Saturday, June 20, 2015

I Visited Seoul for Total Korean Beauty Immersion

I Visited Seoul for Total Korean Beauty Immersion:

As a serious skin care junkie, I’ve been hooked on Korean beauty products since I first discovered the juggernaut that is the K-beauty industry a year ago. I’ve explored the multi-step regimen, tried a lot of unusual products and devoured blogs searching for holy grail products. So when I got the opportunity to go to Seoul — the epicenter, the mecca — for three days of beauty immersion, I packed up some comfy shoes, a few sheet masks for the 14-hour plane ride and, of course, my credit card.

Photo: Cheryl Wischhover/Fashionista
Photo: Cheryl Wischhover/Fashionista
I stayed in the Myeong-dong neighborhood, which is very touristy and the epicenter of beauty shopping in Seoul, especially for the so-called road shop (aka mass market) brands like Missha, The Face Shop and Tony Moly. As you can see here and in my enthusiastic Instagram above, there are quite literally blocks of beauty shops, one after another, punctuated by stands with vendors selling street food. Shop girls hang out in front, enticing you in with free sheet masks and other treasures.

And speaking of masks, yes, I was there during the MERS outbreak. About a quarter of the people I saw were wearing face masks and the streets felt rather empty, but after a bit of research, I decided that I felt comfortable without wearing a mask.

Photos: Cheryl Wischhover/Fashionista
Photos: Cheryl Wischhover/Fashionista
While I was excited to get my hands on all the mass market brands, some of them are pretty readily available here in NYC. I really went nuts (and got my credit card shut off) after I discovered Olive Young (left) the "Sephora of Korea," which carries more indie and hard-to-find brands. I stopped in at least three different outposts of the chain during the trip.  LOHB (right), which I discovered in the cute and trendy Garosugil neighborhood, was also great for brands I haven't seen before.

K-pop gods enticing you to buy cushion compacts, and me doing a sniff test at Skinfood. Photos: Cheryl Wischhover/Fashionista
K-pop gods enticing you to buy cushion compacts, and me doing a sniff test at Skinfood. Photos: Cheryl Wischhover/Fashionista
According to Charlotte Cho, the founder of K-beauty e-commerce site Sokoglam and my knowledgeable guide in Seoul, brands frequently tap male K-pop and K-drama stars — as seen above — to entice women into shops. Like female entertainment stars in Korea, these men are admired for their smooth, poreless skin — and perhaps the added lust factor gets shoppers to spring for the 10-pack of sheet masks rather than just one? (Pro tip: The shops will sell masks to you individually, but you have to ask them to go to the secret cabinet to get them.) Also, after touring Skinfood with a brand rep, I highly recommend you try the Rice Brightening Cleansing Water.

Photos: Cheryl Wischhover/Fashionista
Photos: Cheryl Wischhover/Fashionista
The now-iconic sheet masks were everywhere, and I came home with dozens, possibly hundreds. Several people, including company reps at a brand meeting I attended, noted that animal face masks are currently all the rage in sheet masks, especially amongst Chinese customers. Obviously I bought a bunch of them. Watch my Instagram. I will haunt your nightmares.

The drool-worthy cleansers at Banila Co. Photo: Cheryl Wischhover/Fashionista
The drool-worthy cleansers at Banila Co. Photo: Cheryl Wischhover/Fashionista
In general, salespeople at the road shop stores were aggressive. I'd often have a shopgirl following at my heels while I browsed, which probably made me buy less than I might have. On the flip side, the sample game in Seoul is next level. At checkout, sales associates put handfuls of samples into my bag, including sheet masks. Oftentimes I was handed a basket containing one or two freebie products as I walked in. Prices for products, especially because of the won/U.S. dollar exchange rate and VAT tax refund, were definitely lower than in the U.S.

I felt bad for the foot guy, because it was really hot that day. Also, Paris Hilton has a line of "gel" nail polish, spotted at LOHB. Photos: Cheryl Wischhover/Fashionista
I felt bad for the foot guy, because it was really hot that day. Also, Paris Hilton has a line of "gel" nail polish, spotted at LOHB. Photos: Cheryl Wischhover/Fashionista
While I'm all about serious skin care, a lot of K-beauty is silly and gimmicky, and I love that as well. I spent a good chunk of time ogling macaron-shaped compacts and products embellished with cupcakes in the pink palace that is Etude House, giggling at phallic cucumber cooling gel packaging, and trying to decide whether or not I needed sheet masks for my boobs. (Answer: no.) Then there was this product, which nearly made me jump out of my skin upon first squirting it (turn your volume on):

This cooling, sizzling foam (reminiscent of the lye scene in "Fight Club") turns into a clear moisturizing lotion. Fun!

At the Su:m 37 brand store at LG headquarters. Photo: Cheryl Wischhover/Fashionista
At the Su:m 37 brand store at LG headquarters. Photo: Cheryl Wischhover/Fashionista
But there is much more than just cutesy products in Korea, as anyone who has tried the hardcore skin care regimen knows. I had meetings with marketing and R&D reps from several brands that I wanted to get to know better, and a few that I never knew existed. The products are put through rigorous safety testing, and two of the innovative skin care brands that I visited (more on them in future posts, I promise) showed me some pretty impressive clinical studies for their products. One R&D person told me it's harder to get brands through the Korean FDA than to export them to the U.S. and go through our FDA.

Too Cool For School's egg line. Photo: Cheryl Wischhover/Fashionista
Too Cool For School's egg line. Photo: Cheryl Wischhover/Fashionista
And now, some exciting K-beauty news for you. The brand Too Cool for School, probably best known for its Egg Cream masks, is coming to Sephora this fall, and also launching a U.S. website around the same time. After spending 45 minutes in the store, I'm excited to be able to access this brand more easily. In addition to multiple full skin care lines (a mere portion of which can be seen above), it also has a full and varied color cosmetics range, going beyond the few sparkly eye shadows and lip tints that some other brands offer.  

The Too Cool for School Dinoplatz makeup range. Photo: Cheryl Wischhover/Fashionista
The Too Cool for School Dinoplatz makeup range. Photo: Cheryl Wischhover/Fashionista
According to the brand rep, who gave me a tour of Too Cool for School's Garosugil store, Sephora will be carrying the full Egg line and the full Dinoplatz (above) makeup line. Speaking of the store, it struck me as a much more serious place for makeup than many of the stores I'd already been to. The brand has partnered with artists and makeup artists on some lines and packaging, and there are none of the usual K-pop stars as models — in fact, there are no models at all.  The store itself is a bit darker, without any of the extreme twee cutenesss seen at other brands. And the products are good. Not only by Korean makeup standards, which historically has lagged behind skin care, but by any standards. There are great colors, a pretty amazing mascara and my favorite, a portable cushion compact that also houses a concealer, highlighter and lip balm in a little hidden drawer. Check this line out. You will not be disappointed.

Dr. Jung Hae-Jin and I at the 4-ever Plastic Surgery & Skin Clinic and the facial room at the clinic. Photo: Cheryl Wischhover/Fashionista
Dr. Jung Hae-Jin and I at the 4-ever Plastic Surgery & Skin Clinic and the facial room at the clinic. Photo: Cheryl Wischhover/Fashionista
I couldn't visit Korea without hitting up a clinic. The country is well-known — some would say notorious — for having, by some estimates, the highest rate of plastic surgery per capita. I visited the 4-Ever Plastic Surgery & Skin Clinic, which is a mini-medi-chain in South Korea, where I met with the head of the clinic, Dr. Jun Hae-Jin. Procedures are ridiculously cheap here. He quoted me about $30 for a medical facial and about $100 for Fraxel, a laser treatment which can cost up to $1,500 per treatment in the U.S. The law of supply and demand is clearly at work in the country. I didn't get anything done, but if I'd had more time, I would have tried a medical facial for sure.

Grab a cappuccino while you browse potential new boobs. Photo: Cheryl Wischhover/Fashionista
Grab a cappuccino while you browse potential new boobs. Photo: Cheryl Wischhover/Fashionista
The clinic itself was spotless and felt very high-end. A hostess dressed a little bit like a flight attendant met us and brought us water. Exam and treatment tables were covered with patterned blankets, a superficial touch that nevertheless did wonders for breaking up the clinical look that permeates so many U.S. dermatology offices. The clinic took up multiple floors and included a VIP wing, a facial area, an "obesity treatment" area, a laser wing and a lovely cafe in the waiting room. But it was definitely still a legitimate clinic. My former nurse's eye spotted emergency equipment (a must in any medical office), oxygen tanks, and scores of vials and medical supplies. I left understanding this aspect of Korean beauty culture a bit better. While the desire to completely change one's appearance via eyelid and jawline surgery still seems extreme to me, it's a very matter-of-fact thing in the country.

Sokoglam's Charlotte Cho models Seoul's hottest hair color. Photo: Cheryl Wischhover/Fashionista
Sokoglam's Charlotte Cho models Seoul's hottest hair color. Photo: Cheryl Wischhover/Fashionista
Korean beauty trends, as demonstrated by the everyday women I saw, are relatively homogenous. According to Cho, when a K-drama actress debuts a new look, women across the country follow suit. Trends also change quickly. This spring, it's the hair color seen above, which Cho had done in Seoul, and which her colorist described as "reddish-pink and black." Everyone had this color. Everyone. Even some guys. And speaking of guys, their hair — again, I am generalizing here — is pretty damn spectacular. The per capita use of molding mud must be very high. Learn, American men.

Celeb makeup artist Mr. Son giving me a lip. Photo: Cheryl Wischhover/Fashionista
Celeb makeup artist Mr. Son giving me a lip. Photo: Cheryl Wischhover/Fashionista
Son Daesik is the makeup artist who gives Korean actresses like Jun Ji Hyun, who stars in the K-drama megahit "My Love From Another Star," her glow. He talked about the archetypal glowy face and demonstrated how your face shape affects the way you apply highlighter. (Pro tip: if you have a more rounded face, apply it at a more severe angle towards the outer edges of your eye on your upper cheekbones. If you have an angular face, put it a bit more straight towards your ears.) He also demonstrated a fantastic blotted ombre lip, which involves nothing but your fingers and two lip crayons. Put a lighter color all over the whole lip, a brighter or darker color just in the center, and then smudge it all out. The result is really natural.  Mr. Son is working on some exciting upcoming projects, so watch this space for more to come.

Palace, originally built in 1395. Photo: Cheryl Wischhover/Fashionista
Palace, originally built in 1395. Photo: Cheryl Wischhover/Fashionista
I had to take a bit of time out to absorb some of the history and culture in Seoul. While most of the city consists of modern high rises, there are gems like this that appear all over the city.

Yum. Photo: Cheryl Wischhover/Fashionista
Yum. Photo: Cheryl Wischhover/Fashionista
Finally, I can't finish this without mentioning the food. Beauty comes from within, after all. I didn't have a single bad meal. With that, I leave you with a picture of the freshest, most delicious bibimbap I've ever had. Over the next few weeks I'll be writing about some more specific K-beauty trends and brands from the trip. Stay tuned.

Disclosure: My trip to Seoul was sponsored by Sokoglam.

Arthur Arbesser Named Creative Director of Iceberg

Arthur Arbesser Named Creative Director of Iceberg:

Arthur Arbesser. Photo: Vittorio Zunino Celotto/Getty Images
Arthur Arbesser. Photo: Vittorio Zunino Celotto/Getty Images
In the fashion industry's never-ending game of creative director musical chairs, another chair has been filled, this time by one of Milan's rising stars.

Arthur Arbesser has been named creative director of Iceberg, a 43-year-old Italian company that launched in the '70s as a knit sportswear brand and now encompasses childrenswear, home, fragrances and even mineral water. His first collection, for spring 2016, will debut at Milan Fashion Week in September. A rep for Arbesser confirmed the appointment. The news was first reported by Style.com.

The brand, which isn't widely available in the U.S., shows as part of the Milan Fashion Week calendar and enjoyed a bit of a refresh under former creative director Alex Martial, who recently decamped to Carven.

Arbesser, whose three-year-old namesake collection has a youthful vibe, marrying wearable shapes with innovative fabrics, seems well-poised to pick up where Martial left off. He is one of few emerging designers to make a name for himself in Milan, where it's particularly difficult for independent labels to compete with the established heavyweights. Born and raised in Vienna, Arbesser studied at Central Saint Martins and worked for seven years at Giorgio Armani. He won Vogue Italia's "Who Is on Next" competition in 2013 and was shortlisted for this year's LVMH Prize. Still, back in September, he told Fashionista that he only had "one and a half" employees and that money was his biggest problem.

This new gig should help with that, as Arbesser plans to continue showing his namesake line at Milan Fashion Week.

MESKITA IS LOOKING FOR GRAPHIC & TECHNICAL DESIGN INTERNS (NYC)

MESKITA IS LOOKING FOR GRAPHIC & TECHNICAL DESIGN INTERNS (NYC):

MESKITA is seeking graphic and technical design interns to start immediately in our NYC office. We’re seeking highly motivated and enterprising individuals. Minimum commitment of 2-3 full days per week required.

To apply, please send your resume to emily@meskita.com.

Image provided by Meskita
Image provided by Meskita

Michelle Obama Branches Out in Europe

Michelle Obama Branches Out in Europe:

Michelle Obama in Michael Kors. Photo: Andreas Solaro/AFP/Getty Images
Michelle Obama in Michael Kors. Photo: Andreas Solaro/AFP/Getty Images
On a European publicity tour with her mother and daughters Sasha and Malia this week, Michelle Obama paid homage to the cities she visited with some European wardrobe updates.

During her two-day visit to London, she wore dresses from local labels Preen by Thornton Bregazzi, Mary Katrantzou and Christopher Kane. She wore a dress from another London-based designer, Duro Olowu, to arrive in Milan on Wednesday, and donned a Missoni dress to visit the Milan Expo on Thursday. While her daughters have worn dresses from the likes of Kate Spade and American Apparel, Obama has been pointedly non-American in her fashion choices.

Until Friday that is, when she either ran out of European labels to wear or wanted to ward off potential criticism for failing to champion American designers abroad. She wore a red Michael Kors shirtdress upon arriving in Venice, making a stop to visit mothers-to-be at the U.S. and NATO military base in Aviano.

Apart from the change-up in designers, Obama has not used the trip to take any sartorial risks, sticking to her favored knee-length, A-line silhouettes and intricate prints.

Greater fashion risks were taken elsewhere by the likes of Rihanna, Selena Gomez and Sofia Coppola. See the FLOTUS's looks, and the rest of the week's best dressed ladies, below.

How to Pull Off a Sophisticated Smoky Eye Worthy of a Red Carpet

How to Pull Off a Sophisticated Smoky Eye Worthy of a Red Carpet:

Beauty tutorials are big on YouTube — a search for “makeup tutorial” and “hair tutorial” yields more than 5 million videos. In this weekly series, we put a mix of popular and under-the-radar tutorials to the test and show you what’s best.

While I’ve never thought of myself as a big “makeup person,” I’ve always dreamt of executing the perfect inky smoky eye. I’m not alone in this, I sense: The technique is at once timeless and of the moment, tutorials on the latest iteration pouring in after each fashion week and major awards show.

And yet, for a style so ubiquitous, the well-established smoky eye isn’t so simple to pull off. At times, I’ve layered dark eyeshadow so aggressively that I look more like Sally Bowles at the Kit Kat Klub than Jennifer Lawrence at the Oscars. Or, conversely, I’ve not used enough, my own masterpiece dissolving into streaks an hour after I’ve left my apartment.

As one does, I recently gave up on my smoky eye fantasies altogether — but this particular video might’ve just changed that. With the help of veteran YouTuber EasyNeon, we get a zoomed-in, narration-free tutorial viewers can actually follow along at home. She begins by slathering a milky-colored ("ochre," actually) cream across her enter eyelid, then toning it down with a layer of a more neutral shade. Some casual eyeshadow sorcery follows, using three separate shadows in three different places. She tops it off with fake lashes, a messily applied eye pencil and a slick of mauve lipgloss.

The most important components here, it seems, are the three eyeshadows, as I suspect it may be difficult to replicate her look with just one color. You can see the full list of products EasyNeon uses here.

Here’s to yet another, albeit more successful attempt at the smoky eye — for all of us.

Homepage photo: Mireya Acierto/Getty Images

Report: J.Crew Fires VP of Men's Merchandising for Insensitive Instagram Posts

Report: J.Crew Fires VP of Men's Merchandising for Insensitive Instagram Posts:

Alejandro Rhett. Photo: Alejandro Rhett/Facebook
Alejandro Rhett. Photo: Alejandro Rhett/Facebook
After insensitive Instagram posts landed him on the cover of the New York Post with the headline "J. CRUEL," Alejandro Rhett was reportedly fired by J. Crew on Thursday, according to The Daily Front Row.

Rhett was the vice president of men’s merchandising at the slumping brand, which announced on June 10 that 175 full-time positions would be eliminated, mostly from its corporate headquarters in New York.

A spokesperson for J.Crew refused to comment on his employment status, issuing the following statement instead:

"We do not condone this behavior in any way. Individuals’ actions do not represent the culture of our company – this is not who we are. The tough decisions we made last week were not something we took lightly. We do our best to make decisions with care and compassion for all of our associates. Our values at J.Crew are and have always been about respect, support and consideration for others."
According to the Post, which published now-deleted screenshots from his Instagram account, Rhett had a celebratory evening with at least two other J.Crew colleagues after personally laying off several employees this week. He posted images from a bar with captions suggesting he and his buds had survived something akin to "The Hunger Games" (#maytheoddsbeeverinyourfavor), among other comments that appeared crass in light of his employer's recent woes.

A Valentino Gown That's 'Worth' a Second Look

A Valentino Gown That's 'Worth' a Second Look:

New blog Part Nouveau, or ‘partly new’, delves into fashion history to showcase the inspiration–be it art, photography or design–behind some of today’s biggest fashion moments. It’s fascinating and impossible not to get lost in, so we asked the site’s founder, Lilah Ramzi, to give us a little history lesson each week.

The House of Worth is considered the most influential and widely-recognized fashion house of the nineteenth century. Founded in 1858 by English designer Charles Frederic Worth, it is often suggested that the couture house produced its best work under the helm of Gaston-Lucien and Jean-Philippe, Worth's sons. An exquisite dress designed by Charles Frederic's successors, dated at 1898-1900, showcases Art Nouveau's influence on fashionable dress of the period. The S-curved gown features swirling curls of black velvet woven onto a ground of white satin; the black tendrils emulating the vogue for the decorative ironwork popularized in Art Nouveau design.

For Valentino's Spring 2013 couture show, designers Maria Grazia Chiuri and Pierpaolo Piccioli cited secret gardens and wrought irons gates among their sources of inspiration, showing a diaphanous white gown paired with a floor-length tulle cloak embroidered with black "ironwork."

Evening dress by the House of Worth, 1898-1990. Housed at the Costume Institute at The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Evening dress by the House of Worth, 1898-1990. Housed at the Costume Institute at The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Lucy Birley in Valentino Couture Spring 2013, photographed by Tim Walker for W Magazine April 2013.
Lucy Birley in Valentino Couture Spring 2013, photographed by Tim Walker for W Magazine April 2013.
For more comparisons by Part Nouveau, click here.

Monday, June 15, 2015

'Jurassic World' Bites Off Biggest Global Debut of All Time

'Jurassic World' Bites Off Biggest Global Debut of All Time:

Jurassic World
Chris Pratt, Irrfan Khan, Bryce Dallas Howard and Jake Johnson in "Jurassic World." 

Chuck Zlotnick/Universal Studios
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Dinosaurs are anything but extinct at the box office.

Jurassic World, the fourth film in the series, became the highest global opener of all time with a staggering $511.8 million in its first days in theaters. It also devoured a number of domestic box office records with a $204.6 million take, the Rentrak media-measurement company estimated on Sunday.

In addition to setting a record for 2015, Jurassic World is now the second-highest domestic opening of all time, right behind Marvel's The Avengers, which took in $207.4 million in 2012. By the time Monday actuals roll in, there is a chance the film could dethrone Avengers.

Jurassic Park Theme Is Finally a Top Ten Hit

It has been 14 years since there has been a new Jurassic film in theaters, and the combination of cinematic grandeur, nostalgia and awareness helped Jurassic World far surpass analyst predictions going into the weekend, which had the film on track for a $125 million opening.

"This over-performed in a way that I've never seen," Rentrak's Senior Media Analyst Paul Dergarabedian said. "It broke the box office sound barrier."

Universal Pictures and Legendary co-financed the $150 million, PG-13 rated film. Audiences in every quadrant turned out to see the film in theaters. According to exit polls, 39 percent were under the age of 25, signifying the massive interest of both a new generation and the continued enthusiasm of those who saw Jurassic Park in 1993.

Also, audiences shelled out the extra money to see the film in the biggest format possible. About 48 percent of domestic audiences opted for 3D.

"It is extraordinary. The film has resonated with audiences around the world," said Nick Carpou, Universal's president of domestic distribution.

Directed by Colin Trevorrow and executive-produced by Steven Spielberg, Jurassic World is the third in a series of blockbusters for star Chris Pratt, who also starred in the 2014 box office hits Guardians of the Galaxy and The Lego Movie.

"He's like Jimmy Stewart with a leather vest and muscles," Dergarbedian said. "He's a great modern-day action hero."

This is also likely not the last Jurassic film audiences will see. Pratt has stated in interviews that he has signed on for future installments. But right now, Universal is focusing on what's in theaters.

Jurassic World is just the latest hit for Universal in 2015, following Fifty Shades of Grey and Furious 7.

No studio even tried to compete with the unbeatable dinosaurs this weekend, and thus holdovers populated the rest of the top five. Melissa McCarthy's Spy earned $16 million in its second weekend in theaters, bringing its domestic total to $56.9 million. San Andreas added another $11 million, and Insidious Chapter 3 and Pitch Perfect 2 took the fourth and fifth spots, with $7.3 million and $6 million, respectively.

The dino-sized debut of Jurassic World is of utmost importance to the industry, too, which has seen three consecutive down weekends in what was supposed to be a record-setting summer.

"We got the wind back in the summer sails," said Dergarabedian, citing upcoming films like Inside Out, Mission: Impossible-Rogue Nation and Ted 2 as some of the big films on the way. "This gets the summer back on track."

Watch Metallica Play 'Star-Spangled Banner' Before Game 5 of the NBA Finals

Watch Metallica Play 'Star-Spangled Banner' Before Game 5 of the NBA Finals:

Metallica Live at New York's Apollo Theater, Sept. 21, 2013.
Metallica performs for SiriusXM listeners at The Apollo Theater on September 21, 2013 in New York City.

Photo: Theo Wargo/Getty Images for SiriusXM
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Metallica are proven big-game players, with a taste for rocking arenas… and sometimes sporting contests. So the veteran metal band’s James Hetfield and Kirk Hammett were in their element when they took center stage to play the national anthem Sunday night ahead of game 5 of the NBA Finals.

Hetfield and Hammett wielded their axes for a rendition of the "Star-Spangled Banner" before LeBron James, Steph Curry and co. lit up the Golden State Warriors’ game against the traveling Cleveland Cavaliers.



Metallica has a habit of showing up to entertain sports fans in California. They performed on ice during a break in the game pitting the hometown San Jose Sharks against their NHL rivals the L.A. Kings back in January, and in May they performed the anthem as the San Francisco Giants took on the Los Angeles Angels.

Watch Carlos Santana and Cindy Blackman Play the National Anthem Before NBA Finals Game

The NBA Finals series has been a ratings heavyweight thus far, and some of the biggest names in music have taken national anthem duties, including Usher and the husband-and-wife duo of Carlos Santana and Cindy Blackman.

For the record, the Warriors lead the best-of-seven series 3-2 after winning the most recent game 104-91. 

5 Seconds of Summer's Tour of Australasia Won't Be Affected by Michael Clifford's Injury

5 Seconds of Summer's Tour of Australasia Won't Be Affected by Michael Clifford's Injury:

5 Seconds of Summer's Tour of Australasia Won't Be Affected by Michael Clifford's Injury
Michael Clifford, Ashton Irwin, Luke Hemmings and Calum Hood of 5 Seconds of Summer pose for a portrait during the 28th Annual ARIA Awards 2014 at the Star on November 26, 2014 in Sydney, Australia. 

Mark Nolan/WireImage
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5 Seconds of Summer’s upcoming tour of Australia and New Zealand should go ahead without a hitch despite the group’s guitarist, Michael Clifford, suffering facial burns on the weekend in a pyrotechnics mishap.

The Sydney-formed four-piece completed their final show at SSE Arena (Wembley) on Sunday night, with an injured Clifford taking his familiar spot at the front of stage. His good health augurs well for the band’s homecoming stretch, which is due to start June 18 at Auckland’s Vector Arena, then rolls into arenas in each of the big five Australian cities.

5 Seconds of Summer Guitarist 'Recovering Well' After Catching Fire at London Concert, Reps Say

The sold-out Rock Out With Your Socks Out tour is due to wrap-up June 29 at Perth Arena. A spokesperson for Live Nation Australasia, the promoter of the tour Down Under, tells Billboard “there’s no reason to expect New Zealand and Australia dates will be affected.”

Clifford appeared to step into a flame during the latter stages of the band's Saturday night show in London. His hair and head dramatically caught fire in an incident that hit the news bulletins in the band’s homeland.

5 Seconds of Summer Announces Australasia Tour...In June 2015

Clifford didn’t return to the stage that night, but he was back on deck the following evening for what was their final show of their tour of the U.K and Europe. He’s kept his millions of loyal fans informed of his situation with a string of tweets.

Feeling loads better and my face is fine :) excited for the show tonight \m/
— Michael Clifford (@Michael5SOS) June 14, 2015
there's been a lot of love spread around lately, thank you all so much :) all of us boys appreciate everything you do!
— Michael Clifford (@Michael5SOS) June 14, 2015
And also thank you so much to all my friends for wishing me the best
— Michael Clifford (@Michael5SOS) June 14, 2015
Thank you for tonight Wembley!! you were amazing :)
— Michael Clifford (@Michael5SOS) June 14, 2015
Last night of the UK/EU tour finished :) thank you so damn much for all of the crew involved and all of the people who came.. love to all!!!
— Michael Clifford (@Michael5SOS) June 15, 2015

Bonnaroo Day 4 Recap: Florence + the Machine Dazzles, Billy Joel Closes Out Fest

Bonnaroo Day 4 Recap: Florence + the Machine Dazzles, Billy Joel Closes Out Fest:

Florence Welch of Florence + The Machine
Erika Goldring/WireImage
Bonnaroo 2015 is in the books. Sunday -- the fest's fourth and final day -- was a little tamer than the days before it, since the crowd began to realize the inevitability of work the next day or a long trip home. Even if Sunday wasn't as turnt as the days before it, the closing block of Florence + the Machine and Billy Joel sent the crowd home in style. And there was a lot more to the final day on the farm on Manchester, Tenn. Join Billboard's Chris Payne and Dominick Grillo as they navigate the madness.

1:20 PM: Youthful folk rock band Grey Season is drawing an impressively enthusiastic crowd despite playing perhaps the most unforgiving time slot at the fest: early afternoon on the last day of 'Roo.

1:24 PM: Singer Ian Jones of Grey Season brings a little Jim Morrison to 'Roo with a spirited rendition of "Back Door Man."

1:50 PM: "My favorite thing about writing songs is writing about the fucked up things you do and watching people dance to them," notes Jessica Hernandez of her namesake outfit, Jessica Hernandez and the Deltas. So, what did you do, Jessica? "This song's called 'Sorry I Stole Your Man.'" Ah, right.

1:54 PM: Hernandez seems to have a pretty good idea of the kind of folk who come to 'Roo: "This song is dedicated to all of you weird people at Bonnaroo because I know you're getting into some weird stuff… This song's called 'Carnie Threesome'."

Bonnaroo 2015 Recaps: Thursday | Friday | Saturday

3:45 PM: Nothing like an old Appalachian coal mining song to help test the political climate of a crowd of people. With Béla Fleck and Abigail Washburn performing "Come all Ye Coal Miners," the audience roars with delight at the repeated refrain "Let's sink this capitalist system."

4:20 PM: Danish alt-popper MØ takes the stage. She opens with her banger "Walk This Way" and sets the tone for her set, with lots of singing from a swaggering, squat/lean stance.

4:28 PM: MØ introduces "One More," which she worked on with a fellow Scandinavian: "Do you know Elliphant? She's my hero. My Swedish hero."

4:46 PM: Possibly the first time a Spice Girls song has been performed at 'Roo, MØ puts her own imprint on "Say You'll Be There."

Bonnaroo 2015: All Our Coverage

5:13 PM: On the main stage, Spoon has just finished rocking out "The Beast and Dragon, Adored," with additional guitar theatrics compared to the original. Just after, bassist Rob Pope jokes around with guitarist Alex Fische: "Is there someone you want to thank?" He shakes his head. One more time: "Is there someone you want to thank? Who's in your top eight?" Someone in the crowd yells the perfect response: "Inside jokes, yeah!"

5:43 PM: It's not hard to find people with terrible nutritional habits at 'Roo: "We'd wake up with two blunts and that was breakfast," slurs a young man who probably isn't old enough to drive himself down the block.

5:47 PM: Happy birthday to you… Happy birthday day to you… Freddie Gibbs turns 33 today and celebrates with some "gangsta shit."

7:08 PM: Florence + the Machine takes the main stage and opens with their woozy anthem, "What the Water Gave Me." The woman of the hour can hardly contain herself, and runs from side to side of the stage, belting her vocals.

Check Out the Highlights From 2015's Bonnaroo Superjam!

7:09 PM: Rudimental takes a break from its drum and bass tunes to cover "Welcome to Jamrock," the thundering title track to Damian Marley's album of the same name.

7:25 PM: It's time for Florence to perform "Rabbit Heart (Raise It Up)," which means everyone in the crowd is asked to hoist someone up on their shoulders. Many comply.

7:25 PM: Five minutes before Caribou's set is scheduled to start, a shockingly small crowd awaits the electronic tunes. It's the kind of size one expects to see at a 1pm set time -- not in primetime -- but perhaps that is the result of matching show times with Florence + the Machine.

7:35 PM: Apparently the worries about the turnout for Caribou were unfounded: within two songs Other Tent has completely filled out and the size of the audience has expanded across the lawn.

7:36 PM: Florence notices a girl a few rows from the front holding a "HUG ME" sign. She tells her she'll comply if she can make it over. Immediately, all around help her crowd surf to the stage, where she finds a warm place in Florence's arms. Aww! Of course, the audience watches the usual sequence of an onstage guest awkwardly not know what to do next once the moment ends.

Kacey Musgraves Disses Radio, Plays New Music at Heartwarming Bonnaroo Set

7:46 PM: Florence is offstage, running through the crowd for the second time in her set. Yes, this is why she broke a leg at Coachella; she's a master performer with almost no inhibitions who can't bear to performing without engaging with her audience. And for her, engaging means leaping the barricade and running through the audience with a security guard behind her.

8:34 PM: Caribou's first (and only) single off 2014's Our Love finishes off the dance party on a high note. Off to Billy Joel!

9:01 PM: Like a true New Yorker, Billy Joel knows the value of being on time. He was allotted 150 minutes, but precisely one minute after his announced start time, he takes the stage and performs "My Life" with his flashy backing band.

9:10 PM: Joel gasps, "Some of you have been here for three days, huh?" (virtually the entire crowd was on its fourth). Being the narrative-inclined 66-year old he is, he compared it to Woodstock: "I didn't play; I was just there. I guess this is what it was like.... Anyone making babies out there?"

9:30 PM: Once he gets his eyes off the massive crowd's expanse, he turns to the people right up front: "Are these like, the rich people seats? Just rattle your jewelry!"

9:43 PM: Joel wraps "She's Always a Woman to Me," and throws a damper on the true love vibes: "That's about one of my ex-wives. That one didn't work out."

Billy Joel Closes Out Bonnaroo, Covers AC/DC With Roadie (Live Review)

9:51 PM: For the first time, Billy Joel gets up from his piano stool and grabs a guitar -- a red Gibson. He says the band is going to have a special guest come out and that it's okay to boo him offstage if the audience doesn't like it. It's his roadie of 34 years "Chainsaw," who just wants to rock. He sings lead vocals on AC/DC's "Highway to Hell," while Joel struts around the stage with his ax. No one is booing anyone.

10:18 PM: It's that time: Joel closes out the first portion of his set with "Piano Man," and gets the best response from the audience he's seen so far.

10:45 PM: A rousing performance of "Only the Good Die Young" appears to cap Joel's encore. "Don't drink and drive!" he yells coming offstage, referencing his own rocky past. "Do what I do -- drink and get a big limousine."

10:48 PM: The Bonnaroo schedule said Billy was going till 11:30, so the crowd up front sticks around, hoping for music. But it's not meant to be. The house music starts playing onstage and fireworks burst in the sky, signaling the end of Bonnaroo 2015. 

Muse's 'Drones' Opens At No. 1 in U.K.

Muse's 'Drones' Opens At No. 1 in U.K.:

Muse
Muse photographed in 2015.

Danny Clinch
Muse have secured their fifth U.K. No. 1 album with Drones (Helium 3/Warner Bros.), 12 years after their first chart-topper. Jason Derulo moved into a third week atop the singles chart with “Want To Want Me” (Warner Bros.).

Drones had a combined sales figure of nearly 73,000, to continue a run for the progressive rock heavyweights that started in 2003 with Absolution. They also led the way with Black Holes & Revelations in 2006, The Resistance (2009) and The 2nd Law in 2012.

Florence + the Machine fell to No. 2 with last week’s bestseller, How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful (Universal Island). Britain’s Got Talent winners Collabro slipped 2-3 with Act Two (Syco Music/Sony Music) but Ed Sheeran’s X (Asylum/Warner Music) moved back 10-4 in its 51st chart week. Its track “Photograph” reached the top 40 for the first time, in its 16th week in the top 75 and 30th in the top 100, with a 43-34 move.

Four weeks ahead of Sheeran with a 55-week album chart run, Sam Smith improved 7-5 with In The Lonely Hour (Capitol/Universal). Dance pacemakers Leftfield’s first full-length studio release in 16 years, Alternative Light Source (Infectious Music), entered at No. 6. Its predecessor Rhythm and Stealth opened at No. 1 in 1999.

Polydor/Universal’s reissue of the Rolling Stones 1971 classic Sticky Fingers took the album back into the top ten at No. 7. The original release spent its first four weeks at the summit, and five in total. Iceland’s Of Monsters and Men came in at No. 10 with Beneath The Skin (Republic/Universal), which follows the No. 3 start for My Head Is An Animal in 2012.

FFS (Domoino), the collaborative album by Franz Ferdinand and Sparks, opened its account at No. 17, and on the compilation chart, the TFI Friday collection, released to coincide with last week’s revival of the 1990s British television favorite, came in at No. 1.

Derulo’s single had 2.26 million streams last week and finished more than 11,000 combined chart sales ahead of its nearest challenger, OMI’s Felix Jaehn remix of “Cheerleader” (Ultra). That former No. 1 moved back 3-2 and was the most-streamed track of the week, at 2.33 million.

“Lean On” (Because Music) by Major Lazer featuring Mo & DJ Snake regained its peak position by climbing 4-3, while “Where Are U Now” (Atlantic/Warner) by Skrillex & Diplo featuring Justin Bieber moved 5-4. “Runaway (U & I)” (Big Beat) by Galantis jumped 7-5 and there was a 75-8 leap for "Shut Up & Dance” (RCA/Sony) by Cincinnati-based pop outfit Walk The Moon.

Janet Jackson Announces 'Unbreakable World Tour'

Janet Jackson Announces 'Unbreakable World Tour':

Janet Jackson Unbreakable World Tour 2015
Janet Jackson Unbreakable World Tour 2015 poster.

Courtesy Photo
Janet Jackson is hitting the road for the first time in four years, in support of her forthcoming new album (available for pre-order now) for Rhythm Nation/BMG duet this fall.

The first 36-date leg of her Unbreakable World Tour kicks off Aug. 31 in Vancouver, BC and continues in North America through Nov. 12 in Honolulu. More worldwide concerts will be announced at a later date.

Janet Jackson to Release New Album This Fall Via Rhythm Nation/BMG 

Tickets go on sale June 22 at JanetJackson.com, with an American Express pre-sale beginning Monday, June 15 at 10 a.m. EST through Friday, June 19 at 10 p.m. “American Express is thrilled to partner with an iconic artist like Janet Jackson on the Unbreakable World Tour and bring our Card Members an opportunity to purchase tickets before the general on-sale date,” Walter Frye, V.P. American Express Entertainment, said in a statement. “Adding Janet to our industry-leading ticketing partnerships is rooted in our mission to serve our card members’ deep passion for music.”



Janet Jackson Unbreakable World Tour 2015


Janet Jackson's Biggest Billboard Hits

In addition to Live Nation and Rhythm Nation, other concert promoters will include Nederlander Concerts, Jam Productions, Another Planet Entertainment, and such promoters as Bamp and Tommy Meharey who will produce the Honolulu dates.

Jackson is one of the most-decorated acts in Hot 100 history, with 10 No. 1 singles and 27 top 10s.

Full list of North American Unbrekable World Tour dates below:

Aug. 31, 2015 Pepsi Live at Rogers Arena, Vancouver, BC
Sept. 2, 2015 Scotiabank Saddledome, Calgary, AB
Sept. 4, 2015 Rexall Place Edmonton, AB
Sept. 5, 2015 Revolution Place Grande Prairie, AB
Sept. 7, 2015 SaskTel Centre Saskatoon, SK
Sept. 8, 2015 MTS Centre Winnipeg, MB
Sept. 11, 2015 Van Andel Arena Grand Rapids, MI
Sept. 12, 2015 PNC Pavilion at Riverbend Music Center Cincinnati
Sept. 15, 2015 Air Canada Centre Toronto
Sept. 17, 2015 Walnut Creek Amphitheatre Raleigh, NC
Sept. 18, 2015 PNC Music Pavilion Charlotte, NC
Sept. 20, 2015 American Airlines Arena Miami
Sept. 23, 2015 Amway Arena Orlando
Sept. 24, 2015 Amalie Arena Tampa, FL
Sept. 26, 2015 Chastain Park Amphitheatre Atlanta, GA
Sept. 27, 2015 Ascend Amphitheater Nashville
Sept. 29, 2015 Fedex Forum Memphis, TN
Sept. 30, 2015 Smoothie King Center New Orleans, LA
Oct. 9, 2015 Axis @ Planet Hollywood Las Vegas
Oct. 10, 2015 Axis @ Planet Hollywood Las Vegas
Oct. 13, 2015 Bill Graham Civic Auditorium San Francisco
Oct. 14, 2015 Bill Graham Civic Auditorium San Francisco
Oct. 16, 2015 The Forum Los Angeles
Oct. 17, 2015 Viejas Arena San Diego
Oct. 19, 2015 Comerica Theatre Phoenix
Oct. 21, 2015 Santa Barbara Bowl Santa Barbara, CA
Oct. 22, 2015 Santa Barbara Bowl Santa Barbara, CA
Oct. 24, 2015 Energy Solutions Arena Salt Lake City, UT
Oct. 25, 2015 Pepsi Center Denver, CO
Oct. 27, 2015 Sprint Center Kansas City, MO
Oct. 29, 2015 Chaifetz Arena St. Louis, MO
Oct. 30, 2015 CenturyLink Center Omaha, NE
Nov. 1, 2015 Target Center Minneapolis
Nov. 3, 2015 Chicago Theatre Chicago
Nov. 4, 2015 Chicago Theatre Chicago
Nov. 12, 2015 Neal S. Blaisdell Center Arena Honolulu, HI

Spotify Launches Time Machine Playlist Site

Spotify Launches Time Machine Playlist Site:

Jimi Hendrix, Woodstock 1969
Spotify has quietly launched a new standalone site that helps you build retro playlists based on your current tastes. "What would you jam to if you were born during a different decade?" the streaming giant asked in a tweet late Friday afternoon. "Spotify Taste Rewind" starts off by highlighting a modest selection of your collection and then asks you to choose "three artists that you love." It will then build tailored playlists for each of the five previous decades, going back to the 1960s.

In its current state the feature feels a little buggy and the pool of artists you get to choose from doesn't necessarily change much. An attempt to create a custom playlist only rendered about eight artists I actually listen to before Spotify began suggesting general hit makers like Ariana Grande, Hozier and Rihanna. After a playlist is generated you have the option of launching Spotify to listen to it or share it (though that button failed to work on an iPad).

What would you jam to if you were born during a different decade? Find out with #TasteRewind! http://t.co/4tTGV3bbiC https://t.co/mg4gk8vyTb
— Spotify (@Spotify) June 12, 2015
Highlighting the slight drawback of announcing something at an hour -- Summer Friday y'all! -- when people are trading their computers for frozen margs, the new feature went widely unnoticed until one of Spotify's engineers posted about it on Facebook over the weekend, leading some outlets to think it was leaked early.

Ever wondered which artists you would be listening to if you were born in another time?Spotify can help you turn your music back in time :), try it out!

Posted by Juan Manuel Serruya on Sunday, June 14, 2015

Taylor Swift (and Friends!) Celebrate at Jamie King's Baby Shower

Taylor Swift (and Friends!) Celebrate at Jamie King's Baby Shower:

Jaime King and Taylor Swift 2014
Jaime King and Taylor Swift attend the 22nd Annual Elton John AIDS Foundation Academy Awards Viewing Party at The City of West Hollywood Park on March 2, 2014 in West Hollywood, California. 

Michael Kovac/Getty Images for EJAF
This looks like the most rager-esque (a.k.a fun) baby shower we've ever seen.

Taylor Swift may have performed two 1989 World Tour shows in Philadelphia this weekend, but she still managed to fit in some girlfriends time -- a.k.a., a baby shower for pal Jamie King, who shared recently that she had named Swift godmother to the upcoming arrival.

"So just took a red eye and threw Jaime a baby shower. Here's photo evidence," she wrote on social media. "Baby shower/major throwdown."

Swift is clearly pleased with her party-planning prowess -- the singers posted several pics from the evening, and it seems several Swift Squad members were able to attend. E! Online reports that the guest list included Sarah Hyland, Gigi Hadid, Hailee Steinfeld, the HAIM gals, Jessica Alba, Selma Blair, Nina Dobrev and Emma Roberts.

We'll be over here coveting those goofy photo booth accessories.

Dierks Bentley Explains Why New Single 'Riser' Is a 'Once In a Career' Song

Dierks Bentley Explains Why New Single 'Riser' Is a 'Once In a Career' Song:

Dierks Bentley
Dierks Bentley performs onstage during the 2015 CMA Festival on June 11, 2015 in Nashville, Tennessee. 

John Shearer/WireImage
Dierks Bentley’s against-all-odds new single "Riser" may be the album’s fifth, but it’s been at the forefront of the singer’s mind since the day he heard it.

“I was searching for that one song that gives the album context, and when I heard ‘Riser’ for the first time I knew that was the cornerstone of the album,” Bentley tells Billboard. “I knew that’s what the album was going to be called, and I built it around that song.”

Dierks Bentley Previews Sounds of Summer Tour

The message behind “Riser” -- that life is hard, man, and you’ve got to give it your all to succeed -- is almost chillingly appropriate for Bentley. The country star’s career has had its fair share of false starts: He recalls launching his headlining career just as the 2007 recession hit, and Riser debuted with a flop of a lead single, “Bourbon in Kentucky.” The title track itself, meanwhile, is a tough sell as a summertime release, considering it’s a heavy, down-tempo ballad. The struggle is real even for Bentley’s pets: During his call with Billboard to talk about the new tune, he’s out searching for his beagle-mix, George, who’s once again gotten loose without a collar. (“He has like 20,000 lives,” Bentley says.)

Co-written by Nashville aces Travis Meadows and Steve Moakler, “Riser” was sent to Bentley by his executive producer, Arturo Buenahora, amid a swirl of vulnerability: He was mourning the 2012 passing of his father, Leon, and soon he’d learn that his wife, Cassidy, was pregnant with their son, Knox. He didn’t simply relate to lyrics like “The hard times put the shine into the diamond/I won’t let that keep us in the ground” -- he was living them.

Dierks Bentley Recruits Miranda Lambert for '90s Covers Band

“I was trying to think about the man I wanted to evolve into being,” he says.

Bentley has spent the past two years trickling out singles from the Grammy-nominated Riser, his seventh studio album, including the No. 1s “Say You Do” and “I Hold On.” This time last year, the licensed pilot was flying high on the summer smash “Drunk on a Plane.” But all along, he had the secret weapon of “Riser” in his back pocket.

“I really feel like the song is going to help people who are going through a hard time,” Bentley says. “I know it’s connecting, I know it has that effect.” Because of that, he adds, it was too important not to give it a shot on country radio: “I can’t move forward from that album knowing that it’s still sitting on the table.”

Dierks Bentley Talks 'Drunk on a Plane'

In April, he tested the waters at the 50th annual Academy of Country Music Awards by playing “Riser” for a live audience dotted with lighters (or maybe iPhones) and more than 15 million additional viewers at home. Bolstered by the positive feedback -- Billboard ranked it as the best performance of the night -- Universal Music Group greenlit the song as Bentley’s newest single. In an effort to further strengthen the song’s connection with his audience, last week he unveiled a feature on his website that allows fans to upload photos and then overlay their favorite lyrics.

As he embarks on his Sounds of Summer tour, which kicked off June 5, Bentley hopes that “Riser” continues to resonate with listeners as much as it continues to resonate with him.

“Songs and music can change people’s lives,” he says. “This is one of those songs you get once a career that has the possibility to do that.”

Miley Cyrus & Instagram Launch #InstaPride to Help Share Transgender Stories

Miley Cyrus & Instagram Launch #InstaPride to Help Share Transgender Stories:

Miley Cyrus attends the 30th Annual Night Of Stars presented by The Fashion Group International at Cipriani Wall Street on October 22, 2013 in New York City.
Miley Cyrus attends the 30th Annual Night Of Stars presented by The Fashion Group International at Cipriani Wall Street on October 22, 2013 in New York City. 

Dave Kotinsky/Getty Images
Miley Cyrus, whose LGBTQ-friendly Happy Hippie Foundation launched earlier this spring, expands her inclusive activism with the launch of #InstaPride today (June 15). Hosted on Instagram (and presented by her Happy Hippie Foundation), #InstaPride will "share stories of transgender and gender expansive people from around the country over the next 2 weeks," according to Cyrus' post.

Watch Miley & Ariana Sing an '80s Classic

Just last week, Miley shared some art she created inspired by Caitlyn Jenner's Vanity Fair cover. In the music realm, an unreleased Miley track "Nightmare" leaked last week -- no word if it's from an upcoming project or a Bangerz leftover.

I’m launching #InstaPride today, in partnership with @instagram, to share stories of transgender and gender... https://t.co/SRF7GpY206
— Miley Ray Cyrus (@MileyCyrus) June 15, 2015