Le Journal
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Las fotos de Kiko Rivera y su novia, Lola García, en su primera escapada a Nueva York: “No es el lugar, es la persona”

Could a president deploy wartime law against the Beatles? Trump administration says ‘yes’

Barrel Tasting 2026 takes place Jan. 31-Feb. 1 in Temecula
Coupe de Bretagne : pour l’entraîneur de Moëlan Michaël Mignone, « la venue du Stade Pontivyen est un bon test pour jauger nos capacités et montrer un beau visage »

Maul's got revenge on the brain in new Shadow Lord trailer
Democracy has fallen and the most evil forces in the galaxy have no checks on their virtually unlimited power. We’re talking, of course, about the new trailer for Maul — Shadow Lord, of which Disney shared a new teaser for today. The series will pick up where Star Wars: The Clone Wars left off, and Maul’s got one thing on his mind: revenge. “Times have changed. I will show you the galaxy for what it truly is. See things from a new perspective,” he intones as the trailer starts. Within the clip, Maul meets a “disillusioned Jedi Padawan” who apparently survived Order 66 and now has potential to be his new apprentice. Described as a “pulpy adventure,” Disney shares that the plot will otherwise focus on “Maul plotting to rebuild his criminal syndicate on a planet untouched by the Empire.” Untouched for how long, it’s hard to say—as Maul hears by the end of the trailer, “the Emperor wants you dead.” Dave Filoni, the mind behind Clones Wars, The Bad Batch, Rebels, and several other Star Wars series also created Maul — Shadow Lord. Sam Witwer, Gideon Adlon lead the voice cast along with the newly-minted Oscar nominee Wagner Moura. Maul — Shadow Lord will debut on Disney+ on April 6; two episodes will air each well until its conclusion on May 4.

Our most anticipated films of Sundance 2026

5 songs you need to hear this week (January 22, 2026)

Only YOU can save music videos
I’ve been thinking about music videos a lot lately. Right at the start of the new year, when most of us were watching the ball drop or popping bottles and sipping bubbly at the clurb or, let’s be real, rewatching When Harry Met Sally for the 30th time, MTV shut down all its music-only channels—including MTV Music, MTV ’80s, and MTV ’90s—in the UK and Australia. For music fans online, the news signaled the death of the music video. But then again: Did it really? After all, how many people were still watching MTV by the end? I mean, who even has cable these days? (I suppose you could’ve watched MTV on Pluto too, but what the hell is Pluto, anyways?) My suspicion that this all amounted to a cultural nothingburger was partially confirmed by the fact that so many of the eulogies bemoaning MTV’s demise got so many of the basic facts wrong: MTV still exists, at least as a channel that mostly hosts an agonizing assortment of reality TV shows (which is its own topic of conversation, but I digress). Even the music-only channels still exist on cable in the US right now, although those are slated to go dark throughout this year as their distribution contracts expire. And so MTV isn’t really “dead”—at least, not in the way that news outlets and music fans online seemed to be implying—and the fact that very few of the people relentlessly mourning MTV clocked the fact that it was still alive in the US suggested, to me, that no one was turning on their TVs to actually watch MTV in the first place. In reality, MTV has been dying a long, slow death for a while now, its cultural relevance fading with each year. I suppose that’s just not as exciting a story as the ‘90s nostalgia thinkpieces that the MTV announcement spawned. Perhaps more importantly, though, YouTube announced in December that it would no longer provide its video streaming data for Billboard’s various charts. The decision was based primarily on YouTube’s disagreement with Billboard’s method for counting music streams, where paid streams (ex: a Spotify Premium stream) are weighted more heavily than free or ad-supported streams (ex: a free YouTube stream.) YouTube wanted both paid and ad-supported streams to be weighted equally, and even though Billboard did agree to slightly bump up the weight on ad-supported streams, it wasn’t enough to reach an agreement with YouTube. Thus, as of January 16th, Billboard officially no longer uses YouTube streaming data for its charts. And if we were going to worry about music videos, that feels like the real tea leaves to read. Perhaps I’m biased in my viewing of this YouTube announcement as a more crucial indicator for the culture; after all, I came of age in the 2010s, when YouTube VEVO channels had effectively already replaced MTV as cultural and musical kingpins. The biggest videos from that era of VEVO world domination still have absolutely mind-boggling view counts: 8.9 billion for “Despacito,” 6.9 billion for “See You Again,” 5.7 billion for “Uptown Funk.” YouTube is how I remember encountering so many music videos in my own childhood: Nicki Minaj’s candy-colored, hallucinatory “Starships,” Rihanna’s Requiem for a Dream knock-off “We Found Love,” even Avril Lavigne’s flop “Hello Kitty” (which, years later, is very fun in an unbearable sort of way). Part of the reason why some music videos from that period have such high view counts is simply because those songs were popular. Before the true rise of streaming services, watching music videos on loop was the closest you had to “streaming” itself. Music videos were a crucial means of consuming music, so everyone watched them; that’s probably how you found a lot of music at that time, regardless of the quality or memorability factor of the videos themselves. Even held at gunpoint, I couldn’t tell you what actually happened in Justin Bieber’s “Sorry” music video (4 billion views) without rewatching it, but God knows I watched it to hear the song then. For all the hand-wringing that came with MTV…

Sam Claflin is The Count Of Monte Cristo in teaser for new Masterpiece PBS series

Jeunes pianistes à Radio France : Nour Ayadi, Rodolphe Menguy, Jonathan Fournel, Nathalia Milstein, Marie-Ange Nguci...
![[SORTIE CD] Véronique Gens / Ensemble les Surprises / Louis-Noël Bestion de Camboulas - Reines](https://www.radiofrance.fr/s3/cruiser-production-eu3/2026/01/55b93658-7658-4f5e-bcc1-e9207fc03151/1200x680_sc_design-sans-titre-3.jpg)
[SORTIE CD] Véronique Gens / Ensemble les Surprises / Louis-Noël Bestion de Camboulas - Reines

