
August 19, 2025
“Your Idol” stands out in Kpop Demon Hunters not just as a catchy track, but as one of the most self-aware songs in the whole project. At first listen, it has all the hallmarks of a classic K-pop...
Read more
August 19, 2025
If you’ve scrolled TikTok, Insta, or literally any corner of the internet in the past few weeks, you’ve probably heard it: the fizzy, feel-good bop known as “Soda Pop” by the Saja Boys. Straight...
Read more
August 19, 2025
Skai Is Yourgod didn’t just drop a song, he dropped a cultural grenade. His track “Stacks From All Sides” has taken TikTok by storm, and the secret sauce? A cheeky little sample from Beetle on...
Read more
August 19, 2025
After 70 weeks at No. 1 with “Too Sweet,” Hozier’s reign on Billboard’s Hot Rock Songs chart comes to an end as newcomer Sombr takes over with...
Read more
August 19, 2025
Charli XCX brought her groundbreaking Brat era to a poignant close Friday night during an electrifying performance at South Korea's One Universe Festival. The pop innovator marked the final...
Read more
August 19, 2025
Taylor Swift’s appearance on Travis and Jason Kelce’s New Heights podcast drew 1.3M live viewers, breaking YouTube records and sparking buzz with details about her new album The Life of a...
Read more
August 19, 2025
After a six-year silence, Chance the Rapper is officially back. On August 15, 2025, he will drop his sophomore album, Star Line, marking a new chapter filled with growth, travel, and creative...
Read more
August 19, 2025
Lana Del Rey’s new song takes aim at Ethel Cain, referencing an alleged personal rift involving Instagram posts, a mutual ex, and behind-the-scenes remarks...
Read more
August 15, 2025
The music industry collectively lost its composure when Taylor Swift announced her twelfth studio album The Life of a Showgirl, with everyone from Sabrina Carpenter to Caitlin Clark publicly...
Read more
August 15, 2025
One of the most talked-about musical moments of the summer is JoJo Siwa's recent rendition of the 1981 classic "Bette Davis Eyes." On July 11, she shared her retro-style rendition, sparking intense...
Read more
August 15, 2025
Chappell Roan is keeping fans guessing about her sophomore album, admitting she has "no idea" what direction her new music will take. In a revealing interview with Apple Music 1's Zane Lowe, the...
Read more
August 15, 2025
In a candid new interview with GQ, Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce is pulling back the curtain on his relationship with pop superstar Taylor Swift. The NFL star revealed intimate details...
Read more.png)
In a recent interview, singer-songwriter SZA reportedly linked the rise of artificial intelligence (AI) to broader systemic issues like environmental racism, urging tech companies to address the disproportionate pollution burden on marginalized communities.
SZA isn’t buying into the AI hype—and she’s calling out its devastating environmental cost. In a fiery series of Instagram posts this week, the Grammy-winning singer condemned artificial intelligence programs like ChatGPT and Elon Musk’s Grok for exacerbating pollution in marginalized communities, declaring: “The only AI I’m using is Actual Imagination.”
On Tuesday (July 15), SZA called attention to the hidden toll of AI infrastructure, particularly in Memphis, where Musk’s x AI recently opened a data center. “Please google how much energy and pollution it takes to run AI,” she urged followers, reposting a comment highlighting how tech corporations exploit low-income areas for cheap resources while leaving residents to suffer the consequences.
Memphis activists have long warned about the center’s excessive water usage and pollution risks. “They treat southwest Memphis as just a corporate watering hole,” KeShaun Pearson of Memphis Community Against Pollution told TIME in 2023. SZA echoed their concerns, labeling the practice “environmental racism”—the systemic siting of polluting industries in communities of color.
SZA didn’t mince words about AI’s human cost: “AI doesn’t give a fuck if you live or die,” she wrote. “There is a price for convenience, and Black and Brown [people] will pay the brunt of it every time.” She criticized the public’s dependence on AI, warning, “We won’t get it til it’s too late.”
Her posts resonated with fans, sparking discussions about tech accountability. When resharing her message on Instagram Stories, SZA added: “I really meant this and I’m deeply concerned .. pls care.”
SZA’s outcry reflects a growing movement to expose AI’s environmental injustice. From energy-guzzling data centers to mineral mining for tech hardware, the industry’s footprint disproportionately harms vulnerable populations—a reality the singer insists shouldn’t be ignored. As she signed off: “Love y’all regardless.”