Green Day, Super Bowl and Donald Trump
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Super Bowl, Trump and Bad Bunny
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This time it’s personal. Bruce Springsteen seethes with righteous fury on his dramatic new protest song, Streets of Minneapolis, his voice dripping with disdain as he calls out “King Trump’s private army” in “a city aflame” fighting “fire and ICE / ‘Neath an occupier’s boots.
This isn't the first time Trump has used a Queen song to promote himself. The band objected to his use of "We Are the Champions" at his Republican National Convention speech in 2016, and in 2019 they blocked a video of a Trump rally set to the tune of "We Will Rock You."
President Donald Trump didn't take too kindly to Bruce Springsteen's new anti-ICE protest song on Thursday, flaming "Streets of Minneapolis" through a White House spokesperson as "random," "inaccurate" and "irrelevant" hours after the music legend dropped a music video highlighting violent protests in the city.
Nicki Minaj earns a new Billboard hit as her years-old track "Hard White" debuts on two genre-specific digital song sales charts in the United States.
The song, released Wednesday, describes how “a city aflame fought fire and ice ’neath an occupier’s boots,” which Springsteen calls “King Trump’s private army.”
Brian May fires back at Trump.