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Red Pill Blues is the sixth studio album by Maroon 5. It was released on November 3, 2017, by 222 and Interscope Records. The title of the album refers to the science fiction term of taking the red pill or the blue pill, which originated from the 1999 sci-fi film The Matrix. The album is the follow-up to their fifth studio album V (2014) and features guest appearances from ASAP Rocky, SZA, LunchMoney Lewis and Julia Michaels.
Supermodels Alessandra Ambrosio, Adriana Lima, Anne Vyalitsyna, Behati Prinsloo, Candice Swanepoel, Doutzen Kroes, Erin Heatherton, Lily Aldridge, Lindsay Ellingson and Miranda Kerr get a thumbs up from Adam Levine as they put their own spin on ‘Moves Like Jagger’. To watch Maroon 5 perform it, tune in for the 2011 Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show, November 29, 10/9c on CBS.
“She Will Be Loved’ @ Hands All Over Tour 2011 in Moscow, Russia – November 27
A little more than a month ago, Maroon 5 lead singer Adam Levine made a political statement. Well, sort of: he called Fox News “evil” and demanded his music never be played on the network again. Predictably, it took less than 24 hours for Maroon 5 to be blasting from the speakers at Red Eye, and host Greg Gutfeld hasn’t forgotten the incident, as evidenced by his comments on the singer in his new interview with the LA Times.
Gutfeld’s profile is mostly a look at his career up to now– from from men’s magazine editor to Fox News host, and the excitement of being on a network that defies the “terrible sameless” he considered prevalent elsewhere in cable news. He calls those who “whine about Fox News” “hypocrites”: “they say they’re totally tolerant, but when they run into someone who doesn’t share their assumptions, they say, “Fox News is evil, and it must be stopped.”
Which brings us to Levine, whose courage in the face of adversity was an inspiration to Gutfeld:
You had quite a cyber tiff last month with Adam Levine, when he tweeted that he wanted Fox News to stop playing his music.
I have to say that Adam Levine is truly a daring young man to go on Twitter to bash Fox News. He’s so rebellious, so subversive. I mean, for a musician, seriously, could you find a more predictable stance than that? He’s as edgy as a hacky sack, which also describes his music. So I went on there basically to lower the bar of discourse. If he’s going to rag on Fox News, I’m going to make stupid jokes about him.
Levine didn’t respond to the initial barb, but with enough prodding, this feud could easily reach Chris Brown proportions. But it is clearly an incidental diversion to Gutfeld, who also went on to describe his duties over at The Five, a show he called “the greatest job.” The interview also goes on to discuss his online beginnings at the Huffington Post and why he rarely has “celebrities” on Red Eye (the short answer: he doesn’t want them).
from a fire escape and flipped over by cars, has his head slammed repeatedly against a door, and generally gets a solid ass-kicking—all at the hands of a beautiful, manic temptress. But what really catches the eye in the video for Maroon 5‘s “Misery” is Levine’s muscular yet catlike physique.
The 32-year-old singer, who is also a judge on NBC’s The Voice, owes that body to a mix-and-match yoga regimen he practices at home, at the recording studio, and on the road. “At any Maroon 5 concert, you’ll see a room backstage marked yoga,” he says.
Living the plugged-in celebrity life in Los Angeles, Levine was aware of the yoga scene but initially kept his distance, turned off by what he calls “the cheesy clichés.” But he began to worry that his gym routine was a dead end, hurting more than it helped: “Weights made my neck thick, and I would be like, ‘I’m turning into a monster!'” As he grew increasingly frustrated by lower-back pain and tight hips and hamstrings, he decided to give yoga a try. That was five years ago, and Levine hasn’t lifted a weight or entered a gym since. “Yoga takes what you have and molds and sculpts it, which is a much more natural way to look and feel,” he says.
Credit Levine with a refreshing candor about the aesthetic payoff:
“I don’t like how people bullshit about how yoga is not about vanity.” Not that he doesn’t appreciate the spiritual benefits—Levine sees his routines as a therapeutic antidote to the distortions of his career. “Playing a show before thousands of people is a highly unnatural state,” he says, “and when I get on the mat to do an hour of yoga before the show, I come out physically relaxed.”
The man behind Levine’s transformation is veteran New York City yoga instructor Chad Dennis. At a friend’s suggestion, Levine met him for a session, and within months Dennis was traveling with Maroon 5. On tour, he puts Levine through daily routines that draw from a variety of yoga schools. Sometimes the poses are slow and repetitive: “For me, that’s a form of meditation,” Levine says. Other times they are muscle-quiveringly difficult: “He’ll take me on a friggin’ obstacle course of yoga.” All of it, he says, adds up to “an investment in happiness for the rest of my life.”
Adam Levine’s publicist has shot down reports the Maroon 5 frontman and Christina Aguilera were involved in a fight during rehearsals for the American Music Awards.
The pair has faced gossip suggesting they do not get along since signing up as judges on TV talent show The Voice. They swiftly silenced the speculation by recording the hit song Moves Like Jagger, which they performed at the awards ceremony.
However, rumors of a feud returned after Aguilera reportedly snubbed Levine’s request for a hug and stormed off stage while they prepared for their performance.
A source tells New York Post gossip column PageSix, “At the end of the number, Adam went to hug Christina in a friendly fashion, but she pushed him away, gave him a dirty look and stormed backstage.”
But Levine’s spokesperson has quickly rebuffed the report, insisting it is “100 percent not true.”