Ye’s latest date with Julia Fox was a visit to Paris for Fashion Week.

The rapper and actress made their red carpet debut, posing together at Kenzo’s fashion show on Sunday (Jan. 23), which was the debut of the brand’s new creative director Nigo.

The pair coordinated in denim ensembles that were accessorized with black gloves. WWD reports that Fox’s conical denim jacket was by Schiaparelli, and she wore Schiaparelli creative director Daniel Roseberry’s personal pair of jeans. “I took the pants off of his body, and he was very kind to let me wear them,” she told the publication.

The Uncut Gems actress recently addressed the attention she’s received since she started dating West, who now goes by Ye.

“It’s funny cause I’m getting all of this attention, but I really couldn’t care,” Fox said on her Forbidden Fruits podcast. “People are like, ‘Oh, you’re only in it for the fame, you’re in it for the clout, you’re in it for the money.’ Honey, I’ve dated billionaires my entire adult life, let’s keep it real.”

She, “Watch my movie, read my book. That is more thrilling to me now than eyes on me.”

On her podcast, she talked about her recent night out in Los Angeles with Ye, Madonna, Floyd Mayweather, Antonio Brown and Evan Ross.

“There was a lot going on. Madonna was there,” Fox recalled. “I was actually supposed to be at dinner for just Madonna and I … and all of these other celebs crashed.”

Ye and Fox met in late December, less than a year after Kim Kardashian filed for divorce from the rapper in February 2021.

Fox had married pilot Peter Artemiev in November 2018, and announced they had separated three years later, in November 2021.

Finneas fumbled over his words in front of Taylor Swift — and he’s gone on record to say this moment was, in fact, his most embarrassing moment.

The singer-songwriter-producer, who’s Billie Eilish‘s brother, did a casual Q&A session via Instagram Stories on Saturday (Jan. 22).

There, he revealed that he got invited to Swift’s birthday party and apparently was mortified about something he said while he was there.

“I said ‘thanks for coming’ to Taylor Swift at her own birthday party,” he admitted.

“Meant to say ‘thanks for inviting me’ or whatever obviously,” Finneas wrote.

Swift turned 32 on Dec. 13, and she had a dual party alongside her friend Alana Haim.

“*don’t say it, don’t say it OKAY I’m saying it:* I’M FEELIN 32,” she wrote to fans on social media on her birthday. “And Alana is feeling 30. Don’t worry we tested everyone! Thank you so much for the birthday wishes, I love you all so much.”

Finneas and Billie recently won the Golden Globe for best original song for “No Time to Die,” from the James Bond film of the same name.

Swift most recently made headlines for being announced as the first-ever global ambassador for Record Store Day, taking place on April 23. An as-yet-unannounced Record Story Day release from Swift is also set to drop that day.

A new mural honoring Gloria and Emilio Estefan has been unveiled in Miami’s Little Havana.

Local artist Disem305 painted the giant mural depicting the power couple of Latin pop in the 1980s, when they came out with smash hits such as “Conga” and “Rhythm Is Gonna Get You.”

The artwork was unveiled at a Saturday (Jan. 22) event, attended by city officials and the couple’s son Nayib Estefan.

“My parents have always been this big to me, but it’s amazing to see them preserved in one of their finest moments in the 80s in Miami,” Nayib Estefan told WTVJ.

The giant mural is part of a local effort by the Kcull Life Foundation to partner up with local artists to improve historic neighborhoods and preserve Cuban-American culture. A well-known costume shop on the Calle Ocho donated the wall.

The foundation also recently presented another mural to salsa artist Celia Cruz, who is also Cuban.

Florida International University President Mark Rosenberg stunned students, friends and staff with his resignation on Friday, abruptly ending his 12-year tenure leading South Florida’s biggest public university. The sudden resignation … Click to Continue »
Monroe County sheriff’s deputies say a Florida Keys woman who was arrested Friday afternoon on drug charges also taught children how to package narcotics for sale. Stephanie Marie Smith, 30, … Click to Continue »
Hours after Florida International University President Mark Rosenberg announced his resignation on Friday, citing health problems for him and his wife, students, staff and friends rushed to thank him for … Click to Continue »

Julia Fox is setting the record straight about her romance with Kanye West.

During her Forbidden Fruits podcast on Friday (Jan. 21), the 31-year-old Uncut Gems actress addressed some of the negative attention she’s received since dating the rapper and fashion mogul, who now goes by Ye.

“It’s funny cause I’m getting all of this attention, but I really couldn’t care,” Fox said. “People are like, ‘Oh, you’re only in it for the fame, you’re in it for the clout, you’re in it for the money.’ Honey, I’ve dated billionaires my entire adult life, let’s keep it real.”

The actress added, “Watch my movie, read my book. That is more thrilling to me now than eyes on me.”

During the episode, Fox also discussed a recent night out in Los Angeles with Ye and other A-listers, including Madonna, Floyd Mayweather, Antonio Brown and Evan Ross.

“There was a lot going on. Madonna was there,” Fox said. “I was actually supposed to be at dinner for just Madonna and I … and all of these other celebs crashed.”

Ye and Fox met in December, less than a year after Kim Kardashian filed for divorce from the rapper in February 2021, following months of speculation that a split was imminent. Fox had married pilot Peter Artemiev in November 2018, and announced they had separated three years later, in November 2021. The former couple welcomed a son in January 2021.

After racking up more than eight million views on TikTok on a clip summarizing the bad luck she’s had just trying to see Adele in concert, fan Eleni Sabracos finally got to connect with the star.

The fan checked in on TikTok from Las Vegas on Thursday (Jan. 20), soon after the “Easy on Me” singer postponed her Vegas residency that was set to begin this weekend. Addressing her own misfortune with a sense of humor, Sabracos shared her sad story of missing out on three special Adele shows due to unfortunate circumstances. (In short: She bought tickets for a show at Madison Square Garden from Craigslist that ended up being fake, she flew to London for a show that ended up getting canceled, and now she’s in Vegas for a residency that at the last minute ended up rescheduled due to COVID-19.)

But on Friday night, she uploaded a new video with the caption “UPDATE: I TALKED TO ADELE.”

In a nod to fans who’d already arrived in Vegas for a concert that had to be called off, members of Adele’s team pulled aside some visitors at her Weekends With Adele merchandise store to briefly speak to the singer via a video call.

Sabracos was apparently one of those fans. “I love you,” she gushed to the phone held in front of her. “I’m sorry,” she added, to which Adele replied, “Why are you sorry?”

“Because I feel for you,” the fan explained, referencing the canceled concerts. “I know you’re doing everything you can.”

Adele had released an apology video on Thursday, explaining that many members of her crew and team were “down with COVID” and that it was not possible to pull the show together on time.

In the chat with Sabracos, which has been viewed 1.4 million times on TikTok, Adele told her that she’d eventually get to see her onstage and meet her. “We’ll have a photo together,” she said.

“I just FaceTimed Adele!” the fan screamed with glee after their call.

See the video below or on TikTok.

@elenisabracosTHIS IS JUST THE BEGINNING LADIES AND GENTS♬ original sound – Eleni

It wasn’t until 1993, years after the late ’70s release of his breakthrough, massively successful album Bat Out of Hell, that Meat Loaf actually had the first Hot 100 No. 1 song of his career with the epic “I’d Do Anything for Love (But I Won’t Do That),” leading the album Bat Out of Hell II: Back Into Hell. That moment brought tears to the late singer’s eyes, his daughter Amanda Aday remembers.

Aday spoke to People about her dad, born Marvin Lee Aday, after he passed away at age 74 on Jan. 20.

“I’d Do Anything for Love (But I Won’t Do That)” spent five weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 songs chart, and his Bat Out of Hell II: Back Into Hell album went to No. 1 on the Billboard 200.

In the interview published on Saturday (Jan. 22), Aday recalls that the family was in Australia when they first heard the news about topping the charts in 1993.

“I remember we were in the hotel room and my mom just started sobbing crying, and my dad started crying. And I’m standing there going, ‘What? What is this? What are you guys doing?’ And then, from there, he was everywhere again,” Aday says. She notes that her father wouldn’t call it a comeback: “I’ve never stopped playing,” he’d say. “I’ve never stopped performing. I’ve always been here. You guys are just now recognizing that.”

Off the stage and at home, the performer — who had just told Billboard in October that he was planning a world tour, a new EP and a TV game show — “was just dad,” she says. “He wasn’t Meat Loaf anymore.”

He directed school plays and coached softball, and he loved Christmas with his kids. “He was Santa Claus,” Aday tells People. “He would stay up all night making train sets around the Christmas tree.”

“He was a singer, he was an actor, he was a father, a husband, he was a grandpa. It was Papa Meat to my nephew. He was everything,” she adds.

She says his family and closest friends were by his side before he died in Nashville, where “he flipped a couple of us off, which is very dad, very appropriate. That’s a good sign. He’s there. He’s joking.” He was looking forward to walking her down the aisle when she marries her fiancé, she says, and his final words to her (though not his final words all together, she clarifies) were “no courthouses, but okay, let’s go.”

Aday says plans for Meat Loaf’s memorial service and funeral are still in the works.

Brazilians on Friday (Jan. 21) were grieving the loss of legendary samba singer and force of nature Elza Soares, a day after she died in her Rio de Janeiro home.

Family and friends gathered at Rio’s Municipal Theater, where her body was brought for viewing, before the playhouse opened its doors to the artist’s fans.

“Elza went on the day she wanted, the way she wanted, without suffering. And surrounded by family,” the singer’s granddaughter, Vanessa Soares, said in an interview on TV Globo. Soares was 91.

There was an outpouring of tributes from artists in Brazil and abroad, old and young, samba stars and rappers alike.

Singer Maria Rita called her “one of our country’s greatest, a representative of the resistance and resilience of its people. … And now our mission starts: celebrating her forever!”

Beyonce also thanked the artist on her website for inspiring “so many from Brazil and around the world,” while Rio’s Mayor Eduardo Paes declared three days of mourning.

“Woman! Warrior! Elza Lives!” he wrote on Twitter.

Soares rose to stardom in spite of a difficult upbringing and being a Black woman in a country where slavery has left a stark legacy of inequality. She often spoke critically of the country’s problems, and overcoming those obstacles contributed to her mythical persona.

Elza Gomes da Conceição was born in June 1930, in a poor Rio de Janeiro household in the Vila Vintem favela, a working-class neighborhood then known as Moca Bonita.

She was forced to marry at 12, had her first child at 13 and by age 21 was a widow with several children to feed. She lost two of them to hunger, Brazilian media have widely reported. Her most recent album, released in 2019, was entitled Planet Hunger — a reference to the place that he said on a radio show in the 1950s marked her origin.

She often told the story behind her distinctive raspy voice: Growing up, she had to carry water jugs balanced atop her head while walking through her favela. “I picked up a jug, and I groaned,” she said in one interview, illustrating her words with a deep, harsh sound. “And I thought this gave it a swing.”

For years, she had to do odd jobs to provide for her family, at one point working in a soap factory. It was only in the early 1960s that she started gaining fame as a samba singer.

She diversified to other genres, and in 1999 was elected “singer of the millennium” by BBC London, consolidating her international reputation.

“If I didn’t sing, I would die,” Soares said in a more recent television interview, in 2002. “Singing to not go crazy.”

Throughout her career, she maintained a fierce appetite for work, recording more than 30 albums. She also became a fashion figure, often appearing in interviews and on magazine covers or catwalks wearing extravagant garments, headdresses and thick make-up.

She was famous — and, to some, infamous — for striking up a relationship with Mané Garrincha, widely considered one of Brazil’s greatest soccer players. He ended his marriage with his wife in order to be with Soares, and the public cast blame on her.

But Soares, a fiercely independent woman and feminist well ahead of her time, distanced herself from the attention on their relationship and then marriage.

“I never liked being so-and-so’s wife. I’m me. I didn’t need to be Garrincha’s wife to be Elza Soares. Garrincha was Elza Soares’ husband,” she told Globo TV in 2017.

In 2020, the Mocidade samba school featured Soares in its Carnival parade, and last month she took part in a documentary series paying tribute to Black women singers who paved the way for other artists.

Following Soares’ death, Brazil’s hottest young artists, from rappers to pop stars, shared recent pictures of themselves posing next to their idol, a testament to her lasting impact.

Soares was to be buried Friday near the Vila Vintem favela where she grew up.