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Clipse and Josh Sperling Debut Limited Edition 'Let God Sort Em Out' Collection

Clipse and Josh Sperling Debut Limited Edition 'Let God Sort Em Out' Collection

Hypebeast17-07-2025
Summary
Josh SperlingandClipsehave teamed up for a limited edition run ofLet God Sort Em Outmerch.
The release features a selection of apparel and vinyl LP, with a Cross and Anchor motif heavily integrated into the designs. 'The Cross and the Anchor. The Cross to represent sin, death and faith. The Anchor to represent strength and stability in unknown waters,' Sperling wrote on Instagram. 'Two symbols for two brothers.'
A black T-shirt features the Anchor insignia on the front chest while the white offering sees the Cross. Both logos are placed on the back of each T-shirt, with the Clipse emblem redesigned to match the motif. Meanwhile, the whiteLet God Sort Em Outvinyl LP arrives with Sterling's original artworkClipse Cursive, housed in a black sleeve with the insignia.
Check out the collaborative merch above.
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Chris Paul returns to Clippers to make history, not relive past glory
Chris Paul returns to Clippers to make history, not relive past glory

New York Times

time2 days ago

  • New York Times

Chris Paul returns to Clippers to make history, not relive past glory

This is a basketball story. But I have to start with hip-hop. You see, a new album can serve a lot of areas, even if it's from an older performer. New work will have you recalling past brilliance while proving they can still get it done. Clipse, a hip-hop duo from Virginia formed by brothers Pusha T and Malice, reunited and put out its first album in 16 years with the release of 'Let God Sort Em Out' this month. It was produced by Pharrell Williams, who, along with The Neptunes, helped produce Clipse's first three albums, starting with 'Lord Willin'' back in 2002. Advertisement Old conflicts had to be resolved for this album to happen. Old love for the game had to be replenished. Themes of appreciation, having no regrets, and giving flowers while they can still smell them were explored. Also, the brothers can rap. And they in turn keep the art of rap accountable. So be it, so be it. Let me transition from Clipse to Clips. As in the LA Clippers, a team that added future Hall of Fame point guard Chris Paul to a group that already had seven players over 30. Paul turned 40 in May and is about to play his 21st NBA season. And as Clippers president of basketball operations Lawrence Frank put it, Paul will slot in as a high quality 'reserve point guard' with a clear understanding of his role. This is a full circle moment for Paul and the Clippers. LA first acquired him in 2011, at the end of a fourth straight season of at least 50 losses. When LA traded former lottery picks Chris Kaman (2003), Eric Gordon (2008) and Al-Farouq Aminu (2010) along with a future first-round pick that became Austin Rivers to the New Orleans Hornets for Paul, the Clippers had a total of six winning seasons in 41 years as an NBA franchise. They had never won 60 percent of their games before 2011. The Clippers won at least 60 percent of their games in all of Paul's six seasons with the franchise. He had an infamous run, but when it was over in 2017, he could have opted out of the final year of his contract and entered unrestricted free agency. Instead, he opted in, initiating a trade to join James Harden and the Houston Rockets. That 2017 trade netted the Clippers Lou Williams, Patrick Beverley and Montrezl Harrell. And as Frank noted, the Clippers are still benefitting from that trade when you consider subsequent trades, right down to the acquisition of John Collins this summer. LA has the league's longest active streak of winning seasons at 14, and that is largely possible because of Paul. 📰 @TheAthletic Chris Paul reunites with the LA Clippers, years after the original CP3 trade that set the franchise on a maiden course towards winning and another CP3 trade that still benefits the Clippers to this very day — Law Murray 🎡 (@LawMurrayTheNU) July 21, 2025 'When Chris exited, we worked together,' Frank said. 'When he decided to go to Houston, Chris helped us in the sense of turning it into a sign-and-trade, and it really helped us transition. I mean obviously, Chris had great history, great six years with us. Being an All-Star each year, All-NBA five of those six years, making the playoffs each of those years. And yet the ability to get the return we got from Houston helped us get to where we're at now.' Advertisement So why do the Clippers need Chris Paul? It begins with the basketball. No, really, the actual basketball. I wrote three weeks ago about how Paul makes sense as a player who has always valued taking care of the basketball. The Clippers were 23rd in the NBA last season in turnover percentage and assist-turnover ratio. Paul finished 8th in the NBA in assists per game with 7.4 and averaged only 1.6 turnovers. That's an assist-turnover ratio of 4.69, which trailed only Tyrese Haliburton (5.61) and Tyus Jones (4.71) among the 253 players who appeared in at least 20 games and played at least 20 minutes per game last season. Compare that with Harden, who had an assist-turnover ratio of 2.01, which ranked 106th. When Paul, who started all 82 games for the San Antonio Spurs last season, was on the floor, 13 percent of the Spurs' possessions ended in a turnover, which is the equivalent to a team ranking third in the NBA. When Paul was off the floor, the Spurs had a turnover percentage of 14.5, which is the equivalent to a team ranking 18th. 'We know that ballhandling was a little bit of an issue for us last year,' Frank said. 'Ballhandling and playmaking were areas we wanted to address this offseason. When we were at our best, we were taking care of the ball. And Chris takes care of the ball and runs an offense about as well as anyone who's ever done it.' Paul is the Point God. He provides discipline. He provides structure. When Paul gets point/assist double-doubles, he can do it without a turnover, something he's done 45 times (13 more than John Stockton, who is next on that list, per Stathead). As Damian Lillard was reintroduced by the Portland Trail Blazers this week, Portland head coach and former Paul Clippers teammate Chauncey Billups said that Lillard is 'going to be the highest paid assistant coach in league history.' Paul might as well be the second-highest paid assistant coach. Clippers head coach Tyronn Lue certainly could use someone else to yell at Harden instead of Harden averaging the third-most turnovers in the league again. And though Paul and Harden didn't end things well in Houston after two seasons, Harden played a role in Paul's return to LA, along with Leonard. Advertisement 'James has been a huge part of this offseason,' said Frank. 'When talking to James, talking to Kawhi, and we talked about the role … both guys said CP would be the best guy for this role. James is all about winning and obviously Chris and him played together in Houston. They got within a game of the NBA Finals in 2018. What James talked about with Chris was his ability to see the floor like few others, the leadership skills he brings, the competitiveness, and his everyday work ethic and approach.' Chris Paul needs the Clippers. He's been in five cities over these last eight years. The Clipper fan base, one that has been treated to arguably the most ahistorical franchise in the league, gets to celebrate Paul once again. And Paul's first tenure with the Clippers showed him what it means to have star players come to the Clippers near or at the end of their careers — Billups, Lamar Odom, Grant Hill, Antawn Jamison, Danny Granger and Hedo Turkoglu spent their final or penultimate season with the Clippers. Just like Malice has been both Mason Bethas, Chris Paul has been both Paul Pierces now: he was a superstar now in the twilight of his career with the Clippers. Paul replaces Patty Mills, who replaced the disgruntled PJ Tucker in February. The difference between Mills and Tucker was striking. Tucker didn't want to be on the team and, after he opted into $11 million last summer, LA leadership decided to keep him away from the team until he was traded. When Mills arrived, he was able to contribute positively to the Clippers locker room, even serving as the director of vibes. The Clippers aren't a whole lot older than last year's team. Bradley Beal is a month younger than Norman Powell, John Collins is three months younger than Amir Coffey and rookies Yanic Konan Niederhäuser and Kobe Sanders replace Drew Eubanks and Seth Lundy, respectively. Brook Lopez, 37, replaces Ben Simmons, 29. But Paul, Collins, and Lopez replace three players (Mills, Coffey, Simmons) who are still unsigned at this point of free agency, and they may be reserves on the Clippers after being starters for their teams last season. The Clippers getting older with Paul and Lopez belies the fact that the Clippers are now Pacific Ocean's Eleven: a group of established players who were productive last season and who can help keep each other's minutes and workload down in the rare instances where the team is fully healthy. Lue has a deeper, more versatile roster at his disposal. Paul and Lopez, in particular, represent players (a traditional backup point guard and center) the Clippers didn't have last season, especially in the playoffs against Denver. LA Clippers offseason, updated… Noah's ark, at least two of all they need — Law Murray 🎡 (@LawMurrayTheNU) July 21, 2025 'Everyone's entitled in terms of the judgments they want to make on the group,' Frank said. 'We're super excited about the group, and I think part of the thing with age that typically people worry about (is) increased chance for injury. That's why we lean into the depth. … The nature of any NBA team, let alone an older one, is that you may have more injuries than others. Now some of our older guys have been very, very durable, so knock on wood. Hopefully that maintains. But if not, we do have great faith in the roster and having depth across the board. Lue will need to carefully manage his rotation's minutes, but Paul, Nicolas Batum and Lopez should play the least while LA hopes Leonard, Beal, Collins and Bogdan Bogdanović are healthier (none of them played 60 games in 2024-25). The player who needs the most management, and the one Paul was brought here for as insurance, is Harden. He played 2,789 minutes in the regular season at age 35 and he was an All-Star and an All-NBA selection. That's only the 34th season in NBA history by a player who played at least 2,700 minutes at age 35 or older. Advertisement The only players who followed up a season with that kind of workload at that age and made an All-Star appearance the following season are Hall of Famers Wilt Chamberlain (1973 Lakers), John Havlicek (1978 Celtics), Artis Gilmore (1986 Spurs), Robert Parish (1990 Celtics), Karl Malone (2001 and 2002 Jazz), Jason Kidd (2010 Mavericks) and future Hall of Famer Kevin Durant (2025 Suns). None of those players were guards responsible for both scoring and primary playmaking. With Paul, the Clippers have eight players who are older than 30. Can an old team win it all? Certainly. The 1998 Bulls were led by Michael Jordan, who began the Last Dance at the same age (34) that Leonard will be next season. Jordan was joined by two other starters older than 30 (Scottie Pippen, Ron Harper) and five reserves who were 30 or older by the end of June 1998 (Dennis Rodman, Steve Kerr, Bill Wennington, Randy Brown, Jud Buechler). The 2011 Mavericks were led by 32-year-old Dirk Nowitzki, who was joined in the starting lineup by four other 30-plus starters (Kidd, Shawn Marion and DeShawn Stevenson). That Dallas team had four reserves on the playoff roster older than 30 (Jason Terry, Peja Stojakovic, Brendan Haywood, Brian Cardinal), and that didn't include injured 31-year-old Caron Butler, who was the second-leading scorer in the starting lineup when his season ended in January due to a knee injury. The 2016 Cleveland Cavaliers, coached by Lue, were led by 31-year-old LeBron James, who was joined in the starting lineup by 30-year-old JR Smith. Cleveland's bench in the playoffs had seven players 30 or older (Richard Jefferson, Channing Frye, Timofey Mozgov, Mo Williams, James Jones, Dahntay Jones, Sasha Kaun). None of these teams are perfect correlations. Every team is trying to win a championship. They're all flawed, even the team that won it last year and will win it this year. If the Clippers signed recent first-round picks to fill out the roster (like they did last year with Kevin Porter Jr. and Mo Bamba) instead of older and better players like Paul and Lopez, then they would be criticized for not giving themselves the best opportunity to win. Frank put the roster together and he's going to let Lue sort them out. Paul is here to be a part of the puzzle, and it's a smaller part than he's used to. Paul has seen it all, and he's about to see The Wall. But the Clips aren't just here to collect veterans and have sweet moments. They're trying to put the best product out there and win. And so is Paul. 'There's the heartstrings part of it, of someone who was such a significant part of the Clippers' rise, to be able to bring it back,' said Frank. 'Whether this is his last year or not, that's obviously Chris's story in terms of what he feels and what he wants. But I think number one is his ability to help impact winning. And then the secondary was someone who's been so important to the franchise, to be able to bring him back in the fold.' (Photo of Chris Paul waving: Michael Gonzales / NBAE via Getty Images)

Travis Scott's ‘JackBoys 2' Tops Chart, Ends Justin Bieber's Six-Album Streak of No. 1 Debuts
Travis Scott's ‘JackBoys 2' Tops Chart, Ends Justin Bieber's Six-Album Streak of No. 1 Debuts

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

Travis Scott's ‘JackBoys 2' Tops Chart, Ends Justin Bieber's Six-Album Streak of No. 1 Debuts

Travis Scott came out on top in a stacked week of new releases Sunday, as his latest album JackBoys 2 debuted atop Billboard's 200 Albums chart, beating out Justin Bieber's surprise release Swag, as well as Let God Sort 'Em Out, Clipse's first album in over 15 years. JackBoys 2, considered a compilation album with his Cactus Jack label, marks Scott's sixth album to top the Billboard chart (that's four solo records as well as the original JackBoys compilation album). It opens with 232,000 units and was buoyed by strong traditional sales, selling 160,000 copies, Billboard reported. More from The Hollywood Reporter Bruce Springsteen Joins Zach Bryan for Surprise Appearance at New Jersey Concert Chris Martin Jokes About Kiss-Cam Scandal at First Coldplay Concert Since Video Went Viral Billie Eilish Reveals 3D Collaboration With James Cameron Is in the Works Scott ends Morgan Wallen's I'm the Problem's two-month streak atop the albums chart since that record debuted in May. (Luminate reported last week that I'm the Problem is the biggest album in the U.S. through the first half of 2025.) The chart news marks the first time Bieber hasn't opened at No. 1 in his 15-year career, ending a six-album streak of No. 1 debuts that began with his first record, My World 2.0, back in 2010. Despite that streak ending, Swag had a more than respectable opening, debuting with 163,000 overall units on 198.77 million streams, per Billboard. Notably, Swag's debut was carried almost entirely by streams, with physical sales set to be included on a later chart after his physical units are shipped out. Swag appears to have netted Bieber another hit with 'Daisies,' which topped both Apple Music and Spotify's daily U.S. charts this past week. It's a potential contender for a No. 1 debut on the Hot 100 chart, in close competition with Alex Warren's 'Ordinary,' which has spent the past six weeks atop the chart. The New Hot 100 chart will release Monday. Other than Bieber, Clipse earned 118,000 equivalent units with Let God Sort 'Em Out, debuting at No. 4 on this week's chart. Best of The Hollywood Reporter From 'Party in the U.S.A.' to 'Born in the U.S.A.': 20 of America's Most Patriotic (and Un-Patriotic) Musical Offerings Most Anticipated Concert Tours of 2025: Beyoncé, Billie Eilish, Kendrick Lamar & SZA, Sabrina Carpenter and More Hollywood's Most Notable Deaths of 2025 Solve the daily Crossword

The Mind-Boggling Net Worth in Venice for Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez's Wedding
The Mind-Boggling Net Worth in Venice for Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez's Wedding

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

The Mind-Boggling Net Worth in Venice for Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez's Wedding

Venice is suffering through an all-out billionaire invasion as Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez prepare to tie the knot in the floating city. Among the arrivals: media tycoons, tech titans, Hollywood elites, and royals—collectively worth close to half a trillion dollars, or the equivalent of Nevada and New Hampshire's GDP combined. Here's a look at who's descending on Venice—and just how rich this guest list really is. Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez: $226.7 Billion The Amazon founder, 61, and his TV-anchor-turned-Hollywood fiancée, 55, are throwing the 'wedding of the century,' shelling out over $50 million for the affair—nearly double Sánchez's $30 million net worth. Amid local protests accusing them of turning Venice into a 'playground for oligarchs,' the couple welcomed some 200 A-list guests to their celebration, many who arrived this week by private yacht while others clogged Marco Polo airport with private jets. Bezos also invited President Donald Trump, but despite the president's affinity for billionaires and gilded spectacles, he declined, citing scheduling conflicts. Bill Gates: $116.5 Billion The Microsoft co-founder, 69, touched down in his private jet on Thursday and later attended the wedding's welcome party alongside his girlfriend, Paula Hurd—the widow of Oracle CEO Mark Hurd. The couple previously attended Bezos and Sanchez's engagement party aboard the Blue Origin founder's $500 million superyacht, the 417-foot-long 'Koru,' in 2023. Lachlan Murdoch: $2.1 Billion One of several media tycoons to show up for the wedding, Lachlan Murdoch, 53, is the son of 94-year-old publishing magnate Rupert Murdoch and the heir to the family's multibillion-dollar media empire. He arrived in Venice with his wife Sarah. The Kardashians: $2.6 Billion Kim Kardashian, 44, tops the clan's net worth list at $1.7 billion, followed by Kylie Jenner, 27, at $670 million. The Kardashians—close friends with Sanchez—have built their fortunes through business ventures launched off the back of their reality-TV fame. Kim and Kylie are accompanied by their poorer sisters Khloé Kardashian and Kendall Jenner, and momager Kris Jenner, 69, who brought boyfriend Corey Gamble for the gondola ride. Francois-Henri Pinault: $18.8 Billion Francois-Henri Pinault, 63, heir to the Pinault family's massive fortune, is the head of luxury group Kering, which owns brands such as Yves Saint Laurent, Gucci, and Balenciaga. He was spotted without his wife, actress Salma Hayek. Barry Diller and Diane von Fürstenberg: $5.2 Billion Barry Diller, another media mogul, is the chairman of IAC (a co-owner of the Daily Beast) and is attending the festivities with his wife, fashion designer Diane von Fürstenberg. The couple, 83 and 78, are longterm friends of Bezos and Sánchez, and their yacht is said to have inspired the design of Bezo's Koru. Oprah Winfrey: $3.1 Billion The world's richest talk-show host, 71, was pictured boarding a boat after her private jet landed in Venice on Thursday. Oprah Winfrey was accompanied by her best friend, CBS Mornings anchor Gayle King, 70, who took part in Sánchez's 11-minute trip to the edge of space aboard the Blue Origin rocket in April. King and Sanchez declared themselves astronauts; the official definition does not agree. Domenico Dolce and Stefano Gabbana: $4.5 Billion Rumor has it Sánchez chose Dolce & Gabbana for her wedding gown—so, naturally, the men behind the legendary fashion house made the trip to Venice. Like many other guests, Domenico Dolce, 66, and Stefano Gabbana, 62, are staying at five-star hotels situated directly on the Grand Canal, like the Aman and the Gritti Palace. John Elkann: $2.8 Billion John Elkann, 49, (left) is the head of the Agnelli family—a multi-industry business dynasty built by his great-great-grandfather, Fiat founder Giovanni Agnelli. In addition to chairing automaker Stellantis, which makes Dodge and Jeep in the U.S., Elkann is the CEO of Exor, a holding company with controlling stakes in Ferrari, The Economist, and Fiat. He is accompanied by wife Lavinia Borromeo (right). Ari Emanuel: $1 Billion One of Hollywood's most powerful—and wealthiest—talent agents, Emanuel, 64, is linked to Sánchez and Bezos through his agency, Endeavor. He also serves as chairman and CEO of media conglomerate TKO Holdings Group, which owns both the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) and World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE). Emanuel was the real-life inspiration for Ari Gold on the HBO series Entourage. Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner: $840 Million Although her father skipped the occasion, Ivanka Trump, 43, made the trip across the Atlantic with her husband Jared Kushner, 44—who may soon crack the billionaire ranks through his investment firm Affinity Partner—and their three kids. 'Ready to celebrate the love story of our friends,' Ivanka posted on X. Queen Rania of Jordan: $35 Million Rania, 54, has reportedly maintained a close friendship with Bezos and Sánchez ever since Bezos first visited her and her husband, King Abdullah II, 63, at Jordan's royal palace in 2016. She was joined in Venice by her son, Crown Prince Hussein, his wife, Princess Rajwa, and their newborn daughter. Solve the daily Crossword

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