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Post by Admin on Jan 18, 2019 18:24:59 GMT
Ariana Grande has shared a new song with its accompanying music video. Watch the visual for “7 Rings,” a rework of The Sound of Music classic “My Favorite Things,” below. She’s been teasing her follow-up single to “Imagine” and “thank u, next” on social media. Ariana’s most recent studio album Sweetener was released in 2018. She’s set to tour behind that full-length and her recent singles in 2019, beginning with a show at the Times Union Center in Albany, New York on March 18.
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Post by Admin on Jan 31, 2019 17:41:56 GMT
The song is Grande's second leader, and second to launch at the summit. Ariana Grande's "7 Rings" shines atop the Billboard Hot 100, blasting in at No. 1 on the chart dated Feb. 2. The song is Grande's second Hot 100 No. 1 and second to start on top, following "Thank U, Next," which debuted atop the chart dated Nov. 17, and led for seven total weeks. Let's run down the top 10 of the Hot 100, which blends all-genre U.S. streaming, radio airplay and digital sales data. All charts will update on Billboard.com tomorrow (Jan. 29).
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Post by Admin on Feb 1, 2019 17:33:37 GMT
To celebrate her newest single “7 Rings,” pop star Ariana Grande got a kanji tattoo. Unfortunately, it’s wrong. Grande posted a photo of her tattoo. In Japanese, it reads, 七輪 (shichirin). You can see the pic photo (via Grande’s official Japanese Twitter), which has since been deleted from her Instagram. The kanji character 七 means “seven,” while 輪 means “hoop,” “circle,” “ring,” or “wheel.” However, when you put them together, the meaning is different! 七輪 (shichirin) also means a “small charcoal grill” and not “seven rings,” which is written differently in Japanese
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Post by Admin on Feb 7, 2019 17:41:53 GMT
Ariana Grande is still attempting to fix her new tattoo after learning that what she thought said “7 rings” in Japanese actually meant “small, charcoal grill.”" data-reactid="16" style="margin-top: 0.8em; color: rgb(38, 40, 42); font-family: "Helvetica Neue", Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif; background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255);">Ariana Grande is still attempting to fix her new tattoo after learning that what she thought said “7 rings” in Japanese actually meant “small, charcoal grill.” TMZ story that reported LaserAway had sent Grande a $1.5 million offer to remove her tattoo for free and become a paid spokesperson for the company. The pop star, 25, posted a series of since-deleted tweets in response to a TMZ story that reported LaserAway had sent Grande a $1.5 million offer to remove her tattoo for free and become a paid spokesperson for the company. (Grande’s manager Scooter Braun told TMZ that they had “not received this letter.”) As it turns out, Grande has an offer of her own: “I’ll give y’all a million to get off my nuts,” she tweeted on Saturday. (A rep for LaserAway could not be immediately reached for comment.) “I have crippling anxiety ,” Grande continued. “I don’t like hurtin ppl. People on this app really don’t know how to be forgiving or gentle when someone has made an innocent mistake. No one considers feelings other than their own. It’s very pointless.” “There’s a difference between appropriation and appreciation,” she added. “My Japanese fans were always excited when I wrote in Japanese or wore Japanese sayings on my clothing. However, all of the merch with Japanese on it was taken down from my site not that anyone cared to notice.”
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Post by Admin on Feb 17, 2019 17:45:15 GMT
Today in weird news, Ariana Grande's fans are boycotting her new single "7 rings." Which like...what now? This song has obviously come with a ton of drama thanks to plagiarism claims from Princess Nokia and Soulja Boy, but that's not why fans are boycotting.
Turns out they just really want her third single "break up with your girlfriend, i'm bored" to take the #1 spot on music charts, like "thank u, next" and "7 rings" before it.
Fair 'nuff, but Ari's fans have straight up created a #BOYCOTT7RINGS hashtag and are even hoping that Ariana will join them in their mission. Her thoughts? To call everyone "insane and funny" and say, "i ain’t goin nowhere."
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