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July 31, 2025
When the White House repurposed a popular Jet2 Holidays meme video featuring Jess Glynne's hit "Hold My Hand" to highlight ICE deportations, the backlash was immediate and loud. “This post honestly...
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July 31, 2025
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July 31, 2025
The Weeknd’s meteoric rise from Toronto’s underground music scene to global superstardom came full circle this weekend as Mayor Olivia Chow presented the Grammy-winning artist with the Key to the...
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July 31, 2025
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July 31, 2025
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July 30, 2025
Taylor Swift deleted her entire repertoire off Spotify in 2014, arguing that the site did not pay musicians fairly. Despite initial criticism as a publicity trick, the action drew international...
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July 30, 2025
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July 30, 2025
Billie Marten, the British singer-songwriter known for her hauntingly beautiful folk-inspired music, has recently shared her thoughts on the financial struggles many artists face in today’s music...
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Let’s be honest: when most pop stars go quiet, we assume they’re recharging in Bali, journaling in silk robes. Not Justin Bieber. Nah, he went into full stealth mode, dropped a random “SWAG” billboard in Times Square, and then boom, a 21-track fever dream titled Swag hit our playlists like a surprise FaceTime from your ex at 2:14 am.
So, what is Swag? A vibe. A therapy session. A lo-fi dad diary wrapped in auto-tuned lullabies and luxury-grade heartbreak.
This isn't “Baby” Bieber, or even Justin Justin. This is “I change diapers, drink green juice, and rap about spiritual growth,” Bieber. His vocals float in and out like a dream you almost remember. Think Sunday soul with a side of serotonin crash.
The production is so stripped, it’s practically naked: synths hum, drums whisper, and Bieber? He sings like he’s curled up on the floor of a walk-in closet wearing Yeezy socks and overthinking life.
“Dadz Love,” he really rhymed “bib” with “crib” and made it emotional. Oscar-worthy lullaby energy. “Therapy Session,” a voice memo turned breakup text. The most intimate thing since your phone accidentally switched to selfie cam. “Glory Voice Memo,” Unfiltered, unedited, unfazed. He literally said, “No hook, no problem.”
Gunna, Sexyy Red, Lil B, Marvin Winans… it’s like Justin invited the entire internet to his journal party. Somehow, the guest list slaps. It shouldn’t work. But it does.
Swag is not an album. It’s a sonic moodboard for millennial burnout and Gen-Z healing.
It’s the sound of a popstar who found peace, lost it again, and turned the spiral into a sound bath.
Don’t expect big choruses or arena anthems. Expect feelings. Expect weirdness. Expect raw, buttery vocals layered over bedroom beats and spiritual side quests.
Justin didn’t just release Swag. He soft-launched his entire inner life. And somehow, it works. It’s weird. It’s honest. It’s… swaggy.