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Larry David and President Obama Team Up for HBO’s Wildly Unexpected Limited Series

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Nobody saw this one coming. HBO has released a new teaser and images for ‘Life, Larry, and the Pursuit of Unhappiness,’ a seven-episode limited sketch comedy series pairing Larry David with President and Mrs. Obama. It debuts Friday, June 26 at 9:00 p.m. ET/PT on HBO and streams on HBO Max, with new episodes dropping weekly through the season finale on August 7.

The premise is exactly as absurd as it sounds. President and Mrs. Obama wanted to honor America’s 250th anniversary with a celebration of the nation’s unique history. Then Larry David called. The rest is television history in the making.

The series is written and executive produced by Larry David alongside co-creator Jeff Schaffer, who also directs. Barack Obama and Michelle Obama executive produce through their Higher Ground production company, joined by Ethan Lewis and Vinnie Malhotra.

The cast includes select “Curb Your Enthusiasm” veterans alongside noteworthy guest stars. Beyond that, details are being kept close to the vest, which only adds to the anticipation.

Higher Ground is no stranger to acclaimed work. The company has earned 3 Academy Award nominations (winning for ‘American Factory’), 12 Emmy nominations, and 3 Grammy nominations, with celebrated projects including ‘Leave the World Behind,’ ‘Rustin,’ and ‘American Symphony’ on its resume.

‘Life, Larry, and the Pursuit of Unhappiness’ is the kind of creative collision that only happens once. Seven episodes. Two of the most recognizable figures in American culture. One very uncomfortable premise. June 26 on HBO.

Carlos Santana Returns to House of Blues Las Vegas With New Fall 2026 Residency Dates

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Fourteen years in and Carlos Santana still owns the House of Blues Las Vegas. The guitar legend has announced a new batch of September 2026 performances of “An Intimate Evening with Santana: Greatest Hits Live,” presented by SiriusXM at House of Blues inside Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino.

The newly added fall dates land on September 16, 17, 19, 20, 23, 24, 26, and 27. All shows begin at 8 p.m. Tickets are on sale now starting at $99.50, not including applicable fees, at HouseofBlues.com/Santana, MandalayBay.com, and Ticketmaster.com.

VIP packages are available with customizable experiences including limited edition photos and specialty food and beverage options with stage-side dining. They’re limited, so moving fast is the right call.

A portion of every ticket sold benefits The Milagro Foundation, the charitable organization Santana and his family founded in 1998 to support underrepresented children and youth in arts, education, and health. A second contribution goes to the House of Blues Music Forward Foundation, which connects young people to music education and industry mentorship.

Santana is a 10-time GRAMMY and 3-time Latin GRAMMY winner, a Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee, a Kennedy Center Honoree, and sits at number 11 on Rolling Stone’s list of the 100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time. His 1999 album ‘Supernatural’ took home 9 GRAMMYs in a single night, including Album and Record of the Year.

His latest album ‘Sentient’ features collaborations with Michael Jackson, Smokey Robinson, Miles Davis, DMC, and Cindy Blackman Santana. The Tribeca-premiered documentary CARLOS is streaming globally now. This summer, Santana and The Doobie Brothers head out together on the Oneness Tour across North America.

The residency at House of Blues remains one of the most consistent live experiences in Las Vegas. Intimate room, five decades of catalog, one of rock’s all-time great guitarists. Tickets are available now.

Fall 2026 Residency Dates:

September 16, 2026

September 17, 2026

September 19, 2026

September 20, 2026

September 23, 2026

September 24, 2026

September 26, 2026

September 27, 2026

Oklahoma Rockers Hillbilly Vegas Drop ‘A La Mode’ Featuring Rock Hall Legend Paul Rodgers

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Hillbilly Vegas came to play. The Oklahoma-based southern rockers have released their new album ‘A La Mode’ through Quarto Valley Records, and it’s available now on digital, CD, and vinyl.

Self-produced at their home studio, ‘A La Mode’ is 11 tracks of hard-driving rock built on relatable lyrics and the kind of raucous energy the band has become known for. With 7 songs already logged on Billboard’s Rock charts, Hillbilly Vegas arrives at this record with serious momentum behind them.

The album’s focus track is “Miss America”, a hard-charging number powered by chugging guitars, a thunderous rhythm section, and a sustained keyboard line with an earworm chorus. It draws comparisons to the Rolling Stones with a dose of .38 Special, and it earns every one of them.

Steve Harris describes it plainly: “It’s a love song for bad decisions. ‘Miss America’ is what happens when desire wins the argument and reason storms out.” That line tells you everything about where this band lives lyrically.

The album also features “I Hope You Know”, the lead single that reached #12 on Billboard’s Rock charts, and “Let It Ride”, which spent 13 weeks on the chart and climbed to #10. Two charting singles before the full album even drops is a strong statement.

The crown jewel of ‘A La Mode’ is “Mr. Midnight”, written by and featuring Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee Paul Rodgers (Bad Company, Free, Queen, The Firm). Geraldo Dominelli (former Loverboy/Paul Rodgers) and Todd Ronning (former Bad Company) are in the lineup, so the connection to Rodgers runs deep.

The band has signed with booking agency TKO, with tour dates being finalized in support of the album. Live shows begin in August.

Hillbilly Vegas has shared stages with Blackberry Smoke, The Kentucky Headhunters, Alabama, Travis Tritt, Blake Shelton, and Wynonna Judd. Their appeal crosses genre lines and their live shows deliver every time. ‘A La Mode’ is out now.

‘A La Mode’ Track Listing:

  1. Miss America (3:34) (Album Focus Track)
  2. Down the Honkytonk (3:12)
  3. Let it Ride (3:11)
  4. Every Jukebox in Town (4:14)
  5. Find Me Yesterday (4:05)
  6. Mr. Midnight (Featuring Paul Rodgers) (3:24)
  7. Feels Good (3:21)
  8. Something Crazy (3:44)
  9. Bound to Run (4:01)
  10. I Hope You Know (3:22)
  11. Holding On (3:09)

Hot Wheels Monster Trucks Live Brings Glow-N-Fire and Brand-New Rhinomite to Hamilton’s TD Coliseum

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Hamilton, this one’s for real. Hot Wheels Monster Trucks Live is bringing its Pollstar Family Show of the Year-winning Glow-N-Fire tour to TD Coliseum on September 12 and 13, 2026, and it marks the first time ever the show has come to this venue.

The headline addition this year is Rhinomite, an all-new rhino-themed monster truck making its world debut on this tour. Charging horn-first into the competition, Rhinomite brings explosive energy to an already stacked lineup. This is a world premiere moment happening right in Hamilton.

The full roster of trucks is loaded. Mega Wrex, Tiger Shark, HW 5-Alarm, Bone Shaker, Bigfoot, and Skelesaurus are all back, joined by FMX riders launching into never-before-seen aerial stunts. The all-new No-Handed Front Flip is making its debut this tour, and it’s exactly as wild as it sounds.

The show also features a fire-breathing, car-crushing robot dinosaur. That’s not a metaphor. That’s the show.

VIP packages for 2026 are completely overhauled. Three tiers are available: Start Your Engine, Pedal to the Metal, and the Full Throttle VIP, which includes front-row seats, a backstage tour with the show’s host, and a meet-and-greet with a Monster Truck driver and an FMX rider. Packages are limited.

The Pre-Show Party runs two and a half hours before every performance. Fans get arena floor access, up-close views of the trucks, autograph signings from drivers and performers, and an exclusive autograph card included with every Pre-Show Party pass.

Show times are as follows:

Saturday, September 12 at 11:30am (Pre-Show Party 9:00am to 10:15am)

Saturday, September 12 at 6:30pm (Pre-Show Party 4:00pm to 5:15pm)

Sunday, September 13 at 1:30pm (Pre-Show Party 11:00am to 12:15pm)

Special kids pricing is available for all shows. Tickets and full event information are at hotwheelsmonstertruckslive.com.

The Greatest Guest Vocals of Michael Stipe

R.E.M.’s Michael Stipe has one of the most distinctive voices in rock history, and for decades he’s been wonderfully generous with it. Here are the guest appearances that fans can’t stop talking about.

“Kid Fears” — Indigo Girls

The one that gives everyone chills. Stipe doesn’t arrive until late in the song, but when he does, the whole thing transforms into something genuinely spine-tingling.

“Your Ghost” — Kristin Hersh

A perfect duet from 1994 that’s quietly one of the most beautiful vocal collaborations of the entire decade. Haunting, intimate, and completely unforgettable.

“Future 40’s” — Syd Straw

A fan favourite that doesn’t get nearly enough attention. Stipe’s harmonies here are warm, unexpected, and completely wonderful.

“Boy (Go)” — The Golden Palominos One of several Golden Palominos tracks that gave fans a rawer, more unbridled side of Stipe that R.E.M. rarely showed.

“Alive and Living Now” — The Golden Palominos

Many fans consider this the best of his Golden Palominos work, with Stipe front and centre and clearly loving every second of it.

“A Campfire Song” — 10,000 Maniacs

Pure joy from start to finish. Stipe belts alongside Natalie Merchant and the chemistry between those two voices is something else entirely.

“To Sir With Love” — 10,000 Maniacs

Another Stipe and Merchant moment that fans have never stopped talking about, this time a gorgeous cover that the two of them make completely their own.

“Trout” — Neneh Cherry

An unexpected pairing that absolutely works. Stipe’s voice alongside Cherry’s is playful, soulful, and surprisingly moving.

“Injured Bird” — Vic Chesnutt

A deeply emotional vocal performance that shows just how much range and tenderness Stipe brings when the song calls for it.

“You Woke Up My Neighbourhood” — Billy Bragg

Warm, punchy, and full of personality. Stipe sounds like he had a brilliant time making this one.

“She Doesn’t Exist” — Robyn Hitchcock

A subtle, understated gem where Stipe’s backing vocals drift in at the fade and somehow make the whole song feel larger than it was before.

“Broken Promise” — Placebo

A gorgeous and unexpected late-career collaboration that showed Stipe’s voice had lost absolutely none of its power or emotional depth.

“Almond Kisses” — Spacehog

A cult favourite among fans, and for good reason. Stipe sounds completely at home in Spacehog’s glam-tinged world.

“Time Is the Killer” — Rain Phoenix

Dreamy, melancholy, and deeply moving. Many fans quietly consider this one of his finest vocal performances outside of R.E.M. entirely.

“Dancing on the Lip of a Volcano” — New York Dolls

Proof that Stipe’s voice can slot into absolutely any context and make it better. Even the New York Dolls didn’t see this one coming.

How to Make Money from Music Without Touring

If you love making music but the idea of living out of a suitcase, cancelling plans, and surviving on airport sandwiches doesn’t exactly sound like the dream, you’re in very good company. The music business in 2026 is genuinely bursting with ways to build a real, sustainable income from your art without ever stepping foot on a tour bus. Whether you’re an independent artist, a songwriter, a producer, or all three at once, the opportunities are there and they’re growing fast. You just have to know where to look.

First, let’s talk about streaming, because yes, it still matters, even if the per-stream math can be a little humbling. Artists typically earn between $0.003 and $0.005 per stream on Spotify, meaning one million plays generates roughly $3,000 to $5,000. That’s not a salary on its own, and everyone knows it. But here’s the thing: streaming is your discovery engine. The artists building real careers in 2026 treat streaming as the discovery layer that feeds everything else, not the income source that funds the career. Get people in through the stream, then bring them into the other rooms where the real money lives.

And one of the most exciting of those rooms is sync licensing. This is where your music gets placed in TV shows, films, commercials, video games, and podcasts, and the rewards can be genuinely life-changing. A single sync placement in a national commercial can pay more than a year of streaming royalties. Even placements in smaller productions like indie films, web series, and podcasts generate revenue and expose your music to audiences who’d never have found you through Spotify alone. According to industry data, recorded music synchronization revenue totaled about $641 million in 2025, and sync money often arrives as upfront cash rather than the usual per-stream payouts. Independent artists actually have a real edge here too, because major label tracks are expensive to license and indie music is far more flexible.

Then there’s the direct-to-fan world, and honestly, it’s one of the most powerful shifts in the music business right now. Platforms like Patreon, Bandcamp, and Substack let you build a paying community around your music, your process, and your personality. Even 200 patrons at $10 a month is $2,000 a month in reliable income. Membership platforms, fan clubs, Discord communities, private content, early access, behind-the-scenes posts, and exclusive demos can all work beautifully if you’ve got an engaged niche audience. You don’t need millions of followers. You need the right ones.

Don’t sleep on publishing royalties either, because this is genuinely the most overlooked income stream in music. Many independent artists leave significant money on the table simply because they haven’t registered their songs properly or don’t understand the different types of publishing income. Performance royalties get paid when your song is played publicly on radio, in venues, or on streaming. Mechanical royalties get paid when your song is reproduced. If you’re not registered with a performing rights organization like ASCAP, BMI, or SOCAN right now, you’re leaving real money uncollected. Go fix that today. Seriously.

Finally, let’s talk about teaching and session work, two income streams that are as reliable as it gets. Many musicians report teaching as their most consistent income. Online lessons have made this easier than ever, with no commute and students from anywhere in the world. And if you’ve got strong recording chops, a musician with solid recording skills, a good home studio setup, and strong professional relationships can build regular paid work even without a large public artist profile. Stack teaching, session work, sync, Patreon, and publishing royalties together, and you’ve got something genuinely exciting. A music career on your own terms, from your own home, doing what you love.

The Street Sessions, the Competitions, and the Craic: What to Expect at Fleadh Belfast 2026

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Picture this. You’re walking down a Belfast street on a warm August evening. You hear music before you see anyone playing. You round a corner and there it is — a fiddle player, a flautist, maybe a bodhrán keeping time — strangers who met an hour ago, playing like they’ve been friends for decades. Nobody planned it. Nobody ticketed it. It just happened. That’s the Fleadh. And from August 2 to 9, 2026, it’s coming to Belfast for the very first time.

For one incredible week, the Fleadh will transform Belfast into a vibrant and immersive carnival of sound, colour, culture, and craic — from lively pub sessions to headline concerts, pop-up street performances to prestigious All-Ireland competitions. And the best part? Most Fleadh events are completely free to attend, including outdoor concerts, street sessions, and competitions. Yes, free. Put your wallet away and just follow your ears.

Let’s start with what makes the Fleadh unlike any other music festival on earth: the street sessions. Every pub runs a session from noon to closing. Every corner becomes a stage. Streets that are normally quiet become rivers of sound. From formal performances to spontaneous sessions, the Fleadh’s atmosphere is defined as much by what happens between events as by what appears on the official programme. There is no setlist. There is no barrier. There’s just music, and you’re invited.

Then there are the competitions — and these are something truly special. With hundreds of competitive categories, from céilí bands to solo instruments and sean-nós dancing and lilting, they showcase the very best in traditional music, song, dance, and storytelling. Competitors range across age groups — Under 12s right through to seniors — and instruments run from fiddle and flute to melodeon and mouth organ. At the 2025 Fleadh in Wexford alone, over 5,000 competitors took part in over 180 competitions. Every single one of them earned their spot, having already qualified through county and provincial heats. The standard, in a word, is jaw-dropping.

And then there’s the opening weekend to look forward to. Headline acts for opening day include Sharon Shannon, Goitse, and Blackwater Céilí Band, joining pipe bands and school choirs for a multi-generational, cross-community showcase — a free concert outside City Hall that sets the tone for the whole week ahead. Beyond that, expect concerts and céilís featuring top performers, workshops where you can learn tunes and discover instruments, storytelling, street entertainment, and children’s events throughout. There is genuinely something for every age, every taste, and every level of trad music knowledge — including zero.

Over 800,000 people are expected to enjoy the eight-day event, and Belfast is the island of Ireland’s only UNESCO designated City of Music — so this isn’t just any city hosting the world’s greatest Irish music festival. It’s the right city. Whether you’re a lifelong devotee of traditional music or someone who simply wants to experience something genuinely unforgettable this August, Belfast is about to give you a week you’ll be talking about for years.

Fleadh Cheoil na hÉireann takes place in Belfast, August 2–9, 2026. For more information visit fleadhcheoil.ie, visitbelfast.com, and discovernorthernireland.com.

Why Fleadh Cheoil Coming to Belfast for the First Time Is a Historic Moment

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First, let’s get the pronunciation out of the way — it’s Flah Kyole. Say it a few times. Now you’re basically fluent. Fleadh Cheoil translates from Irish as “feast of music,” and a feast is exactly what it is. The world’s largest annual festival of Irish music, song, and dance, it has become a national institution since its beginnings in Mullingar in 1951, now drawing upwards of 600,000 visitors to its host city over the course of a week of festivities and competitions every August. Think Glastonbury, but with fiddles, tin whistles, and significantly more step-dancing.

When the festival began more than 70 years ago, it was against the backdrop of a decline in the popularity of traditional Irish music — a picture we would hardly recognise today. Comhaltas Ceoltóirí Éireann was formed in 1951 by traditional musicians and cultural advocates seeking to improve the standing of traditional Irish music, dance, and language in Ireland. That humble first gathering drew just a few hundred people. Now? It sells close to a million pints of Guinness in a single week. Mission accomplished.

So why is Belfast such a big deal? Because it’ll be just the second time in the festival’s 75-year history that the Fleadh Cheoil will be held north of the border. The last time the Fleadh was held in the north was in 2013, when Derry played host, drawing an estimated 430,000 attendees. Belfast had tried before — putting in bids for both 2023 and 2024 — and finally landed it for 2026. Good things come to those who wait (and to those who sort out their Irish language inclusion and accessibility plans).

From August 2 to August 9, 2026, the city of Belfast will host Fleadh Cheoil na hÉireann for the very first time. More than 700,000 people are set to visit the city during the eight-day celebration, and tourism officials have predicted it will create a legacy similar to that delivered by golf’s Open Championship on the north coast. For context, that’s a lot of people who are going to fall in love with Belfast — and probably never want to leave.

The Fleadh’s finest moments can often be found in hidden corners around the city. As the festival atmosphere sweeps through Belfast’s cobbled lanes and historic pubs, you just follow the sounds of an impromptu street session starting up — because the magic of the Fleadh is very much in the air. Competitions, parades, céilí dancing, language workshops, cross-community showcases — it’s a full week of joy that spills out of every venue and onto every street corner.

And here’s the cherry on top: Belfast has already been confirmed to host the Fleadh again in 2027, making it the first location in Northern Ireland to host the event twice. The city isn’t just hosting a festival — it’s writing itself into Irish cultural history. If you’ve ever wanted to experience the soul of Ireland at its most alive, most joyful, and most unapologetically musical, there has never been a better reason to book a flight to Belfast. The music is waiting.

Fleadh Cheoil na hÉireann takes place in Belfast, August 2–9, 2026. For more information visit fleadhcheoil.ie, visitbelfast.com, and discovernorthernireland.com.



Dasha Marks Her 26th Birthday With a Live Grand Ole Opry Recording of Her Most Personal Song, “Oh, Anna!”

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Dasha released a live recording of “Oh, Anna!” captured at the Grand Ole Opry as a birthday gift to herself and her fans, and the choice of song and setting says everything about where she is as an artist right now. Recorded on the Opry stage in August 2025 and released on her 26th birthday via Warner Records, the performance strips the song down to its core, putting the ache in her voice and the weight of every lyric front and center.

“Oh, Anna!” is among her most emotionally raw releases, wrestling with identity, growth, and the complicated relationship we have with our younger selves. The name is personal. Dasha grew up going by Anna, and stepping into the Opry circle to sing it carries a meaning that goes beyond performance. “The Opry carries so much history; it’s where country music’s story has been told for generations, and ‘Oh, Anna!’ carries my own history,” she says. “When I sang it there this past summer, I knew it was a moment I’d want to hold onto forever. Releasing this live version on my 26th birthday feels like the most meaningful way to honor where I started and who I’ve become.”

Dasha became a 2025 Opry NextStage class member and first stepped into the famed circle in June 2024. The trajectory since her breakout has been remarkable. “Austin (Boots Stopped Workin’)” became one of the most-streamed country songs of the year, earned Female Song of 2024 at the People’s Choice Country Awards, and helped push her into a billion-stream era. An MTV Video Music Awards nomination for Push Performance of the Year and a Best New Female Artist nod at the ACM Awards followed. At 26, she’s one of the most compelling new voices in country music, and this live recording is a genuine document of that.

Swae Lee Releases Debut Solo Album ‘Same Difference’ and Drops the Bayou-Soaked First Single “Flammable”

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Swae Lee is stepping out on his own. The Rae Sremmurd supernova has released his debut solo album ‘Same Difference’ via Eardruma Records and Interscope Records, and lead single “Flammable” is out now as the first taste of what he’s calling his Gemini era.

Produced by Rosen, “Flammable” marries the epic melodic sweep of Just Blaze instrumentals with the Atlanta trap sound of the 2020s, and Swae moves across it with the blend of melody and dextrous delivery that has always set him apart. The cinematic video, directed by Logan Meis, plants him in a backcountry bayou bash complete with a flamethrower and a fanboat, paying direct homage to his Southern roots. “My fans been waiting to eat,” Swae says simply. “Let the feast begin.”

The timing of the announcement lands in the middle of a significant moment for the Rae Sremmurd catalog. “Black Beatles,” originally released in 2016 and a Billboard Hot 100 number one for seven consecutive weeks, earned a diamond certification last June, fueled in part by a wave of nostalgia-driven social media trends revisiting that cultural era. Swae also helped set a Guinness World Records title during the release of the hit video game Ninja Gaiden 4 last October.