It might be the dead of winter but festival organizers are warming things up as a few summer lineups have been released.
Coachella 2023 is shaping up to be a memorable one with Bad Bunny, BlackPink, and Frank Ocean all slated to headline the three-day festival. Benito will set the tone on Friday, April 14 with some pretty amazing acts that will hit the stage before him.
Some of those artists include Kaytranada, Wet Leg, and Burna Boy. Rosalía, Charli XCX, and Kid Laroi are all set to perform before BlackPink headlines on Saturday, April 15. Then, on Sunday, the final day of the festival, hitting the stage before Frank Ocean, who hasn't dropped an album since 2016, are Kali Uchis, A Boogie, and Latto among others.
Coachella will take place at the Empire Polo Grounds in Indio, California, on the weekends of April 14-16 and April 21-23.
Bonnaroo's lineup was also revealed. Headliners this year include Kendrick Lamar, Odesza, Foo Fighters, Zeds Dead, and Liquid Stranger.
The festival is slated for June 15 through June 18 in Manchester, Tennessee.
Police shootings have persisted in America for the last several decades but now personal video footage is holding officers accountable, says O'Donnell. The MSNBC host is re-publishing his book "Deadly Force" that chronicles the 1975 police shooting of an unarmed black man that was criticized as "basically a murder".
The president's consistent attacks on media outlets like CNN is "very, very good for business." But Trump has avoided directing his wrath at MSNBC since taking the White House, because the network "is much higher rated" and "he would prefer people to watch CNN," which features many pro-Trump speakers, says O'Donnell.
The MSNBC host explains what happened leading up to the moment when his co-worker, Rachel Maddow, broke down in tears on air while covering the border crisis. O'Donnell tells Cheddar that if he had to report the story on tender age shelters, he might have cried too.
The ticketing company plans to add an extra charge for movies that it thinks will be popular. Associate features editor for PCMag.com Rob Marvin joins Cheddar to explain this surge pricing announcement and how MoviePass squares up against the competition.
MTV, in a bid to ride the nostalgia TV wave, launched a new venture, MTV Studios, that will reboot Daria, the Real World, and Aeon Flux for streaming platforms. Bringing back old successful titles rather than launching brand new ones is a smarter, less risky way for media companies to stay relevant, says Jessica Derschowitz, senior digital news editor at Entertainment Weekly.
Tesla is making big cuts to its solar business. According to a Reuters report, the company will close 12 solar installation facilities across several states. Tesla bought SolarCity more than two years ago for $2.6 billion.
Chipotle is giving its menu a makeover. The company is experimenting with five new menu items at its test kitchen in New York, including quesadillas, nachos, and chocolate milkshakes. Chipotle plans to roll out these items nationwide in the coming months.
Brian Krzanich, the CEO of Intel, is resigning after an internal investigation found his relationship with another Intel employee violated the company's code of conduct. Bob Swan will step in as interim CEO while the company looks for a permanent CEO.
AT&T is launching a new streaming service aimed at winning back cord cutters. WatchTV is a skinny bundle which features around 30 basic channels. It will be free for new AT&T wireless subscribers, and will cost $14.99 per month as a standalne product.
Cheddar's Brad Smith sits down with Tristan 'Mack' Wilds and Chaley Rose, stars of the new movie 'Dinner for Two,' at the American Black Film Festival. The actors discuss what it was like filming a movie in just two weeks.
The recent crisis at the U.S.-Mexico border isn't that different from the injustices committed against the transgender community, says actress and transgender rights activist Angelica Ross. "We, as a country and as a global society, have lost touch with our humanity," she tells Cheddar.
Oxygen's new true-crime series "In Defense Of" takes a look at some of the most infamous criminal cases in U.S. history -- from the perspective of the defense attorneys who represented those who many found irredeemable.
The "Pride Portraits" photography project, which profiles LGBTQIA+ community members and allies all over the country, sprang out of the mass shooting at Orlando's Pulse nightclub and in two years has captured 3,000 images. "It is a wonderful way to celebrate who we are and give us humanization," says founder and photographer Eric Edward Schell.
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