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Verizon's 'Can't B Broken' Wins Cannes Gold Lion

Klaudia//June 23, 2024
On day two of the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity, Ogilvy won two gold Lions, one silver, and 11 bronze Lions for a total of 14 Lions, bringing the network’s total to 30 Lions through the Festival.

Verizon’s 'Can’t B Broken' by Ogilvy New York won a Gold Lion in the Entertainment-Brand or Product Integration into Music Content category. The collaboration between Verizon, Beyoncé and Ogilvy put the Verizon network to the test in the biggest way possible. On the biggest stage. With the biggest icon there is. Beyoncé breaks the internet, but can she break Verizon’s network?

Matt Curry, Ogilvy's global executive creative director, said, “Starting with a big, smart, culturally explosive idea was just the beginning. From there the only path to success was through the biggest act of trust that an agency and client could undertake together. Ogilvy is so proud of this work and what it means to our relationship with Verizon, and to the entire team who made this phenomenal moment happen. Winning a Cannes Gold for ‘Can’t B Broken’ is a testament to what culture-first ideas can do when built on absolute collaboration.”

Beyoncé and Black Country Acts on How 'Cowboy Carter' Impacted Them

Klaudia//June 23, 2024
When Beyoncé’s “Texas Hold ‘Em” hit the top spot on Billboard’s Hot country songs chart, she became the first Black woman to achieve the feat in the chart’s 80-year history. The tune blending elements of country, Western music, pop and soul reigned supreme for 10 weeks as her Cowboy Carter album emerged as a cultural piece of art that sparked think pieces about Black artists reclaiming the genres they created to social media essays about Queen Bey’s next-level greatness and virtuosity.

“Texas Hold ‘Em” eventually dipped to No. 2, only to be supplanted by a new artist with a connection to Beyoncé: her two-time Cowboy Carter collaborator Shaboozey. The 29-year-old’s anthemic blend of country and rap on “A Bar Song (Typsy),” released two weeks after Cowboy Carter, danced to the top of the charts. And, for the first time in Billboard history, two consecutive Black artists held the No. 1 spot.

Now, Shaboozey has a Top 5 album on the pop charts with his third project, Where I’ve Been, Isn’t Where I’m Going, and he is a shoo-in best new artist Grammy contender. Part of his success can be attributed to “the Bey-effect.” Other breakthrough newcomers featured on her historic album — including Brittney Spencer, Tiera Kennedy, Tanner Adell, Reyna Roberts and Willie Jones — have also benefited, from earning first-ever placements on the Billboard charts to soaring streaming numbers and an expanded social media presence.

“When you are breaking down barriers, not everyone is ready and open for a shift. But when I see Shaboozey tearing the charts up and all the beautiful female country singers flying to new heights, inspiring the world, that is exactly what motivates me,” Beyoncé tells The Hollywood Reporter in a statement.

Ian Fitchuk Talks Working on Cowboy Carter

Klaudia//June 8, 2024
Producer Ian Fitchuk talked to Vulture about working with Beyonce on a song for Kacey Musgraves, as well as on "Cowboy Carter".

It is funny to hear you say you don’t quite consider yourself a country person, because when Cowboy Carter came out and I was looking through the credits, your name jumped out as one of the few Nashville people who worked on that record. How did that come together?

When we started working on star-crossed, I signed a new publishing deal with Sony. I had the crazy idea of, What if we got Beyoncé on a song? It turns out I was able to get that music to her. She really reacted to star-crossed, before the record was done, and sent a beautiful email to Kacey. For a while there, we were going back and forth, and there was a song called “good wife” that it looked for a minute like Beyoncé was going to do a verse on it. In the end, it didn’t work out.

But a couple of years later, I got a call from my publisher saying Beyoncé is working on a new record. I don’t know if it was even described to me as a country record. They were like, “We’re very interested in sending Ink and Dave Hamelin and Dixson to Nashville to try to work on some songs for Beyoncé. Would you be interested in writing some songs with them? And they’d be interested in having Kacey come too.” So myself, Kacey, and the three of them spent a week in Nashville writing songs. There were not a lot of parameters given. I think we did hear “16 Carriages,” but they were like, “Don’t try to do that.”

Beyonce Nominated at the 2024 Kids' Choice Awards

Klaudia//June 8, 2024
Nickelodeon has revealed a star-studded list of nominees for its annual Kids’ Choice Awards. Leading the pack with six noms is Taylor Swift, followed by Olivia Rodrigo, Miley Cyrus and Beyoncé, with four noms each.

Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards 2024 will premiere live from their undersea home of Bikini Bottom on Saturday, July 13, at 8 p.m. (ET/PT). The awards also will simulcast across Nickelodeon, TeenNick, Nicktoons, the Nick Jr. channel, TVLand, CMT and MTV2.

Fans in the U.S. can cast their votes across 33 categories on the official Kids’ Choice Awards website, KidsChoiceAwards.com. International markets will also open voting, including additional regional categories.

Here is the complete list of Beyonce's nominations:

Miley Cyrus opens up about friendship with Beyoncé

Klaudia//June 8, 2024
Miley Cyrus has given fans a glimpse into her relationship with Beyoncé and how the II ladies worked on their chart-topping duet.

The "Flowers" singer covers the latest issue of W magazine, The Pop Issue, where she opened up more about her friendship with Beyoncé and collaborating on their hit song "II Most Wanted" on Beyoncé's album "Cowboy Carter."

"I wrote that song, like, two and a half years ago. My mom would always go, 'I love that song so much.' So when Beyoncé reached out to me about music, I thought of it right away because it really encompasses our relationship," Cyrus told the magazine.

"I told her, 'We don’t have to get ­country; we are country. We’ve been country. You know, between you being from Texas and me being from Tennessee, so much of us is going to be in this song,'" Cyrus said. "Getting to write a song, not just sing, for Beyoncé was a dream come true."

Cyrus, who called Beyoncé a "big role model" in 2006, explained that she now has a genuine friendship with Queen Bey.

"Sometimes I forget to talk about things that are a ­normal part of my day-to-day, like texting with Beyoncé" Cyrus said. "I think it’s a really cute part of our relationship, because over the past couple of years I’ve really locked down on my privacy and on what I share with the public. She’s the same way. Part of our relationship is the safety between us."

Tina Knowles Shares Beyoncé Was Bullied Growing Up

Klaudia//June 2, 2024
Tough girl is what Beyoncé had to be when facing school bullies.

In fact, the "Texas Hold ‘Em" singer's mother Tina Knowles reflected on her favorite memories of her childhood, and shared that Queen Bey went through some struggles in school.

"Beyoncé—she was very shy, and she got bullied a bit," Tina shared in a Vogue video posted May 27. "But the day that she stood up for someone—she didn't stand up for herself but she stood up for them, I'm getting emotional talking about it—I couldn't have been more proud."

And while Tina visibly teared up when describing Beyoncé's school days, she also gushed about her other daughter, Solange and Destiny's Child member Kelly Rowland, who lived with the Knowles family from a young age.

"Solange, she was only in about fifth grade and she was out getting petitions signed," Tina added. "So she was always an activist."

As for Kelly, Tina noted, "I remember her being this little peacemaker."

And the fashion designer, 70, went on to emphasize the uniqueness between the women.

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Beyoncé and Black Country Acts on How 'Cowboy Carter' Impacted Them

Klaudia//June 23, 2024
When Beyoncé’s “Texas Hold ‘Em” hit the top spot on Billboard’s Hot country songs chart, she became the first Black woman to achieve the feat in the chart’s 80-year history. The tune blending elements of country, Western music, pop and soul reigned supreme for 10 weeks as her Cowboy Carter album emerged as a cultural piece of art that sparked think pieces about Black artists reclaiming the genres they created to social media essays about Queen Bey’s next-level greatness and virtuosity.

“Texas Hold ‘Em” eventually dipped to No. 2, only to be supplanted by a new artist with a connection to Beyoncé: her two-time Cowboy Carter collaborator Shaboozey. The 29-year-old’s anthemic blend of country and rap on “A Bar Song (Typsy),” released two weeks after Cowboy Carter, danced to the top of the charts. And, for the first time in Billboard history, two consecutive Black artists held the No. 1 spot.

Now, Shaboozey has a Top 5 album on the pop charts with his third project, Where I’ve Been, Isn’t Where I’m Going, and he is a shoo-in best new artist Grammy contender. Part of his success can be attributed to “the Bey-effect.” Other breakthrough newcomers featured on her historic album — including Brittney Spencer, Tiera Kennedy, Tanner Adell, Reyna Roberts and Willie Jones — have also benefited, from earning first-ever placements on the Billboard charts to soaring streaming numbers and an expanded social media presence.

“When you are breaking down barriers, not everyone is ready and open for a shift. But when I see Shaboozey tearing the charts up and all the beautiful female country singers flying to new heights, inspiring the world, that is exactly what motivates me,” Beyoncé tells The Hollywood Reporter in a statement.

Shaboozey — who released his debut project six years ago and launched three songs from his new album before finding chart success with “A Bar Song (Typsy)” — is grateful for the push Cowboy Carter has given his music. “It’s been pretty great for her to put a lot of eyes on me at one time. Her being able to put a light on me at that time period helped my roll-out. She helped amplify what I was already doing in this space, and it’s really amazing somebody that is really influential historic figure,” he tells THR. “It’s cool to see how far country music has reached since Beyoncé did her project. It’s cool to see the music reach all over the world.”

On Cowboy Carter, Shaboozey appears on “Sweet Honey Buckin’” and “Spaghetti,” which also features country music pioneer Linda Martell, the first Black woman to perform solo at the Grand Ole Opry whose legendary career is getting more attention thanks to her double appearances on Queen Bey’s album. Jones lends his vocals to “Smoke Hour II” while Spencer, Kennedy, Adell and Roberts harmonize on a Paul McCartney-approved cover of The Beatles’ “Blackbird.”

For Kennedy, who moved to Nashville eight years ago and has worked as a songwriter behind the scenes, being part of Cowboy Carter came at a significant time in her career.

“For me it’s so much deeper than the numbers. It was a change for my entire life. A few months before happened, I was dropped from my record deal, and I was on this trajectory of having the career that I had always dreamed of and then that was such a bombshell for me,” she explains. “And literally, immediately after the album came out my social numbers shot up. Ever since then, it’s been steadily growing and people are finding me and finding my music. And it’s been really cool, because I think this is coming at a very pivotal time for my career.”

Kennedy, who was signed to Big Machine Label Group, released the independent single “I Ain’t a Cowgirl” in April and said she’s “loosely” talking to major labels about deals. But she adds that Beyoncé emboldened her to create the debut album she truly wanted to make.

“Beyoncé inspired me to make an album that is true to me. She’s given me this freedom to put out music the way I want,” she says of the project, expected to be released in October. “Before I was trying to make an album that was commercially acceptable instead of making an album that was true to me. I describe my sound as R&B/country and I was a little scared to really dive into that, because I thought I had to be in this one lane. But then Beyoncé comes with this project that has obvious influences from so many different spaces, but country at its core is storytelling. And that is what she’s doing in this album — it is most certainly a Beyoncé album and it inspired me to create a Tiera album.”

Spencer has been rising on the country music scene and has impressed with her awards show performances, from last year’s CMA Awards alongside Mickey Guyton and Madeline Edwards with a song honoring Black hair to April’s CMT Awards with Parker McCollum, which was full of passion and went viral on TikTok. Her debut album, My Stupid Life, was released in January and even made Rolling Stone’s Best Albums of 2024 So Far list, published last week. And she’s predicted to earn a Grammy nomination for best new artist.

She moved to Nashville 11 years ago and loves the boost Beyoncé has given her.

“In the middle of Cowboy Carter coming out, I was still on the road finishing up a tour leg with Grace Potter and there were people that came up to me like, ‘Yo, I heard you on Cowboy Carter and I had to come out here.’ And of course it made me smile so deeply,” she says. “We know everyone loves Beyoncé and it’s so cool to watch her fans come up to me or send me a message and say, ‘Yo, I really rock with you because I heard you on Cowboy Carter.’ I think it’s beautiful.”

Outside making history for other acts, Cowboy Carter is continuing to make history for Beyoncé, with some music experts predicting the piece of work could finally win the artist with the most Grammys in Grammy history the coveted album of the year trophy next year.

It has reached the No. 1 spot on the all-genre Billboard 200 albums chart, as well as the country and folk charts. The album, with more than 1.5 billion streams worldwide, set records on Spotify and Amazon Music and debuted at No. 1 in 17 countries.

But Cowboy Carter has also sparked conversations and for Beyoncé, that’s more important than going multi-platinum. “There was a time in my life when charts and sales excited and motivated me. Once you have challenged yourself and poured every ounce of your life, your pain, your growth and your dreams into your art, it’s impossible to go backward,” Beyoncé says. “I’m very grateful and humbled for the extraordinary success of the new album.”

“I think that it’s done something interesting in country as a whole. I feel like it’s broken apart in country music I don’t think we’ll ever go back completely to how Black country was perceived before this,” Spencer adds. “I feel like it cracked the creative code for a lot of us, and it’s really cool to watch that happen for me and other artists as well.”

Spencer continues, “The conversation of Black country music, it’s been growing over the last four years, and it’s been a whole lot of groundwork, a whole lot of efforts from a lot of different people, and watching this moment with Cowboy Carter happen, it’s done something really beautiful in connecting the fans to the musical space. And I think that’s really cool because people feel it. I’m watching Nashville feel it in a real personal way.”

Kennedy feels it, too. In addition to “Blackbird,” she joined Spencer, Roberts and Adell as background vocalists on Cowboy Carter’s “Tyrant” — “I kept joking that we were channeling our inner Destiny’s Child,” she reveals, laughing. But, seriously she says, working on the album with the other breakthrough acts has created community amongst them.

“Really through this journey we’ve gotten closer and it’s been really special to see how all of this has affected their careers, and even the artists outside of this project,” Kennedy says. “I remember watching an interview recently with Shaboozey — to see that happening for a Black man in country music is absolutely insane. And I think it’s exactly what Beyoncé intended to happen with this project.”

For Spencer and Kennedy, they are also hoping to pass the torch in country music to the young Black and Brown girls behind them like Beyoncé has done.

“Artistry is hard, no matter who you are, no matter what you look like. It’s just hard. And I think once you add those other variables, it definitely adds more challenges to your path. And I would love for a 10-year-old girl to be able to see herself and be like, ‘This is normal. I can do this thing. I can follow the actual passions and pursuits of my heart without letting a hard historical truth make me feel like I should change something,’” Spencer says.

“Thank you, Bey, for making a really thoughtful and musical project that has opened doors for a lot of people, many of which we won’t know probably for years from now.”

For Beyoncé, Cowboy Carter is a continuation of the work she did with 2022’s Renaissance, which blends dance, house, disco, R&B and hip-hop and incited discussions about the history of dance music and its origins in Black art and culture. “I’m honored to introduce so many people to the roots of so many genres. I’m so thrilled that my fans trusted me. The music industry gatekeepers are not happy about the idea of bending genres, especially coming from a Black artist and definitely not a woman,” Beyoncé tells THR.