Category: 5. Entertainment

  • Royal train to be retired as King Charles seeks to modernise monarchy | King Charles III

    Royal train to be retired as King Charles seeks to modernise monarchy | King Charles III

    The royal family’s private “royal train” will be decommissioned as part of King Charles’s drive to modernise the monarchy and reduce costs.

    The train has been used to transport members of the royal family around Britain’s railway network since 1840, but it has become increasingly costly to maintain and store. Rolling stock from the 1980s would need to be updated for modern railway networks, and two new more fuel-efficient helicopters offer a suitable alternative.

    James Chalmers, the keeper of the privy purse, said: “The royal train, of course, has been part of national life for many decades, loved and cared for by all those involved. But in moving forward we must not be bound by the past.

    “Just as so many parts of the royal household’s work have been modernised and adapted to reflect the world of today, so too the time has come to bid the fondest of farewells as we seek to be disciplined and forward in our allocation of funding.”

    Chalmers said a search was under way for a long-term home for the train’s historic parts.

    Prince Andrew waving from a window at left, with Queen Elizabeth II, Prince Edward, Lady Sarah Chatto and Viscount Linley in another window of the royal train at right, circa December 1965. Photograph: Fox Photos/Getty Images

    The annual royal accounts for 2024-25, published on Monday, show that the sovereign grant, which is distributed by the Treasury to fund the official duties of the royal family, will remain at £86.3m for a fourth consecutive year.

    The grant will increase to £132m annually between 2025 and 2027. This is partly to take advantage of record offshore windfarm profits for the crown estate, which hit £1.1bn in the last financial year, and also to cover the remaining £100m costs for the final two years of Buckingham Palace’s £369m, 10-year refurbishment.

    The accounts also show that royal travel costs increased by £500,000 to £4.7m and payroll costs were up £2m to £29.9m.

    There was an increase in the number of travel journeys costing over £17,000, from 24 in 2023-24 to 43 in 2024-45, reaching a total expenditure of £2.7m. Travel costs for the king and queen’s state visit to Samoa cost £401,000 in public money.

    As part of a sustainability drive, one of the royal Bentleys is now powered by biofuels, with the other due to transition this year, and a move to electric vehicles is under consideration.

    The Duchess of Sutherland hauling the royal train across Smardale viaduct near Kirkby Stephen, Cumbria in 2005. Photograph: Don McPhee/The Guardian

    Separate accounts also published on Monday reveal that the duchy of Cornwall, which provides Prince William with a private income of nearly £23m a year, will waive rents for grassroots groups such as wildlife trusts and the St Petrocs homelessness shelter, and reduce rent for local charities by 50%.

    This follows a Channel 4 Dispatches and Sunday Times investigation last November into the prince’s duchy and the duchy of Lancaster estate, which found that the estates had secured rental agreements worth millions of pounds with the armed forces, the NHS and state schools.

    Will Bax, the duchy of Cornwall’s new secretary and keeper of records, said the duchy was also looking at including schools in the community groups that would be eligible for the rent waiver. Commercial relationships with public bodies such as the Ministry of Defence and the Ministry of Justice will not change.

    Bax said: “It would be remiss not to address the media scrutiny the duchy has experienced this past year. We’ve used these challenges as an opportunity to stop and reflect. Both the duke and I are clear that we want the duchy to be world-class in our approach to supporting people, communities and nature to flourish, and to realise that aim we must operate and communicate in a modern, socially minded way.

    “It’s clear we’ve entered an era of deep change, but we change not because we disrespect our past but precisely because we do respect it.”

    The accounts show the duchy generated profits of £22.9m, down £700,000 from £23.6m in the previous financial year.

    The annual review for the Prince of Wales omits his income, expenditure and tax payments, a move away from the transparency implemented by Charles as the previous Prince of Wales.

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  • Stand Up Comedian Earthquake to Develop Fox Sitcom with Bill Burr

    Stand Up Comedian Earthquake to Develop Fox Sitcom with Bill Burr

    Fox is about to get hit with an Earthquake.

    Variety has learned that the broadcast network is currently working with renowned stand up comic Earthquake (born Nathaniel Stroman) to develop a half-hour sitcom based on his life.

    Fox has given the multi-cam project a script commitment, though no writer is currently attached. Earthquake will star as himself.

    Earthquake will also executive produce along with his manager, Jermaine Smith. Bill Burr and Mike Bertolina will executive produce via North Hill Productions, with Dave Becky executive producing for 3 Arts Entertainment. The show will be produced by Fox Entertainment Studios and distributed by FOX Entertainment Global.

    Earthquake has been on the comedy scene for nearly 30 years. He has put out multiple comedy specials, including “About Got Damm Time,” “From the Outhouse to the Whitehouse,” “These Ain’t Jokes,” and “Chappelle’s Home Team – Earthquake: Legendary.” He has also appeared on shows like BET’s “Comic View,” HBO’s “Def Comedy Jam,” and “Shaq’s All-Star Comedy Jam.” As an actor, he is known for roles on shows like “Everybody Hates Chris” “Rel” (also a Fox show), “South Side,” and “The Neighborhood.” Currently, he hosts “Quake’s House” for Kevin Hart’s Laugh Out Loud Network on Sirius XM Channel 96 while continuing to tour as a stand up.

    He is repped by WME and 3 Arts.

    Burr and Bertolina founded North Hill in 2024. Their first production was Burr’s Hulu stand up special “Drop Dead Years.” The company has also produced the film “Old Dads,” which was written, directed by, and starring Burr. Other projects include “Drugstore June” starring Esther Povitsky and the documentary “Patrice O’Neal: Killing is Easy.”

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  • Bill Burr Is Developing a Sitcom About Earthquake’s Life for Fox

    Bill Burr Is Developing a Sitcom About Earthquake’s Life for Fox

    Bill Burr is developing a half-hour comedy at Fox based on the life of comedian Earthquake (real name Nathaniel Stroman). It will be titled, wait for it, Earthquake.

    Burr is producing the project through his North Hill Productions; 3 Arts Entertainment will also produce through Fox Entertainment Studios. Right now the commitment is just for a script; Burr, Dave Becky, manager Jermaine Smith and (Burr’s producing partner) Mike Bertolina are executive producers.

    That’s about all we’ve got for now. Well, aside from the super-long bios provided by Fox.

    Earthquake is a comedian, actor, voice artist and radio personality. In 2022, he had an episode of Chappelle’s Home Team, titled “Earthquake: Legendary,” on Netflix. Earthquake was a staple of shows like BET’s Comic View and HBO’s Def Comedy Jam. His specials include About Got Damm Time, Walter Latham Presents, From the Outhouse to the Whitehouse and These Ain’t Jokes for Showtime.

    You know Bill Burr. He’s one of the greatest stand-up comedians of all time and entered dramatic acting via Breaking Bad. Burr’s own life story, basically, was told through his Netflix animated series F Is for Family. Burr has hosted SNL twice and just wrapped up a Broadway run of Glengarry Glen Ross.

    And that’s all the bio you really need.

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  • The Booker Prize Foundation stops all posting on X

    The Booker Prize Foundation stops all posting on X

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  • NASA eyes summer streaming liftoff on Netflix – France 24

    1. NASA eyes summer streaming liftoff on Netflix  France 24
    2. NASA+ is Coming to Netflix This Summer  NASA (.gov)
    3. Netflix To Soon Allow Viewers To Binge Rocket Launches, Spacewalks  Deccan Chronicle
    4. Netflix to Integrate NASA+ Live Streaming Feeds  106.3 The Groove
    5. NASA officially announced a collaboration with Netflix to live stream rocket launches and real-time views of the International Space Station for free.  富途牛牛

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  • Doechii shuts down Glastonbury 2025 with explosive “Alter Ego” performance

    Doechii shuts down Glastonbury 2025 with explosive “Alter Ego” performance

    Doechii delivered one of the standout moments of Glastonbury 2025 with a commanding performance of “Alter Ego” on the West Holts stage. 

    The Florida rapper’s electrifying set was widely praised for its theatricality, lyricism and energy—earning her star status among festival headliners.

    Opening her conceptual “school of hip‑hop” performance, Doechii captivated the audience with narrative-driven staging—complete with desks, lockers and voice‑over lessons. As she transitioned into “Alter Ego,” her presence intensified; she moved with fierce confidence, interacting with dancers amid umbrella choreography. The performance struck a balance of irreverence and skill, with Doechii exuding self‑aware humor alongside her undeniable rap mastery. Critics noted she “triumph[ed] over a biblical set clash” against competing headliners like Charli XCX and Neil Young.

    The Guardian described her West Holts debut as “theatrical, flirtatious and athletic,” firmly establishing Doechii as both artist and entertainer. She weaved in samples ranging from Wu‑Tang Clan to Daft Punk, showcasing her deep hip‑hop roots while delivering fresh reinterpretations. By the time she reached “Alter Ego,” she commanded the crowd, who were “bopping, jumping and losing it” to the track.

    Doechii’s 40‑minute set reaffirmed her rising status in contemporary rap. Fresh off a Grammy win for Alligator Bites Never Heal and a Billboard Artist of the Year title, her Glastonbury run felt less like a debut and more like a coronation. With her blend of rap prowess, stagecraft and relatable charisma, Doechii didn’t just perform—she shut Glastonbury down.

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  • Travis Scott Launches Smoothie Collaboration With Erewhon

    Travis Scott Launches Smoothie Collaboration With Erewhon

    Travis Scott is in gut health mode. On Monday, the 34-year-old rapper became the latest celebrity to partner with California-based grocery store Erewhon to launch his very own smoothie called “Storm Storm,” a green and pink blended concoction chock-full of probiotics.

    Scott is the first Grammy-winning hip-hop artist to team up with the organic supermarket after its previous collaborations with Winnie Harlow, Kourtney Kardashian, Gisele Bündchen, influencer Nara Smith, Bella Hadid and Hailey Bieber.

    Travis Scott teams up with Erewhon to launch “Storm Storm,” a gut-friendly smoothie.

    A mix of Agua de Kefir’s fizzy Dragon Fruit Fresca and Cocoyo Piña Colada Raw Coconut Yogurt, “Storm Storm” is a non-dairy, tropical beverage, priced at $22. The ingredients are meant to be both hydrating and gut-friendly. The Auga de Kefir additive, specifically, is cactus-powered vegan kefir water made with postbiotics, leftover waste from prebiotics and probiotics, as well as electrolytes. Kefir water is known to help decrease inflammation and maintain a balanced gut microbiome to absorb nutrients and aid digestion.

    Cocoyo, the cult-favorite creamy yogurt, is plant-based and “live,” which means it continues to ferment well after it’s packaged. Cocoyo has gained significant recognition online with a slew of wellness influencers singing its praise. With more than two billion probiotics in its formula, the rich yogurt benefits the gut flora, otherwise referred to as the microbiome.

    The smoothie includes gut-friendly ingredients such as non-dairy yogurt and vegan kefir water, as well as more than two billion probiotics.

    While the cost of one smoothie is a bit pricey, a portion of the proceeds is reportedly being donated to the Cactus Jack Foundation, a nonprofit organization empowering the youth of today, which was founded by Travis Scott in 2020. Since its establishment, Cactus Jack Foundation has launched a handful of year-round programs, such as the Fashion Scholarship Fund Design Ethos 101 Partnership, and the Waymon Webster HBCU Scholarship Fund.

    Other ingredients in the tie-dye smoothie include Unsweetened Coconut Malk, Ancient Nutrition Multi-Collagen, Sun Chlorella Supplement Powder, and Magic Mind Mental Performance Shot. The frozen drink is also caffeine-free.

    Arguably, the most notable Erewhon smoothie collaboration is Hailey Bieber’s “strawberry glaze skin” concoction, which is still available to order today. Bieber launched the thick, creamy blend back in June 2022. The drink’s drop purposefully coincided with the debut of her now $1 billion skin care brand, Rhode, as well as the “glazed donut” beauty trend, as popularized by her. Fans flocked to the high-end market to try the sweet treat and later post a review online. The smoothie remains in high demand, even though it’s still around three years later and most others are not.

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  • Lii Men’s Spring 2026 Runway, Fashion Show & Collection Review

    Lii Men’s Spring 2026 Runway, Fashion Show & Collection Review

    Zane Li’s sophomore men’s collection, as the Daily Mail would like to put it, is all about putting on a very leggy display.

    The New York-based, FIT-trained Chinese designer said the styling choice is aimed at evoking the status of half-ready.

    “Maybe they woke up too late and everything is in the laundry or too wrinkly, so you throw on a nice coat over gym shorts and flip-flops, and you’re at least ready to get a coffee. There is something chic about that,” he said.

    The legs might be bare, but Li balanced the looks with eye-catching outerwear, with standouts including sheer trenches in breathable nylon, squared ponchos, and mac coats in aqua, pink and blue.

    “For menswear, outerwear is the most important expression of style. You can wear literally anything — a T-shirt, sweat shorts, maybe nothing — and it’s enough if you have a nice trenchcoat or bomber. That’s the ease of menswear that can be quite liberating when you try less to make more out of it,” he added.

    Inspiration wise, Li said spring 2026 was about muting the aggression that’s associated with uniforms of all sorts, and giving these different archetypes of menswear a gentle, softer spin.

    By changing the texture and proportion, Li was able to reimagine garments as power projections as modern, playful fashion statements.

    A Mao suit came with a flare in the front. A cropped Harrington jacket was paired with a sweatshirt with a wide, dropped waistband. Other fun offerings included a leotard-cum-T-shirt, and a two-in-one tank top/T-shirt hybrid.

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  • Your weekly horoscope: 6/30-7/6 | Arts & Culture

    Your weekly horoscope: 6/30-7/6 | Arts & Culture

    Did you do your due diligence last week and plant seeds for Cancer season? If not, don’t worry, there’s still time to sow emotional wellness. Pursue your green thumb era in the month of July. 

    The Red & Black has compiled horoscopes for each zodiac sign for the week of June 30 through July 6.

    Aries

    March 21 – April 19

    The skeletons in your closet told me they want out. Take a deep breath and open the door. It’s better to invite them into the light than have them barge out uninvited. After all, your past is nothing to be ashamed of and confronting it is essential for your future. 

    Taurus

    April 20 – May 20

    You’re beginning to realize how far you’ve come. You’ve tackled the obstacles in the way and are ready to focus your efforts on self-improvement. Nothing is stopping you now. 

    Gemini

    May 21 – June 20

    Your other half is stepping into the light this week. Whether it’s a suppressed interest, talent or a shot in the dark, be open to exploring these parts of yourself. It’s not a weakness to be multifaceted; draw inspiration from a Swiss Army knife. 

    Cancer

    June 21 – July 22

    You may feel an urge to focus your attention inward. Your subconscious mind is trying to communicate with you; this may manifest itself in a variety of forms. It could be as simple as listening to a craving or as complex as setting some long-overdue boundaries. Regardless, listen and place trust in yourself. 

    Leo

    July 23 – Aug. 22

    The way you speak to yourself matters; if you wouldn’t talk to a friend or family member the way you talk to yourself, consider why. At the end of the day, you can’t be anyone else. You deserve the same compassion given to those around you. 

    Virgo

    Aug. 23 – Sept. 22

    June was a chaotic month for you but the storm has calmed, leaving behind clearer skies. Take a moment to look up. Do any clouds remain? 

    Libra

    Sept. 23 – Oct. 22

    This week, your critical side comes out to play. Fear not, you know how to reign it in when necessary. Instead of going full-mode perfectionist, think, “how can I learn from this.” As one door closes, another opens.  

    Scorpio

    Oct. 23 – Nov. 21

    Control makes you feel safe; life is easier when you’re only counting on yourself. However, this week, you may have to trade short-term comfort to build long-term trust. Over time, you’ll learn that life is easier this way. 

    Sagittarius

    Nov. 22 – Dec. 21

    You may find yourself thinking about the relationships in your life, those that have weakened and those that have remained strong against the test of time. Though painful, it’s natural for people to fade out of the picture. You know who’s in it for the long haul. 

    Capricorn

    Dec. 22 – Jan. 19

    Surface-level conversations aren’t doing it for you anymore. Whether it’s getting real with yourself or others, go with your gut and chase the depth you desire. How far do you want to go? 

    Aquarius

    Jan. 20 – Feb. 18

    This week, inspiration hits. A word of advice, billboard sign or chorus to a song might be calling your name. Be on the lookout for muses. What will you do with them? 

    Pisces

    Feb. 19 – March 20

    Wounds of past relationships have opened and need to be tended to. Platonic or romantic, you’ve been hurt and haven’t fully healed yet. Be kind to yourself during this time and attentive to your needs. 

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  • Why the Gen Z Star Is an Artist You Need to Know

    Why the Gen Z Star Is an Artist You Need to Know


    T
    he doors of the El Rey Theater in Los Angeles felt like a vortex last Friday: Fans walked in wearing Hawaiian shirts, leis, and tropical flower clip-ins, ready to be transported into the Elvis Presley Blue Hawaii world of Remy Bond. A burlesque dancer opened the show, and for her set, Bond popped out of a giant cake, backed by a pair of dancers (and her sister Olivia) dressed like Fifties diner waitresses. 

    At one point, Bond sang from inside a martini glass; at another, she marries a fan and shares a kiss with him onstage. Her giant blonde hair bounces over her tiny shoulders as she serenades the crowd with her oldies-inspired sound. In the middle of the fever dream, Bond pulls out a bedazzled vape from her dress, offering a puff to each of her dancers before taking one herself. Bond’s music lives in this fuzzy, decade-blending, kitschy utopia. It doesn’t feel real — and it isn’t supposed to. Since her first single in 2023, Bond has built a cult-like audience around this vintage fantasy, and her sound offers nostalgia and a breath of fresh air at the same time.

    “It’s a diamond sadness and a washed-up glittery sound that works for me,” she tells me over a greek salad at a diner, where we meet for lunch. We sit in the back corner of the tiny joint called Cindy’s, surrounded mostly by seniors, as Bond goes off on tangents about her adventures making music. Today, there’s no wig, but she’s wearing a Hawaiian shirt-inspired blouse, and a fake Sailor Jerry tattoo is fading off her arm. The workers here are dressed like Bond’s dancers during the show, and Bond can decipher the Sixties songs that are playing in the background. Even as she preps for her first big tour, Bond is already thinking about a new era of music. 

    “Every shroom trip, we got a new source of inspiration. We wrote ‘Movie Star’ on shrooms. We were like, ‘Oh my gosh, if we take shrooms, we can write so many bangers.’ So we would just go into album mode every time we would do it,” she says of a recent trip with her go-to producer Jules Apolinaire. 

    “Wait, we should do shrooms together. Why not do shrooms right now?”

    Despite being early in her career, Bond is already carving a distinct sonic and visual lane for her music, which pairs her old-school inspiration with a sharply Gen Z perspective. She listens to both Kanye West and the Ronettes, although “Kanye is not the bad bitch he once was,” she says. It’s not the real-life Sixties and Seventies that inspire Bond, but the fantasy worlds imagined by Hollywood — it’s no surprise that Elvis’ campy world is high on the inspo list. “Elvis’ guitar-shaped car is for sale… I should have bought that instead of the  Chelsea Hotel sign,” Bond says, confessing: “I spent all my money on it. I can’t even afford furniture.”

    That dreamy, retro longing in Bond’s music? It probably started at home. Bond’s parents often threw dinner parties and played music that she quickly fell in love with: She’d play Cat Stevens, Siouxsie and the Banshees, and the Mamma Mia! Soundtrack on repeat. The Bond sisters (they also have a younger brother) weren’t allowed phones until eighth grade, so Remy listened to whatever CDs were lying around. (Supertramp’s Breakfast in America comes up more than once in our conversation.)

    Her dad, she says, is a cinephile and would play classic movies all the time. She’d also watch shows like Downton Abbey constantly. “I was Lady Branson for Halloween for three years,” she says. “I consumed everything my parents were really into. I guess they had good taste.” Oh, and she grew up next door to Sean Ono Lennon. “My first exposure to nudity was him shooting [something] in the backyard,” says Bond. “Dude, this guy literally never left this house.”

    Before music became her full passion, Remy and her sister Olivia made history as the first sibling duo to compete on MasterChef Junior. Culinary art was like her first love, thanks to her mom. In some adorable YouTube videos from 2018, you can see a tiny Bond strutting around the kitchen in a giant bow, bossing the other kids around. The hair accessories — now it’s usually a tropical flower — are part of the vibe today, too.“I still am into cooking. I make macaroons and shit,” she says. “It was something I was into, but it just didn’t mean anything to me.”

    She traded the spatula for a microphone once she hit high school. “I was studying music but wasn’t writing it, until I got an Omnichord — that’s when I started writing songs,” she says. (You can thank David Bowie for the instrument choice.) “I was trained classically in Italian, but when I realized I could write my own songs and create the music I wanted to hear, I became fixated.”

    Bond started releasing music in 2023 with “End of the World,” where she posed the paradoxical question, “Why am I so nostalgic for the now?” — a lyric that still defines much of her music. The next summer, she dropped “Summer Song,” which introduced her to many of the fans she has today, thanks in part to its virality on TikTok.

    “Summer Song,” her breakthrough hit, was born from an impromptu trip to Paris after watching The Virgin Suicides. She and her sister Olivia had just seen the iconic film for the first time when Liv decided to DM Air — the duo behind the film’s dreamy soundtrack — to ask if they’d want to collaborate. “[Jean-Benoît Dunckel] actually responded. I totally lied. I was like, ‘I’m going to be in Paris next week, let’s get a coffee,’” Bond recounts. “And he was like, ‘Sure.’ So I flew to Paris for a coffee. I didn’t want to seem like a stalker, so I looked at their tour dates… and we made ‘Summer Song’ there.”

    Early listeners of Bond were drawn in by the cinematic quality of her music, with some comparing her sound to that of a young Lana Del Rey. Her use of old-Americana nostalgia has sparked conversations about parallels with Del Rey, including with the visual for “Summer Song,” which calls to mind “National Anthem.” But Bond, who first got into Lana during the Covid pandemic, doesn’t mind the comparisons. “People can say what they want. I think it’s a compliment,” she says. (She’s a fan of Del Rey’s unreleased music.)

    It’s the whimsical energy of the music that really sets her apart. Bond’s song “San Francisco” takes inspiration from the Summer of Love. “My muse was Jenny from Forrest Gump,” she says. She wrote last year’s “Red, White, and Blue” during what she describes as a time of “a lot of political tension” around the 2024 election, and shortly after cutting ties with a friend who wanted to vote for RFK “because of his views on food,” she explains. “I was worried people would perceive it as an ‘I love America’ song. I think it is a little bit perceived that way, but it’s not.” And “Star-Shaped Baby,” it’s about “a girl who’s shaped by the industry to be a star.” Is that you? “I don’t know,” she says. “I think I’m a star.”

    The artwork for February’s “Simple Girl” features a Stepford Wives-like Bond mowing a lawn, mirroring the irony of the song’s opening line: “I’m a simple girl, I like gardening ‘n drugs.” She pulled the lyric from something she overheard at a café in L.A. “I was like, ‘I relate to that.’ I have a garden, and I hide my vape in my garden to avoid hitting it,” she says with a laugh. None of Bond’s lyrics take things too seriously.

    Bond’s latest single “Movie Star” trades the Fifties-Sixties fantasies for Seventies Europop. Remy takes a jab at an unworthy lover withthe silly line: “You say you love the music / But you vape, you vape, you vape.” “That line modernizes the song a bit,” Bond explains. “I didn’t want it to be totally a throwback; I wanted it to feel a little kitschy, a little funny.” Then she giggles: “The bridge is just about the guy I lost my virginity to…” She leans in and whispers his name in my ear. “It’s about some spawn of a Spice Girl,” she clarifies on the record, eyeing my phone recording. 

    The vape talk suddenly reminds Bond of something. She pauses, checks her phone, and looks at me: “I actually ordered a vape here. Do you mind if I use your ID?” she asks. “I don’t have my fake.” Yeah, I’m down! (I pull out my wallet.) “Fuck. It said the delivery guy was here 20 minutes ago,” she says. “It’s not good for my lungs, anyway. I just like the flavor.”

    Mid-interview, a call comes in from “Cheese,” the nickname for Bond’s sister Olivia. “She’s editing the ‘Moviestar’ video as we speak,” Bond tells me, before answering one of her sisters’ questions about the visual over the phone. (A close-up of some bedazzled vapes open the video meant to be set in the Seventies. “No one let us film the vape on set. So we rehired a film crew to just get a shot of us twinkling our vapes,” she says.)

    Olivia is an integral part of Remy Bond, The Artist. During the tour, Olivia acts as a co-star. For “Moviestar,” which Olivia wrote on and sings on, she grabs a mic and duets with Remy, frolicking with her onstage. During “San Francisco,” she appears in a peace sign-shaped dress inspired by what Marina Abramović wore at Glastonbury last year. Olivia also directs and stars in most of Bond’s videos — and when Bond’s opener dropped out at a recent show, she filled in, performing some of Remy’s unreleased songs.

    “We just keep each other in check,” says Bond. “We are the same person, but also completely opposites. She has a really good perspective on things. I don’t. I’m better with melodies because I’m not as quick at putting things into words. She’s better with words, but not as sonic.”

    “Same with our faces,” she adds. “The top half of her eyes are better than mine, and my mouth is better than hers. So if we combined ourselves, we’d be perfect.”

    After the Bonds wrap her tour this month, they’ll be going full-throttle on Remy’s debut album. Bond says she’s headed to Austria with Jules Apolinaire, her and Suki Waterhouse’s go-to producer, to make more songs for the album. Expect more ABBA, more Seventies sparkle, more Europop flair. She’s actually deep in “research” mode. On a recent trip to Sweden — which included a shroom-fueled escape from the music of a modern male pop singer she won’t name (“I don’t want to diss anyone, but I was literally in hell,” she says) — she somehow ended up on a date with one of Björn Ulvaeus’ grandkids. “We just went for a walk. He didn’t really speak any English,” she says with a giggle. “In LA, I couldn’t do that. But when I’m in Sweden, I’m free of all social norms, so I can be weird.” Also, she’s single, and into English guys. “I don’t really date LA guys. They’re all gay to me,” she says. 

    After finishing her salad, I give Bond a ride to the studio — with a quick vape stop on the way, of course. She comes out holding a pink, strawberry mango-flavored one she’s had before. She takes a few puffs before we get to the studio, where Apolinaire matches Bond’s endearingly chaotic energy, greeting us in fuzzy red-and-pink-heart pajamas at the door.

    “Today’s a very special day,” he says in his French accent. “Therefore, Rem-ee close your eyes.” The producer goes into another room to pull out a massive, Dolly Punkton, if you will, wig covered in plastic: “Happy two years of friendship and music.” (Today marks two years since their first session.)

    Bond lets out a squeal as she opens her eyes: “Where did you even get this?” asks Bond, plopping the head of hair on her head. “It’s so Agnetha.” The wig fits perfectly.

    “That’s the most Abba I’ve ever seen you,” responds Apolinaire. She’s yet to use the wig onstage, but it won’t take long before she does. She later sends me a photo of her gift to Apolinaire: a tin of caviar and a Bluey plushie. 

    Trending Stories

    Weeks later, Bond sends me a text, with me an amendment for this story: “Can u include in ur article that my wig got checked for drugs at TSA?” she wrote. “#formative moment. Hairspray’s a drug.” 

    In Remy Bond’s world, it really is. 

    PRODUCTION CREDITS:

     Styling by OMID ANTHONY DIBAEI. Styling Assistant MICAELLA LANDERS.

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