Channing Tatum has come a long way since breakdancing his way onto the big screen in 2006 as the leading man in Step Up. See how far he’s come by checking out clips from his best roles.
From Daft Punk ditching EDM to Kanye assaulting our ears to surprise comebacks from My Bloody Valentine, Justin Timberlake and David Bowie, 2013’s been a great year for albums – and we’re only halfway through it. Here’s an unranked list of the year’s best so far.
Happy 87th birthday Mel Brooks! Find out who is currently making the legendary comic laugh.
“When politicians try to restrict women’s rights, it hurts…Women’s rights are something that I really care about. Girls of all ages support me, and I want to do what I can to help women feel good. Because that’s going to help out guys, too, you know? And it’s going to help the world in general. We need to understand each other – more empathy, just continuously trying to learn about other people’s situations. Love is the cure to everything.”
We walked in on Darren Criss freaking out before his Roseland show in New York yesterday. Stay tuned for a behind-the-scenes gallery of Criss preparing for the show.
While some musicians might resent being compared to inhuman technology, Jerry Casale – the co-founder of groundbreaking new-wave/punk icons Devo – intends the remark as supreme tribute to Alan Myers, Devo’s drummer during the group’s most vital decade, who died Monday from stomach cancer at 58. In fact, Myers’ angular playing proved so absurdly precise on Devo’s most beloved classics – the band’s provocative 1978 debut album Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo!, the 1979 follow-up Duty Now for the Future and 1980 mainstream breakthrough Freedom of Choice (featuring the era-defining hit “Whip It") – that his beats were frequently mistaken for a drum machine. Read fond memories that Meyers’ bandmates shared with us about the late drummer.