Error loading page.
Try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading.
Learn more about possible network issues or contact support for more help.

Rolling Stone

May 01 2021
Magazine

No one covers the people, politics and issues that matter (now more than ever) like Rolling Stone. Your source for all the breaking news coverage, exclusive interviews with influential people, music trends, hot album and movie reviews, must-read rock star profiles and in-depth national affairs reporting you rely on in the magazine. An annual term to Rolling Stone is currently 12 issues. The number of issues in an annual term is subject to change at any time. Get Rolling Stone digital magazine subscription today for cutting-edge reporting, provocative photos and raw interviews with influential people who shape the scene and rock the world.

Rolling Stone

Love Letters & Advice

Lucy Dacus Remembers Everything • Few in indie rock can write an emotional gut punch like her, but that’s not all she’s about

Stairway to Bootleg-LP Heaven

The Ultimate Sound at Home • Headphones, speakers, turntables, and more of the best new audio tech

Healing Us Softly With Her Song

RS Charts • THE BIGGEST ARTISTS, ALBUMS, AND SONGS OF TODAY

2021 Music Docs Breakdown

How Lil Yachty Got His Second Act • Five years ago, the rapper garnered the title ‘King of the Teens’ — and a lot of criticism. Today, he’s a mentor and a mogul

Eric Church • The country superstar on his new triple LP, getting back on the road, and why you can’t go half Meat Loaf

The Trouble With MeidasTouch • The brothers behind the breakout anti-Trump PAC are the golden boys of the #Resistance, but when ‘Rolling Stone’ took a look beneath the surface, their response turned Trumpian

Issa Rae Can’t Stop, Won’t Stop • She brought a singular voice to TV with Insecure. Now Hollywood’s queen of comedy is building an empire

The Year That TV Saved Us • As life outside our homes shut down, the small screen became our treasured path to a much-needed safe escape

The Magic of “Wandavision” • Inside the making of the year’s biggest, boldest show — a superhero sitcom mash-up that explores grief, trauma, and the beating hearts of Marvel’s complicated men and women in tights

The New Adventures of Old TV • THESE DAYS, TV SHOWS DON’T DIE — they just sit around and wait for their reboot. Networks think, ‘Why risk something new when you’ve got a built-in fan base?’ The past year has seen a whole crop of reboots and revivals announced. Here are a few we’re most anxious to see.

The Good Thief of “Lupin” • Behind the scenes of Netflix’s electrifying crime-caper sensation out of France — a series that’s given us television’s most charming new antihero

Hollywood’s Not-So-Easy Rider • On TV, Justin Theroux is great at being difficult. In real life, the ‘Mosquito Coast’ star couldn’t be happier

Barry Jenkins Finds Hope “Underground” • The Oscar-winning director on tackling the brutality of slavery in America through his limited-series adaptation of the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel ‘The Underground Railroad’

The 50 Best Sitcoms of All Time

Phife Dawg Forever • He was the Everyman at the heart of A Tribe Called Quest. Five years after his death, his family and friends unveil his final album and celebrate his legacy

The Fort Bragg Murders • At least 44 Fort Bragg soldiers died stateside in 2020 — several of them were homicides. Families want answers. But the Army isn’t giving any

Prisoners and the Pandemic • Elderly, locked up, and at risk — the life and death of the incarcerated during Covid

Music

Movies

Marianne Faithfull • The vocal legend on the price of fame and the wisdom that comes with age


Expand title description text
Frequency: Monthly Pages: 84 Publisher: Penske Media Corporation Edition: May 01 2021

OverDrive Magazine

  • Release date: May 4, 2021

Formats

OverDrive Magazine

Languages

English

No one covers the people, politics and issues that matter (now more than ever) like Rolling Stone. Your source for all the breaking news coverage, exclusive interviews with influential people, music trends, hot album and movie reviews, must-read rock star profiles and in-depth national affairs reporting you rely on in the magazine. An annual term to Rolling Stone is currently 12 issues. The number of issues in an annual term is subject to change at any time. Get Rolling Stone digital magazine subscription today for cutting-edge reporting, provocative photos and raw interviews with influential people who shape the scene and rock the world.

Rolling Stone

Love Letters & Advice

Lucy Dacus Remembers Everything • Few in indie rock can write an emotional gut punch like her, but that’s not all she’s about

Stairway to Bootleg-LP Heaven

The Ultimate Sound at Home • Headphones, speakers, turntables, and more of the best new audio tech

Healing Us Softly With Her Song

RS Charts • THE BIGGEST ARTISTS, ALBUMS, AND SONGS OF TODAY

2021 Music Docs Breakdown

How Lil Yachty Got His Second Act • Five years ago, the rapper garnered the title ‘King of the Teens’ — and a lot of criticism. Today, he’s a mentor and a mogul

Eric Church • The country superstar on his new triple LP, getting back on the road, and why you can’t go half Meat Loaf

The Trouble With MeidasTouch • The brothers behind the breakout anti-Trump PAC are the golden boys of the #Resistance, but when ‘Rolling Stone’ took a look beneath the surface, their response turned Trumpian

Issa Rae Can’t Stop, Won’t Stop • She brought a singular voice to TV with Insecure. Now Hollywood’s queen of comedy is building an empire

The Year That TV Saved Us • As life outside our homes shut down, the small screen became our treasured path to a much-needed safe escape

The Magic of “Wandavision” • Inside the making of the year’s biggest, boldest show — a superhero sitcom mash-up that explores grief, trauma, and the beating hearts of Marvel’s complicated men and women in tights

The New Adventures of Old TV • THESE DAYS, TV SHOWS DON’T DIE — they just sit around and wait for their reboot. Networks think, ‘Why risk something new when you’ve got a built-in fan base?’ The past year has seen a whole crop of reboots and revivals announced. Here are a few we’re most anxious to see.

The Good Thief of “Lupin” • Behind the scenes of Netflix’s electrifying crime-caper sensation out of France — a series that’s given us television’s most charming new antihero

Hollywood’s Not-So-Easy Rider • On TV, Justin Theroux is great at being difficult. In real life, the ‘Mosquito Coast’ star couldn’t be happier

Barry Jenkins Finds Hope “Underground” • The Oscar-winning director on tackling the brutality of slavery in America through his limited-series adaptation of the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel ‘The Underground Railroad’

The 50 Best Sitcoms of All Time

Phife Dawg Forever • He was the Everyman at the heart of A Tribe Called Quest. Five years after his death, his family and friends unveil his final album and celebrate his legacy

The Fort Bragg Murders • At least 44 Fort Bragg soldiers died stateside in 2020 — several of them were homicides. Families want answers. But the Army isn’t giving any

Prisoners and the Pandemic • Elderly, locked up, and at risk — the life and death of the incarcerated during Covid

Music

Movies

Marianne Faithfull • The vocal legend on the price of fame and the wisdom that comes with age


Expand title description text