‘The Bachelorette’ recap: Hometowns week ends with a devastating elimination

‘The Bachelorette’ recap: Hometowns week ends with a devastating elimination
‘The Bachelorette’ recap: Hometowns week ends with a devastating elimination
ABC/Craig Sjodin

It was time for hometowns on Tuesday’s episode of The Bachelorette, and with just four men left, Michelle faced her most difficult rose ceremony yet, which ended with Rodney being sent home.

Rodney — along with BrandonJoe and Nayte — were unable to show off their real hometowns due to COVID-19 protocols, but each did their best to show off their own hometown stories with a series of fun dates that included skateboarding, paddleboarding, apple-picking and a romantic prom.

Of course, each date ended with Michelle meeting the guys’ families, which mostly went well. However, Michelle’s conversations with Nayte’s mother and stepfather, raised some red flags when they expressed doubt as to whether the 27-year-old sales executive — who would later profess his love for Michelle — was really ready for a lifetime commitment.

Luckily, two of Michelle’s best friends — Bri and Serena P., with whom she formed a bond while competing together on Matt James‘ season of The Bachelor — paid Michelle a surprise visit, after which she had the clarity to decide which of the men she would send home.

Ultimately, Michelle followed her heart, picking Nayte, along with Joe and Brandon. Martin ended up being the odd man out.

After assuring Rodney that, contrary to previous conversations between them in which he’d described himself as an “underdog,” that wasn’t the case and “who you are is enough.”

Rodney, in turn declared that in spite of being sent home, he was still “falling in love” with her, adding, “I’m always gonna care about you Michelle…forever.”

Here are the men going to fantasy suites:

Brandon J., 27, a traveling nurse recruiter from Portland, Ore.
Joe, 28, a real estate developer from Minneapolis, Minn.
Nayte, 27, a sales executive from Austin, Texas

The Bachelorette returns with a special “Men Tell All” episode on Monday, 8 p.m. ET on ABC.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Pharrell Williams describes Jay-Z’s recording process as “weird and amazing”

Pharrell Williams describes Jay-Z’s recording process as “weird and amazing”
Pharrell Williams describes Jay-Z’s recording process as “weird and amazing”
Brian Ach/Getty Images for Something in the Water

Pharrell Williams has recorded with a who’s who of music, including BeyoncéRihanna, Mariah Carey and Kanye West, and he’s worked more than anyone else with one of the new members of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, Jay-Z. They began recording in 1999, and their seemingly endless list of hits includes “Frontin’,” “Excuse Me Miss” and “Change Clothes.”

The 13-time Grammy winner has observed Hova create classic lyrics many times, and he says his recording process is quite unorthodox.

“He’s really a character. He’s an odd guy. When you have a conversation with him, it’s not a regular conversation,” Pharrell explains in a recent episode of the Fader Uncovered Podcast.

The Virginia Beach, Virginia, native used the recording session for their 2000 hit “I Just Wanna Love U (Give It 2 Me),” as an example.

“When he writes, he’s just sitting there mumbling to himself — in falsetto, by the way,” Pharell explains. “He goes [in falsetto], ‘Yo, yo, when the Remy’s in the system/ Ain’t no telling will I f*** ’em? Will I diss ’em?/ That’s what they be yellin’/ I’m a pimp by blood.’ And he taps you on the shoulder and takes it back again. He writes in falsetto.”

Pharrell continues, “That’s odd and different and weird and amazing! And makes him a character. I gotta ask him why he does that. I don’t know why he does it. But he’s always done that.”

Pharrell also reveals that “I Just Wanna Love U (Give It 2 Me)” was inspired by another hit he wrote and produced, also in 2000 — Mystikal‘s “Shake Ya A**.”

“It just came together, ’cause [Jay-Z] loved ‘Shake Ya A**,'” the “Happy” singer remembers. “He was like, ‘Yo, I need that!’ I was like, ‘Uhhh, OK.'”

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by The FADER (@thefader)

 

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Miley Cyrus and Rihanna make ‘Forbes” 30 Under 30 Hall of Fame

Miley Cyrus and Rihanna make ‘Forbes” 30 Under 30 Hall of Fame
Miley Cyrus and Rihanna make ‘Forbes” 30 Under 30 Hall of Fame
Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic

Miley Cyrus and Rihanna have made Forbes‘ Under 30 Hall of Fame in honor of the 30 Under 30 list’s 10th anniversary.

Miley initially made the 30 Under 30 list in 2014 at age 21, just after her album Bangerz came out. She’s since released three more albums and founded the Happy Hippie Foundation to support LGBTQ+ and at-risk youth.

“FORBES 30 UNDER 30. I turned 29 last week. It was now or never,” Miley tweeted. “Thank you for the honor.”

In a behind-the-scenes video of her Forbes cover shoot, she reflects on her music career, calling songwriting her “greatest joy” and discussing the special bond that she has with her fans. She also discusses exploring different forms of creativity, including her collaboration with Gucci, as well as combining her artistry and activism with Happy Hippie.

Rihanna, meanwhile, originally made the 30 Under 30 ranking in 2013 at age 24. The now-33-year-old singer and businesswoman has since become a billionaire thanks to Fenty Beauty and her Savage x Fenty lingerie line, and was just named National Hero of her native Barbados.

Also making Forbes‘ Hall of Fame list are Kylie Jenner, Mark Zuckerberg, Malala Yousafzai, LeBron James and Naomi Osaka.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Of Monsters and Men want to get — virtually — “sweaty” with you during 10th anniversary concert streams

Of Monsters and Men want to get — virtually — “sweaty” with you during 10th anniversary concert streams
Of Monsters and Men want to get — virtually — “sweaty” with you during 10th anniversary concert streams
Credit: Cameron Stewart

Last month, Of Monsters and Men played a series of concerts in their native Iceland to celebrate the 10th anniversary of their debut album, My Head Is an Animal. In the very likely event you weren’t able to attend any of the shows in person, you’ll still be able to watch them streaming online starting tonight, December 1.

Fittingly, the shows were recorded Gamla Bíó, the same place where Of Monsters and Men threw the release party for My Head Is an Animal a decade ago.

“We’re kinda just going back to that night, really,” vocalist Nanna Bryndís Hilmarsdóttir tells ABC Audio. “We’re going to do the album in its entirety, and [will be] playing with…people who have been with us throughout this journey.”

Vocalist Ragnar “Raggi” Þórhallsson adds that the concerts have a real “family” vibe to them, while also allowing the band to get back to their “sweaty club show” roots.

“I’m craving it,” Raggi says.

With the streams, Raggi and Nanna hope that “people will get sweaty with us around the world.”

“Watch on the internet and get sweaty,” Nanna laughs.

The shows will be available to watch via the streaming platform Mandolin. Subsequent airings will be held December 8, 15 and 22.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

What’s Rob Thomas’ real-life “Small Town Christmas” like? Just watch his latest video

What’s Rob Thomas’ real-life “Small Town Christmas” like? Just watch his latest video
What’s Rob Thomas’ real-life “Small Town Christmas” like? Just watch his latest video
Jim Trocchio

Rob Thomas‘ latest single “Small Town Christmas” was inspired by his own small town, located in the New York City suburbs in Westchester County.  And when it came to depicting that small town in the song’s video, he knew he needed something that reflected his family’s real-life holiday experiences.

“We had shot all the live footage of me playing the song and that just didn’t make a video,” Rob tells ABC Audio. “And then, they wanted to use B-stock footage of, like, families having nice Christmases in small towns. And that just didn’t feel personal enough.”

So Rob and his wife, Marisol, decided to give fans a peek into their actual lives in their small town.

“Mari and I got together one night and just compiled together all the video that we had…that we have taken of ourselves, just from our phones and Instagram and stuff like that,” he says.

“We pooled together everything that we had of celebrating Christmas over the last few years up here,” he says of his town. “And then we put that in there and edited it together into the video.”

The video features shots of Rob and Mari and their dogs celebrating in front of the Christmas tree and playing in the snow, as well as scenes of them shopping for decorations, sledding, buying wine and other holiday activities.

Tonight on NBC, Rob will celebrate another Christmas tradition by singing on NBC’s Christmas in Rockefeller Center, along with Alessia Cara, Harry Connick Jr., Norah Jones, Pentatonix, Carrie Underwood and more.  The show airs at 8 p.m. ET/PT and will stream simultaneously on Peacock.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Deep Purple drummer Ian Paice says band’s new covers album “sounds like five guys in a room having fun”

Deep Purple drummer Ian Paice says band’s new covers album “sounds like five guys in a room having fun”
Deep Purple drummer Ian Paice says band’s new covers album “sounds like five guys in a room having fun”
earMUSIC

This past week, British hard-rock legends Deep Purple released their first album of cover tunes, a 12-track collection titled Turning to Crime.

Founding drummer Ian Paice tells ABC Audio that impetus behind the project was the COVID-19 pandemic, which kept the band from touring and from working together on new music in a studio.

“So what do you do? You just can’t sit on your a** all day long, all month long, all year long,” Paice notes. “And if you can’t get together with your pals to write new music, then play some old music…and choose pieces which were important to you for different reasons.”

Paice says the band members settled on the tunes democratically, and recorded the album remotely.

“I was worried at first that it would sound like five guys in different parts of the world, but it doesn’t,” Ian admits. “It sounds like five guys in a room having fun. And once I realized it was gonna have that collective feel, I was really happy with just getting the project as good as we could get it.”

Turning to Crime features Deep Purple putting its own spin on such songs as the Peter Green-era Fleetwood Mac gem “Oh Well,” Bob Dylan‘s “Watching the River Flow,” Little Feat‘s “Dixie Chicken,” Cream‘s “White Room” and more.

Paice says “Dixie Chicken” was one of the songs he picked, noting, “I love the band, but also, [I’m a] great fan of [drummer] Richie Hayward…[He’s], just a feel-groove merchant.”

Ian also was quite happy with Deep Purple’s version of “Oh Well.”

“I think [guitarist] Steve [Morse] did a wonderful job,” he says. “He married…the Peter Green bit with a bit of Jeff Beck-ism at the end.”

Here’s the album’s full track list:

“7 and 7 Is”
“Rockin’ Pneumonia and the Boogie Woogie Flu”
“Oh Well”
“Jenny Take a Ride!”
“Watching the River Flow”
“Let the Good Times Roll”
“Dixie Chicken”
“Shapes of Things”
“The Battle of New Orleans”
“Lucifer”
“White Room”
“Caught in the Act” (Medley: “Going Down”/”Green Onions”/”Hot ‘Lanta”/”Dazed and Confused”/”Gimme Some Lovin'”)

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Climate change is affecting when grey seals give birth, scientists say

Climate change is affecting when grey seals give birth, scientists say
Climate change is affecting when grey seals give birth, scientists say
iStock/chonticha wat

(NEW YORK) — Scientists are continuing to discover ways in which climate change is already affecting animal species around the world — including how it’s changing the phenology, or timing of biological events.

Grey seals are the latest species to see phenological shifts due to warming ocean waters, a new study published Tuesday in the Royal Society Journals has found.

Researchers who monitored grey seals in the U.K.’s Skomer Marine Conservation Zone for three decades found that climate change has caused older seal mothers to give birth to pups earlier, an observation that favors the hypothesis that climate affects phenology by altering the age profile of the population.

When the researchers first began surveying grey seals in 1992, the midpoint of the pupping season was the first week of October. By 2004, the pupping season had advanced three weeks earlier, to mid-September, according to the study.

Warmer years were also associated with an older average age of mothers, the scientists found. Grey seals typically start breeding around 5 years old and can continue for several decades after. But the older the seals got, the earlier they gave birth, the researchers said.

The changes were not isolated to the U.K. There have been observable changes in the timing of seal life throughout the Atlantic and the world, according to the study.

Climate change has also recently been linked to a rising divorce rate in albatross couples, which mate for life, and to the shrinking of dozens of species of Amazonian birds, which are evolving to have smaller bodies and longer wing spans.

The causes and consequences of phenological shifts across ecosystems and geographical regions as a result of climate change have become a major area of interest in recent years, according to the study.

These changes can have a domino effect. Since species do not live in isolation, phenological changes can cascade through biological communities through trophic, competitive and mutualistic interactions, according to the study. This can be especially apparent in “mismatches in seasonal events,” such as those between predator and prey populations or flowering plants and their pollinators.

Eventually, phenological shifts in life-history events, such as breeding and pupping, can decouple biological communities and lead to critical transitions in population structure and even the collapse of ecosystems, the scientists said.

 

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

The Jacksons team up with Hard Rock International for series of casino concerts in 2022

The Jacksons team up with Hard Rock International for series of casino concerts in 2022
The Jacksons team up with Hard Rock International for series of casino concerts in 2022
Courtesy of The Jacksons

The Jacksons are partnering with Hard Rock International for a series of performances at Hard Rock and Seminole casino venues around the U.S. that will kick off with four concerts in February 2022.

The confirmed shows are scheduled to take place on February 18 at the Hard Rock Casino Northern Indiana in the group’s hometown of Gary, Indiana; February 21 at the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Tampa, Florida; February 23 at the Seminole Casino Hotel in Immokalee, Florida; and February 24 at the Seminole Casino in Coconut Creek, Florida.

Tickets for the first two concerts will go on sale to the general public on Wednesday, December 1, at 10 a.m. ET, while tickets for the second two shows will be available to the public starting Friday, December 3, at 10 a.m. ET.

The Hard Rock Casino Northern Indiana features a 37-foot-tall guitar marquee that was designed to replicate an original guitar owned by late Jackson family patriarch Joe Jackson. The casino also houses a collection of Jackson memorabilia that includes one of Michael Jackson‘s iconic gloves and a suit Janet Jackson wore during her Velvet Rope tour.

“We are so honored and excited to be performing at a venue that means so much to us,” says Jacksons member Tito Jackson. “To be able to perform at four iconic Hard Rock Hotels & Casinos, including in our hometown, is truly humbling and we cannot wait to give fans a memorable experience.”

The group’s partnership with Hard Rock International is expected to extend beyond 2022. For more information, visit HardRock.com.

As previously reported, The Jacksons are also among the many artists who will be performing on the 2022 edition of the Ultimate Disco Cruise, which sets sail from Miami on February 26.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Jack White headlining South Carolina’s 2022 High Water Festival

Jack White headlining South Carolina’s 2022 High Water Festival
Jack White headlining South Carolina’s 2022 High Water Festival
Shovels & Rope/AC Entertainment/C3 Presents

Jack White is headlining the 2022 High Water Festival, which will take place April 23-24 in North Charleston, South Carolina.

The bill, which is curated by Charleston folk duo Shovels & Rope, also includes Modest Mouse, My Morning Jacket, Black Pumas, Local Natives and Sharon Van Etten, among others.

Pre-sale tickets are available now, and while tickets will go on sale to the general public beginning Thursday, December 2, at noon ET. For the full lineup and ticket info, visit HighWaterFest.com.

High Water is White’s first announced live performance for 2022. The White Stripes rocker plans to release two solo albums next year: Fear of the Dawn on April 8, and Entering Heaven Alive on July 22.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

COVID-19 live updates: Greece to mandate vaccines for people 60 and older

COVID-19 live updates: Greece to mandate vaccines for people 60 and older
COVID-19 live updates: Greece to mandate vaccines for people 60 and older
Tempura/iStock

(NEW YORK) — As the COVID-19 pandemic has swept the globe, more than 5.2 million people have died from the disease worldwide, including over 779,000 Americans, according to real-time data compiled by Johns Hopkins University’s Center for Systems Science and Engineering.

Just 59.4% of the population in the United States is fully vaccinated against COVID-19, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Latest headlines:
-Variant-specific vaccine could be completed in about 3 months: White House
-Greece to mandate vaccines for people 60 and older
-Global case count of omicron variant tops 200
-Omicron variant was in the Netherlands earlier than thought

Here’s how the news is developing. All times Eastern.

Nov 30, 5:50 pm
Merck pill now awaiting FDA authorization after adviser endorsement

Advisers from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration have narrowly approved an endorsement of the Merck COVID-19 pill, voting 13 to 10 in favor of the authorization.

If authorized, it would be the first easy-to-take antiviral pill for COVID-19. Pfizer is also working on a COVID-19 pill, which it hopes will be authorized early next year. The FDA typically takes the advice of its advisers but will make its own final decision.

During Tuesday’s meeting, advisers spoke positively on Merck’s pill, even though it was not found to be quite as effective in the final analysis as it was in an early, preliminary analysis.

However, the advisers expressed doubt about whether it would be safe for pregnant people to use Merck’s pill because of the potential risk of harm to the fetus as well as its use in children due to lack of data and similar concerns as in pregnancy.

ABC News’ Sony Salzman

Nov 30, 2:45 pm
Variant-specific vaccine could be completed in about 3 months: White House

If a variant-specific vaccine is needed, the process, including FDA and CDC authorization, would take about three months, White House COVID-19 coordinator Jeff Zients said at Tuesday’s White House briefing.

The omicron variant has still not been detected in the U.S. Delta “remains the predominant circulating string representing 99.9% of all sequences sampled,” CDC director Rochelle Walensky said.

Walensky said the CDC is also working on expanding a surveillance program through JFK International Airport, San Francisco International Airport, Newark Liberty International Airport and Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport that would conduct more tests on international arrivals.

Walensky added, “To be crystal clear, we have far more tools to fight the variant today than we had at this time last year.”

ABC News’ Cheyenne Haslett

Nov 30, 2:13 pm
Blanket travel bans won’t prevent international spread of omicron: WHO

The World Health Organization praised South Africa and Botswana on Tuesday for the “speed and transparency” in which they reported on the new omicron variant.

The WHO stressed that “blanket travel bans will not prevent the international spread, and they place a heavy burden on lives and livelihoods.”

“In addition, they can adversely impact global health efforts during a pandemic by disincentivizing countries to report and share epidemiological and sequencing data,” the WHO said.

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, while on a plane to Nigeria, told reporters Tuesday that South Africa should not be “punished” with travel bans for being transparent.

“These bans must be removed,” he said.

“We have advanced in the world to a point where we now know when people travel, they should be tested, like I was tested last night and I’m happy to be tested when I arrive again,” he said.

“And for us, the tourism industry is one of the key industries. … This is discriminatory against us, and they are imposing a very unfair punishment,” he said.

ABC News’ Christine Theodorou

Nov 30, 1:35 pm
80 million eligible Americans remain unvaccinated

About 100 million Americans remain completely unvaccinated, according to federal data. Nearly 80 million of those people are over the age of 5 and therefore eligible to get the shot.

Since the beginning of November, hospital admissions have jumped by 20%, while emergency department visits have increased by 27%, according to federal data.

Minnesota and Michigan currently hold the country’s highest case rate, followed by Wisconsin, North Dakota, New Hampshire, Arizona, New York, Pennsylvania and Ohio. Puerto Rico, Florida and Louisiana currently have the nation’s lowest infection rate, according to federal data.

ABC News’ Arielle Mitropoulos

 

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