While most of you were enjoying the holiday break, spending time with family and friends, perhaps catching up on movies you’d missed, voting members of the Recording Academy were hunkering down with the Grammy nominations list to make thoughtful, carefully considered choices.
At least that’s what Recording Academy CEO Harvey Mason jr. fervently hopes. In any event, final-round Grammy voting, which opened on Dec. 12, closes Monday (Jan. 5) at 6 p.m. PT – no exceptions, no extensions, no excuses.
We’ll find out what the voters decided across 95 categories on Sunday Feb. 1 when the 68th annual Grammy Awards are presented at Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles.
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Here’s a preview of 12 categories that we’re watching with particular interest.But first, if you’re still in an eggnog-induced holiday fog, we’ll get you back into a Grammy frame of mind by reminding you about last year’s results. Kendrick Lamar was the top winner with five awards, including record and song of the year for the scathing “Not Like Us.” Beyoncé took album of the year (at long last) for Cowboy Carter. Chappell Roan won best new artist, beating Sabrina Carpenter, but Carpenter edged out Roan in two key pop categories. (We’ll call that a split decision.)
Here are 12 key categories on this year’s ballot. We show the three presumed front-runners in each category (in alphabetical order by artist), the rest of the nominees in the category (also in alphabetical order by artist), offer a few thoughts, and cap it with our best guess of who will win. Several of these races appear to be very close, so if you’re a voting member and you haven’t voted yet, be sure to do so. (But finish reading this first!)
https://i0.wp.com/neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/station.nez_png.png?fit=943%2C511&ssl=1511943Yvetohttps://neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/nez_png.pngYveto2026-01-05 16:01:182026-01-05 16:01:18As Grammy Voting Closes Today, Here Are 12 Races We’re Watching
John Mayer and film director/producer McG are in no rush to leave their personal stamp on the historic Los Angeles studio lot they bought together just over a year ago, which was most recently home to the Jim Henson Company and, before that, A&M Records. In fact, when tasked with giving the lot a “new” name, the duo returned all the way back to the landmark’s 1917 advent as Charlie Chaplin’s production studios, announcing in the new year that they’ve rebranded the vaunted space Chaplin Studios.
“I thought this could be really interesting to have people who are in their 20s, who are working on their first album, go to a place called Chaplin, even if they’re not aware of what the connection is,” Mayer told Billboard and a small group of other reporters during a tour of the lot and a sit-down chat in Studio B last month — one of the first interviews he and McG have given about their lofty Hollywood purchase. “I really like the letters, and I really like the sound, and I think you can honor the history and the legacy of the building, but also distance yourself from it a little bit so you get to establish something new.”
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Mayer is no stranger to continuing the legacy of an already well-established brand, having toured with the Grateful Dead offshoot Dead & Company for more than a decade now, so he understands his responsibility as a torchbearer. “I think my mark would be very similar to Dead & Company, in some way,” he says. “I think there’s a similarity to being a bridge to keep something going. That’s enough of a mark for me.”
There’s plenty of history to mine at the 80,000-square-foot lot just south of the intersection of Sunset Boulevard and La Brea Avenue, starting with the silent-film legend in 1917 and continuing with episodes of The Red Skelton Show, The Adventures of Superman and Perry Mason in the 1950s and ’60s, before taking a major musical pivot in 1966 when Herb Alpert and Jerry Moss purchased the lot to become the headquarters of A&M Records. In the label’s newly created recording studios (A&M left one Chaplin-era soundstage untouched in their renovations, among other original buildings), the list of classic productions created there is mind-boggling, from Joni Mitchell’s Blue and Carole King’s Tapestry to the all-time greatest gathering of musical A-listers for the 1985 USA for Africa charity single “We Are the World.” In 2000, Jim Henson’s children purchased the lot to be the new home of The Jim Henson Company, continuing the location’s longtime journey of TV and film production, as well as an active music recording space.
Brecht Van’t Hof
Mayer first made his way to Henson Studios in 2005 to record a cover of “Route 66” for Disney’s Cars soundtrack, and he immediately knew: “I was in a big-time studio. I didn’t know how it stacked up against other things, but I knew, like, ‘OK, this is where Pixar is setting up, and these are the players I’m playing with. And we better get this right, because we don’t have a week; we have a day.’ And then I started to go off and work in other studios, and it wasn’t until when I finally moved, bought a place and really lived somewhere, it was close enough that this made sense to start working here. … At that point, [songwriter/producer/guitarist] John Shanks had just moved out of Studio C, and he had, like, a 17-year stint as a lockout. So I jumped on it. Like, ‘I want to be the next guy to to have a lockout of C.’ And that started since 2018, and so that’s where I’ve slowly just acclimated to this place and loved it and understood it, and understood the vibe really well.”
When word got out a couple of years back that a family with ties to the Church of Scientology was pursuing the lot, McG — best-known for directing the 2000 Charlie’s Angels reboot and executive-producing the 2003-07 teen soap The O.C., and who got his start producing music and shooting videos for Sugar Ray and other bands, oftentimes at A&M/Henson — worked to put together his own bid, but “just didn’t have enough dough.” That’s when studio president Faryal Ganjehei (who started with Henson in 2000 and will continue in her role as president for Chaplin) connected McG with Mayer, whom she knew was also interested in preserving his studio home.
“John and I strangely didn’t know each other all that well prior to our arranged marriage,” McG laughs. But they quickly realized that the filmmaker was “equipped to deal with the headache” of running a lot, while Mayer was interested in being able to “tunnel into the studio, tunnel out.” Irving Azoff — who gave McG his first record deal in the ’90s and is Mayer’s longtime manager — vouched for the partnership, and the $60 million deal was finalized in November 2024.
“For me, this was about keeping the band together,” Mayer says of maintaining the workplace he had created at Henson, adding: “This is about caring about so many people who see each other every day. And especially if you’re me and you’re an artist, and the story goes that you don’t have any semblance of routine in your life, and I found it, and artists find it here — I didn’t want that to break up.”
Mayer and McG also both looked at the purchase for reasons beyond the financial, with the singer/songwriter calling the lot “an emotional asset.” “Everyone’s always looking at assets from a very kind of objective, hard-core, empirical-value level. This is something I wake up and I go to sleep every day knowing in my heart that I have a piece of in some way, or I’m responsible for other people’s piece of it.”
Part of that responsibility is knowing what to change and what to keep exactly the same. “We’re going to bring back the original pattern of the rug, which right now is in Studio A, but I think A is being used,” Mayer says. “So there’s a lot of things to be done in the studio, but for the most part, you leave artists alone, and they do their thing, and they don’t love too much change.” He’s hoping to maintain the exact scent of the recording studios (“I don’t know what makes an old California studio smell like an old California studio, but if you have the smell, keep it”) and isn’t interested in any lighting updates (“If artists walked in, and immediately everything was LED backlit…”). “There’s a nomenclature to being in the studio that lives in its own timeframe,” Mayer says. “And you just let people relate to that still. Even the tapestries — you know, there’s just something about tapestries and string lights that make people want to write songs, even if it’s not the most modern, Tesla-fied thing.”
Mayer is also learning what it’s like to be on the other side of an artist request, like when Justin Bieber was hoping to play some basketball during his downtime on the lot while recording Swag last year. Ganjehei immediately put the industrious studio runners on the job of turning the soundstage into Bieber’s private court. “Two hours later, three hours later, maybe later on that night, I get an image of what looks like a perfect basketball court with a three-point line, a foul line, everything, all the tape,” Mayer recalls. “The runners had figured out how to do it.” That’s all part of the studio gig, Mayer says: “If Justin Bieber had something that you could hear on Swag that was nominated for album of the year at the Grammys because he was able to shoot a little hoops on a break, then we’ve done our job.”
Perhaps Mayer will be putting in his own special requests to the Chaplin team as he goes back into artist mode this year to create his ninth studio album. “It’s become harder and harder and harder to block out the expanse of time it takes to make a record,” Mayer admits. “And it took me a couple of years to realize I may never make a record again if I continue to just do these projects. And by the way: It’s a great reason not to make a record for a couple of years to get the studio going, to write a Sphere show and put on the Sphere show [with Dead & Co.]. So what I’ve been doing is, probably since October… it’s like pumping the brakes on an 18-wheeler to get a schedule in 2026 to be open enough to make an album. And so I have done that.”
He’ll still make time for his SiriusXM channel, Life With John Mayer, but “other than that, I have to get back in the role of being an artist, and the way you do that is you throw tons of time at it. There is no way to streamline an album. And if you want to streamline an album, you can do it, but it won’t be very good.”
While he might be spending some extra hours in Studio C this year, his and McG’s purchase has also protected his ideal space to create — and his travel time to get there. “It’s the only place I can think of that is where it is and is what it is,” Mayer says of the Hollywood space. “Because if you come to L.A., you’re probably staying somewhere around here. If it’s time to go rehearse, you’ve got to go to Burbank. Artists don’t love being in the car all day going to Burbank, to go to Center Stage or to go to Conway or to go, you know, across town or to go anywhere. This is so centralized, but also feels like the kind of place you would have to drive 12 miles away, 6 miles away, and take an hour and a half to get this kind of space in this kind of openness, and that might be my favorite thing is right here, grandfathered in, it’s one of the last lots in this location where the gates open and they close behind you, and you own a different style of air on this block. And everyone else has to share the air that’s created by the rest of La Brea and the rest of Sunset, but there’s this one block that still can create its own tempo without having to drive out an hour and a half or an hour in traffic to touch that kind of air. So that’s really cool to me.”
https://i0.wp.com/neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/station.nez_png.png?fit=943%2C511&ssl=1511943Yvetohttps://neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/nez_png.pngYveto2026-01-05 15:00:592026-01-05 15:00:59John Mayer & McG Talk Rebranding Chaplin Studios, But Knowing What to Leave Untouched: ‘There’s Just Something About Tapestries & String Lights That Make People Want to Write Songs’
The Universal Music Group has kicked off 2026 with the first big investment of the year: its Universal Music India subsidiary is taking a 30% stake in Indian film and digital content studio Excel Entertainment, a deal that values the latter enterprise at approximately $257 million, the companies announced today (Jan. 5). At that valuation, UMG’s investment works out to just north of $77 million.
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The deal gives Universal global distribution rights for all of Excel’s original soundtracks moving forward, including those created for Excel’s popular musical drama projects, and will include the launch of a new Excel record label. Universal Music Publishing Group will also become Excel’s global exclusive publishing partner, while UMG’s chairman/CEO of Universal Music India & South Asia and senior vp of strategy, Africa, Middle East and Asia Devraj Sanyal will join Excel’s board of directors. A press release says that Excel’s founders Ritesh Sidhwani and Farhan Akhtar will remain in charge of overseeing content and creative direction.
“India’s entertainment landscape continues to grow from strength to strength, and this is the perfect moment to build meaningful global collaborations,” Sidhwani and Akhtar said in a joint statement announcing the deal. “We’re excited to partner with UMG in what we believe will be a truly creative and transformative alliance—one that unlocks fresh opportunities for artists and repertoire across music, film and emerging formats. Together, we aim to take culturally rooted stories to the world.”
Added Vishal Ramchandani, Excel’s CEO, “This partnership with UMG marks a pivotal step in our journey to broaden creative opportunities and tell Indian stories with a global lens. With a shared vision for innovation and excellence, we aim to transform Excel into a creative global studio — one that brings clutter-breaking, original content to audiences across platforms and geographies.”
The deal marks another foray into the Indian market for the U.S.-based music business, which has increasingly turned its attentions to the fast-rising subcontinent in recent years. Last February, Republic Records launched a joint venture with Savan Kotecha to find the next Indian pop boy band, while Warner Music’s Canadian and Indian operations (the latter of which was launched in 2022) founded a joint-venture label called 91 North Records in 2022, and in July HYBE announced it was exporting its K-pop model to India. Recently, several other labels, publishers and DSPs have broadened their reach in the region. India boasts the world’s largest population, but is the 15th-biggest recorded music market in the world, according to IFPI’s latest figures, suggesting plenty of room for growth in the industry. India is also a fast-growing concert hub, with the likes of Ed Sheeran, John Mayer and Coldplay making waves with shows in the country.
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“Today’s announcement further strengthens UMG’s position in India, a dynamic and strategically important music market for the group globally,” said UMG’s CEO of Africa, Middle East and Asia Adam Granite in a statement. “Original soundtracks remain at the heart of India’s fast-growing music market, with Indian listeners showing a growing desire to access more music in that genre. By investing in and partnering with Excel Entertainment, UMG will be uniquely positioned to contribute from the earliest stage to Excel’s future endeavors and throughout the creative process, providing huge benefits to both parties.”
“Farhan and Ritesh have built an exceptionally impressive business, and we’re thrilled to be working with them on the next phase of their journey,” Sanyal commented. “The Indian film scene presents a hugely exciting opportunity for music and the music-led entertainment business, and Excel is the perfect partner for us to work with going forward.”
Excel, founded in 1999, has released over 40 film and original shows over the past quarter century, according to a press release, which also notes that Indian film and TV soundtracks are often re-listened to compared to other genres and formats in the country, which UMG hopes to tap into. AZB & Partners served as legal counsel and KPMG served as transaction advisor to UMG for the deal; for Excel, Khaitan & Co. acted as legal counsel, Ernst & Young as transaction advisor, and Morgan Stanley as financial advisors.
https://i0.wp.com/neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/station.nez_png.png?fit=943%2C511&ssl=1511943Yvetohttps://neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/nez_png.pngYveto2026-01-05 14:20:312026-01-05 14:20:31Universal Music Takes 30% Stake in India’s Excel Entertainment at $257M Valuation
The drama between Brianna “Chickenfry” LaPaglia and ex-boyfriend country music star Zach Bryan has seemingly bled over into another year. After Bryan announced on New Year’s Day that he’d married girlfriend Samantha Leonard, LaPaglia was back in the conversation again thanks to a cryptic social media post that some fans took as a swipe against the “Oklahoma Smokeshow” singer.
In a brief TikTok video posted on Friday (Jan. 2) LaPaglia, 26, is seen wearing a light brown New York Yankees cap and smiling at the camera as she mouths the line “checkmate, I couldn’t lose” from Taylor Swift’s 2022 song “Mastermind.” While LaPaglia didn’t offer any additional thoughts explaining the clip, one commenter proclaimed to get the unspoken meaning behind the social post: “said a lot without saying nothing my queen.” LaPaglia’s post did not specifically reference Bryan or their relationship.
Podcaster LaPagalia dated Bryan, 29, from July 2023 through Oct. 2024 before Bryan seemingly surprised the influencer with the breakup. The exes engaged in a public back-and-forth in July 2025 after Bryan released a trio of new songs, which the Grammy-winning singer denied were about LaPaglia. “Lmfao, I said ‘sweet’ this is not about whatever she has going on hahahahaah,” Bryan said in a TikTok.
LaPaglia quickly weighed in, writing, “Lmao obviously he doesn’t think I’m sweet I turned down 12 million dollars to share my abuse,” before making claims about Bryan’s previous romantic partners, “while rose [Madden] and Deb [Peifer] signed nda’s. Also fyi his songs aren’t about anyone he writes them drunk at 6am.” Following the couple’s messy split, LaPaglia accused Bryan of emotional abuse and claimed that Bryan’s management team offered her a series of non-disclosure agreement options, including ones proffering a house and $3 million and another option for a $10 million payout.
Despite the seeming lingering acrimony with LaPaglia, Bryan, 29, was all smiles in his black and white wedding day portrait with Leonard, 28, in which he held his bride in his arms, captioning the snap: “Tougher than the rest.” The phrase, from Bruce Springsteen’s 1987 Tunnel of Love single “Tougher Than the Rest,” was heard in an accompanying video Bryan posted that appeared to show him performing the song with a full band.
Bryan — who was married to Rose Madden from 2020-2021 — was first spotted with Leonard in social posts last summer and the couple have, for the most part, kept their relationship private to date.
https://i0.wp.com/neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/station.nez_png.png?fit=943%2C511&ssl=1511943Yvetohttps://neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/nez_png.pngYveto2026-01-05 14:00:592026-01-05 14:00:59Brianna ‘Chickenfry’ LaPaglia Posts Taylor Swift ‘Mastermind’ Lip Synch Video Following Ex Zach Bryan’s Holiday Wedding
Hugh Jackman already thought that having a karaoke sleepover at Neil Diamond‘s was the pinnacle of his relationship with the “Sweet Caroline” singer. But over the weekend, the actor notched yet another career high moment with Diamond when the Grammy-winning superstar sent him a very special gift.
Jackman is currently on the big screen in the role of Mike “Lightning” Sardina, the lead singer of a Diamond tribute act Thunder & Lightning in the heartwarming musical drama Song Sung Blue. In a video posted on Sunday (Jan. 4), Jackman reacts with shock upon opening an instrument case containing an acoustic guitar signed by Diamond.
Staring at the six-string, a speechless Jackman stares at the camera in awe exclaiming, “oh… my…” before gingerly taking the guitar out, swiping at the signature (which reads “Hugh, Keep rocking! Your friend, Neil Diamond) to make sure it’s real and asking, “that’s from Neil Diamond?” The brief clip ends with Jackman closing his eyes as he lovingly hugs the unexpected keepsake and says, “thank you Neil.”
“One of the most awesome gifts I’ve ever received and will cherish forever,” Jackman wrote in the caption of the post that also included a shot of the 84-year-old Diamond holding up the axe and giving a thumbs-up; Diamond announced his retirement from touring in 2018 after being diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease.
Jackman stars alongside Kate Hudson in the film released on Christmas Day that is based on the true story of a Milwaukee Diamond tribute band Lightning & Thunder. In December, Jackman appeared on The Graham Norton Show, where he revealed that a weepy Diamond called him after watching the movie to say that he loved it.
“So I took the opportunity. I said, ‘Guys, I’d love to come around and have a cuppa or something,’” Jackman said of his pitch to Diamond to get together for a coffee. “And Neil’s like, ‘Okay, yeah, all right.’ And then I didn’t hear from Neil anymore. And [Diamond’s wife] Katie obviously takes the phone and goes, ‘You know we’re in Colorado?’ I went, ‘Okay, I’d still like to come for a cuppa,’ and she was like, ‘So I guess you want to stay the night?’ I’m like, ‘That’d be great.’ And she’s like, ‘Okay.’”
So Jackman flew out to Colorado to visit Diamond and they had dinner and ended up doing karaoke together that night.
https://i0.wp.com/neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/station.nez_png.png?fit=943%2C511&ssl=1511943Yvetohttps://neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/nez_png.pngYveto2026-01-05 13:06:172026-01-05 13:06:17Hugh Jackman Left Speechless By One-Of-a-Kind Gift From Neil Diamond: ‘Oh… My’
Olivia Dean’s The Art of Loving reaches a new peak on the Billboard 200 albums chart (dated Jan. 10) vaulting 14-4, as holiday titles flee the region post-Christmas. The latest chart reflects the tracking week of Dec. 26 through Jan. 1.
The Art of Loving surpasses its No. 5 peak achieved in November.
All charts dated Jan. 10 will be posted in full on Billboard’s website on Jan. 6.
The Art of Loving debuted at No. 8 on the chart dated Oct. 11, climbed to its previous No. 5 high on the Nov. 22 chart, and spent its first 11 chart weeks in the top 10. It only got pushed out of the top 10 in the last two weeks due to the avalanche of returning catalog holiday albums that typically crowd the top 10 during the final weeks of the holiday season. Last week (Jan. 3 chart, reflecting the Dec. 19-25 tracking frame), there were a record seven holiday albums in the top 10.
Now, on the latest chart, with all holiday albums departing the top 10, the region readjusts to normal business, and many non-holiday albums jump back up the list, including The Art of Loving.
Concurrent with The Art of Loving’s climb on the Billboard 200, its lead single “Man I Need” spends its second week at No. 1 on the Pop Airplay chart (dated Jan. 10). It also holds at its No. 5 high on Adult Pop Airplay for a third week and climbs 14-13 to a new peak on Adult Contemporary, while also ranking in the top 25 on Dance/Mix Show Airplay (21-18, a new peak), Adult R&B Airplay (up a spot to a new peak, No. 22), Rhythmic Airplay (holding at its No. 22 high).
The Billboard 200 chart ranks the most popular albums of the week in the United States based on multi-metric consumption as measured in equivalent album units, compiled by Luminate. For all chart news, follow @billboard and @billboardcharts on both X, formerly known as Twitter, and Instagram.
https://i0.wp.com/neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/station.nez_png.png?fit=943%2C511&ssl=1511943Yvetohttps://neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/nez_png.pngYveto2026-01-05 12:10:362026-01-05 12:10:36Olivia Dean’s ‘The Art of Loving’ Hits New Peak on Billboard 200
Paris Jackson has shared a candid message about sobriety and mental health, offering support to others navigating similar paths.
The singer, model and actor posted the message to Instagram alongside a montage of moments from the past year, reflecting on her experiences since becoming sober in 2020.
Jackson, the only daughter of Michael Jackson and Debbie Rowe, has been open about her recovery journey and mental health struggles in recent years.
“Getting sober ain’t always the indication that life is perfect,” Jackson wrote. “A few years in, it all got very, very hard for what felt like an eternity.”
She continued, “I didn’t have the same survival skills I was used to having to cope. I had to learn to live life on life’s terms.”
Jackson also addressed the mental health challenges she has faced during her sobriety, naming several conditions in her post.
“Treatment-resistant major depressive disorder is a b–ch, so is PTSD and OCD,” she wrote. “If you’ve got this s–t or anything of the sort, you’re not alone. Hang in there, and if no one’s told you they love you today, I love you.”
The post arrives as Jackson continues to mark milestones in her recovery. In January 2025, she reflected publicly on reaching five years of sobriety, sharing another message on Instagram.
“Hi, I’m PK, and I’m an alcoholic and a heroin addict,” she wrote at the time. “Today marks 5 years clean and sober from all drugs and alcohol. To say that I’m thankful would be a poor euphemism. Gratitude hardly scratches the surface.”
In that earlier post, Jackson also spoke about the everyday experiences that sobriety has allowed her to reconnect with.
“I get to make music. I get to experience the joy of loving my dogs and cat. I get to feel heartbreak in all its glory,” she wrote. “I get to grieve. I get to laugh. I get to dance. I get to trust. I feel the sun on my skin, and it’s warm.”
Alongside her advocacy and openness around mental health, Jackson has continued to build a career in entertainment across multiple fields. She has released music as a solo artist, including her 2020 debut album Wilted, while also working as an actor and model.
https://i0.wp.com/neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/station.nez_png.png?fit=943%2C511&ssl=1511943Yvetohttps://neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/nez_png.pngYveto2026-01-05 09:11:572026-01-05 09:11:57Paris Jackson Opens Up About Sobriety and Mental Health in Candid Instagram Post
Mickey Rourke has launched a GoFundMe campaign as he faces a possible eviction from his Los Angeles home after allegedly falling nearly $60,000 behind on rent.
According to The Hollywood Reporter, the fundraiser was organized by Rourke’s friend and a member of his management team, Liya-Joelle Jones. The campaign went live on Sunday (Jan. 4) with a $100,000 goal and raised just over $1,500 within its first six hours.
The GoFundMe page states that Rourke has given his “full permission” for funds to be used to “help cover immediate housing-related expenses” and prevent eviction. The campaign describes a period of prolonged financial and health struggles following the actor’s decision to step away from Hollywood at the height of his career.
“At the height of his success, he stepped away from Hollywood in search of truth and authenticity, choosing risk over comfort,” the campaign reads. “Boxing—real and punishing—left lasting physical and emotional scars, and the industry that once celebrated him moved on quickly.”
The page continues, “Fame does not protect against hardship, and talent does not guarantee stability. What remains is a person who deserves dignity, housing, and the chance to regain his footing.”
Speaking to THR, Jones said, “Mickey is going through a very difficult time right now, and it’s been incredibly touching to see how many people care about him and want to help.”
According to People, Rourke was served a notice on Dec. 18 demanding payment of $59,100 in back rent or that he vacate the property within three days. The notice was reportedly posted on the home and mailed to the actor because he was not present at the time.
A complaint filed on Dec. 29 alleges that Rourke “failed to comply with the requirements of” the notice.
The three-bedroom, 1,600-square-foot home was rented under a lease Rourke signed in March 2025 for $5,200 per month, which was later increased to $7,000. In addition to back rent, the landlord, Eric Goldie, is reportedly seeking attorney fees and the forfeiture of the rental agreement.
Rourke began renting the home shortly before pursuing legal action against Celebrity Big Brother UK over an alleged pay dispute following his exit from the series in April 2025. At the time, his manager Kimberly Hines said in a statement shared with People that the show had disrespected the actor and failed to compensate him as agreed.
“There’s no question that when Big Brother booked Mickey Rourke, they were fully aware of both his public persona and how it aligned with his Hollywood rebel image,” Hines said, adding that producers knew his presence would be “explosive, controversial and attention-grabbing — and that’s exactly what they got, and more.”
The actor won the award for his performance in Marty Supreme, in which he plays Marty Mauser, a professional table tennis player chasing an ambitious goal.
After thanking his fellow nominees, his team and the film’s director, Josh Safdie, Chalamet turned his attention to Jenner, who was seated in the audience.
“And lastly, I’ll just say, thank you to my partner of three years. Thank you for our foundation,” Chalamet said from the stage. “I couldn’t do this without you. Thank you from the bottom of my heart. Thank you so much,” he added.
Cameras quickly cut to Jenner in the audience, who responded by mouthing “I love you” back to the actor, drawing cheers from the room and instant reaction across social media. The moment marked one of the couple’s most public displays since they began appearing together at major industry events.
Chalamet, visibly emotional, admitted early in his speech that the moment had hit him harder than expected.
“I’m more nervous than I thought I’d be,” he said, before shifting focus to the creative team behind Marty Supreme. He singled out co-writer and director Josh Safdie for crafting a story that centers on ambition without moralizing its subject.
“You made a story about a flawed man with a relatable dream, and you didn’t preach to the audience about what’s right and wrong,” Chalamet said. “I think we should all be telling stories like that. Thank you for this dream.”
The Best Actor category was one of the evening’s most competitive, with Chalamet beating out Leonardo DiCaprio (One Battle After Another), Joel Edgerton (Train Dreams), Ethan Hawke (Blue Moon), Michael B. Jordan (Sinners), and Wagner Moura (The Secret Agent).
In addition to Chalamet, Marty Supreme’s cast includes Gwyneth Paltrow, Odessa A’zion, Shark Tank‘s Kevin O’Leary, Fran Drescher, Sandra Bernhard, magician Penn Jillette and Abel Ferrara.
Marty Supreme opened with over $27 million at the box office, according to Variety, in its four-day opening set following its Christmas Day (Dec. 25) release.
“Golden,” the fizzy global smash from KPop Demon Hunters, won best song at the 31st Critics Choice Awards, which were held at Barker Hangar in Santa Monica, Calif., on Sunday (Jan. 4). Ludwig Göransson’s music for Sinners won best score.
Both “Golden” and the Sinners score are nominated in those same categories at the Golden Globe Awards, which will be presented on Jan. 11. Both are also shortlisted for Oscars in those categories. Oscar nominations will be announced on Jan. 22.
“Golden” topped the Billboard Hot 100 for eight weeks. It’s the first former No. 1 hit to win at the Critics Choice Awards since “See You Again” from Furious 7 a decade ago. That hip-hop smash topped the Hot 100 for 12 weeks. (“Shallow” from A Star Is Born also hit No. 1, but not prior to awards season. It hit No. 1 after it won the Oscar.)
“Golden” was cowritten by EJAE, Mark Sonnenblick, Ido, 24 and Teddy. If it also wins at the Oscars, it would mark the first time the winning song has had as many as five credited writers. The Academy has a rule that no more than four statuettes will be presented in this category, so these five writers have agreed that, should they win, they will share one statuette for their song.
This is Göransson’s second Critics Choice Award for best score. He won two years ago for Oppenheimer. He’s the first composer to win twice in the space of three years since Justin Hurwitz, who won for La La Land (2016) and First Man (2018).
Four of the six winners for best original score since 2020 went on to win in that category at the Oscars. Likewise, four of the seven winners for best original song since 2020 (there was a tie in 2020) went on to win at the Oscars.
Ryan Coogler’s horror film Sinners led the 2026 Critics Choice Awards nominations with a whopping 17 bids. Paul Thomas Anderson’s One Battle After Another was runner-up, with 14 nods. Those two films were followed on the leaderboard by Frankenstein and Hamnet (11 nods each); Marty Supreme (eight); F1, Sentimental Value and Wicked: For Good (seven nods each), Train Dreams (five), and Jay Kelly and Weapons (four nods each).
On the television side, Netflix’s Adolesence led the way with six nominations, followed by Nobody Wants This with five; and All Her Fault, Death by Lightning, Ghosts, Hacks, Severance and The Pitt, with four nods each.
Chelsea Handler hosted the Critics Choice Awards for the fourth consecutive year. It was broadcast live on Jan. 4 on E! and USA Network.
Here’s a complete list of nominations in both film and TV categories, with the winners that have been identified marked. The other winners will be marked as the show progresses.
https://i0.wp.com/neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/station.nez_png.png?fit=943%2C511&ssl=1511943Yvetohttps://neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/nez_png.pngYveto2026-01-05 02:41:042026-01-05 02:41:04‘Golden’ and ‘Sinners’ Score Win in Music Categories at 2026 Critics Choice Awards