Punk rock legends Social Distortion, Good Riddance, and Terror have all returned with new tunes, Aussie acts Same Pains and Mudrat are dropping their best, and Joshua Redbeard shares his absolute ...
A legendary punk rock band is going on tour to celebrate its first new album in 15 years. Social Distortion announced its 2026 tour dates beginning in August, including two nights Sept. 11-12 at the ...
In good voice: Ness was in the middle of making the new album with Social Distortion when in June 2023, he was diagnosed tonsil cancer. As the album play-through demonstrated, and Gurewitz also noted, ...
Social Distortion will release Born To Kill on May 8, 2026, their first studio album in 15 years and the first since Mike Ness’ recovery from cancer.
The affable Swede on how he got his big break in Six Feet Under, the amps that make him feel “terrible” about his playing, ...
Social Distortion has announced a new album called Born to Kill.The eighth studio effort from the punk vets is due out May 8. You can listen to the title track and watch its accompanying video ...
Social Distortion have announced a new album titled Born To Kill, the legendary punk act's first album in 15 years. Hear the title track.
Neal Mohan at Made on YouTube 2024 (Photo Credit: Dave Kotinsky/Getty Images) YouTube is not a social media app, lawyers for the video streaming platform said in Tuesday opening arguments, kicking off ...
The world's biggest social media companies face several landmark trials this year that seek to hold them responsible for harms to children who use their platforms. Opening statements in one such trial ...
The app said in opening statements that it was more of an entertainment platform. The lawsuit claims social media companies design products that cause personal injury. By Eli Tan and Cecilia Kang Eli ...
Lawyers for a now-20-year-old woman argued that addictive features harmed her mental health as opening statements began Monday in a landmark trial against Meta and YouTube, the first of hundreds of ...
YouTube's CEO Neal Mohan is the latest in a line of tech bosses who have admitted to limiting their children's social media use, as the harms of being online for young people have become more evident.