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Music industry titan Mo Ostin who worked with Sinatra, Hendrix and Prince dies at 95 The music industry is paying tribute to powerhouse record executive Mo Ostin who died "peacefully in his sleep" on Sunday evening, according to a statement from Warner Records. He was 95 years old. Ostin oversaw the careers of a long list of marquee ...
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Nichelle Nichols, trailblazer known for playing Lt. Uhura on 'Star Trek,' dies "Star Trek" fans are mourning the death of Nichelle Nichols. She played Lieutenant Uhura on TV and films. And in the 1960s, she was one of the first Black women starring on a TV show. NPR's Mandalit del Barco has this remembrance of a groundbreaking role ...
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Mo Ostin, who brought star musicians to Warner records, dies at 95 Mo Ostin, a self-effacing giant of the music business who presided over Warner Bros. Records' rise to a sprawling, billion-dollar empire and helped discover and nurture artists from Jimi Hendrix to Green Day, died July 31. He was 95.
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Beyoncé will change a lyric in her latest album after accusations of ableism On the album's 11th track, "Heated," which features Beyoncé and Drake among its writers, is the word "spaz," a term that disability activists have called an ableist slur. Beyoncé's publicist ...
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Industry's Toughest Critics? That Would Be Creators Mickey Down and Konrad Kay They say write what you know, but Mickey Down and Konrad Kay can admit that the first draft of their buzzy HBO finance drama, Industry, may have hit a little too close to home. "The first version of the show we wrote was even colder. It was almost ...
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Entering Sandman: All You Need to Know About Neil Gaiman's Classic Johanna Constantine, as she originally appeared in The Sandman, is an 18th century ancestor of the John Constantine you're likely familiar with. One liberty that The Sandman Netflix series takes is double casting Jenna Coleman ...
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What if White people woke up with dark skin? Mohsin Hamid's novel wonders. In the opening sentence, a White man named Anders awakens one morning to discover that his skin has turned "a deep and undeniable brown." Following Kafka's lead, the cause of this sudden alteration remains unknown; its meaning is equally elusive.
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