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Jason Momoa, Noah Centineo and a Stacked Cast Throw Down in the First Trailer for Street Fighter

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Jason Momoa, Noah Centineo and a Stacked Cast Throw Down in the First Trailer for Street Fighter

TAGS: Noah Centineo, Jason Momoa, Curtis Jackson, Andrew Koji, Callina Liang, Joe Anoai, Cody Rhodes, David Dastmalchian, Andrew Schulz, Eric André, Vidyut Jammwal, Orville Peck, Olivier Richters, Hirooki Goto, Rayna Vallandingham, Alexander Volkanovski, Mel Jarnson, Kyle Mooney, Kitao Sakurai, Paramount Pictures, Legendary, Capcom,

The first official trailer for Street Fighter is here, and Paramount and Legendary are clearly not playing it safe. Director Kitao Sakurai’s adaptation of the iconic Capcom franchise arrives in theaters October 16, and the footage makes one thing immediately clear: this is a full-swing, big-budget, faithful-to-the-source brawler with one of the most genuinely unexpected ensemble casts assembled for a video game adaptation. Noah Centineo plays Ken Masters opposite Andrew Koji’s Ryu, with the two estranged fighters dragged back into combat when Callina Liang’s Chun-Li recruits them for the next World Warrior Tournament.

The supporting lineup reads like someone raided every corner of pop culture simultaneously. Jason Momoa plays Blanka and serves as a producer on the film. Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson is Balrog. Professional wrestlers Joe “Roman Reigns” Anoai and Cody Rhodes step into the roles of Akuma and Guile respectively. David Dastmalchian takes on M. Bison. Musician Orville Peck plays Vega. Comedian Andrew Schulz is Dan Hibiki. Eric André, Vidyut Jammwal, Olivier Richters, and Alexander Volkanovski round out a roster that maps closely to the game’s iconic fighter lineup. The film is set in 1993, one year before the original 1994 adaptation, leaning into period detail and arcade-era energy throughout.

Street Fighter has sold over 55 million units worldwide since its 1987 launch, making it one of the highest-grossing video game franchises of all time. This is the franchise’s third attempt at a feature film, following Jean-Claude Van Damme’s 1994 version and 2009’s Street Fighter: The Legend of Chun-Li. The trailer debuted ahead of Paramount’s CinemaCon presentation in Las Vegas, where the studio showed additional footage to cinema executives.

Street Fighter hits theaters October 16.

Meghan Trainor Cancels the Get In Girl Tour to Focus on Her Family, But ‘Toy With Me’ Still Arrives April 24

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Meghan Trainor has canceled her Get In Girl Tour, a 30-plus date North American run that was set to kick off June 12. Three months after welcoming daughter Mikey Moon via surrogate, the Grammy-winning pop singer made the call after what she describes as “a lot of reflection and some really tough conversations.” With a new album, a newborn, and two young sons at home, she put it plainly: “Balancing the release of a new album, preparing for a nationwide tour, and welcoming our new baby girl to our growing family of five has just been more than I can take on right now.”

The decision is a personal one, and Trainor has been open about the full picture. In a recent interview, she spoke candidly about prioritizing mental health, noting she’s in weekly therapy, recently diagnosed with ADHD, and firmly committed to asking for help when she needs it. “I can’t do it all. I wish I could, and I can’t.” Fans who purchased tickets through Live Nation will receive automatic refunds. Third-party ticketholders should contact their point of purchase directly.

The tour cancellation doesn’t affect the music. ‘Toy With Me’, Trainor’s seventh studio album, still arrives April 24 as scheduled. “I promise I’ll be back soon, and I can’t wait for you to hear this new record,” she wrote to fans. “I’m so proud of it, and I’m endlessly grateful for your love and support always.”

Little Debbie Just Answered the Only Question That Mattered: What If the Old Fashioned Donut Was Chocolate

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Little Debbie launched its original Big Pack Old Fashioned Donuts in June 2025 and the response was immediate. The bakery-style classic sold out consistently across the country, proving that the combination of nostalgic texture and modern convenience was exactly what snack aisles were missing. America’s No. 1 snack cake brand took note, and now the next move is here: Chocolate Old Fashioned Donuts, rolling out now to major retailers, grocery stores, and convenience stores nationwide.

The new variety brings a rich chocolate flavor to the signature golden-brown ridges and moist, crumbly texture that made the original a hit, finished with a sweet glaze and available in two formats. The Big Pack Carton holds six full-sized donuts in retro-inspired packaging, built for the family pantry. The single-serve 3 oz. individually wrapped version is the one you grab at the convenience store on the way to anywhere, paired with a coffee, eaten standing over a sink, no judgment either way.

Brand manager Scott Brownlow puts it plainly: “We’re doubling down on what works and giving both loyalists and new fans an irresistible reason to head back to the store.” The Chocolate Old Fashioned Donut joins the original as a permanent addition to the Little Debbie lineup. This one isn’t going anywhere.

Olivia Rodrigo Launches Her ‘Sad Lover Girl’ Era With Euphoric New Single “Drop Dead”

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Olivia Rodrigo’s third album era has officially begun. “Drop Dead,” the lead single from ‘You Seem Pretty Sad for a Girl So in Love’, is out now via Geffen Records, and it arrives as a genuine sonic pivot, trading in the pop-punk urgency of ‘Guts’ for something more maximalist, euphoric, and deliberately unsteady. Co-written with longtime collaborator Dan Nigro and songwriter Amy Allen, the track opens on fluttery synths and a lyric about hoping someone never finishes their beer, then catapults into a chorus about the giddy terror of getting exactly what you wanted.

The music video, directed by Petra Collins and filmed at the Palace of Versailles, gives the song a visual scope that matches its emotional ambition. Rodrigo wanders through gilded rooms with a pink guitar and pink headphones, treating one of the most historically loaded buildings in the world like a personal space for a private feeling. The lyric at the center of it all, describing someone looking like an angel against the walls of Versailles, lands the way the best pop writing does: so specific it becomes universal. The song also name-checks Robert Smith’s “Just Like Heaven,” a nod to Rodrigo’s ongoing creative connection with The Cure’s frontman.

‘You Seem Pretty Sad for a Girl So in Love’ arrives June 12 and spans 13 tracks. Rodrigo has described it as a collection of sad love songs, noting that no matter how hard she tries to write something hopeful, the melancholy finds its way in anyway. The rollout began with pink padlocks placed in Los Angeles, New York, Paris, and London spelling out the April 17 release date, and the campaign has been as carefully constructed as the music behind it. Both of Rodrigo’s previous lead singles, “Drivers License” and “Vampire,” debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100.

On May 2, Rodrigo hosts and performs on Saturday Night Live ahead of the album’s June 12 release on Geffen Records.

Country Music Lost One of Its Greatest Architects: Don Schlitz, Writer of “The Gambler,” Dead at 73

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Don Schlitz, the North Carolina-born songwriter whose pen shaped some of the most enduring songs in country music history, died April 16 at a Nashville hospital following a sudden illness. He was 73. Born in Durham on August 29, 1952, Schlitz arrived in Nashville at 20 with $80 in his pocket and a gift that would outlast the careers of many artists he wrote for. He worked an all-night job on Music Row while honing his craft, and within a few years changed country music forever.

He did it with “The Gambler.” Written at 23, recorded by Kenny Rogers in 1978, the song topped the Hot Country Songs chart, won the Grammy for Best Country Song, and took the CMA Song of the Year the following year. It was selected for preservation in the National Recording Registry by the Library of Congress in 2018 as culturally, historically, and aesthetically significant. A reporter told Schlitz at the time of the CMA nomination that it would be the first line of his obituary. He was right, and he knew it, and he smiled.

But “The Gambler” was only the beginning. Schlitz went on to accumulate 24 number-one hits across a career that touched virtually every major name in country music. “Forever and Ever, Amen” for Randy Travis earned him a second Grammy. “When You Say Nothing at All” became a signature for both Keith Whitley and Alison Krauss. “He Thinks He’ll Keep Her” defined a chapter of Mary Chapin Carpenter’s career. “Strong Enough to Bend” for Tanya Tucker, “One Promise Too Late” for Reba McEntire, “Learning to Live Again” for Garth Brooks, “On the Other Hand” for Randy Travis, the list runs deep and wide across the genre’s golden decades. He also received four consecutive ASCAP Country Songwriter of the Year awards from 1988 to 1991, and three CMA Song of the Year honors. Kenny Rogers, who knew the power of Schlitz’s work better than anyone, put it simply at Schlitz’s 2012 Songwriters Hall of Fame induction: “Don doesn’t just write songs, he writes careers.”

Beyond the awards and chart positions, Schlitz helped shape the culture of Nashville songwriting itself, pioneering the “in-the-round” format at the Bluebird Café alongside Paul Overstreet, Fred Knobloch, and Thom Schuyler, a format that became the gold standard for acoustic songwriting showcases across the country. He was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1993, the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2012, the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2017, and the Grand Ole Opry in 2022, making history as the only non-artist songwriter ever inducted as an Opry member in its century-long history. He opened his Opry sets with the line “you have no idea who I am.” The audiences always knew his songs. He also wrote the music and lyrics for the 1999 Broadway musical ‘The Adventures of Tom Sawyer’, and regularly rose before dawn to sing for the homeless at Nashville’s Room in the Inn.

Don Schlitz is survived by his wife Stacey, daughter Cory Dixon and her husband Matt, son Pete Schlitz and his wife Christian Webb Schlitz, grandchildren Roman, Gia, Isla, and Lilah, brother Brad Schlitz, and sister Kathy Hinkley. The Grand Ole Opry dedicated its April 18 performance to his memory. Every time “The Gambler” plays on a radio, every time a couple walks down an aisle to “Forever and Ever, Amen,” every time “When You Say Nothing at All” finds the right moment, Don Schlitz is still in the room.

Celine Dion Returns to Her French Roots With Powerful New Single “Dansons”

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Celine Dion has released “Dansons,” her first original song in several years, and it’s a reunion that carries real weight. Written by Jean-Jacques Goldman, the track returns Celine to the French repertoire that defined the early years of her career, blending elegance, optimism, and fierce defiance into something that feels both timely and timeless. A lyric video filmed on the streets of Paris by Maxime Allouche accompanies the release.

The Goldman connection runs deep. The two most famously collaborated on ‘D’eux’, Celine’s landmark 1995 album and still the best-selling French-language album of all time, with Goldman serving as primary writer. Their most recent collaboration before “Dansons” was the 2016 track “Encore un soir.” Goldman describes the song’s origins simply, noting it was conceived in 2020 when people were dancing in lockdown, and observing that six years later, the words don’t need changing because the world hasn’t steadied itself.

“Dansons” arrives as Celine prepares for her long-awaited return to the stage. A five-week residency at Paris La Défense Arena is scheduled for September and October 2026, with 16 performances confirmed. It’s the beginning of a new chapter for one of the most celebrated performers of her generation.

Some Fear Dig Deep on New Single “Dia” Ahead of Sophomore Album ‘Word Eater’

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Some Fear have shared “Dia,” the latest preview of their sophomore album ‘Word Eater’, arriving April 24 via Houston’s Rite Field Records. The track moves through blistering drums and a gnawing sense of inadequacy, circling the idea of losing yourself in the things you do. Frontman Bran Palesano puts it directly: “You are more than just the things you do; sometimes those things bring you down and make you feel like you’re coming up short, but life is more than that.” Listen here.

‘Word Eater’ is eight slow-motion songs about being drained by the powers that be and finding survival in community and close relationships. It marks a deliberate step forward from Some Fear’s lo-fi debut into a more polished, high-fidelity sound built on dense, patient textures. The record moves through financial burnout on “I Don’t Want to Spend My Money,” anxiety in “Stay Home,” and the weight of unspoken emotions across the full runtime, balancing heavy themes with a genuine search for harmony.

What started in 2021 as a solo bedroom project for Oklahoma City songwriter Bran Palesano has grown into a full band and a recognized force in the U.S. slowcore scene. Their self-titled debut earned praise from The Line of Best Fit, Stereogum, and Ones to Watch, with tracks like “The Faucet Does All The Crying” and “Skin I Can’t Peel” becoming fan favorites. The Line of Best Fit called their sound “truly standout textured slowcore,” adding that “success feels inevitable.”

Some Fear play Norman Music Festival in Norman, OK on April 23, one day before ‘Word Eater’ drops, then head to Indianapolis for a show at Healer on April 25 alongside Gawshock, Mourning Star, and Meadows.

Tracklist:

  1. Word Eater
  2. I Don’t Want to Spend My Money
  3. Stay Home
  4. Rot
  5. 99 Diner
  6. Dia
  7. Harmony
  8. You Are Every Flower

Upcoming Shows:

April 23 – Norman, OK @ Norman Music Festival

April 25 – Indianapolis, IN @ Healer (w/ Gawshock, Mourning Star, Meadows)

Craft Recordings Honors Miles Davis’s Centennial With Definitive New Box Set ‘Miles ’56: The Prestige Recordings’

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Craft Recordings continues its year-long centennial celebration of one of the 20th century’s most important cultural icons—trumpeter, bandleader, and composer Miles Davis—with a brand-new box set, Miles ’56: The Prestige Recordings. Building upon Craft’s GRAMMY® Award-winning Miles ‘55 release, this latest collection focuses on Davis’ 1956 sessions for Prestige Records, which resulted in such landmark albums as Cookin’, Relaxin’, Workin’, and Steamin’,and features an all-star line-up of talent, including John Coltrane, Sonny Rollins, Red Garland, Art Taylor, Paul Chambers, Tommy Flanagan, and Philly Joe Jones. Click here to pre-order the album and stream the newly remastered “My Funny Valentine”

Arriving on June 19, Miles ‘56 will be available as a limited-edition 4-LP box set, a 3-CD set, and in Hi-Res digital. All audio was transferred from the original analog tapes and meticulously restored by Plangent Processes. The collection was remastered by GRAMMY Award-winning engineer Paul Blakemore and lacquers were cut for the 180-gram vinyl LP edition by Kevin Gray at Cohearent Audio. Produced by Nick Phillips, both physical editions include a new essay by GRAMMY Award-winning music historian Ashley Kahn. Track notes by the late Dan Morgenstern, a GRAMMY Award-winning jazz historian and archivist, add additional insight into the 70-year-old recordings. Additionally, a limited run of merchandise featuring the iconic artwork from Workin’, Cookin’, Relaxin’, and Steamin’ with the Miles Davis Quintet will be available exclusively through the Craft store.

For trailblazing trumpeter, bandleader, and composer Miles Davis (1926 – 1991), 1956 was a pivotal year, centered around his first consistent group, The Miles Davis Quintet. Formed just a few months earlier, the band—known as the “First Great Quintet”—featured a who’s who of rising stars, including tenor saxophonist John Coltrane, pianist Red Garland, bassist Paul Chambers, and drummer Philly Joe Jones. Together, they would become a defining force of the hard bop era.

“The group simply had so much to offer,” writes Ashley Kahn. “Depending on what tune they were engaging, and who was soloing, the group’s sound could change energy and effect, such was the flexibility and contrasting styles of its members…. Collectively, the band was able to breathe as one, in a natural, imprecise way. The group could deliver fire and, just as effectively, stillness—which Miles was famously responsible for.”

After recording their debut album in November 1955 (Miles: The New Miles Davis Quintet), the quintet further honed their sound through non-stop touring, playing packed residencies across North America, while, at home in New York, they maintained a regular presence at the West Village hotspot, Café Bohemia. Their setlists, Kahn shares, “reflected a ‘ballads, burners and blues’ mix of material,” including standards like “My Funny Valentine” and “Surrey With the Fringe on Top;” bebop mainstays, such as “Woody’N You” and “Salt Peanuts;” and tunes by contemporaries, including Sonny Rollins’ “Oleo,” Thelonious Monk’s “Well You Needn’t” and Ahmad Jamal’s “Ahmad’s Blues.” Davis’ originals were also regularly sprinkled into the mix, including “Half Nelson” and “Four.”

By now, Davis’ profile had grown significantly, attracting attention from the press, his peers, and record labels. While still under contract with Prestige, Davis signed to Columbia Records, with the full blessing of the independent label’s founder, Bob Weinstock. To fulfill his contractual obligations with Prestige, he scheduled two marathon sessions at Rudy Van Gelder’s storied Hackensack studio, where he would record enough material for several years’ worth of albums. The sessions, which took place on May 11 and October 26, were treated by the quintet as live gigs, as they performed the set lists that they had perfected over the preceding months, including the aforementioned selections. The subsequent recordings captured the quintet’s on-stage magic with a palpable sense of immediacy.

Kahn writes, “Most tunes feature the quintet, but as they would onstage, they stretched to include the bands-within-the-band idea; for example, Coltrane laying out as Miles led the rhythm section on ‘My Funny Valentine,’ and Garland taking over with a piano trio version of ‘Ahmad’s Blues.’”He adds, “Other than a second try at ‘The Theme,’ these were all first takes. Like the final set on a Tuesday night, they hit it, quit it, and went home.”

The tracks they recorded in May and October would be released as four iconic albums: Cookin’ (1957), Relaxin’(1958), Workin’ (1960), and Steamin’ (1961)—each with a full title that includes “with the Miles Davis Quintet.” One outlier, the Thelonious Monk-penned “’Round Midnight”—which would become a signature tune for Davis—appeared on 1959’s Miles Davis and the Modern Jazz Giants.

Additionally, Miles ’56 includes the trumpeter’s other Prestige session that year, captured on March 16th and featuring Sonny Rollins (tenor saxophone), Tommy Flanagan (piano), Paul Chambers (bass), and Art Taylor (drums). The session—which marked the bandleader’s final studio date with Rollins and his sole recorded collaboration with Flanagan—includes two Davis originals (“Vierd Blues,” “No Line”) plus the Dave Brubeck-penned “In Your Own Sweet Way,” all of which appeared on the 1956 LP, Collectors’ Items.

The impact of the 1956 quintet recordings could be felt immediately upon release, as critics welcomed them with open arms and young jazz musicians sought to emulate Davis’ approach to improvisation. Their lasting influence, however, still reverberates. “Many of the tunes and arrangements from the quintet’s 1956 sessions can be heard in the repertoire of contemporary jazz ensembles,” notes Kahn. “In approach and attitude, this music…continues to inspire and build student improvisers, providing them a solid foundation to take a leap and find their own way to push the music forward.”

While this iteration of the quintet would only spend a brief time together, they played a crucial role in shaping Davis as an artist, helping him come into his own as a bandleader and find his voice as a musician. As 1956 closed, Davis was primed to embark on a new chapter—one that would find his star ascending to unbelievable heights. He would continue to innovate for decades, shaping the sounds of post-bop and fusion, while experimenting with electronic elements, funk, rock, pop, and African rhythms well into the late 1980s. Today, his vast catalog continues to resonate far beyond the world of jazz.

Tracklist (4-LP Vinyl):

Side A

1. In Your Own Sweet Way (March 16, 1956 version)

2. No Line

3. Vierd Blues

4. In Your Own Sweet Way (May 11, 1956 version) 

Side B

1. Diane

2. Trane’s Blues

3. Something I Dreamed Last Night

Side C

1. It Could Happen to You

2. Woody’N You

3. Ahmad’s Blues

Side D

1. Surrey With the Fringe on Top

2. It Never Entered My Mind 

3. When I Fall in Love

4. Salt Peanuts

 Side E

1. Four

2. The Theme (Take 1)

3. The Theme (Take 2) 

4. If I Were a Bell 

5. Well, You Needn’t

Side F

1. ’Round Midnight

2. Half Nelson

3. You’re My Everything 

4. I Could Write a Book

Side G

1. Oleo

2. Airegin 

3. Tune Up

4. When Lights Are Low

Side H

1. Blues by Five

2. My Funny Valentine 

Tracklist (3-CD/Digital):

Disc 1

1. In Your Own Sweet Way (March 16, 1956 version)

2. No Line

3. Vierd Blues

4. In Your Own Sweet Way (May 11, 1956 version) 

5. Diane

6. Trane’s Blues

7. Something I Dreamed Last Night

8. It Could Happen to You

9. Woody’N You

10. Ahmad’s Blues

Disc 2

1. Surrey With the Fringe on Top

2. It Never Entered My Mind 

3. When I Fall in Love

4. Salt Peanuts

5. Four

6. The Theme (Take 1)

7. The Theme (Take 2) 

8. If I Were a Bell 

9. Well, You Needn’t

Disc 3

1. ’Round Midnight

2. Half Nelson

3. You’re My Everything 

4. I Could Write a Book

5. Oleo

6. Airegin 

7. Tune Up

8. When Lights Are Low

9. Blues by Five 10. My Funny Valentine

The National Music Centre Is Handing Alberta Musicians the Keys to Studio Bell for 10 Artist Mini-Residencies

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The National Music Centre has opened applications for 10 Artist Mini-Residencies at Studio Bell in Calgary, and Alberta-based musicians have until May 10 to apply at studiobell.ca/mini-residencies. In celebration of NMC’s 10-year anniversary, each residency offers two full days of access to the Centre’s living collection of instruments and music technology, world-class recording studios, and an expert studio team. It’s a rare and genuinely open-ended creative opportunity with no prescribed outcome.

The possibilities across two days are wide open. Artists can workshop new material, record singles or demos, cut a live off-the-floor record, or simply use the time and space to explore sounds they couldn’t access anywhere else. NMC Director of Programs Stephanie Hutchinson puts it plainly: “Without creative constraints, artists can achieve whatever musical outcome they are working towards. Having access to our living collection makes the experience that much more impactful for emerging and veteran musicians alike who can use history to make history.”

The residency program has a strong track record. Past alums include The Halluci Nation, Jeremy Dutcher, Jean-Michel Blais, Tanika Charles, Rich Aucoin, Bebe Buckskin, and nêhiyawak, among many others. Over 10 years, NMC has hosted hundreds of artists through its residency and development programs, building a body of work that reflects the full breadth of Canadian music.

Ten residencies will be awarded across 2026 and 2027. Applications are open now through May 10, 2026 at 11:59 PM MT. Alberta-based musicians can apply and find full details at studiobell.ca/mini-residencies.

This LEGO Coffee Factory Takes Your Order by App and Brews It Without You Lifting a Finger

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Someone went ahead and solved mornings.

Brick Machines has built a LEGO Coffee Factory that takes orders through a smartphone app, brews via a built-in Keurig, disposes of the used containers automatically, and drops a lid on your cup at the end. The whole thing runs itself. By the time you’re dressed and functional, your coffee is waiting. It’s an absurdly satisfying build that does exactly one thing and does it perfectly.