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  • Anticipate Tyson Fury vs. Anthony Joshua Clash “THIS YEAR,” Eddie Hearn Affirms in Response to Unconventional Luke Littler Question.

    Anticipate Tyson Fury vs. Anthony Joshua Clash “THIS YEAR,” Eddie Hearn Affirms in Response to Unconventional Luke Littler Question.

    Hearn’s forecast will astound boxing enthusiasts.

    According to EDDIE HEARN, Anthony Joshua and Tyson Fury WILL square off this year.

    For almost ten years, the British couple has been openly criticizing one other and even agreed to a fight in 2020.

    Eddie Hearn, the promoter, thinks AJ and Fury will square off later this year.

    Promoter Eddie Hearn predicts that later this year, AJ and Fury will square off in the ring.

    Eddie Hearn, the promoter, thinks that later this year, AJ and Fury will square off.

    To the dismay of boxing fans everywhere, however, their much-anticipated domestic brawl has yet to materialize.

    But now that former unified heavyweight king Joshua has won four straight, their long-overdue Battle of Britain is back on the table.

    Additionally, Matchroom Boxing CEO Hearn expressed his conviction that the biggest bout in the sport will take place before the end of the year in a peculiar question concerning darts player Luke Littler.

    He told talkTV’s Piers Morgan: “Because the Darts Championship happens in December and January, I’m gonna say that Fury vs AJ happens this year.

    “So I’m gonna say Fury vs AJ [happens first].”

    Boxing fans were set to be treated to back-to-back showdowns involving Fury and Joshua after the pair inked a lucrative two-fight series in June 2020.

    But the deal went up in smoke when former WBC heavyweight champion Deontay Wilder won his arbitration case for a trilogy fight with the Gypsy King.

    Joshua, 34, got himself back in world title contention in 2023 with three solid wins.

  • Tyson Fury vs Oleksandr Usyk rematch date revealed after the Gypsy King activated a clause in their deal to face the undisputed champion again

    Tyson Fury vs Oleksandr Usyk rematch date revealed after the Gypsy King activated a clause in their deal to face the undisputed champion again

    Tyson Fury will have to wait until four days before Christmas for his dollar-laden rematch with Oleksandr Usyk.

    The betting odds are already stacking against Santa Claus delivering unto the Gypsy King revenge as a festive gift.

    But the delay from the original date of October 12 to December 21 will be seen in some quarters as giving Fury an extra ten weeks to recover from the monstrous ninth round beating he took in their first fight which was crucial to Usyk becoming the first undisputed world heavyweight champion for a quarter of a century.

    An underlying reason for the change in timing, however, is that another epic fight will give the Saudi Arabian paymasters a spectacular opening to the next Riyadh Season of sports, culture and star-studded entertainment events in the capital.

    Hence His Excellency AlAlSikh had no need to announce the venue when he confirmed the date.

    Oleksandr Usyk defeated Tyson Fury via split decision in their Saudi Arabia bout this month
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    Oleksandr Usyk defeated Tyson Fury via split decision in their Saudi Arabia bout this month

    Saudi chief Turki Alalshikh has confirmed that the heavyweights will battle again in December
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    Saudi chief Turki Alalshikh has confirmed that the heavyweights will battle again in December

    Usyk became the first man in 25 years to unify the division after beating Fury this month
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    Usyk became the first man in 25 years to unify the division after beating Fury this month

    Tyson Fury ready for a rematch after losing against Usyk

    In his post on X, Turki Alalshikh wrote: ‘The rematch between the Undisputed Champion Oleksandr Usyk and the Champion Tyson Fury is now scheduled on the 21 of December 2024 during Riyadh Season.

    ‘The world will watch another historical fight again…Our commitment to boxing fans continues…We hope you enjoy it..’

    One thing that won’t alter appreciably is the division of the booty. The terms of the rematch were set in the original contracts for two fights, with Fury the great showman the A-side ticket and pay-TV attraction.

    While he banked an estimated £100 million earlier this month, Usyk settled for £35 million. Poor chap!

    While there may be somewhat of an adjustment in recognition of Usyk now owning all the belts, the percentages will still weigh heavily in Fury’s favour.

    Nor is it likely that Usyk will still be undisputed by the time they fight again.

    While the Ukrainian hero will still hold the WBC, WBA and WBO titles, the IBF are threatening to give Anthony Joshua a route back to their championship in a Wembley fight this September against the winner of this Saturday’s bout in Ryadh between Filip Hrgovic and Daniel Dubois.

  • Tyson Fury vs Oleksandr Usyk rematch: Date, time, venue and odds as heavyweight title rematch bout is confirmed by Turki Alalshikh

    Tyson Fury vs Oleksandr Usyk rematch: Date, time, venue and odds as heavyweight title rematch bout is confirmed by Turki Alalshikh

    Undisputed heavyweight champion Oleksandr Usyk and Tyson Fury are set to encounter one another once again this year.

    The pair met on a historic night for the world of boxing on May 18 as the Ukrainian southpaw beat Fury by split decision to become the first undisputed champion of the four-belt era.

    Ever since the famed fight, the world has been eagerly anticipating when the ‘Gypsy King’ and ‘The Cat’ will enter the ring together again.

    Fury possessed the option to force a rematch in his contract, the original date proposed for the rematch fight which is projected to be ‘bigger and better’ than the first was set for October but has been pushed back by the Saudis.

    Here is everything you need know about Tyson Fury vs Oleksandr Usyk rematch including date, time, venue and where you can watch.

    A date has been set for Tyson Fury vs Oleksandr Usyk's hotly anticipated rematch
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    A date has been set for Tyson Fury vs Oleksandr Usyk’s hotly anticipated rematch

    Fans have been eagerly awaiting confirmation of a second fight between the pair after Usyk claimed the undisputed heavyweight title by split decision on May 18
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    Fans have been eagerly awaiting confirmation of a second fight between the pair after Usyk claimed the undisputed heavyweight title by split decision on May 18

    'The Gypsy King' activated his rematch clause on May 24 according to Top Rank CEO Bob Arum and a date has now been confirmed by Turki Alalshikh
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    ‘The Gypsy King’ activated his rematch clause on May 24 according to Top Rank CEO Bob Arum and a date has now been confirmed by Turki Alalshikh

    When is Tyson Fury vs Oleksandr Usyk rematch?

    The heavyweight title rematch between Fury and Usyk has been fixed for Saturday, December 21, 2024.

    The pair will battle it out over 12 rounds in a winner-takes-all bout. An official start time for the event has yet to be released but looking at previous events in Saudi Arabia could see the main card get underway as early as 4pm Uk / 11am ET / 8am PT.

    Although times have no been revealed for the titanic fight night, going off previous Saudi boxing nights, and Fury vs Usyk 1, we can predict that the action will get underway around 11pm UK time – 1am Saudi Arabia time on Sunday, May 19.

    Where is Fury vs Usyk 2 taking place?

    Just like their first bout, the rematch between Tyson Fury and Oleksandr Usyk will take place in Saudi Arabia.

    Turki Alalshikh who confirmed the rematch did not name a venue or destination for the fight but said the hotly anticipated rematch would take place ‘during Riyadh Season’.

    Usyk and Fury's first bout went the full 12 rounds and fans are saying the rematch will be even 'bigger and better' than their titanic first clash
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    Usyk and Fury’s first bout went the full 12 rounds and fans are saying the rematch will be even ‘bigger and better’ than their titanic first clash

    Where to watch/follow?

    Mail Sport will be live blogging the historic rematch, providing you with all the necessary pre-fight build-up as well as round-by-round reporting and updates.

    It has yet to be released which broadcasters have been given the rights to the fight. We will update where you can watch the bout live once it is revealed.

    Fury vs Usyk – Key Information

    Tyson Fury 

    Age: 35

    Country: England

    Height: 6ft 9in

    Reach: 85″

    Record: 34-1-1

    Oleksandr Usyk  

    Age: 37

    Country: Ukraine

    Height: 6ft 3in

    Reach: 78″

    Record: 22-0-0

    Fight Odds

    Fury to win – 13/10
    Usyk to win – 4/6
    Draw – 14/1

    All odds were accurate at the time of publication via Skybet.

  • Eddie Hearn claims it’s ‘not fair’ that the IBF allowed Oleksandr Usyk to retain his heavyweight title for a rematch with Tyson Fury… as boxing chief insists ‘you can’t ignore’ mandatory challenger Filip Hrgovic

    Eddie Hearn claims it’s ‘not fair’ that the IBF allowed Oleksandr Usyk to retain his heavyweight title for a rematch with Tyson Fury… as boxing chief insists ‘you can’t ignore’ mandatory challenger Filip Hrgovic

    Eddie Hearn has questioned the IBF’s decision to allow Oleksandr Usyk to retain his heavyweight title for an immediate rematch with Tyson Fury.

    The Ukrainian defeated Fury this month in a spilt decision victory to become the first fighter since Lennox Lewis defeated Evander Holyfield in 1999 to unify the belts.

    However, Usyk was in danger of being stripped of his IBF Championship due to the fact he was meant to make a mandatory title defence against Croatia’s Filip Hrgovic.

    However, IBF President Daryl Peoples confirmed that Usyk requested an exception to keep his IBF heavyweight world title for a Fury rematch, rather than being stripped for not facing his IBF mandatory challenger.

    And, after Turki Alalshikh confirmed that the rematch has been set for December 21, Matchroom boxing chief Hearn has insisted it’s ‘not fair’ on Hrgovic.

    Eddie Hearn questioned the IBF's decision to allow an immediate rematch for Usyk and Fury
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    Eddie Hearn questioned the IBF’s decision to allow an immediate rematch for Usyk and Fury

    Oleksandr Usyk (left) defeated the Gypsy King via split decision after an impressive display
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    Oleksandr Usyk (left) defeated the Gypsy King via split decision after an impressive display

    Tyson Fury ready for a rematch after losing against Usyk

    Speaking on the Chris Mannix YouTube channel, Hearn said: ‘My understanding is, there’s already been an exception [with IBF allowing Usyk to keep his belt for the rematch with Fury]. I get both sides of the argument.

    ‘You really don’t want the belts to be fragmented, but you’ve got a guy [Filip Hrgovic] who has been ordered ages ago and has been waiting and waiting and waiting.

    ‘So, it was my understanding that the Fury-Usyk fight took place on the condition that the winner had to fight Hrgovic with no exceptions. I don’t think that’s going to happen next week [by June 1st] for Hrgovic-Dubois for that to be on the line.

    ‘But maybe the winner of that has AJ next in line for the IBF. We have to wait and see. But you can’t ignore your mandatory challenger for two or three years.

    ‘I get the whole idea of, ‘Yeah, it’s great to have an undisputed champion.’ But what if the shoe is on the other foot, and you’re this guy [Hrgovic] that’s been mandatory, and now he goes out and beats Dubois?

    ‘He’s told, ‘You can’t get your title shot until the summer of 2025. It’s not fair. I get both sides of the argument, but I do expect the IBF belt to come vacant, but it’s very unlikely for next Saturday,’ said Hearn.

    Croatia's Filip Hrgovic is the mandatory challenger for Usyk's IBF heavyweight title
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    Croatia’s Filip Hrgovic is the mandatory challenger for Usyk’s IBF heavyweight title

    Usyk became the first man in 25 years to unify the division after beating Fury last month
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    Usyk became the first man in 25 years to unify the division after beating Fury last month

    Usyk is moved to tears as he talks about his supportive late dad

    While Hearn insisted that the immediate rematch was unfair on Croatian heavyweight Hrgovic, he did admit that another fight between Fury and Usyk made sense.

    He continued: ‘There should be a rematch because it was a great fight. We had Usyk winning the fight.

    ‘I had it tight, and some had it a little wider, but still a close, competitive fight. He [Usyk] probably thinks he can win the rematch, which I think he’s the favorite to do’.

    The rematch between the two heavyweight stars was officially confirmed on Thursday afternoon.

    Saudi chief Turki Alalshikh has confirmed that the heavyweights will battle again in December
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    Saudi chief Turki Alalshikh has confirmed that the heavyweights will battle again in December

    In a post on X, Turki Alalshikh wrote: ‘The rematch between the Undisputed Champion Oleksandr Usyk and the Champion Tyson Fury is now scheduled on the 21 of December 2024 during Riyadh Season.

    ‘The world will watch another historical fight again…Our commitment to boxing fans continues…We hope you enjoy it..’

    Hrgovic, meanwhile, has been the top heavyweight contender since an August 2022 win over Zhilei Zhang.

    The Croatian will be in action next weekend when he takes on England’s Daniel Dubois as part of the Matchroom vs. Queensberry 5-v-5 in the same Saudi Arabia venue where Usyk tasted victory.

  • Tyson Fury suspended from boxing after brutal defeat to Oleksandr Usyk… but Gypsy King is still set to activate rematch clause

    Tyson Fury suspended from boxing after brutal defeat to Oleksandr Usyk… but Gypsy King is still set to activate rematch clause

    Tyson Fury has been handed a one-week ban from boxing following his defeat to Oleksandr Usyk last weekend.

    The Gypsy King suffered his first professional defeat at the hands of Oleksandr Usyk on Saturday in Saudi Arabia, losing split decision after the judges scored the bout 115-112, 113-114, 114-113.

    It meant that Usyk became the first boxer since Lennox Lewis in 1999 to unify the heavyweight division after taking the WBC title off Fury, which was added to his WBA (Super), WBO, IBF and IBO titles.

    Fury was in big trouble on the ropes at one stage of the fight with many arguing that the referee could have stopped it.

    And it has been revealed that the UAE Boxing Commission gave him a rather meaningless one-week medical suspension which meant that he would not have been allowed to fight until this weekend.

    Tyson Fury was handed a one-week ban from boxing following his defeat to Oleksandr Usyk
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    Tyson Fury was handed a one-week ban from boxing following his defeat to Oleksandr Usyk

    The Brit suffered nothing more than cuts and bruising from the brutal 12-round contest.

    Usyk, who had to be taken to hospital after the fight due to fears over a broken jaw, is not allowed to compete until June 2.

    Fury and Usyk look set to run it back later this year with promoter Frank Warren confirming his fighter’s intention to activate his rematch clause.

    ‘There will be a rematch,’ Warren said. ‘I think it will be better than the original fight.’

    ‘They both know each other, they’ve shared the ring and they’ll be looking to use what they’ve gained from the fight as an advantage to beat their opponent.’


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    It was a brutal contest but Fury suffered nothing more than than surface level damage

  • Tyson Fury ‘officially activates rematch clause with Oleksandr Usyk’ in the wake of his defeat in Saudi Arabia… after Ukrainian ‘applied for exemption’ to stop him facing the mandatory challenger

    Tyson Fury ‘officially activates rematch clause with Oleksandr Usyk’ in the wake of his defeat in Saudi Arabia… after Ukrainian ‘applied for exemption’ to stop him facing the mandatory challenger

    Tyson Fury has officially activated a rematch clause to fight Oleksandr Usyk, according to Top Rank CEO Bob Arum.

    The Ukrainian defeated Fury last weekend in a spilt decision victory to become the first fighter since Lennox Lewis defeated Evander Holyfield in 1999 to unify the belts.

    However, Usyk was in danger of being stripped of his IBF Championship due to the fact he was meant to make a mandatory title defence against Croatia’s Filip Hrgovic.

    With this in mind, IBF President Daryl Peoples confirmed that Usyk officially requested an exception to keep his IBF heavyweight world title for a Fury rematch, rather than being stripped for not facing his IBF mandatory challenger.

    Now, it appears his wish has been granted after Arum confirmed that Fury has activated a rematch clause with his Ukrainian counter-part.

    Tyson Fury has officially activated his rematch clause with Olekansdr Usyk, according to Bob Arum
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    Tyson Fury has activated his rematch clause with Olekansdr Usyk, according to Bob Arum

    Tyson Fury ready for a rematch after losing against Usyk

    Usyk became the first man in 25 years to unify the division after beating Fury last month
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    Usyk became the first man in 25 years to unify the division after beating Fury last month

    Uysk requested an exemption to keep his IBF heavyweight title - despite the fact that Croatian boxer Filip Hrgovic (above) is the mandatory challenger - in order to rematch Fury instead
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    Uysk requested an exemption to keep his IBF heavyweight title – despite the fact that Croatian boxer Filip Hrgovic (above) is the mandatory challenger – in order to rematch Fury instead

    According to talkSPORT, Arum relayed the news before saying: ‘That fight will take place either at the end of this year or the beginning of next year in Riyadh.’

    Hrgovic has been the top heavyweight contender since an August 2022 win over Zhilei Zhang.

    The Croatian will be in action next weekend when he takes on England’s Daniel Dubois as part of the Matchroom vs. Queensberry 5-v-5 in the same Saudi Arabia venue where Usyk tasted victory last week.

    Usyk went into his titanic clash with Fury knowing that his undisputed reign could possibly last only two weeks – given the mandatory challenger.

    The threat of a short undisputed reign and splinter of the belts was always a possibility when the original date of Usyk’s clash with Fury was made.

    However, it was further complicated after the pair’s fight was pushed forward following the injury to Fury’s eye that saw the bout moved to a later date.

    Uysk's wants to remain undisputed champion ahead of a expected rematch with Tyson Fury
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    Uysk’s wants to remain undisputed champion ahead of a expected rematch with Tyson Fury

    Usyk is moved to tears as he talks about his supportive late dad

    Usyk won the WBA, IBF and WBO titles in a Sept. 2021 points win over Anthony Joshua and retained the bets in a rematch against the Brit a year later – the same night Hrgovic beat Zhang to become the mandatory challenger.

    Now, the 37-year-old wants to extend the run with all four belts, so he can defend them against the Gypsy King once again in their expected rematch later this year.

    Fury, meanwhile, has been handed a one-week ban from boxing following his defeat last weekend.

    It has been revealed that the UAE Boxing Commission gave him a rather meaningless one-week medical suspension which meant that he would not have been allowed to fight until this weekend.

  • Frank Warren has insisted Tyson Fury would be wise to target what he perceives to be Oleksandr Usyk’s greatest weakness when the pair meet inside the ring on May 18 here.

    Frank Warren has insisted Tyson Fury would be wise to target what he perceives to be Oleksandr Usyk’s greatest weakness when the pair meet inside the ring on May 18 here.

    Frank Warren has insisted Tyson Fury would be wise to target what he perceives to be Oleksandr Usyk‘s greatest weakness when the pair meet inside the ring.

    For the first time since Lennox Lewis more than two decades ago, an undisputed king of the heavyweight division could be crowned in Riyadh next month.

    Usyk and Fury had originally been scheduled to face off in February before the Gypsy King sustained a serious cut in sparring leading to the bout being moved to May 18.

    As part of the deal to reschedule the fight, Turki Alalshikh revealed that both fighters had agreed to forfeit $10m (£8m) if they were forced to pull out.

    Speaking ahead of the highly-anticipated showdown, Warren insisted he has identified a weakness in the former undisputed cruiserweight champion’s game which he believes Fury will use it to his advantage on fight night.

    Frank Warren insisted Tyson Fury will expose Oleksandr Usyk’s main weakness in their clash next month

    The showdown in Saudi Arabia is set to crown the heavyweight division’s first undisputed champion since Lennox Lewis

    The Ukrainian is undefeated in his 21-fight professional career with 14 wins via knockout

    ‘One thing about Tyson, if he senses a crack or sees any weakness, he’s the biggest exploiter of it and that’s why it’s going to be such an exciting fight.’ Warren told Sky Sports.

    ‘On the other hand, Usyk might feel from the [Francis] Ngannou fight there are some things that he can exploit and I’m sure he will. He’s a competitor.

    ‘He’s a competitor from amateur days right up until the present day. He’s done everything that’s been asked of him.

    ‘His Achilles’ heel, as I’ve said, and I’m surprised the so-called experts never picked up on it, has always been his body.

    ‘Daniel Dubois, that’s what he was trained for, to go and exploit that and he nearly pulled it off.’

    Back in August, Usyk put his heavyweight titles on the line against British prospect Dubois in front of a partisan crowd in Wroclaw, Poland.

    For much of the contest, the Ukrainian utilised his superb technical acumen to build up a sizeable lead on the judges’ scorecards before scoring a KO finish in the ninth round.

    However, the win was marred in controversy after Dubois sent the 37-year-old crashing to the canvas in the fifth with a shot that was contentiously ruled by the referee to have been a low blow.

    Warren claimed Usyk has struggled with body shots in the past, a tendency he believes Fury will exploit

    The Ukrainian was dropped by a shot that was controversially ruled low in his win over Daniel Dubois in August

    Warren added that Usyk will also likely target Fury’s weakness by looking to reopen the cut above his right eye that caused the fight to be delayed in the first place.

    ‘Well, I would. Of course he will [try to exploit the cut].’ Warren continued.

    ‘He had a worse cut against [Otto] Wallin. Tyson had a dreadful cut in that fight and won the fight convincingly with a bad cut, a real bad cut.

    ‘He’s got plan A, plan B and a plan C and more importantly, he’s got a big heart.’

  • At Ye’s listening events, true believers rally around a chaotic idol

    At Ye’s listening events, true believers rally around a chaotic idol

    Midway through Vultures 1, on the bombastic “Carnival,” Ye performs a miracle: “I’m the new Jesus, bitch / I turn water to Cris.” After

    years of official releases cluttered with reference tracks and unfinished demos distributed on gimmicky rubber gadgets, everything on

    a Ye album, for once, feels complete. The artist’s rapping sounds fresh off a firmware update, slick and swagless but coherent. Yet

    something is betrayed by that title, which naturally evokes rotting carcasses — body into rancid bread, life sustained by death. It’s been

    over a decade since Yeezus; these days, those glimpses of brilliance feel more like flickering embers than glimmers of hope.

    Inside Long Island’s UBS Arena on Feb. 9, Ye commands the crowd at a massive listening event for Vultures 1. His new collab with Ty Dolla $ign is now a No. 1. album.

    Jason Martinez/Courtesy of the artist

    Who, in 2024, is Kanye West for? For several years now, his fanbase has seemed like a body in steady collapse, each controversial comment icing out another section of it. After the Trump endorsement, after “slavery was a choice,” after the White Lives Matter shirt (remember that?), after going “death con 3” on Jews in interview after interview and after the severing of countless lucrative brand deals, the island of stragglers and true believers remains populous enough that Vultures 1 is now a No. 1 album, the 11th of Ye’s career. Who are these people, really?

    That’s the question that brought me and a music industry friend to Long Island’s UBS Arena on Friday, Feb. 9, what would be the eve of the new album’s release. Outside, janitors hurriedly swept up empty glass bottles and beer cans, and somebody tried to sell me a bootleg tee with Ye’s face plastered on it. It was 10 p.m. — we were technically an hour late to the Vultures NY Listening Experience, presented by Ye and Ty Dolla $ign, where the duo (billed as ¥$) would share a version of Vultures 1, the first in a series of three planned records. Tickets online were $225; at the door, they could be had for around $180. By the time we’d passed through security and made our way inside the venue, it was 10:30 and the show had yet to start. Still, there was plenty to do in the meantime: pop over to one of the long merch lines for a surprisingly affordable $20 VULTURES T-shirt in black; buy a $14 beer and listen to the DJ playing Frank Ocean; people-watch among the low-taper fades and pick out the showgoers most likely to belong to a crypto secret society.

    I approached one of them, a model in a chintzy cowboy hat and dark leather pants who goes by fendi.worldwide. “Perceptions change all the time — they go up, they go down — but the one thing that remains is greatness,” he told me. Many others in attendance adopted the drapey all-black uniform Ye and Ty Dolla have embraced for this rollout, surely inspired by Playboi Carti’s #opiumaesthetic, but perhaps also the gothic tones of white supremacist black metal acts like Burzum, whose font was flipped for Vultures 1‘s original cover art, before the semi-nude tableau that eventually went to streaming platforms. Some of them were gray-haired OGs, catching the last whiffs of a fading glory. Many seemed like ordinary young people casually juggling multiple truths, something they’ve had to do over and over again with popular art. “It’s hard to get into it, because he has mental illnesses and he goes through many challenges in life,” said a 16-year-old named Liam who discovered Ye through TikTok. Then, pointing at his friend Milo: “He’s Jewish and he still likes Kanye!”

    As Ye and Ty Dolla $ign’s album finally began to unfurl in the dark and foggy arena, a single beam shone down to the stage, where the masked duo paced in and out of its light. Their visual transience mirrored Ye’s jagged approach to press the last couple years, alternating between long spells of radio silence and constant visibility. For how macho and muscular the album is, the event felt oddly intimate, more friendly gathering than cursed stan cult. A group of four white dudes in front of us seemed to be on psychedelics, cackling for no apparent reason and tossing a shoe around.

    As for the music? Right here, out these speakers, with this lighting and art direction and these fits, it was … actually pretty good. Ty Dolla $ign’s vocal runs were majestic, undulating waves, his hook on “BACK TO ME” particularly gorgeous. Ye’s goofier clunkers were rapped verbatim by the crowd, inside jokes studied by the terminally online via past listening parties. Chunky, crowd-pleasing samples lit up the arena, including a generous serving of “Back That Azz Up” and Charlie Wilson singing Backstreet Boys. Ye’s always had a thing for this kind of populism, but he relied on it more than ever here, energizing the crowd when he brought out Playboi Carti to perform “H00DBYAIR.” Two tracks caused the crowd’s hype to supernova: North West’s gleeful turn on “TALKING” (“Is that Babyxsosa?” my friend asked) and the kinetic “EVERYBODY,” the one with the Backstreet Boys interpolation and a particularly egregious Kanye verse that would not make the final album.

    An image from the stage at the Vultures NY Listening Experience.

    Jason Martinez/Courtesy of the artist

    It was, materially, a much different experience to listen the next day on Apple Music: The music immediately felt flatter, more minimal and, like the last few Ye albums, strangely sterile. Ye’s adoption of newer flows mostly strikes me as bland cosplay, even if some excitement pokes through, as when he cribs a high-pitched Young Thug zigzag on “PAID.” And there are inspired arrangement choices, as when a single horn and seismic piano accompany Ye’s bashful verse on “PROBLEMATIC,” or when stray live drums punch through the ragey “F*** SUMN” under piercing, high-pitched raps. But other moments fail to translate. The gang vocals on “CARNIVAL” rang out like a battle cry in the UBS Arena, enough that one could briefly ignore Ye name-dropping R. Kelly, Bill Cosby and Puffy in his verse, like a roster of disgraced zombie Pokémon. In my headphones, the song is a limp FIFA soundtrack leftover, delirious Carti verse aside. The scratchy-soul, Old Kanye moment “BURN” put smiles on the faces around me; now it’s almost uncomfortable how anachronistic it sounds, Ye puffing out his chest and saying, Still got it!

    What’s perhaps most unnerving about this record is how, rather than developing a new vision, as the artist has done even at his most inscrutable turns (I’ll never forget my ride with an Uber driver who said that Jesus is King saved gospel music), Vultures 1 calcifies the last decade of the Ye sandbox into a neat, uninteresting package. Rarely the most compelling part of any of these songs, Ye here dines on the husks of his own career and news cycles, platooning many of his verses with geriatric raunchiness and Genius screenshot bait. At least Ty Dolla $ign can still sing.

    As a musician, the dominant narrative around Ye since The Life of Pablo has been his embrace of streaming — tampering with his records, fixing “Wolves.” But another possible read is that he’s grown wary of this mode of music listening and is instead essentially making albums for these listening parties. The songs since TLOP have stripped away the clutter of his earlier mixes: They’re stark and cutting, each element given the space to breathe in a big room. 2021’s DONDA was panned by some for its minimal, almost incomplete-sounding finish, but at its public launch inside Atlanta’s Mercedes-Benz Stadium, I’m sure it went off. These recent albums don’t do well critically, but they’re not in service of critics or penny-pinching streaming services. They’re for the cult, the people who cough up hundreds of dollars to watch Ye demo them in real time, their master at work. (This tracks, too, with the massive revenue he generates from merch and listening event ticket sales.)

    Par for the course, parts of Vultures 1 were recorded in the final hours prior to previously announced release dates: backstage at listening events, in the thrum of hotel-room afters, the process as much a part of the spectacle as the actual release. In the same way, Ye’s antisemitic comments fold into this messy, unfiltered art project: To consider his work, to step through these gates, requires a willingness to accept all of his baggage.

    I’m reminded of the way a certain former president spent a feverish half-decade graduating from celebrity to politician to movement. With Donald Trump, it’s not just about voting for or against him, it’s about accepting everything that comes with him. What detractors call complicity, supporters call humanity. As much as Ye operated as a populist entertainer from his breakout to his peak and beyond, he doesn’t really make music for the people anymore. He serves up edgelord art in cavernous halls, where the last of the vultures gather to feast.

  • Kanye West’s 2005 Interview About Hip-Hop Homophobia Resurfaces After DaBaby Controversy

    Kanye West’s 2005 Interview About Hip-Hop Homophobia Resurfaces After DaBaby Controversy

    Kanye West’s 2005 Interview About Hip-Hop Homophobia Resurfaces After DaBaby Controversy

    A Kanye West interview from more than 15 years ago has resurfaced following the backlash to DaBaby ‘s homophobic comments at

    Rolling Loud Miami last month.

    A Kanye West interview from more than 15 years ago has resurfaced following the backlash to DaBaby ‘s homophobic comments at

    Rolling Loud Miami last month.

    In the August 2005 interview with MTV News’ Sway Calloway, the 22-time Grammy-winner passionately defends the LGBTQ+

    community and calls out discrimination in the hip-hop industry. In the video, West also revealed that in high school, people would

    often use the word “gay” as an insult and frequently asked if he was gay, which made him feel “homophobic, because I was like damn,

    why does everybody else walk like this and I walk like this?”

    Kanye West

    Kanye West on MTV news in 2005.Courtesy Photo

    In the August 2005 interview with MTV News’ Sway Calloway, the 22-time Grammy-winner passionately defends the LGBTQ+ community and calls out discrimination in the hip-hop industry. In the video, West also revealed that in high school, people would often use the word “gay” as an insult and frequently asked if he was gay, which made him feel “homophobic, because I was like damn, why does everybody else walk like this and I walk like this?”

    West continued in the interview: “If you see something and you don’t want to be that because there’s such a negative connotation towards it, you try to separate yourself from it so much that it made me homophobic by the time I was through with high school.

    But for West, despite societal influences that impacted his opinion as a teen, he later had a change of heart after learning that his loved one was gay. “I remember my cousin told me that another one of my cousins was gay, and at that point was the turning point where I was like, ‘Yo, this is my cousin, I love him. I’ve been discriminating against gays. Do I discriminate against my cousin?’ And then everything starts to click,” he said.

    West went on to tell Sway with a smile that his cousin brought his partner to join the family for their Thanksgiving festivities.

    “Hip-hop seemed like it was about fighting for your rights in the beginning and about speaking your mind and about breaking down barriers,” West explained. “… But everybody in hip-hop discriminates against gay people. To me, that’s one of the standards of hip-hop … Matter of fact, the exact opposite word of ‘hip-hop’ I think is ‘gay.’”

    West then called out his contemporaries and made a call to action, urging them to be more inclusive. “Me speaking for my entire culture and me looking at my rappers out there, hip-hoppers discriminate against gay people. … I wanted to come on TV to just tell my rappers, tell my friends like, ‘Yo, stop it, fam.’ Seriously, that’s really discrimination. To me, that’s exactly what they used to do to Black people. I’m just telling people to stop all that.”

    Since the video resurfaced, a number of social media users have expressed their support for West, saying that they wish more platforms would highlight his positive contributions to the industry, culture and beyond.

    The resurfaced video comes after DaBaby issued a second apology on Monday for his Rolling Loud remarks, saying he was sorry to the LGBTQ community for his homophobic rant, during which he made inaccurate and hurtful comments about HIV, AIDS and queer people. Throughout the week, the rapper has been dropped from six music festivals, including Lollapalooza, Governors Ball, Austin City Limits, Music Midtown and more.

  • DRAKE’S INVITATION TO MICHAEL RUBIN’S HAMPTONS WHITE PARTY COMES WITH INSANE GIFT

    DRAKE’S INVITATION TO MICHAEL RUBIN’S HAMPTONS WHITE PARTY COMES WITH INSANE GIFT

    Drake has been invited to Michael Rubin’s annual 4th of July White Party, and the billionaire has made it difficult for him to say no.

    In a post on his Instagram Stories on Friday (May 17), the Toronto rap star shared the extravagant invitation he received from Rubin,

    who is best known as the founder of Fanatics and for his association with JAY-Z, Meek Mill and other Hip Hop elites.

    Drake, along with everyone else who made the guestlist for the mogul’s swanky Hamptons bash, was sent a custom artwork illustrated

    by famed visual artist George Condo.

    Condo previously designed the artwork for Kanye West‘s My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy and Travis Scott‘s “Franchise.”

    Taken aback by the lavish invitation, Drizzy captioned his post: “Went from 1 bedroom condo to 1 of 1 condo @michaelrubin

    [exploding head emoji].”

    Drake’s former rival Meek also received a similar illustration and posted his on social media, writing: “The invites real art!!!!!! @artistgeorgecondo.”
    Drake's Invitation To Michael Rubin's Hamptons White Party Comes With Insane Gift
    COLE BURSTON/GETTY IMAGES | MATT WINKELMEYER/GETTY IMAGES

    Michael Rubin’s White Party has raised eyebrows among rappers (namely 50 Cent) in recent years for his penchant for drunken hugs.

    After last year’s event, a picture of Rubin hugging Lil Baby from behind went viral, drawing the ridicule of the G-Unit boss.

    Using it as further ammo against his longtime rival Diddy, 50 wrote next to the photo: “See this is why I don’t go to no party puffy and them at. [side eye emoji] da fu*k is going on here [facepalm emoji, sulking emoji] get the fu*k off my young [ninja emoji] WTF!”

    The White Party isn’t Rubin’s only annual spectacle.

    Back in February, Travis Scott and Ice Spiceheadlined the billionaire’s exclusive Super Bowl party in Las Vegas.

    The New York Post published the details about the shindig, which also featured performances from the likes of The Chainsmokers, A$AP Ferg, Meek Mill, Lil Baby, Fabolous, Ludacris, Ne-Yo and The Kid LAROI.

    According to The New York Post, the event also featured performances from the likes of Lil Baby, A$AP Ferg, Fabolous, Ludacris and Ne-Yo.

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