- China shrugs off new Trump tariffs but bruising trade war looms
- Is it Beyonce's time? Music's A-listers ready for the Grammys
- Chappell Roan: the splashy pop supernova
- Trump unveils sweeping US tariffs on Canada, Mexico, China
- US unveils sweeping tariffs on Canada, Mexico, China
- Ex-Charlie Hebdo artist wins top prize at comics festival
- Trump tariff deadline looms, Canada told levies coming Tuesday
- Trump tariff deadline looms over Canada, Mexico, China trade
- Horst Koehler, German ex-president and IMF chief, dead at 81
- Pre-Grammys gala honoring the Grateful Dead focuses on fire relief
- Tradition and technology sync at China 'AI temple fair'
- Taliban govt-run corporation takes over luxury Kabul Serena hotel
- Benin seeks home-grown cotton 'revolution'
- A 'city-killer' asteroid might hit Earth -- how worried should we be?
- Philadelphia plane crash marks a second US aviation disaster
- OpenAI chief says it needs new open-source strategy
- Neymar signs for Santos
- US charges former Fed official with spying for China
- Meta mulling incorporation shift to Texas: report
- Scientists cast doubt on famous US groundhog's weather forecasts
- World's longest cargo sail ship launched in Turkey
- TikTok king Khaby Lame joins UNICEF as goodwill ambassador
- Stock markets mostly gain at end of turbulent week
- Stock markets gain at end of turbulent week
- Calls for UK govt to allow bird flu vaccines for poultry
- Offshore wind power giant Orsted changes CEO
- South Korea, Ireland watchdogs to question DeepSeek on user data
- Trio of rare tiger cubs spotted in Thai national park
- Stock markets close out turbulent week with gains
- South Korea watchdog to question DeepSeek over user data
- Kenya's Ice Lions skate to win on East Africa's only rink
- World awaits Trump tariff deadline on Canada, Mexico and China
- Samsung operating profit hit by R&D spending, fight to meet chip demand
- Japan records biggest jump in foreign workers
- Asian markets mostly rise but worries over tariffs, AI linger,
- Investigators recover plane black boxes from Washington air collision
- 'No happiness': Misery for Myanmar exiles four years on from coup
- Ghosts of past spies haunt London underground tunnels
- Chipmaker Intel beats revenue expectations amidst Q4 loss
- Key nominees for the Grammy Awards
- Beyonce leads Grammys pack at gala backdropped by fires
- Samsung Electronics posts 129.85% jump in Q4 operating profit
- French luxury billionaire sparks tax debate with threat to leave
- Apple profit climbs but sales miss expectations
- Washington midair crash: What we know so far
- Marianne Faithfull: from muse to master
- Trump blames 'diversity' for deadly Washington airliner collision
- Merkel slams successor over far-right support on immigration bill
- Stock markets firm on ECB rate cut, corporate results
- Mexican economy shrinks for first time in three years
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Chappell Roan: the splashy pop supernova
Camp queen, queer icon, a searing yet irreverent songwriter with cascading vocals: Chappell Roan has soared to pop's upper echelons on a singular blend of vulnerability and high-production performance that has earned her legions of fans.
Her supersonic ascent has made the musician from Missouri with a waterfall of red curls one of the leading contenders at the Grammy Awards on Sunday, with six nominations, including in all four major categories.
Her over-the-top theater kid persona, complete with wildly lavish costumes and high-drama makeup that nods to drag culture, made her an unstoppable force on the festival circuit.
And since then, the 26-year-old has since been truly inescapable -- on TikTok, the radio, streaming, late-night shows and, eventually, a viral media cycle over her lukewarm support of presidential candidate Kamala Harris that proved, in case anyone doubted it, just how big she'd gotten.
In an industry thirsty for "moments," it seemed like Roan was a rare bird who appeared out of nowhere.
But she'd actually been hustling for a decade -- making music while working odd jobs, handling mental health struggles and coming into her own.
- Midwest Princess -
Born Kayleigh Rose Amstutz on February 19, 1998 in Willard, Missouri, Roan threw herself into the arts while never quite finding her social footing, and grappling with weighty emotions she would eventually learn were symptoms of bipolar disorder.
Her YouTube performances earned attention, and she moved to Los Angeles -- but then home again after Atlantic Records dropped her amid the early days of the pandemic that left the music industry reeling.
But before she was cut loose, Roan dropped "Pink Pony Club," a track that years later would blossom as one of her smash hits.
Dan Nigro, the heavyweight producer who worked with Roan at Atlantic, reconnected with her in 2021, and the years-long build-up to her soaring takeoff began in earnest.
For several scrappy years, she worked odd jobs, amassed followers on TikTok, underwent therapy to treat her unpredictable condition and finished her debut album.
Roan -- whose stage name pays homage to her late grandfather Dennis Chappell and his favorite song, "The Strawberry Roan" -- released her bold, vulnerable album "The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess" in 2023 to critical praise.
On it, she delves into themes of sexuality and yearning with a pop-forward, dance-heavy beat and impressive vocals that one critic characterized as "singing in cursive."
Her standalone single "Good Luck, Babe!" and the cheerleader-inspired dance number "Hot to Go!" found enormous audiences.
She thrived on TikTok but Roan wasn't only magnetic online: it was her extravagant presence onstage -- she did New York's Governors Ball dressed as the Statue of Liberty after arriving in a huge apple bong -- that cemented her superstar status.
- Growing pains -
Roan's phenomenal rise has come with a price: she has spoken out about fame's growing pains that have left her exhausted and at times afraid of aggressive fans.
During a set over the summer, she broke down in tears, telling fans she felt "a little off today" over her career's breakneck pace.
She says many of her fellow artists have reached out with sympathy, including Elton John -- who comically called her from an unidentified number 11 times before she answered and realized it was him, she told Rolling Stone.
"I was telling him I was struggling a lot, and he said, 'If you need to stop, say stop,'" she said.
Roan, who grew up in a conservative, Christian household, isn't shy about speaking out on topics from trans rights to supporting the Palestinian cause, but does not want to be pigeon-holed for her progressive politics.
She also has sung of queer love, and eventually came out as a lesbian this past summer.
But, in an industry that finds a marketing angle wherever possible, she insists on "being taken seriously outside of" her queerness.
"Look, I love being gay. I just don't want to talk about it every second of every day," Roan told Rolling Stone.
X.Cheung--CPN