logo
Miley Cyrus Explains Why Mom Tish Unfollowed Her On Instagram

Miley Cyrus Explains Why Mom Tish Unfollowed Her On Instagram

Yahoo3 hours ago

Singer Miley Cyrus and her mom, Tish Cyrus, are addressing a social media snafu that had people 'freaking out' not too long ago.
'Miley, why do you think your mom unfollowed you on Instagram?' Tish asked, doubling over in laughter, on the latest episode of the 'Sorry We're Cyrus' podcast she does with her daughter Brandi Cyrus, Miley's older sister.
The pop star conceded that the timing of her mom's unfollow was 'interesting,' because she had recently posted a photo of her dad, Billy Ray Cyrus, after the two were estranged for a period of time.
Tish and Billy Ray Cyrus divorced back in 2022.
'If you were in the family or not in the family, it was weird timing,' the singer teased her mom. 'Like I went to go see B Ray and, like, you did mysteriously unfollow me.'
'And then you got some backlash, and then suddenly you knew how to press that 'follow' button,' she said before adding that she was 'just kidding.'
The 'Flowers' singer explained that 'the truth is ― which is boring ― there's a bug in Meta which... it naturally unfollows the person that you follow with the most engagement.'
'It was insane, though,' Tish Cyrus said as her daughter took listeners through what she thought had happened.
'I was like, either, 'Mom lost her glasses and can't see,' which is ― that's what I thought happened,' Miley Cyrus said. 'And then, there was actually a bug in Meta.'
Both women addressed the unfollowing incident when it happened in May.
When someone on Instagram asked Tish Cyrus why she had suddenly unfollowed her daughter, she commented, 'i didn't! Idk what happened lol.'
Tish later spoke about the situation on X, writing, 'I would never unfollow Miley, her and I are as close as we've always been. Period. Love you Little.'
The 'Hannah Montana' star took to her Instagram stories to address the hoopla, writing, 'I rarely comment on rumors, but my mama and I are too tight for anything to ever come between us.'
'She's my best friend,' she added. 'Like a lot of moms, she doesn't know how to work her phone and somehow unfollowed me-simple, coincidental, and uninteresting.'
Miley Cyrus Sets The Record Straight On Her Estrangement With Dad Billy Ray Cyrus
Miley Cyrus Opens Up About Confidently Choosing A Child-Free Life
Miley Cyrus Reveals The Tattoos She Regrets The Most

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Miley Cyrus turns heads in barely-there ensemble during Parisian night out
Miley Cyrus turns heads in barely-there ensemble during Parisian night out

Fox News

time24 minutes ago

  • Fox News

Miley Cyrus turns heads in barely-there ensemble during Parisian night out

Miley Cyrus showed off her toned abs when she stepped out in Paris wearing a sheer dress. The 32-year-old former Disney star was photographed outside her hotel as she left for a night out on the town in a light blue sheer Jean Paul Gaultier gown that featured a coned bra covered in peacock feathers. She accessorized the look with black underwear that was visible through the fabric, black leather opera gloves and knee-high brown sandals with cutouts. She styled her hair in big messy curls and opted for minimal makeup. The actress shared photos of the look on her Instagram, captioning the post, "Paris is the place for me… I love you all." "This look is one of my favorites you've ever done," one fan wrote in the comment section with a heart-eyed emoji. Another added, "What a queeennnn," while a third chimed in with "You are THAT LEGEND." Fans of the actress also couldn't hold back their excitement at having seen Cyrus perform on stage with Beyoncé as part of her "Cowboy Carter" tour in Paris. The two sang the song "II Most Wanted," on which Cyrus collaborated with Beyoncé. "Thank You for singing Most wanted with Beyoncé Today," one fan wrote in the comments section, while another added, "Omg you did it II most wanted." The actress has been spotted in a number of showstopping outfits during her time in Paris, including a knit leopard print Valentino dress with a fringe collar and a vintage black Patrick Kelly dress with rhinestones in the shape of the Eiffel Tower. Cyrus is in Paris to promote her latest visual album, "Something Beautiful," and its accompanying film, which premiered earlier this month at the Tribeca Film Festival. As part of the promotional tour, she performed at Spotify's Billions Club Live, hosted at Maxim's de Paris, where she sang two of her biggest hits, "The Climb" and "We Can't Stop." She took the stage in a vintage 1992 sequined Mugler minidress, which mixed light and dark shades of blue. When discussing her latest album on "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" in May, Cyrus opened up about how filming one of the music videos for her visual album ended with her in the ICU after her "leg began to disintegrate" after filming. "And then the doctor goes, 'Do you have any idea why you would have such a brutal infection on your kneecap?'' she said on the show. "To have a surgeon look at you and say, 'Yuck.' … They open up cadavers. They see inside the guts of humans, and they're looking at me, telling me I'm disgusting. And they do brain operations."

Born Ruffians, Basia Bulat, Godspeed You! Black Emperor to headline Supercrawl festival
Born Ruffians, Basia Bulat, Godspeed You! Black Emperor to headline Supercrawl festival

Hamilton Spectator

time31 minutes ago

  • Hamilton Spectator

Born Ruffians, Basia Bulat, Godspeed You! Black Emperor to headline Supercrawl festival

An all-Canadian lineup of rockers, rappers and folk musicians have been recruited to headline downtown Hamilton's Supercrawl festival. Indie band Born Ruffians, folksingers Basia Bulat and Donovan Woods, rapper TOBi, local songsmith Steve Strongman and orchestral rock group Godspeed You! Black Emperor are joined by dozens of local, national and international acts for the Sept. 12 to 14 event. Subscribe to Basia Bulat's channel : Pre-order "Basia's Palace" here: ►Follow Basia: Instagram: ​ Twitter: Facebook: TikTok: @basiabulat YouTube: Credits: Danced by Louise Bédard & Naïma Contreras Tejpar Directed by Nora Rosenthal Produced by Jennifer Law-Smith Director of Photography: Jonathan Auger Steadicam Operator: Kes Tagney 1st AC: Andrew Lee 2nd AC/FilmLoader: Anthony Dion Camera Trainee: Samuel Li Choreography by Nora Rosenthal & Laura Jeffrey Costume: Amanda van der Siebes Costume Assist: Isabel Murphy HMU Artist: Brigitte Lacoste Gaffer: Wissam Salem Grip: Jérémy Gorry Editor: Kyle Gregory Sanderson Colourist: Yuri Cabrera PA (Driver): Alexis Bellini PA: Mary Williamson PA: Peter Hostack Basia Bulat Management: Noah Fralick Director's Shadow: Emily Lê Processed at Mels Studios Scanned at Main Film Thank you to: Vincent René-Lortie Andrew Woods Roro and DeeDee Yagoda Bulat Ziuta Dziurko Nico Contreras Rehana Tejpar Alan Rosenthal Linda Rabin CineGround Lyrics Wrong way home again Some roads never end Half way home to bed Have you nothing left Oh in my head And in my sleep Where in my dreaming hours have you been Can I be brave enough to believe In all this changing up my sleeve Oh tell me baby, baby , baby I don't learn Baby, baby, baby, I don't learn Not when I'm lost, not when I'm blue What was I thinking if not of you In orbit so confused Now you complicate every path I make Tell me what to do Have I still got nothing left? Oh baby, baby, baby - I don't learn Baby, baby, baby - I don't learn! Wrong way out of here Some roads never end Half way home to my bed Half way in my head But in my head and in my sleep What was I thinking I would perceive What was I thinking of to be free What was I thinking, if not of me? I don't know if I'm going to make it Day and night and day in Run around and face it Am I really changing? Am I gonna make it? Day and night and day in Run around and face it What was I thinking baby? Baby, baby, baby - I don't learn ! Baby, baby, baby - I don't learn ! Baby, baby, baby - I don't learn ! Baby, baby, baby - I don't learn ! ►Subscribe to Secret City Records on Youtube: Secret City Records: Instagram: ​ Twitter: ​ Facebook: ​ TikTok: @secretcityrecords #BasiaBulat #BasiasPalace #baby #secretcityrecords Godspeed has played a small part in James Street North history. Older indie rock fans might remember the post-rock collective performed at a sold-out concert 22 years ago at the now-defunct Tivoli Theatre. Provided to YouTube by BWSCD Inc RAINDROPS CAST IN LEAD · Godspeed You! Black Emperor 'NO TITLE AS OF 13 FEBRUARY 2024 28,340 DEAD' ℗ 2024 Constellation Released on: 2024-10-04 Main Artist: Godspeed You! Black Emperor Composer: Aidan Girt Composer: David Bryant Composer: Efrim Manuel Menuck Composer: Mauro Pezzente Composer: Michael Moya Composer: Sophie Trudeau Composer: Thierry Amar Composer: Timothy Herzog Music Publisher: Constellation Auto-generated by YouTube. Hundreds packed the seated theatre to hear the then-nine-piece Montreal band's intensely emotional instrumental tracks in March 2003. The venue closed forever soon after as part of the building collapsed in 2004. Decades later, the group returned to the city with decades of albums and stage experience — minus a lengthy hiatus in early 2000s — to play a Supercrawl-presented show at Bridgeworks in November 2024. Godspeed's newest album, 'NO TITLE AS OF 13 FEBRUARY 2024, 28,340 DEAD,' follows the same intensity with droning chords and impactful crescendos. Directed & Animated by Renaldho Pelle: Produced by Studio Linguini: Listen to 'Someone I Knew' here: Follow TOBi: Instagram: Facebook: Twitter: #TOBi #SomeoneIKnew #Rap Juno-winning rapper and singer TOBi will add a fresh face to the lineup. The Nigerian-Canadian artist from Brampton is the only headliner who has never played the festival before. Here are all the bands playing Supercrawl. Born Ruffians, Basia Bulat, Godspeed You! Black Emperor, Steve Strongman, TOBi, Donovan Woods , AOIFE, The Beans, Sean Bienhaus, Rachel Bobbitt, Born In The Eighties, Buddah Abusah, Cadence Weapon, Jean Caffeine, Classified, Sarah Church, The Commune, Council House, Criminal Inhibition, cute, Da Bomb, Dammit Goldie, The Darcys, Don't Hit Your Head, Eyes Like Opals, James Favron, Foxwarren, Delyn Grey, Hamilton Children's Choir, Hamilton Philharmonic Orchestra, Neil Haverty, Jambassadors, Ro Joaquim, Jocelyn June and the Bugs, KTxKP, Rob Lamothe, Hua Li 化力, Linebeck, Loaded Dice, Lonely Little Kitsch, Los Chukos, Lost Faculty, Loversteeth, Lucky Honey, DJ Danny Miles, Minuscule, Neon Dreams, Nezqwik, NOVIÆ, PYPY, Rapid Transit, Rexford Drive, Shealagh Rose, Evan Rotella, Rocket and the Renegades, $EAMS, ShaaMaa, C.A. Smith, Spookyguava, Thunder Queens, Trout Lily, Menno Versteeg, Alex Whorms, and CJ Wiley. For the 17th year, Supercrawl will shut down James Street North from King Street to beyond Barton Street. Three stages of musicians will join visual artists, fashion designers, dancers and performers and a variety of vendors for the annual festival. From Born Ruffians' album Birthmarks, out now on Yep Roc Records. Buy here: Video by Istoica and James Cooper #BornRuffians #Needle #YepRocRecords

I've ditched HR to free my company from the social-justice police
I've ditched HR to free my company from the social-justice police

New York Post

time39 minutes ago

  • New York Post

I've ditched HR to free my company from the social-justice police

'I want to be the first company without HR.' It was just a throwaway comment I made this month at a conference called Freedom Fest — but the audience went wild, and the line went viral in an Instagram post with over 5 million views. 'They produce nothing,' I continued. 'They monitor our words. They tell us what we can and cannot say. Advertisement 'They inhibit creativity. It's bad for business.' At my own start-up — XX-XY Athletics, the only brand standing up for the protection of women's sports — I'll be damned if I'm going to let the ladies of 'The View' run around policing my employees' conversations. We started with no Human Resources department a year ago, and we'll continue with no HR as we grow. Advertisement My statement touched a nerve because anyone who has worked in corporate America has been subjected to the censorious 'Head Girl' rule-making emanating from HR departments. And they are tired of it. When I started my business career in the early 1990s, HR was responsible for recruiting, benefits and payroll — that was it. As I moved up the ladder and found myself in executive meetings, the HR leader weighed in last on key business decisions, if at all. Advertisement Thirty years on, HR leaders are calling themselves 'Chief Human Resources Officers,' and they proclaim their power with reckless and off-topic abandon. HR departments today are packed with Tracy Flicks, the way-too-eager high schooler played by Reese Witherspoon in the movie 'Election.' Flick is the archetypal 'Head Girl,' a term derived from the British school system and its tight hierarchy of internal discipline — ambitious and officious with little actual skill or intellect. Hand-raisers like these are not selected to lead for intelligence or ability, but for conscientiousness and a willingness to uphold 'the rules.' Advertisement That was fine when HR had no power. But now, after yearning for a seat at the table, HR's midwit elites have found a way to exert increasing influence in the corporate environment — leveraging social-justice buzzwords to accrue power and (what else?) make more rules. In the 2020s, HR asserts its newly found clout with tyrannical zeal. When I interviewed in 2023 for a CEO job at an $8 billion retailer, I made it all the way to the end of the corporate leadership receiving line, successfully fielding queries on my business acumen and brand-building accomplishments. My last interview was with the HR representative on the board. Her first question: 'Will you apologize for what you've done?' Get opinions and commentary from our columnists Subscribe to our daily Post Opinion newsletter! Thanks for signing up! Enter your email address Please provide a valid email address. By clicking above you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Never miss a story. Check out more newsletters What I'd 'done' was advocate for opening public schools during the COVID pandemic. By 2023 I'd been proven right. That didn't matter to the HR lady. I'd violated her tightly enforced script. Advertisement I didn't apologize, and I didn't get the job. Over the last two decades, HR has gone from operational support to Operation Head Girl Hall Monitor. They force-feed trainings about acceptable language; they make 'merit' out to be racist; and they set hiring criteria based on risk avoidance rather than excellence. But hiring people who don't offend anyone won't result in employees who take initiative and make things. Advertisement Am I being sexist in calling them Head Girls? In 2023, 76% of HR managers in the United States were female. The shoe fits. (And yes, men can be Head Girl types, too.) British academic Bruce Charlton explains the Head Girl 'can never be a creative genius because she does what other people want by the standard they most value.' That's why the Head Girls of HR made everyone add pronouns to their email signatures starting around 2020: Social standards. Not because it drove the business. Advertisement No, these time-suckers shift focus away from the business. Front-of-house employees — builders, makers and service providers — must spend a significant amount of time thinking about the words they use rather than their actual jobs. Critics of my viral comment pushed back at me: 'You need HR to avoid unnecessary risk!' they chorused. Right. That's the fear HR leverages to maintain its unearned influence. Advertisement Risk avoidance means hiring mediocre people with no opinions who never offend anyone. Those hires won't take my one-year-old start-up to big-brand status. I want big thinkers with creative minds. Sometimes these folks are disruptive. But there are no new products or breakthrough marketing campaigns without them. My company is a walking, talking HR violation. We 'misgender' all day long. In fact, speaking truth (as I call it) is required to work here. We're not in school anymore. We don't need a persnickety Miss Manners etiquette-enforcer telling us to be nice. I'll continue to go it alone without HR. I'll assume the so-called risk so I can lead in my own voice. And I'll succeed, or fail, on my own terms. Jennifer Sey is founder and CEO of XX-XY Athletics.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store