian].”

Monday’s decision was the end of a nearly two week-long trial initiated by Blac Chyna in 2017, when she sued Kris JennerKylie JennerKourtney Kardashian and Khloe Kardashian for defamation and interference with her E! reality show, Rob & Chyna.

Upon leaving the courtroom, Blac Chyna was stopped from answering reporters’ questions. The Kardashian-Jenner family were not present in court, and instead attended the 2022 Met Gala in New York Monday night.

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Billy Corgan raises middle finger to “the conspiracists about the state of my voice”

Billy Corgan raises middle finger to “the conspiracists about the state of my voice”
Billy Corgan raises middle finger to “the conspiracists about the state of my voice”
Astrida Valigorsky/Getty Images

Billy Corgan has a word for people criticizing his voice. Or, rather, a finger representing two words.

In a recent Instagram post, the Smashing Pumpkins frontman shared a picture of himself onstage while raising his middle finger. Text across the image reads, “To the conspiracists about the state of my voice.”

While it’s unclear exactly who or what inspired Corgan’s ire, Pumpkins fans on Reddit theorize Corgan was responding to comments on his recent vocal performance of the song “X.Y.U.” during last weekend’s Beale Street festival, which featured some pretty intense screaming.

However, a quick perusal of the comments on the performance seem to be in favor of the screaming — perhaps Corgan’s middle finger was more of a triumphant eff-you to doubters rather than an angry one.

To hear Corgan’s voice in person, you can catch the Pumpkins’ ongoing Rock Invasion 2 tour, which finally kicked off this week after a two-year pandemic delay.

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