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Lady Gaga ‘Mayhem' review: An all-out pop microcosm of her career so far

Lady Gaga ‘Mayhem' review: An all-out pop microcosm of her career so far

Yahoo07-03-2025

For Lady Gaga, MAYHEM arrives at a pivotal time in Mother Monster's career. Even if the soaring electro-pop of 'Abracadabra' has become a global hit, Gaga recently admitted that she had been reluctant to look back on similar past successes.
'I didn't want to make this kind of music for a long time even though I had it in me. I felt like being stagnant was just death in my artistry,' she told Zane Lowe.
Instead of that aforementioned stagnancy, Gaga ha thankfully combed through her own discography to once again remind everyone that all-out pop music is what she does best. A career high can be found in the multi-facetted dance funk avant-garde drama of 'Vanish Into You'. Now, that might seem like a lot, but Gaga's everything and the kitchen sink approach to the album (and her music as a whole) somehow works perfectly and joyfully. The very DNA that made her previous records like The Fame and Born This Way a success are alive and breathing. Gaga may not have invented distorted production and stuttering pre-choruses, but she does them in a way that no one else can.
As a self-proclaimed 'student of music', Gaga wears her influences on her sleeve throughout. This is most evident on the Michael Jackson- infused 'Shadow Of A Man' to the Bowie-meets-Prince funk of 'Killah (feat Gesaffelstein)'. Like her Bowie tribute/cosplay from her now infamous performance of the late stars hits at the 58th GRAMMY Awards, the outcome can feel overproduced and underwritten at times. This can be equal parts cringe and, oddly, charming.
Not one to follow trends (may it be fashion or music), the exploration into sounds from the 80s feels fresh and exciting. The 90s grunge through a pop lens 'Perfect Celebrity' speaks of a star that has felt a lot of torture and pressure because of said stardom. 'You love to hate me/I'm the perfect celebrity' Gaga sings. Fame has been a subject Gaga has referenced a lot in her career, but it feels like a self-assured iteration of previous musings. The fame is now something Gaga can fully navigate and own.
In looking back, Gaga has delivered an album that acts as an effective and powerful microcosm of her inspirational career so far.

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Forbes Travel Guide's Best Hotel Bars For 2025
Forbes Travel Guide's Best Hotel Bars For 2025

Forbes

time10 hours ago

  • Forbes

Forbes Travel Guide's Best Hotel Bars For 2025

Hotel bars have become destinations in their own right. The finest examples are familiar yet transporting, offering a welcome respite for weary travelers, a launching pad for an exciting night out or the elegance of a perfectly crafted cocktail. The inaugural Forbes Travel Guide Star Bars for 2025 honors the world's most exceptional hotel bar experiences. A timeless icon such as Monaco's Le Bar Américain at the Hôtel de Paris Monte-Carlo demonstrates daily why it's endured since the 1930s, with its jazzy ambiance and nightly music drawing illustrious fans from Josephine Baker to Lady Gaga. Then there are new favorites such as the BKK Social Club at the Four Seasons Hotel Bangkok at Chao Phraya River's, which connects Asia with North and South America, showcasing Mexico-inspired drinks in a dazzling Art Nouveau space that evokes Buenos Aires. The inaugural list also includes sky bars—including SkyHigh on the 60th floor of the Four Seasons Hotel Philadelphia and the Lounge & Bar on the 102nd floor of The Ritz-Carlton, Hong Kong—and old school drinking dens, like Rosewood London's Scarfes Bar, which draws from English caricaturist Gerald Scarfe's famous works, and Kimpton Seafire Resort + Spa's Library by the Sea, a Grand Cayman hot spot that interprets literary works through creative cocktails. Forbes Travel Guide recognized 58 bars this year to celebrate its 1958 founding as Mobil Travel Guide. And FTG's expert, incognito inspectors visited each one, sampling cocktails on multiple visits. The winners were determined by data collected as part of FTG's 2024 and 2025 Star Ratings, based on several exacting standards. The top bars achieved the highest scores for their beverage program and presentation, as well as providing seamless service and an exceptional guest experience. FTG also focused on publicly accessible hotel bars. London rang up the most accolades with seven bars, followed by Paris with five and Dubai at four. When it comes to brands, Four Seasons Hotels & Resorts earned eight spots, and Rosewood Hotels & Resorts, St. Regis Hotels & Resorts and The Ritz-Carlton Hotel Company tied with five winners each. 'These awards highlight sophisticated ambiance, elevated service, artfully curated wine lists and cocktails that are skillfully crafted and creatively presented," says Bastien Gardrat, Forbes Travel Guide's Global Spirits Ambassador. 'These are elements that come together to create an unforgettable hotel bar experience.' Here are the Star Bars for 2025 The Study at Four Seasons Hotel, Macao VIRTÙ at Four Seasons Hotel Tokyo at Otemachi Wing Lei Bar at Wynn Palace, Macau

SNL: We Pick the 15 Funniest Sketches of Season 50 — Watch Video
SNL: We Pick the 15 Funniest Sketches of Season 50 — Watch Video

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

SNL: We Pick the 15 Funniest Sketches of Season 50 — Watch Video

Saturday Night Live's landmark 50th season has come and gone… and as usual, it left us with plenty of big laughs. NBC's sketch comedy institution wrapped up Season 50 last month, bringing back lots of familiar faces along the way, with cameos from legendary alumni like Adam Sandler and Tina Fey. But SNL delivered some instant-classic sketches this season, too — maybe even ones we'll still be talking about 50 years from now. (We'll probably have to explain to our grandchildren who or what Moo Deng was, though.) More from TVLine #OneChicago: Find Out Which Stars Are Set to Return This Fall - Plus, Fire, Med and P.D. Episode Counts Revealed Outlander's Jamie and Claire Get Goofy in Bed and Other Season 7 Bloopers - Watch Exclusive Reel AGT Just Brought Back Two Acts for Redemption in Season 20 - and One Got a Golden Buzzer! (Watch) We're celebrating the end of another SNL season — and a half-century of Studio 8H greatness — by looking back at the funniest Season 50 sketches, from uproarious live moments to pre-taped short films to Weekend Update characters we hope to see a lot more of in future seasons. Our favorite sketches include stellar work from hosts like Ariana Grande, John Mulaney and… Lady Gaga? Who knew she was a comedy powerhouse? (Note: In the interest of fairness, we left off any sketches from February's live SNL50 anniversary special — although those were fantastic, too. Click here for a full rundown.) Read on to see which Season 50 sketches made the cut — press PLAY on the photo that accompanies each entry to watch the sketch in full — and be sure to hit the comments below and let us know if we left off any of your favorites. This short film is a real emotional roller coaster, telling the tale of a cute monkey that was sent into outer space at the dawn of the Space Race — and might not make it back home. The Mad Men-era period detail is exquisite here, and Beppo's story actually becomes genuinely poignant at times. (We're rooting for you, Beppo!) But John Mulaney and company make sure to weave lots of absurd humor into the mix, even when things go dark. (And zero forever.) Ariana Grande really showed off her vocal range in this goofy trip back to the Italian Renaissance, playing a young boy who has an incredibly high singing voice… thanks to an involuntary castration. (Poor Antonio.) The sight gag of Grande's haunted face is priceless, and SNL greats Maya Rudolph and Andy Samberg even pop in to explain the castration process in broad Italian accents: 'We never cut. We just-a twist!' Weekend Update anchors Colin Jost and Michael Che's annual joke swap is always a good time, where they write incredibly offensive jokes for each other to read on air without seeing them first. They really outdo themselves here, though, with Jost comparing his wife Scarlett Johansson's, um, private area to Costco roast beef — with a shocked Johansson watching live backstage. She did eventually get an apology from Che… penned by Jost, of course. Yes, Shane Gillis bombed hard with his controversial monologue — and his episode earned a 'F' grade from TVLine readers — but we did find a silver lining in this commercial parody, where Gillis hawks a tried-and-true medication for men facing anxiety and depression: Just down a couple beers! His confidence goes through the roof, and he uses the wonder drug to cope with everything from 'winter' to 'museum.' (Watch it here.) No frills or cameos here: This is just a good old-fashioned hilarious sketch, led by new featured player Ashley Padilla as a wife who tells embarrassingly horrible jokes at a company dinner. (Or just one embarrassingly horrible joke, really. Over and over again.) Padilla's magnificently over-the-top delivery won our hearts immediately. She better be back next season, Lorne. SNL pays tribute to a cultural staple with this fake ad for every older woman's favorite accessory: little red glasses! (They say, 'I teach Philosophy of Dance, and I eat tapas every night.') Lady Gaga's Noo Yawk accent is fantastically on point here, and the heightening rises to absurd levels: 'I have a Celestial Seasonings credit card!' Two keys to making a great SNL sketch: (1) Give Kenan Thompson a crazy character to play, and (2) let him cook. Here, he plays rock'n'roll legend Little Richard, who repeatedly pops up on a cheesy '90s family sitcom for some reason. 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The sheer star wattage here is almost overwhelming, but they bring the jokes, too, including Kristen Wiig's weird sexual energy and a delightful reunion of 30 Rock stars Tina Fey and Alec Baldwin. For SNL junkies, this is a real Christmas gift. This glorious Weekend Update character, with Bowen Yang playing the cute baby hippo that became a viral sensation, offers both high and low comedy. On one hand, we get a painfully pretentious Moo Deng complaining about his sudden fame, a la Chappell Roan. ('I will not be making an endorsement in this year's election.') And on the other, we get Yang in a hippo suit trying to drink water from a hose fired right at his face. Truly the best of both worlds. Walton Goggins turns the sleaze factor up to 11 for this riotous sketch, playing a wildly flirty waiter entertaining a pair of middle-aged moms at a Mother's Day brunch — and annoying their sons. 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Bruno Mars Brings His Star-Making Hits Back To The Charts
Bruno Mars Brings His Star-Making Hits Back To The Charts

Forbes

time2 days ago

  • Forbes

Bruno Mars Brings His Star-Making Hits Back To The Charts

Bruno Mars's "Uptown Funk" and "Just the Way You Are" return to Billboard's global charts, joining ... More his current smashes "Die With a Smile" and "Apt." LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - APRIL 03: (L-R) Bruno Mars of Silk Sonic accepts Song Of The Year for 'Leave The Door Open' onstage during the 64th Annual GRAMMY Awards at MGM Grand Garden Arena on April 03, 2022 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo byfor The Recording Academy) Bruno Mars has been a global superstar for nearly two decades, and while many pop stars see their careers fade by this point – long before this point, actually – the singer-songwriter and producer is still just as hot as ever. In late 2024, he landed two of the biggest hits of his career, with "Die With a Smile" with Lady Gaga and "Apt." with Rosé. As those tunes approach their one-year anniversary on the charts, they have hardly faded. At the same time that those cuts are riding high, several of the tracks that made Mars a household name return to worldwide rankings. A pair of Mars's most famous smashes reappear on Billboard's global lists this week. Both compositions find their way back to just one roster apiece, and they do so on different tallies. "Uptown Funk," his collaboration with Mark Ronson, returns to the Billboard Global Excl. U.S. at No. 190. The tally ranks the most consumed tunes throughout the world, blending sales and streaming data, with all U.S.-based listening excluded. Over on the Billboard Global 200 — which does include U.S. plays and purchases — "Just the Way You Are" returns at No. 192. It has no need to break back onto the Billboard Global Excl. U.S., where this time around it slips just two spots to No. 179. The two worldwide favorites have experienced different journeys on the rankings they appear on. "Just the Way You Are" is the higher-peaking of the two, having previously climbed to No. 69 on the Billboard Global 200, and No. 58 on the Billboard Global Excl. U.S. Meanwhile, "Uptown Funk" has only reached as high as No. 116 on the Billboard Global Excl. U.S., and it's not even present on the all-encompassing roster. However, on that latter tally, "Uptown Funk" does best "Just the Way You Are," which only peaked at No. 177. That said, "Just the Way You Are" has spent more time on the Billboard Global 200 than "Uptown Funk" has on the Billboard Global Excl. U.S. — more than twice as many weeks — as it seems that American consumption of Mars's breakout solo smash continues to prove incredibly important to the cut. Mars currently fills four spaces on both global rankings. "Die With a Smile" is still present at No. 2 after spending months at the summit and scoring 41 weeks on the lists. "Apt." also holds steady in third place. That tune traded spots with "Die With a Smile" for months at a time, and the two rank among the most successful cuts ever on these charts.

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