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Best Celebrities New Year Eve 2020 Outfits! (Justin Bieber, Billie Eilish, Nicki Minaj, Cardi B...)

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Justin Bieber and wife Hailey Baldwin are ringing in the New Year by each other’s sides.

The "Sorry" singer, 25, and model, 23, spent their second New Year’s Eve as a married couple together, posing for a series of celebratory photos that showed them embracing and Baldwin wearing a “Happy New Year” headband.

In one particularly sweet shot, the pair share a big smooch to celebrate the beginning of 2020, with Baldwin captioning it, “Please be my New Years kiss even when I’m 80!”


Earlier in the day, Bieber also revealed a new trailer, as well as the title and release date, for his upcoming 10-part docu-series on YouTube Originals called Justin Bieber: Seasons. The episodes will air on Mondays and Wednesdays on YouTube starting Jan. 27.
In a basement recording studio in her home neighborhood of Highland Park, Billie Eilish was thinking about climate change and the end of the world, and how she might well live to see it.

“It’s weird,” said the 17-year-old electro-goth singer, one of the biggest and most important pop acts to emerge in a generation. “It feels like we’re living in a movie that you’d watch where the world is like ending. We could stop it, but we’re not going to because everybody’s too lazy.

“But listen,” Eilish said, her toxic-green hair and macabre sweatshirt looking ominous as she leaned back in her studio chair. Her mother, Maggie Baird, nodded along from an adjacent couch.


Nicki Minaj's 2008 mixtape Sucka Free is hardly comparable to her most recent record, Queen. The 2010s had yet to hit the then-25-year-old Minaj; a line from her cover of Biggie Smalls' "Dead Wrong" sticks out as both a triumph and an omen: "First they love you, then they switch/ Yeah, they switch like f*****s."

Related | PAPER's Top 10 Songs of the '10s

It was a set-up for ten years' worth of career ups and downs, but throughout the '10s, Minaj always had her Barbz. One of the more reactive fan groups, they've never left her side. Their loyalty has defined a musical era; the "first they love you, then they switch" line is incidental if not comical now, her wayward Queen Radio rants are practically scripture, and her ego has become part of her allure.


The husband and wife rappers are settling down in a stunning mansion in Atlanta with baby Kulture.

Rappers Cardi B and Offset have had quite the ride since they first met somewhere around three years ago.

Between their secret marriage, the birth of their first child together and his infidelities, a lot of drama has surrounded the couple — and they certainly doesn't shy away from sharing intimate details of their relationship with the public, especially on Instagram and Twitter.


Offset, 28, whose real name is Kiari Kendrell Cephus, grew up in suburban Gwinnett County, Georgia. He, his cousin Quavo and his nephew Takeoff formed hip hop and trap group Migos, aka the Migos, in 2008.

During an interview with Rolling Stone in early 2018, he confessed that he was interested in Cardi B before they even met, sharing how he'd watched her career takeoff: “I was like, ‘Damn, I am on her!’"

Born in Manhattan and raised in the Bronx to a Dominican father and Trinidadian mother, Cardi B, 27, whose real name is Belcalis Marlenis Almánzar (Cardi is a play on rum brand Bacardi), left her days as a stripper behind her after she gained popularity through viral posts on Instagram and Vine. In 2015, she joined the cast of VH1's "Love & Hip Hop: New York," which she left in December 2016 to pursue a career as a solo artist in music.

Offset asked his publicist to set up a dinner with Cardi B and a few other women, and a romance between the two was born.



The domino effect that Minaj managed to set off with "Super Bass" cannot be understated or undervalued; a Nicki feature on a radio-impacting track was suddenly the hottest commodity in the industry, and there's a paper trail of evidence to support it. From Madonna's "Give Me All Your Luvin" and Big Sean's "Dance A$$," to Britney Spears' "Till the World Ends" remix and Drake's "Make Me Proud," the 2011 exchange rate for a Minaj verse skyrocketed in the wake of "Super Bass" mania.

Hot on the heels of something big, mid-2012 apocalypse phenomenon and at the kickoff of EDM's tightening grip on the industry, Minaj struck pop-rap gold again with "Starships." The rise of the six-times platinum single off of her sophomore album Pink Friday: Roman Reloaded, was not without incident, however. Minaj was met with Facebook-era backlash over the abrasive "Stupid Hoe," a cut from the sophomore album which keyboard critics pegged as an exemplar of the general public's decaying taste in music. "Stupid Hoe" was never meant to be compared to prose-like songs, though, and a criticism of that caliber against a similarly repetitive song by today's standards — say, Doja Cat's "Juicy" — might be called out as misogynistic.

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