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Thursday, August 31, 2023

Little Debbie Announced A Fall Ice Cream Collaboration That You Won't Want To Miss - Southern Living

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Alongside the (albeit welcome) wave of pumpkin spice that descends upon us each fall comes a host of autumnal flavors and nutmeg-infused products we can’t wait to try. Fall in the South is, luckily, still warm enough to relish a cold bite of ice cream, and a recent announcement from Little Debbie and Hudsonville Ice Cream has us eager to pull out our spoons.

Based in Collegedale, Tennessee, Little Debbie has endeared the hearts of Southerners since the beloved snack cakes line was first introduced by the McKee family in 1960. Though treats like Honey Buns, Cosmic Brownies, Oatmeal Creme Pies, and Nutty Buddy Wafer Bars are hard to top, the brand’s seasonal selections have quickly risen in popularity and dominate snack shelves—especially from September through December. Fun fact: American shoppers purchase more than 2,100 Little Debbie products per minute!

Little Debbie / Hudsonville Ice Cream

Now, in collaboration with another family owned brand, Little Debbie is launching four limited-edition fall ice cream flavors inspired by some of their best-selling snack cake sweets:

  • Apple Fruit Pies ice cream: Cinnamon-vanilla ice cream base swirled with apple pie filling and pie crumbs
  • Chocolate Chip Creme Pies ice cream: Vanilla creme ice cream base dotted with chocolate chip cookie pieces
  • Turtle Brownies ice cream: Brownie batter-flavored ice cream base filled with brownie dough, crushed peanuts, and a caramel swirl
  • Pumpkin Delights ice cream: Pumpkin-flavored ice cream base with a spiced cookie swirl

These fall ice cream flavors are available in pints beginning September 4 exclusively at Walmart while supplies last.

“Hudsonville and Little Debbie are thrilled to jump on the seasonal flavor craze with these four popular snack cakes-inspired ice creams,” said Hudsonville Ice Cream’s chief marketing officer Rob Heider. “Hudsonville is proud of our thriving relationship with Little Debbie…we strive to create accessible products at a good value that are made with real ice cream and quality ingredients.”

We’d encourage you to top some of your favorite homemade fall treats with this array of festive flavors—maybe pairing Pumpkin Delights ice cream with Pumpkin Pecan Coffee Cake or Apple Fruit Pies ice cream with warm Cinnamon Roll Casserole.

What a delicious way to celebrate the season!

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September 01, 2023 at 05:49AM
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Little Debbie Announced A Fall Ice Cream Collaboration That You Won't Want To Miss - Southern Living

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Florence Pugh Defends Her 'Little Cute Nipples' | Entertainment | derbyinformer.com - The Derby Informer

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Florence Pugh Defends Her 'Little Cute Nipples' | Entertainment | derbyinformer.com  The Derby Informer The Link Lonk


August 31, 2023 at 11:56PM
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Florence Pugh Defends Her 'Little Cute Nipples' | Entertainment | derbyinformer.com - The Derby Informer

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Leave Florence Pugh and Her 'Little Cute Nipples' Alone! - Pajiba Entertainment News

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Florence Pugh a.k.a. the world’s brightest hope for replacing Meryl Streep, does not give a hoot about what you think about nipples, or her body at all for that matter.

Pugh is the cover star for the October Elle UK, and for that issue, she talked to Jodie Turner-Smith, another actress we should cling to for dear life, about her personal style and her approach to body positivity.

“I speak the way I do about my body because I’m not trying to hide the cellulite on my thigh or the squidge in between my arm and my boob: I would much rather lay it all out,” she said, inspiring me to start a petition to get the part of the armpit between the boob and the arm to be officially referred to as “the squidge” in medical textbooks.

She reflected on the controversy over the sheer pink gown she wore to the Valentino Haute Couture fashion show last summer, which made her nipples visible, causing Puritan shock and awe.

“It’s the freedom that people are scared of; the fact I’m comfortable and happy. Keeping women down by commenting on their bodies has worked for a very long time. I think we’re in this swing now where lots of people are saying, ‘I don’t give a shit.’ Unfortunately, we’ve become so terrified of the human body that we can’t even look at my two little cute nipples behind fabric in a way that isn’t sexual. We need to keep reminding everybody that there is more than one reason for women’s bodies [to exist].”

She added that when she was walking the red carpet in that dress, “Every woman I walked past would say, ‘You look like you’re having so much fun.’ And I was!”

“Women were drawn to the fact that I was completely happy. That’s been a massive aspect of my career and my life: accepting who I am, and not running away from it,” she concluded.

Florence Pugh for Meryl Streep and for president. Well, she’s British, so I guess she can’t be president, but you know what I mean.


Header Image Source: Getty Images

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August 31, 2023 at 10:08PM
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Leave Florence Pugh and Her 'Little Cute Nipples' Alone! - Pajiba Entertainment News

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Wednesday, August 30, 2023

Trump offers advice to Ramaswamy: 'Be a little bit careful' with what you say so you aren't 'controversial' - Fox News

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Former President Trump offered unsolicited advice to GOP rival Vivek Ramaswamy, who has garnered a lot of attention in recent weeks. 

Appearing on Glenn Beck's show Tuesday, Trump was asked whether he's considering a "Vice President Ramaswamy" as he was watching the first Republican presidential debate last week.

"Well, I think he's great. Look, anybody that said, I'm the best president in a generation. I don't know, you have to define generation. That's a long time," Trump quipped. "He said it a couple of times. And he said it in 100 years. So I have to like a guy like that. You know, I can't get upset with him."

FLASHBACK: RAMASWAMY'S ‘BOUGHT AND PAID FOR’ DEBATE ATTACK ECHOES SIMILAR LINE TRUMP WAS BOOED FOR IN 2016 

Donald Trump

Former President Trump showered GOP rival Vivek Ramaswamy with praise during an interview with Glenn Beck. (Sean Rayford/Getty Images, File)

Trump hailed Ramaswamy as being a "smart," "young guy" and a "very intelligent person" who has "a lot of talent" and "good energy."

"He could be some form of something, I'd tell you. I think he'd be very good. I think he's very good. I think he's really distinguished himself," Trump said. 

RAMASWAMY SAYS HE ‘WON'T CUT AID TO ISRAEL' UNTIL ‘ISRAEL TELL US SO’ AS HE FACES QUESTIONS ON FOREIGN POLICY 

Vivek Ramaswamy at Fox News debate

Trump was asked whether he was considering a "Vice President Ramaswamy" as he was watching the political newcomer at last week's presidential debate.  (Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

The GOP frontrunner went on to warn the political newcomer that he was becoming "a little bit controversial."

"He's starting to get out there a little bit. He's a little bit — getting a little bit controversial. I'd tell him be a little bit careful. Some things you have to hold in just a little bit, right?" Trump said before adding "But he's got a lot of good energy, and he's been very nice to me."

Ramaswamy spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin told Fox News Digital, "If I'm a betting woman, I wouldn't expect Vivek to hold back much!"

The entrepreneur-turned-2024 GOP hopeful has repeatedly said he has zero interest in becoming Trump's running mate.

VIVEK RAMASWAMY RESPONDS TO RECENT MEDIA FIRESTORMS: ‘MY POSITION HAS BEEN CARICATURED’

Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy

Entrepreneur and 2024 Presidential hopeful Vivek Ramaswamy went viral after rapping Enimem's "Lose Yourself" at the Iowa State Fair. (Stefani Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images, File)

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The former president maintains a dominant lead in the GOP primary race, holding a 40-point advantage over the rest of the field according to the RealClearPolitics average of polls. Ramaswamy has seen his polling go up in recent weeks, averaging in third place behind Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis.

Trump is certainly no stranger to controversy as he was hit with four indictment this year, the first from New York over hush money payments that were made to porn star Stormy Daniels during the 2016 election, two federal indictments over his handling of classified documents and his actions leading up to Jan. 6, and more recently from Georgia's Fulton County over his attempt to reverse the state's 2020 election victory for President Biden. 

Last week, Trump got his mugshot taken as part of the Georgia indictment, which has fueled a huge spike in campaign fundraising exceeding $20 million for the month of August.

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August 31, 2023 at 07:55AM
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Trump offers advice to Ramaswamy: 'Be a little bit careful' with what you say so you aren't 'controversial' - Fox News

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Netflix's fall movie lineup has a little something for everyone - The Verge

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This fall, Netflix is breaking the heat with new films from Zack Snyder, Wes Anderson, David Fincher, and more.

A humanoid robot cast in shadow.
A mechanical being appearing in Zack Snyder’s Rebel Moon.
Image: Netflix

This year’s summer of movies is finally drawing to a close, but Netflix is already gearing up for another round of fall features to keep you watching as the seasons change.

Today, Netflix dropped a massive preview of all the cinematic offerings coming to the service this fall, and while there’s a little something for everyone, here are the titles you’re probably going to want to watch out for.

Most people know Augusto Pinochet as Chile’s long-dead former dictator whose 17-year-long rule was marked by thousands of state-sanctioned murders and the violent suppression of his political enemies. But in director Pablo Larraín’s El Conde, Pinochet (Jaime Vadell) isn’t just a metaphorical monster — he’s a 250-year-old vampire who has finally made the decision to embrace his true death as a new generation of Chileans grapple with the long-lasting impacts of his regime. Premiere date: September 15th.

Spy Kids: Armageddon

When a maniacal video game developer lets loose an insidious piece of malware that gives them control over every piece of technology on earth, the only people capable of setting things right just so happen to be the children of the world’s most talented spies. Premiere date: September 22nd.

The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar

Image: Netflix

Based on Roald Dahl’s short story, Wes Anderson’s latest cinematic diorama tells the tale of a man named Henry Sugar (Benedict Cumberbatch) who, after learning about a “guru” with the ability to see without his eyes and other seemingly mystical abilities, sets out to develop the skills for himself to succeed at gambling. Premiere date: September 27th.

The Devil on Trial

Director Christopher Holt’s new documentary delves into the details of the trial of Arne Cheyenne Johnson — the first and only time that demonic possession was used as a defense in a murder case. Premiere date: October 17th.

Sister Death

In Spanish director Paco Plaza’s new horror Sister Death, life is already complicated enough for a young woman named Narcisa (Aria Bedmar) who has a number of strange abilities she tries to keep for herself. But when Narcisa arrives to teach at a former convent turned school for girls that appears to be plagued by supernatural happenings, she finds herself sucked into a terrifying fight for her life that reveals all sorts of horrific truths about her new place of work. The film does not yet have a solid release date.

The Killer

Based on the comic by the same name from writer Matz and artist Luc Jacamon, The Killer tells the bleak tale of an expert assassin (Michael Fassbender) whose tenuous grip on reality begins to slip even more and leads to him breaking his personal code of only killing people he’s been hired to kill — a development that puts his plans for retirement in serious jeopardy. The movie is set to hit theaters on October 27th, 2023, before debuting on Netflix on November 10th, 2023.

In directors Robert Marianetti, Robert Smigel, and David Wachtenheim’s new animated comedy, Adam Sandler is Leo, a 74-year-old lizard who’s been imprisoned as a class pet for more years than he cares to think about. After decades of being poked and prodded by kids who have no clue what he really wants, Leo sets out to gain his freedom when he learns that he only has a year left to live. Premiere date: November 21st.

Family Switch

Image: Colleen Hayes / Netflix

Based on author Amy Krouse Rosenthal’s Bedtime for Mommy, director McG’s Family Switch dives into the lives of an emotionally distant family who — after a chance encounter with a fortune teller — finds themselves all body-swapped with one another on the one day when they’ve all got Very Important Things To Do™. Premiere date: November 30th.

The Archies

In director Zoya Akhtar’s musical The Archies, Riverdale isn’t just some lily-white town somewhere in the American Northeast; it’s the hill station town in India that Archie (Agastya Nanda), Betty (Khushi Kapoor), Veronica (Suhana Khan), and Jughead (Mihir Ahuja) all call home and love. The film does not yet have a premiere date.

Leave the World Behind

Image: Jojo Whilden / NETFLIX

From executive producers Barack and Michelle Obama, director Sam Esmail’s new drama tells the story of how a family’s idyllic vacation is abruptly halted when they meet a pair of strangers feeling some sort of catastrophe stemming from a cyberattack whose implications are far larger than anyone can imagine. Premiere date: December 8th.

Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget

Having escaped Tweedy’s farm to live out the rest of their days on a tranquil island, the last thing either Rocky (Zachary Levi) or Ginger (Thandiwe Newton) wants is to be bothered by the likes of humans or to let their daughter Molly (Bella Ramsey) get mixed up in humanity’s madness. But when the chickens learn that the rest of their kind are facing a new kind of existential threat back on the mainland, the trio finds themselves pulled into another adventure — not for glory but for the salvation of chickenkind. Premiere date: December 15th.

Rebel Moon — Part One: A Child of Fire

Director Zack Snyder’s latest epic will take you to the far reaches of a strange galaxy where peaceful colonies living on the edge of existence fight alongside a prophesied warrior princess of legend (Sofia Boutella) to break free from an oppressive tyrannical monarchy. Premiere date: December 22nd.

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August 30, 2023 at 11:38PM
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Netflix's fall movie lineup has a little something for everyone - The Verge

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Tuesday, August 29, 2023

El Segundo welcomes home Little League World Series champions - NBC Southern California

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El Segundo welcomes home Little League World Series champions  NBC Southern California The Link Lonk


August 29, 2023 at 08:28AM
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El Segundo welcomes home Little League World Series champions - NBC Southern California

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‘A little kiss’: crowd supporting Luis Rubiales eclipsed by global feminist momentum for change - The Guardian

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More than a week after the world watched Luis Rubiales plant an unsolicited kiss on forward Jenni Hermoso, the seaside city of Motril woke up to find graffiti gracing its sports centre. “Prison for Rubiales,” read one message scrawled on the front entrance. “We’re with Jenni,” read another.

The graffiti soon became the backdrop for television crews as they descended on the city as news broke that the embattled football chief’s mother, Ángeles Béjar, had shut herself into a 19th century church and declared she was on hunger strike over the “unwarranted, inhumane and bloodthirsty hunt” of her son.

The unexpected turn of events seemingly turned Motril – a southern Spanish city of 59,000 where Rubiales’ dad was mayor for eight years – into the last bastion of public support for a man who was once among the most powerful in European football.

On Monday evening, a few dozen of Rubiales’ friends, family and supporters gathered outside the former convent where his mother is camped out, waving placards that decried what they saw as Rubiales’ persecution.

The focus was on the kiss – “We are talking about a little kiss, he didn’t kill anyone,” resident Amparo Macias told Reuters – rather than Rubiales grabbing his crotch as the women’s team won the World Cup.

The small gathering was eclipsed by the global momentum for what has seemingly become a turning point in Spain. On Monday hundreds packed into a central Madrid plaza, their chants of se acabó, or “it’s over”, aimed as much at Rubiales’ presidency as at female football’s long-running struggle to be treated on a par with the men’s national team.

Across the Atlantic the UN spokesperson weighed in – “How difficult is it not to kiss somebody on the lips?” Stéphane Dujarric told reporters – as the national football teams of Norway added their voices to the many who have expressed solidarity with Hermoso.

Rubiales, in contrast, appeared increasingly isolated. This week the regional leaders of the Spanish football federation demanded he resign, reportedly cancelling his pay and asking him to return his mobile phone, as the country’s high court investigated whether the kiss could be grounds for sexual assault charges.

Rubiales has sought to portray the kiss as consensual, claiming he asked Hermoso if he could give her a peck and that she replied: “OK.” Hermoso has described Rubiales’ words as “categorically false” and said the unconsented kiss left her feeling “vulnerable and a victim of aggression”.

Against this backdrop it was Rubiales mother who swept to his rescue, portraying herself as what La Vanguardia’s Isabel Garcia Pagan described as the image of “Mother courage” seeking to exhort sympathies and wrangle in the church as Rubiales wages an “incomprehensible battle against the 21st century.”

News media in Spain have embraced the plight of Béjar, offering ongoing updates. “I don’t mind dying for justice,” she told broadcaster Telecinco on Tuesday, as she said her first night in the church had gone well.

Many saw it as the family’s attempt to use media pressure to skirt around Fifa’s orders for Rubiales to refrain from contacting Hermoso and those around her. Others saw it as an example of how women end up perpetuating patriarchal attitudes.

On Friday, as Rubiales railed against “fake feminism”, he pointed proudly to his three daughters who sat in the audience, addressing them directly as he battled for his job.

Whether intentional or not, the involvement of his daughters and mother fits into a well-worn pattern, said political scientist Cristina Monge. “It’s exactly the script. With the daughters at the assembly and the mother in the church, what they end up doing is sparking division among women,” she said. “This would make a perfect Netflix series.”

As the many reporters camped out outside the church offer a running broadcast of the lock-in, the attention may be helping to put in play what Kate Manne, an associate professor at Cornell University describes as “himpathy” – an operation that sees powerful and privileged men garner sympathy and support over their female victims.

While some have seized on this as a sign of a polarised Spain divided over women’s rights, Monge pointed to the condemnations that have poured in from across the political spectrum, with even the far-right Vox leader describing Rubiales’ act as “disgraceful”.

The response hints at the deep impact feminism has had across Spain, with movements such as that directed against the so-called Wolf Pack helping to reshape how the country view women’s rights and consent.

“What we’ve seen at play in recent days is twofold; one is the huge reaction of Spanish society to the changes wrought by feminism,” she said. “And the other is how deeply rooted machismo is in some power structures, such as the Spanish football federation … It’s an example of how machismo is absolutely permeating and contaminating the power structures of Spanish society at a level that we no longer thought possible.”

The sentiment was echoed by Verónica Boquete, the Spanish superstar footballer and veteran of the female football team’s long quest for equality.

“What Rubiales did is part of the society that we all want to change. And year by year it is changing,” she told Newtral.es. “It’s a reflection of a part of society that we want to make smaller and smaller.”

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August 30, 2023 at 03:12AM
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‘A little kiss’: crowd supporting Luis Rubiales eclipsed by global feminist momentum for change - The Guardian

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How the ‘My Little Pony’ Theme Song Was Remixed and Reimagined for the 40th Anniversary - Hollywood Reporter

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My Little Pony is arguably one of pop culture’s most enduring brands, and in 2023, it’s celebrating 40 years of friendship and magic.

Remixed in size and color after the 1981 My Pretty Pony fell short in inspiring young buyers, the My Little Pony brand took off with the release of some Gen1 ponies in 1983, followed by TV specials, shorts and animated series bearing the toy line’s titular name. By the mid- to late-80s, the ponies had become a fixture of the children’s media and toy industry.

In the four decades — and four more pony generations — since, the Hasbro brand’s endless appeal has led to more toys, shows, movies and games. As a result, My Little Pony has left an imprint on multiple generations, from the children of the synths-era to today’s current TikTokers.

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To help celebrate that cross-generational appeal, Jessica Vaughn, head of sync at Venice Music and the founder and president of Head Bitch Music — a full-service music production house that has worked on series like Bridgerton, Criminal Minds, Melrose Place, FBoy Island, Chucky, Zoey’s Extraordinary Playlist and Kipo and the Age of Wonderbeasts — has remixed the My Little Pony classic theme for fans young and older.

Through two EPs featuring more than 20 combined remixes, Vaughn — who is also involved with Web3 Music Rights Group, a nonprofit focused on fair and equitable licensing agreements and copyrights in the Web3 space — has delivered a series of thematic spins that are not only at the disposal of Hasbro, but My Little Pony fans across the world.

The Hollywood Reporter spoke to Vaughn, who is a singer-songwriter in her own right, about crafting music that not only capture My Little Pony’s steadfast themes of friendship and magic, but pay tribute to its distinctive eras. She also discusses making music for brands in the social media age, creating music for young audiences, and how Web3 technologies and AI are reshaping the modern music industry.

You released two EPs in July — a six-track compilation of sped-up and lo-fi remixes and instrumental, as well as a second 14-track collection featuring acoustic, ’80s and ’90s remixes. What inspired these?

I’ve been working with Hasbro on and off since 2014. I’ve worked on Jem and the Holograms, the My Little Pony spin-off the Equestria Girls, Littlest Pet Shop. Any small animal or an animal that becomes a real girl, I’m your girl. (Laughs.) Hasbro had approached us about helping with some of the marketing materials around My Little Pony. I’m such a fan. I feel like it’s so empowering. It was a show that as a young child I really related to, so when they asked me to reimagine some of the songs, I was like, “Absolutely.” The first EP is all the main ’80s theme. There’s been different iterations of that theme — we’re on Generation Five now — so it’s been through a lot of changes.

It was a really exciting project, because we got a ton of amazing female creators involved as well as the bronies, the producers that we worked with. We got to do a ’90s pop version, an ’80s remix. It was just a lot of nostalgic moments, as well as some modern touches. But it came about organically. I spoke to the head of music [at Hasbro] and we put our heads together to figure out what would audiences want to interact with. We had the one theme sped up, as that’s what Gen Z kids and younger want, and then a whole reimagined EP. But we are going to be doing some more My Little Pony across a lot of fun generations.

You were clearly trying to tap into the generational diversity of the My Little Pony fan base. How did you find the right sound to represent those generations?

We talked a lot about how we connect to each generation of Pony fans. I was born in the ’80s, so I really grew up on the ponies in the ’90s. I’m actually the one who’s singing on the ’90s girl-pop version because doing a Britney [Spears] theme is easy having grown up on that. But we didn’t want to alienate newer fans that might not be so aware of the ’90s and the ’80s. We wanted them to also be like, “This is silly. This is fun. I want to post about this.” So no matter the style — obviously we are catering to that nostalgia — we worked to not alienate those that might have grown up with different versions of the ponies, and also different eras of music.

You’re also always thinking about the parents. What I like about Hasbro so much is that I really believe they work in a really holistic way. There are the kids, the fans with no kids, and there are the parents. Whenever I approach anything, whether it is like a re-imagination of a preexisting catalog song or an original song, I try to think about all the listeners. I don’t want to leave anyone out because music is supposed to resonate with you. It’s supposed to make you feel less alone. If you’re making something that is alienating, you’re missing the point of this magical universe, in my opinion.

What would you say makes the My Little Pony theme distinctive? And what elements of the original were you willing to play with? What might you have not wanted to change?

There’s definitely motifs in the song. Towards the end, there are three notes, and we were really going back and forth with Hasbro on this. Do we need to keep it? Do we need to lose it? Certain notes are always going to be recognizable across the board, no matter what brands you are working on. People just associate it with that. So they were really adamant about keeping it, and I was trying to make it work within only having 30 seconds or only having 60 seconds. But then also with the motif, how are we going to do the ’80s remix with that? Is that a guitar part? Is that a voice, a synth? There are certain elements in the theme, especially the ’80s theme, that are so iconic. It’s very child-like, the voices. Obviously, there’s some adult mix with this high-pitched voice. But you can’t tell if it’s like numerous characters or just one character.

People get really attached to what they grow up with, so if you re-imagine it too much, it’s almost like you’re taking something away from someone. You have to be really mindful about that. The things that really make the theme the theme are the motif and all the friendship and magic. I feel like the lyrics are really important, but there are some lyrics that you’re like, “Are they dated? Should we say it?” At the end of the day, it’s that nostalgia, so we can’t change it. But we can build upon it. The ponies and the pony and bronie [adult male] fans want to feel safe. Those motifs and the setting is really important to that. So each theme remix whether it was ’90s, or ’80s, or acoustic, pretty much entered in the same fashion. The production may change, but the melodies don’t. It’s the approach to the melody that does. You might change it one way for the ’90s, but then you’re doing a more acoustic version, and you might sing it more like Taylor Swift. It’s all about how you interpret the same material without changing it.

My Little Pony debuted in a time when toy lines were frequently adapted into TV shows, and before there were more restrictions around marketing to children through the TV. Which is probably why those theme songs feel so catchy — they weren’t just themes, they were toy jingles. Do you feel like the My Little Pony theme embodies jingle elements that make it memorable? If so, what are they?

I work in sync and custom music, so this is something I think about every day. When creating a theme, or even a theme that already exists, that needs to resonate with somebody as a person, and I honestly do believe that Hasbro is really good at this. When I think of My Little Pony, I think of feeling safe, being free, having friends and empowering young women. That naturally lifts their brand, the shows and the movies because they’re all about that: being independent, leaning on your friends and living in this magical world. And then going all the way back, we all grew up on this, so we already have that within us. It’s like with any show that you watched back in the day. These iconic brands, that’s what they have to do with their themes. No matter the theme, no matter if they change the theme. It all comes from the direct source of how the initial viewers felt. Then they evolve, and that’s how I approach the music. Some people are like, “Children’s music? I don’t have kids.” But I was a kid, so I give it 100 percent. These are memories that stay with people for the rest of their lives.

Once people reach a certain age, they can move or even lose some respect for the music of their childhood shows. But at an animation-themed Writers Guild picket, the playlist had all these kids show songs that were not just recognizable, but danceable. What does it take to make a good theme for a kids show?

There’s always a certain amount of finesse, intelligence and silliness. Just like any TV show theme or anything that accompanies music-to-picture, you really have to think about whether this supports the narrative. To me, that feels like a paint by number situation. Be fun within the lines. When I wrote the original theme for Littlest Pet Shop, that was for a little bit of an older audience — similar to My Little Pony. I had such a blast doing that, because some of the references were Fitz and the Tantrums. But how do you take Fitz and the Tantrums and make it also universal for kids, for the families that are watching?

Going back to the My Little Pony EP songs, Hasbro and fans will have access to them — both for business and for fun. How did you take that into consideration when crafting them? And did you think about, in terms of Hasbro’s use for marketing, what might perform better certain places online and off?

The Hasbro team and I talked about this a lot. The ultimate goal for these and other releases that we’ll be doing is supporting the brand and helping engagement across the board, whether that’s for marketing lift, or for new people to discover the song on TikTok and then be able to use it in their content in a silly way or as a fan. So we did some of the conversions because there’s so many different ways to engage as a user with audio content. My favorite is the ’80s remix. It’s fun and silly, and maybe it’s just my age that makes it perfect for someone like me, but, you can make a really fun video to that, if you wanted to post ads. And if Hasbro does want to run ads for their brand, they have all these different versions that they can now test out, if they so choose. But we definitely thought about that — especially the sped-up and slowed-down versions. Those are obviously for [Instagram] Reels and for TikTok. We really had them in mind. We studied what are people creating that are slowed down and sped up. At Venice Music, we have a lot of artists that I represent that also do really amazing on TikTok, so I had a perfect case study.

Beyond your work with Hasbro and other networks and shows, you are attached to a nonprofit focused on Web3 technologies. AI isn’t Web3 exactly, but it is an increasingly discussed topic in terms of how it’s used in relation to artists and their rights. In what ways has AI impacted your work? Do you use it at all in your process?

I co-founded a group called the Web3 Music Rights Group with some other players in the music licensing space out of necessity. We were like, how do we solve this problem? And this is before we were in deep fake-land. We were like, “Metaverse!” and we were thinking about NFTs — or, I guess, we’re not really calling them NFTs anymore because that did not go well. (Laughs.) But we asked, how do we create a safe space for each other to ask questions and then create general standards that we can share with our community. As someone who deals with rights all the time, it can be a muddy place to work. It can be confusing. It can be ever-changing. Things move at such a fast rate, sometimes legislation can’t keep up with it. So it’s our job sometimes to “Wild West” and regulate this to the best of our ability as good citizens.

With AI, the way that I’ve been using it right now, I use some AI assistance at my licensing job. But I really don’t use it a ton in custom music. Sometimes I like to ask ChatGPT marketing questions, or, “Will this resonate with someone?” I do ask specific questions around a release rollout, or maybe something I’m creating to get general feedback, but the biggest concern in America is that your likeness is really not protected — so your voice, etc. — while in other countries it is. That’ll be a really interesting thing to tackle when it comes to licensing. It’ll also be an interesting thing, too, as we’re seeing Universal and these larger companies try to work out this backend deal with fake releases. But AI has to source its content from somewhere, so unless it is actually saying, I am sourcing from here, here and here, no one can truly license that material for film, TV, advertising and gaming. You need to know where all the bodies are buried in order to license something.

If you’re doing something with AI where it’s an AI library — someone is creating all this music, maybe they’re using a voice, and then it’s creating and generating a song — that’s truly a free-use situation. You would maybe sign up for that AI program, and you’d be able to pull and resource whatever you want. But if something is sourcing, let’s say from Radiohead, it sounds like Radiohead, it’s [Thom Yorke’s] voice and they’re taking bits and parts of his song and then changing it, it’s still being sourced from somewhere. You’re seeing this a lot with authors and artists. I think that at the end of the day, you still have to source and credit, kind of like sampling. But we’ll see how it eventually unfolds. It’s moving so quickly, I wouldn’t be surprised if we need AI to help us monitor AI.

The sourcing issue is an important one across industries, from visual art to writing to music. But it seems like a given: One learns that they can’t just download a photo from Google Images and use it because there may be permissions attached. It works the same way with other art, content, creation. So why does it feel like this isn’t a widely established understanding with AI, including in music?

It’s a systemic problem in the sense that music rights are confusing for most people, they’re confusing for the people who work in music rights, and they are ever-changing. People connect to music in all different ways. People also consume music in different ways and have a different level of respect for music across the board. You see it with networks and how they treat creators in general. Every production company, every network, is not created equal in the sense of how they appreciate creatives. If you’re coming from the Napster generation, where you’re just used to being able to get music whenever you want it, you might not understand the value that music has and that it is truly a copyright.

These are just long-winded macro issues across the board that have a trickle-down effect of how people consume music on a daily basis. And the law’s still the law, but is it easy to enforce across the board when everyone is violating it? Not everyone has the type of team that maybe Taylor Swift has that can constantly regulate how her music, voice and brand is being used. I think that a lot of people are in the mindset of, I’d rather ask for forgiveness than permission.

AI has already started to make its way into the kids content space, from interactive episodes to cameos. In terms of music, which can become almost ear-wormy for kids, do you see any applicable uses for AI?

Not only do I work with Hasbro, but I work with Box Sign and they have a toy called [Toniebox]. We do a lot of the music for these little figurines that are in this screenless speaker box. It’s so important to put thought behind how you create music like this for children. There are ways to do it intelligently and to connect to numerous listeners. There’s a way to do it where it’s still silly and fun, but that you don’t dumb it down either. Kids are a lot smarter than they get credit for. So personally, if you’re going to use or generate AI for music for the children’s space, the only way that I could see it being used is almost like a splice package where AI generated this bed of music.

But personally, I just don’t feel comfortable as a person [with it]. I really labor over what we create, and I think it needs to be skillful, and you need to think about how young minds are growing up and how they’re going to interact with the world. That is a huge responsibility that I don’t necessarily trust at this current time for AI to be responsible for. Plus, I think it would take away some of that silliness and goofiness that works. You need a human being that has feelings to be able to connect to a child spirit.

Going back to the kids theme songs question — there’s just so much hooky, zanny, specific stuff in a lot of those that it feels almost like AI couldn’t lyrically or musically match the distinctiveness of some of these themes. Do you think it’s possible for artificial intelligence to match the work of humans in the work you do?

It’s never going to be the same. For example, I love working with Hasbro because Equestria Girls and My Little Pony, those resonate with all genders, but as a young woman growing up, it obviously spoke to me. So it’s easy for me to pull from within myself when I’m creating for those brands. It feels real, because it is. AI and anything Web3-related — I don’t think anyone’s trying to avoid it, but it should be used as a tool to enhance the creators’ experience in a way that will help them resonate with their audience, or create a better allocation of time. It doesn’t necessarily have to be a replacement of what they do because then we miss out on true art that connects to people. I feel like everything you do should be an extension of your humanity. Everything should come from an authentic place, or else what are we really doing it all for.

When you cater to the least evolved version of what it’s like to be a human being, you’re really missing out. Algorithms can help you find the things that you want to watch, but even then you’re helping push them into the direction that you are already in. When you use things like AI to create something, it loses its magic. Emotion is so nuanced. It’s like poetry. There’s so many different ways to react to how something is created. A kid can play the piano, but is it the same thing as somebody who has played for 25 years? It’s not. So I’m not afraid of AI. I started this group because I want to embrace change. But I want to be able to understand it and speak up when I think that it is taking advantage of my fellow creators, composers and artists that I hire.

Interview edited for length and clarity.

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How the ‘My Little Pony’ Theme Song Was Remixed and Reimagined for the 40th Anniversary - Hollywood Reporter

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Dems leave Congress with 'very little choice' over Biden impeachment inquiry: Jonathan Turley - Fox News

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George Washington University law professor Jonathan Turley reacted to the "very troubling picture" of mounting Hunter Biden evidence on "America Reports." The latest evidence revealed that Hunter Biden's business partner, Devon Archer, met with Secretary of State John Kerry weeks before the Ukrainian prosecutor investigating Burisma was fired. Turley on Monday criticized Democrats for calling to stop the investigation as more evidence is revealed.

Archer and Hunter split image

Devon Archer, left, and Hunter Biden, right (Fox News)

CORRUPTION FIGHTER SLAMS BIDEN FOR SAYING HUNTER DID ‘NOTHING WRONG’, SAYS IT PROMOTES SON’S ‘BUSINESS MODEL'
 

JONATHAN TURLEY: There is a lot [of details], but there's this disconnect. The more evidence we get, the louder the call is from the Democrats to stop any further investigation. Well, it really doesn't make much sense. I mean, we now have a very troubling picture that is composed of financial records with over $20 million that are being transferred through a myriad of accounts that seem overly complex. It seems like the only purpose of those accounts is to hide those transfers. You have what I think now is accepted as, sort of, open influence peddling by Hunter Biden. That narrative has shifted. Now, you have the media admitting that he was selling influence and access, but they insist that's an illusion. Well, how do we know that? I mean, you don't know if it's an illusion or not until we get to the bottom of this. And this meeting is just the latest such example. We need to know more about the meeting. But that information is not forthcoming. And that is why Merrick Garland and others are making the case for an impeachment inquiry. They're leaving Congress with very little choice. 

BURISMA'S DEVON ARCHER MET WITH THEN-SECRETARY OF STATE KERRY JUST WEEKS BEFORE SHOKIN WAS FIRED
 

(Getty Images)

Hunter Biden’s former business partner and fellow Burisma board member, Devon Archer, met with then-Secretary of State John Kerry just weeks before the Ukrainian prosecutor who was investigating Burisma was fired in 2016.

Former Ukrainian prosecutor General Viktor Shokin was fired on March 29, 2016, less than four weeks after Archer met with Kerry at the State Department in Washington, D.C., according to a State Department email.

"Devon Archer coming to see S today at 3:00pm - need someone to meet/greet him at C Street," reads the redacted email on March 2, 2016, which was previously released via the Freedom of Information Act.

Fox News Digital can confirm that "S" refers to Kerry, based on multiple other email communications. However, it is unclear what Archer and Kerry discussed at the meeting or whether Burisma came up in conversation.

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At the time of the meeting, Archer and Hunter Biden had been sitting on the board of Burisma for about two years, and then-Vice President Joe Biden had recently wrapped up a trip to Ukraine where he threatened to withhold $1 billion in U.S. aid if Ukrainian officials didn’t fire Shokin, claiming he was too lax on prosecuting corruption.

Fox News' By Jessica Chasmar and Cameron Cawthorne contributed to this report.

For more Culture, Media, Education, Opinion, and channel coverage, visit foxnews.com/media.

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Dems leave Congress with 'very little choice' over Biden impeachment inquiry: Jonathan Turley - Fox News

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Nikki Haley's super PAC spent big to fuel her rise. It started 2024 with little left. - NBC News

little.indah.link The super PAC backing former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley entered the election year in January with just $3.5 million in...

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