
Junior Andre reveals dream collaborations with Jorja Smith and Joyner Lucas
The 20-year-old singer - whose parents are pop star Peter Andre and his ex-wife Katie Price - is at the beginning of his music career but he is already thinking about who he would like to work with in the future and those two artists are at the top of his list.
Speaking exclusively to Lulu Eagle for BANG Showbiz at the launch of Men and Their Emotions (M.A.T.E) - a new mental health charity for men - on Friday night (18.07.25) at Indigo at The O2, he said: "I'm honestly so open, there are so many artists I would love to collab with. Maybe Jorja Smith on a little vibe - she's got a great voice. Joyner Lucas… he's sick.'
Junior - who signed a major record deal with Columbia Records at just 16, the same label behind Harry Styles and Calvin Harris - says making music is a daily ritual, shaped entirely by how he feels in the moment.
He added: "I pretty much make music every day and it depends on the vibe I'm feeling. Sometimes I'll tap into mental health stuff, sometimes I'm happy and I'll tap into summer stuff. It all depends.'
As his career continues to grow, with new music and an acting role alongside his father in the upcoming musical Finding My Voice, Junior has one piece of advice he lives by, stay humble.
He said: 'Always remain grounded, remember where you come from, be nice to people, man. Kindness goes a long way. Don't be mean, treat people with respect. We're all the same, no one is different. Love people, be kind, be real.'
The Only One singer is a vocal advocate for mental health, especially among young men, urging them to open up emotionally and challenge outdated ideas of masculinity.
He said: 'I think guys need to speak up about it. Everyone does, but a lot of guys don't, and I think it's so important.
'Your mental health is everything. In fact, it's more important than your physical health - because if your mental health is in the right place, it can help your physical health.
'Being a man is being able to be open, speaking about your emotions. People don't realise, but when you speak about your emotions you actually instantly feel relieved. Better. It's very good for you.
'If you don't, and you let it all bottle in - it's only gonna go one way.'
M.A.T.E (Men and Their Emotions) is a new UK-based mental health charity, founded by comedian and rapper Daniel O'Reilly - best known as his comedy persona Dapper Laughs.
Inspired by his own battles with addiction and mental health, the organisation is dedicated to encouraging men to open up emotionally, break down stigma around male vulnerability, and create safe spaces for honest conversation, support, and connection.
Follow Lulu Eagle on Instagram at _altereagle_ and Lulu_Eagle for more showbiz exclusives.
Hashtags

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

News.com.au
5 hours ago
- News.com.au
Scottie Scheffler clears the air on British Open fart-gate
The Scottie Scheffler fart-gate took a brand new twist. On the 17th hole at the British Open last Thursday, when Scheffler was chipping to the green, the broadcast feed picked up someone passing gas. While some thought a fan was the culprit, Scheffler completely changed the narrative this week, the New York Post reports. Scheffler was featured on Barstool Sports' 'Pardon My Take' podcast and shed light on who is really to blame for the incident — himself. 'Yeah, that was me,' Scheffler admitted on the show. 'Oh yeah, that was me. 'You're out there for like six hours, you're eating some different food over there. Some stuff is going to happen. 'You never know with the boom mics there, you never know what they're going to pick up. I'm definitely surprised it hasn't happened more in the past picking up stuff like that. I literally didn't think anything about it then after we got inside, Xander [Schauffele] was showing me the video. He pulls up the video and I see myself standing on 17, and I'm like, 'Oh, I know what this is.'' Now that the truth is out, the gas might've helped fuel his shot as Scheffler almost chipped it straight into the hole. Scheffler finished Thursday 3-under par and continued to ride high into the weekend before he ran away with the British Open crown, his first time winning that major. The chasing group behind him never got within four strokes on the final day. Scheffler, before winning the event, was the world No. 1 golfer and the betting favourite to win the Claret Jug. 'It is a pretty special feeling,' Scheffler said after winning. 'It was a tough week; I battled hard all weekend. Today, once again, was a battle, but [I] played some really good golf. I'm fortunate to be standing here holding the trophy.' The British Open now gives Scheffler the third of the four major trophies in golf, as he needs the U.S. Open to complete the career grand slam.

ABC News
6 hours ago
- ABC News
How The Veronicas' 'Untouched' became their Hottest 100 debut in 2025
Please stand for your national anthem and number three placegetter in the Hottest 100 of Australian songs — 'Untouched' by The Veronicas. Written in Los Angeles by the sister duo of Jess and Lisa Origliasso, with German producer and songwriter Toby Gad whose credits include Beyoncé, John Legend, Fergie, Nicole Scherzinger and more), 'Untouched' explores the all-encompassing longing that's felt when you're physically separated from those you love. In The Veronicas' case, being on the other side of the world and away from their family in their early 20s. Released in 2007 and recognised as the Australian response to alternative pop icons like Avril Lavigne and P!NK, 'Untouched' was the first single in the US and UK from Hook Me Up, The Veronicas' second album, and delivered the sisters their first taste of international attention. Defying the hesitations of their record label at the time, 'Untouched' peaked at number two in Australia, number one in Ireland and reached the top 10 in Czech Republic, Canada, the Netherlands, the UK and New Zealand. Locking in double platinum in the US, and platinum in Australia and Ireland, 'Untouched' truly established The Veronicas as a pop force to be reckoned with. But it had never made a Hottest 100 countdown, until now. The power-pop heater opens with those iconic strings and then explodes into its fast-paced lyricism and tempo to match. It's certifiably a speedy song. Sitting at 177 BPM, 'Untouched' is one of the most amped-up tracks in the entire Hottest 100 of Australian Songs, narrowly behind Amyl and the Sniffers' 'Hertz' at 185 BPM. Something about them just makes you want to get up and go , and that's in the beat. The music video is an iconic piece of Australian cinematic history in itself. Filmed at the Marble Bar at Sydney's Hilton Hotel, it captures the essence of edgy teen fashion in the mid-2000s. Black lace, sweeping fringes, heavy eyeliner — a gothic, baroque moment seen throughout the era (looking at you, Panic! At The Disco and Fall Out Boy). It's no surprise that The Veronicas launched their own fashion range in major Australian department stores shortly after. While 'Untouched' had its time in pop culture around the time of its release — notably in TV series such as The Hills and 90210 — the song lived primarily in '00s pop party and throwback playlists until it found a renewed audience with the queer community. After Jessica was outed by tabloids at age 20, and just beginning her career, she famously dated Ruby Rose on and off from 2008 to 2018. She later got engaged to her partner Alex Smith in late 2022. "It was weird to have it written about so publicly because you don't really see that anymore. I was 20," Jessica told Stellar Magazine in 2023. "I didn't want to give them an answer because I didn't know what the answer was at the time. Labels were loaded back then. But all our fans knew I was queer; I wrote about it in so many songs." Fast forward to 2019 where the pair introduced 'Untouched' at LA Pride as "the national gay anthem", cementing the LGBTQIA+ community as the custodians of the power pop hit. "People say that we gave the gays 'Untouched,' but it was actually the gays that gave us 'Untouched'." "Because we literally grew up influenced by all the music that was defining queer culture," Jessica told Nylon Magazine in 2019. "So, of course, we were going to go on to create music that reflected that. 'Untouched' doesn't say 'I want to kiss a girl,' that's 'Take Me on the Floor'. There's no overt language in 'Untouched', but it's something about that song." Back home in Australia, The Veronicas struck the sweet spot when they joined Allday at Splendour In The Grass in 2019, bringing a whack of 2000s nostalgia to the stage. Their trap-infused remix of the song countless young Aussies had on their childhood iPods catapulted Jessica and Lisa into the zeitgeist, and ushered in a whole generation of new fans. This new legion of fans showed their love for the track in the way a chronically-online generation knows how: memes. Lots and lots of memes. Most recently, 'Untouched' has featured in the psychological supernatural horror Bring Her Back by fellow Australian power twins, Danny and Michael Philippou. "You're always trying to find songs that tie into the themes of the film or tie into something we're trying to convey," Danny told triple j. "And Laura's a character that when she's in these uncomfortable situations, she blasts music to try and cope with her nerves." So how do The Veronicas feel about a track they wrote 17 years ago having new life breathed into it? "It's literally the dream as a songwriter and as a performer," Lisa told Lucy Smith in 2023. "It was the first song for our second album. For us we took everything that we learned and we took a risk with 'Untouched' because at the time the genre and style of music that it was wasn't being played on radio. Lady Gaga hadn't even come out yet, so electro pop rock just wasn't a thing. "For this to be the blueprint of The Veronicas that people really feel like solidifies our sound is, for us, just the highest compliment." 'Untouched' is a song that has lasted the test of time, seen an artist through the bell curve of rising, falling and rising popularity, and now reached the podium of the best Australian Songs. The Veronicas are truly untouchable.


Perth Now
7 hours ago
- Perth Now
Meet the Aussie duo rewiring comedy
In early 2020, appearing on the YouTube interview show Hot Ones, legendary comedian Will Ferrell mused on the future of comedy. Comedy clubs were back then and are now a shadow of their former selves and mere days ago CBS announced the cancellation of The Late Night Show with Stephen Colbert after 33 years on air, 10 of those with Colbert as host. But laughs aren't dead, they're just online now. Social media is proving the new frontier for comedians looking to cut their teeth, allowing budding comics to record sketches, develop characters and grow a platform without the aid of more traditional pathways. Half the world away from that Ferrell interview, comedy duo Swag on the Beat started life in a Melbourne supermarket after an innocent one-take video poking fun at Covid supermarket etiquette gathered almost 30,000 views. Melbourne duo Swag On The Beat made up of Isaac Gibbons and Jack Say. David Crosling Credit: News Corp Australia Today, the duo – made up of Jack Say, 28, and Isaac Gibbons, 29 – have amassed more than 3.3 million followers across Instagram, TikTok and Facebook. Having recently completed a live show tour around Australia, New Zealand and England, Say and Gibbons agreed with Ferrell's assessment that there was no substitute for honing a comedian's craft quite like performing in front of a crowd. However, they argued the nature of social media management meant nowadays comics needed to be a 'jack of all trades'. 'It was an amazing cutting of the teeth moment for us,' Say told NewsWire. 'We learned so much about live audiences, but it feels like now – you hear musicians talk about it as well – not only do you have to 'make the music', but you have to be the advertiser and you have to do all the social media stuff that comes along with it. 'It feels like you almost have to be a jack of all trades and to service each platform with what it requires in order to have a grip in the industry.' The boys just reached one million followers on Instagram alone. David Crosling Credit: News Corp Australia Continuing the aspiration of multi-platform mastery, the duo have cracked into the podcast space. It's a dangerous time to make the move. Internet commentators have complained the market is now so over-saturated that the sale of podcasting equipment ought to be restricted or banned. The boys, however, are finding the change of pace a welcome return to the ad lib comedy style of their younger years. 'Speaking for myself, I wasn't a huge podcast guy, so I guess I was always astounded by the amount of podcasts out there that have strong listenership,' Gibbons said. 'Obviously, it's a growing platform and there's people that listen to all kinds of content. And I think rather than talking other people down or focusing on how types of podcasts that don't deserve listeners, get listeners, maybe it's worth acknowledging that there's all kinds of listeners for different types of content and trying to tap into that, appreciate that everyone listens to different stuff and try to make something that can appeal to a lot of people.' Making content that is appealing to a wide spate of people is no easy task in the modern world and it's something that Say and Gibbons have made pains to improve on in recent years. 'We were talking about this earlier today actually. Something we've crystallised since the start of Swag and we're getting closer and closer to is being able to provide content that anyone can listen to,' Say said. Comedy legend Barry Humphries is among the boys' role models. Openart AI Credit: Supplied 'If you're 15 or 75, we would like to create stuff that anyone can enjoy, anyone can palate. 'While being fresh and interesting is kind of the goal for us, we don't want to exclude any group or person or people from our stuff. 'It's that classic line from when they wrote the Mr. Bean TV show. 'If a joke couldn't be understood by people in Egypt, then it didn't get in'. He's on the extreme level where he didn't even speak, but we're sort of taking a leaf out of that book, which is: Does this allow everyone who can hear and watch our stuff the chance to enjoy it? 'There's only so much you can do as two guys, but we feel like we're getting better at dividing our time and energy up into multiple parts of the industry, which feels like an essential thing.' It's difficult to put your finger on Australian comedy in the same way you can identify dry British humour or brazen American comedies, and the nature of social media skits as an emerging form of content means prospective filmers may lack the comic role models of other mediums. However the boys cast the net wide and believe the vagueness offers an opportunity to cherry pick and aspire to the best. 'We're big fans of Chris Lilly, everything done by Chris Lilly,' Gibbons said. Australian icon in Chris Lilley as Jonah Takalua. Supplied Credit: Supplied 'I love the character comedy and the way he can very convincingly play all different types of characters. Sacha Baron Cohen as well. 'I think the Godfather of Australian comedy, Barry Humphries, is of course iconic. Flight of the Concords is a duo who has a hilarious dynamic and incorporates music which we try to do as well.' '(American and British humour) both are incredible, but I suppose beyond personal preference of the comedy styles, as Australia does in many other ways, we sort of take little bits of longstanding cultures that we like and try and incorporate them into our own things,' Say added. 'Maybe there's a bit of that going on that is forming the Australian comedy style.' The duo has partnered with KitKat to release a line of Commuter Camouflage Hoodies and are celebrating reaching one million followers on Instagram by throwing a party at the Railway Hotel in Brunswick on Saturday, August 30, announcing a secret project they've 'been working on for months'.