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U.N. Slams Response to Johnny Kitagawa Sexual Abuse Scandal

An investigation by the U.N. Human Rights Council has concluded that the late Johnny Kitagawa, for decades the most powerful man in Japanese show business, abused hundreds of boys, and that the agency he founded has still not taken responsibility for the crimes.

Pichamon Yeophantong, a member of the U.N. working group which visited Japan, also criticized the inaction of the government and said it needed to act as “the primary duty bearer to ensure transparent investigations of perpetrators and that victims obtain effective remedies.”

The working group “observed deeply troubling issues” across the Japanese media and entertainment industry, according to Pichamon, who said that the absence of codes and rules around workplace behavior contributed to a culture of “impunity for sexual violence and harassment.”

Born John Hiromu Kitagawa in Los Angeles to a Buddhist priest in 1931, Kitagawa went back and forth between L.A. and Tokyo in his early life and began working at the U.S. embassy in Japan in the 1950s. While there, he recruited a group of teenagers to join a boyband he would manage and christen Johnnys, the name given to the multitude of groups he would go on to create. In 1962, he founded Johnny & Associates Inc. It was instrumental in creating the ‘idol’ group phenomenon, spawned megastar groups such as SMAP and Arashi, and only handled male talent.

An article this month in the weekly magazine Shukan Bunshun quotes a former staff member who worked for many years with Kitagawa at the agency, saying, “More than a case of the president of an idol empire being a sexual abuser, this was a sexual abuser who created an idol empire to groom boys on the way to making their [showbiz] debut.”

Though the recent spotlight shone on Kitagawa’s crimes followed a BBC documentary aired in March Predator: The Secret Scandal of J-Pop, his behavior was an open secret in Japan that was reported on by weekly magazines and covered up by the major media groups.

Indeed, the first allegations were printed in a March 1965 issue of the now defunct Shukan Sankei, when Kitagawa was still working at the U.S. embassy, with Shukan Gendai carrying a report from another victim in April 1981. A number of books written by former talent from Johnnys were published in the 1990s contained accounts of abuse both experienced and witnessed.

In 1999, Shukan Bunshun ran a 10-part series detailing graphic accounts of rape by Kitagawa from a dozen victims. Kitagawa sued the publisher for libel and won damages in the Tokyo District Court in 2002. His victory was reported by all the major newspapers. That decision was partially overturned and the damages were drastically reduced the following year by the Tokyo High Court, which concluded the abuse allegations were largely true. Only two newspapers, the liberal-leaning Asahi Shimbun and Mainichi Shimbun, carried the new ruling, and in smaller articles than they had run on Kitagawa’s previous victory.

All of Japan’s biggest newspapers belong to media groups that include television and radio networks. Kitagawa was ruthlessly effective in controlling the narrative around himself and his stars. It was well known that anything approaching negative coverage of anybody attached to his agency could result in an entire media group losing access to its huge stable of talent.

When Kitagawa died in 2019, then deputy chief cabinet secretary Kotaro Nogami paid tribute to the mogul, saying that he had “trained many idols over many years and left behind huge achievements in the Japanese entertainment industry. I wish to offer my sincere prayers for him.”

Since the airing of the BBC documentary and subsequent Japanese media coverage, dozens more victims have come forward, finally putting names and faces to what had previously been mostly anonymous accounts in weekly magazines.

In May, Takeshi Kitano, arguably Japan’s most recognizable entertainer, weighed in on the Kitagawa sexual abuse scandal. Speaking at the Cannes Film Festival, Kitano told The Hollywood Reporter that “the time of being able to speak up about LGBTQ stuff and sexual harassment has finally come to Japan.” He added, that “these stories have always been around [in our industry].”

Still, there appears a reluctance to fully accept the enormity of the crimes and how the complicity of the media and entertainment businesses helped facilitate pedophilia.

Shortly after the documentary aired, U.S.-born Japanese TV talent Dave Spector tweeted (in Japanese) that he was “Surprised at the difference in tone between the reporter’s insistent Western-style “sense of justice” and victim mentality thinking and that of the people involved in the actual case,” going on to question why they didn’t report about it while Kitagawa was alive if they cared so much.

Another regular on Japanese TV went further. Dewi Sukarno criticized the U.N. group’s visit to Japan on Twitter last month, and said that Kitagawa “loved the children from his agency as if they were his own,” adding that the criticism of him was “bringing disgrace to Japan.”

This article originally appeared in THR.com.

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Inside Billboard’s 2023 R&B/Hip Hop Power Players Event Honoring Lil Wayne, Nas, Ice Spice & More

On Tuesday evening (Aug. 8), hundreds of R&B and hip-hop executives gathered at Novo in downtown Los Angeles to celebrate one another — and honor 50 incredible years of hip-hop. 

As the red carpet started to jam with guests eager to get the night started, those already inside Billboard’s 2023 R&B/Hip-Hop Power Players event were treated to a warm up set from DJ Jadaboo and passed food courtesy of Fixins Soul Kitchen.

“I’m so excited to see Lil Wayne,” said one attendee. Meanwhile, fellow cover star Nas was getting comfortable in a private booth as Ice Spice did the same one table down.

Soon, Billboard‘s chief brand office Dana Droppo kicked things off with a stellar introduction. She not only set the tone for the evening, but also introduced Billboard executive director, R&B/Hip-Hop, Gail Mitchell. “Gail is the first person to big up her team and the first to fight for coverage that she believes in,” said Droppo. “Thank for you being a tireless champion of this music and of music journalism.”

Mitchell then took the stage (fittingly dressed in gold to honor hip-hop’s 50th) and spoke about how 50 years ago, the very genre being celebrated tonight was dismissed as a fad. She then gave a special shout out to Quality Control CEO Pierre Thomas, winner of Billboard‘s first-ever peer-voted R&B/Hip-Hop Power Players’ Choice Award, before welcoming Antonio “L.A.” Reid to the stage, who presented Larry Jackson with his Executive of the Year Trophy.

From Jackson’s impassioned speech — during which he read a letter from Clive Davis to Billboard written in 1997 — to Lil Wayne revealing his post-party plans, below are the best moments from the special night.

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August 8 Election Recap

Voters went to the polls yesterday to vote on a handful of ballot issues.

The most prominent issue in Springfield and other communities around the Ozarks was taxing recreational marijuana.

Springfield voters passed the three percent tax with 70-percent of the vote.

Mayor Ken McClure said, in a press release, he is pleased with the election results.

Other communities passing three-percent taxes on recreational marijuana were Branson, Rockaway Beach, Forsyth, Hollister, Buffalo, Taney, and Dallas County.

There were a few other issues on the ballot in some communities.

Tax levies for fire protection and schools went down to defeat.

Voters said no to tax levy increases in Central Polk County, Hazelgreen and Lake Ozark for their fire protection districts.

Richland and Ava school districts saw their tax levy increases defeated.

Voters did approve a transportation tax in Seymour, a property tax to support the Branson-Hollister library, and a use tax in Cedar County.

From the City of Springfield news release:

“City of Springfield officials are grateful for the successful passage of a ballot measure to add a 3% sales tax on the retail sale of adult use marijuana, also known as recreational marijuana.

The tax is estimated to generate about $1.8 million per year.

Those voting affirmative numbered 70% with only four precincts remaining at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday. 

Proceeds from the tax will be used for public safety, mental health services, housing and substance abuse services.

City Manager Jason Gage said he expects that City Council will budget certain dollars for each (or all) categories they wish to address each budget year, depending on the programming.

“They could spend all funds in one program, divide them evenly or take a more customized approach.

If they should focus on long-term programming using the funds, then it is possible they will prepare a longer-term funding plan similar to our capital improvement program,” he said.

Mayor Ken McClure is pleased with today’s result, saying the funds will be put to good use, addressing critical issues in the community.

“We are very grateful for the support of the community with this passage,” he said.

“Community health, public safety, and the housing shortage are important issues. I am pleased we will have additional funds for these purposes.” 

Retail sales of recreational marijuana are already taxed by the state of Missouri at a rate of 6%.

The sales tax rate in the city limits of Springfield is 8.1% for all retail goods, which includes the City’s sales tax rate of 2.125%. 

This article is provided by Ozarks News – 93.3 KWTO
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Amy Shark Books Surgery, Cancels North America Tour

Amy Shark will miss her upcoming tour of North America due to an unspecified illness that requires urgent surgery.

The award-winning Australian singer and songwriter broke the news on her social channels.

“In recent days I’ve had some very uncomfortable painful moments and have just found out that I need surgery ASAP,” reads Shark’s post accompanied with a photo of herself wearing a blue hospital gown, and giving the thumbs-down.

“I am choosing to keep the details private but I’m all good DW. I will need a month to recover, meaning I have to cancel the North American tour next month.”

The post continues, “I’m so sad right now. I’m very sorry but I need to focus on my health for a month. I hope you understand and I promise I’ll be back as soon as I’m recovered. Much love from sad Amy.”

Due to the mystery ailment, Shark misses a U.S. run that includes September shows at Union Stage, Washington, DC; Irving Plaza, New York; Johnny Brenda’s in Philadelphia, PA; and multiple stops in Canada.

Indeed, all dates are scrubbed from her itinerary, with the exception of a homecoming concert Nov. 18 at Optus Stadium, in Burswood, Perth.

With No. 1 hits, multiple ARIA Awards including best female artist, and several APRA Awards, including the coveted song of the year, Shark is one of the biggest starts in her homeland.

Hailing from the Gold Coast, Shark’s (real name: Amy Billings) career took flight with “Adore You”, which placed at No. 2 on Triple J’s Hottest 100 for 2016. Matters have only heated up since.

She has released three albums, 2018’s Love Monster, and 2021’s Cry Forever, for two No. 1s, and, for her work as a judge on Australian Idol, she recently scooped the silver Logie award for best new talent at the Australian TV industry’s annual ceremony, the Logies.

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BlackPink’s Lisa, Freddie Mercury & More to Be Inducted Into Asian Hall of Fame

An eclectic group of musicians are among the 2023 inductees into the Asian Hall of Fame, which also includes people from business, government and other areas beyond music and entertainment. Sixteen living individuals and one group are being inducted, as are four individuals who are being inducted posthumously, plus one corporate inductee (Nintendo) and one “artist ambassador,” the late country legend Johnny Cash.

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Here’s a quick look at this year’s music inductees:

Lalisa Manoban, better known as Lisa from BlackPink, was born in Thailand. The rapper, singer and dancer, 26, is being inducted as a “cultural icon.”

Jennifer Lee, better known as EDM artist/producer TOKiMONSTA, is a second-generation Korean/American. In 2019, she was nominated for a Grammy for best dance/electronic album for Lune Rouge.

Far*East Movement had a pair of top 10 hits on the Billboard Hot 100 in 2010-11 – “Like a G6” (featuring Cataracs & Dev) which hit No. 1, and “Rocketeer” (featuring Ryan Tedder), which reached No. 6.

Ben Fong-Torres, a respected rock journalist, author and broadcaster, is best known for his long association with Rolling Stone. Fong-Torres is 78.

Freddie Mercury was born in Zanzibar to Parsi-Indian parents. The Queen frontman died in 1991 at age 45.

Ryuichi Sakamoto was among the first Asian composers to win an Oscar for best original score. Sakamoto, who was born in Japan, made that bit of Oscar history in 1988 for The Last Emperor, along with fellow composer Cong Su, who was born in China. The third collaborator on that score was David Byrne, who was born in Scotland. Sakamoto died in March at age 71.

Johnny Cash, who was not of Asian descent, is being inducted as an artist ambassador. The country legend died in 2003 at age 71.

“Inductees and artist ambassadors inspire courage, character, and service for the betterment of our country and humanity,” Maki Hsieh, president and CEO of Asian Hall of Fame, said in a statement.

The induction ceremony is set for Oct. 21 at the Biltmore Hotel in Los Angeles. The Seattle Founders Gala honoring Pacific Northwest inductees will be on Sept. 29 at the Washington Athletic Club. Tickets and sponsorships are at asianhalloffame.org.

Asian Hall of Fame works to advance Asian and Indigenous leadership, achievements, and service to the U.S. and globally. It was established in 2004 by the Robert Chinn Foundation. Year-round programming trains local youth, empowers women founders, promotes cross-cultural content, and amplifies legislation.

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Which Album Cover Is Your All-Time Favorite? Vote!

Nirvana’s Nevermind, Beyoncé’s Lemonade, Fleetwood Mac’s Rumors and more — the art that goes into an album cover is often as pivotal and iconic as the songs on the records themselves.

As such, Billboard has ranked the 100 Best Album Covers of All Time, spanning from the 1930s to the present day, in order to give flowers to the best album art concepts thought the decades. But which album do you think has the best cover?

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Album cover art came to be in 1939 when Alex Steinweiss, a graphic designer who worked at Columbia Records, came to the realization that records have the potential to sell more copies if there was an interesting design on the cover. Steinweiss’ hypothesis was correct, and was put into practice in the years following. Smash Hits by Rodgers & Hart was the first to receive the treatment in 1939, and recording artists thereafter followed suit.

The 1970s is the most represented decade on Billboard‘s list, with inclusions from Janis Joplin (Pearl, 1971), Funkadelic (One Nation Under a Groove, 1978), Bob Marley & the Wailers (Rastaman Vibration, 1976), Pink Floyd (The Dark Side of the Moon, 1973) and more. By the 1980s, pop divas entered the mix, with entries from Whitney Houston, Janet Jackson, Madonna and Grace Jones on our ranking.

And yes, present-day albums earned their respective spots on the list, with Indigo from BTS’ RM, Japanese Breakfast’s Jubilee, SZA’s SOS and more representing for the 2020s. But which album cover is your all-time favorite? Vote in our poll below.

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Kourtney Kardashian Flaunts Her Pregnant Belly in Bright Orange Bikini

Kourtney Kardashian has that pregnancy glow! The 44-year-old The Kardashians star took to Instagram on Tuesday (Aug. 8) to show off her growing baby bump with a series of summery photos.

In the snaps, Kardashian is seen posing among a pathway lined with florals and trees, belly on full display as she rocks an orange string bikini. “growing you inside of me, my son, is the greatest blessing, honor and joy,” she captioned the photos. See the post here.

In mid-June, Kardashian revealed she was pregnant by holding up a poster during Blink-182’s concert at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, where her husband Travis Barker was rocking out on drums. In big black letters, the sign read, “Travis I’m Pregnant.”

This marks the first baby for the couple, who confirmed they were married on May 16, 2022, before hosting a gorgeous Italian wedding on May 22, 2022. Both Kardashian and Barker have children from previous relationships. Kardashian has son Mason, 13, daughter Penelope, 10, and son Reign, 8, with ex-boyfriend Scott Disick. Barker has son Landon, 19, daughter Alabama, 17, and stepdaughter Atiana, 24, with ex-wife Shanna Moakler.

On June 24, the couple announced the sex of their upcoming bundle of joy in a sweet video shared through Instagram, in which they confirmed with a fitting drumroll that they are expecting a baby boy.

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Travis Scott Says U.S. & European Tours Are Coming Up

Travis Scott is ready to head out on the road!

The rapper took to Instagram on Tuesday (Aug. 8) to tease his upcoming U.S. and European tours in support of his freshly released album, Utopia. “UTOPIA TOUR SOON, US AND EURO DATES SOON TO BE ANNOUNCE, I MISS THE ROAD I MISSS YALLL,” he wrote. See his post here. The exact tour dates have yet to be officially announced.

The news comes just a day after Scott celebrated his album’s release with a performance at Rome’s Circus Maximus, and the show also featured a rare onstage appearance by Kanye West. Throughout the set, Scott performed a number of tracks off Utopia, including his The Weeknd and Bad Bunny team-up “K-Pop,” as well as his Beyoncé and Justin Vernon-featuring “Delresto (Echoes).” He also performed some pre-Utopia hits including “Highest in the Room” and “Butterfly Effect.” 

Utopia blasted in at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 albums chart (dated Aug. 12), marking the third-biggest week of 2023 for any album and the largest for any R&B/hip-hop or rap release. The project bows with 496,000 equivalent album units earned in the U.S. in the week ending Aug. 3, according to Luminate.

Additionally, all 19 songs from the set rank on the Hot 100, giving Scott a 111 total charted songs in his career. The rapper becomes just the 15th artist in the chart’s 65-year history to log 100-plus career entries on the survey.

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How Dan + Shay Took an Emotional Barroom Journey With ‘Save Me The Trouble’

At the end of the first verse of the new Dan + Shay single, Shay Mooney’s voice cracks as he addresses a stunning woman in a bar, “I’m beggin’ you please.”

Mooney is a singer with enormous control, and his request isn’t for her to accompany him home; overpowered by the expectation that she’ll break his heart, the protagonist instead asks her to leave him alone. Mooney’s small vocal imperfection speaks loudly in the context of a blistering performance.

“I thought that line was really important to set up that chorus,” says the group’s Dan Smyers, who co-produced “Save Me the Trouble” with Scott Hendricks (Blake Shelton, Brooks & Dunn). “‘I’m begging you, please’ — that’s kind of you putting your fist on the table and saying, ‘I’m vulnerable. I’m defenseless.’

“Shay is the greatest singer to ever do it, you know. He’s my favorite singer I’ve ever heard. I’ve never heard him hit a sour note, and I’ve recorded a lot of his notes. But man, that line is great.”

“Save Me the Trouble,” which Warner Music Nashville released to country radio via PlayMPE on July 13, is an important single for the duo, the first since it experienced some inner turmoil, debated the future of the act, then refocused its energy on moving forward. It was so important that the pair set aside an entire day at Nashville’s Ocean Way to record the one song, which begins as a spare country track, reestablishes the duo’s powerful harmonies, then transforms into a pop symphony with a momentary touch of prog-rock drama before a stark, a cappella close.

“It just felt very adult. It felt very professional, but at the same time, very grassroots and very natural and genuine,” Mooney says of that session. “After the first time through, I was like, ‘Oh, my God. Damn. This is another level.’”

The foundation for that level was established Jan. 12 during a songwriting session at the East Nashville home studio of Jordan Reynolds (“Speechless,” “Tequila”), where they were joined by Ashley Gorley (“Last Night,” “Girl in Mine”) and Jordan Minton (“Best Thing Since Backroads,” “Good Time”). They set out to develop something that would provide a big concert moment, or a head-turning performance for an awards show.

“We definitely spent a lot of time that day figuring out what that kind of sonically would be for them,” says Minton. “Something that’s kind of big, anthemic, still feels like them — [with] fresh radio melodies that are really wide and big for Shay to sing.”

Smyers provided a title, “Save Me the Trouble,” that he had heard in a conversation, and they developed it as a barroom snapshot of a guy who recognizes the woman tempting him would only break his heart. They wrote the chorus first, in 6/8 time, using the title in the stanza’s opening line with drawn-out notes that allowed the duo to highlight its exacting harmonies. Halfway through the section, they changed pace with a rhythmic bounce, then reaffirmed the title twice more.

Mooney took the lead on the verse melody, pitching it in the bottom part of his range as they focused on the opening lines.“In that lower register, it gives you somewhere to go,” he says.

Gorley established key parts of the chord structure on piano and mapped out a general plot overview.
“He’s just so smart at knowing what a song needs and going, ‘All right, so we’ve got this in the chorus and the first verse; this is what the second verse should be about,’” says Reynolds about the veteran songwriter. “Everybody’s like, ‘Yeah, that is exactly what it needs.’ He introduces a great vibe and a knowledge and wisdom of songs, whether he is contributing a lot or a little.”

In verse two, they revisited the bouncy rhythmic idea, with Mooney changing the melody from the first verse in a way that temporarily reflected a cheery “just a little kiss” fantasy, before the protagonist remembers that this woman is a heartbreaker. “We always love doing that in the second verse: changing it a little bit just to give it somewhere to go,” Mooney says. “It’s not anything insane. It gives it enough [difference] that it’s something intriguing that you’re listening for the second time around.”

The song remains open-ended — it’s not clear whether the character takes the woman at the bar home — though the writers have an idea about it. “I think he does not,” says Minton. “I think the whole night is kind of in his head.”

Reynolds and Smyers worked on a demo when the song was finished, with Reynolds building out the instrumentals in the studio and Smyers editing vocals in a bedroom closet. “It’s a leftover closet for guitar cases and awards that I don’t know what to do with,” Reynolds says. “There’s stuff everywhere, and it’s not big, maybe four by five [feet]. It’s got shelves, so he just sets his laptop on a shelf, stands there and works, closes the door. I think it’s the most dead room in the house, but he’s never recording anything, so it doesn’t matter.”

Smyers felt enormous pressure when they brought it to the recording studio because “Save Me the Trouble” had so much potential. “I knew what it needed to sound like,” he remembers. “I could almost see the ProTools session laid out. I could see the knobs and levers in the mix, and I was like, ‘We just can’t screw it up.’”

The crew developed a gradually building production: “Every line, there’s one more thing kind of going on than the previous line,” says Smyers. Steel guitarist Russ Pahl overdubbed a winding, neo-synth sound underneath the prechorus in the first verse, and Smyers thickened the vocals by adding one harmony voice at a time. The bridge featured a pair of dramatic stops with a single cymbal clang by drummer Nir Z, plus thick harmonies, enhanced by some reverb effects that hint at the sound of a Black gospel choir.

“When you listen to the track as a whole, it feels a bit dangerous,” Smyers says. “I thought that was an important sonic pivot for us after coming off a couple of super-positive, major-sounding love songs in a row as singles. I felt like a little bit of danger, a little bit of angst, was the right pivot.”

“Save Me the Trouble” debuted at No. 21 on the Country Airplay chart dated July 29. It checks in at No. 27 in its third week.

“I love where it landed,” Smyers says. “It feels dramatic, and it feels intense. It’s gotten stuck in my head since the day we finished it.”

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Russell Brand Says Marriage to ‘Amazing’ Katy Perry Felt ‘A Little Bit Chaotic’

It’s been more than 10 years since the world watched Katy Perry perform mere minutes after learning about the breakdown of her marriage to Russell Brand in her 2012 Part of Me documentary. Now, the Forgetting Sarah Marshall star is reflecting on their marriage in a new episode of Running Wild With Bear Grylls: The Challenge.

“Aside from my sort of feelings of affection for Katy, it’s a time that I remember as being a little bit chaotic and a bit for me, speaking for myself, a little disconnected,” Brand said. “That was when I was sort of most in the public eye and working in America… some aspects of [that time] were amazing.”

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Perry and Brand married in 2010 and divorced 14 months later. The two seismic life events came in the midst of the most commercially dominant phase of Perry’s career. In 2010, she released Teenage Dream, her Grammy-nominated sophomore studio album, which spawned five Billboard Hot 100 No. 1 singles: “Firework,” “California Gurls” (with Snoop Dogg), “Last Friday Night (T.G.I.F.),” “E.T.” (with Kanye West) and the title track. In 2012, the same year their divorce was finalized, Perry re-released the album as Teenage Dream: The Complete Confection, earning an additional Hot 100 chart-topper with “Part of Me.”

“She’s an amazing person,” Brand told Grylls of the pop star. “It was kind of incredible to live for a moment in that eye-of-the-cyclone type aspect of fame.”

Last year, Brand starred in a trio of films, including Death on the Nile, Catherine Called Birdy and Minions: The Rise of Gru, which was the fifth-highest-grossing film of 2022. Perry recently announced the end of her Play Las Vegas residency, as well as plans for new music after taking some time to raise her 3-year-old daughter Daisy Dove Bloom.