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The first week of the Sean Combs trial was dominated by the testimony of Cassie Ventura, Combs’ ex-girlfriend, who shared graphic and detailed accounts of the highly choreographed sexual performances that she says Combs coerced her into participating in, sometimes using violence and drugs. Isabella Gomez Sarmiento was in the courthouse where Combs is facing charges including sex trafficking and racketeering conspiracy, and she reported on what Ventura’s testimony reveals about the prosecution’s case against the rapper and music mogul.
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Earlier in the week, Anastasia Tsioulcas looked back at Cassie’s promising early career — her song “Me & U” was one of the biggest hits of 2006 — and what we now know about the way that promise evaporated.
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You can follow coverage of the trial of Sean Combs here.
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Recent changes to enforcement of immigration — including stories of deportations and detainment — have made the already challenging process of touring the U.S. feel insurmountable for some international musicians. Nastia Voynovskaya of KQED in San Francisco reported this week that some are canceling plans to come to the U.S.
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The winner of the 2025 Eurovision Song Contest was crowned on Saturday. Austria’s JJ took the prize. If you want to learn more about how the contest works, and the story behind some of the finalists, check out Glen Weldon’s roundup, or read Itay Stern’s profile of the second-place performer, Israel’s Yuval Raphael, a survivor of the Hamas attack on Oct. 7.
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The Broadway composer Charles Strouse wrote several hit musicals with iconic songs, from Bye Bye Birdie to Annie, died in New York last week at the age of 96. Jeff Lunden wrote Strouse’s obituary for NPR.
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I’m a fan of these recent offerings |
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If you’re interested in the context surrounding K-Pop, this conversation between scholar Oliver Wang and Euny Hong, author of the classic book The Birth of Korean Cool, is really illuminating.
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The Criterion Channel has a great feature this month on Jem Cohen, whose film about the band Fugazi, Instrument, was filmed over the course of more than a decade and is one of the great music docs. But I want to recommend Cohen’s brief portrait of Elliott Smith, Lucky Three. Quiet, almost austere, yet lush with tenderness and light – like Smith’s music itself – is a beautiful reminder of what made this singer-songwriter’s life and work so precious.
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My friend and old Village Voice colleague Vince Aletti has an amazing collection of physique magazines, classic repositories of images intended for “the gay gaze,” and I’ve been waiting years for him to write about them. The wait is over.
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One of my local Little Free Libraries gifted me a copy of a novel I’ve long wanted to read, John Fante’s Ask the Dust. Friends, I devoured it! Now I need someone to discuss it with me. Have you read it?
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I’m in D.C. as I’m writing and that means I stopped by “rhymes with latte” Tatte and had a salmon tartine and I am very happy.
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Papal preferences: White Sox, Aurelio's Pizza and (perhaps) the Chicago Symphony Orchestra ... |
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