Popcast The New York Times
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- Musik
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The Popcast is hosted by Jon Caramanica, a pop music critic for The New York Times. It covers the latest in popular music criticism, trends and news.
Listen to this podcast in New York Times Audio, our new iOS app for news subscribers. Download now at nytimes.com/audioapp
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Popcast (Deluxe): What’s an Industry Plant Anyway? Plus: Ariana Grande
Discussing the quick ascent of the downtempo R&B singer 4batz, the new Ariana Grande album, “eternal sunshine,” music at the Oscars and more.
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Tate McRae, Dua Lipa and the Fight to Be ‘Main Pop Girl’
A conversation about a title that emerged from stan communities, and how it’s played a role in pop singers’ careers. Guests: Vulture's Jason P. Frank and Rolling Stone's Larisha Paul.
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girl in red: The Popcast (Deluxe) Interview
An interview with the Norwegian singer girl in red (Marie Ulven) about her second album, “I’m Doing It Again Baby!,” opening for Taylor Swift and more.
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Popcast (Deluxe): Is TikTok Done? 4 Crises Holding the App Back
Once addictive and effective, TikTok is struggling with commercialization, a shifting relationship with the music industry and more.
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Remembering Toby Keith and His Complexities
A conversation about his loudest (and quieter) moments, and how patriotism has played into country music. Guest: David Cantwell.
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Popcast (Deluxe): Pop Stars vs. the Attention Economy
Jennifer Lopez’s new film and album, “This Is Me … Now,” plus other confusing recent rollouts for pop stars including Dua Lipa, Justin Timberlake and Camila Cabello.
Kundenrezensionen
unbelievably good!
thank you so much for the best podcast ever!
lil peep
it’s gorgeous hearing peep talking and i thank u a lot that u talked about him and shared it w the world. i rlly miss peep. i had to cry when i heard his voice. it’s gorgeous. absolutely gorgeous.
Jung Kook, BTS and English language K-pop
The latest podcast about Jungkook and K-pop is full of xenophobia, racism, and techno-orientalism, chasing an alien fantasy that represents a borderline fetishization of Asians. The fact that it was approved by the New York Times shocks me. It is very ignorant, uneducated and unprofessional and reflects poorly on the New York Times. What is astonishing is the American arrogance that comes from people who claim the English language and popular music as their own, even though neither of them even originated there. Saying that Koreans shouldn't sing in English as if it isn't a universal language is shocking to say the least, but then turning around and saying you should rather listen to Justin Bieber sing in Korean is low. I have no words. The audacity to keep pop music away from Asian artists and only allow white artists to sing it - as if pop didn't evolve from a combination of jazz, swing, blues and rock, all of which have bipoc origins. This podcast proves that many white people simply absorb cultures without thinking and claim them as their own, feeling superior. The podcast is full of bias against an artist and a group, arrogance and ignorance, and gives a known hater of a particular group space to speak instead of discussing this very sensitive topic objectively and seriously without prejudice and bias.