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The very best of Time Out's rising coverstars
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Introducing DJ AG, Time Out’s 2024 Londoner of the Year
In the past month, DJ AG has amassed nearly 50 million views on Instagram and TikTok combined – but he assures me ‘it’s not about the numbers’ at least three times throughout our chat. Beyond the street shows and livestreams, he also performs in care homes and hopes to reach out to schools and rehabilitation centres, all so he can spread joy through music. Click to read more.
Introducing DJ AG, Time Out’s 2024 Londoner of the Year
DJ AG, whose real name is Ashley Gordon, is a 39-year-old Tottenham native who performs out on the streets of London. Recently, he’s garnered public attention for his star-studded, seemingly impromptu, sets. What AG is aiming to do goes far beyond the surprise guests on his music streams. It’s about building community through a platform. Meet Time Out’s Londoner of the Year, DJ AG. Click to read more.
Introducing DJ AG, Time Out’s 2024 Londoner of the Year
In the past month, DJ AG has amassed nearly 50 million views on Instagram and TikTok combined – but he assures me ‘it’s not about the numbers’ at least three times throughout our chat. Beyond the street shows and livestreams, he also performs in care homes and hopes to reach out to schools and rehabilitation centres, all so he can spread joy through music. Discover more about DJ AG, Time Out's Londoner of the Year, now.
Introducing DJ AG, Time Out’s 2024 Londoner of the Year
What DJ AG is aiming to do goes far beyond the surprise guests on his music streams. It’s about building community through a platform. Meet Time Out’s Londoner of the Year, DJ AG. Click to read more.
Will Sharpe: ‘You’re not watching a film if you’re watching it at home’
‘The White Lotus’ and ‘A Real Pain’ star is set on London Film Festival glory.
Will Sharpe: ‘You’re not watching a film if you’re watching it at home’
‘The White Lotus’ and ‘A Real Pain’ star is set on London Film Festival glory.
Will Sharpe: ‘You’re not watching a film if you’re watching it at home’
I lived in Japan until I was eight and then moved to Surrey with my family, there isn't any place that I’d 100 percent call home. But I feel like I know London. Having spent a few months in Budapest this year and returning to London definitely felt like: Oh yeah! There's a greyness and a greenness I always notice as I arrive in London. It always smells like it’s just rained, even if it hasn’t. That’s an essence of something feeling like home. Read what he had to say to Time Out about London, Olivia Coleman, and getting noticed on the Tube.
Will Sharpe: ‘You’re not watching a film if you’re watching it at home’
An actor in demand, Will Sharpe is here to chat about another trip to eastern Europe – his work on the Poland-set A Real Pain – and cast an eye back over a 15-year career that seems poised to go stratospheric. Read what he had to say to Time Out now.
Will Sharpe: ‘You’re not watching a film if you’re watching it at home’
'I never feel quite at the centre of anything. I always feel like there's a slightly peripheral perspective. When I’m in England I still feel like a Japanese version of an English person, and when I’m in Japan I definitely feel like a western version of a Japanese person.' - Will Sharpe Read the full Time Out interview now.
Will Sharpe: ‘You’re not watching a film if you’re watching it at home’
'Everybody has their own process, and as a director that’s one of the really exciting things about meeting different actors, seeing how they work and how they find their way into the story. Cobbling together a micro-budget feature film gave me a good sense of what everyone does on a production. We were the catering, the transport, the casting directors.' – Will Sharpe Read the star's full Time Out interview now.
‘It’s a full circle moment’: how the Sugababes are bringing yesterday back around
London’s OG pop royals are experiencing a heroic comeback. Mutya, Keisha and Siobhán tell Time Out how they got there.
‘It’s a full circle moment’: how the Sugababes are bringing yesterday back around
Maybe the cynics among you are thinking something along the lines of ‘Another noughties comeback? Who needs that?’. And, sure, Mighty Hoopla has a lot to answer for. But it genuinely feels like there’s something special about the Sugababes return. Perhaps that’s because, as Amar Ediriwira, creative director of Boiler Room says, so many artists are still inspired by them: ‘They're completely iconic in the British club space’. Perhaps it’s helped by Gen Z’s current revival of all things Y2K. (‘Oh my God, the big belts!’ says Buena, her gold tooth glinting as she laughs.) Or maybe it’s just thanks to it becoming increasingly normal for female pop stars to – shock, horror! – make music beyond the age of 29. You can find out more about the girls' return in their Time Out interview here.
‘It’s a full circle moment’: how the Sugababes are bringing yesterday back around
‘Every [band] has their reasons as to why they get back together,’ says Keisha Buchanan, with a long, thoughtful pause. ‘Our one was – it was not financially motivated – it was about a story that we felt hadn’t been really told properly and we felt like it was taken away from us, that our opportunity was taken away.’ Read the Sugababes full Time Out interview now.
‘It’s a full circle moment’: how the Sugababes are bringing yesterday back around
In a vast, empty roller disco in west London, Mutya Buena is posing atop a wooden box, like a statue. Neon light catches constellations of facial piercings dotted across her cheeks. Tattoos run up her arms and down her chest. She looks powerful, serene, regal even. Read what she, and her bandmates in the Sugababes, had to say of their 2023 comeback when Time Out caught up with them.
‘It’s a full circle moment’: how the Sugababes are bringing yesterday back around
‘It’s so weird,’ says Siobhán Donaghy. ‘Quite a few times since last summer, we’ve been met with hysteria.’ Read the Sugababes full interview with Time Out now.