Pop star Sabrina Carpenter slammed the White House on Tuesday after it posted a video using her song "Juno." The video on the official X account of the White House featured a montage of clips ...
The White House unleashed a scathing response to pop star Sabrina Carpenter after she blasted the administration for using her music without permission in a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement ...
From left: Sabrina Carpenter, ICE video screenshot and Donald Trump Getty Images; White House UPDATED, with White House comment: Sabrina Carpenter blasted the White House on Tuesday for using her song ...
"Do not ever involve me or my music to benefit your inhumane agenda," the singer said. By Ethan Millman Music Editor “This video is evil and disgusting. Do not ever involve me or my music to benefit ...
The White House social media team is in hot water with one of the world’s biggest pop stars after using Sabrina Carpenter’s song “Juno” in a video depicting law enforcement apprehending individuals in ...
A cat ice-skating. Historical figures playing basketball. Cartoon characters hanging out with famous people. Generative video tools like OpenAI’s Sora 2 mark the next frontier in artificial ...
With short-form video now dominant on social media, researchers are racing to understand how the highly engaging, algorithm-driven format may be reshaping the brain. From TikTok to Instagram Reels and ...
Monique Hinton rubbed her fingers together in one of her recent YouTube videos, signaling to her million-plus followers on the platform that she had a moneymaking business idea for them. She first ...
After the White House used a Sabrina Carpenter song without her permission, the pop star is keeping her response short and sweet. The "Espresso" singer, 26, took to X to slam the White House for using ...
The White House deleted a video featuring a Sabrina Carpenter song after the pop star called the post "evil and disgusting." The post showed individuals being detained by Immigration and Customs ...
People traffickers are posting promotional videos featuring innocent young British women flirting to entice male migrants to come to Britain, a Daily Mail investigation has found. The clips of women ...
As short-form videos continue to shape the way we consume content — from TikTok and Instagram Reels to YouTube Shorts — researchers are raising concerns about their potential impact on the brain.