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#MCE!: Beards At The 2021 BET Hip Hop Awards

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These gents had us doing a double take on the red carpet!

Kojima Productions Is Behind Alleged Sony-Funded Silent Hill Game

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Konami is slowly getting back to putting out games again as evidenced by an earlier official partnership with Bloober TeamĀ and an unofficial report stating that it was reviving three of its biggest franchises: Silent Hill, Castlevania, and Metal Gear Solid. That report said that two Silent Hill games were in development: one from Bloober and one from an unnamed Japanese studio. And now yet another report has claimed that that mystery studio is Kojima Productions.

This comes from GematsuĀ who claims to have a ā€œpublishing source that wishes to remain anonymous.ā€ This small addendum to the original VideoGamesChronicle report simply says that Kojima Productions is developing a Silent Hill game and Sony is helping fund it. And while not explicitly stated, this would likely mean that this Silent Hill game would be a PlayStation exclusive (or at least a console or timed exclusive).

RELATED:Ā The Medium Is More Evidence That Bloober Probably Can’t Handle Silent Hill

This same rumor was floating around way back in March 2020 viaĀ RelyOnHorror. While it doesn’t mention Bloober Team and talks about a reboot from SIE Japan, a studio that has since closed in the meantime, it does speak about a Sony-funded, Kojima-developedĀ Silent Hill game. Sony was reportedly acting as a mediator in an effort to patch up the relationship between Kojima and Konami after their unceremonious breakup following Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain in 2015. RelyOnHorror claims to have had two sources that relayed this information.

One of the sources alleged that it would take advantage of the PlayStation 5’s VR headset. Sony also reportedly offered Kojima ā€œfull creative freedomā€ in this game and apparently pitched it as a narrative-focused game like Until Dawn to Kojima. As of March 2020 when this report was published, it was not a done deal.

RELATED:Ā Death Stranding Director’s Cut Is a More Thorough & Even Masterpiece

Details may have changed in the ensuing 18 months — especially considering how SIE Japan is no more — but the broad strokes still more or less line up with Gematsu’s newer report. Sony and Kojima have consistently worked together for many years as Metal Gear Solid was often seen as a PlayStation-heavy franchise, which is something that continued with Death Standing and its recent Director’s Cut. P.T., the oft-discussed playable teaser for Kojima’s canceled Silent Hills, was also a PS4 exclusive. Norman Reedus, the star of Death Stranding and P.T., also recently posted an odd video on Instagram featuring a Silent Hill 3 character.

Nothing has been confirmed and, according to VGC, nothing will be officially confirmed until sometime next year barring any sort of major delay. However, there are many aspects pointing to something quite big coming out of Silent Hill in the near future, but, fittingly, those things are still covered in a bit of fog.

Adele’s Return Possibly Teased with ā€œ30ā€ Billboards

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Adele fans have spotted at least two ā€œ30ā€ billboards, sparking speculation that new music is imminent, as Rolling Stone points out. Back in 2019, as also noted by her fans, Adele playfully wrote on Instagram, ā€œ30 will be a drum n bass record to spite you.ā€ See the billboards and Adele’s 2019 post below. Pitchfork has reached out to Adele’s representatives for comment and more information.

The ā€œ30ā€ billboards arrive after a radio host tweeted and deleted on Tuesday, ā€œNew Adele. This week.ā€ (So far, no new Adele music has come out this week.) Additionally, after Taylor Swift moved the release of Red (Taylor’s Version) from November 19 to November 12, Adele fans wondered whether the change was meant to accommodate a potential Adele album release date.

Adele released her third album, 25, in 2015. Read Pitchfork’s Sunday Review of Adele’s sophomore LP 21.





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Otaola y Yomil SE ENFRENTAN ā—šŸ’„ Se DIJERON TODOšŸ”„ – El Bafletazo

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Cuban Jazz Train – Manteca

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Cuban Jazz Train – Como Suena
MĆŗsicos
Calixto Oviedo: BaterĆ­a, congas, timbales
Yosmel Montejo: Bajo
Joel Nuñez: Saxofón
Christian Moraga: Congas
Nathanael Molina: Piano
Alex Rivas: Piano
Lily Hernandez: Vocal
Artistas Invitados:
Rachel Lopez: Flauta
Yosiel Perez: Trompeta
Richard Velzen: Trombón
Etiqueta: Cuba

Relaxing Cafe Music For Cooking – Jazz & Bossa Nova Music – Background Cafe Music

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FULL CHICKEN ROAST | Whole Fried Chicken Recipe Cooking in village | Free Range Chicken Recipe

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Today in our village, we cook a spicy chicken recipe by making a full chicken roast. First we fried whole chicken then we roast the fried chicken in Tawa.

By using traditional ingredients, we enjoy the taste of the traditional chicken recipe.

Taste is, Delicious!

Blue Bloods TV Show on CBS: Season 12 Viewer Votes – canceled + renewed TV shows

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Blue Bloods TV show on CBS: canceled or renewed for season 13?

(Photo: John Paul Filo/CBS)

Are tough times ahead for the Reagans in the 12th season of the Blue Bloods TV show on CBS? As we all know, the Nielsen ratings typically play a big role in determining whether a TV show like Blue BloodsĀ is cancelled or renewed for season 13. Unfortunately, most of us do not live in Nielsen households. Because many viewers feel frustrated when their viewing habits and opinions aren’tĀ considered,Ā we invite you to rate all ofĀ the 12th season episodes of Blue Bloods here.

A CBS police family drama series, the Blue Bloods TV show stars Tom Selleck, Donnie Wahlberg, Bridget Moynahan, Will Estes, Len Cariou, Marisa Ramirez, Vanessa Ray, and Sami Gayle with Abigail Hawk, Gregory Jbara, Robert Clohessy, Steven Schirripa, Andrew Terraciano, Tony Terraciano, Lauren Patten, Rosyln Ruff, Luis Antonio Ramos, Callie Thorne, Dylan Walsh, and Jennifer Ikeda in recurring roles. The show revolves around the Reagans, a multi-generational family of New York City cops that’s dedicated to law enforcement. Patriarch Frank Reagan (Selleck) is the New York Police Commissioner and runs his department as diplomatically as he runs his family. His unapologetically bold father, Henry (Cariou), previously served a stint as Chief. A source of pride and concern for Frank is his eldest son, Danny (Wahlberg), a seasoned detective, family man, an Iraq War vet. Danny sometimes uses dubious tactics to solve cases with his partner, Detective Maria Baez (Ramirez). Frank’s daughter, Erin (Moynahan), is a New York Assistant District Attorney who is also a single parent to her daughter Nicky (Gayle). Frank’s youngest is Jamie (Estes), a Harvard Law graduate and the family’s ā€œgolden boy.ā€ He passed on a lucrative future in law and follows in the family footsteps as a cop. Eddie Janko (Ray) is Jamie’s wife and a fellow officer.

What do you think? Which season 12 episodes of the Blue Bloods TV series do you rate as wonderful, terrible, or somewhere between? Do you think that Blue BloodsĀ should be cancelled or renewed for a 13th season on CBS? Don’t forget to vote, and share your thoughts, below.

Ty Segall Wants to Give Aidy Bryant Surf Lessons

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Photo by DenƩe Segall.

A comedian and a singer-songwriter walk into a bar…Scratch that. A comedian and a singer-songwriter attempt to log in to a Zoom call from opposite coasts, while one of them uses his wife’s new iPhone for the first time. That’s how this conversation between the musician Ty Segall and the comedian Aidy Bryant—a long time Segall fan— began earlier week, when the pair hopped online to discuss the 34-year-old Laguna Beach native’s new album Harmonizer. Predictably, the rock star and the improv legend didn’t miss a beat. Below, the two pals discuss the anxiety of performing live, making music the old fashioned way, and even make a surfing date.

———

TY SEGALL: My wife [DenĆ©e Segall]Ā just got an iPhone, so we’re trying out the iPhone. I’ve got a flip phone.

AIDY BRYANT:Ā  That’s so—it’s for the better. I wish I used a flip phone, honestly.

SEGALL: There are pros and cons to that life— this Zoom fiasco and me not knowing how to use anything being a con. But it is nice.

BRYANT: Did you ever have an iPhone? Have you been living free since the beginning.

SEGALL: I totally did, for a couple of years, and it was fine. But I think I just needed a solid disconnect. Now, when I’m sitting on a bus, or waiting at the doctor’s office, and seeing everyone staring at their phones, it feels crazy to me. I much prefer staring at the walls in my doctor’s office.

BRYANT: Well, I’m very honored to be interviewing you. This is very fancy.

SEGALL: Likewise, thank you. It’s great to talk to you.

BRYANT: We had such a funny, I’m gonna say almost a non-meeting, in many ways, do you remember? I basically popped into the dressing room and asked, ā€œIs Mikal [Cronin] here?ā€ And you guys were like ā€œNo.ā€

SEGALL: I don’t know where he was, did you find him?

BRYANT: I don’t think I ever found him.

SEGALL: Well, I told Mikal we were talking today. He says ā€œHi.ā€

BRYANT: That’s so nice. I’m a big fan of yours and a big fan of his as well— so is my husband, who sometimes works with Mikal. He’s been producing some of his videos.

SEGALL: I’ve seen a handful of those videos, and they’re amazing.Ā 

BRYANT: Are you ready for my hard-hitting journalistic questions?

SEGALL: Let’s do this. I’m ready.

BRYANT: I love your new album. It’s so good. Now tell me if you think I’m dead wrong, but I always love sitting down and working through your albums as a whole. I don’t do that with most artists. When you’re making an album, what comes first? Do you have the full concept before you begin recording? Or do you start with a little piece, and see where it leads you?

SEGALL: I’m kind of all over the place. I think that half of the time, I’m reacting to whatever album I made prior. There’s always a bit of a reaction to the last album I’ve made, sometimes you just kind of make a bunch of songs ,and then you take a step back and go, ā€œOh, there’s a story here.ā€ I do love when a record is unified by a single idea.

BRYANT: I feel that. I love how cohesive the visuals are. Do you think of the visual component when you record, or does that come later?

SEGALL: It’s hard to imagine the visuals until the music’s done. They do go hand in hand, you start to get ideas along the way, but nothing comes together until after the fact.

BRYANT: How old are you?

SEGALL: I’m 34.

BRYANT: Okay, so am I. I know you’ve been making music since you were very young. What are some aspects of making a record that felt very important to you when you first started out that mean much less to you now? When I first started, I only cared about writing jokes. Now, I care a lot more about writing stories.

SEGALL: When I was younger, I was kind of obsessed with the idea of making the album that would be ā€œMy Best Album.ā€ That feeling has gotten in the way a couple of times, where instead of making the most fun or satisfying creative choices, I tried to do things that I would help that album fit into boxes so that other people would like it. So, nowadays, I really enjoy making albums that don’t fit into any one genre or box. I make music for myself now, fully, and I hope that people enjoy it.Ā 

BRYANT: I think that’s the right way to do it, that’s truly the artist’s way. So much better than worrying about what your audience is going to think of it. How do you make sure that making music stays fun? I don’t know, sometimes I feel like there’s such misery in making something that I actually like. I love the song that you made with your wife— I’m embarrassed, because I know she’s in the rom with you, hearing me ask a question about her.

SEGALL: [Laughs] She’s here. Collaboration is seriously, like, the best thing ever. If I had to make music only by myself, I wouldn’t really enjoy what I do. There’s real creative fulfillment that comes from making work by yourself, but the coolest part about collaborating is that you create something that you could never have imagined beforehand.

BRYANT: In quarantine, I found myself writing a lot with my husband, just because we were together all the time. You make a lot of your music with analog recording. At SNL, we still make TV like they did in the ’70s, with three cameras and cue cards. I feel like it has shaped how I approach every other project. What’s your relationship to using old school methods?

SEGALL: There are definitely limits with analog recording, it’s archaic in a certain sense. But for me, using an old mixing desk is like involving another instrument. It adds a whole new layer. I think live TV is very similar to mixing music.

BRYANT: Maybe most comparable to performing live. Like, doing shit like playing music or doing stand up for an audience, it’s weird right? Especially post-lockdowns. It had been so long, so it felt very unfamiliar, almost like it was my very first time. Super fun, and really trippy. When you first started playing live shows, were you scared or did you feel breezy?

SEGALL: I was totally terrified. What’s really odd is, the bigger the venue, the easier it is for me. A smaller crowd is more scary to me. But I started performing very young, because my mom used to make me play guitar at dinner parties and stuff.

BRYANT: Oh, my god.

SEGALL: Luckily, I got some practice in high school, because I was in the chorus and I did a few plays, so I had an idea of what being on a stage was like.

BRYANT: Ok, now you have to tell us what plays you were in and what parts you played.

SEGALL: I was in the barbershop quartet in The Music Man. In the sixth grade, our drama teacher created a role for me in this play A Damn Yankee— I was the bat boy. I would just run around singing stuff. And then, what’s that Shakespeare play—A Comedy of Errors.

BRYANT: Oh damn, so we have a real thespian on our hands here. When I was like ten years old, my sense of what was cool was just whatever was out there. I’d listen to whatever was on the radio and be like, ā€œLit, this is what’s up. It’s sexy and nasty, and I’m bad to the bone.ā€ Before you found what you actually liked, before you even found your gateway bands—what were you listening to?

SEGALL: I mean we’re the same age, we know we were listening to the same garbage. I had a 311 CD. Some Korn. I was also into classic rock, and in the 7th grade talent show, and I performed ā€œDazed and Confusedā€ by Led Zeppelin, solo, on the bass.

BRYANT: That’s commitment.

SEGALL: I used a Wah pedal, because I thought that would make the bass sound like the guitar does in that song. All the dads in the audience came up to me after.

BRYANT: Do you like touring? You’re going back on the road soon, right?

SEGALL: I love touring so much. I gotta get used to it again, because just after the 10-day mini-thing we did recently, my body was just dead. I think of it like being a chain smoker. You quit smoking, and then a year later, you have to just smoke a pack of cigarettes. It hurts.

BRYANT: I mean it’s a natural energy that just enters your bloodstream. It’s good.

SEGALL: Do you do comedy tours at all?

BRYANT:Ā  I used to. Long before I was on SNL, I would drive from Chicago to Ohio to Indiana, and many other beautiful states like that. I did shows for people who didn’t want to watch them. I think it was the best thing I ever did, because now I’m not scared to do anything. I once did a corporate buyout that was all cops, literally all police chiefs from Texas. That was really bad. Demonic, honestly. I don’t know if you know this, did you know that Conner named our dog Fuzz after your band? Can you believe that?

SEGALL: What kind of a dog is he?

BRYANT: He’s a dirty little terrier mix. We don’t really know what he is, but he’s a die-hard fan.

SEGALL: He’s fuzzy, I hope?

BRYANT: Kinda. Where are you right now? You’ve been on the go while we’ve been chatting.

BRYANT: Right now we’re in the parking lot next to our house. We live in L.A. somewhere. Are you in New York still?

BRYANT: Yep. We’re about to start the new season of SNL, so I have to be.

SEGALL: All I want to do is go to the Grand Central oyster bar.

BRYANT: That’s a good New York ritual. I feel like my L.A. ritual is I arrive, I spend time in West Hollywood, and then I have a mental breakdown. I can’t handle showbiz. But I like L.A.

SEGALL: I actively try to avoid all of the industry stuff. Are you a beach persons?

BRYANT: I like the beach, but the problem is my husband hates the beach. That’s hell for me. You’re from the beach, aren’t you?

SEGALL: Yeah, I’m from Laguna Beach, so if you ever want to come down, I’ll take you surfing.

BRYANT: Don’t they always say that 34 is the perfect age to learn how to surf?

SEGALL: I’ve been surfing since I was eight. I just do it for fun, I’m not like a wild surfer dude. Well, I am pretty dude-ly in certain respects, but I don’t aspire to be dude-ly. I think it’s just the way, you know, my hair looks. I need to cut it.

BRYANT: You’re going on tour, so you’re going to need that hair. Do you have a favorite song on your new album?

SEGALL: I can definitely pick favorites. I have a couple of songs that I like because of how different they are from my usual stuff, ā€œHarmonized Herā€ is pretty different for me. I also really like ā€œThe Pictures,ā€ it has this weird electronic techno breakdown thing. If you’re in L.A. soon, reach out. I’d love to take you surfing.

BRYANT: Oh I will. This is going to fully change who I am as a person.

SEGALL: Yes, I have extra boards.

BRYANT: Huge.

Ā 



Duffy-Warwick Avenue Lyrics

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Duffy-Warwick Avenue Lyrics
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