Hailey Bieber Pokes Fun at Candid Moment Between Justin and Kendall Jenner
On Saturday (Aug. 16), the 31-year-old pop superstar shared a series of Instagram photos from a night out with friends at a Los Angeles bar. In one candid shot, Justin — sporting a shaved head and light tank top with baggy pants — appears slightly confused as Jenner, 29, animatedly gestures beside him, seemingly mid-story.
More from Billboard
Justin Bieber Shares Sweet Father-Son Moment With 11-Month-Old Son Jack Blues
Justin Bieber Takes His 'Chicken Legs' for a Night Swim in 'First Place' Music Video: Watch
Eddie Benjamin Talks Working On His Debut Album and Justin Bieber's 'SWAG' At the Same Time: 'We Do Life Together At a Beautiful Level'
Hailey, 28, couldn't resist dropping a cheeky comment aimed at her longtime friend. 'It's always Kendall telling a story with her hands,' the Rhode founder wrote.
Her playful comment quickly racked up hundreds of thousands of likes, with Jenner joining in on the fun by replying, 'God forbid I'm a visual storyteller.'
Hailey and Kendall have been close friends for over a decade. The Kardashians star was part of the Biebers' wedding celebration in 2019, and the two even dressed up as Paris Hilton and Nicole Richie from their Simple Life days for Halloween in 2024.
Earlier this summer, the longtime friends went paintballing together, and the outing quickly turned hilariously competitive. In one moment captured on Kendall's Instagram Story, Hailey playfully flipped her the bird after the game.
Justin also shared several other photos from his night out in L.A., including a cute selfie with Hailey. 'Secrets out we're dating!' she joked in the comments.
The 'All I Can Take' singer's Instagram photo dump also included snaps of himself taking a cigarette break outside the bar, racking pool balls and dancing with a cue stick.
Meanwhile, the Bieber family is gearing up to celebrate their son, Jack Blues' first birthday on Aug. 22. Last month, Justin gave fans a glimpse of their baby boy during a visit to the recording studio, where he was likely working on his latest album, Swag. The project dropped on July 11 and debuted at No. 2 on the Billboard 200.
Check out Bieber's photo with Jenner on Instagram here.
Best of Billboard
Chart Rewind: In 1989, New Kids on the Block Were 'Hangin' Tough' at No. 1
Janet Jackson's Biggest Billboard Hot 100 Hits
H.E.R. & Chris Brown 'Come Through' to No. 1 on Adult R&B Airplay Chart
Solve the daily Crossword
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NBC News
7 minutes ago
- NBC News
Group accused of flooding Ticketmaster with fake accounts to buy 321,000 tickets to Taylor Swift and Springsteen shows
A ticket-reselling operation used a network of fake accounts to bypass Ticketmaster's security protocols to grab hundreds of thousands of tickets to hugely popular tours for artists like Taylor Swift and Bruce Springsteen and then re-sold them for millions, federal regulators said Monday. The Federal Trade Commission alleges the operation used illicit software that masked IP addresses, as well as repurposed credit cards and SIM phone cards, as part of the scheme. It was run through various guises, like TotallyTix and Front Rose Tix, but was run by three key individuals, the agency said. In total, the group is accused of buying 321,286 tickets to 3,261 live performances from June 2022 to December 2023, in bunches of 15 or more tickets to each event at a total cost of approximately $46.7 million and then reselling them for $52.4 million, netting approximately $5.7 million. That includes $1.2 million from reselling tickets in 2023 for Taylor Swift's record-breaking 'The Eras Tour.' In one instance, the suspects used 49 different accounts to purchase 273 tickets for Swift's March 2023 tour stop in Las Vegas, vastly exceeding Ticketmaster's six-ticket limit, which they then sold for $120,000, the FTC alleges. Another part of the alleged scheme involved using friends, family and paid strangers to open Ticketmaster accounts. The FTC says the defendants at one point printed up flyers in places like Baltimore claiming that participants could 'make money doing verified van sign ups' in just '3 easy steps,' earning $5 for the account creation and $5 to $20 each time they received a Verified Fan presale code. Ticketmaster came in for heavy criticism after fans complained of faulty technology and eye-watering prices for 2022 sales for Taylor Swift and Bruce Springsteen's tours. The Verified Fan pre-sale for Swift's tour crashed its site, which it blamed on 'bot attacks' and bot fans who didn't have invite codes. It was subsequently forced to postpone the sale date for the general public seeking tickets to Swift's tour 'due to demands on ticketing systems and insufficient remaining ticket inventory.' In response, Swift alluded to broken 'trust' with Ticketmaster, though she didn't name it directly. 'It's really difficult for me to trust an outside entity with these relationships and loyalties, and excruciating for me to just watch mistakes happen with no recourse,' she wrote in an Instagram message in 2022, adding: 'I'm not going to make excuses for anyone because we asked them multiple times if they could handle this kind of demand and we were assured they could.' Springsteen said in a statement at the time that 'ticket buying has gotten very confusing, not just for the fans, but for the artists also' but that most of his tickets are 'totally affordable.' In March, President Donald Trump signed an executive order focused on curbing exploitative ticket reselling practices that raise costs for fans. On Monday, FTC Chairman Andrew N. Ferguson said Trump's order made clear "that unscrupulous middlemen who harm fans and jack up prices through anticompetitive methods will hear from us.' 'Today's action puts brokers on notice that the Trump-Vance FTC will police operations that unlawfully circumvent ticket sellers' purchase limits, ensuring that consumers have an opportunity to buy tickets at fair prices,' he said in a statement. Ticketmaster itself has remained under federal scrutiny for violating a prior agreement to curb what regulators said was anti-competitive behavior. In 2024, the Justice Department and FTC under President Joe Biden opened a lawsuit against Ticketmaster's parent company, LiveNation, that accused it of monopolizing the live events industry. It was not immediately clear whether that suit is still active, but in July, Ticketmaster and Live Nation sued the FTC to block the investigation, saying that ticket purchases on its site did not use automated software, or bots, and did not violate the 2016 Better Online Ticket Sales (BOTS) Act. Representatives for the FTC and Justice Department did not respond to a request for comment. Ticketmaster is not accused of wrongdoing in the latest suit. It did not respond to a request for comment. Strangely, in the latest complaint, the FTC includes a slide from an internal Ticketmaster presentation from 2018 that suggests the company was weighing the economic impact of imposing stricter purchasing caps that would curb bots but potentially hurt its finances. On a page labeled 'evaluating potential actions' a data table is shown under the heading 'serious negative economic impact if we move to 8 ticket limit across the board.' It also includes an email from one of the defendants in which he 'owns up' to having exceeded the ticket-purchase limit for a May 2024 Bad Bunny show in Miami and offers to have the orders canceled, to which a Ticketmaster rep simply responds that 'as long as the purchases were made using different accounts and cards, it's within the guidelines.' Efforts to reach the three defendants — Taylor Kurth, Elan Rozmaryn and Yair Rozmaryn — named in the suit announced Monday were unsuccessful. In 2018, Kurth signed a deal, or consent decree, with regulators in the state of Washington that committed him to not use software designed to circumvent companies' security policies. The FTC is seeking unspecified damages and civil penalties against the defendants.

USA Today
36 minutes ago
- USA Today
Hailey Bieber's Rhode officially gets a Sephora launch date
A launch date for Hailey Bieber's much-loved skin and makeup brand Rhode at Sephora has finally been announced. The beauty retail giant, in a post on Instagram, announced the brand will be arriving in stores and online Sept. 4. Consumers can expect the brand's viral products, including peptide lip treatments, glazing milk and pocket blushes to be available at Sephora, according to the preview. Rhode initially announced its Sephora launch back in May. 'We're beyond excited to share that Rhode's collection of curated skincare and hybrid makeup is coming to Sephora this fall," the brand previously said. "From day one, it's been our dream to bring efficacious, intentional skincare and beauty essentials to as many people as possible." "We're so happy to be partnering with Sephora to help us bring the world of Rhode to more people and expand our global community," the statement added. Rhode bought by e.l.f. Rhode's launch at Sephora comes about three months after the brand was snapped up by e.l.f. Beauty for about $1 billion. Bieber at the time had said the sale marked "an incredible opportunity to elevate and accelerate our ability to reach more of our community with even more innovative products and widen our distribution globally." Rhode, which launched in 2022, has become hugely popular among Gen Z and millennials. It gained popularity with TikTok viral products such as its peptide lip treatments, glazing milk and pocket blushes. Rhode products were previously only available through its own website or pop-up stores, with sales relying heavily on Bieber's social media influence. New Rhode lip tint: Hailey Bieber drops new lip tint, following Justin Bieber's 'iconic' shout-out Contributing: Reuters Saman Shafiq is a trending news reporter for USA TODAY. Reach her at sshafiq@ and follow her on X and Instagram @saman_shafiq7.


Forbes
37 minutes ago
- Forbes
Blackpink May Be About To Beat Its Own Radio Record
A month ago, Blackpink kicked off a new era with a hugely anticipated and high-energy single. The South Korean girl group dropped 'Jump' in July, and the hard electronic cut quickly became a global sensation, as is the case with everything the four women release. 'Jump' is on the decline on several Billboard charts in America, but the song is picking up steam at pop radio. As it advances significantly, Blackpink cements its status as one of the most successful K-pop girl groups of all time – again. Blackpink's Ascent on the Pop Airplay Chart 'Jump' leaps from No. 30 to No. 23 on the Pop Airplay chart, the most competitive of the three pop radio rankings published by Billboard every frame. In its fourth turn on the tally, 'Jump' coincidentally becomes the fourth-highest-rising hit of all time by a K-pop girl group, and it could easily increase its standing again. Fifty Fifty Still Leads So far, just one tune credited to a girl group known primarily for creating K-pop has reached the top 10 on the Pop Airplay chart. 'Cupid' became a breakout smash for Fifty Fifty, flying all the way to No. 7. 'Golden,' which is credited to fake girl group Huntr/X as well as Ejae, Audrey Nuna and Rei Ami, the actual human singers from the KPop Demon Hunters soundtrack, currently appears at No. 20, and just like Blackpink's 'Jump,' it is quickly ascending. 'Jump' sits just two spaces behind another Blackpink track, 'Ice Cream,' the group's collaboration with Selena Gomez. That composition still stands as the outfit's highest-rising win, as it stalled at No. 21 several years back. 'Jump' Could Soon Leap to a Historic New High At the rate that 'Jump' has been surging, it could tie, or perhaps even pass, 'Ice Cream' in a few days, or maybe another week or two. Last frame, when 'Jump' counted No. 30 as its high point, the tune ranked as the fifth-highest-peaking hit by any K-pop girl group on the Pop Airplay chart. In fourth place was 'I Do' by (G)I-dle, which only made it to No. 26 before turning around and then quickly disappearing. Blackpink's New Single Remains a Top 10 Win While 'Jump' is on the downswing, the Blackpink cut still lives inside the top 10 on almost every Billboard tally on which it appears. The tune holds inside the highest tier on both the Billboard Global 200 and Billboard Global Excl. U.S., as well as a trio of genre-specific rosters in America: the Hot Dance/Electronic Songs, Dance Streaming Songs, and Dance Digital Song Sales charts, where it currently appears at Nos. 3, 5, and 7, respectively.