In addition to making great music, H.E.R. wants to be an active citizen who empowers young people with information.

The Grammy- and Oscar-winning recording artist gets to do both in the new animated Netflix series We the People.

Created by Chris Nee and produced by Barack and Michelle Obama, the 10-part series provides a range of civics lessons through three-minute music videos on topics that include the Bill of Rights, immigration and the courts. It features award-winning artists Lin-Manuel Miranda, Brandi Carlisle, Bebe Rexha and others.

H.E.R. took on the “Active Citizenship” episode, writing and performing the song “Change.” It deals with teaching young people to get involved with issues in the community by volunteering, writing letters to elected officials and peaceful protest.

The animated segment was directed by Oscar-winner Peter Ramsey, known for Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse.

H.E.R. admits the idea to make music and educate seemed daunting at first.

“I was like thinking about all these topics and how can I make this, like, cool? And, you know, it just started off with just saying exactly what it is: ‘Wrote a letter to the mayor can you hear me out.’ Like how would we really have a conversation about this with somebody who doesn’t necessarily understand,” she said.

That made the process fun, while at the same time gratifying — she was educating the viewer with important information.

The 23-year-old believes the importance of the subject matter lies in the lack of understanding many citizens have when it comes to the rights and duties of citizenship.

“I feel like sometimes things aren’t taught on purpose,” the recording artist said.

H.E.R. cited the power of artists like Bob Marley and Marvin Gaye when it comes to writing music about social justice.

“[They] are saying things so simply. But we digested them, and we really thought about the way that we live our lives based on this music,” she said.

And it’s because music is a language that everyone understands.

“It’s something that makes us feel good, makes us want to fall in love and makes us sad or makes us learn. And so, what better way to teach, especially people at a young age or of all ages,” she said.

She hopes the collection of music videos in We the People will “share the knowledge, that hasn’t always been shared” when it comes to rights, privileges and responsibilities.

“It’s up to us to make these changes and to empower the youth. So, as we grow, as we learn, we teach. And in that, I think will make a huge difference,” she said.

We the People premieres Sunday (July 4) on Netflix.

Selena Gomez’s swimwear collaboration with La’Mariette launched on Saturday (July 3), and she shared photos of herself wearing a bikini and a one-piece from the new collection’s campaign on social media.

“So grateful that I get the opportunity to celebrate my friends’ endeavors. My collaboration with @lamariette is out today!” Gomez announced in an Instagram post.

“What I love about this brand is that it celebrates women who love their bodies unconditionally giving themselves the grace they deserve,” she wrote. “Hope you love it as much as I do.”

La’Mariette’s collab with Gomez features six styles, including a one-piece, two bikini tops, two bottoms and a sarong. The pieces are all in a purple tie-dye print called “Aura,” and they’re available in sizes XS-XXL.

In a statement published by People, Gomez said: “After going through swatches, my favorite color was purple; I wanted to stay away from colors I’m used to like red and white. Purple felt different for me. And we added pops of color like green and neons here and there; it really becomes your own suit, however you wear it.”

See all of Gomez’s photos from the swimsuit photo shoot on the La’Mariette website, and get a glimpse of the looks on her Instagram post and on Instagram Stories.

From career milestones and new music releases to major announcements and more, Billboard editors highlight the latest news buzz in Latin music every week. Here’s what happened in the Latin music world this week.

Carlos Santana to Receive Special Award

The Hispanic Heritage Foundation (HHF) unveiled this week that 10-time Grammy-winning artist Carlos Santana will be honored with the Legend Award at the 34th Annual Hispanic Heritage Awards taking place on Oct. 8 via PBS. Santana, who will also receive a multi-artist tribute performance, is receiving this special recognition for his contributions to Latin music and prolific 50-plus year trajectory.

“I am grateful to the Latin community and to everyone who feels oneness with our mission to bring equality, fairness, justice, unity, and harmony,” Santana said in a statement. “We wake up every day to touch people’s hearts with our music, spirits-vision, and to make a difference in the world, for the highest good for life, people, and the planet. It is a blessing to be a blessing. We thank the Hispanic Heritage Foundation and PBS for this glorious honor.”

Zion y Lennox Celebrate 20 Years

Zion and Lennox will celebrate 20 years of career with not one, not two, but three back-to-back concerts in the emblematic Coliseo de Puerto Rico in San Juan, Puerto Rico. The Puerto Rican duo, composed of Félix Ortiz (Zion) and Gabriel Pizarro (Lennox), formed in 2000 in Carolina and released their debut album, Motivando a la Yal, in 2004. Since then, the duo has dropped countless reggaeton hits, including “Yo Voy,” “Hay Algo en Ti” and “La Player,” to name a few. Zion y Lennox will perform on December 2, 3, and 4. Tickets are already on sale via Ticketera.com.

Wisin’s La Base Expands

Less than a year after launching his record label, La Base, distributed by The Orchard via WK Records and based in Puerto Rico, Wisin is expanding to a second location in the Dominican Republic, Billboard can confirm. La Base Music officially launched in the summer of 2020 with new signees Chris Andrew and Abdiel Larralde. La Base Music’s resident engineer and award-winning producers include Hyde Quimico and Los Legendarios, who have worked with Latin superstars like Daddy Yankee, Ozuna and Reik.

Arthur Hanlon Makes the Rounds With Piano y Mujer

In celebration of his latest production, Piano y Mujer, virtuoso pianist Arthur Hanlon has partnered with multinational brand Yamaha, which will have him performing exclusively on Yamaha pianos. Faithful to the brand that sparked his love for music when he was only six years old and was his very first piano, Hanlon feels honored to be part of the Yamaha family. “ I love the Yamaha sound, which is perfect for Latin music: a nice high end, and at the same time, a deep, soulful bass end,” he expressed in a statement.

The partnership comes three months after the release of his album Piano y Mujer, where he teamed up with some of the industry’s most iconic female voices, including Kany García, Natalia Jiménez, ChocQuibTown’s Gloria “Goyo” Martínez, Evaluna Montaner and Nella for intimate performances of classic songs powered by his piano. The concert special is currently streaming on HBO Max and HBO Latin, and beginning July 4 it will be available throughout Latin America via the Sony Channel.

Editor’s note: Hanlon is married to Billboard vp/Latin industry lead Leila Cobo.

Pandora Unveils New Pop Station

This week, streaming platform Pandora launched its new station called “La Vida in Pop,” which spotlights pop superstars and trendsetters in the Latin music realm, such as Camilo, Juanes, Anitta and Ricky Martin. The station features everything from ballads to reggaeton to crossover hits, honoring the music and artists that have made Latin pop universal. “La Vida in Pop is the renaissance of Latin popular music, the best in today’s Latin pop,” noted a press statement.

When Vanessa Williams hosts this year’s televised Capitol Fourth celebration, she will not only honor the nation’s traditional independence day, but also the country’s newly designated holiday: Juneteenth.

Williams, who was the first Black woman to be crowned Miss America, will sing “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” which has served as the Black National Anthem.

“It’s in celebration of the wonderful opportunity that we now have to celebrate Juneteenth. So we are reflective of the times,” she told the Associated Press on Thursday while promoting this year’s show.

Juneteenth commemorates the emancipation of African American slaves and has been celebrated annually on June 19 in various parts of the United States. It was made a federal holiday this year.

A Capitol Fourth is marking 41 years on the air. The show is broadcast to millions of viewers on PBS and streaming platforms as well as troops around the globe.

Williams serves as host this year but it’s not be the first time that she‘s brought current social changes to the festivities. At last year’s show, Williams said her musical selections expressed the angst that Black women — especially mothers — were feeling.

She sang the Stephen Sondheim song, “Not While I’m Around,” from his musical Sweeney Todd, an attempt to communicate what she was feeling as the mother of a Black son.

The song “talked about just the connection that you have with your child and wanting to protect them, which was definitely reflective of George Floyd and how everybody felt that pain,” Williams said.

Another Sondheim song, “Somewhere” from West Side Story, conjured the dream of hope for a better world. “It’s a big epic idea about there’s a place for us somewhere,” Williams said. “Peace and quiet and open air, we’ll get there someday. So, I got a chance to address that last year.”

Williams has been no stranger to the annual show, having performed or co-hosted numerous times since 2005. She recalled her first duet partner was Elmo. “So, this year, Kermit is going to be doing a couple of songs with me as I host. And, of course, I’ll be singing.”

While COVID restrictions have recently eased up, the show will still respect social distancing. None of the performances will be live on the West Lawn as they were in previous years. “Performers will be remote in New York and California, Nashville, all over the place,” Williams said,

This year’s lineup will include Broadway phenoms like Cynthia Erivo, Christopher Jackson and Laura Osnes. R&B legend Gladys Knight, country stars Alan Jackson and Jennifer Nettles, and the iconic Jimmy Buffett.

And then there are a few guests that are out of this world — literally. “We have three of our astronauts that are up in the space station that will be giving us a special message for the Fourth of July” Williams said.

A Capitol Fourth airs Sunday (July 4) at 8 p.m. ET/PT on PBS.

It was clearly meant to be that Bebe Rexha’s 2017 megahit “Meant to Be,” featuring Florida Georgia Line, enters YouTube’s Billion Views Club.

“Meant to Be” is Florida Georgia Line’s first entry in the Billion Views Club, while Rexha scores her second after her feature credit on David Guetta’s 2014 hit “Hey Mama,” which also features Nicki Minaj and Afrojack.

Rexha’s country-pop crossover hit earned the pop star her career-first Grammy nominations in 2019 for best new artist and best country duo/group performance, the latter of which was also the country group’s first Grammy nod. The song spent 52 weeks on the Billboard Hot 100, peaking at No. 2 for both acts’ highest-charting song, and spent a record-breaking 50 weeks atop the Hot Country Songs chart.

The Sophie Muller-directed music video shows Rexha as a hitchhiker in the middle of a road, two garbage bags full of belongings in each hand, before she gets picked up in a stranger’s pickup truck. Starting anew, the “I’m a Mess” singer, now a waitress at a small diner, later catches Tyler Hubbard and Brian Kelley performing the song before they invite her onstage to join them.

So lay on back and relax, kick your pretty feet up and watch the “Meant to Be” music video all over again (or for the first time) below.

Legendary bassist George Porter Jr. has released the video for “Crying for Hope,” a powerful anthem that combines the signature sound of Porter’s iconic funk group The Meters with a message of  resistance and urgency for 2021.

The New Orleans funk master and Meters founding member released the title track for his 2021 album on March 26 via Controlled Substance Sounds Labs and Color Red. The Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award recipient, named one of the 50 Greatest Bassists of All Time by Rolling Stone, is continuing to keep his message of struggle, perseverance, comfort and rejuvenation at the forefront of a movement driven by a belief that music is the ultimate requital and The Meters’ pioneering funk sound is the rhythm that fuels the march toward change, one beat at a time.

Crying for Hope was recorded with the Runnin’ Pardners, spearheaded by Porter on bass and vocals, Terrence Houston on drums, Michael Lemmler on keyboards and Chris Adkins on guitar. The album was recorded  virtually from home studios and sessions at Ora’s Third Floor Sound Lab.

Check out the video for “Crying for Hope” below and click here for streaming and physical copies of the album.

The traditional Macy’s Fourth of July fireworks show will return to New York City this weekend after the pandemic forced changes to the celebration in 2020.

The fireworks will be launched from five barges in the East River starting at 9:25 p.m. on Sunday (July 4), said Will Coss, executive producer of the show.

The show will be broadcast live on NBC as part of a two-hour special featuring Blake Shelton, the Jonas Brothers with Marshmello, the Black Pumas, Coldplay, OneRepublic and Reba McEntire, officials from Macy’s and NBC said.

The big show was replaced by several small, unannounced fireworks displays last year in order to prevent crowds from gathering during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The show — hosted by Renee Elise Goldsberry (Girls 5eva, Hamilton) and Ryan Eggold (New Amsterdam) — will air at 8 p.m. ET/PT on NBC, followed by an encore presentation at 10 p.m. ET/PT.

Four days after Jamie Lynn Spears spoke out in support of her big sister Britney Spears, she’s pleading with people to stop sending her family death threats.

“Hi, I respect that everyone has the right to express themselves, but can we please stop with the death threats, especially the death threats to children,” she wrote in a short note on her Instagram Story with her initials “JLS.”

Jamie has two daughters, Maddie Briann Aldridge, 13, and Ivey Joan Watson, 3.

In an emotional Instagram Story video on Monday, days after her big sister’s powerful testimony, the 30-year-old actress addressed her highly criticized silence on Britney’s conservatorship, which gave their father Jamie Spears control over Britney’s life and career for the last 13 years.

“I think it’s extremely clear that since the day I was born that I’ve only loved adored and supported my sister. This is my freakin’ big sister before any of this bulls—,” the Zoey 101 star said in her video from June 28, tears welling up in her eyes. “I’ve made a very conscious choice in my life to only participate in her life as her sister. Maybe I didn’t support her the way the public would like me to with a hashtag on a public platform. But I can assure I have supported my sister long before there was a hashtag, and I’ll support her long after…. I’m not my family — I’m my own person. I’m speaking for myself. I’m so proud of her for using her voice.”

During Britney’s first public testimony since her conservatorship began more than a decade ago, the 39-year-old singer expressed her desire to end the conservatorship to Judge Brenda Penny and went into painstaking detail about the level of control she’s under. She also argued how her family and management has been taking advantage of her for years and exploiting her situation for their own financial gain.

“I would honestly like to sue my family, to be totally honest with you. I also would like to be able to share my story with the world, and what they did to me, instead of it being a hush-hush secret to benefit all of them. I want to be able to be heard on what they did to me by making me keep this in for so long, is not good for my heart,” the pop icon told the judge. “I’ve been so angry and I cry every day, it concerns me, I’m told I’m not allowed to expose the people who did this to me.”

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