Entertainment
Grammy Awards 2026: Full winners list
Kendrick Lamar, Lady Gaga, Bad Bunny, Olivia Dean, and the Dalai Lama were among the standout winners at the 68th Annual Grammy Awards, held on February 1, 2026, at Los Angeles’ Crypto.com Arena.
While the biggest categories were saved for the televised ceremony, 86 awards were announced earlier during Sunday’s Premiere Ceremony. Kendrick Lamar took the night’s first televised award for Best Rap Album.
The ceremony was hosted by Trevor Noah for his sixth and final time, combining high-energy performances with historic milestones, including Bad Bunny’s Album of the Year win and the first-ever Grammy for a K-Pop act.
What to know about the 2026 Grammys
- Kendrick Lamar led with nine nominations, including his fifth consecutive Album of the Year nod for GNX—a Grammy first.
- Lady Gaga followed with seven nominations, while Bad Bunny made history with Debí Tirar Más Fotos, the first all-Spanish-language album to win Album of the Year.
- Trevor Noah returned as host and was also nominated for Best Audiobook, losing to the Dalai Lama.
- Steven Spielberg completed his EGOT by winning Best Music Film for Music by John Williams.
- A total of 95 awards were presented, most announced before the main telecast.
- The ceremony aired live on CBS and streamed on Paramount+.
Trevor Noah hosts the telecast
The former Daily Show host anchors the main ceremony, continuing his long-running association with the Grammys as both presenter and nominee.
General Field (Big Four)
- Album of the Year: Bad Bunny – Debí Tirar Más Fotos
- Record of the Year: Kendrick Lamar & SZA – “Luther”
- Song of the Year: Lady Gaga – “Abracadabra”
- Best New Artist: Olivia Dean
Pop and Dance
- Best Pop Vocal Album: Lady Gaga – Mayhem
- Best Pop Solo Performance: Sabrina Carpenter – “Manchild”
- Best Pop Duo/Group Performance: Cynthia Erivo & Ariana Grande – “Defying Gravity”
- Best Dance/Electronic Album: FKA twigs – EUSEXUA
- Best Dance Pop Recording: Lady Gaga – “Abracadabra”
Rock and Alternative
- Best Rock Album: Linkin Park – From Zero
- Best Rock Performance: Yungblud – “Changes (Live from Villa Park)”
- Best Alternative Music Album: Tyler, The Creator – DON’T TAP THE GLASS
Rap and R&B
- Best Rap Album: Kendrick Lamar – GNX
- Best Rap Performance: Doechii – “Anxiety”
- Best Melodic Rap Performance: Kendrick Lamar & SZA – “Luther”
- Best R&B Album: Leon Thomas – MUTT
- Best R&B Performance: Kehlani – “After Hours”
Special awards and historic wins
- Best Song Written for Visual Media: “Golden,” KPop Demon Hunters – First K-Pop Grammy
- Best Music Film: Steven Spielberg – Music by John Williams
- Best Audiobook, Narration & Storytelling: The Dalai Lama
Other notable winners:
- Best Contemporary Country Album: Jelly Roll – Beautifully Broken
- Best Latin Pop Album: Natalia Lafourcade – Cancionera
- Best Gospel Album: Darrel Walls & PJ Morton – Heart of Mine
- Best Comedy Album: Nate Bargatze – Your Friend, Nate Bargatze
- Best Spoken Word Poetry Album: Mad Skillz – Words for Days Vol. 1
Grammy 2026: Key highlights
- Top winners: Kendrick Lamar and Lady Gaga swept multiple major and genre awards.
- Rock comeback: Linkin Park won Best Rock Album for From Zero.
- Historic K-Pop win: “Golden” from KPop Demon Hunters became the first-ever Grammy for a K-Pop track.
- Best New Artist: Olivia Dean joins a prestigious line of past winners.
- Final hosting: Trevor Noah led the Grammys for the sixth and final time.
Grammys 2026: Key moments
- Kendrick Lamar wins Best Rap Album for GNX, the first televised award of the night.
- Rosé and Bruno Mars open the show with high-energy performance of APT.
- Trevor Noah delivers sharp humour and pop culture commentary in his final hosting gig.
- Sabrina Carpenter impresses with her performance of “Manchild”.
- First-time winners include the Dalai Lama, Turnstile, Lefty Gunplay, and FKA twigs.
- Artists address immigration issues, with speeches from Shaboozey, Amy Allen, Kehlani, and comments from Gloria Estefan.
Performers, presenters and tributes
- Performers: Lady Gaga, Justin Bieber, Tyler, The Creator, Pharrell Williams, Sabrina Carpenter, Bruno Mars, and all eight Best New Artist nominees.
- Tributes: Ozzy Osbourne, D’Angelo, Roberta Flack.
GN
Entertainment
Erling Haaland to make acting debut as Viking named Haaland
Manchester City striker Erling Haaland is to make his feature acting debut, in an animated film as the voice of a Viking – called Haaland.
According to the Hollywood Reporter, the Norwegian international is to play “an animated version of himself” in Viqueens, directed and co-written by Harald Zwart, the Dutch-Norwegian director of The Karate Kid and Agent Cody Banks.
The film’s IMDB synopsis describes Viqeens’ storyline thus: “To return a stowaway, two courageous Viking girls go from Norway to China. Discovering secrets, becoming proficient with dragon kites, fireworks and kung fu, and realising that friendship’s gifts surpass anything taken from adversaries.”
Zwart said: “Erling has already become a kind of real-life Viking icon around the world – powerful, fearless and uniquely Norwegian. Bringing him into this universe as himself gives the film an unexpected energy and authenticity that felt completely right for this story.”
Zwart has already secured musician Rita Ora and Yellowjackets’ Ella Purnell as its leads, named Hedvig and Ingrid, as well as chatshow host Alan Carr in a smaller role as “a lyrically challenged royal scribe”.
Haaland, who joined Manchester City in 2022 from Borussia Dortmund, is leading the race for the Golden Boot, having scored 26 goals so far in the 2025-26 Premier League season.
Viqueens is due for release around Christmas.
The Guardian
Entertainment
BTS to headline FIFA World Cup 2026 halftime show
The World Cup is getting the purple touch. Yes, true, BTS are heading to football’s biggest stage and they’re not going alone.
FIFA announced on May 14 that BTS, along with Madonna and Shakira, will co-headline the FIFA World Cup 2026 Final Halftime Show. The spectacle is set for July 19 at the New York–New Jersey Stadium, bringing together three of the most recognisable names in global pop culture for a historic performance.
“The world’s biggest stage. An even bigger purpose,” FIFA teased in its announcement, revealing that the show will also feature curation by Coldplay’s Chris Martin. Adding a playful twist to the star-studded lineup, Sesame Street and The Muppets are also expected to make appearances.
Moreover, the Halftime Show carries a larger mission. It will support the FIFA Global Citizen Education Fund, aimed at expanding access to quality education and football opportunities for children worldwide. The performance will also be livestreamed globally, ensuring fans everywhere get a front-row seat to the action.
The excitement is high, and of course different sections of different fandoms are already at war. Nevertheless, the common sentiment is, “Being a fan of the biggest group in the world is never boring.” Others took all the negativity in their stride and wrote, “Isn’t it amazing? I always say I love when BTS gets hated on, like with Arirang, because it means that they’re only going to keep rising higher.”
This isn’t BTS’s first brush with global football fever. The group previously performed at Global Citizen LIVE in 2021, while member Jungkook contributed to the 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar with his track ‘Dreamers,’ which became a tournament favourite.
GN
Entertainment
Inside the story of 007: ‘You can be any Bond you want’
If you want to tell the tale of a young James Bond, you first need to pick which James Bond he’s going to grow into. This was the task handed to Hitman developer IO Interactive, the studio taking digital custody of the spy in 007 First Light, Bond’s first video game in almost 15 years. So what’s it to be? Will their agent take baby steps towards Sean Connery’s gruff masculinity, or is he practising Roger Moore’s arched eyebrow in the bathroom mirror? That’s if he’s a “movie” Bond at all. For a generation of gamers, the character exists most vividly as a hand at the bottom of the screen in GoldenEye 007.
As it turns out, 007 First Light’s Bond, depicted by Patrick Gibson (cornering a specific market, having played the serial killer-to-be in the Dexter origins show) is an amalgam: the facial scar is an Ian Fleming detail, but the sweet-talking charm is straight from the Pierce Brosnan playbook, and the second you barge a goon into a bookcase you know someone’s been studying Casino Royale on a loop. Trying to devise a Bond for all fandoms could risk satisfying none, but in the demo we played, the performance works. Crucially, Gibson brings an outsider’s unease that’s all his own, anchored by the arrogance that’ll one day be weaponised by MI6.

Multifaceted appeal … a screenshot from 007 First Light. Photograph: IO Interactive A/S
A multifaceted hero allows 007 First Light to convincingly move between playstyles. Step into a swanky Kensington press conference and you’re playing a bite-size Hitman stage. Eavesdropping on guests hints at routes to a target. Do you pose as a photographer? Or sniff out a staff roster to send a yawning security guard on his break? The difference is that, unlike Agent 47, Bond won’t break anyone’s neck, and is more social animal than predator: get caught where you shouldn’t be and you can deploy “Instinct” to placate an accuser with a smug one-liner.
Slip beyond the red carpet and the game shifts into gadget-infused stealth – a hacking device to trigger electronic distractions; chemical darts to send guards retching to a bin – and bursts of hand-to-hand combat. Getting detected in a Hitman game often means reloading a save as 100 bodyguards swarm you; here you can deescalate, which is a polite term for punching one man in the face and braining his friend with a nearby ergonomic keyboard.
Senior combat designer, Tom Marcham, welcomes any Bond who walks through the door. “We’re truly happy for you to pick whatever [style] you want,” he says. “We trust you to pick the one you’ll have the most fun with. We’ve designed for all of them.” Desks that just seconds ago provided cover for a stealth game can become handy surfaces to bang heads against. When I enter a room with a billiard table – and its oh-so-lobbable cue ball – it takes real restraint not to go loud and chuck it at someone, just for the fun of some crunchy combat.

Did Marcham picture a particular Bond when stitching his together? Daniel Craig’s the obvious influence he says, “just because he has, arguably, the best action sequences. He uses krav maga, so we take a lot from that.” But he also has an affection for the “craziness” of the Brosnan era, which suits the pitch of a younger, wilder spy. “We’re very keen for him not to be 100% competent from the start. We need a little more mess in there and we get that from Pierce Brosnan, where there are lots of bullets flying – a very high-drama combat.”
Certainly, when Bond flees his captors in a bin lorry, shoving aside jeeps and ramraiding a fashion boutique, you can’t help but think of Brosnan flattening St Petersburg in a tank in GoldenEye. It also brings to mind Uncharted, and the kind of blockbuster choreography that few studios outside Naughty Dog have the appetite or budgets to attempt.
Here, you maybe sense IO feeling out new territory. As Bond dodges sniper fire across rooftops or sprints along a collapsing crane, there’s a little clumsiness to the transitions and animations; the very fine details that remind you this is a departure from the clockwork precision of Hitman. That’s not to say 007 First Light’s set pieces don’t get the pulse racing. One scene sees Bond strapped to an interrogator’s chair, and has you trying to time your goading quips to hold your captor’s attention without succumbing to his torture. It’s Goldfinger’s laser table, only you’re in the room, living the moment.
It’s with that sensation, according to art director Rasmus Poulsen, that IO is trying to separate its new game from Hitman. “Rather than having grand, open sandboxes, it’s important for us that you feel certain things at certain times, to bring that story through and have the player feel the forward momentum.”
The price you pay is a little less agency on a grand scale. But you wouldn’t call 007 First Light “IO Interactive Lite”. Putting aside the complexity of the stealth simulation, the Venn diagram of Bond and Hitman is almost an eclipse. They’re both globetrotting adventures showcasing international villainy as its most aesthetically aspirational. Call it Blofeld chic. Poulsen also says that Craig-era Bond was a huge influence on his work in those past games.
But that style now bears extra emotional and thematic weight. Poulsen sees IO’s Bond as a collision of timeless, romantic adventure and a crisp, modern edge. “These are the aesthetics that are fighting, just as they are themes that are fighting,” he says. “It’s longevity versus the promise of a tech utopia. How to belong, but also to challenge what came before.”
And so it is for a game studio in 2026: how to draw on reliable experience while finding new ways to challenge and excite? In Bond, there is no better avatar. “It’s really wonderful to be able to use all the aspects of my craft to try to build a world for you where you have a certain sensation – you feel like an outsider, [or] you feel like you belong – with a character who hopefully players can relate to,” says Poulsen. “To me, that has been a wonderful expansion on our capabilities.”
007 First Light is released on PC, PS5 and Xbox on 27 May; and Nintendo Switch 2 later in summer.
The Guardian
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