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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.
Adam Levine Doesn’t Care If You Like Him (But He’d Really Prefer That You Did)
You might know Adam Levine Or his band, Maroon 5, singers of the catchiest white-people music of our time. Or maybe you’ve seen him on The Voice, where he is the unrepentantly bro-y coach with the groomed stubble. Maybe you even own some music—chances seem good, since people have downloaded more Maroon 5 songs than songs by Justin Timberlake or Jay Z. Chances are also good that you find him strangely uncool. Because, well, there’s just something about him, and he knows it
*Adam Levine wrote this headline. See what we mean about being self-aware?
“Okay. Let’s get into this: What are the characteristics of a douchebag?” says Adam Levine, pushing aside the remains of his egg-white omelet. We’re sitting at Blu Jam, a diner near where he lives in the nondescript Los Angeles suburbs. We’ve been discussing his role in Begin Again, the new movie musical in which he plays a character kinda like Adam Levine: a talented, ambitious indie musician who, after achieving mainstream success, starts acting a little bit like a, well…you know. “Let’s define this,” says Levine, turning on that twinkly-eyed smile, the one that has brought many a groupie to her knees. At 35, Levine’s face is still boyish, the biceps peeking out of his red Hawaiian shirt formidably toned. Later someone will post a sneaky cell-phone photo of this exact moment on Twitter, and a fan will comment: “Damnnn.”
“A douchebag is a really specific thing,” he says. “Okay?”
The waiter comes over.
“We’re talking about douchebags,” Levine tells him.
“Oh, okay,” the waiter says. “That’s a long conversation.”
“No shit!” Levine says. “I just said the same thing.”
Adam Levine is one of the biggest pop stars in the country, if not the world. Along with his band, Maroon 5, he’s responsible for some of the most ubiquitous earworms of the past decade, songs like “This Love” and “Moves Like Jagger,” one of which you’re probably humming right now just by virtue of having read the words. His enthusiastic coaching of aspiring singers on The Voice has made Levine a household name. He has his own microphone-shaped fragrance and a clothing line at Kmart selling faster than you can say “Coachella-inspired,” and he has deployed his considerable personality to sell acne medication, smartphones, and of course, his own music. In 2012, 5 million people downloaded Maroon 5’s “Payphone,” a fact that is especially impressive when you consider most of them probably don’t even know what a pay phone is.