Bill Cosby To Consider Suing Montgomery County Following Prison Release: Report

Bill Cosby is reportedly considering a lawsuit against Montgomery County, following his release from prison, earlier this week. After being incarcerated for the last 3 years, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court overturned his indecent assault conviction on the technicality that a prior prosecutor reached an agreement with Cosby that would have prevented him from being criminally charged in the case.

According to TMZ, Cosby is meeting with his legal team, Thursday, to discuss potential options for legal recourse.

Bill Cosby, Lawsuit
Mark Makela / Getty Images

“This is the justice Mr. Cosby has been fighting for. They saw the light,” Cosby spokesman Andrew Wyatt said, according to NBC News, after the ruling. “He was given a deal, and he had immunity. He should have never been charged.”

District Attorney Kevin Steele released a statement Wednesday condemning the decision: ″[Cosby] was found guilty by a jury and now goes free on a procedural issue that is irrelevant to the facts of the crime. My hope is that this decision will not dampen the reporting of sexual assaults by victims. Prosecutors in my office will continue to follow the evidence wherever and to whomever it leads. We still believe that no one is above the law — including those who are rich, famous and powerful.”

[Via]

Lil Uzi Vert Nearly Gives JT A Heart Attack Doing Wheelies

Lil Uzi Vert and JT stepped out together at the BET Awards this weekend for a glamorous night on the town and a few days later, they hit the streets to get their adrenaline pumping.

Philadelphia rapper Lil Uzi loves to get on his dirt bikes and four-wheelers to terrorize the street in the late hours of the night. Aside from Meek Mill, Uzi is probably the biggest adrenaline junkie in rap. We’ve seen videos of him doing wheelies all across the city and this week, he brought his girlfriend JT along for the ride.


Paras Griffin/Getty Images

Sharing a video of them pulling off a wheelie on a four-wheeler with JT hanging on for her dear life, Uzi wrote, “OMG [laughing emojis] @thegirljt YOU SO SCARY MOMMY. I literally couldn’t BREATH [face-palm emoji] I love you so much crazy lady ….  My Partner in crime.”

In the video, JT screams when Uzi starts doing a wheelie as she holds him from behind. She commented on the post, writing, “Lmaoooooooooo why would you expose me pa? [laughing emojis] next time im gone be ready…..I love you more! You always put me in another world, never a dull moment.”

Seeing JT on the back of Uzi’s four-wheeler is nice, but she’ll definitely need to get used to the ride before she gets back on.


Instagram

Disney Star Kyle Massey Labels Felony Charge As “Extortive”

Kyle Massey, best known for his role as Cory Baxter on Disney shows such as That’s So Raven and Cory in the House, is denying the accusations of allegedly sending pornographic material to a 13-year-old, for which he was charged with a felony, earlier this week. In a statement released by his lawyer, Massey and his legal team labeled the accusations as “extortive.”

“It is unfortunate that Kyle Massey had to learn through the media yesterday that the 2019 allegations have resurfaced in the State of Washington a year after their dismissal,” attorney Lee Hutton told Page Six in the statement. “Massey claims that the allegations then and now are extortive.”

Kyle Massey, Felony
Ethan Miller / Getty Images

The victim and her mother first sued Massey back in 2019, and have provided police with a flash drive containing the explicit messages in question.

“Massey was never properly served or notified as represented to the court and the pleadings are procedurally and substantively deficient on its face,” Hutton said of the felony charge. “Massey intends to aggressively defend these accusations again and will seek civil damages from those that refuse to hear the facts. We plan to seek an early dismissal — finally putting these extortive attempts to rest.”

Earlier this week, Massey was scheduled to appear at King County Criminal Court in Washington, but never showed up.

[Via]

Tyler, The Creator “CALL ME IF YOU GET LOST” Review

At the 62nd Annual Grammy Awards, Tyler, the Creator won “Best Rap Album” for his fifth studio album Igor, an album that Tyler himself prefaced by saying, “Don’t go into this expecting a rap album.” Despite its genre-bending nature and heavy pop aesthetic, Igor was shoved into the rap category and was crowned victorious, a misstep that the Grammys appeared to try and atone for by awarding Nas the win for King’s Disease earlier this year. Tyler, the Creator — while openly grateful for his Grammy — spoke about how the win felt like a backhanded compliment and wondered aloud, “Why can’t we just be in pop?”

Two years after Igor, however, Tyler, the Creator has taken a detour from his revered genre-fluid output and transitioned back to rap, a complete stylistic shift that he revealed was actually inspired by Westside Gunn. The result is CALL ME IF YOU GET LOST, a 16-track album that returns the experimental artist to his raw, Hip-Hop roots. During the first ten seconds of the album opener “SIR BAUDELAIRE,” Tyler proclaims that Wolf Haley — the alter ego that dominated his first three projects: Bastard, Goblin, and Wolf — is back, but CALL ME IF YOU GET LOST doesn’t really mark a return to form for the once-polarizing artist. Instead, Tyler, the Creator’s sixth studio album showcases how much he’s grown since his angst-filled early output, as an artist and as a human being.

Tyler is full-on rapping again, but the gratuitous outlandish subject matter is replaced with absolute bars. “LUMBERJACK” still remains one of the best executed and pure rap tracks from the album, but songs like “CORSO” and “SAFARI” boast some of Tyler’s hardest verses to date.  While there are some questionable bars sprinkled throughout the album, Tyler’s lyrics across the board are more focused and insightful than they’ve ever been.

Tracks like “MASSA” “MANIFESTO,” and “WILSHIRE” are CALL ME IF YOU GET LOST’s shining examples of Tyler’s maturity. On “MASSA,” the Golf Wang creator documents his journey as an artist and dives into an intense stretch of self-reflection, and “MANIFESTO” literally serves as a bold confrontation with his controversial past. Yet, it’s “WILSHIRE” — an uncharacteristically minimal eight-minute and 36-second track about falling in love with his friend’s girlfriend — that illustrates Tyler’s extraordinary growth. A decade ago, a song with subject matter similar to “WILSHIRE” would have been plagued with surface-level lyrics and references to rape, but now, Tyler is able to tell a prolonged story in a brutally honest and captivating way without hiding behind “shock factor.”

Tyler, the Creator performs onstage at the BET Awards 2021 at Microsoft Theater on June 27, 2021 in Los Angeles, California.
Bennett Raglin/Getty Images

With that said, as much as Tyler has grown, CALL ME IF YOU GET LOST does expose the fact that the Grammy award-winning artist has become somewhat set in his ways. From habitually releasing an album every two years to making the tenth track of his albums a two-part song, the multi-talented artist can be frustratingly predictable, and songs like “HOT WIND BLOWS” and “SWEET/I THOUGHT YOU WANTED TO DANCE” fall short of their full potential. “HOT WIND BLOWS” is a middling collaboration between Tyler and Lil Wayne, who have proven in the past that they can strike gold when teaming up on wax together. Then there’s the collaboration with Brent Faiyaz. Surprisingly, the first half of “SWEET/I THOUGHT YOU WANTED TO DANCE” is one of the weakest and sonically jarring moments on CALL ME IF YOU GET LOST, and Tyler’s signature jazzy and synthy production style — which used to feel grand and experimental on previous projects — now feels uninventive. 

To be fair, however, Tyler’s knack for sticking to his creative guns yields far more amazing moments than lackluster ones, and quite frankly, with the arrival of CALL ME IF YOU GET LOST, it’s time to admit that Tyler, the Creator has mastered the art of creating moments.

Throughout his career, he has had at least one insane or unexpected moment on each album, whether it be a six-minute therapy session with the voice in his head on “Bastard” or an unexpectedly beautiful and well-balanced Playboi Carti and Charlie Wilson collaboration on “EARFQUAKE.” CALL ME IF YOU GET LOST shows that Tyler has not only figured out how to craft those lightning in a bottle-esque records, he has figured out how to flood his projects with them.

Hearing NBA YoungBoy randomly storm onto “WUSYANAME” for the first time is an unforgettable experience, and if it weren’t for Tyler, the Creator, who knows if listeners would have ever heard YoungBoy so wondrously out of his element. Only Tyler could have tastefully pieced together a nostalgic 90s R&B-inspired cut that samples H-Town’s classic song “Back Seat (Wit No Sheets)” and features both NBA YoungBoy and Ty Dolla $ign. And while that song alone is in the running for one of the wildest Hip-Hop collaborations of 2021, Tyler’s sixth studio album is filled with several more just like it, from the blaring 42 Dugg-assisted track “LEMONHEAD” to the otherworldly 14th track “JUGGERNAUT” that features Pharrell and Lil Uzi Vert. 

Furthermore, Tyler, the Creator’s decision to enlist the services of DJ Drama has arguably made his whole sixth studio album a moment in itself. Like many of DJ Drama’s most notable Gangsta Grillz mixtapes, CALL ME IF YOU GET LOST has its own identity, and it is utterly entertaining to listen to, from Tyler’s unprecedented commercial freestyle over Westside Gunn’s “Michael Irvin” to the former Odd Future artist fully embracing his past, present, and future on “SAFARI.” Tyler, the Creator a.k.a. Wolf Haley a.k.a Flower Boy T a.k.a. Igor a.k.a Tyler Baudelaire has a Gangsta Grillz mixtape, and if you take the time to fully listen to it, you’ll never forget it.

Rick Ross Shows Off His Unbelievable Car Collection

Rick Ross undeniably has one of the best car collections out of everybody in the rap game. While Chris Brown, Travis Scott, and plenty of others have strong fleets in their garages, Rick Ross has over one hundred vehicles at his estate, putting every other rapper to shame.

Last week, the Florida-based rap icon explained how he can afford to have so many cars at his 400-acre property, revealing that people pay him exorbitant amounts of money just to take pictures with his vintage whips. Much like he’s done with his estate, Rozay has made a business out of his investments. Days after he spoke about his collection, the rapper felt like showing off some of his most prized possessions, walking down his driveway and focusing the camera on his classic Rolls-Royce cars.

“No loaners,” bragged Rozay in his caption, telling the world that he owns every car on his property. People are raving over his car collection, which rivals that of late-night show legend Jay Leno. Recently, they met up to compare collections, filming some content for socials, and becoming fast friends.

Watch the video below to see Rick Ross show off some of his coolest cars and let us know what you think of his collection.

David Geffen Is Donating $150 Million To Yale So Drama Students Can Attend Tuition-Free

In addition to being a giant in the entertainment world, mega-magnate David Geffen—founder of DreamWorks, Geffen Records, Asylum Records, and more—is equally well known for his philanthropic efforts. Particularly when it comes to the arts and investing in the talent of the future, as evidenced by premier cultural centers like UCLA’s Geffen Playhouse and Lincoln Center’s David Geffen Hall.

While UCLA has been the recipient of hundreds of millions of Geffen’s dollars over the years, he’s now sending some of that same generosity to the east coast with a $150 million donation to the Yale School of Drama, which Deadline reports will allow approximately 200 students per year to attend the prestigious training ground—tuition-free.

“By reducing the debt burden of the average student, we create more resilient artists and managers who are able to make braver artistic choices—they’re able to take that downtown play and they don’t have to have a career selling real estate on the side,” said drama school dean James Bundy. “Not every artist is going to break through at the age of 25 or 26 or 27. Certain kinds of careers take time to build, and entering the professions with less debt is going to make for more interesting and more resounding choices in the long run.”

Yale offers one of the most competitive drama schools in the world and its alumni include the best of the best: Meryl Streep, Paul Newman, Frances McDormand, Angela Bassett, Tony Shalhoub, Patricia Clarkson, and Lupita Nyong’o are just some of the school’s acting alumni. But its programs include design, directing, and playwrighting, too, so they’ve got plenty of past students to boast about behind the camera and stage scenes, too.

Deadline reports that Geffen’s gift is the largest donation in the history of American theater. Appropriately, the school will now be renamed the David Geffen School of Drama at Yale University.

(Via Deadline)

All The New Albums Coming Out In July 2021

Keeping track of all the new albums coming out in a given month is a big job, but we’re up for it: Below is a comprehensive list of the major releases you can look forward to in July. If you’re not trying to potentially miss out on anything, it might be a good idea to keep reading.

Friday, July 2

  • Attawalpa — Patterns EP (White Label Collective)
  • Bobby Gillespie And Jehnny Beth — Utopian Ashes (Third Man Records)
  • Broken Fires — New Friends EP (Phwoar & Peace Records)
  • Caitlin Mae — Perspective EP (Monstercat)
  • Chinatown Slalom — Meet The Parents EP (September Recordings)
  • Cloudland — Where We Meet (HeyHey Studios)
  • Cub Scout Bowling Pins — Clang Clang Ho (Rockathon Records)
  • Dennis Lloyd — Some Days (Arista Records)
  • Desperate Journalist — Maximum Sorrow! (Fierce Panda)
  • Earl Slick — Fist Full Of Devils (Schnitzel)
  • G Herbo — 25 (Machine Entertainment Group)
  • The Go! Team — Get Up Sequences Part One (Memphis Industries Records)
  • Izzy True — Our Beautiful Baby World (Don Giovanni Records)
  • Laura Mvula — Pink Noise (Atlantic Records)
  • Molly Lewis — The Forgotten Edge EP (Jagjaguwar)
  • Mr Jukes & Barney Artist — The Locket (The Locket Records/Virgin Music)
  • The Quireboys — A Bit Of What You Fancy 2 (EMI)
  • Risely — Meantime Fades (self-released)
  • Sebastian Plano — Save Me Not (Decca Records)
  • Snapped Ankles — Forest Of Your Problems (The Leaf Label)
  • Steve Marriner — Hope Dies Last (Stony Plain Records)
  • Stone Giants — West Coast Love Stories (Nomark)
  • Sun Crow — Quest for Oblivion (Ripple Music)
  • Supermilk — Four by Three (Specialist Subject Records)
  • Vince Mendoza — Freedom Over Everything (Modern Recordings)

Sunday, July 4

  • Lana Del Rey — Blue Bannisters (Interscope/Polydor)

Friday, July 9

  • The Academic — Community Spirit EP (Capitol Records)
  • Arushi Jain — Under The Lilac Sky (Leaving Records)
  • Attacca Quartet — Real Life (Sony Classical)
  • Charlotte Day Wilson — Alpha (Stone Woman Music)
  • Dylan Cartlidge — Hope Above Adversity (Glassnote Records)
  • DZ Deathrays — Positive Rising: Part 2 (Alcopop! Records)
  • Eden James — All The Good Blank Are Taken (Dandy Ram Records)
  • The Flatlanders — Treasure Of Love (Rack’em Records/Thirty Tigers)
  • Foodman — Yasuragi Land (Hyperdub)
  • Half Waif — Mythopoetics (Anti-)
  • Hannah Dasher — The Half Record (Sony Music Nashville)
  • Hardline — Heart, Mind And Soul (Frontiers)
  • IDK — USEE4YOURSELF (Warner Records)
  • Jahvillani — Dirt To Bentley (VP Records)
  • Jeremy Ferrara — Everything I Hold (AST Records)
  • Jerome Thomas — That Secret Sauce EP (Rhythm Section)
  • Jimmy Jam And Terry Lewis — Jam & Lewis Volume One (Flyte Tyme Records)
  • JOON — Dream Again (Italians Do It Better)
  • Junaco — Blue Room EP (Side Hustle Records)
  • Justin Pierre Courtney — The Price Of Salt EP (Epitaph Records)
  • LA Guns — Cocked & Loaded Live (Frontiers)
  • Lords Of Altamont — Tune In, Turn On, Electrify! (Heavy Psych Sounds)
  • Mads Christensen — 5212 Helvete (Edged Circle Productions)
  • The Maine — XOXO: From Love And Anxiety In Real Time (Photo Finish Records/8123)
  • Meggie Lennon — Sounds From Your Lips (Mothland)
  • Murray McLauchlan — Hourglass (True North Records)
  • Museum Of Love — Life Of Mammals (DFA Records)
  • Real Sickies — Love Is for Lovers (Stomp Records)
  • Serj Tankian — Cool Gardens Poetry Suite (Serjical Strike Records)
  • Soda Blonde — Small Talk (Velveteen Records)
  • Soul Asylum — Stand Up And Be Strong EP (Legacy)
  • Spice Girls — Wannabe25 EP (UMe/Virgin)
  • Thought Leaders — In Wastelands (King of Sticks Records)
  • Tkay Maidza — Last Year Was Weird, Vol. 3 EP (4AD/Dew Process)
  • Toni Sauna — Denise (Def Pressé)
  • Twin Shadow — Twin Shadow (Cheree Cheree)
  • Typical Sisters — Love Beam (Joyful Noise Recordings)
  • Various Artists — Space Jam: A New Legacy Official Soundtrack (Republic Records/WaterTower Music)
  • Vince Staples — Vince Staples (Def Jam)
  • The Wallflowers — Exit Wounds (New West Records)

Friday, July 16

  • Ampersounds feat. Rufus Wainwright — West End EP (West End Records)
  • Anya Hinkle — Eden And Her Borderlands (Organic Records)
  • Bacao Rhythm & Steel Band — Expansions (Big Crown Records)
  • Barenaked Ladies — Detour De Force (Vanguard)
  • Big City — Testify X (Frontiers)
  • Charli Adams — Bullseye (Color Study)
  • Charlie Worsham — Sugarcane EP (Warner)
  • Chet Faker — Hotel Surrender (Detail Records/BMG)
  • Clairo — Sling (Fader/Republic/Interscope)
  • Dave McMurray — Grateful Dedication (Blue Note)
  • Dave Mullen — Solace (Mullsoul Music)
  • Felicity — Dear Universe (Adventure Cat Records)
  • The Flaming Lips — The Soft Bulletin Companion (Warner Bros.)
  • GOAD — La Belle Dame (My Kingdom Music)
  • Hollie Kenniff — The Quiet Drift (Western Vinyl)
  • The Hornets — Heavier Than A Stone (Go Down Records)
  • Ida Mae — Click Click Domino (Thirty Tigers)
  • Inhaler — It Won’t Always Be Like This (Polydor Records)
  • James Vickery — Songs That Made Me Feel (Th3rd Brain Records)
  • James Vincent McMorrow — Grapefruit Season (Sony Music UK/RCA Records)
  • Jayla Kai — Epitome EP (Everybody’s Music)
  • John R. Miller — Depreciated (Rounder Records)
  • Johnny Lloyd — La La La (Xtra Mile)
  • Kate Vargas — Rumpumpo (Big Machine)
  • Kenneth Whalum — Broken Land 2 (Secretly Canadian/Broken Land Records)
  • KSI — All Over The Place (RBC Records/BMG)
  • Lawrence Rothman — Good Morning, America (KRO)
  • Leila Abdul-Rauf — Phantasiai (Cyclic Law)
  • Lovelorn — What’s Yr Damage (6131)
  • Lou Price — Parkside Grooming EP (Hand In Hive)
  • Marc Ribler — The Whole World Awaits You (Wicked Cool Records)
  • Nathaniel Rateliff — Red Rocks 2020 (Stax Records)
  • Nene H — Ali (Incienso)
  • Oscar Lang — Chew The Scenery (Dirty Hit)
  • Rodrigo Amarante — Drama (Polyvinyl)
  • Runnner — Always Repeating (Run For Cover Records)
  • Smile Machine — Bye For Now (Exploding In Sound Records)
  • Stephen Fretwell — Busy Guy (Speedy Wunderground)
  • Thadeus Gonzalez — Opposite Faces (Ripple Music)
  • Toby Hitchcock — Changes (Frontiers)
  • Tommy Ward — From This Moment On EP (Le Coq Records)
  • Tones And I — Welcome To The Madhouse (Bad Batch Records)
  • Trampolene — Love No Less Than A Queen (Strap Originals)
  • Umphrey’s Mcgee — You Walked Up Shaking In Your Boots But You Stood Tall And Left A Raging Bull (Nothing Too Fancy Music)
  • U-Roy — Solid Gold U-Roy (Trojan Jamaica/BMG)
  • Velvet Insane — Rock n’ Roll Glitter Suit (Wild Kingdom Records)
  • Wavves — Hideaway (Fat Possum)
  • Willow — Lately I Feel Everything (MSFTSMusic/Roc Nation/Polydor)
  • The Zolas — Come Back To Life (Light Organ Records)

Friday, July 23

  • Alexis Marshall — House Of Lull, House Of When (Sargent House)
  • Anne-Marie — Therapy (Asylum)
  • Bardo — Everywhere Reminds Me Of Space (Yemayá Sol Records)
  • Chiiild — Hope For Sale (Avant Garden Records)
  • Clay Melton — Back To Blue EP (Cheree Cheree)
  • Dallas Burrow — Dallas Burrow (Subliminal Hymnal)
  • Darkside — Spiral (Matador)
  • David Crosby — For Free (BMG)
  • Descendents — 9th & Walnut (Epitaph Records)
  • Jackson Browne — Downhill From Everywhere (Inside Recordings)
  • Jazzparty — Nobody Gets Away (Remote Control)
  • Joshua Radin — The Ghost And The Wall (Nettwerk)
  • The Jungle Giants — Love Signs (Amplifire Music)
  • Krist Rogers And The Dirty Gems — Still Dirty (Wicked Cool Records)
  • L Devine — Near Life Experience: Part 1 EP (Warner Bros. Records)
  • Leon Bridges — Gold-Diggers Sound (Columbia)
  • Leslie Winer — When I Hit You You’ll Feel It (Light in the Attic)
  • LOLAA — La Marea (Arts & Crafts)
  • Maya Beiser — Maya Beiser x Philip Glass (Islandia Music Records)
  • Mega Bog — Life And Another (Paradise of Bachelors)
  • Molly Burch — Romantic Images (Captured Tracks)
  • Montezuma’s Revenge — S.W.I.M. (DTH Records)
  • Oh Baby — Hey Genius (Burning Witches Records)
  • Rodney Crowell — Triage (RC1)
  • Shiny Joe Ryan — Shiny’s Democracy (Spinning Top)
  • Sleep Waker — Alias (UNFD)
  • Vaines — Electric Blue EP (Hopeless Records)
  • Woods — More Strange (Woodsist)
  • Yngwie Malmsteen — Parabellum (Music Theories Recordings)

Friday, July 30

  • Alan Vega — Alan Vega After Dark (In the Red)
  • Alex Rex — Paradise (Neolithic Recordings)
  • Big Big Train — Common Ground (English Electric)
  • Billie Eilish — Happier Than Ever (Darkroom/Interscope Records)
  • Bleachers — Take The Sadness Out Of Saturday Night (RCA Records)
  • Blues Traveler — Traveler’s Blues (Loud & Proud)
  • Chunk! No, Captain Chunk! — Gone Are The Good Days (Fearless Records)
  • Clay Walker — Texas To Tennessee (Show Dog Nashville)
  • Dee Snider — Leave A Scar (Napalm Records)
  • Dot Allison — Heart-Shaped Scars (SA Recordings)
  • The Effens — Eventually EP (Hidden Pony)
  • Erasure — The Neon Remixed (Mute Records)
  • Grizfolk — Grizfolk (Virgin)
  • The Halluci Nation — One More Saturday Night (Radicalized Records)
  • Jelani Aryeh — I’ve Got Some Living To Do (Imperial/No Matter)
  • Jeremy Squires — Unravel (Blackbird Record Label)
  • King Woman — Celestial Blues (Relapse)
  • Lantlos — Wildhund (Prophecy Productions)
  • Leela James — See Me (BMG)
  • Los Lobos — Native Sons (New West Records)
  • Lump — Animal (Partisan Records)
  • My Idea — That’s My Idea EP (Hardly Art)
  • Naia Izumi — A Residency In The Los Angeles Area (Sony)
  • Prince — Welcome 2 America (Legacy Recordings)
  • Ric Robertson — Carolina Child (Big Machine)
  • Seether — Wasteland — The Purgatory EP (Fantasy Records)
  • Skirts — Great Big Wild Oak (Double Double Whammy)
  • Sleep Moscow — Of The Sun (Majestic Mountain Records)
  • Son Volt — Electro Melodier (Transmit Sound)
  • Sonny & The Sunsets — New Day With New Possibilities (Rocks In Your Head Records)
  • Sycco — Sycco’s First EP (Future Classic)
  • Torres — Thirstier (Merge Records)
  • The Tubs — Names EP (Prefect Records)
  • Tush — Fantast (Do Right! Music)
  • The Wandering Hearts — The Wandering Hearts (Decca Records)
  • William Cashion — Postcard Music Remixes EP (Ideas For Housecrafts)
  • Yola — Stand For Myself (Easy Eye Sound)
  • ZRL — Our Savings (American Dreams Records)

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.