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- 2016–Podcast Episode
- The 2014 Billboard Music Awards where various artists from different categories such as pop,rap,hip hop,inde and so on get to preform on stage, and /or get to win a Billboard Music Award.
- 2020– 40mPodcast EpisodeAlice Coltrane spent the mid Sixties in personal and musical bliss, starting a family with John Coltrane and touring the world as the pianist in his band. Then John died suddenly of liver cancer in 1967. Newly widowed at the age of 29 with four children to care for, she plunged into a lengthy period of despair. Sensing her pain, an old friend introduced her to his guru, Swami Satchidananda. With a new clarity and a harp that John had commissioned for her before his death, she entered the basement studio of her Long Island home and recorded Journey in Satchidananda.
- Three musical chipmunks are discovered by an aspiring songwriter who wants to use their amazing singing abilities to become famous.
- Twelve American finalists (six men and six women) compete in a singing contest.
- 2016–Podcast Episode
- Telling harsh truths about the modern music business, this riveting and award-winning documentary gives intimate access to singer/actor Jared Leto ("Requiem for a Dream," "Dallas Buyers Club") and his band Thirty Seconds to Mars as they fight a relentless lawsuit with record label Virgin/EMI and write songs for their album "This Is War." Opening up his life for the camera during months of excruciating pressures, Leto reveals the struggles his band must face over questions of art, money and integrity.
- Disenchanted with the movie industry, Chili Palmer tries the music industry, meeting and romancing a widow of a music executive on the way.
- Editor in Chief of Rolling Stone AU/NZ, Poppy Reid, sits down with cover stars of the print magazine. They chat about what went into the feature, the cover shoot and how it feel like to grace the cover of Rolling Stone.
- In the personal and inspiring stories of four patients urgently searching for answers to mysterious symptoms, Below the Belt exposes widespread problems in our health care systems.
- 2016–Podcast Episode
- 2016–Podcast Episode
- 2016–Podcast Episode
- Former Black Panther Party leader Elaine Brown rates six Black Panther Party scenes in movies for realism. Brown discusses the accuracy of the portrayal of the Black Panther Party in films such as "Judas and the Black Messiah" (2021), "Forrest Gump" (1994), and "The Butler" (2013). Brown has personal connections to Bobby Seale, Fred Hampton, and Jean Seberg, and she comments on their depictions in "Panther" (1995), "The Trial of the Chicago 7" (2020), and "Seberg" (2019).
- Superheroes usually have secret identities, right? In Boys Noize's video for Out of the Black cut "What You Want," an unassuming fellow moves into a new neighborhood, but all his neighbors are openly superhuman. The bewildered guy carries his boxes into his new house, but his mover uses telekinesis to ease the process. Inspired, he begins a training regimen to work out, but finds himself surrounded by overwhelming everyday greatness. At the suggestion of cheerleaders, he goes to a church, where he finds the true source of everyone's power. "The idea was to interpret the lyrics 'what you want/what you get' as a metaphor of consumerism," Boys Noize mastermind Alex Ridha tells Rolling Stone. "It's also a reflection on the concept of normality. In a world where singularity is the norm, is being normal making you the exception? Then, the goal was just to had fun with costumes and visual effects. We wanted to communicate this awkward feeling you have when you're at a costume party, but you're the only one not wearing a costume." He drew inspiration for the song from the Beastie Boys, Ridha told Rolling Stone last July. "Their Licensed to Ill album is one of my all-time favorite records, and to me 'What You Want' has some sort of B-boy style mixed with my obsession on robot vocals and modern sound aesthetics. This song combines a lot of things I love about electronic music."
- 2020– 38mPodcast EpisodeIn the mid-2000s, few people were more famous than Britney Spears. But as she began to stumble in her personal life, the price of the public's fascination was more than just a few nasty late-night jokes. Paparazzi swarmed Spears' home and her family, turning the singer into a tabloid punching bag. But when you're a platinum-selling pop princess, the show goes on even when you desperately need an intermission. In the midst of madness, Spears began recording an album that would become her defining statement, 2007's Blackout.
- A journalist is sent to Paris by Rolling Stone magazine to investigate the rumour of an old rock star being alive after he is presumed to have committed suicide 40 years ago
- 2016–Podcast Episode
- A music video featuring two Marjory Stoneman Douglas students singing "Carry You On", a song about the devastating shooting that took place at their school in Parkland, Florida. The video urges Americans to go vote in the 2018 election.
- 2016–Podcast Episode
- An authorized documentary on the late musician Kurt Cobain, from his early days in Aberdeen, Washington to his success and downfall with the grunge band Nirvana.
- 2016–Podcast Episode
- 2020– 41mPodcast EpisodeIn the mid-2000s, Daddy Yankee was a married father of three living in the Villa Kennedy public housing projects in San Juan, Puerto Rico. But he was about to change the world with an album that did perhaps more than any other to turn reggaeton - an underground urban movement out of Puerto Rico, drawing on influences like Jamaican dancehall, Panamanian reggae en español and hip hop - into a global force that produces hit after hit and fuels the careers of superstars like Bad Bunny and Ozuna. In the latest episode of Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Albums, Daddy Yankee talks with Nuria Net, journalist and co-founder of podcast studio La Coctelera Music, about that game-changing album, 2004's "Barrio Fino". He breaks down his vision for the album (and for reggaeton itself), going in-depth about the struggles to get the establishment to take reggaeton seriously. Along the way we hear from producers like Echo and Luny Tunes (the massively important hit "Gasolina" was birthed in Luny's mom's house, where she would cook Dominican food for the artists) and from artists like De La Ghetto and Bad Bunny, who talks about first hearing "Barrio Fino" as a 10-year-old kid in Puerto Rico and testifies to the album's influence. Later in the episode, Nuria Net, Los Angeles Times music reporter Suzy Exposito, and De La Ghetto join host Brittany Spanos to discuss the album's impact and legacy.
- 2020– 28mPodcast EpisodeIn 1975, David Bowie moved to Los Angeles and reinvented himself. As rock's greatest chameleon, he had already achieved success as Ziggy Stardust. But this new character would be his darkest yet: the gaunt, theatrical, slick-haired Thin White Duke.
- A thirty-something former child star hires a foster family to re-create the childhood he never had.
- 2020– 24mPodcast EpisodeCoat of Many Colors, the 1971 album where she came into her own as a solo artist, as a songwriter, and as a storyteller. Over the album's 10 tracks, seven of them written solely by Dolly, she explored topics like poverty, class, spirituality, nature, female empowerment, and sexuality. The album marked Dolly's first significant steps out of the shadow of Porter Wagoner, the rhinestoned country star who gave Dolly her big break by hiring her as the "girl singer" on his TV variety show. Dolly tells the stories behind the songs, including "Coat of Many Colors," an account of a childhood that was poor in money but rich in love.
- By 2016, Elon Musk is moving fast with several new business ideas: building underground tunnels, creating chips that can be inserted into people's brains and attempting to build the biggest battery factory the world has ever seen. All the while he is edging closer to his ultimate dream of taking humanity to Mars. As Elon's businesses reach unprecedented levels of success, his celebrity grows, but his behaviour comes under ever greater scrutiny.
- One of the eight remaining contestants is voted off; Jennifer Lopez performs.
- 2016–Podcast Episode
- 2016–Podcast Episode
- An examination of the health risks involved in the fast food industry as well as its environmental and social consequences.
- 2016–Podcast Episode
- Episode: (2023)2016–Podcast Episode
- 2016–Podcast Episode
- When seasoned comedian George Simmons learns of his terminal, inoperable health condition, his desire to form a genuine friendship causes him to take a relatively green performer under his wing as his opening act.
- 2016–Podcast Episode
- A portrait of the late gonzo journalist Hunter S. Thompson.
- Behind The Glass is a documentary feature about legendary audio engineer and producer Eddie Kramer.
- In the aftermath of his girlfriend's mysterious death, a young man awakens to find strange horns sprouting from his forehead.
- When Lou's shot in the groin, Nick and Jacob drag him in the Hot Tub Time Machine to go back in time and save Lou. The three end up 10 years in the future, where they need to go to find the shooter.
- 2016–Podcast Episode
- Aspiring journalists compete for a one-year staff position at the music magazine, Rolling Stone.