Entertainment
Lizzo Dominates ‘SNL’ and Inspires with Her Bold Humor, Music—and Empowering Health Journey
Published
6 months agoon
ORLANDO, Fla. (FNN NEWS) – Lizzo lit up the Saturday Night Live stage on April 12, 2025, returning as both host and musical guest for a night filled with high-energy performances, razor-sharp humor, and heartfelt authenticity. But beyond the laughs and show-stopping vocals, the Grammy-winning artist is making headlines for another reason: her inspiring and transparent health journey.
Opening the show with her signature blend of sass and sincerity, Lizzo kicked things off by poking fun at her own public image. “We’re gonna break the record for the amount of times ‘bitch’ is said on live TV!” she joked, setting a cheeky and confident tone. She even called out her mom in the audience, playfully adding, “Sorry, Mom.” Her openness and charm had the crowd hooked from the jump.
Taking the stage for her musical sets, Lizzo debuted a medley of new tracks from her upcoming album Love in Real Life, including “Love in Real Life” and “Still Bad.” Dressed in a cropped tee with the word “TARIFFIED” emblazoned across the front—a bold jab at former President Trump’s tariff policies—she reminded audiences that her performances aren’t just entertaining, they’re empowering. Later, she changed into a shirt that read “BLACK WOMEN WERE RIGHT”, continuing to drive home themes of visibility and truth.
As always, Lizzo wasn’t afraid to turn the jokes on herself. Addressing social media rumors with her usual humor, she quipped, “They think I’m collecting One Direction members like Infinity Stones,” drawing laughs and proving, once again, that she knows exactly how to own the narrative. She even revisited her viral TikTok about being pregnant with actor Chris Evans’ baby—because of course, she did.
But what made this SNL appearance even more powerful was the context of her evolving health and wellness journey. Over the past year, Lizzo has been incredibly open about what she calls her “weight release”—a phrase she prefers over “weight loss.” She’s been focused on her physical and mental health, not just appearance, and has been sharing her transformation with fans in a refreshingly honest way.
By January 2025, she had reduced her body fat by 16% and lowered her BMI by over 10 points. But she’s been clear: her journey has nothing to do with outside expectations. It’s about how she feels in her own skin. Her regimen includes strength training, Pilates, walking, jump rope, and a steady calorie-deficit diet—done with intention, patience, and self-love. She’s even shut down rumors about taking weight-loss drugs, doubling down on her commitment to transparency and wellness on her own terms.
In a recent Instagram post, Lizzo shared a mirror selfie in workout gear, writing:
“I did it. Today when I stepped on my scale, I reached my weight release goal. I haven’t seen this number since 2014! Let this be a reminder you can do anything you put your mind to. Time for new goals!”
Her words resonated deeply with fans, not just because of the number on the scale, but because of what it represents—perseverance, self-respect, and the kind of joy that comes from real, internal transformation.
Lizzo’s SNL performance was more than just another stop on the promo tour. It was a celebration of who she is today: an artist in control of her voice, her body, and her message. She’s not only shaping pop music—she’s reshaping the conversation around health, beauty, and empowerment.
From high-octane hits to health milestones, Lizzo is giving us all a reason to cheer. And as she said onstage, with that megawatt smile and unstoppable energy: “Here we goooo!!”
Let’s go, indeed.
_________________________________________________
Kareen Kennedy is the Assistant Editor for Florida National News
kareen.kennedy@floridanationalnews.com
Entertainment
After the Airing: What Jimmy Kimmel’s Soaring Ratings Really Reveal
Published
4 days agoon
October 3, 2025
ORLANDO, Fla. (FNN NEWS) – The numbers are in, and they speak louder than Jimmy Kimmel’s monologue.
More than 6.2 million people tuned in to Jimmy Kimmel Live! on the night of his return: the highest single-night viewership the show has pulled in over a decade. That’s not just impressive; it’s exceptional for a late-night program in today’s fragmented media environment.
But to read this as a mere “ratings win” for Kimmel would miss the real story. What the numbers actually reflect is a surge of public momentum driven not by promotion, not even by controversy alone, but by audience power. This wasn’t about the man with the microphone. It was about the people on the other end of it.
It’s clear now that this wasn’t just an act of viewership, it was a collective show of force. The audience didn’t just watch Kimmel’s return; they validated it. They turned a late-night broadcast into a national media moment, forcing the issue back onto the cultural agenda through sheer participation.
What makes this more than a one-night bump is the way the episode resonated beyond TV. The monologue was clipped, reposted, debated, and dissected – generating tens of millions of views online within hours. The broadcast became a viral node not because of shock value, but because people felt invested in what it represented.
For ABC, this moment underscores both the reward and the risk of public responsiveness. Yes, controversy generated attention but it was the threat of losing consumer trust that truly moved the needle. The spike in ratings proved that viewers weren’t bluffing. Their voices weren’t just loud, they were measurable.
Whether the show sustains those numbers in the weeks ahead remains to be seen. But the September 23 ratings event wasn’t about longevity. It was about leverage. And in this case, the viewers — not the network, not the advertisers, not even the host — held it.
The night will be remembered not for what was said behind the desk, but for what millions of viewers shouted through their actions: we are watching and we expect to be heard.
__________________________________________
Kareen Kennedy is the Assistant Editor for Florida National News
kareen.kennedy@floridanationalnews.com
Entertainment
Sanford, Florida’s Rising Star: Yoshihannaa Aims to Turn Heads on The Voice
Published
4 days agoon
October 3, 2025
ORLANDO, Fla. (FNN NEWS) – The spotlight is bright, but for Sanford-raised vocalist Yoshihannaa, also known as Yoshi, it’s nothing she can’t handle. As a contestant on Season 28 of The Voice, she’s not just chasing a dream — she’s proving that soulful artistry, grit, and heart can’t be boxed in by geography, grief, or genre.
Though now based in Atlanta, Yoshihannaa’s story is deeply rooted in Central Florida. Family, faith, and community performances shaped her early years.
“I had to stop waiting for someone else to sing my words. The time came to sing them myself.”
As the author of this article, I have had the personal pleasure of witnessing her humble beginnings, performing alongside a pianist at Sunday brunches at the Bohemian Hotel in Orlando. Even then, her voice captivated the room, hinting at the star she was destined to become.
Before the cameras turned on, before her blind audition aired, Yoshi had already lived the kind of story that makes for great music: joy, loss, rebirth. Her emotional original track, “Rainbow Ribbon,” was written as a tribute to her late grandmother — a pivotal moment that pushed her from songwriting behind the scenes into the artist spotlight.
“I realized I had to stop waiting for someone else to sing my words,” she’s shared in interviews. “The time came to sing them myself.” That moment of clarity now resonates with every note she delivers on national television.
Yoshi isn’t new to the hustle. She’s written for others, performed across East Coast cities, and already has original music streaming on platforms — a rarity for many contestants who step into The Voice for their first big break. Her style blends old-school soul with modern edge, drawing comparisons to Jazmine Sullivan, H.E.R., and Anita Baker — all influences she proudly names.
But what sets Yoshi apart is the weight behind her performance. There’s polish, yes, but there’s also pain, praise, and purpose in her tone. She doesn’t just sing — she ministers.
In Sanford, where pride in local talent runs deep, Yoshihannaa’s rise is being watched with full hearts and full volume. Fans are organizing voting parties, sharing her clips, and reposting her audition with pride. For a community often overshadowed by Orlando’s glittering entertainment industry, Yoshi is a reminder that stars grow quietly — in church pews, backyard showcases, and late-night writing sessions.
Her supporters aren’t just hoping she wins — they’re saying she’s already a success, not because of celebrity, but because she’s representing Sanford with grace, authenticity, and soul.
As she advances through the competition, the stakes rise — but so does the excitement. Whether she walks away with the crown or not, Yoshihannaa has already claimed something more lasting: visibility, validation, and a seat at the table.
For those who doubted her? The voice speaks for itself.
Kareen Kennedy is the Assistant Editor for Florida National News
kareen.kennedy@floridanationalnews.com
Entertainment
Say Her Name: Solange Is Building a Legacy That Can’t Be Erased
Published
4 days agoon
October 3, 2025
ORLANDO, Fla. (FNN NEWS) — Solange. Say her name — not as an echo of someone else’s spotlight, but as a cultural architect in her own right. In an era when Black history, literature, and expression are under political assault, Solange Knowles is doing more than creating — she’s preserving, protecting, and passing on the richness of Black and Brown voices through her newly launched Saint Heron Digital Archive Library.
This isn’t performance. It’s preservation. And it’s revolutionary.
The Saint Heron Digital Archive, introduced earlier this month, is a free-to-access library offering rare, out-of-print, and first-edition books by Black and Brown authors. Curated seasonally by guest archivists, the archive includes works that often fall outside traditional institutions — titles you won’t find on bestseller lists, and stories at risk of being forgotten. Books are shipped free of charge to U.S.-based borrowers, rooted in trust, care, and cultural responsibility.
“This archive isn’t just about reading — it’s about reclaiming. Reclaiming our stories, our access, and our power.”
At a time when diversity programs are being dismantled, educational curricula are being whitewashed, and books by marginalized authors are being banned across states, Solange’s project is a powerful act of resistance. The archive isn’t just about cataloging the past — it’s about securing our future.
Solange is no stranger to creating outside the lines. Through her Saint Heron platform, launched in 2013, she’s long nurtured voices that challenge convention — visual artists, designers, architects, poets, and now, literary giants and unsung storytellers. The digital library is a natural extension of her curatorial legacy.
This isn’t just about reading — it’s about reclaiming. Reclaiming the narratives that institutions ignore. Reclaiming access to knowledge. Reclaiming space for the voices that shaped our world but were rarely given the mic.
And Solange is doing it on her terms.
No big rollout, no celebrity co-signs. Just quiet, radical intention. An offering to the culture, from the culture. In her own words, this archive is about “preserving collections of creators with the urgency they deserve.” That urgency is real — because books are being banned. DEI is being defunded. History is being rewritten. And Solange is saying: not on my watch.
The Saint Heron Digital Archive is more than a library — it’s a cultural sanctuary. A refusal to let our stories disappear. A reminder that while others try to silence, we document. We protect. We amplify.
So yes — say her name. Not as a footnote. Not as a comparison. But as a leader, a visionary, and a steward of Black memory in a time when remembering itself is a radical act.
Solange.
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Kareen Kennedy is the Assistant Editor for Florida National News
kareen.kennedy@floridanationalnews.com
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April 16, 2025 at 9:14 pm
Lizzo’s presence on SNL was electric—not just for the music and laughs, but for how openly she shares her personal health journey. It’s refreshing to see someone in the spotlight embracing vulnerability and self-love so unapologetically. That kind of visibility matters, especially for people navigating similar paths.