Thursday, May 7, 2026

Dave Grohl reveals real reason he changed Foo Fighters album name

Dave Grohl changed the name of the Foo Fighters' latest album to avoid comparisons to Wicked: For Good. The...

Latest Posts

FLO take the party to a deeper place with new album Therapy At The Club

FLO are officially entering a new era, unveiling their second studio album Therapy At The Club, which arrives July 24.

BTS’ 50,000-strong ARMY turn out at Mexico City for historic presidential palace visit

More than 50,000 fans packed into Mexico City’s Zócalo Square as BTS made a balcony appearance at the Presidential Palace following a...

Sir Paul McCartney explains first ever duet with Sir Ringo Starr

Sir Paul McCartney has explained how he came to record his first ever duet with his former Beatles bandmate Sir Ringo Starr.

What is the ‘exhilarating’ change Def Leppard have made to enhance their lives?

Def Leppard frontman Joe Elliott has told of an "exhilarating" change the band have made to their recording process, and the group...

Chiwetel Ejiofor felt unrepresented in the UK

Chiwetel Ejiofor thinks its "shocking" he had to go to America to find work.

The 43-year-old actor insisted "non-representation" is an issue in the UK and he was unable to find the support or roles he was looking for in Britain so had to set his sights further.

He said: "Look, I know what non-representation feels like, as do so many black people in this country. To walk into a room and not see anyone who looks like you?

" I had to go to America to get the work I wanted, rather than get the support and work I wanted in the UK and that, to me, was shocking. Shocking."

The ‘Old Guard’ actor also reflected on feeling "other" when growing up in east London.

He told the new issue of GQ Hype magazine: "I also know what it feels like to be considered ‘other’. I grew up in the 1980s in Forest Gate, East London.

"Back then there was what is termed in America this notion of white flight – inner city, once predominantly white communities becoming more diverse. Let’s just say where I lived in the East End the white community wasn’t going particularly quietly.

"At times I remember I would have to come home from school through National Front marches, with my father holding my hand as we’d bolt across the road. I know what lack of representation means.

"I know how it can fester and build ideas of the ‘other’, how it can create xenophobia and what that feels like… a fear of the stranger. So am I optimistic? Yes… Yes, I am. Just cautiously so."

While Chiwetel is hopeful for the future, he warned it will take several lifetimes to completely eradicate racism and it won’t happen until white people get involved in making change.

He said: "Anti-black racism has been one of the fundamental parts of modern history in the Western world. It is baked into the cake of the occidental world in a way that few other things are. It’s like the flour in the cake.

"And this anti-black racism is heightened by colonialism and by the slave trade. So the profitability of black and brown bodies has become essential to how the West has worked.

"Dismantling these systems is the work of several lifetimes – my life, yes, but also those that come after me.

"The thing is it is very difficult to do this. All these systems need to survive is a sort of apathy from the white community.

"This is why these white supremacist power systems continue to be considered the norm.

"The white people, whether they’re good natured or whether they’re not, will by and large let it run. They won’t get involved. They won’t care about it enough.

"So, yes, white people will turn and say, ‘Oh, this is a terrible thing. Systematic racism is awful, isn’t it?’ but unless those same white people actually start to get involved, then the system will stay. This is why education is so important."

Read the full feature online at GQ Hype https://www.gq-magazine.co.uk/culture/article/chiwetel-ejiofor-interview-2020

Latest Posts

FLO take the party to a deeper place with new album Therapy At The Club

FLO are officially entering a new era, unveiling their second studio album Therapy At The Club, which arrives July 24.

BTS’ 50,000-strong ARMY turn out at Mexico City for historic presidential palace visit

More than 50,000 fans packed into Mexico City’s Zócalo Square as BTS made a balcony appearance at the Presidential Palace following a...

Sir Paul McCartney explains first ever duet with Sir Ringo Starr

Sir Paul McCartney has explained how he came to record his first ever duet with his former Beatles bandmate Sir Ringo Starr.

What is the ‘exhilarating’ change Def Leppard have made to enhance their lives?

Def Leppard frontman Joe Elliott has told of an "exhilarating" change the band have made to their recording process, and the group...

Don't Miss

Tyla eyes PinkPantheress collab as she gushes over working with Zara Larsson

Tyla is already eyeing her next dream collaboration — and PinkPantheress is at the top of the list — as she reflects...

Spice Girls still eyeing Glastonbury as Mel C says ‘it’s electric’ when all five are together

Melanie C says Spice Girls playing Glastonbury would be “the pinnacle” as she reflects on the group’s enduring chemistry.

HUNTR/X’s Rei Ami Says Coachella collab With KATSEYE was ‘a beautiful meeting of girl power’

HUNTR/X star Rei Ami has opened up about the viral Coachella moment that saw the singing voices of the KPop Demon Hunters...

ROSALÍA crowned The Ivors’ International Songwriter of the Year as LUX Mania Sweeps the UK

ROSALÍA will be crowned International Songwriter of the Year at The Ivors 2026 with Amazon Music. The Spanish superstar...

Stranger Things star Finn Wolfhard announces new album Fire From The Hip

Finn Wolfhard will release his second solo album this summer. The Stranger Things star, 23, dropped debut LP Happy...

Stay in touch

To be updated with all the latest news, offers and special announcements.