It’s Monday, November 17, 2025, and last week’s trending TikTok audios gave us all the nostalgic feels! Throughout the week, we continued to see a rise in RAYE’s ‘Where The Hell Is My Husband?’ which we definitely used on our own accounts a few times. We’re heading into this new week hoping for some fresh hits from our faves and nostalgic tracks we haven’t heard in forever!
Here are the viral trending TikTok audios we’ve been obsessed with this week.
‘Ain’t It Fun’ By Paramore
Hayley Williams and Paramore have proved time and time again that their music is simply timeless. While we’re streaming Hayley’s new album, Ego Death at a Bachelorette Party, we’ve been hitting rewind on our favorite Paramore tracks, including ‘Ain’t It Fun.’ We’ve been seeing it being used up and down our FYP, and we couldn’t be happier!
Showcasing all our favorite things on TikTok and IG reels is what we live for. Use this popular 70’s song, ‘Just What I Needed,’ on your next video of your favorite thing – it could be your favorite new lip gloss, a new album you’ve been loving, your local Friday night pizza spot, or even just a cute shot of your puppy! We wanna see it all!
‘4 Minutes’ By Madonna (Feat. Justin Timberlake & Timbaland)
2008 was the birth year for all the best pop songs! Every now and again, ‘4 Minutes’ by Madonna resurfaces on TikTok and all the baddies come out to play. Put on your favorite going-out dress and strut with your friends with this trending audio. Bonus points if you’re also a Justin Timberlake and Timbaland fan (I mean, who isn’t?).
‘You’ll Always Find Your Way Back Home’ By Miley Cyrus
Hannah Montana songs trending in 2025? Yes, yes, yes! Whenever we’re feeling nostalgic, we always return to Hannah Montana: The Movie and our favorite tracks from Miley Cyrus‘s iconic career as Hannah. ‘You’ll Always Find Your Way Back Home’ hits home (no pun intended) every time. To see this song on our FYP has warmed our hearts, and we’re definitely making our own video soon!
Again, nostalgia is certainly a theme this week on our FYPs. Kesha’s ‘Blow’ has found its way onto our feed, and let’s just say it’s resurfaced our 2010 girl crush. We’ve always been huge Kesha fans here in the hive, and have been supporting her every step of the way since we were in middle school. ‘Blow’ has always been one of our favorite OG Kesha songs – which 2000s Kesha songs do you still listen to?
That’s a wrap on this week’s trending TikTok audios! Have you participated in any of these trends? If you do, make sure you tag us on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook.
Billy Ray Cyrus ‘Secrets’ Out … Shares Birthday Song From Miley!!!
Published
Billy Ray Cyrus currently has no “achy breaky” family drama with daughter Miley Cyrus … proving this to be true by releasing the sweet birthday song she wrote for him.
The country legend was just about beaming while sharing a snippet of the unreleased single, titled “Secrets,” which was penned and performed by Miley — oh, and featured Billy’s favorite band, Fleetwood Mac.
Snippet of Miley Cyrus’ new song “Secrets” coming soon, featuring instrumentation by Fleetwood Mac!
Miley’s dad Billy Ray posted the snippet and revealed that she wrote the song for him as a birthday gift. pic.twitter.com/OYKRXSawEE
Take a look, Billy filmed himself sitting in a field and listening to the new track, which he played on his phone. BRC looked beyond thrilled by the new anthem, bobbing his head and smiling repeatedly while listening to his daughter belt out her tune.
Billy further praised Miley on Instagram for giving him “the gift of music,” declaring his love for the “Hannah Montana” alum.
Miley previously discussed the song earlier this summer, when she appeared on Monica Lewinsky‘s ‘Reclaiming’ podcast in July. As MC explained at the time, Billy served as the inspo for the song — since she wanted to be a safe space for her dad’s, you guessed it, secrets.
Reclaiming with Monica Lewinsky
She added … “I wanted to be the one he felt safe enough to tell me the things that were damning and damaging to the family. But I wanted him to think that, as a middle child, I’m old enough to take some of that.”
Miley and Billy Ray have had their highs and lows over the years … with Miley even leaving her dad out of her “thank you” speech at the 2024 Grammys.
The drama didn’t take a “wrecking ball” to their relationship, however — they’re clearly doing OK these days!!!
Courtney Stodden is ditching all reminders of her ex-fiancé Chris Sheng … and, absolutely shockingly, that includes tossing her massive engagement ring down the toilet.
Check it out … Courtney records herself as she casually declares she’s doing some spring cleaning around her Brentwood, CA home, and then grabs the diamond sparkler out of her jewelry box and holds it over the toilet.
She proves she means business by dropping the rock — 5 carats large, BTW — into the water, and flushing without hesitation!
Clearly mocking her ex, Courtney adds … “I guess diamonds aren’t always a girl’s best friend after all.”
TMZ broke the story in July 2023 … Courtney decided to call off her engagement with Chris after 7 years together, with sources telling us jealousy and insecurities plagued the relationship ahead of the split.
Courtney was previously married to actor Doug Hutchison … but their 2011 nuptials sparked controversy as she was only 16 at the time. They divorced in 2020.
Courtney has since moved on with Emmy-winning Hollywood producer Jared Safier, who she quietly began dating last summer. Sources tell us Courtney’s romance with Jared is going strong … as it’s “moving very fast and is very serious.” We’re told Jared is looking to propose soon and has been telling his family and friends he’s been ring shopping recently.
This explains why Courtney decided to toss out an old reminder of Chris.
Courtney herself tells TMZ … her ring toss was inspired by James Cameron‘s “Titanic.” She explains, “Like the little old lady who dropped it into the ocean in the end [of Titanic], I needed to rid myself of any remanence from the past that no longer had any hold on me. Rose’s character taught me something special – what a woman does with her diamonds is her prerogative.”
Her bottom line is clear … “Out with the old and in with the new.”
Elle Darlington has all the makings of your classic popstar: a whimsical, dynamic vocal range, the songwriting prowess to make any song an instantaneous pop hit, and a high-energy aura that’s both contagious and compelling.
Similarly to the rest of the world, Darlington started uploading her music to TikTok during lockdown – where we found a fresh way to discover artists without the help of a label. From there, it didn’t take long for the world to fall in love with Elle Darlington, who amassed over 1.1 million followers thanks to her song covers.
In October of 2023, a few short years after Darlington’s college tutor suggested she start posting her music online, she released her debut single, “wish you would.” Reminiscent of pop-diva greats like Mariah Carey and Ariana Grande, Elle Darlington entered the music scene swinging (even hitting insane whistle notes).
“wish you would” displays her dreamy voice and ear worm-y lyrics that send me back to the early 2000’s. Her voice is glamorous and her music hits the sweet spot between nostalgic and completely, utterly unique. In terms of debut singles, it’s hard to craft one as astonishing an introduction to an artist as “wish you would.”
Since then, Elle Darlington continues to prove she is bringing back the era of the popstar. Following up with a refreshing holiday song, “Christmas Is You”, Elle often nods to Mariah Carey’s iconic “All I Want For Christmas Is You” as her go-to Christmas jam.
And then there’s her latest release, “hiatus”, which blends pop and R&B almost seamlessly. A song about needing a break from someone who isn’t good for you anymore, “hiatus” is yet another immaculate contribution to Darlington’s discography. You can listen to “hiatus” below.
What makes Elle Darlington different isn’t the features in magazines like Peopleand Rolling Stone, or the record deal with Columbia Records…but the effortless talent that just exudes from her, the way the term “popstar” can be thrown into the mix and no one will bat an eye. Because some people just have the It Factor, and she’s one of them.
As she takes the world by storm, I got the chance to speak with Elle Darlington about her new singles, what comes next, and much more. Check it out below!
PD: You’ve been studying music your whole life. Who were your inspirations growing up and how did they influence your career?
My first awakening into music was watching Hannah Montana when I was super young. The show was what first introduced me to ‘pop stars’. I wanted to be like her so bad! As I grew up a little I was obsessed with Rihanna, Beyonce, and Ariana Grande.
PD: Your career took off on TikTok, where you began posting covers and gathered a following. Did you have a plan when going on the app? What kind of covers are your go-to?
No! I had no expectations, it was actually a tutor at my college who suggested I start uploading videos. I made my account for fun in lockdown to keep myself busy and it grew from there. I like to keep my videos spontaneous so there’s isn’t much planning involved. I do love to cover a power ballad though!
PD: Your debut single, “Wish You Would”, came out in October. After working on this project for over two years, what have you learned about yourself as a songwriter so far?
I need to write about true experiences. It took a while to become comfortable opening up to people so that my songs could reflect my life and my vision. Once I learned how to channel my emotions it made the process way easier for me and I really feel like the more genuine I am, the more people can relate to my songs.
PD: You have an amazing way of storytelling. If you had one piece of advice for those starting out, what would it be?
Don’t be afraid of what people are going to think of you. Everyone starts somewhere! And trust your gut, if you believe in it, go for it.
PD: Your new song “Hiatus” is coming out in February. What was the inspiration behind it?
“hiatus” came from a relationship where I was feeling really unappreciated and had to learn to put myself first and walk away. I hadn’t heard the word put into a song before and I thought it was a really interesting way to talk about a breakup.
PD: What is one thing you want your audience to take away from your music?
I want my audience to connect my music with whatever they’re going through. Sing along to it, cry along to it.. anything it makes them feel really!
PD: What’s next for you in 2024?
I can’t wait to show everyone all the different things I’ve been working so hard on over the past couple of years…so lots of music to be released in 2024! and hopefully a lot of live shows too.
Chilli is officially a grandma at 53 ’cause her son, Tron Austin, has just welcomed his first child with his wife, Jeong Ah Wang!
Tron — whom the TLC singer shares with her ex, Dallas Austin — made the big announcement Saturday … sharing a sweet IG snap of his newborn daughter and his wife, right from the hospital in Seoul, South Korea.
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He wrote … “On this day March 2nd, 2024 at 1:59pm 6.173 LBS/2.8kg an angel from heaven was born our beautiful daughter LUA婁娥) we are officially parents!!”
Tron also shared that Jeong had to undergo an emergency C-section a few days earlier than her expected due date, sending their anxiety levels through the roof. But he gushed that despite the challenges … his wife courageously powered through to bring their healthy and beautiful baby girl into the world.
Tron and Jeong shared their pregnancy news back in September, revealing they’d been on quite the fertility journey to get to this point … and now, you can tell they’re proud parents.
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Jeong went through a laundry list of procedures — two HSG procedures, a hysteroscopy, having both her tubes and scar tissue removed from hernia and appendicitis surgeries, one egg retrieval and a heartbreaking miscarriage. The hardships were clearly worth it in the end!
As of right now, Tron’s mama Chilli hasn’t said anything publicly about her granddaughter just yet, but she’s probably soaking up every moment with her newest family member.
In the spirit of “close-up videos” that have come before, including Sinéad O’Connor’s “Nothing Compares 2 U,” Gwen Stefani’s “Used to Love You,” Selena Gomez’s “Lose You To Love Me” and even Madonna’s “Love Don’t Live Here Anymore” (with its slow tracking shot eventually leading to a close-up on M’s face), Miley Cyrus intends for her audience to know she means Serious Business with the earnest simplicity of the Jacob Bixenman and Brendan Walter-directed video for her latest single, “Used to Be Young.”
For those who would rightly balk at Cyrus effectively branding herself as “old” at thirty, one need only look back at all the venomous flak Madonna got (and gets) for continuing to be a successful pop star into her thirties (and well beyond). Told to pack it in and cover up, Madonna refused to do anything of the kind. Indeed, despite all the barriers she broke down for women like Cyrus to continue into their “old” age, female pop stars are still keenly aware of the tick of the clock when they enter their thirties. Even someone as theoretically “untouchable” and “failproof” as Taylor Swift knows that “nothing gold can stay.” Which is why she commented to Jimmy Fallon on The Tonight Show, about a month from her thirty-third birthday, that she was a geriatric pop star. Therefore, amazed that she can still break all these records as she told Fallon, “It’s like, you know, I’m thirty-two. So we’re considered geriatric pop stars.” Both Swift’s and Cyrus’ sense of “jocularity” about aging in the pop arena is meant to mask an inherent fear about “losing their job” as a result of losing relevancy.
As Swift put it in 2020’s Miss Americana, “It’s a lot to process because we do exist in this society where women in entertainment are discarded in an elephant graveyard by the time they’re thirty-five. Everyone’s a shiny, new toy for, like, two years. The female artists that I know of have reinvented themselves twenty times more than the male artists. They have to…or else you’re out of a job. Constantly having to reinvent, constantly finding new facets of yourself that people find to be shiny… This is probably one of my last opportunities as an artist to grasp onto that kind of success. So I don’t know, like, as I’m reaching thirty, I’m like, ‘I want to work really hard, um, while society is still tolerating me being successful.’” In that sense, evermore‘s “tolerate it” could also be about society still “tolerating” her success. And oh how they’ve been tolerating it with the Eras Tour. The massive, arena-hopping juggernaut that has found Swift ramping up her parasocial relationships as Cyrus seeks to shirk live touring altogether. And yes, Cyrus received quite a bit of backlash for comments she made in a British Vogue article from earlier this year, during which writer Giles Hattersley described, “Cyrus was known to give everything on tour. She would perform for hours, take requests, not quit that stage until she was pretty sure every single person had had the night of their lives, swaying to ‘We Can’t Stop,’ bouncing to ‘Party in the USA,’ shedding a tear to ‘The Climb.’ Now she’s not sure she can do it anymore; certainly not in the foreseeable. He then quotes Cyrus as saying, “It’s been a minute. After the last [headline arena] show I did [in 2014], I kind of looked at it as more of a question. And I can’t. Not only ‘can’t,’ because can’t is your capability, but my desire. Do I want to live my life for anyone else’s pleasure or fulfillment other than my own?”
The answer appears to lie somewhere between yes and no, as she still works hard to please the fans. This latest single released so soon after her album, Endless Summer Vacation, being a case in point. And it seems she was planning “Used to Be Young” for a while, as she also mentioned it in that British Vogue article from May. Appropriately, it came up after she recounted how “a songwriter came to her with a track” that prompted her to say, “It was like, you know, the standard fucked up in the club track. And I was like, ‘I’m two years sober. That’s not where I spend my time, you know. You’re more likely to catch me and my friends literally walking through rose gardens or going to a museum… It’s not about being self-serious. I’m just evolved.” Hattersley then concludes, It inspired her to write a different song. She hopes to release it soon, she explains, as she recites a line from it to me, her eye contact steady, her voice calm. ‘I know I used to be crazy,’ she says. ‘I know I used to be fun. You say I used to be wild. I say I used to be young.’”
Of course, to some, this comes across as though Cyrus is essentially saying you become boring and banal after your twenties, a trope that, quite honestly, doesn’t need to be reemphasized. Least of all to the already highly age-discriminatory Gen Z (see: the “Young and Beautiful” TikTok trend), which seems to have no awareness that their own “jig is up” fate as Alpha comes up the rear on “youth supremacy.” Then again, once everyone becomes a humanoid, perhaps age really will be rendered immaterial. In the meantime, Cyrus continues the tradition of confirming that one can only be “wild” in their youth (at least, “acceptably wild” anyway, for to continue that behavior into later years amounts to what we see on Britney Spears’ Instagram). Thus, she offers the staid, understated video for “Used to Be Young,” during which her figure cuts through a black space to approach the camera wearing a red sequined leotard with a white sleeveless Mickey Mouse shirt peeking out of the top. This being an obvious nod to her Disney days as Hannah Montana. The girl she ultimately had to kill over and over again with the type of wild behavior she also addresses on songs like “D.R.E.A.M.” (Drugs Rule Everything Around Me). Addressing it once more here, Cyrus appears to do it with a greater sense of gravity as she feels as though her youth is “spent” for real this time, whereas before she was merely talking about being “old” from the still-naive perspective of her twenties. But again, we apparently need to reiterate that being in one’s thirties isn’t old either. Even though Cyrus’ Disney star contemporary, Selena Gomez, also seems to feel that way if we’re to go on her comment about being “too old” for social media.
But maybe there is something to why these pop stars who are still actually young tend to feel so old by their thirties. It’s a wizening lifestyle, after all. Even though you’re supposed to keep looking young no matter how old you feel—this belying the adage, “You’re as young as you feel.” If that’s true, no wonder Cyrus feels positively decrepit. Cyrus’ examination of age and it occasionally being “nothin’ but a number” were also apparent on 2017’s country twangin’ “Younger Now,” during which she claimed, “I feel so much younger now.” Six years later, that’s evidently no longer the case, with Cyrus both mourning and welcoming the loss of her youthful rebellion. This shining through as she gives Claire Danes a run for her “crying face” money right from the outset of the video, realizing that she’s “left [her] living fast/Somewhere in the past/‘Cause that’s for chasing cars/Turns out open bars/Lead to broken hearts/And going way too far.” This is something many a pop star has had to learn the hard way over the years, especially if they came of age in the 00s. Just look at Britney Spears, Lily Allen (who once sang vis-à-vis a woman approaching thirty, “It’s sad but it’s true how society says her life is already over”) or Amy Winehouse—the latter of whom didn’t even survive the follies and wildness of her youth. All three women were endlessly dragged through the tabloid mud for their “exploits,” though if they were men, such behavior would have been par for the course.
At the one-minute, eighteen-second mark of the video, a crack of light starts to appear as the doors to the soundstage part. As though to symbolically indicate there’s some positivity to growing “old.” Even for a pop star. For one thing, it means more leeway with creative expression, ergo the ability to release a song like this. With its frank subject matter and sparse piano instrumentation thanks to co-production from Cyrus, Michael Pollack and Shawn Everett, something about its intonation might also remind listeners of “Never Be Me” from 2020’s Plastic Hearts. A song that shows Miley, only two years ago, insisting that she could never be “stable” or “faithful.” Two qualities that are decidedly associated with being “old” a.k.a. mature. But maybe Miley could be those things now that she’s decided to relinquish the wildness of her past. Or so she says.
However, knowing Miley (and pop stardom), it’s more likely she’ll flip-flop again to echo what MARINA sang on 2015’s “Can’t Pin Me Down”: “You ain’t got me sussed yet/You’re not even close/Baby, it’s the one thing/That I hate the most/All these contradictions pouring out of me/Just another girl in the twenty-first century/I am never gonna give you anything you expect/You think I’m like the others/Boy, you need to get your eyes checked, checked/You can paint me any colorAnd I can be your clown/But you ain’t got my number/No, you can’t pin me down.”
And, as fellow “geriatric” pop star Taylor Swift mentioned, preserving one’s career as a female pop star depends on that kind of “elusiveness.” As she sardonically phrased it in Miss Americana, “Be new to us, be young to us, but only in a new way and only in the way we want. And reinvent yourself, but only in a way that we find to be equally comforting but also a challenge for you. Live out a narrative that we find to be interesting enough to entertain us, but not so crazy that it makes us uncomfortable.” Nonetheless, Cyrus might actually be making people too uncomfortable with all this talk of age and time passing. Decidedly “unsexy” topics in the realm of pop stardom. Even when you’ve had bouts as a rock and country star embedded within that framework.