logo
Billie Eilish review – pop's sharpest commentator plays with fame's power dynamics

Billie Eilish review – pop's sharpest commentator plays with fame's power dynamics

The Guardian08-07-2025
Billie Eilish's face is blown up across a four-sided, NBA-style jumbotron. Below, tracked by camera crews, she prowls a bare stage akin to a boxing ring – a rectangle slapped in the middle of the arena, fans everywhere she turns. Such media-heavy, mega-watt staging is immediately at odds with ambiguous opener Chihiro: 'You won't forget my name, not today, not tomorrow, kinda strange, feelin' sorrow,' she murmurs, featherlight, over distant, rumbling subwoofer and watery electric guitar.
The challenge for Eilish's arena tours has always been to balance her talent for intimacy with her clear interest in spectacle. It's unfortunate but perhaps inevitable that the intricate production quirks of tracks such as Lunch and Wildflower get lost in the mix tonight, with just the drums pounding through, but she compensates with astute theatrics; at still just 23, Eilish offers some of pop's sharpest commentary on the push and pull of fame.
Seizing control of the big screens for her teen-villain breakthrough single Bad Guy, Eilish dodges the limelight of its infamous 'might seduce your dad' brag by turning a handheld camera first on her band and then on her screaming fans, focusing more on the song's reception than its delivery. The crowd is hitting serious decibels – running the risk of drowning out Eilish and band throughout – but still she goads them: 'Louder!'
She casually goes full superstar on Happier Than Ever, showcasing all she does best – a whispery intro, a bittersweet slow-build with lacy vocals, and a stormy, demolition-grade payoff – before a final whiplash in tone for closer Birds of a Feather, last year's omnipresent, soft-rock romance. Tonight, its frothy optimism is played up with stage projections of a sunny green field, and only a nod towards the nihilism: 'If I'm turnin' blue, please don't save me,' she breezes.
Yet still she paces the perimeter like a caged lion, staring out at a sea of frantic faces, obviously fascinated (and maybe even disturbed) by the power dynamics at play. Eilish is the rare pop star just as interested in watching her audience perform, and it feels both intimate and combative to be looked at like that.
Billie Eilish: Hit Me Hard and Soft tour is in the UK and Ireland until 27 July
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Business owner's fight to start over after his restaurant was canceled over chef's clash with influencer
Business owner's fight to start over after his restaurant was canceled over chef's clash with influencer

Daily Mail​

time30 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Business owner's fight to start over after his restaurant was canceled over chef's clash with influencer

A San Francisco restaurateur is attempting to turn the page after a bitter online feud between his co-owner and a popular food influencer tanked his wine bar's reputation. Eric Lin, a first-time restaurant owner, recently reopened his Hayes Valley wine bar under a new name, Bosque, just three weeks after shuttering the premises in the wake of a viral social media controversy. The original café, named Kis, became the target of online outrage after TikTok influencer Karla Marcotte posted a video detailing her 'nightmare' experience there with Lin's former business partner, Luke Sung. Marcotte arrived at the restaurant expecting a free meal, but instead claims she was belittled by chef Sung who told her she was not famous enough to warrant the treatment. An immediate backlash followed and Sung was forced to step down. Now Lin says all he really wants to do is move past the tense confrontation. 'It's been really tough,' Lin told SFGate. 'I've turned myself off from social media a little bit.' After abruptly closing Kis Cafe last month, Lin quietly reopened the business on August 7 under a new identity, reportedly named after his dog. The rebrand was low-key, with Lin declining to offer a website, social media, and or even announce the re-opening. 'I'll probably have something, maybe a website,' he said, adding that he doesn't 'see a point in being very engaged.' The only trace of the new venture online is a Resy page describing the eatery as 'a wholesome neighborhood wine bar that serves simple small plates'. Lin's Kis Cafe had opened only six months prior when Marcotte entered for what was supposed to be a 'collaboration meeting'. Instead, she posted a video accusing Sung of belittling and disrespecting her. Following her controversial review of the northern California spot, her follower count surged from 15,000 to nearly half a million, and Kis Cafe's Yelp page was bombarded with more than 3,000 negative reviews. Lin even said that he, his employees, and even their families received threats as a result of the negative publicity. Lin, who left a tech career to pursue food and hospitality, said the chaos was never what he signed up for. 'I've never liked being the face of anything, and that's not what this place is about,' he said. 'It's about the food. It's about the people who come to eat here.' Though the restaurant dons a new namesake, little has changed inside the establishment. The dining room retains its denim-blue chairs and open kitchen and the menu remains largely the same, SFGate reported. However, while the rebrand appears to have calmed some of the online fury, Lin says business has been slow. 'I need to be a responsible business owner,' Lin said. 'I'm not made of cash.' Sung has since shared his side of the story with The San Francisco Standard. He claims Marcotte entered the restaurant without introducing herself or acknowledging his role, and that she appeared unfamiliar with the restaurant or his background. 'I thought she'd say, "Hey, Mr. Sung, I read about you, and I am so happy to be doing this with you." But she showed up and sat down and didn't say hi,' he told the outlet. He admitted to questioning Marcotte's qualifications, reviewing her TikTok content at the table, and expressing concerns about her representing his food. 'I saw creamy spaghetti in a pan with sliced, overcooked New York steak on top,' he said. 'That night, I was running a special with this beautiful coho salmon. I didn't want to be misrepresented by someone who doesn't understand the difference between Atlantic salmon and king salmon.' Marcotte, however, said she had introduced herself and even showed up early to shoot content. She claimed that Sung and Lin were speaking negatively about her when she arrived. Before leaving the restaurant, she also allegedly warned Sung, 'The restaurant world is really small. There will be consequences.' Following the viral fallout, Sung stepped down from both Kis Cafe and his other restaurant, Domo. He issued a public apology on Instagram, writing: 'Karla - I am truly sorry for my actions toward you. I was condescending, hurtful, and intimidating. You did not deserve to be made to feel less than or unimportant, nobody does.' Sung said the ordeal has left his personal and professional life in tatters. 'Everything is broken into pieces. I have to try to pick it up and glue it back together. I have to just let it heal.' Meanwhile, Lin is cautiously optimistic about Bosque's future. 'The food works,' he said. 'I don't see a point in stressing, and I don't have the money to overhaul everything right now.' He hasn't ruled out working with influencers again and acknowledges that it was ultimately his invitation that brought Marcotte into his restaurant in the first place. 'I hope to do everybody proud, from Luke to Karla to all of them,' Lin said. 'At the end of the day, everybody likes good food, and everybody likes good drink.'

From anti-vax stances to vile rants and violent acts: Why these A-listers were BANNED from stepping foot into Australia - as Snoop Dogg is allowed back in for AFL Grand Final gig
From anti-vax stances to vile rants and violent acts: Why these A-listers were BANNED from stepping foot into Australia - as Snoop Dogg is allowed back in for AFL Grand Final gig

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

From anti-vax stances to vile rants and violent acts: Why these A-listers were BANNED from stepping foot into Australia - as Snoop Dogg is allowed back in for AFL Grand Final gig

Aussie fans of Snoop Dogg rejoiced on Tuesday when it was announced that the iconic rapper would be headlining the AFL Grand Final in Melbourne in 2025. Snoop, who has become globally renowned for hits such as Drop It Like It's Hot and Sensual Seduction, is set to perform to a crowd of 100,000 at the MCG on 27 September later this year. 'It's an absolute honour to be hitting the stage at the AFL Grand Final — it's one of the biggest events on the Aussie calendar,' he said of his much-anticipated gig, which has seen the likes of Katy Perry and Kiss take to the stage. 'Can't wait to bring the energy and celebrate with the fans.' However, many may not remember the musician was once banned from entering Australia after he did not meet the visa character requirements. In 2007, the 53-year-old star was preparing to perform at the MTV Australian Music Video Awards in Sydney when he was denied entry. Snoop was prohibited from visiting the country after he was convicted of drug and firearms offences in the US. In April 2007, he pleaded no contest to gun and drug charges in a Los Angeles court and was sentenced to five years' probation and 800 hours of community service. However, Snoop's multiple run-ins with the law started long before. Soon after graduating high school in 1989, Snoop was arrested for possession of cocaine and a year later convicted of felony possession of drugs and possession with the intention of sale, according to The Age. The publication reports that between the late 90s and mid 2000s Snoop was arrested a number of times, mostly for drug and firearm possession. Thanks to Snoop's 2007 legal dramas, Australia ultimately decided to deny him a visa and entry into the country. The ban was lifted a year later, and the star went on to perform a number of iconic gigs across the country, including his I Wanna Thank Me tour in 2023 and his headlining performance at Big Day Out festival in 2014. However, it calls into question: who else has had a hard time visiting Aussie shores? Kanye West Kanye West's hopes of entering Australia went up in smoke in July as the American rapper's Aussie visa was cancelled. Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke revealed that the American rapper would be denied entry to the country after releasing a vile anti-Semitic song praising Adolf Hitler. The track, titled Heil Hitler, was dropped by the singer on May 8 and was deemed to be 'promoting Nazism'. As a result, officials revised West's 'lower-level' visa and came to the decision that it would be revoked. 'He's been coming to Australia for a long time. He's got family here and he's made a lot of offensive comments that my officials looked at again,' Burke told the ABC. 'Once he released the Heil Hitler song, he no longer has a valid visa in Australia. 'It wasn't a visa for the purpose of concerts. It was a lower-level and the officials still looked at the law and said, you're going to have a song and promote that sort of Nazism, we don't need that in Australia.' Floyd Mayweather Jr. Floyd Mayweather Jnr was prohibited from entering Australia in 2015 after the Immigration Department refused to grant him a visa. An online petition was launched via to stop him from visiting the country because of his history of domestic violence. Mayweather was jailed in 2012 for an attack on his ex-girlfriend Josie Harris. He served two of the three-month prison sentence he was handed for a hair-pulling, arm-twisting attack on his former lover, as two of their three children watched. The petition against his possible entry, led by campaigner Angela Burrows, stated: 'His assaults are sickening to read about.' 'Allowing a chronic perpetrator of violence like Floyd Mayweather to visit Australia sends a terrifying message – that vicious, repeat abuse isn't serious.' It is believed that Mayweather is still banned from Australia. Novak Djokovic was deported from Melbourne on the eve of the 2022 Australian Open after breaching Australia's COVID-19 rules. During a time when non-vaccinated people were prevented from entering Australia, the government ruled his medical exemption to the vaccine invalid and his visa was cancelled. The Serbian tennis champion spent 11 days unsuccessfully battling to maintain his visa and the controversial court decision sparked fury among his fans. Deportation from Australia means visitors are automatically barred from entering the country for three years. Former Home Affairs Minister Karen Andrews - who was a key figure in imposing the ban - said at the time that the government should abide by the rules and not review his case. 'It would be a slap in the face for those people in Australia who did the right thing... if all of a sudden, Novak Djokovic is allowed back into the country, simply because he is a high-ranking tennis player with many millions of dollars,' she told the ABC. Despite this, the ruling was eventually overturned and Djokovic appeared at the beloved Aussie tennis tournament the following year. Skepta - real name Joseph Junior Adenuga - was initially banned from entering Australia after punching a man in a Melbourne nightclub in 2016. The UK rapper pleaded guilty to recklessly causing injury, however no conviction was reported at the time, according to BuzzFeed. The publication claimed he was fined $2,500 and ordered to pay $10,000 to the victim. After failing the immigration character test, Skepta's touring company appealed the decision to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal. During the appeal, Skepta alleged that he had 'grown as a person both emotionally and spiritually' since the incident. The tribunal also heard that the man who Skepta hurt in 2016 accepted an invitation to attend his concert, as well as the opportunity to meet and greet with the rapper so that Skepta could formally apologise in person. In 2018, just two weeks before he was set to play shows across Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Adelaide and Perth, the ban was overturned.

Embattled business partner attempts rebrand after restaurant was bombed with bad reviews amid influencer's feud with chef
Embattled business partner attempts rebrand after restaurant was bombed with bad reviews amid influencer's feud with chef

Daily Mail​

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Embattled business partner attempts rebrand after restaurant was bombed with bad reviews amid influencer's feud with chef

A San Francisco restaurateur is attempting to turn the page after a bitter online feud between his co-owner and a popular food influencer tanked his wine bar's reputation. Eric Lin, a first-time restaurant owner, recently reopened his Hayes Valley wine bar under a new name, Bosque, just three weeks after shuttering the premises in the wake of a viral social media controversy. The original café, named Kis, became the target of online outrage after TikTok influencer Karla Marcotte posted a video detailing her 'nightmare' experience there with Lin's former business partner, Luke Sung. Marcotte arrived at the restaurant expecting a free meal, but instead claims she was belittled by chef Sung who told her she was not famous enough to warrant the treatment. An immediate backlash followed and Sung was forced to step down. Now Lin says all he really wants to do is move past the tense confrontation. 'It's been really tough,' Lin told SFGate. 'I've turned myself off from social media a little bit.' After abruptly closing Kis Cafe last month, Lin quietly reopened the business on August 7 under a new identity, reportedly named after his dog. The rebrand was low-key, with Lin declining to offer a website, social media, and or even announce the re-opening. 'I'll probably have something, maybe a website,' he said, adding that he doesn't 'see a point in being very engaged.' The only trace of the new venture online is a Resy page describing the eatery as 'a wholesome neighborhood wine bar that serves simple small plates'. Lin's Kis Cafe had opened only six months prior when Marcotte entered for what was supposed to be a 'collaboration meeting'. Instead, she posted a video accusing Sung of belittling and disrespecting her. Following her controversial review of the northern California spot, her follower count surged from 15,000 to nearly half a million, and Kis Cafe's Yelp page was bombarded with more than 3,000 negative reviews. Lin even said that he, his employees, and even their families received threats as a result of the negative publicity. Lin, who left a tech career to pursue food and hospitality, said the chaos was never what he signed up for. 'I've never liked being the face of anything, and that's not what this place is about,' he said. 'It's about the food. It's about the people who come to eat here.' Though the restaurant dons a new namesake, little has changed inside the establishment. The dining room retains its denim-blue chairs and open kitchen and the menu remains largely the same, SFGate reported. However, while the rebrand appears to have calmed some of the online fury, Lin says business has been slow. 'I need to be a responsible business owner,' Lin said. 'I'm not made of cash.' Sung has since shared his side of the story with The San Francisco Standard. He claims Marcotte entered the restaurant without introducing herself or acknowledging his role, and that she appeared unfamiliar with the restaurant or his background. 'I thought she'd say, "Hey, Mr. Sung, I read about you, and I am so happy to be doing this with you." But she showed up and sat down and didn't say hi,' he told the outlet. He admitted to questioning Marcotte's qualifications, reviewing her TikTok content at the table, and expressing concerns about her representing his food. 'I saw creamy spaghetti in a pan with sliced, overcooked New York steak on top,' he said. 'That night, I was running a special with this beautiful coho salmon. I didn't want to be misrepresented by someone who doesn't understand the difference between Atlantic salmon and king salmon.' Marcotte, however, said she had introduced herself and even showed up early to shoot content. She claimed that Sung and Lin were speaking negatively about her when she arrived. Before leaving the restaurant, she also allegedly warned Sung, 'The restaurant world is really small. There will be consequences.' Following the viral fallout, Sung stepped down from both Kis Cafe and his other restaurant, Domo. He issued a public apology on Instagram, writing: 'Karla - I am truly sorry for my actions toward you. I was condescending, hurtful, and intimidating. You did not deserve to be made to feel less than or unimportant, nobody does.' Sung said the ordeal has left his personal and professional life in tatters. 'Everything is broken into pieces. I have to try to pick it up and glue it back together. I have to just let it heal.' Meanwhile, Lin is cautiously optimistic about Bosque's future. 'The food works,' he said. 'I don't see a point in stressing, and I don't have the money to overhaul everything right now.' He hasn't ruled out working with influencers again and acknowledges that it was ultimately his invitation that brought Marcotte into his restaurant in the first place. 'I hope to do everybody proud, from Luke to Karla to all of them,' Lin said. 'At the end of the day, everybody likes good food, and everybody likes good drink.'

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