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Post Malone and Kid Cudi to headline 2023 Hive Festival

Post Malone and Kid Cudi will headline the 2023 Hive Music Festival, also featuring Joji, Big Sean, Santa Fe Klan, Glorilla among the over 27 artists set to perform. This year the festival is produced by C3 Presents (producers of Lollapalooza, Bonnaroo, ACL Festival and more) and Live Nation, and will take place June 9-10th at Utah State Fairpark in Salt Lake City, Utah.

2-Day General Admission, GA+, and VIP presale tickets are on sale now via Ticketmaster.

For more information, head to the 2023 Hive Festival official website.

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Rihanna to perform ‘Lift Me Up’ from Black Panther: Wakanda Forever at 2023 Oscars

Academy Award organizers confirmed on Thursday that Rihanna will perform her Oscar-nominated song “Lift Me Up,” from Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, at this year’s 95th Annual Academy Awards. The song was Rihanna’s first solo single released in six years, and marks her first Oscar nomination.

The music of “Lift Me Up” is from Rihanna, Tems, Ryan Coogler and Ludwig Goransson, while lyrics are from Tems and Coogler. Other nominees for Best Original Song are “Applause” from Tell It like a Woman, “Hold My Hand” from Top Gun: Maverick, “Naatu Naatu” from RRR, and “This Is A Life” from Everything Everywhere All at Once.

The 2023 Oscars, hosted by Jimmy Kimmel, will air live from the Dolby Theatre on ABC and broadcast outlets worldwide on Sunday, March 12.

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9-year-old girl, TV news staffer among three killed in Orlando shooting

Authorities confirmed that a local TV news journalist and a 9-year-old girl were among three people killed in shootings in Orlando, Florida, on Wednesday, while two others were wounded. Authorities said the mother of the 9-year-old child who died was in critical condition and is continuing to “fight for her life.”

Orange County Sheriff John Mina said in a news conference that Keith Melvin Moses, 19, has been arrested in connection with the shootings and is expected to be charged. Mina said that Moses has a lengthy criminal history that includes gun charges and charges for aggravated battery and assault with a deadly weapon, burglary and grand theft. The sheriff’s office said they didn’t yet know if the suspect had any connection to the news crew, or the mother and daughter.

Police say the deadly rampage began at 11 a.m. local time when deputies responded to a shooting and discovered a woman in her 20s who had been fatally shot.  Moses allegedly shot and killed a woman in her 20s (with whom he was an acquaintance) on Wednesday morning, and police were called later in the day to two additional shootings near the scene. Sheriff Mina said a 9-year-old child and her mother were shot at one home; and at another scene nearby, staffers from Spectrum News 13 were shot near their vehicle. Authorities located the reporter and photographer for Spectrum News 13 — who were on the scene to cover the homicide which had occurred Wednesday morning — shot in or near their news vehicle. One of the News 13 employees died from their injuries. Mina said it is unclear why the Spectrum News 13 crew members were targeted, or if the suspect even knew whether or not they were members of the media.

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Twin-engine plane crashes in Little Rock, Ark, killing all 5 aboard

A twin-engine plane crashed near the Clinton National Airport in Little Rock, Ark., on Wednesday afternoon, killing all five people on board. The Little Rock Police Department tweeted that emergency departments were alerted to the crash at 12:02 p.m., with callers reporting a crash near the 3M plant that is in the area. Sources from the Federal Aviation Administration confirmed there were no survivors.

The sheriff’s office said the plane was about a mile from the Clinton National Airport when it crashed after departing the airport. The plane was reportedly a Beech BE20 that was on its way to Columbus, Ohio.

Lt. Cody Burk, spokesman for the department, said it is unclear if weather played a role in the crash. A line of thunderstorms with wind gusts up to 46 mph swept through the heart of Arkansas at about the time of the crash.

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Bebe Rexha announces North American summer tour dates

Bebe Rexha announced that she’s hitting the road this summer, travling across North America on the 20-date Best F-n Night Of My Life summer tour. The tour kicks off May 31 at The Van Buren in Phoenix, Arizona, and will make stops in Chicago, Toronto, Philadelphia, Orlando, San Diego and more before wrapping up June 30 at The Wiltern in Los Angeles, California.

Artist Presale and VIP Packages for Rexha’s Best F-n Night Of My Life tour are on sale now, with the general on-sale beginning Friday, February 23 at 10 a.m. local. To purchase tickets, head HERE.

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TWICE announce first set of dates for their ‘Ready to Be’ world tour

TWICE has announced the first run of dates for their fifth world tour, dubbed the “Ready to Be” world tour, which takes its name from TWICE’s forthcoming mini-album. The new world tour follows TWICE’s previous world tour, “III,” which sold out worldwide. The K-pop performers performed in the U.S. in March 2022 for a two-night encore concert at the BMO Stadium in Los Angeles.

The official TWICE Twitter account shared an image with the dates and venues for the “Ready to Be” world tour, which is set to kick-off in April at KSPO Dome in Seoul, followed by a series of shows in Australia and Japan in May. In June-July, the girl group will travel to various cities in North America before wrapping up in Atlanta, GA. Verified Fan registration to purchase tickets for TWICE’s North American leg of the tour is open now through March 8 at the link – here.

TWICE also shared details of the “Ready To Be” mini-album on Twitter. The mini-album is comprised of seven songs in total, including the previously released single “Moonlight Sunrise” and the title track “Set Me Free.”

“Ready To Be” is set to drop on March 10th; to pre-order/pre-save, head here.

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Supreme Court hears arguments on social media legal protections

On Tuesday, the Supreme Court heard oral arguments in the first of two cases that could decide whether social media companies can be held liable for promoting incendiary content which have been allowed to widely circulate on the platforms, including terrorist activities. These rulings could overturn Section 230 of the 1996 Communications Decency Act, and throw out longstanding federal protections that keep big tech companies from being sued over content published by independent users. The court could fundamentally determine whether the federal statute can still apply if algorithms used by the tech companies are targeting specific users with questionable content, while also spreading terrorist influence to their massive digital audiences.

The case of Gonzalez vs. Google arose out of a lawsuit filed by the family of 23-year-old Nohemi Gonzalez, an American student who was among 130 people killed in a 2015 Islamic State attack in Paris. Filed under the Antiterrorism Act, the lawsuit accuses Google – YouTube’s owner — of allowing barbaric videos to be posted to the platform, which then go viral as algorithms recommend the content to random users. The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals previously upheld Section 230, saying the statute protects big tech in cases where it has recommended inflammatory content — so long as the algorithm was being used in the same way for all other content. However, the lower court acknowledged that Section 230 “shelters more activity than Congress envisioned it would” and suggested that U.S. lawmakers move to clarify the scope of the law. The Gonzalez family appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court upon that decision, which agreed to hear the liability case last year. Gonzalez is the first case that the Supreme Court has heard on this topic

In the second case, victims in Twitter vs. Taamneh, which the high court has agreed to take up on Wednesday, could determine whether Twitter, Facebook and Google can be held liable for aiding and abetting international terror groups who have turned to using the platforms. The Twitter case stems from a federal lawsuit filed by the Taamneh family — relatives of Nawras Alassaf, a Jordanian national who was among 39 killed in a 2017 terrorist attack in Istanbul.

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Biden administration unveils broad asylum restrictions at U.S.-Mexico border

On Tuesday, the Biden administration released a new rule largely barring migrants who traveled through other countries on their way to the US-Mexico border from applying for asylum in the United States. The new 153-page proposed regulation marks a departure from decades-long protocol, and is the most restrictive policy put in place by the Biden administration to try and manage the US-Mexico border.

According to the text of the regulation, the proposed rule would presume asylum ineligibility and “encourage migrants to avail themselves of lawful, safe, and orderly pathways into the United States, or otherwise to seek asylum or other protection in countries through which they travel, thereby reducing reliance on human smuggling networks that exploit migrants for financial gain.” The rule would generally apply to migrants who unlawfully cross the US-Mexico border, but doesn’t apply to unaccompanied migrant children. The proposed rule will be posted in the Federal Register for a 30-day public comment period and likely take effect in May, when Title 42 is set to expire. The rule is also expected to last for two years. The United States had begun sending migrants from Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua to Mexico under Title 42 and opened a separate program that allows migrants of those nationalities and Haiti to apply to legally come to the United States. Thousands of migrants have already applied.

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Miley Cyrus’ “Flowers” stays at No. 1 on Billboard Hot 100 for fifth week

Miley Cyrus‘ “Flowers” remains at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 charts for a fifth straight week, marking Cyrus’ longest-running #1 song ever.

“Flowers” debuted at No. 1 after it was released last month and as of this week it is the most-heard song on radio stations across the country. Billboard estimates the song made 85.8 million airplay audience impressions over the past week.  “Flowers” has also taken the #1 spot on Billboard‘s Radio Songs chart, making it Miley’s first track to ever hit the top spot. Only three other songs launched to the top of the Radio Songs chart in five weeks or less: Adele‘s “Hello;” Destiny’s Child’s “Survivor”, and TLC‘s “No Scrubs.”

“Flowers” has been streamed 33.7 million times over the past week, and on Spotify the song remains the #1 leader on its Weekly Top Songs chart. According to the platform, ‘Flowers’ has amassed over 508 million streams since it was released on January 12th.

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BTS’ Jimin announces first solo album “FACE”

Jimin of the South Korean boy band BTS will release his first solo album, titled ‘FACE’, on March 24th.

Big Hit Music, the South Korean label behind BTS, made the announcement via global fandom life platform Weverse, with a logo motion revealed on the official Twitter account account of Big Hit Music. In a press release, ‘FACE’ is described as being the “story of fronting his true self and making a new leap forward as an artist. Through ‘FACE’, Jimin will present his own musicality with distinct timbre and impeccable dance performance.”

Jimin is the fourth member of BTS to release solo music in the past year. J-Hope released Jack in the Boxlast summer featuring “More” and “Arson,” Jin released “The Astronaut” last fall with Coldplay, and RM released his first solo album Indigo in December. The band is currently on hiatus as each member fulfills their mandatory military service commitment to South Korea. Each will serve — and release solo material — before they are expected to reunite as BTS in 2025.

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