Blondshell, the songwriting project of Sabrina Tietelbaum (and Consequence’s 2023 Rookie of the Year), has teamed up with Bully for a brand new single, “Docket.” Stream the new tune below.
Doubling down on the alt-rock vibes that pervaded Blondshell’s self-titled debut, “Docket” finds the artist connecting with Bully (the indie rock project of Alicia Bognanno) to spin a tale of self-examination, presenting the perspective of someone who exhibits less-than-healthy behavior when it comes to their relationship.
“Isn’t it wrong/ When I’m gone/ I look around at the options/ I put men on the docket,” Tietelbaum sings over driving power chords and saturated drums. “He should be with someone who’s more in love/ Not someone eating for free/ My worst nightmare is me.” At least they’re honest!
“I had space on this song for another person and I kept hearing Bully’s voice on it,” Tietelbaum said in a statement.
Doubling down on the alt-rock vibes that pervaded Blondshell’s self-titled debut, “Docket” finds the artist connecting with Bully (the indie rock project of Alicia Bognanno) to spin a tale of self-examination, presenting the perspective of someone who exhibits less-than-healthy behavior when it comes to their relationship.
“Isn’t it wrong/ When I’m gone/ I look around at the options/ I put men on the docket,” Tietelbaum sings over driving power chords and saturated drums. “He should be with someone who’s more in love/ Not someone eating for free/ My worst nightmare is me.” At least they’re honest!
“I had space on this song for another person and I kept hearing Bully’s voice on it,” Tietelbaum said in a statement.
- 3/26/2024
- by Jonah Krueger
- Consequence - Music
In what could very well be the indie-rock collab of the year, Blondshell has enlisted Bully for the new rager “Docket.”
“Docket” is classic Blondshell, as Sabrina Teitelbaum pairs a sugary, melodic riff with brazen lyrics about love on the road — and a chorus that will stay in your head for days. She trades verses with Bully (Alicia Bognanno), her feathery yet mighty vocals rounding out the track.
“For me this is a song about splitting off from yourself,” Teitelbaum said in a statement. “It’s about uncertainty when you...
“Docket” is classic Blondshell, as Sabrina Teitelbaum pairs a sugary, melodic riff with brazen lyrics about love on the road — and a chorus that will stay in your head for days. She trades verses with Bully (Alicia Bognanno), her feathery yet mighty vocals rounding out the track.
“For me this is a song about splitting off from yourself,” Teitelbaum said in a statement. “It’s about uncertainty when you...
- 3/26/2024
- by Angie Martoccio
- Rollingstone.com
Bully, the indie rock project of Alicia Bognanno, has shared a devastating piano ballad titled “Atom Bomb.” Stream the new song below.
On the stripped-down track, Bognanno doesn’t hold anything back while opening up about a former lover who left her behind. “I’m ashamed, I lose myself in people like I lost myself in you,” she sings, her voice full of pain. “I bite my tongue, I don’t wanna give in/ You’re already gone and I’ve been living/ Like an atom bomb waiting to be lit.”
In a statement, Bognanno explained that “Atom Bomb” wasn’t always a piano ballad. “The song was originally recorded with a drum machine and electric guitar; it was also quite a bit faster,” she said about the standalone track. “When I played the demo for [producer] Jt Daly, he had the idea of moving it to the piano. I remember saying out loud,...
On the stripped-down track, Bognanno doesn’t hold anything back while opening up about a former lover who left her behind. “I’m ashamed, I lose myself in people like I lost myself in you,” she sings, her voice full of pain. “I bite my tongue, I don’t wanna give in/ You’re already gone and I’ve been living/ Like an atom bomb waiting to be lit.”
In a statement, Bognanno explained that “Atom Bomb” wasn’t always a piano ballad. “The song was originally recorded with a drum machine and electric guitar; it was also quite a bit faster,” she said about the standalone track. “When I played the demo for [producer] Jt Daly, he had the idea of moving it to the piano. I remember saying out loud,...
- 2/29/2024
- by Eddie Fu
- Consequence - Music
Militarie Gun have announced Life Under the Sun, a new EP due on January 26th featuring reimaginings of songs from their debut album, Life Under the Gun. Along with the announcement, they shared the single “My Friends Are Having a Hard Time” featuring Manchester Orchestra.
Life Under the Gun debuted in summer 2023 and served as a proper introduction to the blend of kinda-sorta hardcore sonics and personal songwriting that earned Militarie Gun a spot on Consequence‘s list of 15 rising artists to watch in 2024. The track “My Friends Are Having a Hard Time” — which has now been reimagined as a duet with Manchester Orchestra’s Andy Hull — exemplifies that blend.
“My girl says this song makes her really sad,” frontman Ian Shelton told Consequence for Militarie Gun’s Track by Track breakdown of Life Under the Gun. “Being someone who loves melancholy songs, I just love it. At the time I wrote it,...
Life Under the Gun debuted in summer 2023 and served as a proper introduction to the blend of kinda-sorta hardcore sonics and personal songwriting that earned Militarie Gun a spot on Consequence‘s list of 15 rising artists to watch in 2024. The track “My Friends Are Having a Hard Time” — which has now been reimagined as a duet with Manchester Orchestra’s Andy Hull — exemplifies that blend.
“My girl says this song makes her really sad,” frontman Ian Shelton told Consequence for Militarie Gun’s Track by Track breakdown of Life Under the Gun. “Being someone who loves melancholy songs, I just love it. At the time I wrote it,...
- 1/23/2024
- by Jo Vito
- Consequence - Music
Breakout Los Angeles rock outfit Militarie Gun have released new versions of two songs from their debut album Life Under the Gun: “Never Fucked Up Twice” featuring Bully vocalist Alicia Bognanno and “Very High (Under The Sun).” Along with the new music, the band has announced their first full headlining tour since the album release.
Militarie Gun will kick off their 2024 tour in Phoenix on January 31st. The tour will feature a 31-show run, concluding on March 9th in Seattle — and making stops in New York, Chicago, Las Vegas, and more. Pool Kids and Spiritual Cramp will provide support on all dates. Tickets go on sale beginning Friday, Friday, December 1st at 10 a.m. local time via Ticketmaster.
Editor’s Note: Check out our track-by-track breakdown of Life Under the Gun.
Militarie Gun 2024 Tour Dates:
01/31 – Phoenix, Az @ The Rebel Lounge
02/02 – Dallas, TX @ Rubber Gloves
02/03 – Austin, TX @ Mohawk
02/04 – Houston, TX @ House of Blues Bronze Peacock
02/06 – Nashville,...
Militarie Gun will kick off their 2024 tour in Phoenix on January 31st. The tour will feature a 31-show run, concluding on March 9th in Seattle — and making stops in New York, Chicago, Las Vegas, and more. Pool Kids and Spiritual Cramp will provide support on all dates. Tickets go on sale beginning Friday, Friday, December 1st at 10 a.m. local time via Ticketmaster.
Editor’s Note: Check out our track-by-track breakdown of Life Under the Gun.
Militarie Gun 2024 Tour Dates:
01/31 – Phoenix, Az @ The Rebel Lounge
02/02 – Dallas, TX @ Rubber Gloves
02/03 – Austin, TX @ Mohawk
02/04 – Houston, TX @ House of Blues Bronze Peacock
02/06 – Nashville,...
- 11/29/2023
- by Emma Carey
- Consequence - Music
J Mascis has announced his fifth solo album, What Do We Do Now, out on February 2nd via Sub Pop. As a preview, the Dinosaur Jr. mastermind has shared the record’s lead single “Can’t Believe We’re Here” and a star-studded accompanying music video.
Mascis recorded What Do We Do Now at his own studio, Bisquiteen, in Western Massachusetts. With guest performances from The B-52’s Ken Mauri on keys and Matthew “Doc” Dunn on steel guitar, it’ll mark Mascis’ first solo album that features full drum and electric leads, though still backed by some acoustic instrumentation that Dinosaur Jr. fans will find familiar. Pre-orders for physical copies are ongoing.
“When I’m writing for the band, I’m always trying to think of doing things [Dinosaur Jr. bandmates] Lou and Murph would fit into,” Mascis said of his creative process. “For myself, I’m thinking more about what...
Mascis recorded What Do We Do Now at his own studio, Bisquiteen, in Western Massachusetts. With guest performances from The B-52’s Ken Mauri on keys and Matthew “Doc” Dunn on steel guitar, it’ll mark Mascis’ first solo album that features full drum and electric leads, though still backed by some acoustic instrumentation that Dinosaur Jr. fans will find familiar. Pre-orders for physical copies are ongoing.
“When I’m writing for the band, I’m always trying to think of doing things [Dinosaur Jr. bandmates] Lou and Murph would fit into,” Mascis said of his creative process. “For myself, I’m thinking more about what...
- 11/14/2023
- by Abby Jones
- Consequence - Music
The Mountain Goats have shared “Fresh Tattoo,” the latest single from Jenny from Thebes, their sequel album to 2002’s All Hail West Texas. Plus, they’ve announced new stretch of US tour dates for Winter 2023 (get tickets here).
“Fresh Tattoo” assembles an impressive group of collaborators including Bully’s Alicia Bognanno, horn players Matt Douglas and Evan Ringel, and singer-songwriter Matt Nathanson, whom frontman John Darnielle credited in a statement with helping the band get their start after hosting an open mic night in the ’90s.
“Listening to Matt put down the harmonies on [“Fresh Tattoo”] in Tulsa earlier this year was one of the best moments I’ve ever had in my musical life,” he shared. “It meant so much to make something new with him, I wouldn’t even be here without him. I’m very happy to share it with the world today.”
In regards to the continuing narrative...
“Fresh Tattoo” assembles an impressive group of collaborators including Bully’s Alicia Bognanno, horn players Matt Douglas and Evan Ringel, and singer-songwriter Matt Nathanson, whom frontman John Darnielle credited in a statement with helping the band get their start after hosting an open mic night in the ’90s.
“Listening to Matt put down the harmonies on [“Fresh Tattoo”] in Tulsa earlier this year was one of the best moments I’ve ever had in my musical life,” he shared. “It meant so much to make something new with him, I wouldn’t even be here without him. I’m very happy to share it with the world today.”
In regards to the continuing narrative...
- 8/23/2023
- by Bryan Kress
- Consequence - Music
The Mountain Goats have announced their new album, Jenny from Thebes. Billed as the sequel to 2002’s All Hail West Texas, it’s out on October 27th via Merge Records and includes the lead single, “Clean Slate.” Stream the track below.
According to a press release, Jenny from Thebes is “a story about the individual and society, about safety and shelter and those who choose to provide care when nobody else will.” Of course, that individual is Jenny, who longtime Mountain Goats fans will recognize from the All Hail West Texas cut bearing her name as well as “Straight Six” from Jam Eater Blues and “Night Light,” a track that appears on side two of Transcendental Youth.
Produced by Grammy-winner Trina Shoemaker, the 12-track project features contributions from Bully’s Alicia Bognanno (guitar) and Matt Douglas (horn and string arrangements). Kathy Valentine of The Go-Go’s and Matt Nathanson also provide backing vocals.
According to a press release, Jenny from Thebes is “a story about the individual and society, about safety and shelter and those who choose to provide care when nobody else will.” Of course, that individual is Jenny, who longtime Mountain Goats fans will recognize from the All Hail West Texas cut bearing her name as well as “Straight Six” from Jam Eater Blues and “Night Light,” a track that appears on side two of Transcendental Youth.
Produced by Grammy-winner Trina Shoemaker, the 12-track project features contributions from Bully’s Alicia Bognanno (guitar) and Matt Douglas (horn and string arrangements). Kathy Valentine of The Go-Go’s and Matt Nathanson also provide backing vocals.
- 7/19/2023
- by Eddie Fu
- Consequence - Music
Nashville garage rockers Bully are back with a new song, “Days Move Slow,” which will appear on their next album, Lucky for You, out June 2 via Sub Pop.
“Days Move Slow” is a punchy but poignant tune, an energetic and honest exploration of grief that Bully’s Alicia Bognanno wrote after the death of her dog, Mezzi.
“As someone who has spent the majority of my life feeling agonizingly misunderstood, there is no greater gift than experiencing true unconditional love and acceptance,” Bognanno said in a statement. “I waited my...
“Days Move Slow” is a punchy but poignant tune, an energetic and honest exploration of grief that Bully’s Alicia Bognanno wrote after the death of her dog, Mezzi.
“As someone who has spent the majority of my life feeling agonizingly misunderstood, there is no greater gift than experiencing true unconditional love and acceptance,” Bognanno said in a statement. “I waited my...
- 3/21/2023
- by Jon Blistein
- Rollingstone.com
Lucky for us, Bully is releasing a new album. Lucky for You, the latest release from Alicia Bognanno’s indie rock project, is out June 2nd via Sub Pop, and the announcement comes with lead single “Days Move Slow” as well as new 2023 tour dates.
A press release promises that Lucky for You comes chock-full of “punk grit, crunchy shoegaze bliss, and an explosive Britpop bop,” and if we know anything about Bully, we can expect plenty of guitar shredding and feisty vocals.
Bognanno recorded the album last year between Mmk Studios and her Nashville home: “With every record, I feel more and more secure in terms of doing what I want,” she says in a statement. “For this one, I wanted to be as creative as possible with these songs.” Pre-orders for the album are ongoing.
Much of Lucky for You was inspired by the passing of Bognanno’s beloved dog Mezzi,...
A press release promises that Lucky for You comes chock-full of “punk grit, crunchy shoegaze bliss, and an explosive Britpop bop,” and if we know anything about Bully, we can expect plenty of guitar shredding and feisty vocals.
Bognanno recorded the album last year between Mmk Studios and her Nashville home: “With every record, I feel more and more secure in terms of doing what I want,” she says in a statement. “For this one, I wanted to be as creative as possible with these songs.” Pre-orders for the album are ongoing.
Much of Lucky for You was inspired by the passing of Bognanno’s beloved dog Mezzi,...
- 3/21/2023
- by Abby Jones
- Consequence - Music
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Is this a parent-teacher conference? No, it’s just Soccer Mommy and Bully on a song! On Wednesday, Bully released a collaboration with Soccer Mommy titled “Lose You,” and announced a U.S. tour.
This is the first time since Bully’s debut EP in 2014 that Bully’s Alicia Bognanno has welcomed a feature on one of her songs. The visualizer for the track sees a woman being chased by a dog underwater.
Is this a parent-teacher conference? No, it’s just Soccer Mommy and Bully on a song! On Wednesday, Bully released a collaboration with Soccer Mommy titled “Lose You,” and announced a U.S. tour.
This is the first time since Bully’s debut EP in 2014 that Bully’s Alicia Bognanno has welcomed a feature on one of her songs. The visualizer for the track sees a woman being chased by a dog underwater.
- 2/15/2023
- by Tomás Mier
- Rollingstone.com
Bully, the alt-rock project of Alicia Bognanno, returns today with a new song called “Lose You” featuring backup vocals from Sophie Allison of Soccer Mommy.
“Lose You” attempts to reckon with the idea that even a love that seems like it’ll last forever isn’t necessarily immortal. Taking cues from late ’80s and ’90s shoegaze pioneers, the track is driven by a steadily, thumping beat that backdrops Bognanno’s fuzzed-out guitars: “Either way I’m gonna lose you,” she and Allison lament in harmony, before a ripper of a guitar solo near the song’s end.
“When ‘Lose You’ came about it was the first time I’ve considered having someone else sing on a Bully song,” Bognanno said in a press release. “I love Sophie’s voice and have always admired everything she does so to me it was a no brainer. Watching her soar out of the...
“Lose You” attempts to reckon with the idea that even a love that seems like it’ll last forever isn’t necessarily immortal. Taking cues from late ’80s and ’90s shoegaze pioneers, the track is driven by a steadily, thumping beat that backdrops Bognanno’s fuzzed-out guitars: “Either way I’m gonna lose you,” she and Allison lament in harmony, before a ripper of a guitar solo near the song’s end.
“When ‘Lose You’ came about it was the first time I’ve considered having someone else sing on a Bully song,” Bognanno said in a press release. “I love Sophie’s voice and have always admired everything she does so to me it was a no brainer. Watching her soar out of the...
- 2/15/2023
- by Abby Jones
- Consequence - Music
Bully has announced a nine-date North American tour this summer in support of their album Sugaregg, released in August 2020.
The tour kicks off July 31st at Skully’s Music Diner in Columbus, Ohio, and will make stops in Nashville, Birmingham, Atlanta, St. Louis, Chicago, Milwaukee, and Minneapolis before concluding September 4th at Seattle’s Neumos venue. To coincide with their tour announcement, Bully have released a live performance video for their song “Where to Start,” filmed at Drkmttr in Nashville.
The Sugaregg tour marks one of the first tour announcements...
The tour kicks off July 31st at Skully’s Music Diner in Columbus, Ohio, and will make stops in Nashville, Birmingham, Atlanta, St. Louis, Chicago, Milwaukee, and Minneapolis before concluding September 4th at Seattle’s Neumos venue. To coincide with their tour announcement, Bully have released a live performance video for their song “Where to Start,” filmed at Drkmttr in Nashville.
The Sugaregg tour marks one of the first tour announcements...
- 4/6/2021
- by Claire Shaffer
- Rollingstone.com
Bully’s Alicia Bognanno covered Pj Harvey’s “Dry” as part of Sounds of Savings’ “Song That Found Me at the Right Time” series, in partnership with the American Association of Suicidology.
Bognanno’s rendition appears five minutes into the video, as she rips through the track on guitar as a chihuahua peers through the doorway. “Her vocal delivery is always just unbelievable,” she said of Harvey. “There was a point in time where I was just listening to that on repeat, and I feel like it was the only...
Bognanno’s rendition appears five minutes into the video, as she rips through the track on guitar as a chihuahua peers through the doorway. “Her vocal delivery is always just unbelievable,” she said of Harvey. “There was a point in time where I was just listening to that on repeat, and I feel like it was the only...
- 2/2/2021
- by Angie Martoccio
- Rollingstone.com
Bully’s Alicia Bognanno credits the creation of her new record, Sugeregg, in part to finding proper treatment for her bipolar II disorder. “Being able to finally navigate that opened the door for me to write about it,” she said in a release about the album, which deftly moves from moshpit rockers to contemplative slow-burners with an alacrity that that should put the whole “you have to suffer for your art” thing to rest.
Fellow perfectionists have long felt a kinship with Bognanno, about whom former boss Steve Albini once...
Fellow perfectionists have long felt a kinship with Bognanno, about whom former boss Steve Albini once...
- 8/19/2020
- by Brenna Ehrlich
- Rollingstone.com
Alicia Bognanno channeled 1997 Chumbawamba classic “Tubthumping” when it came to writing her new single, “Where to Start” — the first song off of Bully’s upcoming third album, Sugaregg (out August 21 via Subpop).
“I was listening to ‘Tubthumping’ by Chumbawamba and picking apart the melodic structure and sort of trying to mimic that,” Bognanno tells Rolling Stone. “I’m not even joking; it still makes me laugh to think about. But let’s be real, that is undeniably a solid song. ‘Where to Start’ addresses the frustration that comes along with...
“I was listening to ‘Tubthumping’ by Chumbawamba and picking apart the melodic structure and sort of trying to mimic that,” Bognanno tells Rolling Stone. “I’m not even joking; it still makes me laugh to think about. But let’s be real, that is undeniably a solid song. ‘Where to Start’ addresses the frustration that comes along with...
- 6/11/2020
- by Brenna Ehrlich
- Rollingstone.com
Bully and its frontwoman, Alicia Bognanno, have been getting Kurt Cobain comparisons since their 2015 debut, Feels Like. (It doesn’t hurt that she studied at the feet of Nirvana producer Steve Albini.) So hearing the Nashville band cover Nirvana is almost too obvious — but, good God, is it glorious.
Their spin on 1989’s “About a Girl” strikes a perfect balance of raw and melodic, without ever sounding like the output of a cover band. Bognanno’s home-recorded production and instrumentation definitely capture the original’s energy: The guitars come in...
Their spin on 1989’s “About a Girl” strikes a perfect balance of raw and melodic, without ever sounding like the output of a cover band. Bognanno’s home-recorded production and instrumentation definitely capture the original’s energy: The guitars come in...
- 5/1/2020
- by Brenna Ehrlich
- Rollingstone.com
There’s a temptation to call “Her Smell” a greatest-hits compilation of the films of writer-director Alex Ross Perry. After all, it’s got the pitch-black humor of “The Color Wheel,” the narcissism of artists behaving badly from “Listen Up Philip” and the spectacle of Elisabeth Moss as a character spiraling out of control, just like “Queen of Earth.”
There’s more than a little nihilism in these films, delivered with those laughs that get caught in your throat, and Perry couldn’t be less interested in how likable or redeemable his characters might be. Something of a cult filmmaker until now, Perry calls things as he sees them, and he would appear to see them through the bleakest perspective possible.
But this is new material from the challenging auteur, one that reflects a deeper sense of maturity, displayed mainly in the idea of the possibility of redemption. Moss’ Becky Something,...
There’s more than a little nihilism in these films, delivered with those laughs that get caught in your throat, and Perry couldn’t be less interested in how likable or redeemable his characters might be. Something of a cult filmmaker until now, Perry calls things as he sees them, and he would appear to see them through the bleakest perspective possible.
But this is new material from the challenging auteur, one that reflects a deeper sense of maturity, displayed mainly in the idea of the possibility of redemption. Moss’ Becky Something,...
- 4/12/2019
- by Alonso Duralde
- The Wrap
Fame knocks the hell out of Becky Something (Elisabeth Moss in a five-alarm fire blaze), a ’90’s indie punk rocker who leads a riot grrrl band that she bombards with near-constant verbal abuse. Those backstage tantrums can do damage to anyone who gets too close. Narcotics or narcissism? Pick your poison. Becky chooses both — and you don’t want to get in her way. Can you really commit to a movie that makes you want to bolt for the exits? You can if it’s this one.
How Elisabeth Moss...
How Elisabeth Moss...
- 4/10/2019
- by Peter Travers
- Rollingstone.com
Cara Delevingne, Dan Stevens, Eric Stoltz, Virginia Madsen, and Dylan Gelula have joined the cast of Bow and Arrow Entertainment’s music drama “Her Smell,” starring Elisabeth Moss.
Alex Ross Perry is directing from his own script. Previously announced cast includes Amber Heard, Ashley Benson, Agyness Deyn, and Gayle Rankin.
Voltage Pictures is selling international rights at the Cannes Film Festival. Moss is producing alongside Matthew Perniciaro and Michael Sherman of Bow and Arrow Entertainment, Adam Piotrowicz, and Perry.
Endeavor Content is representing domestic sales for the film.
Moss stars as Becky Something, a maniacally destructive punk rock star and leader of the seminal all-female rock band Something She, who pushes her relationships with bandmates, family, and followers to the limit as she wages a years-long war against sobriety, while attempting to re-engage the creativity that had once led her band to massive crossover success.
Delevingne will star as the leader of a new,...
Alex Ross Perry is directing from his own script. Previously announced cast includes Amber Heard, Ashley Benson, Agyness Deyn, and Gayle Rankin.
Voltage Pictures is selling international rights at the Cannes Film Festival. Moss is producing alongside Matthew Perniciaro and Michael Sherman of Bow and Arrow Entertainment, Adam Piotrowicz, and Perry.
Endeavor Content is representing domestic sales for the film.
Moss stars as Becky Something, a maniacally destructive punk rock star and leader of the seminal all-female rock band Something She, who pushes her relationships with bandmates, family, and followers to the limit as she wages a years-long war against sobriety, while attempting to re-engage the creativity that had once led her band to massive crossover success.
Delevingne will star as the leader of a new,...
- 5/8/2018
- by Dave McNary
- Variety Film + TV
Voltage Pictures has announced a huge ensemble joining Elisabeth Moss in the punk rock pic Her Smell including Cara Delevingne, Dan Stevens, Eric Stoltz, Virginia Madsen, Dylan Gelula and Eka Darville. They also join Amber Heard, Ashley Benson, Agyness Deyn and Gayle Rankin who were previously announced.
Moss stars as Becky Something, a maniacally destructive punk rock star and leader of the seminal all-female rock band Something She, who pushes her relationships with bandmates, family and followers to the limit as she wages a years long war against sobriety, while attempting to re-engage the creativity that had once led her band to massive crossover success. When a new, younger female band called The Akergirls, led by Delevingne’s Cassie, bursts onto the scene, Becky becomes their mentor. With added responsibility and watching her former friend Zelda E. Zekial (Amber Heard) rise to celebrity megastardom while her career falters, Becky falls deeper into her downward spiral,...
Moss stars as Becky Something, a maniacally destructive punk rock star and leader of the seminal all-female rock band Something She, who pushes her relationships with bandmates, family and followers to the limit as she wages a years long war against sobriety, while attempting to re-engage the creativity that had once led her band to massive crossover success. When a new, younger female band called The Akergirls, led by Delevingne’s Cassie, bursts onto the scene, Becky becomes their mentor. With added responsibility and watching her former friend Zelda E. Zekial (Amber Heard) rise to celebrity megastardom while her career falters, Becky falls deeper into her downward spiral,...
- 5/8/2018
- by Anthony D'Alessandro
- Deadline Film + TV
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