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When you're shopping for clothes, there's a checklist of things you look for: you want them to look and feel good, you want them to last a long time, you might want them ethically and sustainably sourced, and probably most importantly, you don't want them to break the bank. In 2011 one active wear company emerged that ticked pretty much all those boxes. Adam Goldenberg is the CEO and co-founder of Fabletics. Adam is a seasoned entrepreneur and leader in the e-commerce industry with a proven track record of building multiple-billion dollar brands. In fact, alongside co-founder Don Ressler, Adam has generated over $10 billion dollars in sales through his company, TechStyle Fashion Group, which in addition to Fabletics, has launched other digitally-native fashion brands like Savage X Fenty, Just Fab, Fab Kids, Shoedazzle and Yitti. Adam launched his first company at 16, at 19 he became the youngest ever COO of a public company. He joins us to share his thoughts on e-commerce, customer retention, sustainability, and opportunities to grow the Fabletics brand. Highlights:Fabletics origins (2:50)Fabletics' customer base (4:48)Tech and personalization (5:55)Celebrity partnerships (7:32)Membership model (8:37)E-commerce vs. Brick and mortar retail (11:23)Amazon (13:54)Plans for growth (15:27)Sustainability (19:09)Lesson's learned (20:58)What's next for Fabletics (23:19)Links:Adam Goldenberg LinkedInFabletics LinkedInFabletics WebsiteICR LinkedInICR TwitterICR Website Feedback:If you have questions about the show, or have a topic in mind you'd like discussed in future episodes, email our producer, marion@lowerstreet.co.
Lacey Bridges is the founder of Black Flamingo Agency, an experiential marketing firm in Los Angeles. As a visionary leader and innovative creative marketer, Lacey excels at crafting immersive experiences that drive brand success. Her entrepreneurial spirit and passion for the experiential side of marketing solutions have positioned Black Flamingo Agency as one of the fastest-growing trailblazers in the industry. Spearheading groundbreaking campaigns for major brands like Good American, Savage X Fenty, and TopGolf, Lacey has created transformative and unforgettable experiences that solidify her reputation as a leader in experiential marketing.
#Rihanna isn't here for love songs, calling them "corny" in her latest Savage X Fenty video! Plus, #KattWilliams spills on how he keeps in shape without hitting the gym—it's all about the bedroom!
Meera Bhatia's career is a masterclass in transformation, bridging the worlds of technology and retail. She started at Microsoft, Expedia, and LinkedIn, where data and innovation were king. But instead of staying in the tech lane, she saw something others didn't: the power of technology to reshape the retail landscape. Now, as the Chief Operating Officer of Fabletics and President of TechStyleOS, Meera is rewriting the rules of fashion commerce. She doesn't just oversee growth, technology, and supply chain operations—she orchestrates them, weaving AI, data, and personalization into an omnichannel experience that keeps millions of members engaged. In an industry where trends come and go, she's building a model designed to last. Her approach is simple but powerful: Meet the customers where they are, innovate fearlessly, and always stay ahead of the curve. Meera's leadership includes roles at Stella & Dot and Savage x Fenty, where she merged consumer insights with digital strategy. She lives in Los Angeles, where she balances the intensity of scaling brands with embracing wellness and staying active.Timestamps:[00:00] Introduction[01:17] Meera's transition from tech to retail[02:41] The role of technology in modern retail[04:03] Understanding customer needs through data[05:26] How Fabletics' membership model drives engagement[06:48] Challenges and benefits of a subscription-based business[08:14] Why personalization is crucial in e-commerce[09:37] Leveraging AI for better customer experiences[11:02] How businesses can start small with AI[12:29] The importance of an omnichannel retail strategy[13:53] The role of physical stores in digital-first brands[15:21] How online presence boosts retail locations[16:44] Leadership strategies for collaboration and empowerment[18:07] The importance of assuming the best intent in teamwork[19:33] How to scale a brand while staying agile[21:09] Why hiring the right people is key to business success[22:46] Investing in the most critical areas of a business[24:13] How Meera stays resilient as a leader[25:38] Balancing work and wellness for long-term success[27:04] Why mindset is everything in businessResources Mentioned:Fabletics | WebsiteSavage x Fenty | WebsiteStella & Dot | WebsiteFollow Nancy Twine:Instagram: @nancytwinewww.nancytwine.comFollow Makers Mindset:Instagram: @makersmindsetspaceTikTok: @themakersmindsetwww.makersmindset.com
We kick off Women's History Month with a guest who has championed inclusivity, on and off the courts. Vanessa Wallace, a former NCAA basketball star for the University of Texas Lady Longhorns, and now the Chief Marketing Officer of Savage X Fenty, the intimates, loungewear and sportswear brand founded by Rihanna in 2018. Headquartered in El Segundo, Ca., Savage X Fenty celebrates fearlessness, confidence and inclusivity. Rihanna launched the brand seven years leveraging her Instagram account; the brand took off quickly and has not slowed down. Savage X Fenty was valued at about $1 billion last year; Rihanna owns the brand along with a group of investors that includes LVMH and the TechStyle Fashion Group.Vanessa joined Nike a few years after leaving the University of Texas, and held 10 different positions at Nike over the course of 19 years–including Head of Brand Marketing before she left in 2024 to join Savage X Fenty. Tune in for a conversation with a CMO who loves her job–almost as much as she loves her puppy Kobe.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
We're excited to welcome IMA associate Debra Walmsley, and Jana Prahl, Insight leader at Savage X Fenty, who share their experiences and expertise. We discuss the art of crafting a compelling brand identity for your Insight team. Learn how building a brand board can help articulate your collective vision and establish your team as trusted advisers and innovative thinkers. Discover the power of marketing skills to position your team effectively internally, and see how identifying milestone projects can showcase your team's unique contributions, solidifying your reputation as key players within the company.Our guests provide inspiration by showcasing real-world examples of successful initiatives, such as transforming customer feedback into powerful visual stories that resonate with leadership. These initiatives highlight the significance of embedding insights into the hearts and minds of organisational colleagues. By focusing on both "headspace" and "heart space," your Insight team can become a formidable force for change, driving effectiveness and impact within corporate structures. Tune in to discover actionable ideas and inspiration for elevating your Insight team's presence and impact.Please listen to find out more! Topics DiscussedImproving an Insight team's branding (03:35)Consistent branding and reporting best practices (15:04) Building a strong Insights team (19:39) Elevating an Insights team through customer exposure (24:20) Impact of Heart-centred customer engagement (29:37) Highlights“When we talked about this topic at the Insight forums last year, we decided that the answer to that big question was often to be found in our approach to three smaller questions. The first was what position does your insight team occupy in your organisation's hearts, minds and decision-making processes?” (01:49)“But there are two other ways of improving your insight team's profile which are more linked to insights day-to-day activities. The first relates to the best practice territory that the IMA refers to as Insight influence. Most progressive Insight leaders would agree that their teams can't succeed without improving their ability to drive decisions.” (05.46)“I suggested to people that they do an exercise which is building a brand board. It's something that I've done in a few companies that I've worked in and it's worked really well to really get people to explore that whole concept of what does this team stands for, what's it like to work within the team, how does it look and feel to people and also what do stakeholders think about the team?” (10.57)“I remember someone coming up later to me saying that it was like a museum for them, like all they wanted to do was go around the office and read each quote from each of our customers that said something to us and so got a lot of positive feedback, and it was just a way for us to bring the voice of the customer a little bit more closely in an unconventional way.”(22.29) This is episode 65 of the Transforming Insight podcast. If you have the ambition to transform your Insight team and the role it plays in your organisation, please tune in to future episodes. Not only will we explore the 42 secrets of successful corporate Insight teams as outlined in the Transforming Insight book, we will also talk to senior corporate Insight leaders, delve into books that have inspired us, and discuss new best practice research carried out with the IMA's corporate members.You won't want to miss this! So please subscribe - and thank you for listening. About James Wycherley, the author of Transforming InsightJames Wycherley was Director of Customer Insight and Analytics at Barclays from 2005 to 2015 when he became Chief Executive of the Insight Management Academy (IMA). A popular keynote speaker and acknowledged expert on Insight leadership, strategy, and communication, he is the author of the book Transforming Insight: the 42 secrets of successful corporate Insight teams, and over 35 IMA publications. He has provided thought leadership in the UK, Western Europe, the USA, Canada, Australia, India, and the Middle East, and regularly hosts the IMA's Insight forums - London, Manchester, UK Online and US Online.The Insight Management Academy is the world's leading authority on transforming Insight teams.Resources: If you would like more information on any of the ideas discussed in this episode of the Transforming Insight podcast, please visit www.insight-management.orgCopies of James Wycherley's book Transforming Insight: the 42 secrets of successful corporate Insight teams can be purchased direct from www.transforming-insight.comDisclaimerThe Transforming Insight podcast is published by the Insight Management Academy and produced by Zorbiant.All rights reserved.
Welcome to The Game w/ Alex Hormozi, hosted by entrepreneur, founder, investor, author, public speaker, and content creator Alex Hormozi. On this podcast you'll hear how to get more customers, make more profit per customer, how to keep them longer, and the many failures and lessons Alex has learned and will learn on his path from $100M to $1B in net worth.Wanna scale your business? Click here.Follow Alex Hormozi's Socials:LinkedIn | Instagram | Facebook | YouTube | Twitter | Acquisition Mentioned in this episode:Get access to the free $100M Scaling Roadmap at www.acquisition.com/roadmap
After a week off for Thanksgiving, Annie and Jo catch up - they're talking wings vs popcorn, AI vs puppets, skin care routine vs plastic surgery. Plus, Annie visits Rihanna's Savage X Fenty in Glendale and sees Wicked and Moana 2. Meanwhile, 45 years later Jo still can't wrap her mind around how planes WORK. Don't tell Tom Cruise! Links to topics covered in this ep can be found in Mom Stomp's newsletter, Mom Stomp Weekly on Substack. Please subscribe: https://substack.com/@momstomppodcast
Formal complaints against DTE, other utilities dismissed or settled in secret Rihanna's Savage X Fenty store opens in downtown Detroit Spencer Torkelson, Riley Greene blast Detroit Tigers to 4-1 win over Boston Red Sox
Show Notes: Christiane Pendarvis found her career passion in retail and retail merchandising in Neiman Marcus department stores in Dallas, Texas. She started working in a high-end department store, and after working in the retail industry, she went back to business school and earned an MBA. Experience as a Team Lead and Mentor After business school, Christiane worked at Procter & Gamble in their brand management arena, but she missed retail and has been there ever since. Throughout her career, she has worked for various large brands and has moved across the country, including Dallas, North Carolina, Cincinnati, San Francisco, Columbus, Ohio; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; New York City and finally L.A. She worked at various companies and gained exposure to different mentalities which gave her valuable experience in both life and work and she explains how her personal growth impacted her professional growth. Her desire today, as a senior executive, anchors on impact and exposure, showcasing the possibilities for other women. She feels blessed to have gone through these moves, cities, and companies, and has been able to impact and expose a wide group of people. She shares a story of how she helped team members grow professionally when working for a direct to consumer retailer in New York City, overseeing websites and a third-party marketplace business. Christiane aims to guide and develop people by considering both the company's needs and individual needs, leveraging their strengths to drive business performance while escalating learning, growth, and confidence. Working as CO President and Chief Merchant at Savage As CO president and chief merchant at Savage X Fenty lingerie by Rihanna, Christiane talks about her experience in merchandising roles. She describes the role as similar to a buying role, where it involves sourcing product, pricing, inventory. However, at Savage X Fenty, Christiane oversaw all functions related to product creation, including designers, fabric suppliers, technical designers, production teams, and inventory management. The role involves working on various products at different stages of development, such as holiday assortments, samples, and inventory management. Each season is at a different stage, making it challenging to balance the development of different products while also managing the business. Christiane enjoys this dynamic role as it allows him to be inspired but also tactical in solving problems.In addition to overseeing the merchandising team, she also manages e-commerce and direct to consumer sales. The Pandemic - A Rocket Year Christiane shares her experiences at Savages during the pandemic. The business started in May 2018 just before the pandemic. The business tripled its size in 2020 due to the pandemic, which was a surprise blessing for the business, as it was a direct-to-consumer business that relied on social media to attract customers. In 2021, the business almost doubled from the previous year, with a total employee base of 225 people. This growth was not only financial but also a success as a leader and executive. The company also opened retail stores, with hundreds of additional employees. Managing supply chain challenges during the pandemic was challenging, but the overall impact on the business and the cultural relevance of Savage was also a proud moment for Christiane. The Apparel Industry Culture Christiane talks about the misconceptions people may have about the apparel industry. She explains it is not all as glamorous as many people think. It is a hyper-competitive, business-oriented industry with sustainability challenges. The best people and retailers are run well, like any other business. Victoria's Secret, for example, has a $7 billion revenue business. When it comes to business, it's not just about glamor; it's about strategic product selection, consumer appeal, positioning in the marketplace, and competitiveness. People sometimes underestimate the importance of retail, thinking it's a great place to be if you're a business. However, the industry is not just about fashion, it has challenges surrounding sustainability, and responsible growth. Staying in Tune with the Market Christiane shares what she has learned about merchandising and her approach to staying in tune with the market, the importance of testing and learning, and hiring the right people for the right roles. She acknowledges that she is not a trend-setter and that she may not be able to keep up with all the latest trends. She believes that having the right people in the right roles is essential for a company to succeed. She explains how she manages her employees to help them improve their performance, enjoy their work, and remain loyal to the company. While she may not be in the loop with general trends, she does keep up with product trends. She enjoys spending time in stores and trying new beauty products, but culturally, she may not be the best person to stay updated on the latest trends. She also explains how she hires talent and ensures a cultural fit. Personal and Professional Growth Christiane shares her journey of self-acceptance and the unexpected opportunities she has encountered. She admits to never having considered becoming the CEO of a company, and has learned now to feel more comfortable not knowing and reaching out for help. She acknowledges that the false narrative of having to have it all together and expose herself to others' perspectives is a false narrative. Her openness towards uncertainty and seeking help has helped build success in her career. She has developed a long-term career plan based on exploration and curiosity, focusing on opportunities that have opened doors she couldn't have predicted. Influential Professors and Courses at Harvard Christiane highlights her involvement in various activities and courses. She started a basketball cheerleaders group, which provided her with broader exposure and allowed her to meet interesting people from different circles within the community. She also enjoyed supporting the sports team and was a member of Kuumba, a group that provided a platform for her to sing and perform and build a strong network of friends. She was treasurer of the organization that helped fund a Kuumba tour. Christiane believes that the tight network she formed at Harvard has remained strong even 35 years later, with deeper friendships formed due to the shared experience and respect within the class. Timestamps: 01:53: Career journey, impact on people, and self-acceptance 07:38: Leadership and development of employees in a retail setting 12:25: Product development and inventory management in the lingerie industry 17:21: Business growth and celebrity involvement 22:41: Misconceptions about the fashion industry, merchandising, and consumer understanding 28:38: Talent selection and cultural fit in leadership roles 34:14: Career journey, self-acceptance, and personal growth 40:35: Shared experiences and bonds formed at Harvard University 35 years after graduation Links: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/christianependarvis Featured Non-profit The featured non-profit of this episode is the Global Medical Research Institute, recommended by Candy Gunther Brown who reports: “Hi, I'm Candy Gunther Brown, class of 1992. The featured nonprofit of this episode of The 92 report is the Global Medical Research Institute, or GMRI. Gmri supports evidence-based research on Christian healing prayer by publishing randomized, controlled trials and case reports in peer reviewed medical journals. Spiritual healing practices like mindfulness and yoga are better studied, though, Christian healing prayer is more common. Doctors and patients and skeptics and believers all have a stake in knowing whether Christian healing prayer helps or harms and which approaches are most clinically beneficial. I'm privileged to have co-founded and served on the GMRI Board for the past 13 years. You can learn more about their work at global mri.org that's G, l, O, B, A, L, M, R, I, dot O, R, G, and now here is Will Bachman with this week's episode. To learn more about their work visit: https://www.globalmri.org/
Understanding your customer is one thing. Crafting content that actually resonates with them is another. The cheat code to nailing this? Building for brands you would actually buy from. For this episode of Building Brand Advocacy, Verity is joined by Stefani O'Sullivan (Marketing Consultant and Head of Growth & Marketing @ Staud). It's a conversation fashion marketers won't want to tune out from, spanning all of today's hottest industry topics. Join the pair as they explore how fashion brands are fostering genuine connections, tactically cultivating communities of loyal superfans by seeking them out to create with – just like Glossier, Savage x Fenty, and more. Their discussion dives deep into the impact of private sharing on socials, the success-stories of ‘storytelling-first' brands, and what the future looks like for creative marketing. Listen to hear Stef's take on… The Role of Creators in Driving Brand Advocacy: Co-creation is the past, present, and future of content marketing. It's why seeing the customer as your influencer is revolutionizing Brand Advocacy. The strategic value of nano and micro-influencers in building robust communities and driving that word-of-mouth marketing cannot be overlooked any longer. The Future of Brand Stunts & Reactive Marketing: One of the biggest powers any brand holds with their community lies here. Put on a remarkable show, impactfully join a timely conversation, and know the boxes you need to tick. Stef shows you them. Integrating Brand & Growth Teams: Right now, Stef sees a critical need for diverse perspectives in brand marketing. To her, brand and growth are not two sides of the same coin – they're the solid material it's made from. Integrate these halves into a whole and watch the brand community you've sought for come together. Apply these tips. Soak up Stef's knowledge. Elevate your brand's Advocacy game. Rate & review Building Brand Advocacy: Apple Podcasts Spotify Connect with Stefani: On her Website On LinkedIn
Ian is a guy who uses his 15+ years of experience building ads, and writing shows for networks like MTV, SyFy and CMT, to help brands tell better stories. He's an ADWEEK Top 100 Creative and works across iconic cultural brands like HBO, Apple, Savage X Fenty, and Marvel Entertainment. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/dylanconroy/support
Joining us for a deep dive on creating remarkable brand stories and driving powerful customer engagement are two industry veterans who will also be gracing the stage at next month's Shoptalk event in Las Vegas. Christiane Pendarvis, co-CEO of Pattern Beauty, Tracee Ellis Ross's hair care brand, and Andrea Moore, Chief Digital Officer of NEST New York, the fast growing fragrance brand deliver s a master class on the changing consumer landscape, evolving customer journeys, and what brands must do to stand out and win the future. They also preview their Shoptalk sessions.But as usual we start with our analysis of the week's most important retail news, including offering new Macy's CEO Tony Spring some unsolicited advice before wondering whether Andy Jassey and team may (finally) be on to something with their Amazon Fresh reboot. We also explore Target's rumored late entry to the membership game and what to make of Tapestry and Capri's final earnings report before they are formally hitched. We also try discern what what be in store for malls (and JC Penney) based upon reading between the lines of the Simon Property earnings call.Steve's new book--Leaders Leap: Transforming Your Company at the Speed of Disruption--will be released April 23rd (note new release date). And for a limited time pre-order it at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Bookshop,org, or any other retailer worldwide, and get some very special FREE bonuses.Buy 1 Copy and receive:- An exclusive PDF book excerpt- An invitation to a private pre-launch virtual event.Buy 5 Copies and receive:- All the above, plus access to a small group virtual Q&A session.Buy 25 copies or more and receive:- All the above, plus a private one-on-one 20 minute Zoom consulting or executive leadership coaching session with me.Simply email your receipt to leadersleap@sageberryconsullting.com and we will handle the rest!Shoptalk Offer:10% off General Attendee10% off Retailer & BrandCode - remarkableattendee Code - remarkableretailandbrandLink - https://stus24-registration.personatech.com/code?cId=cmVtYXJrYWJsZWF0dGVuZGVlLink - https://stus24-registration.personatech.com/code?cId=cmVtYXJrYWJsZXJldGFpbGFuZGJyYW5k About ChristianeChristiane Pendarvis is a growth-oriented chief executive with over 25 years of experience leading direct-to-consumer and omni-channel consumer businesses. Her career focus has been in general management and retail merchandising, running $250M to $1B operating businesses with Fortune 500 brands such as Old Navy and Victoria's Secret. Known for her ability to translate insights into business strategies, she has extensive strategic planning, assortment development, digital commerce and retail operations experience; and has driven large scale technology infrastructure projects. Ms. Pendarvis approaches all her roles with compassion, humility and empathy, driving profitable growth and shareholder value by unlocking the power of people and diverse teams. She sits on the board of directors for Hims & Hers (NYSE: HIMS, Member - Audit) and Hootsuite (Chair – Nom/Gov, Member – Audit) and was previously on the board of Savage X Fenty. Ms. Pendarvis has been recognized in WWD's 2023 Most Inspirational Women Leaders, WWD's 2022 50 Women in Power and as a Top Woman in Retail by Women in Retail Leadership Circle in 2021. Ms. Pendarvis is currently Co-CEO of PATTERN Beauty By Tracee Ellis Ross where she is responsible for all aspects of the business in partnership with Ms. Ellis Ross, the Founder. Prior to Pattern, she was Co-President at Savage X Fenty where under her leadership the company grew 6X from 2019 to 2022 and successfully closed two financing rounds totaling $240M in 2021. She led an expansion into new product categories including Mens, Loungewear and Womens Activewear as well as the brand's channel expansion into physical retail in 2022. Ms. Pendarvis has held executive roles with top tier retailers and DTC companies including Victoria's Secret, Aerie, Old Navy, Minted and FullBeauty Brands. Her scope of experience is wide, having managed women's and men's apparel, intimate apparel, beauty, consumer electronics and consumer packaged goods.Energized by high growth environments, Ms. Pendarvis also has experience in start-ups and mid-tier companies. She excels in helping brands, teams and individuals grow and succeed in the face of rapidly changing industry dynamics. She currently sits on the Shop Talk Advisory Board and is Chairperson of the Women of Color Retail Alliance board. She also has a long history of non-profit board service (National Black MBA Association Cincinnati Chapter, Dallas Symphony Orchestra, Episcopal Community Services of San Francisco and the Violet Torch Foundation). Ms. Pendarvis earned a BA in Economics from Harvard University and an MBA from the Kenan-Flagler Business School at the University of North Carolina (Consortium for Graduate Study in Management fellowship program). She is passionate about increasing diversity and representation in the fashion industry and dedicates her time to mentoring women of color specifically. She currently resides in Los Angeles, CA with her husband and identical twin daughters.About AndreaAndrea Moore is a C-Level Omni-Channel Executive with extensive experience launching and building digital businesses quickly and profitably. Andrea's areas of expertise include digital strategy, marketing and merchandising, technology, analytics and team leadership and talent development.Andrea has experience in large, publicly traded companies, as well as small, entrepreneurial, private-equity backed brands; in digital businesses of up to $100M in annual revenue and teams of up to 40.Angel investor, Advisory Board member, non-profit Board Chair, FIT Adjunct Professor.About UsSteve Dennis is a strategic advisor, board member, and keynote speaker focused on strategic growth and transformation and the impact of digital disruption. He is the author of the bestselling book Remarkable Retail: How To Win & Keep Customers in the Age of Disruption and the forthcoming Leaders Leap: Transforming Your Company at the Speed of Disruption , which will be published in April 2024 and is now available for pre-order at book retailers everywhere. Steve regularly shares his insights in his role as a Forbes senior contributor and on social media..Don't forget to join Steve's new Linked Group for his new book.Michael LeBlanc is the Founder & President of M.E. LeBlanc & Company Inc and a Senior Advisor to Retail Council of Canada as part of his advisory and consulting practice, a keynote speaker around the world and consumer growth consultant. He brings 25+ years of brand/retail/marketing & eCommerce leadership experience, and has been on the front lines of retail industry change for his entire career. Michael is the producer and host of a network of leading podcasts including Canada's top retail industry podcast, The Voice of Retail, plus Global eCommerce Leaders podcast, and The Food Professor , Canada's top food industry podcasts and one of the top management podcasts in the nation according to Apple, with Dr. Sylvain Charlebois. You can learn more about Michael on LinkedIn. Be sure and check out Michael's Last Request Barbecue, his YouTube BBQ cooking channel!
Earned: Strategies and Success Stories From the Best in Beauty + Fashion
In the 112th episode of Earned, we sit down with Christiane Pendarvis, Co-CEO of Pattern Beauty and former Co-President of Savage X Fenty. To start, we dive into what it was like for Christiane as she came into the top role at Pattern: CEO. After years of working in the fashion industry, the jump to beauty was daunting, but Christiane explains how she took a humble approach and understood that listening would help to build a solid foundation. Next, Christiane shares her advice to not lose sight of the clarity you once had on the outside of an organization, as it can quickly dissipate once you're immersed in the day-to-day. We explore Christiane's strategy of urgency awareness, which she uses to decide if the situation is mission-critical and requires a clean slate, or whether it requires smaller levels of change. Unpacking the success factors behind Rihanna's brand Savage X Fenty, Christiane explains that the market was “ripe” for this brand, which promotes confidence, inclusivity, and fearlessness for women. We then learn about how a brand's foundation, product assortment, and perfect-storm opportunities can lead to massive success. Christiane emphasizes the importance of a founder being ingrained in the brand's story, which she has seen firsthand with both Tracee Ellis Ross (Pattern Beauty) and Rihanna (Savage X Fenty). When people are genuine and authentic in their product and brand creation, it translates into opportunities that consumers can relate to, and products they want to buy. Christiane then reveals her own pivot to passion- and purpose-driven brands, and shares that as she's progressed in her career, the quality of an idea has become increasingly important. To close the show, Christiane speaks to the growth of the gaming industry, and where she (and her children) think it's headed next. In this episode, you will learn: The secrets behind transitioning to a brand that's making waves with authenticity and purpose.The importance of balancing brand position and cultural timing. Personal career insights from Christiane Pendarvis highlighting the shift from working with large global brands to more purpose and product driven companies.Resources:PATTERN Beauty - https://patternbeauty.comConnect with the Guest(s):Christiane's LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/christianependarvis/Connect with Conor Begley & CreatorIQ:Conor's LinkedIn - @conormbegleyCreatorIQ LinkedIn - @creatoriqFollow us on social:CreatorIQ YouTube - @TribeDynamicsCreatorIQ Instagram - @creatoriqCreatorIQ TikTok - @creator.iqCreatorIQ Twitter - @CreatorIQ
(Video episodes available on Spotify and YouTube) In this episode, Jazz and Jess discuss Janelle Monae's thirst tweets, Travis Scott's performance in Roman historical landmark, Jada Pinkett-Smith's alopecia, Tory Lanez's 10-year prison sentence, Savage X Fenty maternity line, drive-by gossip includes: Wayne Brady, Lil Wayne, Nas, Ciara, DJ Casper, Neyo, Doja Cat, Tyrese, Bianca Sensori, Kanye West, Lizzo, and the 'Unpopular Opinions' alternating segment. BUY SLMTY MERCH - limited time ONLY Linktree Instagram TikTok Facebook Group Email CashApp - $sisletmepodcast --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/sissy-podcast8/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/sissy-podcast8/support
Welcome to episode 8 where in this episode we talk with Maia Mccoy about fashion in sports, professional track and field, Savage x Fenty, and so much more! Be sure to check out the first issue of The Poster Gworl magazine on our website. Thank you so much for watching and don't forget to like, comment, subscribe, and share! And feel free to use #thepostergworl☆
In this episode we discuss the BET Awards, Angela Bassett's Honorary Oscar Award, Rihanna stepping down from Savage X Fenty, plus Is Cardi B cheating on Offset? Grab your teacups and join us as we spill the tea on all the latest hot topics.
Si & Veronica are ready to take out the luggage with Charity for episode 271! We are back on our bullshit with the premiere episode of season 20 of the Bachelorette. They had rain for the limo entrances, but at least they gave Charity a fancy pagoda to stand under. Limo entrances ended with a special guest… her brother! Even though production gave him a laughable disguise, he definitely had some intel to give his sis about some of the dudes. We have all the professions covered with professional wrestlers, jumpers, software salesmen, and even some healthcare bros. Brayden got some bombastic side-eye for being so giddy over his makeout session with Charity, but it earned him the First Impression Rose! Will he be made a villain all season? Will Charity be a fakeout queen? Only time will tell. Bachelor Nation announced that Serena and Grocery Store Joe will take over hosting Bachelor Happy Hour, which seemingly unceremoniously canned Michelle Young and Becca Kufrin. There seems to be a new power couple in the franchise… (Bachelor/reality TV talk ends at time marker 45m:48s) Ryan Seacrest will add host of “Wheel of Fortune” to his lengthy resume starting next season. But will Vanna White stick around without a raise and her beloved co-host? Jennifer Lawrence squashed the rumors that her and Liam Hemsworth had an affair whilst he was married to Miley Cyrus. Taylor Swift called off her Swifties from bullying John Mayer in preparation of her “Speak Now” re-release that includes the track “Dear John” that folks think is about her relationship with him. In an episode full of successions, Rihanna is stepping down from her CEO role with Savage X Fenty. Vee went “Yikes!” to a member of the audience throwing a phone and hitting Bebe Rexha at her recent New York performance. He did it to “be funny,” but last time we checked, several stitches around the eye socket isn't a great joke. Join us for what is always a good time and leave us a rating and review for a shoutout! Follow us @thefuturebachelor on Instagram! Thanks to you all who have subscribed! -- For fun, great music updated weekly, follow FUTURE BACHELOR on Spotify! ***SLAPPER OF THE WEEK*** "Summer Baby" by Jonas Brothers -- Follow us on Instagram!
Today's Sponsor: YouTubeTVhttps://thisistheconversationproject.com/youtubetv Today's Rundown:Gröna Lund: Rollercoaster accident in Sweden leaves one deadhttps://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-66014566 Train derailment on Montana bridge sends multiple rail cars into the Yellowstone Riverhttps://www.cnn.com/2023/06/24/us/montana-train-derailment-yellowstone-river/index.html Wagner leader calls for rebellion against Russian defense chief, Kremlin orders his arrest https://apnews.com/article/ukraine-war-russia-nuclear-647a545db4e4628676ff7db5b1bded34?user_email=9704f2a5e3f85dba98c827799bcbb8c6eacf1b4b967b5e04654e55ea129ba9d0&utm_medium=Afternoon_Wire&utm_source=Sailthru&utm_campaign=AfternoonWire_Jun23_2023&utm_term=Afternoon%20Wire Hackers Leak Over 100,000 ChatGPT Credentials on the Dark Webhttps://news.yahoo.com/finance/news/hackers-leak-over-100-000-233933341.html Bulls expect Lonzo Ball to miss another season because of left knee injury https://apnews.com/article/lonzo-ball-knee-injury-chicago-bulls-4169d9711a07bf5769e4d30db0f4207c Harrison Ford Says He Has No Plans to Retire At Age 80 https://www.tmz.com/2023/06/24/harrison-ford-not-planning-retirement-age-80/ Kendra Wilkinson Admits Divorce and Loss of TV Show Caused Depressionhttps://okmagazine.com/p/kendra-wilkinson-divorce-losing-tv-show-triggered-depression-healing/ Adele Polls Las Vegas Concert Audience After 'Titan' Sub Tragedyhttps://people.com/adele-polls-concert-audience-after-titan-sub-tragedy-7552995 Harry Styles tells fan ‘there's no shame' after she sold feet pictures for concert tickethttps://www.tyla.com/celebrity/harry-styles-fan-sells-feet-pics-for-ticket-608092-20230623 Rihanna steps down as chief executive at her Savage X Fenty lingerie brandhttps://www.theguardian.com/music/2023/jun/23/rihanna-savage-x-fenty-lingerie-chief-executive Website: http://thisistheconversationproject.com Facebook: http://facebook.com/thisistheconversationproject Twitter: http://twitter.com/th_conversation TikTok: http://tiktok.com/@theconversationproject YouTube: http://thisistheconversationproject.com/youtube Podcast: http://thisistheconversationproject.com/podcasts #yournewssidepiece #coffeechat #morningnews June 26 BirthdaysSean Hayes (53)Chris O'Donnell (53)Nick Offerman (53) Today In History1974: The Universal Product Code — the bar code — was scanned for the first time to sell a package of Wrigley's chewing gum at a supermarket in Troy, Ohio. Realizing the significance of the event, the buyer returned the item. The 10-pack of Wrigley's Juicy Fruit is now on display at the Smithsonian in Washington, D.C.1977: Elvis Presley closed his concert at Market Square Arena in Indianapolis with Can't Help Falling In Love With You. It was his last concert. He died seven weeks later.1990: President George H.W. Bush, who had campaigned for office on a pledge of “no new taxes,” conceded that tax increases would have to be included in any deficit-reduction package. PLUS, TODAY WE CELEBRATE: Forgiveness Dayhttps://www.google.com/search?q=%E2%80%A2+Forgiveness+Day&oq=%E2%80%A2+Forgiveness+Day&aqs=chrome..69i57j0i22i30l9.1975j0j4&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8
Comedian Luenell has many talents beyond comedy: A bank robber, Rihanna fashion model, perhaps Tom Sandoval and Raquel Leviss' correctional officer?! Known as “The Original Bad Girl of Comedy,” Luenell gets undressed this week as she tells Pol' and Patrik about her life before comedy: robbing a bank was one thing, being separated from her daughter another… she goes on to tell us about almost selling pictures of her pooping her pants on ONLYFANS. And if you think that's hysterical, Luenell breaks down the latest season of Vanderpump Rules and shares how she would've handled Tom Sandoval and Raquell Leviss cheating scandal. In other words, Raquel would've gotten the biggest beat-down of her life for breaking girl-code… The guys keep it fresh for Runway Rundown and pull looks of Luenell from Rihanna's Savage X Fenty Vol. 2 show. Luenell shares what it was like working with Rihanna, wearing lingerie as a big girl, and what it was like being a Savage X ambassador. The guys throw in a few more looks including a surprise image of one of Luenells former frenemies from Coming to America 2. Luenell hints towards who the real mean girls in Hollywood are… Who could it be?! For kicks and giggles, the three discuss some of Luenell's most raunchy ONLYFANS requests. Some of which helped her make a down payment on her new house! Pol' & Patrik scheme up a plan for creating their own ONLYFANS account… foot fetish pics, maybe? To wrap up their conversation Pol' reads Luenell's Armenian Coffee Cup. He reveals a deeper connection she shares with her daughter including minor and major decisions. Pol' also gets a vision for Luenell's future endeavors. There's a pond, a river, and a whole bunch of wishes waiting to be granted. Will Luenell settle for the next gig or pick a project she believes in? Chapters: [0:00] Who is Luenell? [5:18] Luenell on working with Rihanna and becoming a Savage X Fenty Ambassador [9:40] Luenell ROBBED A BANK for $50K?! [13:42] Luenell's NEW Comedy Residency in Las Vegas [20:15] How Luenell became a comedian [23:50] Luenell's take on Anna Nicole Smith and the Netflix Documentary, “Anna Nicole Smith: You Don't Know Me” [26:43] Runway Rundown [30:35] Luenell has an ONLYFANS?! [40:14] Luenell's take on Vanderpump Rules and Tom Sandoval & Raquel Leviss cheating SCANDAL [53:36] Haute or Naute (Marry or Narry) Game [1:02:52] Armenian Coffee Reading #UndressedPodcast #VocalPodcasts #VocalPodcastNetwork Show Notes: Subscribe to our audio: linktr.ee/undressedpod Follow our guest, Luenell: Instagram: @luenell Twitter: @HeyLuenell For more of Luenell, purchase tickets to see her LIVE in Las Vegas here Subscribe to Luenell's ONLYFANS account here Follow Pol Atteu: Instagram: @polatteu Tiktok: @polatteu Twitter: @polatteu Follow Patrik Simpson: Instagram: @patriksimpson Tiktok: @patriksimpsonbh Follow Snow White 90210: Instagram: @snowwhite90210 Twitter: @SnowWhite9010 Use code “UNDRESSED” to get 20% your order at cceyewear.com Watch Season 4 of Gown and Out In Beverly Hills on Prime Video. Follow Vocal Podcast Network: Instagram: @vocalpodcasts Twitter: @VocalPodcasts #VocalPodcasts #VocalPodcastNetwork #UndressedPodcast Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Sensuality and lingerie have always gone hand in hand. But who is sexy underwear for? This week, fashion journalists Kate Finnigan (FT, British Vogue, The Gentlewoman) and Emily Cronin (Elle, Telegraph, Grazia) take a look at the fe/male gaze to ask how sexiness has changed and if underwear is ‘empowering' or something much more profound. Who are the next generation of underwear makers and wearers? And how does body positivity shake up the rule book? “We are essentially saying, screw the male gaze!” – Chelsea Mtada, founder of Nightstand Service “It used to be that when it came to lingerie, there was only one question that mattered; what does he think?” – Kate Finnigan “It's what we were born with, the best we can be is ourselves. That to me is sexy.” – Serena Rees, founder of Agent Provocateur and of Les Girls Les Boys Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/hellogirls_pod/ Written and presented by Emily Cronin and Kate Finnigan. Produced by Kasia Tomasiewicz. Audio production and music composed by Jade Bailey. Music mix and production by GXL Music. Art direction by James Perrett. Image courtesy of Savage X Fenty. Lead Producer: Anne-Marie Luff. Group Editor: Andrew Harrison. Hello Girls is a Podmasters Production. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
In the latest edition of the Omni Talk Fast Five, sponsored by the A&M Consumer and Retail Group, Firework, Trigo, Sezzle, and Silk, Chris Walton and Anne Mezzenga along with special guest hosts from the Alvarez & Marsal Consumer & Retail Group Joanna Rangarajan and Chad Lusk discuss: Fit:Match and Savage X Fenty Reinventing The Fit Process Again For the full episode head here: https://omnitalk.blog/2023/02/17/fast-five-video-walmart-forces-staff-back-to-the-office-ups-expands-rfid-wegmans-tries-to-get-smart/
On a new TAGS LIVE, Kodi Maurice Doggette is on hosting duties alongside Special Guest Co-host Teddy Alexis Rodriguez with all new hot topics in front of a live virtual audience.Miss Argentina and Miss Puerto Rico are the hot couple in new Savage X Fenty adRIRI's Halftime Performance...Czech Republic Soccer player Jakub Jankto announces he's gayClub Q will re-open in the FallThe new CBS salacious documentary on George SantosWhen preferences goes wrong...Do you stop yourself from climaxing?Thirst TrapFollow us on IG: @tagspodcastFollow Steve V. on IG: @iam_stevevFollow Teddy Alexis on IG: @teddyalexisFollow Kodi's Life Coaching on IG: @kmdcoachingFollow Kodi on IG: @mistahmauriceTAGSPODCAST is Sponsored by Better Help. Get 10% Off your first month. Visit: BetterHelp.com/tagsRo.Co/tags for 20% offGet 20% Off plus Free Shipping Worldwide with Code: TAGSPOD Manscaped.comWanna drop a weekly or one time tip to TAGSPODCAST - Show your love for the show and support TAGS!Visit our website: tagspodcast.comNeeds some advice for a sex or relationship conundrum? Ask TAGS! DM US ON IG or https://www.talkaboutgaysex.com/contactSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/talk-about-gay-sex-tagspodcast/exclusive-contentAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
N.O.R.E. & DJ EFN are the Drink Champs. In this episode the Champs chop it up with the legendary Luenell!Luenell shares stories of her career, her passion for comedy, working with Rihanna and Savage X Fenty and much much more! Lots of great stories that you don't want to miss!!Make some noise!!!
TW: eating disordersSavage x Fenty, you better listen to this one! After a Grammys debrief (was Beyonce snubbed, or did Harry deserve it?), Josie, Alycia, and Yasmine welcome model and icon Alexa Jay to the studio. They talk everything from the painstaking, crucial journey to self love to what it's like being curvy in the fashion industry.Show Notes2023 GRAMMY Nominations: See The Complete Winners & Nominees ListDoja Cat Says She's 70 Days Vape-Free: ‘Are You Proud of Me?'Alexa Jay on TikTok and InstagramAlexa and Ella's viral TikTok
The biggest stage in music is still the Super Bowl Halftime Show. In 2023, that stage belongs to Rihanna. This is a noteworthy show for multiple reasons.Rihanna hasn't released an album since 2016's ANTI, which was a TIDAL exclusive! Seven years is a long time. She has since built two billion-dollar brands with Fenty Beauty and Savage X Fenty, and recently became a mother. Could this be the start of a music comeback for RiRi?A few years ago, Rihanna famously turned down this opportunity citing her support of Colin Kaepernick. But that was before Jay Z's Roc Nation entered into an agreement with the NFL to produce the show in 2019. That relationship — Jay signed Rihanna to her first record deal at 16 — likely patched things up.This performance is also noteworthy since it's Apple Music's first year as sponsor, taking over from Pepsi's decade long-run. To unpack it all, I brought on Louie Mandelbaum aka DJ Louie XIV. He's a pop music connoisseur and breaks down the genre on his Pop Pantheon podcast. Here's what we covered on the episode: [1:38] How Rihanna has stayed relevant without releasing music[4:49] Factors behind Rihanna's cool factor[13:18] Where will Rihanna's performance rank among Super Bowl halftime performances?[18:03] Evaluating Roc Nation as halftime show producers[26:47] “Chaotic” MTV-era producing halftime shows [28:59] Apple Music's impact as first-time show sponsor[32:52] Is performing at the Super Bowl still the biggest stage?[37:15] Is Rihanna finally returning to music?[45:32] Predicting future Super Bowl performersListen: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | SoundCloud | Stitcher | Overcast | Amazon | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | RSSHost: Dan Runcie, @RuncieDan, trapital.coGuests: Louie Mandelbaum, @DJLouieXIVThis episode was brought to you by trac. Learn more about how artists can bring web2 and web3 together for their fans at trac.coEnjoy this podcast? Rate and review the podcast here! ratethispodcast.com/trapitalTrapital is home for the business of music, media and culture. Learn more by reading Trapital's free memo.TRANSCRIPTION[00:00:00] Louie Mandelbaum: I would say there's three moments that really stand out to me, maybe four. the first is I do believe from the jump, she always had the coolest records from Pon de Replay on like Rihanna, Pon de Replay, SOS, Unfaithful. These were like very state of the art cutting edge, well-made. Cool pop songs. She always had that going for her.[00:00:23] I think from the jump, but I don't know if that necessarily translated into her celebrity persona. I think that began to emerge around her third record, which is 2007s Good Girl, Gone Bad. I think Umbrella kind of to me stands as like the moment where Rihanna went from sort of upstart to like true.[00:00:39] Kind of a-list Pop Star, that record is obviously widely considered to be one of the best pop songs of the 21st Century For Good Reason. [00:01:15] Dan Runcie Guest Intro: Today's episode is a Super Bowl special. This is all about Rihanna, the halftime show, and how this show has evolved over the past few years. I was joined by DJ Louis the 14th, who is the host of the Pop Pantheon podcast, and him and I talked all about what do we expect from Rihanna? This is the first big music thing that she's done in quite a few years.[00:01:35] What do we think? Where this show will sit in terms of other performances that have been historic in the Super Bowl, this is now gonna be the fourth Super Bowl that Rock Nation has done. What do we think about the job that they've done? This is the first year for Apple Music. How have they been doing and what do we think we'll expect from them moving forward?[00:01:53] And also, We all know about the Super Bowl bounce, what artists do the year after the show. So what do we expect from Rihanna for the next couple of years after the show? What do we expect to see from the show moving forward? And we make some predictions at the end on who we think would be some dope Super Bowl performances that we could likely end up seeing in the next couple of years.[00:02:14] Here's the episode. Hope you enjoy it.[00:02:16] Dan Runcie: All right. Today we have the pop culture expert himself, DJ Louie the 14th here with us. Today he's hosted the Pop Pantheon podcast, and he was the best person that I had that I wanted to talk about this upcoming Super Bowl halftime show with the one and only Rihanna. So Louie, we're talking a little bit before we recorded just about her and how, I know she's someone that you can riff on for a while, but it would be good to start with where this fits with Rihanna's career right now, because she's someone that, I think it's almost gonna be seven years since Anti came out at this point, that at least the Super Bowl halftime show would've happened. I know she had the Black Panther song, but it's been so long since she's released new music, but she's still stayed so current.[00:03:04] What do you think it is about her that just keeps that.[00:03:08] Louie Mandelbaum: Dan. Thank you so much for having me on the show. So glad to be speaking with you. What I think is Rihanna's number one currency as a pop star, you know, like lots of pop stars have sort of a thing that. Is the engine behind their stardom, you know, for someone like Taylor Swift for instance, I would say it's her songwriting chops.[00:03:28] That's like the thing that everybody turns to about her. For Beyonce, it's kind of her epic performance abilities. Like, not to say they don't have other attributes that, you know are working towards their success, but they're sort of like a main thing with all of them. I tend to think, and to me Rihanna's has always been her cool factor, like Rihanna is the coolest pop star of her generation, and she's never been the most traditionally talented at any of like the musical aspects of all of it. Like she's not like a generational songwriter. She's not a particularly like gifted dancer, you know, she's a very distinctive, but not traditionally powerful vocalist necessarily.[00:04:13] So Rihanna's thing has always been that she is genuinely cool, like in a way that isn't put on or try hard in any sort of way. And I think that allows her to have a certain amount of interest in everything that she does, even when she's not making music. And of course, she's done a really fantastic job of building out her brand identity outside of just being a pop star through the success of her various fashion lines, Fenty Beauty, Savage, all of that stuff.[00:04:47] Has allowed her cool factor to like disseminate through culture without her necessarily releasing music. But I think the most important part when it comes to her returning to music is that unlike other pop stars of her generation, say like a Katie Perry, who definitely does not run on Cool factor, I think that Rihanna is appealing to pop's core fan base, which has shifted out of her specific generation. So like since Rihanna's released new music, like there's an entire new generation of pop fans that are now like the kind of core center of pop music that were very, very young last time that she released music. But I think Rihanna's cool factor.[00:05:28] I guess my hypothesis is that Rihanna's cool factor can allow for her to potentially be someone that they'd be interested in engaging with on new music in a way that they wouldn't, for somebody like Katie Perry or even someone like Lady Gaga, or even someone maybe even like Beyonce, I think that her cool factor creates the circumstances where perhaps people will still be engaged and interested in her releasing new music, despite the fact that it's been such a long time.[00:05:56] Dan Runcie: When do you feel like that cool factor emerged? Because I agree with you. I think there is something intrinsic about her that just pulls people in and thinking about her career, it's almost been 20 years now. She came on the scene as a teenager and, of course, I think that in the early years we do start to see a bit more of the record label created person, and you don't see as much of the personality, but over time you start to see that.[00:06:20] When do you think that shifted? Whoever's like, oh, here is the Rihanna that is showing us why she's the shit and other people aren't quite at that level.[00:06:30] Louie Mandelbaum: I would say there's three moments that really stand out to me, maybe four. the first is I do believe from the jump, she always had the coolest records from Pon de Replay on like Rihanna, Pon de Replay, SOS, Unfaithful. These were like very state of the art cutting edge, well-made. Cool pop songs. She always had that going for her.[00:06:53] I think from the jump, but I don't know if that necessarily translated into her celebrity persona. I think that began to emerge around her third record, which is 2007s Good Girl, Gone Bad. I think Umbrella kind of to me stands as like the moment where Rihanna went from sort of upstart to like true.[00:07:09] Kind of a-list Pop Star, that record is obviously widely considered to be one of the best pop songs of the 21st Century For Good Reason. It's an incredible song and something that really allowed her specific kind of reading nasally voice to like shine through and like she gave that song a Life that I think even other vocalists couldn't necessarily.[00:07:30] That was a song that famously like got passed around to Britney and Mary j Blige and acon and a lot of other artists. So it's really her plus this song that sort of came together and it was like her cool factor and her specific brand of Rihannaness that really made that song what it was. But I also think in a sort of, weirdly, maybe this is like a sticky and difficult or chewy idea. But I do think in the wake of what happened between her and Chris Brown, which was obviously like a horrific public experience, and you know, a very difficult thing for her to parse through. And for the public who, you know, were experiencing her at like one of many zeniths of her career, her experiencing this huge public, you.[00:08:16] Incident with her boyfriend. I think the way that she emerged out of that as this kind of like titanium, no fucks given sort of, brand of like pop heroin or anti heroin in some ways. I think that was the moment in which like the Rihanna persona really crystallized like somewhere between rated R and loud and the kind of caval kid of albums and songs that came after.[00:08:41] She emerged as this very specific brand of turn of the 2010s pop star who was kind of like middle finger in the air, like kind of gave off the air of like, I'm not even trying that hard, but like everything I do is amazing. Like that was another thing about her that I think really like codified her pop star.[00:09:00] Every pop star is working really hard. It's a very hard job. So I don't wanna make it sound like she's not doing that, but there was a way in which she made it feel. She wasn't even kind of trying and like everything she did was a smash, even though she was kind of like casual about it, she never gave off the air of someone that was just like gritting her teeth and working really hard in the way that like a lot of pop stars can seem.[00:09:22] So I think it was those combination of factors around that time, oh 9, 10, 11, that like the full embodiment of the Rihanna, like pop heroin slash anti heroin. I don't know exactly how to frame that, came into full, like being at that point.[00:09:40] Dan Runcie: Yeah. I think another thing that happened right around that same timeframe was the accountant that she had and how she had almost went bankrupt from trusting someone that was very shady with her money too. And that's where I think a lot of that zero fucks given as well. You combine that, the Chris Brown, you know, domestic violence and abusing her and then.[00:10:02] That combination. Yeah. I do feel like by loud sonically we also started to hear a little bit, it almost felt like there was a bit more of like a tone in a oomph in some of the music there, which has been cool to see ever since. And I think like over time, she's just leaned more and more into that. And she also was someone who I think for every year, for up to at least the middle part of her career, she was releasing an album pretty much every year.[00:10:27] But then I feel like by the time that Anti comes around, Slowing down. She's starting to put more into her. And we kind of saw similar transitions with how Beyonce, maybe it started to do, releases that word bit more, you know, less of the general, here is what you're getting. But no, let me be a bit more myself and tap into something like what we saw with formation and the self-titled.[00:10:50] I think you started to see that a bit more with Rihanna and I feel like this. lines up with it as well. And I think another piece that I think about with her too is social media and just how we saw another side of that personality was just a bit how cutting and how, you know, direct she could be with people, whether it was her online, back and forth with Sierra, or even, I think there was one of the Kardashians, or maybe it was like Kendall Jenner had said something about, oh, That I hear this song played at the Rihanna concert, and then she's just like, then don't come if you don't want to hear that song.[00:11:23] And little things like that. It's just like, okay, all right, here we go. You know, throwing a little spice everywhere and slowly making people realize that this is who she is.[00:11:33] Louie Mandelbaum: Yeah, the social media thing is like definitely critical. I'm glad you brought that up because she kind of was like the peak celebrity of Peak Instagram, Twitter, years. Like she was the one that made it all like really enticing. I mean, her Instagram persona in the early 2010s was like the reason to be on Instagram.[00:11:52] And of course all of those clap backs. Our legendary and still cited it to this day. Another one of my favorites is like when some tabloid like tweeted something about, you know, something derogatory about her and she said something like, your pussy's too dry to be riding my dick like this, or something like that.[00:12:09] It was just, you know, we. I think that that was, first of all, she's very clever and smart and good at that stuff, so you can't fake that. But I do think the era of the social media celebrity has been all about creating an accessible persona or something that feels relatable as opposed to like the idea of pop stardom being something that's sort of like cordoned off or celestial or like, you know, something that is untouchable.[00:12:33] You know, the transition that pop has gone through in the 2010s has been toward stars that at least give the patina of relatability or accessibility. And I think her persona on social media and in tandem with the fact that she, I think the fact that she isn't a virtuoso in the way that Beyonce is so defined by her virtuosity created or helped kind of pave the way for the way that Pop stardom has evolved over the 2010s into something that's more about a brand of personality that feels accessible somewhat.[00:13:09] Like relatable, that they could be one of your friends that you know stuff about them, that they don't have to be perfect and manicured necessarily, even though that imperfection can be perfectly manicured in and of itself. But yes, no question about it. Those were all things that she played an integral role in creating that have only become bigger and more prominent aspects of pop stardom in the latter part of the 2010s as she's been kind of pulled back from pop music.[00:13:35] Dan Runcie: and it was interesting to hear you talk as well about the things that set her apart in thinking about the Super Bowl performance coming up. Because this is a stage where so many of the best performances lean into people that are the best performers or have that musical ability that transcends in a lot of ways and for her, even though that cool factor is something[00:13:57] Louie Mandelbaum: Remember Maroon five.[00:13:59] Dan Runcie: Oh man. It's funny, before listening to this, I was listening to where you had ranked a lot of them and I was like, I wonder where he has the maroon five one. And then eventually I was like, oh yeah, like, I'm sure it's closer to that one. I mean, we could talk about that one for a while. I do think that this rietta performance should be, better arrangement and spectacle than that one.[00:14:22] I am curious though, because of course, from a range of, let's say that, "The Who" or the Tom Petty. I mean, I wasn't as much of a fan of those, and I know you weren't either, but of course, Princeton, Beyonce are more of the highly regarded ones based on what you know about Rihanna and where you think she'll fit, where do you feel like this performance would likely end up in terms of where the, where she ranks compared to other halftime perform?[00:14:50] Louie Mandelbaum: Well, I'm awfully curious, Dan, because we haven't seen her do much in a long time, so it's definitely going to fill in some blanks and some curiosities that I think a lot of fans are wondering about where Rihanna is as a pop star and performer. Prior to kind of hanging up her pop star crown, let's say in like, you know, after the Anti tour, let's say in like 2017 or 2018.[00:15:12] She had made great strides as a live performer. I think early in her career she was sort of a weaker performer. Her vocals weren't that great live. She was kind of a listless dancer. Again, she pulled out a lot just based on her swag, but like she had made really huge strides in her performance ability and her vocal ability.[00:15:31] I mean, she was singing so well towards the, you know, end of the promo cycle for auntie when she was in her like Love on the Brain live performance era. I mean, she was shutting it down in a way that I never had imagined she would. She sounded amazing. So I'll be curious to know where her voice is. The thing is that Rihanna's going to do this in the Rihanna way, I would imagine, like, I just don't think, again, prince and Beyonce are two artists that are defined by virtuosity.[00:16:02] They are artists that you know are going to get on stage and be the Absolut. Apex of musicianship of performance ability. They're two of the greatest examples of those things in the most untouchable way possible. Rihanna's like a very different type of pop star. She kind of just gets on stage and grabs her dick, you know?[00:16:21] And like everyone's like, yeah. You know, so that's like what she does. So and I also want to pinpoint that again, and I've said this before, the things that she makes easy look easy or tossed off, or casual or not, like, don't be fooled like a lot of effort and thought and work goes into all of that with her.[00:16:40] So I would imagine we're gonna get some version of "the Rihanna thing" in a Super Bowl performance, which of course, every Super Bowl performance in the modern era is gonna be highly choreographed. It's gonna have massive production values, but I can't imagine her turning in something, again, even akin to like Jennifer Lopez and Shakira's, which is another one that I think is fantastic, but two other performers that are just like impeccable dancers, like super tight performers.[00:17:06] I have a feeling we're gonna get some version of like something that actually maybe relates a little bit more to a rock stars version of the Super Bowl. Not that she's gonna turn in like a Tom Petty-esque performance, but Rihanna can actually just stand there and sort of swag in a way that like, you know, your Beyonce's never gonna really do so. The question is, Is it gonna be up to snuff? I don't think anybody knows that. I think that's part of the fun of waiting for this thing is that we haven't seen her do anything in so long. She's had a baby. It'll be interesting to see like where she's at as a performer. I wish I knew more about it, but I'm just as curious as everybody else's.[00:17:47] But I would bank on the fact that someone of her pedigree and experience is going to turn in something epic and God knows like she's got the production budget and all of the help that she needs to like make that happen. So Rihanna can do a lot just by being Rihanna. So I would say that, I'm sure it's gonna be epic.[00:18:08] My guess is it will probably be epic, I guess.[00:18:11] Dan Runcie: Yeah, I do think that putting her in the top half of performances is a pretty safe bet, I think you could say. I think that comparing to the Prince or the Beyonce, to your point, I think there was so much that you expected from them based on what they're known for before going into it, that you already had that heightened expectation there.[00:18:31] With Rihanna, there's a lot more unknowns. Before this, I was going back and looking at, okay, what are the signature Rihanna performances that are out there. I was looking back at past VMA performances, past Grammy performances, and again, it's so long since you've seen some of those, so it's tough to compare.[00:18:48] And even some of those songs, I mean, she's doing some of the songs that she had done with Calvin Harris, which I'm sure we'll hear at the Super Bowl. But she's also done stuff from Anti that we just hadn't seen in that, you know, grand of a estate, at least in some of those, settings before. It'll be interesting to see.[00:19:06] I'm definitely expecting at least on the top half, but I've thought a lot about just the Super Bowl at all because you brought up the J Lo and Shakira one, which I do think was great on the performance perspective, just given where they are, and that was actually the first. Super Bowl that Rock Nation has done since they had took over as the lead to help the NFL with entertainment for the halftime show.[00:19:30] So that was the first one they had. Then they had the one with the weekend, and then you had last year the West Coast hip hop ensemble with Mary J. Blige and Eminem, Dr. Dre, Snoop, Kendrick and 50 cent was one of the guest acts there. And then you have this one with Rihanna. How do you feel like the Rock Nation era of the Super Bowl halftime show has been?[00:19:51] Louie Mandelbaum: Well, it's definitely been putting a focus on artists of color and artists that are, many artists that are adjacent to r and b and hip hop in a way that the previous iterations like touched on but weren't so focused on. So that's been really good and I think that's been needed and an important pivot. So that's been good. I think the J Lo and Shakira Super Bowl halftime show is one of my all-time top favorites. I think it was absolutely spectacular. They were both incredible and they both managed to make their like two six minute sets that they had to split up, like feel com comprehensive in this way that I was just like floored by.[00:20:26] It was just every moment of that was thrilling. So I love that one. I did not care very much for the weekend's performance. I thought I've never found him to be an incredibly compelling live performer, and I felt the same way about his Super Bowl performance. it just didn't do that much for me.[00:20:41] But I think he was a, a good choice. I mean, he's a massive superstar. He certainly deserved the slot and it made sense. And I thought last year's was great. I mean, I grew up in that era of hip hop, so seeing Dre, Mary J. Blige, Eminem, and Snoop Dogg. I'm never gonna be unhappy about that. And I thought they did a really nice job of threading those all together in a way that made sense.[00:21:05] And it felt like, you know, if you grew up on that music, like how are you not gonna love that? I don't know. It was hard to deny. But that was a very unconventional Super Bowl performance because in the last, let's say 10 to 15 years especially, they've become very codified as this. Artist Showcase for One superstar, they become this kind of like elite performance showcase for these upper echelon pop stars.[00:21:31] if you get that slot, it sort of says something about how culture sees you as, as we would say on my podcast, as like a top tier, pop star. So the last year one was definitelylike an anomalous one in the sense that it I guess it was a celebration of Dr. Dre's, you know, production work on some level, but it wasn't necessarily like the traditional pop star extravaganza that we were used to.[00:21:55] So they've tried things, which is nice, and I think it is nice to shake it up, but I am excited for it to be back to this like one artist sort career capstone thing because I think that that's been a really fun and fruitful mode for the Super Bowl halftime show. So I'd say they've done a good job and I think that I am, you know, I mean they landed Rihanna, which is like interesting considering that she had sworn off doing this because of Colin Kaepernick, which I know was another topic you wanna talk about, but clearly there's something that Rock Nation's involvement with this has. Changed in her mind about her willingness to participate with the NFL on this after she had pretty publicly said that she wouldn't.[00:22:39] Dan Runcie: Yeah, there's been a few things that Rock Nation has done here that I think have been good. I think that they were able to create themes around the event and try to tie in the location in some way, right? They had the Super Bowl in Miami, so they went deep on K. How can we get more music involved with Latin culture even though JLo herself is not from Miami?[00:23:01] That was the tie in there with her and Shakira, and I know that after watching J Lo's Netflix documentary, she was upset about the fact that she had[00:23:10] Louie Mandelbaum: yeah. [00:23:11] Dan Runcie: to share the stage, not against Shakira, but just Kind of like you said the past decade before that, was this is a capstone on a singular pop star, and then here you have J Lo, and now she has to share the stage with someone else.[00:23:23] I know she was upset about that,[00:23:24] Louie Mandelbaum: Which she very easily could have done. She very easily could have done that. I just wanna put that out there. Like J Lo definitely could have held down a 13 minute halftime show by herself.[00:23:34] Dan Runcie: I think so too. I mean, we've just seen her perform at all these different settings and in so many hits in. people can have issues with her as a vocalist or things like that, but in terms of the performance, it was top notch.[00:23:45] So I'm with you on that one. And then with the weekend one, I do think that's the weakest of the ones. And there was less of a tie in, I forget the location of that Super Bowl specifically, but I know that, he had a huge years, the middle of the pandemic and the only person that was really like, you know, elevating as a superstar in the pandemic to a new level was him.[00:24:05] So I understood that. And then, yeah, the West Coast ensemble, that Super Bowl was in LA definitely didn't see it coming just from what we expected, but it was cool, and I do think that a lot of this speaks to the relationship piece and this taps into maybe a bit of that factor about why. They were able to get Rihanna in a way that they may not have been able to get her in 2016, 2017.[00:24:28] I think of course, when they had done that, this was right after Colin Kaepernick was kneeling and the league had a lot of heightened f a lot of people were heightenedly frustrated with the league because of not only its stance on police brutality, but this was also a moment where the league's relationship with domestic violence was getting more underlied.[00:24:49] It was only a couple of years after the Ray Rice incident. The concussion discussions were more and more, the NFL, at least from a public perception place, was probably in its lowest point that I could remember, at least in my lifetime, in that mid 2010s era. So to ask Rihanna then was rough. And I think another thing too that stuck out to me with how Rock Nation went about things, Jay-Z had said this in one of the press conferences that the NFL would ask three of these artists at the same time if they wanted to do the show. So then if someone comes back and then someone says yes before then now you have to go rescind the offer to the other person that said yes, which is a very. Bad way to go about this, especially if you tarnish relationships with things like that.[00:25:33] So I've always kept that in my mind, like if there's certain artists that haven't done it yet and you're like, oh, why hasn't this artist done it? Part of me wonder, is it because they like asked three people to do it and then two of them said yes, and then now they need to go, you know, renege on a deal with someone.[00:25:48] So I knew that Jay-Z was very deliberate about, we ask one person at a time, and then if that person says yes, then great. But if that person says no, then you move on to the next person. It sounds so obvious, but that's how they did it. And at least I had heard close to, some sources that told me that Rihanna was the first choice that they had for this year.[00:26:07] And then she said yes. So that was cool to see. And yeah, I mean, I think it speaks to it as well. Jay-Z obviously had signed, Rihanna's, her first record deal with, Def Jam. She was with Rock Nation. After that, they've always been in business together. So it was cool to see[00:26:24] Louie Mandelbaum: Well, I think part of the problem too is that there's like, we're running out of these superstars who are deserving of this capstone performance. Like there really only is like a handful of those super, super top tier pop stars that haven't done it at this point. It's like Rihanna was an obvious one.[00:26:40] Taylor is obviously one that's sitting out there, I'm sure. Ariana could probably do one at this point. There's like a handful of them left in the mix. But like Drake, drake, absolutely. But there's not that many and you know, there's a whole, you know, extra conversation we could be having right now about the state of pop stardom and how we aren't minting superstars in the same way that we used to do it.[00:27:04] But I think that was another reason why perhaps they felt the need to shake up the format a little bit, including with last year. And maybe even with the Shakira and JLo one and find ways to like do other versions of this because there really aren't, like we've burned through the like a-list pop stars, really, like a lot of them have already done this, so it'll be interesting to see if they continue to kind of like mix it up or like, you know,[00:27:32] hopefully like Billy Eilish and Little Nas X and Olivia Rodrigo, like just really turn it out over the next four or five years so that they're ready, like, you know, in the mid to late 2010s, 2020s to take over for the Super Bowl. halftime show life. I don't know. We'll see. But maybe we are gonna get like more of these.[00:27:49] different themed ones or mis mix and mashups. I mean, that's how they used to be like in the early 2010, early two thousands when MTV was doing them prior to Janet's situation. they were doing these kind of like huge ones, like people don't remember, but like Janet's Super Bowl performance was not like the ones that we get now from superstars, even though obviously she could certainly have done. She did two or three songs, really you got Nelly and Kid Rock and I mean, Justin Timberlake, like a panoply of other artists were involved in those shows. So they used to be more of like a smorgasboard, or at least sometimes they would be kind of like these conglomerations of sometimes very loosely connected stars.[00:28:33] Louie Mandelbaum: There was [00:28:33] Dan Runcie: Did you like those MTV halftime shows? [00:28:35] Louie Mandelbaum: And No Doubt. I mean, they were incredibly chaotic. Like I just think that they were so random. But yeah, I mean, they had their own charms. Like there was the one year that was like Aerosmith and Britney and Nsync, and Nelly and . I mean, they were fucking weird, but like they had their own charms, I guess.[00:28:52] But just a different kind of show, I guess.[00:28:54] Dan Runcie: Yeah, going back and watching some of those, the fact that Nelly did two Super Bowls is[00:29:00] Louie Mandelbaum: I know it's so weird.[00:29:01] Dan Runcie: thinking about that moment, right? But. [00:29:04] Louie Mandelbaum: the two Super Bowl clubs is like Justin Timberlake, Beyonce, and Nelly.[00:29:12] Dan Runcie: I know, right. And maybe Tony Bennett did like one or two from the older ones if I remember correctly. But yeah,[00:29:18] Louie Mandelbaum: No, 90s ones are fucking psychotic. The nineties ones are like out of their minds. Truly like, Chaka Khan, I think like doing like Indiana Jones and Indiana, it was like psychedelic fever dreams. Or maybe it was Patti LaBelle, not Chaka, Patti LaBelle doing Indiana Jones, like themed Super Bowl Halftime performance is one of the weirdest things I've ever seen in my life.[00:29:44] Dan Runcie: Man, and it just makes you think about how far this show has come along and I think to that, even if we see these ensembles, I like the fact that there will be a bit of a theme to them moving forward. And I think there are so many creative things you can do. And I'm also curious to see how the show will continue to shape with the sponsor that's leading it because I feel like that's another element to this. This is Apple Music's first year. As the primary sponsor for the show after Pepsi had had it for the past decade, and we knew that Pepsi chose not to renew. They wanted to put more money into digital, and Apple was willing to pay more for the show. And I know that a lot of these streaming services are trying to get into the livestream business.[00:30:30] Apple was one of the more public companies I was trying to get NFL Sunday tickets. So there's always this association, both with music and entertainment that they've wanted to do to try to essentially sell more AirPods, sell more iPhones or whatever the exposure ends up getting them.[00:30:46] But I am curious to see, is there gonna be any type of integration or any other type of thing that we'll see that is a shift because I feel like this Pepsi era gave us so many of these singular pop star capstone shows. I feel like I think about Beyonce when I think about the Pepsi era of Super Bowl halftime shows.[00:31:02] What will this Apple Music one look like? I'm not sure, but what do you think? Is there anything that you expect to see moving forward now that it's kind of new chapter, new sponsor,[00:31:12] Louie Mandelbaum: Like Rihanna just like comes out wearing a pair of AirPods or like, I don't know, like she she sits down at like a MacBook Air and like in the middle of the stage. yeah, I don't know. That's a good question. I think, well, what's interesting maybe that you were making me think about earlier is that clearly having an artist like Jay-Z involved and Rock Nation involved is gonna be like a more artist friendly way to program these things that's gonna like value, cuz Jay-Z is a music artist, so he's gonna have some form of respect for the people he's booking. I think part of the issue sometimes here is that this is such a huge opportunity. This is the biggest stage in media for any star to get a chance to do this. Is such a huge moment in their career that I can understand why, like prior to Jay-Z. The NFL or whoever was programming these things in the past, like felt like they had all the power . Cause really there's very few opportunities in media. Where like someone like Beyonce feels like, oh, I should do this.[00:32:12] I mean, Beyonce barely does anything at this point. Like there's very few things that would feel like she didn't have the power in every situation. I was just reading an article the other day about how like the Grammys are so desperate to have her perform, but of course like why would she, I don't know what would be like, what would be the benefit of that to her at this point?[00:32:27] So the Super Bowl was really one of the last remaining things that feels like. Oh, like this is exposure that like you get once in a lifetime and it's so humongous. So I can see how that power dynamic works in terms of like what Apple's gonna do versus Pepsi. I don't know if I have any clearer thoughts on like how it's gonna be different except to say that like, again, perhaps Apple is like more of like, in the music industry, like is like more part of the music industry in some way.[00:32:54] They obviously like have been an integral part of like music consumption for the last 10 or 15 years. Whereas like Pepsi, like, you know, aside from like their iconic ads, like really, anyway, Pepsi's not exactly like, you know, music driven necessarily in the same way, so maybe that's gonna have an effect. Do you have any thoughts on that? I'm not totally sure.[00:33:13] Dan Runcie: Yeah, I'm not a hundred percent sure either, I do feel like apple's Dream would probably be to be able to have some type of live stream where you could watch it directly through Apple Music if you're on your computer or if you're on your phone or something like that. I know that the networks that broadcasters show are probably holding onto those rights and want them exclusively, whether it's Fox NBC, CBS, so I don't know if that would actually happen, but I'm sure it's something that they want just thinking about where things go. but beyond that, it'll be interesting to see. It's something I'm definitely gonna be looking out for, but I think it's still a little early to put any predictions on that. One thing you did say though, that was, that touched on something that I was thinking about earlier was just where the Super Bowl sits within pop culture within media and its importance because I do think that for a long time. We always thought of this as, yes, this is the biggest stage in entertainment, and I still do think, especially for a US artist, I think this is still the biggest stage that you could have, but thinking about someone like Beyonce, I think most people would probably look at the past 10 years and say, okay, Beyonce did perform the Super Bowl twice, and what's her signature performance of the past 10 years?[00:34:27] it was her Coachella performance and that's probably not something that we could have said about a artist 10 years before that, cuz I know Coachella has just grew and grew and definitely became an even bigger thing the past decade plus. And I'm now thinking, okay, in this next decade with where things are going, even just now where the Super Bowl sits, how are things shifting?[00:34:49] Is the Premier Music Festival and doing a great performance there, especially since they're now all being live streamed. Could that ever rival or get even close? Are there other types of opportunities that are engine closer? I feel like the Super Bowl probably will always still have that stranglehold just because of how many eyeballs you get, but that's something I've been thinking about, just how these things are shifting and what that may look like.[00:35:13] Louie Mandelbaum: Well, there's no comparing giving somebody a two hour concert to like do the most in the way that Beyonce obviously like now, has defined the most that you could possibly do with that. And of course that is her most well regarded performance ever. And like probably the. Most well regarded live performance of all time question mark.[00:35:33] So no question about that compared to like getting 15 minutes, but. There's the amount of people that are watching the Super Bowl is unmatched. Like no matter how many people are watching that Coachella live stream, like for instance, my parents, my parents still haven't seen Homecoming like they're not big Beyonce people, but my parents see every single Super Bowl halftime performance like, so I still think it's one of the rare instances where monoculture like still exists.[00:36:00] It's like one of the only things I mean I watched the Super Bowl and I could care less about sports. I have zero interest in football. I've never watched another game the entire year, but like I'm there like, you know, with it on mute until , until the halftime show happens. So it is one of the rare instances where monoculture still exists and people still tune in and you're still getting in front of people.[00:36:24] like for better or worse, the people that are watching Coachella are people that are already having some sort of interest in the artists that are performing there. This show puts you in front of a large group of people that like may not give a shit about you and wouldn't like choose to watch you perform even on the Grammys or anything like that, but there you are, so I think it is a level of exposure and a reminder to people and I think the way that these songs burn up streaming charts and Apple,you know, iTune store charts immediately following this, like, the artist that performs at these shows, like tends to like, have humongous streaming and, you know, download boosts following the show bears out that like you're getting in front of people that like just wouldn't seek you out in other instances.[00:37:06] And we have so few examples at this point of like actual monoculturelike functioning in this way, but I do think the Super Bowl is one of the rare moments where that still does happen.[00:37:16] Dan Runcie: Yeah, no, you're right. And I think too, just thinking about how media has changed, especially since the pandemic, if anything, all the other stuff from a broadcast perspective, people are watching less and less, and that's becoming more niche in the N FL even compared to other sports is still the dominant thing.[00:37:36] So I think the Super Bowl, if anything, is probably just having more and more importance from that perspective. So I think it'll always be number one there. You brought up the thing about the bounce and the impact.[00:37:45] Louie Mandelbaum: And prestige. I mean, I think the other thing is just the prestige of the, of getting chosen for it is also something really important. Like yes, getting a Coachella headlining spot is like a big deal, but like people who wouldn't get. Super Bowl head. Letting spots yet like a Billy Eilish last year are still gonna get that Coachella slot like getting that Super Bowl slot is a badge of like honor and confirmation of your like superstar, A-list legendary hall of fame status as a pop figure in a way that like very few other things can coordinate in this day and age, I don't think.[00:38:21] Dan Runcie: Yeah, no, that's a good point. And I think the other point you mentioned too, about the impact that this show has, of course, the week after the Super Bowl or the day after the Super Bowl, we'll see the streaming numbers or the downloads or even the record sales. But I think the thing that I've paid more attention to is some of the ways that these artists are making even more money from their tours or other things like that looking at someone like the Weeknd, he goes from performing in arenas to performing in stadiums and having one of the biggest tours of the year and even last year's West Coast hip hop ensemble. I think Mary J. Blige had the biggest tour that she had had. Dr. Dre, I know he didn't go on tour, but he just sold some of his music and maybe some of the high end interests there could have helped.[00:39:04] And even Snoop Dogg sold a bunch of NFTs afterward and launched his record label that was aligned with this. And if we could think about Rihanna who hasn't released music in seven years, what do we think this next year post Super Bowl will look like? Do you think we'll get a tour? You think there'll be a collaboration?[00:39:22] Do you think we'll finally get that album?[00:39:25] Louie Mandelbaum: I hope so. I mean, I tend to wonder like why she would be doing this if it wasn't to set something up because it doesn't seem like she has interest in just sort of like maintaining like she hasn't done anything in so long that I don't know why she would just do this, like randomly. So one has to imagine that this is the kickoff to an era of some sort. God knows she could launch a humongous tour without having a new album, and I think it would be massively successful like I wonder if Rihanna could play stadiums at this point. Just doing kind of what seems to be the new trend with all the girlies right now, which is doing their greatest hits. That's like Taylor's doing that.[00:40:04] Madonna just announced that she's doing that. I mean, Rihanna could certainly be like, Hey, you know, let me perform my greatest hits, which also constitute like the 25 best singles of the last, you know, 23 years or whatever. So like I have to imagine that it's setting something up. I don't know what to say about the album.[00:40:25] I mean, like I feel like I'd be getting in front of myself to say that she's gonna release something because she's really been adverse to releasing new music, and I wonder if there's anxiety about reentering a streaming marketplace that has changed quite a bit even since 2016. As I mentioned earlier, as much as I do think she has the capacity to appeal to the current pop fan base, cross section. She is certainly, you know, eight years has gone by, like, you know, things have really changed. I wonder if there's like trepidation about like how to work this system. I mean, you look at some of these seasoned pop acts, like even Beyonce. Like Beyonce did well with Renaissance. I mean, she did nothing to promote it, which is like a whole other conversation we could have about that.[00:41:14] But like, you know, the record sold well but isn't doing numbers like Taylor's doing and you know, isn't the sort of like jugg, you know, A-list, A-list, A-list juggernaut that like Bad Bunny is, or that, you know, some of like the new Vanguard of pop stars are. So I wonder if there's a feeling on Rihanna's part in terms of like someone who's had a career that's churn so much on.[00:41:38] A cavalcade of number one hit singles over and over and over and again. Album after album, after album, after album. About like how she's supposed to work that. Exactly. Cuz things have just changed so much and the guard has changed. And so that's a long-winded way to say I don't. No, if you had a gun to my head, I would say tour an album or forthcoming as a result of this, or like on the back of this.[00:42:05] I can't imagine that there isn't. But I will remind people that in 2013 when Beyonce did the Super Bowl, she didn't announce any, like there was nothing new happening. Later that year in December, almost a full year later, she dropped the self-titled album Out of the Sky, but, It felt like that performance just sort of existed in a vacuum when it happened, so it's not as if that doesn't happen.[00:42:28] So it's a little bit hard to say, but if she was smart, I would say given the amount of years that have gone by and how much like she could use of refocusing on the music and that the Super Bowl's gonna give that to her, I would hope that she's using this as some sort of direct launchpad.[00:42:44] Dan Runcie: Yeah, my prediction is Tour. Yes. Album maybe. And the album point is in large part for some of the reasons that you mentioned too, because the last album, I believe there was a botched release with Anti, I think it leaked[00:43:00] early on title cuz I think it was a early release or something like that. It was messy and I know that she was pissed about that and I'm sure that many fans were too And.[00:43:10] People can't escape leaks. I mean, Renaissance leaked early. these things are still happening. And to your point, yeah, there's a whole new system on how these things are being done. And SZA, she's someone who I think kind of perfected this system, but she's with a record label that has. Literally adapted its strategy to be able to understand how to perfect this thing.[00:43:31] And she had this whole waterfall release thing and you need singles leading up to it to kind of make that happen and Rihanna hasn't released music recently, so there's so many things that would need to happen before anyone would really expect, okay, boom, day after the Super Bowl, here's an album.[00:43:46] Like I do not think that's gonna [00:43:48] Louie Mandelbaum: Two things. One is that, I don't know though, cause here, two thoughts I'm having. One is you are right about the anti rollout and it wasn't just the leaks that were the problem. There was a series of underperforming lead singles that led that record off until they landed on work. It was, you know, Bitch Better Had My Money, didn't crack the top 10. There was. You know, the, kind of weird Lucy with Kanye and Paul McCartney. I mean, there was like, you know, a series of singles that like, didn't quite do the job that like usually Rihanna lead singles were doing at that moment where every single one you could to a number basically were like generation defining smash hits.[00:44:25] So that's one element of it, but I kind of think the the SZA thing is an interesting comparison to me because yes, SZA released singles before the record came out, but like Shirt didn't catch fire in the same way that Kill Bill has since the album came out. And there's a big thing now with records that come out where.[00:44:44] Fans pick the hit, you know, you dump the record and fans, I mean, it's the same thing that's happened with Cuff It on some level. Like yes, you know, Break My Soul, hit number one, but Cuff, it's actually been a bigger hit than Break My Soul. If you go look at Spotify numbers, it's got more streams. It's a bigger song.[00:44:58] It's got it got the organic TikTok element that came into play. If she had done literally anything to promo it, if she had performed it or made a music video, I'm sure that song could have hit number one easily. But of course, that's a whole other thing about why Beyonce is doing nothing to promo any of this, but I think Rihanna might benefit from removing herself in the same way that Beyonce did with her self-titled Record and Lemonade.[00:45:24] To some degree, I guess, formation notwithstanding from the sort of like trying to find a lead single prior to dropping an album. I think Rihanna's in a phase, especially with Anti, which is her most critically well regarded work, an album that I think like expanded the possibilities for Rihanna being like a sophisticated and intriguing albums artist to come forth with a full record and sort of like see what catches fire from there might actually be a better strategy for her than trying to locate. In a boardroom, like a single that's gonna function like an umbrella or only girl in the world or whatever. Cuz this marketplace is just way more fickle and difficult to figure that out in than it was during her peak era.[00:46:06] So I actually think her dropping an album like literally after the Super Bowl with no notice, like, could be actually like a pretty effective strategy. But again, I don't know that she's gonna do that, but I'm just pontificating on like what I think could work for her. I actually think that might be a better strategy than like doing some more traditional rollout.[00:46:24] Dan Runcie: Yeah, it'll be fascinating to see. I mean, there's so many unknowns to the same way where I think even before Beyonce reformed, we kind of had an idea of what to expect. we don't know what to expect in a lot of ways, so I'm excited for that. But, Louie, before we let you go, let's make a prediction.[00:46:39] So we talked a little bit about maybe some future ensembles that we could see, or some artists that we could see perform. who do you think would perform, I don't wanna just say next year, because that might be a bit too. Keeping it contained, but what is a artist or a mix of artists that you could see doing the halftime show in the next couple of years?[00:46:58] Louie Mandelbaum: I think the obvious answer is like Taylor is obviously going to do this at some point. It's actually like somewhat surprising to me that she wasn't doing it this year. She's having a massive year. This record is gigantic. She has her biggest hit in a long time. This album is a juggernaut in a mainstream way for the first time in like, you know, a series of interesting kind of career diversions that were all huge.[00:47:20] But like, this is definitely like, feels like a big, big moment for her. And she is such a classic Super Bowl artist, not in maybe the Rock Nation era, but she is white country, you know, blonde, critical darling, rock bonafides, like whatever, like, so it's truly surprising that she hasn't done it yet again, Ariana seems like another obvious one.[00:47:41] At some point, I'm assuming Ariana's gonna come forth with a new record. She's due. It's been, I think, Two and a half years or something since her last album. So one has to imagine she's due for a new era soon. She feels like she's of the caliber and of the stature at this point to do one of these by herself.[00:47:57] So those seem like two obvious superstars. And Drake, I think Drake is on the other one. You brought him up. He's obviously seems like a slam dunk. You know, generational superstar. Literally, I don't know how he'd pick the hits, which is another thing with Rihanna, like how's she gonna pick what she performs in terms of like groupings of artists?[00:48:15] I think that's really interesting. I mean, I wonder like what a version of like the MTV format would like look like in the modern era like how could you like bring a group of artists together? Again, the Dre thing was really an interesting sort of like roll of the dice on that idea, but I'm wondering like how you might do that. In other contexts, like, I'm trying to think of like other rap crews, like obviously the other ones that comes to mind like, ha, why hasn't Jay himself done it yet? I mean that's an interesting one to me too. I know Jay famously said, you know, I don't need the Super Bowl, but now he is intrically involved in the Super Bowl.[00:48:53] He feels like another obvious artist and obviously someone that could like kind of corral and very interesting stable of guests. So. it's like Jay-Z and Friends seems like it could be an interesting one. Unfortunately, we've lost another obvious either co headliner or headliner himself in Kanye who was now radioactive and would never get the slot anymore.[00:49:12] I don't think so. He's someone that certainly deserves it on a musical front, but like I think is just, you know, persona non grata in most spaces at this point. And. I don't know. I'm trying to think of like good groupings. Do you have any ideas of like, what could be like a thematic grouping?[00:49:28] Dan Runcie: Yeah, I mean, it's funny, I was just looking here at some of the upcoming locations to see if that could give us any clues. But before I get there, you brought up a few things that I was thinking about the Taylor thing. I agree with you. I think that will happen. I think she's waiting until all of the re-recording come out.[00:49:45] So I don't think 1989[00:49:47] Taylor's version came out. I don't think that Reputation Taylor's version came out. So I think once those come out and she's like, yes, you can play all my non-Scooter Braun owned music wherever you want after that, then I think[00:49:59] she'll do it. so I think she's kind of waiting there. [00:50:02] Louie Mandelbaum: Yeah. I think [00:50:03] Dan Runcie: do it. I don't think that I mean, there's no Super Bowl team in Canada, so there's no tie in there, but I wanna see him do it. I mean, I've been a fan of his for a while, but some upcoming locations. So you have this one in Arizona. The next one is in, Las Vegas, and then the one after that is in New Orleans.[00:50:19] New Orleans could be interesting. I feel like, you know, a whole bunch of, you know, culture with vibe there. I don't know. what artists necessarily, I know you have a lot of, hip hop[00:50:27] Louie Mandelbaum: Big Freedia Super Bowl halftime show when?[00:50:30] Dan Runcie: Big Freedia would be something, oh man, I feel like they'll do something with that. Assume that, you know, rock Nation is still involved. I feel like we'll get something cultural there. But, the one person that I do wanna say, and I think you mentioned this on a podcast as well, I think I love Bruno Mars as a performer. It was too early though, and I think you're right about that like he performed before Uptown Funk, before 24K magic.[00:50:54] And I think that he may have done like a snippet of those songs at the Coldplay one that he guested it on with Beyonce. But no,[00:51:01] we have a [00:51:01] Louie Mandelbaum: whole next. [00:51:02] Yeah. He did Uptown Funk. I.[00:51:03] Dan Runcie: Yeah, we have a whole next set of those to do. And maybe if it's too bland to do him again, maybe you mix him with someone else or something like that, you know, him and Cardi B have done a few songs, like something like that could be kind of cool.[00:51:16] Louie Mandelbaum: Yeah. What about Nicki and Cardi? I mean, like we haven't had a female rapper headline on her own.[00:51:22] Dan Runcie: I mean, can you get those two in a room though?[00:51:25] Louie Mandelbaum: No, not together. Not together. Not together. I mean like what about one or the other? I mean, Cardi, maybe not, but Nicki certainly is a generation defining pop artist who like certainly deserves her own show. I think that'd be an interesting choice. I think the New Orleans one is really interesting because you're like, all right, you could have like Wayne as like one of the primary headliners of that, you know, and then you could like mix in.[00:51:50] I don't know, like other famous, you know, there's so many famous New Orleans artists. You could do like a Cash Money, Drake, Wayne, Nicki, [00:52:01] Dan Runcie: That would be special. That would be special.[00:52:04] Louie Mandelbaum: Mm-hmm.[00:52:05] Dan Runcie: All right. Well, we're calling that now. That's our prediction. We'll have to check back, but that's our prediction for when is this? February 2025. So two years from now, Drake, Nicki, and[00:52:14] Wayne. The Cash [00:52:15] Louie Mandelbaum: Right on. We'll have to check in about. That seems like an obvious good one. I mean, honestly, great show I That would be amazing.[00:52:22] Dan Runcie: Yeah. No, that would be something that would be good. But no, Louie, this was so much fun. Thank you again for coming on and for the folks that are listening and want to hear more about how you break down pop artists, where should they go?[00:52:35] Louie Mandelbaum: They should subscribe to Pop Pantheon wherever you get your podcasts. It's really a taxonomy of pop stardom. We take them all one by one. We have really in-depth discussions about their careers and disc photographies, and then we rank them in a series of tears called the Pop Pantheon. So if you are interested in pop music, I think it's both informative and fun and smart and stupid at the same time. So if you like to talk about pop music and to overanalyze it as we do, follow us at wherever you get your podcast, Pop Pantheon, and also we're on Instagram and Twitter at Pop Pantheon pod. And I'm @DJLOUIEXIV on Instagram and Twitter.[00:53:18] Dan Runcie: Awesome. Great stuff. Thank you. Appreciate it.
On this special episode of Retail Gets Real recorded at NRF 2023: Retail's Big Show, we talk to Christiane Pendarvis, co-president/chief merchandising and design officer for Savage X Fenty, about her career journey, how the brand is disrupting the intimate apparel industry, the drive to increase inclusivity and diversity in the fashion industry and what it's like to work for Rihanna. Learn more at retailgetsreal.com.
Rihanna's Savage X Fenty is an online subscription service that sells women's lingerie. Like many other subscription services, they have faced scrutiny over how they advertise automatic renewals. In February 2020, Tina.org sent letters to the FTC and CA district attorneys urging them to investigate the company's marketing practices. In August 2022, the DAs filed a lawsuit against the company, and that lawsuit recently ended in a settlement. https://www.adlawaccess.com/2022/12/articles/savage-x-fenty-to-pay-1-2-million-to-settle-automatic-renewal-suit/ Gonzalo E. Mon Phone: (202) 342-8576 Email: gmon@kelleydrye.com Bio: www.kelleydrye.com/Our-People/Gonzalo-E-Mon Download the Ad Law Access App www.kelleydrye.com/News-Events/New…ind-Advertising See our LinkeTree for more information linktr.ee/KelleyDryeAdLaw Hosted by Simone Roach Produced by Jeff Scurry - https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeffscurry
Is "Dead Man" the most interesting Western of the '90s, or did Jim Jarmusch just succeed at shooting a really pretty Johnny Depp in black-and-white for two hours? That depends on what you understood of the movie, and Gene didn't understand much. While Ash struggled to stay awake, an increasingly healthy Big D got really into this 1995 box office flop that sparked conversations on cannibalism, Savage X Fenty, how trains work, Chatroulette, Neil Young's musical score and the Texas Renaissance Festival. The Shat Crew also took a few minutes to quiz one another on pop culture and duke it out over their taste in TV. SUBSCRIBE Android: https://shatpod.com/android Apple: https://shatpod.com/apple All: https://shatpod.com/subscribe CONTACT Email: hosts@shatpod.com Website: https://shatpod.com/movies Leave a Voicemail: Web: https://shatpod.com/voicemail Leave a Voicemail: Call: (914) 719-7428 SUPPORT THE PODCAST Donate or Commission: https://shatpod.com/support Shop Merchandise: https://shatpod.com/shop Theme Song - Die Hard by Guyz Nite: https://www.facebook.com/guyznite
On the Glossy Week in Review podcast, senior fashion reporter Danny Parisi and editor-in-chief Jill Manoff break down some of the biggest fashion news of the week. This week, layoffs hit H&M as the company sees rising costs, and Savage x Fenty settled a consumer protection lawsuit centered on misleading its members about payments. Also, a deep dive into the Balenciaga controversy and what it means for the future of the brand.
Rihanna's Savage X Fenty lingerie line has settled a lawsuit with California for allegedly violating laws about transparency in sales and enrolling consumers into membership programs they weren't aware of. My question is why is the state entitled to so much money when the consumers get far less than that? Thanks for joining me on the Being Beautifully Honest channel! Leave a comment, like & subscribe for more and check out my other videos.Get your Byte Aligners For a Discount of $100 off and 75% off an impression kit! http://fbuy.me/v/ewill_1Build your credit and earn reward points with your debit card! Check it out and you'll get 50,000 points ($50) if you sign up: https://extra.app/r/ELZABG2EGVJYour beautiful skin is waiting at www.inezelizabethbeauty.com and enter the code PERFECT10 for 10% off your first order! Professionals, get THE BEST INDIVIDUAL EYELASH EXTENSIONS ADHESIVE here! https://temptinglashes.com/product/individual-eyelashes-adhesive-ravishing/ Join me on my other platforms!WEBSITE: WWW.BEINGBEAUTIFULLYHONEST.COMPODCAST: bit.ly/thebbhpcastSUBSCRIBE TO MY OTHER CHANNEL AT bit.ly/ytcmobeauty#rihanna #savagexfenty #rihannasettlement
This week on Two Dykes and a Mic, hosts Rachel Scanlon and McKenzie Goodwin have Bri Giger on as a guest. The group plays "Who Tops Who", discusses Rihanna's Savage X Fenty Show, reacts to a Crabby Patty Bandidt "Bumble Fumble" and so much more! Follow: @Brigiger @TwoDykesAndAMic @McKGoodwin @RachelSafety Want to hear yourself on the podcast? Call and leave a voicemail on the Dyke Hotline : (818) 540 -1487 or email twodykesandamic@gmail.com
Our girl Rihanna has returned! Not only has she made a comeback with her new single for the Wakanda Forever soundtrack, but she's also been working hard on her Savage X Fenty brand. Per usual, RiRi did not disappoint, but what was a surprise to many was her casting Johnny Depp in Volume 4 of the shows campaign.As a result of this news, some on social media dragged Rihanna for featuring Depp in the show...which begs the question: was RiRi in the wrong or is society just overreacting?Join us this week as we tackle celebrity drama and discuss who's the asshole and why.Don't forget to follow us, review our podcast and subscribe on our socials!Twitter: @BasicandBrainInstagram: @TheBasicandTheBrainTikTok: @thebasic_and_thebrainWebsite: thebasicandthebrain.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The ladies are back once again for a curated discussion of the best in pop culture. Topics include: the Joan Didion's exhibition at the Hammer Museum, the ethics of a good museum owned by a terrible person, bidding on Didion's personal effects, the return of White Lotus, living a Monica Vitti lifestyle, Lauren's longing for a weekly/bing hybrid, also Lauren is aware she said Michael Imperioli's name incorrectly, Chelsea gives a fashion history lesson about Heroin Chic, Hollywood's obsession with Ozempic, Rihanna's latest Savage Fenty show, why was Johnny Depp there (?!), reviewing Barbarian, and SO MUCH MORE! Show NotesVisit The Joan Didion exhibitionPeruse The Joan Didion auctionWatch The White Lotus Season TwoRead the Heroin Chic articleWatch the Savage x Fenty showWatch Barbarian Today's episode is sponsored by Wildgrain. For a limited time, you can get $30 off the first box - PLUS free Croissants in every box - when you go to Wildgrain.com/outfit to start your subscription.As well as, Nutrafol. Enter the promo code OUTFIT to save FIFTEEN DOLLARS off your first month's subscription.And, Modern Fertility. Modern Fertility is offering our listeners $30 off the test when you go to Modern Fertility.com/outfit. Want to hear our thoughts on Titanic? Get episodes early and without ads? Become a Patron! Go to Patreon.com/EveryOutfit
On the Glossy Week in Review podcast, senior fashion reporter Danny Parisi is joined by Glossy editor-in-chief Jill Manoff to talk through some of the biggest fashion new stories of the week. This week, Johnny Depp made a surprise appearance in Rihanna's Savage x Fenty show, prompting criticism after he was accused of domestic assault. Elsewhere, The RealReal announced some of its plans to reach profitability sooner, including offering a warranty program for bigger purchases and data monetization. Finally, Condé Nast, the publisher of Vogue magazine, is suing Drake and 21 Savage over a fake Vogue cover.
EP. 447: Eco Bio BallsEXCLUSIVEHide Details2hr 12minBrian and Ed discus mechanical pencils, night guards, rotisserie chickens, classroom dosed with LSD (https://worldstar.com/videos/wshh10p3K982swmJn570/zombieland-hs-classroom-goes-crazy-after-someone-put-lsd-in-the-water-fountain) and:Former Uconn and NBA player Ben Gordon was arrested for attacking 2 McDonald's security guards. Last month he was arrested for punching his 10 year old son in an airport.https://www.espn.com/nba/story/_/id/34953714/ben-gordon-arrested-second-month-mcdonald-guard-hitA Croatian soccer player was dumped by his team after having sex on the center circle field with his Playboy model wife. His wife said it was his lifelong dream.https://www.sportbible.com/football/croatia-defender-transfer-listed-sex-playboy-pitch-20221104A TikToker hit a golf ball into the Grand Canyon. She now faces charges.https://golf.com/news/tiktoker-faces-charges-grand-canyon-golf-stunt/Dwight Howard feels snubbed about being left off the 75th anniversary team. "Total disrespect."https://www.si.com/nba/2022/11/01/dwight-howard-nba-75th-anniversary-team-snub-total-disrespectUPDATE: Shakira's ex Gerard Pique announces sudden retirement. Won't have to play with his wife on the Barcelona kit.https://people.com/sports/gerard-pique-anounces-retirement-soccer-after-shakira-split/Polyana Viana Says Colby Covington Got Upset When She Refused To Finger His Buttholehttps://www.barstoolsports.com/blog/3443130/polyana-viana-says-colby-covington-got-upset-when-she-refused-to-finger-his-buttholeYears & Years frontman Olly Alexander says he won't be wearing Savage X Fenty following Johnny Depp's involvement in the fashion show.https://www.buzzfeed.com/natashajokic1/olly-alexander-johnny-depp-savage-x-fentyAir Force says penis shaped flight pattern aimed at Russian base in Syria was total accidenthttps://www.foxnews.com/world/air-force-insists-penis-shaped-flight-path-aimed-at-russian-base-not-intentionalJames Corden has been accused of stealing jokes from Ricky Gervais and Noel Fieldinghttps://www.edinburghnews.scotsman.com/read-this/james-corden-accused-of-stealing-noel-fielding-joke-days-after-using-ricky-gervais-joke-on-the-late-late-show-3905379Caterers on the set of Denzel Washington's Equalizer 3 were arrested in a cocaine busthttps://www.revolt.tv/article/2022-11-03/250438/caterers-on-denzel-washingtons-movie-set-busted-for-cocaine/A Weinstein accuser says the first person she opened up to about the assault was Mel Gibson. Now it looks like Mel will be testifying.https://apnews.com/article/entertainment-movies-los-angeles-sexual-assault-9034eb13ee22e8e22e09dc558cee43e2SpaceX has turned its hyperloop test track into an employee parking lothttps://futurism.com/the-byte/spacex-dismantles-hyperloop-prototype-parking-lotBhad Bhabie delivered a speech to Oxford University students about making $50 million on OnlyFans. The next speaker of the night was Malalahttps://www.joe.co.uk/entertainment/bhad-bhabie-delivers-speech-to-oxford-students-about-making-50-million-on-onlyfans-366060Adele says we have been saying her name wrong all this timehttps://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/adele-clarifies-name-pronounciation-1234623249/There was a federal catalytic converter raid in Oklahomahttps://www.oklahoman.com/story/news/crime/2022/11/04/indictments-oklahomans-got-millions-for-stolen-catalytic-converters/69616202007/?gnt-cfr=1Nick Cannon expecting baby #11, his second with model Alyssa Scott: "Miracle and a blessing"https://people.com/parents/nick-cannon-expecting-baby-11-alyssa-scott-photos/Tyson Foods' CFO was arrested after getting drunk, breaking into a home, and falling asleep in a random woman's bedhttps://unusualwhales.com/news/tyson-foods-cfo-was-arrested-after-getting-drunk-breaking-into-a-home-and-falling-asleep-in-a-random-womans-bed*a comedy podcast about sports, pop culture, movies and dicks*Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/the-baller-lifestyle-podcast/exclusive-contentAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
Hello, everyone! On today's show: Bradley Cooper and Irina Shayk are back on we would like to know if we are the only ones that care about that? Plus, rumours about Pheobe Bridgers and Paul Mescal being engaged are veering into conspiracy theory territory, Johnny Depp makes a controversial appearance at Rihanna's Savage X Fenty show and drama at the finale of the Block. Then, of course, we need to talk about Selena Gomez's new documentary Mind and Me and Selena fans have such a problem with her best friend, Raquelle. This week, Mich recommended watching “Getting Heavy” with Parkway Drive on Australian Story. Zara recommended listening to these two episodes of The Debrief: ‘What Makes Jacquemus So Successful?' and ‘Giorgio Armani, Fashion's Most Successful Designer'. Got some thoughts on today's episode you wanna share? Join in the convo over on our Insta @shamelesspodcast. Big thanks to CeraVe for making this episode possible. If you want to try these quality products that support the skin's moisture barrier, you can find the new skin renewing range at Chemist Warehouse or Adore Beauty. Want to support our show? We are sending air kisses, air tea, and air hugs (too far?) to anyone who clicks ‘follow' on Apple and Spotify. (Bonus hugs for anyone who leaves a five-star review, too!) Still not enough? Well! Our hearts! See below for everything else. Subscribe to the weekly ‘ASK SHAMELESS' newsletter: http://eepurl.com/gFbYLT Join our book club: https://www.instagram.com/theshamelessbookclub/ Check out our website: https://shamelessmediaco.com/ Write to the Shameless Mailbag: Email hello@shamelessmediaco.com Thanks for listening! We are very big fans of yours.
Selena Gomez may have burned a bridge with her kidney donor, Aaron Carter passed away at age 34, Rihanna put Johnny Depp in her Savage X Fenty show, Bella Poarch is divorcing her secret husband, and Elon Musk is following through on his promise to ruin Twitter. Follow us on TikTok, Instagram and Twitter LINKS! Maybe we're all Try Guys? Reddit Post Rihanna's Cancelled Rihanna fans call for boycott of Savage x Fenty over Depp cameo Bella Poarch TikToker Bella Poarch Files For Divorce from Secret Husband Tyler Poarch Aaron Carter dies aged 34 Aaron Carter Dead at 34 Hillary Duff posts a tribute to Aaron Nick Carter's tribute to his brother Aaron's last interview: Aaron Carter on Kanye's Cancellation, Johnny Depp, His Personal Life & More (No Jumper Podcast) Francia and Selena Francis Raina finds out that Selena Gomez calls Taylor Swift her “only friend in the industry, comments on e! News post, and unfollows Selena Musk / Twitter layoffs and a bad first week at work Elon posts rumors about Paul Pelosi, factchecked by his own platform Jack Dorsey says sorry. Former COO walks out Advertisers leaving en mass, Brianna Wu breaks it down
Hi! This week we start with some pop culture popcorn: Selena Gomez has released her new documentary Selena Gomez: My Mind & Me on Apple TV. Jas shares her thoughts and recommends this review by Adrian Horton for The Guardian. Next, news came out that Rihanna has invited Johnny Depp to be a part of the new Savage X Fenty show. We ask why Rihanna would do this to the brand and what it says after the infamous Johnny Depp x Amber Hear trial.18-year-old Heartstopper actor, Kit Connor has been forced to come out as bisexual after so-called fans accused him of queerbating. We share our thoughts on this toxic fandom trend and writer Patrick Lenton reads from his piece “Whether it's Kit Connor or Harry Styles, forcing a celebrity to come out is not progress” for The Guardian. Drake and 21 Savage have released a joint album with one song gaslighting Megan Thee Stallion after being shot by Tory Lanez in 2020. We discuss Drake's 'feminist' lyrics while he simultaneously tears down a Black woman.Next, in an era of aesthetics and endless ‘core' subcultures, are trends dead? There have been talks on the Internet about not being able to pinpoint 2022's aesthetic and pointing to the rise of microtrends as a major reason why it feels like we're in a ‘trend-less' era. We have an open conversation on the media's part to play in this, our own opinions on the matter and hear from two authors. Beccy Hill reads out her piece, 'Good and bad taste no longer exists—here's why' for Stylist UK and Crystal Andrews reads from 'NPCs & Main Characters: We're Straight Up Dehumanising Ourselves Online Now' for her publication, Zee Feed. In recommendation land, Jas loved Enola Holmes 2 on Netflix while Maggie read Dolly Alderton's advice book, Dear Dolly, On Love, Life, And Friendship. See ya next week! xo Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
On today's episode the gang discusses: 1) Twitter Slams Rihanna For Featuring Johnny Depp in Savage X Fenty Lingerie Show 2) Dwayne Johnson Reportedly Butting Heads With DC Studios CEO James Gunn Over Future of DCU 3) Recently Fired G4TV Host Frosk Throws Shade at Henry Cavill and Gina Carano For Twitter Clout
1. Nick Cannon Expecting Baby No. 11, his Second with Model Alyssa Scott: 'Miracle and a Blessing' (PEOPLE) (19:55) 2. Beyonce, Jay-Z post rare Halloween family pic as 'The Proud Family' with their kids (Page Six) (33:36) 3. Aaron Paul files to legally change his 7-month-old son's first and middle names (Page Six) (36:26) 4. Johnny Depp to make guest appearance in Rihanna's Savage X Fenty show: report (Page Six Style) (43:50) 5. RHOBH's Mauricio Umansky Explains Why His New Series Buying Beverly Hills Isn't on Bravo (E! Online) (46:59) The Toast with Jackie (@JackieOshry) and Claudia Oshry (@girlwithnojob) NLOG Tickets Merch The Toast Patreon Girl With No Job by Claudia Oshry
On the show today… Australians have been warned against seeing the new horror movie Terrifier 2, after reports that people were vomiting and fainting in the cinema due to its gory scenes. Now it's been officially submitted to the Academy Awards for Oscars consideration and we need to discuss how this happened. And it's been confirmed that Johnny Depp will appear in Rihanna's highly anticipated Savage X Fenty fashion, much to the surprise of her fans. While Depp is just one of many celebrities to appear in the show, we have to question why Rihanna has gone out of her way to align her brand with his, knowing that his presence would become the dominant talking point of her show. Plus, it's Weekend Watch time! This week we have a highly anticipated celebrity documentary to discuss with you and a new tear-inducing romantic drama with an all-star cast we need you to watch. THE END BITS Subscribe to Mamamia Read more about Selena Gomez's documentary in this profile from Rolling Stone. GET IN TOUCH: Join us in our Facebook group to discuss everything pop culture...https://www.facebook.com/groups/2524018781153963/ Feedback? We're listening. Call the pod phone on 02 8999 9386 or email us at thespill@mamamia.com.au WANT MORE? Read all the latest entertainment news on Mamamia... https://mamamia.com.au/entertainment/ Subscribe to The Spill Newsletter... https://mamamia.com.au/newsletter CREDITS Hosts: Laura Brodnik & Chelsea McLaughlin Executive Producer: Gia Moylan Audio Producer: Rhiannon Mooney Mamamia acknowledges the Traditional Owners of the Land we have recorded this podcast on, the Gadigal people of the Eora Nation. We pay our respects to their Elders past and present, and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cultures.Become a Mamamia subscriber: https://www.mamamia.com.au/subscribeSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Thanks to Rihanna, Sheryl Lee Ralph will add Savage X Fenty model to her resume! Plus, Bono reveals where he slept after getting drunk with Barack Obama, and find out why Gabby Sidibe, Eric André, and Johnny Knoxville are linking up! 'Wild "N Out' star Jessie Woo cohosts, so tune in for the celebrity dish.
Johnny Depp is set to make a guest appearance in Rihanna's upcoming Savage X Fenty show. Migos rapper Takeoff's cause of death has been confirmed -- as Quavo's assistant has been named among those injured in the shooting. Elon Musk and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez got into a tense Twitter feud after Musk announced a monthly subscription fee for 'Verified' Twitter users. Nets player, Kyrie Irving, is acknowledging the hurt he caused the Jewish community when he promoted a movie containing antisemitic ideas. Hosts: Eric Colley & Derek Kaufman Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
On the Glossy Week in Review podcast, senior fashion reporter Danny Parisi and Glossy Pop's Sara Spruch-Feiner break down some of the biggest fashion industry news of the week. On this week's episode: Ciara is the latest celebrity to launch a brand, contributing to the saturation of celebrity beauty and fashion brands that have sprung up in the last year and raising questions about the sustainability of this market. Additionally, Savage x Fenty is getting into loungewear. And Allure announced the end of its print edition to focus on digital media and its brick-and-mortar store in SoHo.
Vanessa Hudgens sits down with Drew for some girl talk on sliding into someone's DMs, and what it was like to be a part of Rihanna's Savage X Fenty Show!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Tonight, Drama and Dee speak to the youth, followed by quite the discussion on Riri's IPO, Bored Ape's expansion, Yelp's top reviewed restaurants, Pixar Director Domee Shi's groundbreaking achievement, Kanye West's skeet beef, China's COVID protocols, and Roman Abramovich's cuckold by the UK. Timeline of What Was Discussed: The youth is interesting. (1:54) Skeet Davidson is everyone's new hero. (5:16) Tom Brady is BACK! (9:06) The best thing Rihanna did is STOP making music. (11:54) Bored Ape Yacht Club is taking over the world! (17:25) Yelp's most reviewed restaurants. (21:16) Don't doubt the internship! (27:10) China's quest for ‘zero-COVID'. (35:06) Russian oligarchs are feeling the squeeze. (41:51) When the White House reaches out to TikTok influencers on misinformation. (45:45) Related Links/Products Mentioned Pete Davidson sends Kanye West a photo IN BED with Kim Kardashian Pete Davidson's Alleged Texts to Kanye West—In Full Kanye West Says Kim Kardashian Won't Allow Their Kids to Attend Sunday Service Tom Brady returns to NFL: Winners and losers after QB makes shocking decision to come out of retirement Rihanna's Savage X Fenty eyes $3B IPO, expanding empire, female entrepreneur status Bored Ape Yacht Everything This LA restaurant is Yelp's most reviewed ever Domee Shi was a Pixar intern 11 years ago—now she's the first woman to solo-direct a feature there The incredibly harmful subtext of Kim Kardashian's 'advice' to women Millions in 'zero-Covid' China are in lockdown as virus cases TRIPLE after surge in infections in north east as country battles its worst outbreak for two years China reinstates COVID-19 restrictions amid a rise in infections Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich has been sanctioned by the UK & is being forced to give up the $3 billion club. TikTok Influencers Get Spotlight in Information Battle Over the Russia-Ukraine War Connect with Group Chat! Watch The Pod #1 Newsletter In The World For The Gram Tweet With Us Exclusive Facebook Content We're @groupchatpod on Snapchat
Troye Sivan Talks Angel Baby, Timothée Chalamet, Savage x Fenty & Wearing A Dress to the MET Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Netflix is in the house!!My Unorthodox Life star, Batsheva Haart gets real about her transition from living in an ultra-orthodox community to making the move to New York City. Lauren & Jeremy gain an entirely new perspective on religion, fashion, love, and family in one of the most inspiring episodes to date.Shop my favorite Savage X Fenty styles at www.savagex.com/WILD9For our audience, Elisire is offering 20% off with the code WILD. Go to elisire.com today and capture your mood. Go to Curology.com/WILD for a free 30-day trial, just pay for shipping and handling! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoicesSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Fousey vents about his recent ban on the dating app Hinge and gives Lauren and Jeremy a crash course on his best pickup lines.As a listener, you'll get 10% off your first month by visiting our sponsor at BetterHelp.com/wt9 Cuyana never goes on sale but as a special offer, my listeners can receive 10% off your first order over $150 plus free shipping. Visit Cuyana.com/WILD to get your individual code. You can grow thicker, healthier hair AND support our show by going to Nutrafol.com and entering the promo code WT9 to save FIFTEEN DOLLARS OFF your first month's subscriptionGet vaccinated at vaccines.gov.Shop my favorite Savage X Fenty styles at savagex.com/WILD9 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoicesSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.