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Disney’s Live-Action Moana Reveals First Look at Characters, Dwayne Johnson Returns as Maui

Disney is bringing Moana back, but this time, it looks very different. Nearly a decade after the 2016 animated film became a global phenomenon, the studio has officially revealed its live-action adaptation, giving fans their first look at beloved characters reimagined in a more realistic world. And yes, Maui is back. Dwayne Johnson returns to play the iconic demigod, making history as one of the rare actors to portray the same character in both animated and live-action formats. 

But this version is not just about nostalgia. Johnson revealed that transforming into Maui required nearly 40 pounds of prosthetics, intense makeup, and physically demanding shoots under extreme heat.

“It was grueling,” he admitted.

At the center of the story is Catherine Laga’aia, who steps into the role of Moana, originally voiced by Auliʻi Cravalho. The character remains the same fearless voyager chosen by the ocean, but the experience promises to feel more grounded and human this time.

Director Thomas Kail describes the vision as a “companion” to the original rather than a copy.

The film also brings back key characters that defined the story.

Chief Tui, Moana’s protective father, is played by John Tui. Grandma Tala, the emotional and spiritual anchor of the film, is portrayed by Rena Owen. The ocean itself remains a guiding force, while the volcanic antagonist Te Kā returns as a major threat.

Even the fan-favorite side characters are not left behind.

Pua the pig is still adorable. Hei Hei the rooster is still chaotic. The mischievous Kakamora pirates are back. And Tamatoa, the shiny-obsessed crab, will also appear, though his voice actor is still under wraps.

What stands out most is how Disney is blending live-action with photorealistic animation. The world feels bigger, more textured, and slightly more intense compared to the original’s vibrant animation.

But the real question is not about visuals.

It is whether this remake can recreate the emotional magic of the original.

Because Moana was not just a film. It was a cultural moment.

And remaking something like that is always a risk.

The live-action Moana is set to release on July 10, and whether it becomes another Disney success or a nostalgia experiment gone wrong will depend on one thing.

Does it feel like home again?

 

New Taylor Frankie Paul Footage Reveals Ex Asking Police to Arrest Him Instead

The Taylor Frankie Paul controversy just took another turn, and this time, it is the footage that is doing all the talking. Newly released police bodycam video from her 2023 arrest shows a moment that is both chaotic and unexpectedly emotional. In the middle of a heated domestic incident, her ex boyfriend Dakota Mortensen can be heard asking officers to arrest him instead of her. “Why can’t it be me?” he asks. That single line is now everywhere.

The footage captures the aftermath of a night that spiraled quickly. Officers arrive at the Utah home to find both parties arguing. Paul appears visibly distressed, crying and stumbling, while Mortensen tells police that she had been drinking and was “going through a lot.”

But the situation escalates as more details come out.

Mortensen claims she hit him with a metal chair, even telling officers he believes his finger is broken. Previously released clips had already shown objects being thrown inside the house, with a child present during the incident. The environment, even through the screen, feels tense and unstable.

At one point, Mortensen tries to take the blame.

He insists on being taken into custody, repeating that Paul has been through a lot. But officers refuse, stating clearly that she was identified as the primary aggressor.

The footage does not stop there.

In a follow up interaction, police question Mortensen about further details from the night, including the extent of the chaos inside the house. The situation appears far more serious than what initially surfaced at the time.

Legally, the case has already played out to an extent.

Paul was arrested and later pleaded guilty in abeyance to aggravated assault. Other charges were dismissed. But the release of this footage is reopening public conversation in a major way.

And the timing matters.

This comes right after ABC pulled her season of The Bachelorette just days before its premiere, and halted production on The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives. What was already a major controversy is now turning into something that feels much bigger.

Because now, people are not just reading headlines.

They are watching it unfold.

And once footage like this is out, the narrative shifts from speculation to something far more real.

At this point, the question is no longer what happened.

It is how much more is still left to come out.

 

Dhurandhar: The Revenge | Aditya Dhar’s Game-Changer

There are films that succeed, there are films that dominate, and then once in a while a film arrives that quietly alters the grammar of an entire industry. Aditya Dhar’s Dhurandhar: The Revenge belongs to that last category. It is not merely a blockbuster; it is a moment of reckoning, a mirror held up to Indian cinema asking how far it has come and how much further it can go. Five days into its run, the film has already stormed past the ₹800 crore mark globally, and yet the real story is not the headline number but the pattern beneath it, the behavioural shift it signals, the kind of audience response that cannot be manufactured but only earned.

On its fifth day, a regular weekday that usually sees a predictable drop in footfalls, Dhurandhar: The Revenge collected ₹65 crore. That number, in isolation, would be impressive. In context, it is disruptive. That is the kind of figure many star-led, banner-backed films struggle to touch even on a peak Sunday. It quietly eclipses benchmarks set over the past decade by films like Sanju, Padmaavat, Tiger Zinda Hai, Sultan, Dhoom 3, KGF Chapter 2, and Gadar 2. What makes this remarkable is not just that it beats them, but how it does so without following their playbook. Dhurandhar: The Revenge is not asking where the ceiling lies; it is redefining where that ceiling should exist in the first place.

To understand how this happened, one has to step away from the numbers and look at conviction, because at the heart of this film lies a decision that could easily have gone the other way. When Aditya Dhar cast Vicky Kaushal in Uri: The Surgical Strike, it was seen as a bold but calculated risk, a bet on intensity rather than conventional stardom. With Dhurandhar: The Revenge, that instinct evolved into something more audacious. Casting Ranveer Singh at a time when the narrative around him had turned uncertain was not the obvious move. His recent filmography had been uneven in reception. 83 was powerful but predictably structured, Jayeshbhai Jordaar carried a vulnerability that did not fully translate commercially, and Cirkus faded quickly from memory. The noise around him was loud, and most would have listened to it. Dhar did not.

What he saw instead was range, and more importantly, conviction. This is the same actor who could embody the unhinged intensity of Padmaavat, channel rebellion in Gully Boy, slip into the understated rhythm of Dil Dhadakne Do, and deliver mass entertainment in Simmba. What Dhurandhar required was not a star persona but a synthesis of all these shades, controlled and calibrated. What Ranveer delivers here is perhaps the most evolved version of himself on screen, a performance that is restrained without losing energy, stylized without losing authenticity, rebellious without tipping into excess. It is not loud, it is not indulgent, it is precise, and that precision is what anchors the film’s emotional and narrative weight.

The overseas story adds another layer to this phenomenon. Pushpa 2: The Rule had set a formidable benchmark with approximately ₹162 crore overseas. Dhurandhar: The Revenge has already crossed ₹200 crore, and it has done so while carrying a handicap that would have significantly dented most films. A ban (obviously already considered) in key Middle Eastern markets effectively removed a potential ₹40 to ₹50 crore from its reach. Its Adult certification excluded a substantial younger demographic, easily another ₹30 to ₹40 crore bracket. Taken together, that is a near ₹90 crore deficit, not as an excuse but as a context. And yet, the film does not merely survive that loss, it thrives in spite of it, asserting its dominance without leaning on what it could have earned, only on what it has.

In North America alone, Dhurandhar: The Revenge has crossed ₹150 crore, overtaking Pathaan and establishing itself as a new benchmark for Hindi cinema in that territory. This is not just a statistical achievement; it is a cultural signal. For years, overseas markets, particularly North America and the UK, have leaned toward glossy, emotionally accessible narratives, the kind often associated with filmmakers like Karan Johar. Yet here is a film that is unapologetically intense, layered with geopolitical undertones, unafraid of violence, and structurally demanding, and it is being embraced not cautiously but enthusiastically. Markets like Australia, contributing around $5 million, and the UK, contributing approximately $2.5 million, reinforce this shift. The audience has evolved, perhaps faster than the industry anticipated, and Dhurandhar: The Revenge has arrived at precisely the moment to capture that evolution.

Every film that shifts an industry carries within it traces of what came before. There is an invisible lineage that connects Ram Gopal Varma’s Satya to the narrative texture of Dhurandhar. The small-town outsider navigating a morally complex, politically charged ecosystem, driven by survival, ambition, and consequence, is not a replication but an evolution of that storytelling DNA. In the background stands Ronnie Screwvala, whose belief in Uri helped create the foundation on which Aditya Dhar could build further. These connections are not accidental; they are the quiet scaffolding of an industry learning from itself.

The conversation around propaganda is inevitable with a film of this nature. It is easy to label, to reduce, to align it with one ideological lens or another. But cinema, across the world, has always carried perspective. Hollywood does it, Asian cinema does it, European cinema does it. The question is not whether a film has a viewpoint, but whether it is compelling enough to engage, provoke, and sustain attention. Dhurandhar: The Revenge does that with conviction. If it is to be called propaganda, then it is executed with such craft that it becomes a case study in how narrative, emotion, and ideology can be woven into a cinematic experience without losing grip on the audience.

And ultimately, it is craft that elevates the film beyond debate. The action is not just choreographed but designed to serve narrative momentum. The background score does not overwhelm but amplifies tension with precision. The cinematography balances scale with intimacy, allowing the audience to feel both the expanse and the immediacy of the story. The writing reflects research, detail, and an understanding of pacing that keeps the narrative taut. This is not accidental success; it is constructed, layered, and executed with intent. It signals the emergence of a new syntax in Indian filmmaking, one that respects detail as much as spectacle.

For exhibitors like PVR INOX Cinemas, Miraj Cinemas, etc. this film is more than a hit. It is validation that audiences will return to theatres when the experience justifies the effort. Not out of habit, not out of lack of options, but out of a desire to be part of something larger than the screen at home. It is a reminder that cinema, when it works, is still a collective experience.

Perhaps the most significant takeaway from Dhurandhar: The Revenge is that it pushes us to move beyond labels. The distinctions between Bollywood, Tollywood, Kollywood, and Mollywood begin to feel increasingly irrelevant in the face of what is emerging as a unified, ambitious Indian cinema. An ecosystem capable of delivering the emotional resonance of Dangal, the spectacle of RRR, the scale of Baahubali: The Conclusion, the raw intensity of Animal, and now the geopolitical grit of Dhurandhar. Different languages, different textures, but a shared ambition to compete not just locally but globally.

What Dhurandhar ultimately represents is not just a commercial high point but a directional shift. Indian cinema is no longer attempting to catch up with global standards; it is beginning to define them in its own context. The film does not ask for validation; it commands attention. And in doing so, it reminds us that when conviction aligns with craft, the box office is not the goal, it is simply the outcome.

Long live cinema and long live the city of dreams that continues to reinvent itself, because films like Dhurandhar do more than succeed. They expand what success can look like.

 

The Essential Orders At America’s Most Famous Steakhouse

(Peter Luger Steak House)

Founded in 1887, Brooklyn’s Peter Luger Steak House introduced diners to the singular pleasures of dry-aged porterhouse steaks served broiled, sliced and sizzling in beef juice and butter. The restaurant’s signature steak cut is typically paired with German Fried Potatoes, creamed spinach, extra thick-cut slabs of bacon and perhaps a tomato and onion salad to start. Peter Luger’s classic menu has spawned countless imitators over the decades, and still ranks among America’s greatest and most influential steakhouses. Adam Richman, the Brooklyn-born gastronaut who gained fame hosting Man Vs. Food and now helms Pro Moves from First We Feast—the same food-obsessed platform that gave us Hot Ones—recently returned to the beloved Williamsburg meat mecca to determine the essential orders for the uninitiated.

(Adam Richman at Peter Luger Steakhouse. Credit: First We Feast)

“As a native Brooklynite, it’s kind of amazing to see my hometown be seen as this culinary destination, and capital of all things cool—streetwear, music, and otherwise,” Richman says. “But before there were Brooklyn food tours, before there were places winning Michelin stars, selling matcha, and Hollywood celebrities living in Bushwick—there was Peter Luger. A place Brooklynites would aspire to eat, celebrate milestones, and were fiercely proud of, as it was always an impressive feather in the cap of my borough. And in the modern, hyper food-savvy environment in which we now live, it’s an honor to be able to bring a show I host to a place where my family and countless other New Yorkers have celebrated momentous occasions. It is that rare phenomenon of timeless old school class, delivered casually.”

Pro Move #1 – Order The Burger At Lunch

(First We Feast)

This lunch-only favorite features a perfectly-seared, half-pound patty made from prime grade chuck blended with dry-aged trimmings from the restaurant’s porterhouses, along with a crunchy wedge of raw onion, melted American cheese and a freshly-baked sesame seed bun. “I admit I only found out about the burger on anotherFirst We Feast show, and it’s because I’ve only gone there for dinner in the past,” Richman says. “But being that the quality is as top notch as the steaks, and it’s actually made from the trimmings of those steaks, make it a burger really worth seeking out.”

Pro Move #2 – Get The Classic Apps

(Peter Luger Steak House)

“If you think Peter Luger is just about getting a good steak, you are sorely mistaken. The tomato and onion salad is a lesson in letting quality produce speak for itself, the thick-cut bacon is a revelation and the sauce is so iconic they sell it all around the country. All of these things just whet your appetite for the glory of the beef ahead.”

Pro Move #3 – Use Your Plate To Adjust Doneness

(First We Feast)

“I didn’t realize this until after the show, but those plates really come out at 900 degrees. That’s not fake—they’re sizzling for a reason. A lot of people get apprehensive when they see pink meat, not realizing that the color is more intense from the dry aging process, and that it is, in fact, cooked all the way through. But if it’s still a little too rare for your taste, you can adjust it right at your table in the coolest way imaginable.”

Pro Move #4 – Always Order Medium Rare

“For the real beef eaters out there, this is a no-brainer. I admit I don’t understand the people that order it so rare that it’s still mooing, but a warm pink center and a nice crust on the outside sort of celebrates every texture that a good piece of meat can have, and every flavor profile you could get out of a good dry-aged steak. If you order your meat well done, I don’t want to be your friend.”

Pro Move #5 – “Vitamins” = Butter + Steak Drippings

Richman advises spooning the buttery beef juice drippings, known as “vitamins” in Peter Luger parlance, directly from the steak platter onto whatever is on your plate. “It’s a fun way to refer to arguably one of the best parts of the Peter Luger steak experience,” he says. “Put it on the meat, put it on potatoes, heck, put it on a loved one, just wait til it’s a little cooler.”

Pro Move #6 – Add Schlag To Your Coffee And Apple Strudel

(First We Feast)

Schlag is a German term for unsweetened whipped cream, and the exceptionally thick version is served as a topping for the apple strudel to balance the sweetness of the pastry. It’s also stirred into cups of black coffee, just for fun. “My grandmother would talk about the Schlag more than she would talk about the steak on her way to dinner at Peter Luger,” Richman says. “Somewhere I have a photo that I took sneakily with my mom of her mother—my grandma—eating a big old spoon of Schlag when we had both left the table. It’s such a fun memory. And none of us could blame her. It’s great on their strudel, but in the coffee it makes it somewhere between a warm affogato and the best cappuccino EVER.”

Watch Richman’s Peter Luger Steak House Pro Moves video below.

 

What a Thrill: See the Cast of Troop Beverly Hills Now

Troop Beverly HillsSure, nowadays you can buy Girl Scout Cookies online and Culver City is a trendy hangout destination full of bars and restaurants.
But 37 years ago, few things signified that you’d made it big…
 

Selena Gomez Surprises Miley Cyrus At Hannah Montana 20th Anniversary Special

Selena Gomez made a surprise appearance for Miley Cyrus during the Hannah Montana 20th anniversary special, creating a moment that quickly caught the attention of fans. The event was organised to celebrate two decades of the popular Disney show that played a big role in shaping early 2000s television. During the special, Miley Cyrus was present to mark the milestone of the show that made her a household name.

The appearance of Selena Gomez came as a surprise, adding an emotional and nostalgic touch to the celebration. The two stars share a long history, as both began their careers on Disney and grew up in the public eye.

Selena’s entry was not announced in advance, which made the moment more genuine for both Miley and the audience. Fans who watched the event reacted strongly, with many appreciating the reunion of two well known faces from the Disney era. The moment also reminded viewers of a time when shows like Hannah Montana were widely followed by younger audiences around the world.

Hannah Montana first aired in 2006 and became one of Disney’s most successful shows. It followed the life of a teenage girl living a double life as a regular student and a famous pop star. The show not only gained high viewership but also helped launch Miley Cyrus into a major career in music and film.

Selena Gomez, who was also part of the Disney network during that time, became popular through her own projects and later built a successful career in both acting and music. Her presence at the anniversary special highlighted the shared journey of many Disney stars who started around the same time.

The event focused on looking back at the show’s impact and its connection with fans over the years. Moments like Selena’s surprise appearance added a personal layer to the celebration, showing how these connections continue even years later.

Overall, the reunion served as a reminder of how strongly Hannah Montana is still remembered and how it continues to hold a place in popular culture even after two decades.

 

How To Register For The Maxim Cover Girl Randa Rose Runway Modeling Competition

Maxim Cover Girl has officially teamed up with avant-garde style and production powerhouse Randa Rose to bring you the ultimate high-fashion breakthrough opportunity. We aren’t just talking about a photoshoot—we’re talking about $20,000 cash, a VIP getaway to the Windy City, and the rarest prize in the industry: the chance to co-create a custom look and debut the bespoke ensemble on the Randa Rose runway. Think you have the walk, the look, and the creative spark? Enter now and claim your spot in the limelight.

(Randa Rose)

The Path to the Catwalk

The registration process is designed to find the next big name in fashion. It’s time to show the world what you’ve got:

  • Create Your Profile: Upload your best shots and tell us your story.
  • Rally Your Fans: This is where your community comes in. Get the word out, gather your votes, and climb the leaderboard.
  • The Judges’ Circle: Rise through the ranks to earn a seat at the judges’ interview round. Impress the pros, and you could be the new face (and stride) of Randa Rose.
(Randa Rose)

Where Edge Meets Elegance

Randa Rose isn’t for the faint of heart. Known for pushing boundaries and redefining modern silhouette, the brand designs for the woman who views the sidewalk as her personal stage. Every piece is a statement of power, blending architectural sharpness with effortless grace. For up-and-coming models, this isn’t just a contest; it’s a career-defining entrance into the industry. Randa Rose is looking for someone who doesn’t just wear the clothes, but breathes life into the design.

The Grand Prize Package

The winner of the Randa Rose Runway competition will walk away with a life-changing haul:

  • $20,000 Cash: Kickstart your modeling career in style.
  • Luxe Chicago Getaway For Two: A high-end trip for you and a guest to the heart of the Midwest’s fashion capital.
  • The “Couture Creator” Experience: Work side-by-side with brand founder Randa Rose to help create a custom, one-of-a-kind runway piece tailored specifically to you—and you get to keep it.
  • The Runway Debut: You won’t just watch the show; you’ll lead it. The winner will officially walk the Randa Rose runway in front of industry insiders.
(Randa Rose)

“This is more than a title; it’s a takeover,” says the Randa Rose team. “We want a model who is ready to own the room and the runway.”

This is your moment to turn your confidence into a professional legacy. The lights are waiting, and the stage is set. Follow Randa Rose and Maxim Cover Girl on Instagram to watch the journey unfold.

 

This Casio Edifice Watch Honors Honda’s First Formula 1 Win

As the current and former official timekeepers of Formula 1, Tag Heuer and Rolex are the watch brands most often associated with the top-dog motorsports series. Look closely at team liveries and driver racing kits, and you’ll see logos from a variety of other luxury watchmakers like Breitling, Tudor, Richard Mille, and IWC Schaffhausen. But budget-friendly baubles and F1 seldom converge in a meaningful way, which makes this racy model from Casio truly worthy of the “special-edition” descriptor.

(Casio)

The Casio Edifice ECB2300HR celebrates six decades since Honda—which last put a standalone factory team on the grid in 2021—earned its first race at the Mexican Grand Prix on October 24, 1965, a date amid an F1 golden era remembered fondly for iconic cigar-shaped cars featuring next to no safety features for the day’s drivers. Among them were legends like Graham Hill, Jim Clark, Jackie Stewart, and Bruce McLaren.

American driver Richie Ginther helmed a Honda RA272 to a flawless victory, just two years after Honda started producing road cars. The ECB2300HR is a dripping homage to the moment and the machine, featuring a carbon-fiber bezel colored Championship White—the exact same color and paint used on the RA272’s body, according to Casio. A contrasting red circle around the dial’s outer edge reflects the Hinomaru “rising sun” design painted in front of the RA272’s windshield, while the gold-IP metal band loop is engraved with the Latin phrase Veni, Vidi, Vici (“I came, I saw, I conquered”), the message sent from the race venue to Honda headquarters following the 1965 victory.

(Casio)

The Ultrasuede lining on the 6 o’clock side of the Nappa leather band features a blueprint-style graphic of the RA272’s pioneering 1.5-liter V12 engine, which was the year’s most powerful unit. The inset dial at the 9 o’clock position harks to the RA272 tachometer, incorporating scale markings, indicator shapes. and red zone accents. The case back features a laser-engraved anniversary logo created by Honda to commemorate 60 years since the first F1 victory.

The Edifice line, billed by Casio as embodying a “Speed and Intelligence” philosophy, is a natural choice for an F1 edition, as it already employs numerous automotive-inspired elements, including carbon fiber components and track-ready complications via the Casio Watches app, as well as core features like solar-powered battery charging and a a Super Illuminator double LED light that enables timekeeping in the dark.

(Casio)

Priced from $400, the Casio Edifice ECB2300HR initially sold out, but you can set a restock alert here.

 

‘Wu-Tang Forever: The Final Chamber’ Tour: 2026 North American Dates Announced

(Araya Doheny/Getty Images)

It’s not quite time yet to exit the Wu-Tang, as the New York hip-hop legends just announced 26 new North American dates to extend their farewell “Final Chamber Tour.” Joined by fellow veteran rap group Bone Thugs-N-Harmony, the “C.R.E.A.M.” wordsmiths will play theaters and arenas in major metros nationwide, including Las Vegas, Atlanta, Toronto, and Atlantic City, among otherse.

Better yet, all nine surviving members of the original lineup will perform, including RZA, GZA, Method Man, Raekwon, Ghostface Killah, Inspectah Deck, U-God, Masta Killa, and Cappadonna, who was officially inducted into Wu-Tang in 2007 after the 2004 passing of Ol’ Dirty Bastard.

The Final Chamber Tour originally kicked off on June 6, 2025, with 27 North American concerts. During that initial outing, RZA, considered to be the group’s leader, told ABC7NY, “It’s hard to get us all together. So this is our chance to come back together and go around the country and around the world and see all our fans and say thank you for all the support. That’s our main intention here.”

Reviewing the Wu-Tang Clan’s performance at the Chase Center in San Francisco on June 24, Riff Magazine piled on the praise, writing, “The entirety of the Clan’s nearly two-hour performance was an extended meditation on energy. the group’s seemingly inexhaustible stamina suggests that its 33-year career is ending with more of a bang than a whimper.”

In March 2026, Wu-Tang kicked off The Final Chamber Tour’s international leg, spanning several European cities and a handful of shows in Australia, Dubai, and Japan that wrap up May 24. The Clan returns to America in August—check out the full list of dates below, and head to Live Nation’s website to sign up for the presale on March 24, before the general sale commences March 27.

WU-TANG FOREVER: THE FINAL CHAMBER TOUR DATES

With Special Guest Bone Thugs-N-Harmony

  • August 27: Darien Center, New York – Darien Lake Amphitheater
  • August 28: Atlantic City, New Jersey – Hard Rock Live at Etess Arena ^
  • August 29: Hartford, Connecticut – The Meadows Music Theatre
  • September 1: Shakopee, Minnesota – Mystic Lake Amphitheater ^
  • September 2: Kansas City, Missouri – Morton Amphitheater
  • September 4: Tinley Park, Illinois – Credit Union 1 Amphitheatre
  • September 5: Cincinnati, Ohio – Riverbend Music Center
  • September 6: Clarkston, Michigan – Pine Knob Music Theatre
  • September 8: Toronto, Ontario – RBC Amphitheatre
  • September 9: Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio – Blossom Music Center
  • September 11: Holmdel, New Jersey – PNC Bank Arts Center
  • September 12: Mansfield, Massachusetts – Xfinity Center
  • September 13: Wantagh, New York – Northwell at Jones Beach Theater
  • September 15: Bristow, Virginia – Jiffy Lube Live
  • September 16: Virginia Beach, Virginia – Veterans United Home Loans Amphitheater at Virginia Beach
  • September 18: Charlotte, North Carolina – Truliant Amphitheater
  • September 19: Birmingham, Alabama – Coca-Cola Amphitheater
  • September 20: Atlanta, Georgia – Shaky Knees Festival – Piedmont Park *^
  • September 22: Orlando, Florida – Kia Center
  • September 23: West Palm Beach, Florida – iTHINK Financial Amphitheatre
  • September 24: Tampa, Florida – MIDFLORIDA Credit Union Amphitheatre
  • September 26: Thackerville, Oklahoma – Winstar Casino ^
  • September 28: Albuquerque, New Mexico – First Financial Credit Union Amphitheater
  • September 29: Salt Lake City, Utah – Utah First Credit Union Amphitheatre
  • October 1: Highland, California – Yaamava’ Theater
  • October 2: Sacramento, California – Aftershock Festival – Discovery Park *^
  • October 3: Las Vegas, Nevada – T-Mobile Arena ^
  • October 4: Phoenix, Arizona – Talking Stick Resort Amphitheatre

* Festival appearance

^ Without Bone Thugs-N-Harmony

 

Bowers & Wilkins Update Award-Winning Earbuds & Headphones With 3 New Colorways

Audio masters Bowers & Wilkins are upgrading the luxury brand’s exterior style with a new set of finishes for its signature Pi8 earbuds and Px7 S3 wireless headphones.

(Bowers & Wilkins)

Leading the way is a duo of elegant finishes for the Pi8 True Wireless earbuds, with Pale Mauve and Dark Burgundy welcoming spring in refined fashion. The earbuds already come in a half-dozen eye-catching colors to complement their best-in-class audio technology, and little has changed on the interior of the compact, delightfully clear-sounding headphones.

(Bowers & Wilkins)

As the brand noted, both its earbuds and over-headphones still “continue to offer the industry-leading, award-winning audio performance each is renowned for, perfectly complementing their refined design and luxurious materials.” On the heels of its summer 2025 debut, the Px7 S3 leaned on the brand’s deeply resonant sound technology by looking to the Px7 S2E for design inspiration, and the luxe headphones now receive a bold Vintage Maroon retooling.

(Bowers & Wilkins)

Features like aptX Lossless sound quality and re-engineered drive units further bolster the Bowers & Wilkins Px7 S3, and with a stylish new colorway to match, the perfect fusion between impeccable form and function appears complete. At the time of the release of the Px7 S3, the historic British audio maker said that the “Px7 S3 takes everything you love about Bowers & Wilkins’ award-winning over-ear headphones and refines it to a new standard of excellence and elegance.”

(Bowers & Wilkins)

Just as impressive is the chic new finish of its Pi8 earbuds, which place a premium on comfort and feature TrueSound mode to avoid audio loss during on-the-go calls. The Pi8 model also emphasizes its True 24-bit audio connection and Active Noise Cancellation technology, while its Dark Burgundy and Pale Mauve stylings lend an extra dose of streamlined style.

Carbon Cone drive units also offer reduced distortion, and more than six hours of battery life are possible via its smart charging case (also now available in the company’s smart, rich new colors). Find the Pi8 online now at Bowers & Wilkins for $499 in a new duo of colors, along with the Bowers & Wilkins Px7 S3 up for grabs at $479 in its stylish new finish.

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