
Articles
-
6 days ago |
yahoo.com | Jen Lennon
Welcome to our weekly music post, where we spotlight our favorite new songs and albums. Hop in the comments and tell us: What new music are you listening to? Lana Del Rey, “Bluebird”When Lana Del Rey first announced her upcoming album late last year, she promised us some new music before Stagecoach 2025, and she’s coming in right under the wire with last week’s “Henry, come on” and the brand-new “Bluebird.” What might not be coming in on time, though, is the album itself.
-
1 week ago |
avclub.com | Jen Lennon
Skip to the content Welcome to our weekly music post, where we spotlight our favorite new songs and albums. Hop in the comments and tell us: What new music are you listening to? Pulp, “Spike Island” Even though Pulp’s 2011 reunion eventually resulted in a new single, 2013’s “After You,” it never built to a whole new album, leaving 2001’s We Love Life as the legendary Britpop band’s last full-length LP.
-
1 week ago |
yahoo.com | Jen Lennon
3 new songs and 3 new albums to check out this weekendFri, April 11, 2025 at 4:00 PM UTCWelcome to our weekly music post, where we spotlight our favorite new songs and albums. Hop in the comments and tell us: What new music are you listening to? Pulp, “Spike Island”Even though Pulp’s 2011 reunion eventually resulted in a new single, 2013’s “After You,” it never built to a whole new album, leaving 2001’s We Love Life as the legendary Britpop band’s last full-length LP.
-
1 week ago |
avclub.com | Jen Lennon
Toward the end of “Full Circle,” the final episode of Yellowjackets season three, Shauna picks up a pen and starts writing. It’s a significant symbolic moment. While she journaled a lot after the Yellowjackets’ plane crashed in the Canadian wilderness in 1996 and left the survivors stranded for 19 months, we’ve never seen her do it as an adult. “I’ve tried for years to remember what happened out there, to understand why it seemed like I couldn’t remember so much of it,” she narrates.
-
2 weeks ago |
avclub.com | Jen Lennon
Author and journalist Ross Benes has a theory about how we ended up in our particularly strange modern world: It all started with the low culture boom of 1999. That was the year reality TV exploded, Woodstock ’99 somehow turned out even worse than the mud-flinging disaster of Woodstock ’94, and exploitative daytime talk shows like Jerry Springer rose to prominence.
Try JournoFinder For Free
Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.
Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →