The NBA YoungBoy phenomenon is unlike the buzz surrounding any other artist.
Whether it's the memes, the message or the collective desire to only play YoungBoy YouTube videos out loud on an iPhone, the love YB fans have for their favorite rapper is impressive. Upon releasing his album Sincerely, Kentrell last Friday, the 21-year-old rapper was fighting with Drake for the top spot on the Billboard Top 200.
Sincerely, Kentrell, which finds YoungBoy rapping entirely by himself -- the project had no features -- is obviously hitting fans in a major way, but 21 Savage says it's not sitting the same with other rappers.
AnnaSophia Robb is getting married! The Doctor Death actress took to Instagram Tuesday to share that she and her boyfriend, Trevor Paul, had gotten engaged.
"I want to be with you everywhere!🎶 And now I get to 💗 We got engaged!!! YAHHHHOOOOOOO! He’s my best friend, the greatest man I know, & a real bad b*tch 🎶 , I feel pure joy beginning the rest of our lives together!," Robb wrote next to a slideshow of photos of her and her hubby to be, including one where she excitedly shows off her glittering engagement ring.
Former "Dirrty" girl Christina Aguilera proved she's not one to cry over spilled milk, or, in this case, a spilled dress. At her 39th-birthday party on Wednesday night, the pop star experienced a bit of a wardrobe malfunction. In a video that Xtina posted on her Instagram, she can be seen having a ball while she dances surrounded by onlooking party guests, when her entire left boob suddenly escapes from the confines of her red mini dress, revealing her black nipple pasty.
Angelo Bruno, Philadelphia's mob boss in the 1960s and 1970s, was killed by a shotgun blast in 1980 as he sat in a car in front of his house on 934 Snyder Avenue.
The grisly story is no doubt a point of fascination for Mafia aficionados, but it wasn't enough to land the address on Philadelphia's list of historical designations.
On Thursday, a historical landmark advisory board committee said the home of the mobster known as the "
Grapefruit's bitterness can make it hard to love. Indeed, people often smother it in sugar just to get it down. And yet Americans were once urged to sweeten it with salt.
Ad campaigns from the first and second world wars tried to convince us that "Grapefruit Tastes Sweeter With Salt!" as one 1946 ad for Morton's in Life magazine put it. The pairing, these ads swore, enhanced the flavor.
In our candy-crushed world, these curious culinary time capsules raise the question: Does salt really make grapefruit taste sweeter?