Your cart is currently empty!
Category: News
-
‘What We Hide’ exposes the dark truths children carry: Watch the trailer
After their mother’s overdose, two sisters conceal her death to avoid the foster care system—unravelling a tense, emotional thriller about survival, sisterhood, and the weight of buried secrets.
[media-credit name=”Instagram” width=1440 align=”center”]
[/media-credit]‘What We Hide’ is a haunting, slow-burning thriller that grips you from the very first frame. In a raw, emotionally devastating performance, Mckenna Grace stars as Spider, the fiercely protective older sister to Jessie, played with heartbreaking innocence by Jojo Regina. After their mother’s fatal overdose, the girls make an unthinkable decision: hide her body to avoid being separated by the broken foster care system they fear more than death.
Set in a forgotten rural town where silence can be a survival tool, the story unravels with chilling tension. Jesse Williams brings measured intensity as the local sheriff, whose suspicions grow whilst navigating his own moral compass. And Dacre Montgomery is chilling as the unpredictable dealer whose presence reminds us that sometimes, the real threat is what’s left behind.
‘What We Hide’ is not just a movie—it’s a gritty, emotional gut-punch about sisterhood, survival, and the secret lives of children forced to grow up too fast. You won’t be able to look away. Watch the trailer for the Dan Kay-directed film. It is to show in select theatres on August 8, 2025; video-on-demand and digital release to follow on August 29.
[youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Blus-SQ9NE&h=315]
-
Denver’s Underground Music Showcase bows out “in its current form” after 25 years
[media-credit name=”Underground Music Showcase” width=1500 align=”center”]
[/media-credit]Denver’s indie lifeblood is pulsing to its final beat this July. After a legendary twenty-five‑year run, the Underground Music Showcase—fondly known as UMS—is bowing out “in its current form”, with July 25–27 marking what organisers are calling a grand and necessary “blowout”. Since its scrappy DIY debut in 2001, born from the passion of Denver Post journalists Ricardo Baca and John Moore, UMS has grown from a handful of $5 shows into a sprawling celebration of local and touring talent—four outdoor stages, twelve venues, and over two-hundred bands this year alone. It’s the stage that propelled acts like DeVotchKa, Flobots, and Nathaniel Rateliff—but evolving realities have reshaped the landscape dramatically.
UMS co‑manager Jami Duffy, who now steps in alongside Casey Berry under the Youth on Record umbrella, described the festival’s gamble with rising costs. From security, climate‑resilient infrastructure, and fentanyl safety measures to higher artist wages, accessibility standards, and mental‑health services, the bar has soared. Even sold‑out crowds don’t close the financial gap anymore.
[youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qKBdpJYpH1Q&h=315]
But this finale isn’t an ending—it’s an inflection point. Duffy emphasises that skipping this year would have robbed the community of a proper farewell. Instead, UMS is seizing this moment to spark dialogue during its Get Loud Music Summit—inviting artists, fans, venues, and funders to envision what comes next.
Denver’s city budget woes—$250 million shortfall at one point—mirror the statewide and national strains on arts funding and public safety support. Still, Duffy remains hopeful. She challenges the community to build a coalition: venues, philanthropists, government, and fans alike. Maybe UMS morphs into something new—fragmented guerrilla gigs, tighter showcases, or a renewed DIY spark. She believes creativity thrives when the stakes are highest.
This year, the festival will carry extra emotional weight. Legacy acts and rising voices will take the stage amid a vigilant audience aware they’re part of history in motion. As Duffy urges, “breathe in those moments…you can hug a little longer…play your asses off”.
UMS may be ending, but its essence—the underground, the unexpected, the electric—lives on in Denver’s tenacious music scene.
[youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_9womMYx3yw&h=315]
Three years ago, the Financial Times released a twenty-minute documentary detailing the risks festival organisers face. In the United Kingdom, there were approximately six hundred festivals in 2019. As of 2023, there are fewer than five hundred. If you ever thought about being a festival organiser, I would recommend watching the video above. It could help you decide if it is worth it.
-
Sophia Hutchins, friend and manager to Caitlyn Jenner, has passed away in ATV accident
[media-credit name=”Generated from Richardine’s commands, via Deadline” link=”https://deadline.com/2025/07/sophia-hutchins-dies-atv-accident-29-1236449801″ width=1536 align=”center”]
[/media-credit]Sophia Hutchins, 29, a prominent entrepreneur, transgender advocate, and longtime confidante and manager of Caitlyn Jenner, tragically died on July 2, 2025 at the age of twenty-nine in an ATV accident near Jenner’s Malibu home.
What happened
Hutchins was driving an ATV early Wednesday morning along a private road by Jenner’s residence when her vehicle collided with the rear bumper of a moving car. The impact caused the ATV to veer off, plunging Hutchins and the vehicle roughly 350 feet into a ravine. First responders reached the scene soon after but confirmed her death on site. The driver and passenger in the other vehicle were unharmed.
It’s not yet known whether Caitlyn Jenner was present at the time, and no statement has been released by Jenner or law enforcement.
Who Sophia Hutchins was
Born in Bellevue, Washington (1995/96), she earned a degree in economics and finance from Pepperdine University in 2019, where she openly transitioned during her junior year. She gained public recognition through her appearances on Caitlyn’s E! docuseries ‘I Am Cait’. Their friendship began in 2015, shortly after Jenner came out as transgender.
Following graduation, Hutchins launched health-tech startup LUMASOL, a sunscreen mist company, and later became CEO and director of the Caitlyn Jenner Foundation, advocating for transgender rights. In 2017, she took on the role of Jenner’s manager, stepping in to help orchestrate Jenner’s personal brand and business affairs after the Kardashian-Jenner family restructures.
Hutchins also became an outspoken political voice during the 2024 presidential cycle, serving as a surrogate for Donald Trump and attending events such as Mar‑a‑Lago campaign gatherings.
A profound loss
Hutchins had quietly held significant roles in both the LGBTQ+ community and the public sphere—bridging activism, business, and entertainment. Multiple outlets, including PEOPLE and E! News, highlighted the depth of her work and the strength of her partnership with Jenner.
Caitlyn Jenner has yet to publicly respond, but hundreds have already shared condolences online, mourning the loss of a bright and inspiring figure.
Legacy
Sophia Hutchins leaves behind a legacy as a passionate advocate, groundbreaking entrepreneur, and devoted friend. Her work with LUMASOL and the Caitlyn Jenner Foundation, along with her courage in publicly living as her true self, will endure as a significant part of her impact. Our hearts go out to her family, friends, and Caitlyn Jenner at this devastating time.
-
‘The Office’ star Craig Robinson announces retirement from comedy: “It’s been an amazing run”
This isn’t a goodbye, it’s an evolution.
[media-credit name=”Instagram” link=”https://www.instagram.com/p/C944HU4uD7s” width=1440 align=”center”]
[/media-credit]In a smooth, soul-deep hum, Craig Robinson—our beloved sparkplug of comedy—stepped onto Instagram this week and dropped a truth bomb. In his trademark laid-back cadence, the fifty-three‑year‑old Office legend simply said:
“I am quitting comedy… it’s been an amazing run, y’all have been amazing and wonderful, but I’m following something bigger. So thank you so much. I love you, and stay tuned.”
Now, that’s Carey Harrison meets Maxwell Scott in tone—warm, introspective, and dripping with quiet confidence. Craig didn’t spill the beans on what’s next—but hinted he’s diving into small‑business territory and could use some tips. He confessed:
“Turns out having a dream and building a business with your friends are two VERY different things. … any help would be huge.”
So, is he pivoting toward entrepreneurial life? Maybe preaching? Or laying down soulful grooves with The Nasty Delicious? Time will tell—but one thing’s certain: This isn’t a goodbye, it’s an evolution.
Craig’s announcement hasn’t got that flash-news energy—it’s more like a late-night piano disclosure in a smoky Jazz club. There’s introspection, a sense of calm purpose, and a voice that says: “I’m done with one chapter, now let me tell you about the next.” You can practically hear the soft pedal under his words.
[youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u1FnYvk6KP0&h=315]
Craig Robinson, you gave us Darryl. You gave us laugh‑tears in Hot Tub Time Machine and soul‑stirring grooves with The Nasty Delicious. Now you’re chasing something bigger, and honestly, bruh—we got your back.
-
Kesha unleashes her wildest era yet with ‘.(Period)’, a frisky, unfiltered Pop frenzy
NSFW visuals, #1 hits, and an eighteen-thousand strong tour kickoff make it clear: She’s never been more in control.
[media-credit name=”Courtesy” width=3600 align=”center”]
[/media-credit]With her latest studio release ‘.(Period)’ (stylised as ‘Period’), globally-recognised musician Kesha isn’t just back—she’s reborn. Described by Rolling Stone as “a frisky pop record that delights in throwing things at the wall and seeing what sticks”, the genre-defying album earned a rare 4-out-of-5-star rave, and it’s not hard to hear why. From the moment ‘The One’ debuted at #1 on iTunes US across all genres, it became crystal clear: Kesha’s creative instincts are sharper, riskier, and louder than ever.
[youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D9NvqJOgjrc&h=315]
The album doesn’t just flirt with chaos—it marries it. Tracks like ‘Boy Crazy’ stand as proof, where she unapologetically directs a NSFW visual alongside Brett Loudermilk and Zain Curtis. It’s sweaty, sacrilegious, and sexy—a fever dream that reimagines ‘The Last Supper’ as a house party gone gloriously off the rails. The men, barely clothed and fully uninhibited, whirl around the GRAMMY-nominated artist as if possessed by the beat. As People put it: “Kesha is getting raunchy.” But let’s be clear—this isn’t shock for shock’s sake. It’s Kesha reclaiming her narrative, her sensuality, and her throne.
[youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CVjBfGfG6Es&h=315]
Elsewhere, ‘Attention’—a standalone track featuring St Louis-born Slayyyter and United Kingdom breakout Rose Gray—cements her knack for cross-generational Pop disruption. Both artists joined Kesha on her newly launched North American headline tour, which roared to life in Utah before eighteen-thousand screaming “Animals”. The energy? Electric. The statement? Clear. Kesha’s not only still here—she’s out for blood, glitter, and glory.
If ‘.(Period)’ is the punctuation on her past, it also signals the start of a new, unhinged, liberated paragraph—written entirely on her terms. Stream the rousing eleven-track album below.
-
TikTok and Tomorrowland announce global partnership to bring best of Electronic music to global audiences
[media-credit name=”TikTok” width=5626 align=”center”]
[/media-credit]Yesterday, TikTok announces a new partnership deal with Tomorrowland (seventeen million followers), the world-famous Electronic Dance music festival, to deliver unprecedented digital festival experiences for global music fans. The new wide-ranging, year-long partnership will see TikTok serve as Tomorrowland’s Official Content Partner, offering 24/7 festival live streams, behind-the-scenes access, artist and creator collaborations, and interactive fan experiences that will bring music fans closer to the heart of the festival than ever before.
Tomorrowland 2025, taking place over two weekends in July in Boom, Belgium, will feature a curated lineup of world-renowned DJs, visionary stage designs, and immersive storytelling. Through TikTok, users worldwide will be able to explore the magic of the festival with LIVE streams of headline acts, creator-led content, and a dedicated #Tomorrowland in-app hub which will act as a one-stop experience for fans all over the world to experience the festival for themselves. Additionally, CapCut and Tomorrowland will launch an official template for all users to spread the magic even further online.
SoundOn, TikTok’s music distribution and promotion service, is partnering with Tomorrowland’s label Tomorrowland Music to host a songwriting camp ahead of the festival. Artists from both labels will collaborate, write and release original music to soundtrack the activities happening on and off the TikTok platform during both weekends. The songs will be performed live onstage at Tomorrowland, and released and distributed by SoundOn.
A global phenomenon, #Tomorrowland is already hugely popular with the TikTok community. Posts using the #Tomorrowland hashtag have now been viewed over ten billion times—with creators using it as a chance to showcase their favourite #Festival content and performances from the two high energy weekends in Belgium—and TikTok’s Tomorrowland 2023 festival livestream was viewed by a record-breaking sixteen million people. The year-long partnership will also see TikTok exploring further opportunities with Tomorrowland’s slate of live music properties, which include Unity at Sphere, Tomorrowland Brasil, Tomorrowland Winter, and many more.
-
LL Cool J chronicles Hip‑Hop’s origins in new docuseries ‘Hip Hop Was Born Here’: Watch the trailer
[media-credit name=”Instagram” link=”https://www.instagram.com/p/Cq6v8PRJRGG” width=1080 align=”center”]
[/media-credit]On June 27, 2025, Paramount Plus released the trailer for ‘Hip Hop Was Born Here’, a compelling five-part docuseries co-created and executive produced by Hip-Hop icon LL Cool J alongside NFL legend Peyton Manning. Set to premiere July 22 across the United States, Canada, Latin America, and Brasil, the show serves as a musical pilgrimage to the origins of Hip-Hop in New York City. In the trailer, LL—real name James Todd Smith—leads viewers on a gritty, soulful journey through NYC’s boroughs, beginning with the Bronx park where DJ Kool Herc hosted the genre’s first block parties.
[media-credit name=”Courtesy” link=”https://www.paramountpressexpress.com/paramount-plus/releases/?view=111575-paramount-to-debut-new-groundbreaking-docuseries-hip-hop-was-born-here-executive-produced-and-co-created-by-ll-cool-j-and-peyton-manning” width=1080 align=”center”]
[/media-credit]His personal narration, “To understand the power of Hip‑Hop today, you gotta go back to where it all started”, punctuates the series’ intent to connect past and present. The docuseries brings together foundational voices like Grandmaster Caz, Roxanne Shanté, Big Daddy Kane, Doug E Fresh, Method Man, and Rev Run, alongside modern talents such as Fivio Foreign and Crystal Caines.
[youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lrK_ksLpbCg&h=315]
Their reflections weave interviews, archival footage, and on-location storytelling into a celebration of Hip-Hop’s cultural and musical legacy. Peyton Manning lends surprising gravitas, remarking that although music isn’t his primary domain, “sports and music have a lot of similarities… both require hard work and commitment, and at their best, both bring people together”. LL Cool J’s production imprint—through his Rock the Bells brand and SiriusXM channel—adds authenticity, ensuring this isn’t just nostalgia but a living, breathing history.
What sets ‘Hip Hop Was Born Here’ apart is its dual homage to the early days and its spotlight on today’s torchbearers. As Method Man asks in the trailer, “Who would ever think that we could be world famous doing something that we love?”
The series promises to resonate with anyone who’s ever felt the beat move them—past, present, and future.
-
Halle Bailey’s sun‑soaked boat day takes an unexpected twist with “mystery man” (See photos)
[media-credit name=”Instagram” link=”https://www.instagram.com/p/DI6zrt_xJb0/?hl=en&img_index=3″ width=1080 align=”center”]
[/media-credit]On July 1, 2025, singer-actress Halle Bailey turned heads during what was meant to be a relaxed boat outing. The “Little Mermaid” star—who has been under heavy media attention amid her high-profile custody battle with DDG—found herself in the spotlight not for drama, but thanks to a spontaneous wardrobe malfunction. Whilst stepping from deck to water alongside a mystery man, Bailey’s bikini bottom unexpectedly rode up, momentarily revealing more than intended.
Although fleeting, the incident sparked a flurry of online chatter. One onlooker captured the moment on mobile—and whilst the footage quickly disappeared, not before TMZ grabbed headlines with a cheeky take: “Halle Bailey Has Butt‑Baring Wardrobe Malfunction, Mystery Man Likes It”. Meanwhile, others on social platforms celebrated Bailey’s uninhibited Summer vibes. X user DiaryOfKeysus remarked, capturing the irreverent tone of many celebrity gossip circles today.
Despite the wardrobe mishap, Bailey appeared unfazed—and in fact, even radiant. Sources say her companion remained supportive, offering a casual assist with her bikini after the moment passed. The duo continued their sunshine-filled day with easygoing smiles, clearly undeterred by the brief viral moment. This playful incident arrives at a time when Bailey is navigating a whirlwind beyond leisure—a very public legal struggle with ex-DDG concerning custody of their child. It seems the loveable wardrobe oops served as both a temporary distraction and reminder: At her core, Halle Bailey remains refreshingly real and relatable.
As headlines buzz over celebrity legal drama or cinematic successes, it’s these candid, light-hearted moments—like a spontaneous bikini slip whilst boating—that truly humanise our stars.
-
Scooter Braun steps down as CEO of HYBE America amid strategic leadership shift
[media-credit name=”Instagram” link=”https://www.instagram.com/p/DJoNTeiux53″ width=1440 align=”center”]
[/media-credit]On July 1, 2025, HYBE America confirmed that Scooter Braun will step down as CEO, transitioning into a Senior Advisory Role whilst remaining on the board. The move is part of a broader five‑year strategic plan initiated when Braun sold his Ithaca Holdings to HYBE in 2021. In his place, Isaac Lee, current Chairman of HYBE Latin America, will assume the reins as HYBE America’s new CEO.
HYBE founder Bang Si‑Hyuk lauded Braun’s contributions: “An extraordinary partner, a visionary executive, and a true catalyst for cultural exchange”, commending his role in establishing HYBE’s ambitious US presence. Braun echoed the sentiment, expressing pride in HYBE’s achievements and reaffirming his commitment to support future leadership and artist-focused initiatives.
Simultaneously, on July 1, BTS surprised ARMY with an OT7 Weverse livestream—hinting at a group comeback in spring 2026. Fans swiftly linked Braun’s departure with this news, interpreting the timing as a symbolic fresh start and reason to celebrate an era now “free” of Braun’s influence. Online sentiment was clear: “Scooter Braun out, Bangtan back — there’s no stopping us now.”
Despite stepping aside from day‑to‑day operations, Braun will remain deeply involved in HYBE’s U.S. expansion. Vulture reports that he’ll continue advising on projects like Katseye, remaining the company’s second‑largest individual shareholder. His next venture has yet to be revealed, though it will “reflect his expansive cross‑industry vision and philanthropic interests”.
Key highlights:
- New CEO: Isaac Lee takes over HYBE America
- Bruce remains involved: Braun stays on board as senior advisor
- Fan connection: Leadership change ties into BTS’s anticipated spring‑2026 comeback
- Next steps: Braun to shift focus to new ventures, albeit unspecified
This strategic transition marks a pivotal moment in HYBE’s evolving global posture—especially as it gears up for BTS’s next chapter under new American leadership.