It was all too tame for a show whose belle of the ball was the Woodstock-era folk legend Joni Mitchell. Photo: Kevin Winter/Getty Images |
The Grammys are straining to be a different beast in this decade under Recording Academy president Harvey Mason Jr., who took over from his disgraced predecessor in 2021. Acclaim now gets spread around a wider and somewhat more careful group of nominees; categories are on the move and trying harder to recognize not just the evolving faces of Stateside pop, rock, rap, and R&B but musical hotbeds around the world. In the 2020s, last night’s ceremony aside, women are picking up more and more wins in categories like Best Melodic Rap Performance and Best Rock Song, where they used to go a few consecutive years without so much as a nod. The show is no longer as aggressively annoying.
What Mason, with his gentle speeches about finding a moment’s peace in music, can’t entirely control is the political context and tone for the Grammys. The way talent engages with or avoids current events outside the arena is a story writing itself one acceptance speech at a time. This year has already seen enough strife to spark a wave of protest songs from the likes of Billy Bragg and Bruce Springsteen, who both released odes to the bravery of Minneapolis, whose occupation by ICE and CBP is notching a body count. The rash of violence and abductions were the subject of a spate of ICE Out protests over the weekend in downtown Los Angeles, where the Grammys took place this year. And the question of whether we still live in a democracy has loomed over the winter. Meanwhile, the White House shitposts to get a rise out of pop stars online and the president announced, mid-show, the abrupt closure of the Kennedy Center for promised “renovations.” Would the Grammys, which kept The Daily Show’s Trevor Noah on retainer as host the whole decade, take a stand?
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Sagar Radia knew his Industry character could handle major storylines. So he asked the HBO series’ creators for more. |
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“I remember just wanting to go home and being like, I need to shower, I need to reset.” |
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Run Amok, Josephine, and many other films on this year’s lineup focused on adults who, under the guise of helping kids, ultimately fail them. |
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“She did not leave on her own, we know that,” a local sheriff said. |
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Noah joked that Trump and Bill Clinton hung out there while hosting the Grammy Awards. |
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HBO CEO Casey Bloys isn’t, anyway. |
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