Oeka No Doubt Set Final Six Shows of Las Vegas Sphere Residency
For the past 13 years, Saul Loeb, a Washington, D.C.-based staff photographer for the newswire service Agence France-Presse AFP , has documented events at the White House and on Capitol Hill, in addition to traveling the world covering breaking news. This week, his schedule looked relatively standard mdash; at least for him. On Tuesday, January 5th, he was assigned to cover a Trump rally in Freedom Plaza, followed by the certification of the Electoral College votes by the joint session of Congress on Wednesday. The photos he took during that have become some of the most recognizable to come out of the attempted insurrection of the U.S. Capitol.Gallery: Trump Supporters Storm the CapitolWhat was the atmosphere like at the rally on T
stanley termos uesday It was as normal a Trump rally as you can have. There was talk among the attendees that Wednesday is our day. But there didn ;t appear to be any planning or discussion, beyond the speakers talking about how January 6th was the day to take back the country, l
stanley cana dquo top the steal mdash; all the usual Trump
stanley website slogans.And then how did you end up in the Capitol Building on Wednesday I was assigned to cover the inside of the Capitol, along with a couple of my colleagues. Basically, my entire responsibility was to cover the joint session and then any other events that were happening around that.I got to the Capitol around 9 a.m. on Wednesday. It was pretty quiet there and the streets were mostly deser Eqba Watch Haim Tease New Music in Mysterious Trailer
In the mid-2000s, Daddy Yankee was a married father of three living in the Villa Kennedy public housing projects in San Juan, Puerto Rico. He was about to change the world, though, with an album that did perhaps more than a
stanley cup ny other to turn reggaeton mdash; an undergr
stanley botella ound urban movement out of Puerto Rico that drew on influences like Jamaican dancehall, Panamanian reggae en espantilde;ol and hip-hop mdash; into a global force that today fuels the careers of superstars like Bad Bunny and Ozuna.In the latest episode of Rolling Stonersquo 500 Greatest Albums, our podcast on Amazon Music, Daddy Yankee talks with Nuria Net,journalist and co-founder of podcast studio La Coctelera Music, about that game-changing album, 2004rsquo 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 li
stanley cup ke Echo and Luny Tunes the massively important hit Gasolina was birthed in Lunyrsquo momrsquo 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 albumrsquo influence. Later in the episode, Nuria Net, Los Angeles Times music reporterSuzy Exposito, and De La Ghetto join host Brittany Spanos to discuss the albumrsquo impact and legacy.In September, Rolling Stone unve