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Tag: benefit

  • Bon Iver Made a Song With Gracie Abrams and Aaron Dessner

    Bon Iver, Gracie Abrams, and the National’s Aaron Dessner have released a new song, “Sold Out,” to benefit the gun violence prevention organization Everytown. Though Justin Vernon has often collaborated with Dessner, and Abrams and Dessner are ongoing songwriting partners—not to mention that Abrams has covered Bon Iver’s “Beach Baby”—“Sold Out” is the first formal collaboration between Vernon and Abrams. Head to Bandcamp to buy the song, which has not been made available to stream.

    The three artists said in a joint statement that they made “Sold Out” last year in the wake of a school shooting. “We were reminded of it this week as our hearts were broken yet again,” they wrote, apparently referring to the Brown University shooting. “It’s a sad one to share during the holidays, but the world is hurting and we shouldn’t look away. We are proud to support Everytown, an organization dedicated to ending gun violence in America. We are releasing this song to raise awareness of their mission of reducing gun violence. Please visit their website for more information on the unbelievable work they do. Sending so much love to you all.”

    Jazz Monroe

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  • Brian Eno, Neneh Cherry, and More Release Palestine Benefit Single

    A Palestine benefit single from an ensemble including Brian Eno, Neneh Cherry, and Nadine Shah is out today. Credited to Together for Palestine—the British-based operation that put on a major benefit concert in September—“Lullaby” is a cover of the traditional Palestinian song “Yamma Mweel El Hawa,” which Peter Gabriel has adapted from an English translation. The Palestinian musician Nai Barghouti arranged and recomposed the song with Shards’ Kieran Brunt. Watch the accompanying video below.

    Upon the song’s announcement, Eno said in a press release that they were aiming for the United Kingdom’s coveted No. 1 spot on the Christmas singles chart. “After a year defined by unimaginable loss, grief and injustice, we want to end with an act of love for Palestine’s children,” he said. “‘Lullaby’ reflects their beauty, their longing and their hope. If we rally together and download it, we have a real shot at landing Christmas No. 1—and turning that moment into vital life-saving support for Gaza’s families.”

    Barghouti added, “This lullaby from our Palestinian musical heritage has been with me since early childhood. Today, it returns at a much-needed time as a reminder of what Palestinians will never lose: hope, defiance, beauty, and dignity.”

    Kieran Brunt, Benji B, and Henri Davies produced “Lullaby,” which also features Amena, Lana Lubany, Leigh-Anne, London Community Gospel Choir, Sura Abdo, Tyson, Yasmeen Ayyashi, and Ysee. All proceeds go to Choose Love’s Together for Palestine Fund, which supports the Palestinian-led organizations Taawon, Palestine Children’s Relief Fund and Palestine Medical Relief Service.

    Jazz Monroe

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  • Brian Eno, Neneh Cherry, and More Unite for Palestine Benefit Single

    Together for Palestine, the humanitarian operation that put on a massive benefit concert in September, has announced a benefit single featuring Brian Eno, Neneh Cherry, and many more. “Lullaby,” a version of the traditional Palestinian song “Yamma Mweel El Hawa,” will be released on December 12, with designs on the coveted UK Christmas No. 1 slot. Others in the ensemble include Nadine Shah, Mabel, Celeste, and Bastille’s Dan Smith. Peter Gabriel wrote an English-language lyric for the cover, and the Palestinian musician Nai Barghouti arranged and recomposed the song alongside Shards’ Kieran Brunt.

    Eno said in a press release, “After a year defined by unimaginable loss, grief and injustice, we want to end with an act of love for Palestine’s children. Lullaby reflects their beauty, their longing and their hope. If we rally together and download it, we have a real shot at landing Christmas No. 1—and turning that moment into vital life-saving support for Gaza’s families.”

    Barghouti adds, “This lullaby from our Palestinian musical heritage has been with me since early childhood. Today, it returns at a much-needed time as a reminder of what Palestinians will never lose: hope, defiance, beauty, and dignity.”

    Kieran Brunt co-produced “Lullaby” alongside Benji B and Henri Davies. Also featured on the track are Amena, Lana Lubany, Leigh-Anne, London Community Gospel Choir, Sura Abdo, Tyson, Yasmeen Ayyashi, and Ysee. Together for Palestine’s T4P label will release the song, via distributor Empire. All proceeds go to Choose Love’s Together for Palestine Fund, which supports the Palestinian-led organisations Taawon, Palestine Children’s Relief Fund and Palestine Medical Relief Service.

    In Los Angeles, meanwhile, another benefit concert, Artists for Aid, has been detailed ahead of its January 10 staging. Organized for the second year by Mustafa, the concert will feature Geese, Blood Orange, Alex G, Clairo, Faye Webster, Noname, Ravyn Lenae, Daniel Cesar, and more, with hosts Bella Hadid and Pedro Pascal.

    A new batch of artists has also signed up to geoblock their music from streaming in Israel. My Bloody Valentine, Saba, Shygirl, YHWH Nailgun, and Denzel Curry are among the additions to No Music for Genocide.

    Jazz Monroe

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  • Semaglutide fails to slow progression of Alzheimer’s in highly anticipated trials, Novo Nordisk says

    An oral version of semaglutide, the active ingredient in blockbuster drugs Ozempic and Wegovy, failed to slow the progression of Alzheimer’s disease in closely watched trials, Novo Nordisk said Monday.In two Phase 3 trials of more than 3,800 adults receiving standard care for Alzheimer’s, the company evaluated whether an older pill form of semaglutide worked better than a placebo. The drug was shown to be safe and led to improvements in Alzheimer’s-related biomarkers, the company said, but the treatment did not delay disease progression.Novo had long treated Alzheimer’s as a long-shot bet for the popular GLP-1 drugs. Use of these drugs for diabetes and weight loss has exploded in recent years, and they have shown benefits for a wide range of additional health conditions, such as protecting the heart and kidneys, reducing sleep apnea and potentially helping with addiction.Smaller trials and animal studies had suggested GLP-1s might help slow cognitive decline or reduce neuro-inflammation but larger trials like Novo’s were needed to confirm whether patients saw actual benefits.”Based on the significant unmet need in Alzheimer’s disease as well as a number of indicative data points, we felt we had a responsibility to explore semaglutide’s potential, despite a low likelihood of success,” said Martin Holst Lange, chief scientific officer and executive vice president of Research and Development at Novo Nordisk said in a statement on Monday that thanked trial participants.A one-year extension of the trials will be discontinued, Novo said. Results from the trials have not yet been peer-reviewed or published but will be presented at upcoming scientific conferences.Novo has been facing increased competition in the weight loss market and recently announced lowered prices for some cash-paying patients using Ozempic and Wegovy. Novo shares fell Monday after the Alzheimer’s trial announcement.

    An oral version of semaglutide, the active ingredient in blockbuster drugs Ozempic and Wegovy, failed to slow the progression of Alzheimer’s disease in closely watched trials, Novo Nordisk said Monday.

    In two Phase 3 trials of more than 3,800 adults receiving standard care for Alzheimer’s, the company evaluated whether an older pill form of semaglutide worked better than a placebo. The drug was shown to be safe and led to improvements in Alzheimer’s-related biomarkers, the company said, but the treatment did not delay disease progression.

    Novo had long treated Alzheimer’s as a long-shot bet for the popular GLP-1 drugs. Use of these drugs for diabetes and weight loss has exploded in recent years, and they have shown benefits for a wide range of additional health conditions, such as protecting the heart and kidneys, reducing sleep apnea and potentially helping with addiction.

    Smaller trials and animal studies had suggested GLP-1s might help slow cognitive decline or reduce neuro-inflammation but larger trials like Novo’s were needed to confirm whether patients saw actual benefits.

    “Based on the significant unmet need in Alzheimer’s disease as well as a number of indicative data points, we felt we had a responsibility to explore semaglutide’s potential, despite a low likelihood of success,” said Martin Holst Lange, chief scientific officer and executive vice president of Research and Development at Novo Nordisk said in a statement on Monday that thanked trial participants.

    A one-year extension of the trials will be discontinued, Novo said. Results from the trials have not yet been peer-reviewed or published but will be presented at upcoming scientific conferences.

    Novo has been facing increased competition in the weight loss market and recently announced lowered prices for some cash-paying patients using Ozempic and Wegovy. Novo shares fell Monday after the Alzheimer’s trial announcement.

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  • The War on Drugs Announce Drugcember Holiday Benefit Concerts

    The War on Drugs have announced the return of their annual Drugcember to Remember benefit concert series, which they started back in 2018. This year’s shows will take place from on December 18, 19, and 20 at the rock band’s favorite local venue: Johnny Brenda’s in Philadelphia. Proceeds from the concerts will benefit the Fund for the School District of Philadelphia, which raises money for public schools. Tickets go on sale this Friday, November 21, at 10 a.m. local time.

    This is the sixth year of Drugcember celebrations. As with recent editions of the benefit concert series, additional fundraising will occur before the events take place. Fans can purchase exclusive Drugcember-themed items provided by local Philadelphia businesses—Elixr Coffee, Sacred Vice Brewing, Room Shop, Uncle Ron’s Candles, and Kinetic Skateboarding/Nocturnal Skate Shop—to help donate to the cause while taking home select items.

    In a press release, frontman Adam Granduciel commented, “Another Drugcember to remember! This has been a year end highlight for me since we started doing it in 2018. Three rock shows at our old local hangout benefitting the Philadelphia school system. This band wouldn’t exist if it wasn’t for the vibrant Philadelphia community that has supported us since the beginning and we are very grateful for it.”

    The War on Drugs’ most recent album, I Don’t Live Here Anymore, came out in 2021. Last year, they released Live Drugs Again, a live album from collected soundboard recordings spanning 2014 to 2019.

    Read about I Don’t Live Here Anymore at No. 34 in “The 50 Best Albums of 2021.”

    Nina Corcoran

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  • Sharp Pins, Been Stellar, Lip Critic, and More Playing Abortion Access Benefit Concerts

    Ground Control Touring has once again organized its annual abortion access benefit concerts throughout the United States to raise money for Noise for Now, tapping Sharp Pins, Been Stellar, Lip Critic, and many more bands to perform next year. The series takes place on Saturday, January 24, 2026 in Chicago, Los Angeles, New York, and Austin, Texas, with a different lineup in each city. Tickets are on sale.

    Sharp Pins, Been Stellar, Widowspeak, @, and more are slated for the New York show at Bowery Ballroom; Tobacco City, Good Flying Birds, This House Is Creaking, Action/Adventure, and others will perform in Chicago at Empty Bottle; Shannon Shaw, Diners, Harmony Tividad, and more are tapped for Los Angeles at Lodge Room; and Ritual, Holy Wave, and Quiet Light, among many more, will play in Austin, Texas, at Hotel Vegas. Check out the full schedule on the poster below.

    All proceeds raised from each benefit concert will go to Noise for Now, which will allocate those funds to local independent abortion clinics and abortion funds in each region: Access Reproductive Justice, the Afiya Center’s SYS Fund, Chicago Abortion Fund, Jane’s Due Process, New York Abortion Access Fund, Northwest Abortion Access Fund, and independent abortion clinics in California, Illinois, and New York through Keep Our Clinics.

    Last year, Noise for Now wrangled together the second volume of its compilation series benefitting independent abortion providers. The benefit album features songs by Faye Webster, David Byrne, and the War on Drugs, among others.

    Nina Corcoran

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  • ‘Compassion is alive and well’: Volusia County food drive helps SNAP recipients

    THANK YOU DAVID. MEANWHILE, SNAP RECIPIENTS ARE STILL STRUGGLING AS THE SHUTDOWN CONTINUES. JUST YESTERDAY, THE SUPREME COURT LET THE TRUMP ADMINISTRATION TEMPORARILY WITHHOLD ABOUT $4 BILLION IN BENEFITS. BUT HELP IS IN THE WORKS AT DAYTONA INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY, THE VOLUSIA COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE, AS WELL, AND THE JEWISH FEDERATION PARTNERED TO PUT TOGETHER A FOOD DRIVE IN LESS THAN FOUR DAYS. TODAY. THE CARS KEPT COMING AND THE FOOD KEPT PILING UP UNTIL THEY COLLECTED 200,000 POUNDS OF FOOD, ENOUGH TO FEED 5000 FAMILIES WHO DEPEND ON SNAP. THAT’S BEEN AFFECTED BY THE LONGEST GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN NOW IN U.S. HISTORY. THIS COMMUNITY DID THIS TOGETHER, AND IN A WORLD WHERE IT FEELS LIKE COMPASSION IS LOST, THIS COUNTY HAS SHOWN COMPASSION IS ALIVE AND WELL. AND I’LL TELL YOU WHAT’S MORE INSPIRING THAN THAT. ARE YOU AMAZED? STUNNED? IT WAS BREATHTAKING TO SEE THAT LINE THAT STILL. I MEAN, HERE’S PEOPLE STILL PULLING IN, DROPPING OFF BAGS AND BAGS AND BAGS OF FOOD AND THAT STUFF THAT WAS LAYING IN YOUR GARAGE WHEN WHEN YOU HAD A FLOOD. THESE WERE PEOPLE WHO, YOU KNOW, THEY WENT TO ALDI, THEY WENT TO WALMART, THEY WENT TO PUBLIX, GOING ABOVE AND BEYOND. TOMORROW AT THE SPEEDWAY, FOLKS IN NEED CAN TAKE FOOD. THAT WAS COLLECTED TODAY, BUT THERE ARE TWO REQUIREMENTS. YOU HAVE TO SHOW PROOF THAT YOU ARE IN THE SNAP PROGRAM AND THAT YOU ARE A VOLUSIA COUNTY RESIDENT.

    ‘Compassion is alive and well’: Volusia County food drive helps SNAP recipients

    Updated: 8:13 PM EST Nov 8, 2025

    Editorial Standards

    As the government shutdown continues, SNAP recipients are struggling, but Volusia County residents have rallied to collect 200,000 pounds of food for families affected by the suspension of benefits.Just yesterday, the Supreme Court allowed the Trump administration to temporarily withhold about $4 billion in benefits. In response, the Volusia County Sheriff’s Office and the Jewish Federation organized a food drive at Daytona International Speedway in under four days.Today, cars arrived, and food donations accumulated until they reached 200,000 pounds, enough to feed 5,000 families who rely on the SNAP program.Rabbi Rob Lennick of the Jewish Federation of Volusia and Flagler Counties said, “We did this together, and in a world where it feels like compassion is lost, this county has shown compassion is alive and well. And I tell you, what’s more inspiring than that.”Sheriff Mike Chitwood of Volusia County expressed his amazement at the community’s response, saying, “Are you amazed? Stunned. It was breathtaking to see that line. There are still people pulling in and dropping off bags and bags of food. And not stuff that was lying in your garage from when you had a flood. These are people who went to Aldi’s, they went to Walmart, they went to Publix.”Tomorrow at the Speedway, those in need can collect the food gathered today. There are two requirements: proof of participation in the SNAP program and residency in Volusia County. The food distribution will begin at 11 a.m.

    As the government shutdown continues, SNAP recipients are struggling, but Volusia County residents have rallied to collect 200,000 pounds of food for families affected by the suspension of benefits.

    Just yesterday, the Supreme Court allowed the Trump administration to temporarily withhold about $4 billion in benefits.

    In response, the Volusia County Sheriff’s Office and the Jewish Federation organized a food drive at Daytona International Speedway in under four days.

    Today, cars arrived, and food donations accumulated until they reached 200,000 pounds, enough to feed 5,000 families who rely on the SNAP program.

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    Rabbi Rob Lennick of the Jewish Federation of Volusia and Flagler Counties said, “We did this together, and in a world where it feels like compassion is lost, this county has shown compassion is alive and well. And I tell you, what’s more inspiring than that.”

    Sheriff Mike Chitwood of Volusia County expressed his amazement at the community’s response, saying, “Are you amazed? Stunned. It was breathtaking to see that line. There are still people pulling in and dropping off bags and bags of food. And not stuff that was lying in your garage from when you had a flood. These are people who went to Aldi’s, they went to Walmart, they went to Publix.”

    Tomorrow at the Speedway, those in need can collect the food gathered today. There are two requirements: proof of participation in the SNAP program and residency in Volusia County. The food distribution will begin at 11 a.m.

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  • Trump administration suggests it may ‘raid school lunch money’ to cover SNAP benefits

    The Trump administration spent Friday fighting to avoid restoring $4 billion in food assistance in jeopardy due to the government shutdown, suggesting it might need to “raid school-lunch money” in order to comply with court orders.

    The claim was part of a break-neck appeal in the 1st Circuit Court of Appeals on Friday, where the government hoped to duck a court order that would force it to pay out for food stamps — formally called the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP — through November.

    “There is no lawful basis for an order that directs USDA to somehow find $4 billion in the metaphorical couch cushions,” Assistant Atty. Gen. Brett A. Shumate wrote in the appeal.

    The administration’s only option would be to “to starve Peter to feed Paul” by cutting school lunch programs, Shumate wrote.

    On Friday afternoon, the appellate court declined to immediately block the lower court’s order, and said it would quickly rule on the merits of the funding decree.

    SNAP benefits are a key fight in the ongoing government shutdown. California is one of several states suing the administration to restore the safety net program while negotiations continue to end the stalemate.

    Millions of Americans have struggled to afford groceries since benefits lapsed Nov. 1, inspiring many Republican lawmakers to join Democrats in demanding an emergency stopgap.

    The Trump administration was previously ordered to release contingency funding for the program that it said would cover benefits for about half of November.

    But the process has been “confusing and chaotic” and “rife with errors,” according to a brief filed by 25 states and the District of Columbia.

    Some states, including California, have started disbursing SNAP benefits for the month. Others say the partial funding is a functional lockout.

    “Many states’ existing systems require complete reprogramming to accomplish this task, and given the sudden — and suddenly changing — nature of USDA’s guidance, that task is impossible to complete quickly,” the brief said.

    “Recalculations required by [the government’s] plan will delay November benefits for [state] residents for weeks or months.”

    On Thursday, U.S. District Judge John McConnell Jr. of Rhode Island ordered the full food stamp payout by the end of the week. He accused the administration of withholding the benefit for political gain.

    “Faced with a choice between advancing relief and entrenching delay, [the administration] chose the latter — an outcome that predictably magnifies harm and undermines the very purpose of the program it administers,” he wrote.

    “This Court is not naïve to the administration’s true motivations,” McConnell wrote. “Far from being concerned with Child Nutrition funding, these statements make clear that the administration is withholding full SNAP benefits for political purposes.”

    The appeal could extend that deadline by as little as a few hours, or nullify it entirely.

    But the latter may be unlikely, especially following the appellate court’s decision late Friday. The 1st Circuit is currently the country’s most liberal, with five active judges, all of whom were named to the bench by Democratic presidents.

    While the court deliberates, both sides are left sparring over how many children will go hungry if the other prevails.

    More than 16 million children rely on SNAP benefits. Close to 30 million are fed through the National School Lunch Program, which the government now says it must gut to meet the court’s order.

    But the same pool of cash has already been tapped to extend Women, Infants and Children, which is a federal program that pays for baby formula and other basics for some poor families.

    “This clearly undermines the Defendants’ point, as WIC is an entirely separate program from the Child Nutrition Programs,” McConnell wrote.

    In its Friday order, the 1st Circuit panel said it would issue a full ruling “as quickly as possible.”

    Sonja Sharp

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  • Democratic-led states sue Trump administration to keep SNAP food assistance funds flowing

    A coalition of 25 Democratic-run states sued the Trump administration Tuesday to prevent billions of dollars of cuts to federal food assistance that are set to kick in this weekend.Democratic attorneys general and governors from 25 states and Washington, D.C., claimed in the lawsuit that the Trump administration was threatening “illegal” cuts to SNAP, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, commonly known as food stamps.The U.S. Department of Agriculture, which oversees the program for 42 million Americans, “cannot simply suspend all benefits indefinitely, while refusing to spend funds from available appropriations for SNAP benefits for eligible households,” the lawsuit claims.The Trump administration has argued it does not have the power to use that pot of existing money — known as its contingency fund — to cover the SNAP program beyond Saturday, because of the federal government shutdown.”The contingency fund is not available to support FY 2026 regular benefits, because the appropriation for regular benefits no longer exists,” officials in the Department of Agriculture wrote in a memo last week.The risk of tens of millions of Americans losing food aid has triggered intense anxiety across Washington, as the government shutdown nears the one-month mark.Top lawmakers from both parties acknowledge it would be the most significant impact of the shutdown to date, with House Speaker Mike Johnson privately warning his GOP members on a call Tuesday that the pain was about to spike for everyday Americans.Senate Democrats have now voted 13 times to block a GOP funding bill because it does not include their separate demands on extending health care subsidies. But GOP leaders have refused to negotiate on the subsidies until the government reopens, leaving both parties in a bitter stalemate with no clear way out.Democrats have been unflinching in their stance, despite the looming Saturday deadline for the food aid. They argue that President Donald Trump has sought to “weaponize” the food assistance program, intentionally choosing not to fund the aid to pressure Democrats to yield.Fight over food aidShortly after the lawsuit was filed Tuesday, Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins told CNN that there isn’t enough contingency funding to cover SNAP benefits for November, which she said would cost about $9.2 billion.”As of today, that $9.2 billion, we don’t even have close to that in contingency funding,” Rollins said. “We’ve got to get this government open.”She added that “all it takes is a yes on a continuing resolution to keep the government going, and to send that (SNAP) money out to the states.”A so-called clean continuing resolution would extend government funding at current levels. But congressional Democrats have opposed that because Republicans haven’t agreed to negotiate on the expiring health care subsidies.The White House referred CNN to the Office of Management and Budget for comment on the lawsuit. An OMB spokesperson said in a statement that “Democrats chose to shut down the government knowing full well that SNAP would soon run out of funds. It doesn’t have to be this way, and it’s sad they are using the families who rely on it as pawns.”Democratic attorney general: ‘This is wrong’The Democratic-run states filed the lawsuit in Massachusetts federal court. Court records indicate the case was randomly assigned to District Judge Indira Talwani, an Obama appointee who was confirmed in a bipartisan and unanimous Senate vote in 2014.Congress approved $6 billion for a “SNAP-specific contingency fund” in the spending bill that averted a shutdown in March, the lawsuit notes. The lawsuit also points out that, as recently as September, the USDA website identified these funds as part of its plan to keep the food stamp payments flowing in case of a government shutdown.North Carolina Attorney General Jeff Jackson, a Democrat, accused the Trump administration of using SNAP benefits “to play shutdown politics” at a news conference Tuesday announcing his support for the lawsuit.”The truth is the department has the money,” Jackson said, adding, “They are looking to ratchet up the pain in an already painful moment. This is wrong, and it’s against the law.”

    A coalition of 25 Democratic-run states sued the Trump administration Tuesday to prevent billions of dollars of cuts to federal food assistance that are set to kick in this weekend.

    Democratic attorneys general and governors from 25 states and Washington, D.C., claimed in the lawsuit that the Trump administration was threatening “illegal” cuts to SNAP, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, commonly known as food stamps.

    The U.S. Department of Agriculture, which oversees the program for 42 million Americans, “cannot simply suspend all benefits indefinitely, while refusing to spend funds from available appropriations for SNAP benefits for eligible households,” the lawsuit claims.

    The Trump administration has argued it does not have the power to use that pot of existing money — known as its contingency fund — to cover the SNAP program beyond Saturday, because of the federal government shutdown.

    “The contingency fund is not available to support FY 2026 regular benefits, because the appropriation for regular benefits no longer exists,” officials in the Department of Agriculture wrote in a memo last week.

    The risk of tens of millions of Americans losing food aid has triggered intense anxiety across Washington, as the government shutdown nears the one-month mark.

    Top lawmakers from both parties acknowledge it would be the most significant impact of the shutdown to date, with House Speaker Mike Johnson privately warning his GOP members on a call Tuesday that the pain was about to spike for everyday Americans.

    Senate Democrats have now voted 13 times to block a GOP funding bill because it does not include their separate demands on extending health care subsidies. But GOP leaders have refused to negotiate on the subsidies until the government reopens, leaving both parties in a bitter stalemate with no clear way out.

    Democrats have been unflinching in their stance, despite the looming Saturday deadline for the food aid. They argue that President Donald Trump has sought to “weaponize” the food assistance program, intentionally choosing not to fund the aid to pressure Democrats to yield.

    Fight over food aid

    Shortly after the lawsuit was filed Tuesday, Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins told CNN that there isn’t enough contingency funding to cover SNAP benefits for November, which she said would cost about $9.2 billion.

    “As of today, that $9.2 billion, we don’t even have close to that in contingency funding,” Rollins said. “We’ve got to get this government open.”

    She added that “all it takes is a yes on a continuing resolution to keep the government going, and to send that (SNAP) money out to the states.”

    A so-called clean continuing resolution would extend government funding at current levels. But congressional Democrats have opposed that because Republicans haven’t agreed to negotiate on the expiring health care subsidies.

    The White House referred CNN to the Office of Management and Budget for comment on the lawsuit. An OMB spokesperson said in a statement that “Democrats chose to shut down the government knowing full well that SNAP would soon run out of funds. It doesn’t have to be this way, and it’s sad they are using the families who rely on it as pawns.”

    Democratic attorney general: ‘This is wrong’

    The Democratic-run states filed the lawsuit in Massachusetts federal court. Court records indicate the case was randomly assigned to District Judge Indira Talwani, an Obama appointee who was confirmed in a bipartisan and unanimous Senate vote in 2014.

    Congress approved $6 billion for a “SNAP-specific contingency fund” in the spending bill that averted a shutdown in March, the lawsuit notes. The lawsuit also points out that, as recently as September, the USDA website identified these funds as part of its plan to keep the food stamp payments flowing in case of a government shutdown.

    North Carolina Attorney General Jeff Jackson, a Democrat, accused the Trump administration of using SNAP benefits “to play shutdown politics” at a news conference Tuesday announcing his support for the lawsuit.

    “The truth is the department has the money,” Jackson said, adding, “They are looking to ratchet up the pain in an already painful moment. This is wrong, and it’s against the law.”

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  • Alan Sparhawk and Benjamin Booker Share Songs From New Refugee Benefit Compilation

    A new benefit compilation for charities supporting immigrants, refugees, and asylum seekers has corralled new songs from Dirty Projectors, Oneohtrix Point Never’s Daniel Lopatin, Tim Heidecker, Bonnie “Prince” Billy, William Tyler, Lambchop, Lonnie Holley, and many others. Passages: Artists in Solidarity with Immigrants, Refugees, and Asylum Seekers arrives December 5 via Western Vinyl. New songs from Alan Sparhawk and Benjamin Booker lead the record—listen to their contributions, “No More Darkness” and “A Place for Us,” below.

    The compilation beneficiaries are two Texas-based organizations: American Gateways and Casa Marianella. Each provides free or low-cost legal services, food, shelter, access to health care, and other essential services to immigrants, refugees, and asylum seekers. As well as contributing a track, Tim Heidecker will host a “live variety show and raffle/auction” on his call-in show Office Hours on December 4 to support the cause.

    The producers and organizers of Passages, Emilie Rex and Rick Alverson, prompted the contributors to write and record their songs in a place that feels like home. “Home, as we know it, is under threat,” they said in a press release. “When immigrants, refugees, and asylum seekers exercise their human right to safe passage, they defend our ability to do so—and our right to be and feel at home.” Rex and Alverson invite us “to join a local organization defending our neighbors, to call our representatives, to have those hard talks with our family members.”

    The album will come out on vinyl, as well as digitally, and a limited-edition version comes with liner notes by Jason De León and poetry from Ross Gay. Both editions feature photography by Greg Constantine and Reena Saini Kallat’s cover art, which you can see below. All labor costs involved in making the album were donated or separately fundraised, according to the press release. You can pre-order the LP via Bandcamp.

    Jazz Monroe

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  • Yaya Bey, Rosali, Font, and More Playing Abortion Access Benefit Concerts

    Yaya Bey, Rosali, Font, and More Playing Abortion Access Benefit Concerts

    Yaya Bey, Rosali, and Font are among the bands playing abortion access benefit concerts across the United States on Saturday, January 25, 2025. Proceeds from the shows go to Noise for Now. Organized by Ground Control Touring, the series takes place in Los Angeles, New York, Chicago, Atlanta, Philadelphia, Austin, Raleigh, and Washington, D.C., with a different lineup in each city.

    Guerilla Toss, Dazegxd, and Gift are among those on the New York bill; Yaya Bey will play in Washington, D.C.; Rosali in Raleigh, North Carolina; and Font in their native Austin, Texas. Cities across the country will host bands including Surfbort, Draag, Dazy, Mamalarky, Omni, Owen, and Tim Kinsella & Jenny Pulse. Check out the full schedule on the poster below.

    Back in March, Noise for Now put together the second volume of its compilation series benefitting independent abortion providers. Faye Webster, David Byrne, and the War on Drugs were among those to contribute.

    Jazz Monroe

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  • Phil Elverum Shares New Mount Eerie Song on Palestine Benefit Album

    Phil Elverum Shares New Mount Eerie Song on Palestine Benefit Album

    Phil Elverum has shared a new Mount Eerie song, “& Sun (Early),” as part of a compilation benefitting the Palestine Children’s Relief Fund (PCRF) and Palestine Legal. (All proceeds go to the charities.) Check out Merciless Accelerating Rhythms – Artists United for a Free Palestine below, with the Mount Eerie song at track three.

    Brooklyn label HateToQuit and the artist Hiding Places put the compilation together, also enlisting Little Wings, John Andrews & the Yawns, Magnolia Electric Co.’s Jason Evans Groth, and dozens more.

    In a press release, HateToQuit and Hiding Places quoted a poem by June Jordan:

    I plan to blossom bloody on an afternoon
    surrounded by my comrades singing
    terrible revenge in merciless
    accelerating
    rhythms

    The compilation organizers went on:

    These are the words of anti-apartheid artist, leader, and poet, June Jordan; we as Artists United for a Free Palestine see retaliation as a diversity of tactics; as mutual aid; as solidarity with the people of Palestine; as direct action, if necessary; as an immediate end to the Israeli Occupation Force and a Free Palestine, forever; as a liberated world. Our duty as artists has—and always will be—radical acts of care; the least we can do is send any aid possible to those facing genocide in Palestine, and money to folks on the frontlines of organizing action to get access to lawyers and legal support.

    Revisit 2019’s “Mount Eerie’s Phil Elverum Starts Over, Again.”

    Jazz Monroe

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  • Friends of Chef Keith “Buttons” Hicks Host Benefit Concert

    Friends of Chef Keith “Buttons” Hicks Host Benefit Concert

    Longtime North Texas culinary fixture Keith “Buttons” Hicks — a chef known for his infectious personality and joy — has made significant contributions to the community with his Southern cooking. Over the years, he’s helmed the kitchens at The Worthington Hotel, The Italian Villa, Mercury Chophouse, The Rim and his namesake restaurant, Buttons Food and Music for the Soul.

    Hicks is now battling end-stage COPD (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease). He is under palliative care and in need of a double lung transplant. His friends, family and current and former staff members are hosting a special concert and benefit dinner to show their support for the chef and his family.

    The Buttons Family Affair Benefit Concert event will take place from 5 p.m. to midnight on Wednesday, Jan. 31, at the Ridglea Theater, 6025 Camp Bowie Blvd. in Fort Worth.

    Tickets for the event range from $25 for general admission to $400 for VIP tables. Tickets can be purchased through Eventbrite. For those who cannot attend the concert, donations can be made through GoFundMe.

    Throughout his career, Hicks’ restaurants have been loved by guests and critics alike, which has given him a platform to give back to others.

    “We’ve hosted countless benefit events and celebrations at Buttons’ restaurant, due to our love and compassion for the community. I am asking the community to support Chef Keith by attending this benefit concert in his honor,” said Carolyn Hughes, a former co-owner of Buttons restaurant. “For so many years, he brought so much ‘Love, Peace and Gritz’ to each of our lives, and now he needs us.”

    Musical guests at the event will include many who have played at Buttons’ restaurants throughout the years, including Rob Holbert Band, Natural Change, Melanie Dutton, Paul Cannon, Kenya Crawford, Bergette Rideau, Lori Dawn and many more. Musical performances are set to begin at 6 p.m.

    Attendees can look forward to popular Southern appetizers from Buttons’ original menu that will be prepared by former Buttons chefs Billy Kidd and Ty Frazier. Food trucks will be stationed onsite to serve additional items, including Fat Face Full by Angie Edwards, Angi’s Louisiana Kitchen and The Rim Restaurant Waterside.

    For those who haven’t had the pleasure of knowingHicks, his infectious and joyful personality has been described in countless articles. In a 2016 article by KERA, the chef explained that “’Buttons’ was the nickname my grandmother gave me as a kid ‘cause I was cute as a button,” adding that for him, cooking is an intuitive and spiritual process that he learned from watching his mother.





    Danielle Beller

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  • Massive Attack, Fontaines D.C., and Young Fathers Announce Ceasefire EP for Gaza Relief Efforts

    Massive Attack, Fontaines D.C., and Young Fathers Announce Ceasefire EP for Gaza Relief Efforts

    Massive Attack, Fontaines D.C., and Young Fathers have teamed up for a limited-edition vinyl record to raise money for Doctors Without Borders’ aid in Gaza and the West Bank. The Ceasefire EP features music from all three bands and is available for pre-order. In addition to donating all the profits to the cause, the bands have called for a ceasefire and, as Fontaines D.C. put it, “a permanent end to Israel’s brutal occupation of Palestine” as nearly 20,000 Palestinians are confirmed killed in the current phase of the Israel-Hamas war.

    Massive Attack’s Robert “3D” Del naja said in a press release, “The hourly scenes of horror in Gaza, with hospitals and schools bombed to dust and innocent civilians, journalists, and doctors killed in unspeakable numbers has been made so much worse by more than ten weeks of abject political failure. We’re in awe of the Doctors Without Borders medics who place their lives on the line to help innocent civilians in Gaza. The Ceasefire EP is a tribute to them, and their incredible ongoing work in truly indescribable circumstances. We stand in solidarity with the people of Palestine.”

    The 12″ vinyl includes artwork designed by Del Naja, which can also be purchased as a large signed print. The reverse sleeve of the EP features the infamous words of Doctors Without Borders medic Dr. Mahmoud Abu Nujaila, who wrote the following message on a hospital whiteboard in Gaza last month before being killed in an airstrike by Israel: “Whoever stays until the end will tell the story. We did what we could. Remember us.”

    In October, dozens of high-profile musicians and entertainment celebrities signed an open letter urging President Joe Biden to call for a cease-fire in Gaza amid the Israel-Hamas war. Among those to call for an end to the bombing were Dua Lipa, Caroline Polachek, Michael Stipe, Run the Jewels, and Devonté Hynes.

    Nina Corcoran

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  • Mustafa Announces Benefit Show for Gaza and Sudan With Omar Apollo, Faye Webster, Clairo, and More

    Mustafa Announces Benefit Show for Gaza and Sudan With Omar Apollo, Faye Webster, Clairo, and More

    Mustafa has announced a New Jersey concert benefitting humanitarian efforts in Gaza and Sudan, with a lineup featuring Omar Apollo, Clairo, Faye Webster, and 070 Shake, among others. The Artists for Aid show is set for January 4 at Newark Symphony Hall, with all proceeds going to Human Concern International, which is working to secure the safe passage of aid from Egypt into Gaza and Sudan, among other initiatives.

    Completing the first set of announced artists are Nick Hakim, Daniel Caesar, Ramy Youssef, 6lack, Charlotte Day Wilson, and Mohammed El-Kurd.

    In announcing the concert, Mustafa wrote:

    We worked tirelessly to bring this to you, but our fatigue is not even a splinter of what we’ll be singing for.
    In the last few years I visited both my homeland, Sudan- & Palestine. My visit to both had a principal intention, to connect with artist communities, with young organisers- for parallels of sorrow and hope and faith.

    The violence in both nations seized the dream.

    Here it is revived for me in someway. The intention remains, on this evening we give our voices to make room for theirs.

    I want to thank each artist performing from the deepest part of me, for your time and effort. None of you hesitated when asked. We’ll remember.

    Jazz Monroe

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  • Four Tet Donates Vinyl Copy of Unreleased Album for Charity Raffle

    Four Tet Donates Vinyl Copy of Unreleased Album for Charity Raffle

    Four Tet has donated a vinyl copy of his unreleased album ⣎⡇ꉺლ༽இ•̛)ྀ◞ ༎ຶ ༽ৣৢ؞ৢ؞ؖ ꉺლ for Resident Advisor’s charity raffle. Some test pressings of the album were sent to fans, but, otherwise, it never received an official release. All proceeds for entering the raffle go to War Child, the organization that aids children living under global conflict. Enter the prize draw here.

    From November 25-26, Resident Advisor and War Child’s fundraising platform the Right to Dance will host an in-person charity record shop at All My Friends in London’s Hackney Wick neighborhood. Donations have been made by multiple artists and labels; find the list of participants below. The winners of the prize draw will be named on November 26. In addition to the Four Tet album, winners have the opportunity to win Audio-Technica turntables and gear.

    Read “Four Tet on His 155-Hour Spotify Playlist, the Coolest Thing on Streaming” on the Pitch.

    Evan Minsker

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  • Rosalía’s “Cherry Cola” Lip Combo Involves This Iconic Lip Tint

    Rosalía’s “Cherry Cola” Lip Combo Involves This Iconic Lip Tint

    As a beauty editor, I love seeing celebrities experiment with different makeup looks and aesthetics rather than commit to just one. It’s for that reason that I consistently check in on Rosalía’s Instagram and TikTok. One minute, the singer-songwriter is wearing blue eyeliner with a slicked-back braid. The very next, she’s wearing glossy lipstick with wet-look waves. She seems to take an experimental approach to beauty, and I, for one, love it. 

    With all that said, there’s still a certain element of her beauty routine that she keeps coming back to, and that’s her signature red-brown, glossy lip. To me, it’s the perfect example of the “cherry cola” trend, in which a nude or brown liner is paired with a cherry-red lip color and topped with gloss. Lucky for me, Rosalía recently shared a tutorial on TikTok, so now I know the exact products she uses to create her take on the trend. Keep scrolling to see them all. 

    Kaitlyn McLintock

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  • I Tried Tons of Brown Eyeliners to Bring You the Very Best 10

    I Tried Tons of Brown Eyeliners to Bring You the Very Best 10

    Much like black, brown eyeliner can be applied in a number of different ways. I personally love using a brown pencil or crayon for tight-lining my eyes. I angle the pencil upwards and apply it right into my lash line which helps to add subtle definition and creates the illusion of fuller lashes without it looking like I have any eyeliner on. If you’ve previously found black eyeliner over-powering, but tight-lining with a brown liner has a totally different result which you’ll probably find more flattering.

    “The great thing about brown eyeliner is that you don’t have to be too neat and if you want a smoky, smudgy look you can just use a pencil brush to blend,” says Clarkson. She also recommends tight-lining to start with, but for a bolder look she suggests dragging the brown liner into a wing whilst keeping your eyes open to add some extra shape. “If you feel like it adds too much product, instead of applying directly with the pencil, put a generous amount onto the back of your hand and use a small angled brush to apply along the lash line, building it up to your perfect amount.”

    Of course, brown eyeliners also come in felt tip pen applicators, which can be used for a more traditional thick line or cat-eye wing. Although this does require a steady hand (and cotton buds to clean up any mistakes!), any error in the shape will be much less noticeable than a black eyeliner would be. Plus, the overall effect will be more subtle.

    Grace Day

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  • Clairo Shares New Benefit Song “For Now”

    Clairo Shares New Benefit Song “For Now”

    Clairo has shared a new one-off charity single titled “For Now.” She released the song on her Bandcamp page yesterday (April 1), writing that all proceeds from the track will go toward For the Gworls and Everytown for Gun Safety. Listen to “For Now” below.

    For the Gworls is a Black, trans-led collective that curates parties to raise funds, which go toward Black transgender people who need assistance with rent, gender-affirming surgeries, doctor’s visits, travel assistance, and more. Everytown for Gun Safety is an organization has long worked to prevent gun violence through advocacy.

    Revisit Pitchfork’s 2019 profile “Clairo Has Something to Prove.”

    Madison Bloom

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  • Brittany Howard, Sheryl Crow, Hayley Williams Protest Tennessee Drag Ban With Love Rising Benefit Concert in Nashville

    Brittany Howard, Sheryl Crow, Hayley Williams Protest Tennessee Drag Ban With Love Rising Benefit Concert in Nashville

    Love Rising is an upcoming Nashville-based benefit concert in response to Tennessee’s new law banning drag performances on public property or anywhere children are present. It takes place March 20 at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville. The lineup includes Brittany Howard, Sheryl Crow, Maren Morris, Jason Isbell, Hayley Williams, Julien Baker, Amanda Shires, Brothers Osborne, Yola, Allison Russell, and more. Find ticket information below.

    Proceeds from the concert will go to Tennessee Equality Project, Inclusion Tennessee, OUTMemphis, and the Tennessee Pride Chamber in Partnership With Looking Out Foundation. Donations are currently being accepted by the Looking Out Foundation. The Tennessee Equality Project is encouraging the state’s resident to register to vote.

    “As a queer, intersectional artist and mother, raising my child in Nashville, it’s important to me to support these wonderful Tennessee LGBTQIA+ advocacy organizations, working so hard to build bridges, reduce harm and promote equality for all Tennesseans,” Allison Russell said in a statement. “LGBTQIA+ contributions and creativity are foundational to every genre of modern song and arts performance. I think it speaks volumes that so many in our community are feeling the same call to support, celebrate and uplift!” 

    “SB3/HB9 and SB1/HB1 are clearly targeted attacks on Tennesseans who haven’t done anything wrong,” Jason Isbell added. “These bills add up to an attempt to eradicate a valuable part of our community and force good people to live in fear. We can’t in good conscience just stand by and let that happen.” 

    All products featured on Pitchfork are independently selected by our editors. However, when you buy something through our retail links, we may earn an affiliate commission.

    Evan Minsker

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