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“Saturday Night Live” Bobblehead Series Unveiled to Celebrate National Bobblehead Day

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 To celebrate National Bobblehead Day, the National Bobblehead Hall of Fame and Museum has unveiled their first limited-edition “Saturday Night Live” Bobblehead Series in partnership with Universal Products & Experiences.

The bobblehead series features 10 different characters from NBC’s Emmy Award-winning late-night comedy show that is currently in its 51st season. The special edition bobbleheads are being produced by the National Bobblehead Hall of Fame and Museum.

The “Saturday Night Live” Bobblehead Collection includes the following bobbleheads, which are available individually or as a set:

  • Roseanne Roseannadanna
  • Matt Foley
  • More Cowbell
  • Drunk Uncle
  • The Ladies’ Man
  • The Ambiguously Gay Duo
  • Bass-O-Matic
  • D*ck in a Box
  • Mango
  • Nick the Lounge Singer

The bobbleheads, which will each be individually numbered to 2,026, are only available through the National Bobblehead Hall of Fame and Museum’s Online Store. The bobbleheads, which are expected to ship in May, are $35 each for the individual bobbleheads and $50 for the dual bobbleheads.

“Saturday Night Live” is the most Emmy-winning show in television history and has been honored four times with the prestigious George Foster Peabody Award. The show continues to garner the highest ratings and largest audience of any late-night television program, entertaining millions each week on linear and digital platforms.

Since its inception on Oct. 11, 1975, “Saturday Night Live” has launched the careers of many of the brightest comedy performers of their generation. “SNL” makes headlines with topical humor reflecting politics and current events, features an array of characters with a perspective on pop culture that remains unparalleled and offers sharp political commentary through its signature “Weekend Update” segment. A variety show that is truly one of a kind, “SNL” also attracts the biggest stars of music to its stage for innovative viral performances. “SNL” broadcasts live from Studio 8H in Rockefeller Center.

“We’re thrilled to unveil the Saturday Night Bobblehead Collection to celebrate National Bobblehead Day as the iconic show closes in on its 1,000th episode,” National Bobblehead Hall of Fame and Museum co-founder and CEO Phil Sklar said. “Famous for its hilarious sketches and memorable characters, ‘SNL’ has provided late-night comedic relief for generations. These bobbleheads will be must-haves for longtime fans of ‘SNL’ and many of the iconic sketches that we’ve turned into bobblehead form.”

Dave Stewart Launches Rare Entity To Reclaim Artist Ownership Of Intellectual Property

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Dave Stewart is shifting the economic weight of the music industry back toward the creators. The London-based visionary and Rock n’ Roll Hall of Famer has launched Rare Entity (a venture builder designed to protect and scale world-class intellectual property). Stewart is joined by entrepreneurs Dominic Joseph and Rich Britton to bypass traditional venture capital models. They prioritize the development of culturally significant concepts before seeking external investment. This framework ensures that the artists behind the work retain control over their revenue and creative independence.

The initiative introduces a diverse portfolio of marquee entities (including the immersive audiovisual experience known as Sonic Sphere). This project redefines audience connection through 360-degree sound and performance (scaling globally with bespoke works from top-tier artists). Another pillar, Rezonate, operates as a next-generation music group co-founded with producer Cam Blackwood. It provides a platform where songwriters realize their potential on their own terms. These ventures represent a sophisticated merger of artistic storytelling and rigorous operational execution.

Rare Entity also bridges the gap between music, sport, and media through high-profile collaborations. Multi-platinum songwriter Chelcee Grimes joins the team to integrate these worlds, while Lewis Carpenter brings the storytelling craft of the ‘So It Goes’ platform into the group. This is an ambitious effort to build sixty standout ventures over the next decade. The collective strategy focuses on identifying ventures with exceptional intellectual property and crafting their commercial edge. It is a robust response to the limitations of major digital platforms.

The pipeline includes several Rare Originals that challenge standard entertainment formats. ‘Zombie Broadway’ is a cinematic theatrical musical hybrid, while ‘Art of Chaos’ explores narrative and experiential platforms. These projects demonstrate a commitment to building stylized universes that blend music and story. This venture builder functions as a home for ideas with the power to define the next era of culture. It is a rare alignment of elite global creators and experienced operators.

Grammy-Nominated Aloe Blacc Rebuilds Altadena Home With Modular System While Channeling Millions To Fire Survivors

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One year after the Eaton Fire destroyed more than 9,400 structures in Altadena and surrounding communities, Grammy-nominated artist Aloe Blacc is rebuilding his family’s home using an approach that dramatically shortens construction timelines, prioritizes structural resilience and keeps communities whole. Blacc, whose family was also affected by the January 2025 fires, selected LiveLarge Home’s modular building system, a decision that reflects a broader shift among California homeowners seeking faster, more durable rebuilding solutions.

Watch how LiveLarge Home’s modular system is being used to rebuild after the Altadena fire: https://livelargetech.com/altadena/

Blacc’s rebuild illustrates challenges facing thousands of displaced families across Los Angeles County. Traditional reconstruction can stretch 18 to 24 months or longer, leaving homeowners in temporary housing as insurance assistance expires and construction costs continue climbing. The emotional and financial strain of prolonged displacement has pushed many residents to explore alternatives that can deliver permanent homes in a fraction of conventional timelines.

“Altadena is home for so many,” said Aloe Blacc, “Through my work helping fire survivors, and managing our property loss, one thing became clear: our community can’t survive if rebuilding takes years. Families need permanent, safe homes they can move into quickly, finding ways to rebuild faster without sacrificing quality, that’s how we keep Altadena whole.”

In November 2025, LiveLarge Home installed the first modules of Blacc’s new residence, marking a tangible milestone in his family’s return to Altadena. The factory-built approach allowed construction to advance in weeks rather than months, with two residential units already in place on the property. This accelerated timeline represents a structural difference from conventional building methods, not simply faster execution of traditional processes.

“Speed matters, but only when quality is not compromised,” said Endong Zhang, CEO of LiveLarge Home. “Traditional rebuilding can take two years or more. We’re cutting that to months, not through shortcuts, but through systematization and precision manufacturing.”

LiveLarge Home’s system centers on light steel frame construction, a non-combustible structural approach that addresses wildfire risk at the foundational level rather than through surface treatments or retrofits. The company has conducted real-world fire resistance testing on its exterior wall systems, demonstrating the ability to withstand direct flame exposure without structural ignition.

The modular units incorporate triple-pane windows, fire-resistant exterior materials, and sealed building envelopes designed to prevent ember penetration, a primary cause of structure loss during wildfires. Factory construction allows for precision installation of these components under controlled conditions, eliminating many variables that can compromise quality in field-built homes.

“This project represents more than a single home,” said Thalia Cheng, President of LiveLarge Home. “It demonstrates a rebuilding pathway that prioritizes speed, safety, and long-term livability model that can be replicated for many families facing the same reality after wildfire.”

Beyond speed, many homeowners are prioritizing structural durability and lower ongoing maintenance compared to traditional builds. Factory-built homes eliminate weather-related construction delays, reduce material waste, and incorporate quality control checkpoints that can be difficult to replicate on conventional job sites.

Blacc, who has helped channel $8 million in direct assistance to 2,300 fire survivors through his work with nonprofit The Change Reaction, understands the urgency families face. “People need to get home,” he said. “Not into temporary housing or stopgaps, but into real, permanent homes where they can rebuild their lives.”

As California confronts the reality of recurring wildfire seasons, the choices homeowners make today are shaping a new standard for post-disaster housing across the state. From Altadena to other fire-vulnerable communities, the conversation has shifted from whether to rebuild to how to rebuild smarter, faster, and more durably than conventional methods allow.

Peter Ormerod’s ‘David Bowie And The Search For Life, Death And God’ Reframes A Legend Through A Spiritual Lens

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Journalist and writer Peter Ormerod, arts editor for NationalWorld and a longtime contributor to The Guardian on culture and faith, has written ‘David Bowie and the Search for Life, Death and God,’ a wide-ranging spiritual meditation on Bowie’s music and creativity that is already drawing serious praise. The Spectator calls it a book where “the Bowie you thought you knew is recast completely,” Publishers Weekly describes it as “a transfixing look at David Bowie’s life through a spiritual lens, fresh and revealing,” and The Guardian’s Simon Critchley says Ormerod “had me singing in the choir with him.” Raised in a clergy family with a lifelong fascination with religion, Ormerod brings a perspective to Bowie’s story that has largely been overlooked, tracing a spiritual quest that runs from his earliest recordings all the way through to his final album.

The book follows Bowie’s restless search for meaning across decades and traditions, from his earliest encounters as a choirboy to his enrapture with Tibetan Buddhism as a young musician, through the Kabbalah-influenced tracks of ‘Station to Station,’ the messiah complex embedded in Ziggy Stardust, and the profound affinity between “Heroes” and Christian thought. Ormerod takes Bowie’s spiritual obsessions seriously as a creative force, showing how that ongoing quest powered his most profound lyrics and propelled him through both his darkest moments and his greatest artistic peaks, including his occult phase in LA and the remarkable final album recorded in the shadow of his own death.

What makes the book essential for any serious Bowie reader is its argument that the spiritual dimension of his work is not incidental but central, the engine behind a genius that crossed genres, eras, and generations. Available in hardback, ebook, and audiobook formats, ‘David Bowie and the Search for Life, Death and God’ offers a genuinely fresh entry point into one of the most written-about figures in popular music history.

Jonathan Bernstein’s Authorized Biography Of Justin Townes Earle Is A Harrowing, Deeply Researched Portrait Of A Singular Life

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Rolling Stone journalist Jonathan Bernstein has written ‘What Do You Do When You’re Lonesome,’ the authorized biography of Justin Townes Earle, produced with the full cooperation of the Earle estate and already earning a starred review from Kirkus, which calls it “a superb biography of a singular life.” When Earle died of an overdose alone in his Nashville apartment, his death sent waves of grief through the country and Americana community. The son of alt-country hellraiser Steve Earle had long wrestled with mental illness and addiction, punctuated by encouraging stretches of sobriety that included the years leading up to his 2010 album ‘Harlem River Blues,’ a career peak that announced him as one of the most authentic troubadours of his generation. By the time of his death he had recorded eight albums, leaving behind a striking and original body of work.

Bernstein unravels the backstories behind Justin’s greatest songs and traces his feral, formative years as a rootless kid developing a unique guitar style while absorbing the musical influences of Nashville, alongside the emotional displacement, economic anxiety, and wandering that ran through both his life and his lyrics. The book also captures a shadow world of neglected children of Nashville legends, wrestling with the legacies of hard-living, road-weary, often absent parents. Justin’s marriage to Jenn Marie Earle and the birth of their daughter represent some of the book’s most hopeful passages, moments of genuine promise in a life that Bernstein chronicles with deep care and unflinching honesty.

What makes ‘What Do You Do When You’re Lonesome’ essential reading is its refusal to reduce Earle’s life to either tragedy or myth. Bernstein documents what Justin himself called “the myth,” the destructive idea that an artist must suffer for their art, and shows how powerfully that belief took hold.

Unearthed: Watch 17-Year-Old Britney Spears Perform “Baby One More Time” On Canadian TV Just Four Days After Hitting #1

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A remarkable piece of pop history has resurfaced on the Dini Petty Show YouTube channel: Britney Spears performing “Baby One More Time” on February 3, 1999, exactly four days after the song hit number one on the Billboard Hot 100. She was 17 years old, the album had been out less than a month, the video was in heavy MTV rotation, and here she is on a Toronto soundstage at the precise moment between before and after.

The Dini Petty Show aired on CTV from 1989 to 1999, broadcasting from Toronto and earning multiple Gemini Award nominations for Petty’s warm yet probing interview style, and this performance, followed by a full interview also available on the channel, captures Britney with an unguarded confidence and joy that feels genuinely rare, a 17-year-old four days into the rest of her life.


Frank Sinatra And Antônio Carlos Jobim’s Legendary 1967 Bossa Nova Medley Returns In Stunning Remastered HD

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A timeless piece of television history has been remastered and released in HD. Frank Sinatra and Antônio Carlos Jobim’s celebrated medley from the 1967 special ‘A Man and His Music’ brings together Sinatra’s smooth, effortless phrasing and Jobim’s lush bossa nova rhythms across four songs, “Quiet Nights of Quiet Stars (Corcovado),” “Change Partners,” “I Concentrate on You,” and “The Girl From Ipanema,” in a performance that remains one of the most sophisticated and unhurried collaborations in the history of American popular music.


Video: Cynthia Erivo Delivers A Spine-Tingling Cover Of Prince’s “Nothing Compares 2 U” At The Kennedy Center

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Cynthia Erivo rang in the New Year with an unforgettable performance of Prince’s “Nothing Compares 2 U” at the Kennedy Center, captured for PBS as part of the Next at the Kennedy Center series. The performance speaks for itself, Erivo filling every note with the kind of deep, aching soul that reminds you exactly why this song has endured for decades, and exactly why she is one of the most compelling vocalists working today.


Coldplay Unveil Director’s Cut of “All My Love” Video Featuring Dick Van Dyke, Directed by Spike Jonze

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Coldplay have shared the directors’ cut of the video for “All My Love,” taken from their tenth studio album ‘Moon Music,’ directed by Spike Jonze and Mary Wigmore and starring the legendary Dick Van Dyke alongside his wife Arlene Silver. Van Dyke’s presence bringing an effortless warmth and charm that perfectly matches the song’s emotional generosity.


Video: Jack White Breaks Down How Johnny Cash’s “Walk The Line” Shaped Punk Music

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Jack White sits down with Dan Rather for AXS TV to strum the iconic riff from Johnny Cash’s “Walk The Line” and trace its direct influence on punk music, before turning the conversation to The White Stripes and the story behind “Seven Nation Army.” It is the kind of conversation that only works when the person talking genuinely loves the music, and White delivers exactly that.