Tag: Katy Perry

  • All Time Low Brings Pride Power to Warped Tour DC with LGBTQ+ Marching Band and Cheer Squad

    All Time Low Brings Pride Power to Warped Tour DC with LGBTQ+ Marching Band and Cheer Squad

    All Time Low turned up the volume on Pride and punk this weekend, making a powerful statement with drums, pom-poms and rainbow spirit at the Vans Warped Tour’s epic 30th anniversary return. During their headlining set at the RFK Festival Grounds on Saturday, June 14, the pop-punk legends teamed up with two Washington, D.C.-based groups: the American University Cheer Squad and DC’s Different Drummers, a nonprofit LGBTQ+ marching band. It was a high-octane, high-emotion performance that blended music, movement, and meaningful allyship.

    A Pride Month Surprise to Remember

    Known for their anthemic hits and devoted fan base, All Time Low didn’t just perform, they transformed the stage into a visual and sonic celebration of love, inclusion, and queer joy. With the cheer squad hyping up the crowd and DCDD’s drumline and color guard powering through choreographed routines, the band’s 14-song setlist, including hits like “Dear Maria, Count Me In,” “Weightless” and “Monsters,” became more than a show. It was a Pride Month moment that demanded to be felt.

    “When we started planning out the set, we threw out the idea, how cool would it be to have a marching band join us on stage?” frontman Alex Gaskarth told the crowd. “Once we connected with DC’s Different Drummers, it instantly felt right. With it being Pride Month, and with everything happening politically in D.C. and across the country, this just felt unbelievably appropriate.”

    All Time Low made a powerful Pride Month statement at Warped Tour DC with an LGBTQ+ marching band and cheer squad.
    Photo: Vans Warped Tour
    All Time Low made a powerful Pride Month statement at Warped Tour DC with an LGBTQ+ marching band and cheer squad.
    Photo: Vans Warped Tour
    All Time Low made a powerful Pride Month statement at Warped Tour DC with an LGBTQ+ marching band and cheer squad.
    Photo: Vans Warped Tour

    Music as a Beacon of Visibility

    With anti-LGBTQ+ legislation continuing to mount across the country, the decision to feature queer performers during one of the biggest sets of the festival wasn’t just thoughtful, it was bold. By sharing the stage and the spotlight, All Time Low used their platform to amplify queer voices in a city at the heart of so much political tension.

    “There are so many people right now who feel alienated or like they don’t belong, and that’s a horrible way for anyone to feel,” Gaskarth said. “This was our way of showing support and uplifting a community that’s supported us for so many years.”

    The performance was both a call to action and a celebration, proving that joy can be resistance and music can be a megaphone for unity.

    Warped Tour’s Legacy of Loud, Proud Rebellion

    This year’s D.C. stop marked a milestone for the Vans Warped Tour, which originally launched in 1995 and quickly grew into the largest traveling music festival in North America. The tour has long served as a launchpad for emerging acts and a hub for progressive causes, including LGBTQ+ visibility and youth mental health.

    Over the decades, Warped Tour hosted acts from Blink-182 and No Doubt to Eminem and Katy Perry. It wasn’t just about the music, it was about building a culture where self-expression and community came first. And in that spirit, All Time Low’s Pride performance felt like a homecoming for the kind of inclusivity the tour helped foster.

    Whether you were there moshing at the barricade or cheering from the back, Saturday night’s set was a reminder: punk isn’t dead, and neither is hope.

    @cinis.cinerem

    And look where I am 🥹 #warpedtour #vanswarpedtour #alltimelow #musicfestival #warped #atl #rock #washingtondc

    ♬ original sound – ✨𝓐𝓼𝓱✨

  • Meg Stalter’s Space Spoof of Katy Perry Steals the Show After All-Female Blue Origin Launch

    Meg Stalter’s Space Spoof of Katy Perry Steals the Show After All-Female Blue Origin Launch

    The space flight may have lasted just 10 minutes, but the memes? Infinite.

    While Katy Perry and Gayle King’s suborbital journey with Blue Origin sparked headlines and social chatter, it was comedian and queer icon Meg Stalter who truly launched the internet into orbit. Her Instagram spoofs poking fun at the brief space trip quickly became the highlight of the post-flight buzz, proving once again that no one parodies pop culture quite like Stalter.

    A Starry Flight Becomes a Meme Magnet

    Blue Origin’s all-female space crew included singer Katy Perry, CBS Mornings host Gayle King, Nobel Peace Prize nominee Amanda Nguyen, aerospace engineer Aisha Bowe, film producer Kerianne Flynn, and Lauren Sánchez—Bezos’ fiancée and Blue Origin executive, who also piloted the mission.

    The flight, which lasted a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it ten minutes, crossed just past the Kármán line—the internationally recognized edge of space—before gently returning to Earth in a capsule that landed in the West Texas desert. While Blue Origin positioned the mission as a historic moment for women in space, the internet had other ideas.

    Enter Meg Stalter: Meme Queen of the Galaxy

    Never one to miss a moment, Meg Stalter took to Instagram shortly after the flight to share a spoof that had fans howling. In one video, she impersonated Katy Perry singing a hilariously offbeat rendition of Vanessa Carlton’s A Thousand Miles—with giggles, awkward pauses, and signature Stalter-style quirky chaos.

    “If I could fly… to Saturn or Mars, Do you think… I could touch the sky?” she crooned, surrounded by sparkly filters and dramatic lighting. The video was instantly reposted across social platforms, solidifying Stalter’s bit as the unofficial encore of the space launch.

     

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    In another clip, she dialed up the absurdity with a mock livestream as “Katy Perry” reporting back from her brief cosmic adventure. Cue a hilariously off-key version of What a Wonderful World by Louis Armstrong—followed by an unhinged interpretive dance to Perry’s own song, WOMAN’S WORLD.

    Naturally, fans declared her the “true star of the launch.”

     

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    Katy, Gayle, and the Ground-Kiss Heard ’Round the World

    While Stalter dominated the comedy circuit, the flight still delivered a few meme-worthy moments of its own. After the capsule’s landing, both Katy Perry and Gayle King dramatically dropped to kiss the ground—a moment quickly turned into a meme for everything from “Monday mornings” to “surviving Mercury retrograde.”

    Footage of Gayle King hesitantly approaching the rocket before takeoff also went viral, with viewers calling her energy “deeply relatable.”

    Meanwhile, Jeff Bezos himself reportedly took a bit of a tumble while hurrying to greet the crew post-landing. Though it appears the astronauts missed it, the internet most certainly didn’t.

    Critics Raise Eyebrows, but the Internet Delivers

    Despite the lighthearted tone, the flight wasn’t without criticism. Some questioned the value of such brief missions, especially during a time of global crises. Others debated whether a 10-minute suborbital hop even qualifies as “space travel.”

    But for many, that conversation took a back seat to the entertainment value—led by Stalter’s pitch-perfect parody. It’s clear: space tourism may be serious business for Jeff Bezos, but for the rest of us, it’s meme fuel.

    And if Blue Origin keeps sending celebrities into the cosmos, we can only hope Meg Stalter keeps spoofing them back to Earth.