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Archive May 2, 2025

I Kissed A Girl singer Jill Sobule’s tragic final social media post just days before death

I Kissed A Girl singer Jill Sobule took to social media just days before her tragic death, asking fans for help after having a ‘hard time’ on tour

Jill Sobule posted an emotional social media post days before her tragic death(Image: FilmMagic)

Jill Sobule took to social media just days before her tragic death, as she opened up about the struggles of going on tour in an emotional post.

The singer-songwriter tragically died in a house fire in Minneapolis, Minnesota on Thursday, May 1, as confirmed by a representative to Variety. She was 66.

Jill was due to to perform in Denver tonight at Swallow Hill Music’s Tuft Theater with a show titled “Jill Sobule presents: Songs From F–k 7th Grade and More.”

Taking to her Instagram earlier this week, Jill posted a black and white cartoon drawing of three mermaids, two playing the guitar and one playing the drum.

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In the caption, she penned: “It’s been hard being on tour. I somehow messed up my back and have sciatica. The morning is the worst. Any advice? Any good back docs, psychical therapist etc in LA? I’ll be there in a few weeks. In the meantime, a cartoon.”

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Since the news of Jill’s tragic death, fans have rushed to the comments to mourn the star. “You were one of my favourite songwriters. Your songs will be forever, RIP,” wrote one.

A second said: “What an eerie last post. She was groundbreaking for the LGBTQ community. An amazing person/songwriter/musician. Rest easy Jill.”

Jill Sobule
Jill tragically died in a housefire on May 1(Image: WireImage for Mann Productions)

“I chose your song for my post earlier tonight because it made me smile, and brought back such happy memories…and then I saw the news. Thank you for the joy you gave,” penned a third fan.

Jill made history with her 1995 single I Kissed a Girl as the first openly gay-themed song ever to crack the Billboard Top 20.

As an avid human rights advocate, Jill used her music as a platform to address challenging issues including capital punishment, anorexia nervosa, shoplifting, reproduction and the Make America Great Again (MAGA) movement.

After Jill’s tragic death. her manager, John Porter, released a heartfelt statement, saying: “Jill Sobule was a force of nature and human rights advocate whose music is woven into our culture.

“I was having so much fun working with her. I lost a client and a friend today. I hope her music, memory, and legacy continue to live on and inspire others.

Jill’s booking agent, Craig Grossman, added: “I was fortunate enough to get to know Jill beyond a professional relationship. No one made me laugh more. Her spirit and energy shall be greatly missed within the music community and beyond.”

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‘Looking for the holy grail’ – O’Sullivan’s master cue craftsman

BBC Sport

Footballers wear brand new boots most weekends. Tennis players pull out fresh rackets during matches. And darts players are often happy to toss their flights away into the crowd after wins.

Nowhere in elite level sport is the bond between player and equipment more profound than in snooker, where once a player finds what they consider the perfect cue, they aim to treasure it for as long as possible. A lifelong alliance is considered the dream scenario.

But during the ongoing World Championship in Sheffield this week, the game’s most illustrious star Ronnie O’Sullivan has been ill at ease with his cue, labelling it “awful” and claiming it is causing “carnage” in his game despite a hitherto straightforward run to the semi-finals.

O’Sullivan is using temporary replacements from the workshop of world-renowned master cue craftsman John Parris, after snapping his previous long-serving design from the same manufacturer following a frustrating defeat in the Champions League in January.

“He is not settled,” Parris tells the BBC at his South East London workshop, which has been producing top-of-the-line cues for more than 40 years.

“I’m not sure what cue he’s coming out with every time he comes through the curtain. It could be a different one every day. He’s not happy with it but he’s managing. We’ll get there – we’ll get the perfect one in the end.”

John Parris inspects a length of ash wood in his workshop at Parris Cues in South East LondonBBC Sport

Seven-time world champion O’Sullivan made a late decision to enter this year’s tournament, having not played competitively for four months, and called Parris with a last-minute request for new equipment.

“It was a bit heart breaking when Ronnie broke that last one,” Parris says. “It was just a tantrum, a rush of blood. It happens I guess. It takes a lot for Ronnie to do that. He has got a lot of pressure on him. Everybody wants a piece of him.

“Sometimes if it’s a clean break you can put it back together again. But this was a real job! It was never going to work. So you just have to say ‘oh well, here we go again’.”

Parris first designed a cue for O’Sullivan when the upcoming prodigy was just 11 years old, and he and his 14 staff members are now partway through the nine-month process of crafting what they hope will be O’Sullivan’s next long-term cue.

A workshop employee inspects a new snooker cue being designed for Ronnie O'Sullivan at Parris Cues in South East London.BBC Sport

Parris travels to timber yards across the country and searches through stockpiles of wood looking for high-quality pieces of ash and maple. Over the following months the wood is cut, settled, rounded, spliced, planed, fitted with a brass tip and leather pad, sanded in nine different ways, oiled, and finally waxed, before being complete.

“It sounds a bit big-headed but yeah it is art”, Parris says. “I won’t be in the Louvre with a cue but a lot of pride goes into each one.

“We’ve got sizes that we know Ronnie likes. He is quite fussy! People go ‘oh Ronnie could play with anything’ and he could, but not to the level that he wants. He is just looking for that little flick here and there, the feel, and I think just wants to get back to what he had before… if the old one was still in one piece!”

Parris took a few cues to O’Sullivan before the World Championship to “glean what he’s looking for”.

“He’s really tuned in,” adds Parris. “It’s genius really. He’s not going to say ‘well I might be able to grow into this’, he wants something that feels right from the start. Finding one that ticks all the boxes for that. That’s when you’ll see me skipping up the road!

A snooker cue is planed by a worker at Parris Cues in South East London.BBC Sport

O’Sullivan’s natural showmanship and compelling character have made him one of the most popular sportspeople since he won the UK Championship as a 17-year-old in 1993. His maverick qualities form part of Parris’ willingness to work with O’Sullivan, even after the destruction of one of his workshop’s fine creations.

“People just love to watch him,” Parris says. “He is a little bit naughty sometimes. He is his own man. He does what he wants to do. So I guess people relate to that and love him for it.

“We’re mates, I suppose. He knows I’m there if he wants something. He doesn’t really need to ask for favours because I’ll always do it.”

When Parris is working with players like O’Sullivan, or fellow big-name clients Steve Davis, Dennis Taylor and Judd Trump, he is aiming to help them feel the kind of intrinsic trust sports stars must have in their equipment to succeed at the top level.

“You need to forget about the cue,” Parris insists. “When you’re playing, you don’t want to be thinking ‘oh I wish it was longer or wider’. You just want to pick it up and go ‘this is my cue and I know I can win with it’, and hopefully it gives people that sort of confidence. The old cliche about it becoming part of your arm is probably true.”

O’Sullivan’s semi-final pits him against China’s Zhao Xintong while favourite Trump faces Mark Williams in a high-quality final four.

For Parris, the thrill of victory is the reason he has no desire to stop offering his craft to the world’s best players now that he is into his 70s.

“You get a buzz,” he says. “That’s what it’s all about – seeing something we’ve created win. I’m never going to lift a trophy, but I just think ‘that’s little bit we’ve done for that player there’.

Related topics

  • Snooker

‘Looking for the holy grail’ – O’Sullivan’s master cue craftsman

BBC Sport

Footballers wear brand new boots most weekends. Tennis players pull out fresh rackets during matches. And darts players are often happy to toss their flights away into the crowd after wins.

Nowhere in elite level sport is the bond between player and equipment more profound than in snooker, where once a player finds what they consider the perfect cue, they aim to treasure it for as long as possible. A lifelong alliance is considered the dream scenario.

But during the ongoing World Championship in Sheffield this week, the game’s most illustrious star Ronnie O’Sullivan has been ill at ease with his cue, labelling it “awful” and claiming it is causing “carnage” in his game despite a hitherto straightforward run to the semi-finals.

O’Sullivan is using temporary replacements from the workshop of world-renowned master cue craftsman John Parris, after snapping his previous long-serving design from the same manufacturer following a frustrating defeat in the Champions League in January.

“He is not settled,” Parris tells the BBC at his South East London workshop, which has been producing top-of-the-line cues for more than 40 years.

“I’m not sure what cue he’s coming out with every time he comes through the curtain. It could be a different one every day. He’s not happy with it but he’s managing. We’ll get there – we’ll get the perfect one in the end.”

John Parris inspects a length of ash wood in his workshop at Parris Cues in South East LondonBBC Sport

Seven-time world champion O’Sullivan made a late decision to enter this year’s tournament, having not played competitively for four months, and called Parris with a last-minute request for new equipment.

“It was a bit heart breaking when Ronnie broke that last one,” Parris says. “It was just a tantrum, a rush of blood. It happens I guess. It takes a lot for Ronnie to do that. He has got a lot of pressure on him. Everybody wants a piece of him.

“Sometimes if it’s a clean break you can put it back together again. But this was a real job! It was never going to work. So you just have to say ‘oh well, here we go again’.”

Parris first designed a cue for O’Sullivan when the upcoming prodigy was just 11 years old, and he and his 14 staff members are now partway through the nine-month process of crafting what they hope will be O’Sullivan’s next long-term cue.

A workshop employee inspects a new snooker cue being designed for Ronnie O'Sullivan at Parris Cues in South East London.BBC Sport

Parris travels to timber yards across the country and searches through stockpiles of wood looking for high-quality pieces of ash and maple. Over the following months the wood is cut, settled, rounded, spliced, planed, fitted with a brass tip and leather pad, sanded in nine different ways, oiled, and finally waxed, before being complete.

“It sounds a bit big-headed but yeah it is art”, Parris says. “I won’t be in the Louvre with a cue but a lot of pride goes into each one.

“We’ve got sizes that we know Ronnie likes. He is quite fussy! People go ‘oh Ronnie could play with anything’ and he could, but not to the level that he wants. He is just looking for that little flick here and there, the feel, and I think just wants to get back to what he had before… if the old one was still in one piece!”

Parris took a few cues to O’Sullivan before the World Championship to “glean what he’s looking for”.

“He’s really tuned in,” adds Parris. “It’s genius really. He’s not going to say ‘well I might be able to grow into this’, he wants something that feels right from the start. Finding one that ticks all the boxes for that. That’s when you’ll see me skipping up the road!

A snooker cue is planed by a worker at Parris Cues in South East London.BBC Sport

O’Sullivan’s natural showmanship and compelling character have made him one of the most popular sportspeople since he won the UK Championship as a 17-year-old in 1993. His maverick qualities form part of Parris’ willingness to work with O’Sullivan, even after the destruction of one of his workshop’s fine creations.

“People just love to watch him,” Parris says. “He is a little bit naughty sometimes. He is his own man. He does what he wants to do. So I guess people relate to that and love him for it.

“We’re mates, I suppose. He knows I’m there if he wants something. He doesn’t really need to ask for favours because I’ll always do it.”

When Parris is working with players like O’Sullivan, or fellow big-name clients Steve Davis, Dennis Taylor and Judd Trump, he is aiming to help them feel the kind of intrinsic trust sports stars must have in their equipment to succeed at the top level.

“You need to forget about the cue,” Parris insists. “When you’re playing, you don’t want to be thinking ‘oh I wish it was longer or wider’. You just want to pick it up and go ‘this is my cue and I know I can win with it’, and hopefully it gives people that sort of confidence. The old cliche about it becoming part of your arm is probably true.”

O’Sullivan’s semi-final pits him against China’s Zhao Xintong while favourite Trump faces Mark Williams in a high-quality final four.

For Parris, the thrill of victory is the reason he has no desire to stop offering his craft to the world’s best players now that he is into his 70s.

“You get a buzz,” he says. “That’s what it’s all about – seeing something we’ve created win. I’m never going to lift a trophy, but I just think ‘that’s little bit we’ve done for that player there’.

Related topics

  • Snooker

Knicks see off Pistons to set up Celtics semi-final

Images courtesy of Getty

The New York Knicks defeated the Detroit Pistons 4-2 in the series opener, which included a game-winning three-pointer.

With only 4.3 seconds left in the game six, the 28-year-old, who was last week named the Clutch Player of the Year, found the bucket and won 116-113.

In the Eastern Conference semifinal play-offs, the Knicks will face Boston Celtics, who have won the 18-time championship before and who is defending champion.

“I rely on the trust and self-assurance that my team-mates give me,” Brunson said.

Without them, nothing would happen.

series against the Nuggets at level

The Los Angeles Clippers won game seven of their play-off game against the Denver Nuggets by 111-105 in Inglewood, California, with the help of James Harden.

The Clippers struggled against a strong performance from Nikola Jokic, who finished with 25 points, eight assists, and seven rebounds for Denver. In order to maintain their play-off hopes, the Clippers needed to win in game six.

The Clippers’ first NBA Championship goal, however, came from Harden, who added eight assists and six rebounds.

According to Clippers coach Tyronn Lue, James did a great job of setting the scene early, scoring the ball, going downhill, and making the right play.

Kawhi Leonard was steady throughout the game, and Norman Powell made some important shots at the end. I believed those guys actually rose up and prepared to play.

related subjects

  • Basketball

Knicks see off Pistons to set up Celtics semi-final

Images courtesy of Getty

The New York Knicks defeated the Detroit Pistons 4-2 in the series opener, which included a game-winning three-pointer.

With only 4.3 seconds left in the game six, the 28-year-old, who was last week named the Clutch Player of the Year, found the bucket and won 116-113.

In the Eastern Conference semifinal play-offs, the Knicks will face Boston Celtics, who have won the 18-time championship before and who is defending champion.

“I rely on the trust and self-assurance that my team-mates give me,” Brunson said.

Without them, nothing would happen.

series against the Nuggets at level

The Los Angeles Clippers won game seven of their play-off game against the Denver Nuggets by 111-105 in Inglewood, California, with the help of James Harden.

The Clippers struggled against a strong performance from Nikola Jokic, who finished with 25 points, eight assists, and seven rebounds for Denver. In order to maintain their play-off hopes, the Clippers needed to win in game six.

The Clippers’ first NBA Championship goal, however, came from Harden, who added eight assists and six rebounds.

According to Clippers coach Tyronn Lue, James did a great job of setting the scene early, scoring the ball, going downhill, and making the right play.

Kawhi Leonard was steady throughout the game, and Norman Powell made some important shots at the end. I believed those guys actually rose up and prepared to play.

related subjects

  • Basketball

Katie Price takes a swipe at Chris Hughes and JoJo Siwa after ‘flirty texts’

Katie Price has taken a swipe at Chris Hughes and JoJo Siwa after the duo formed a strong bond in the ITV Celebrity Big Brother house despite the Dance Moms star having a fiance

Katie Price said she ‘feels sorry’ for Kath(Image: Getty Images)

Katie Price has made a fresh dig at Celebrity Big Brother best pals Chris Hughes and JoJo Siwa. The former glamour model, 46, watched on with the rest of the country as the duo formed a formidable bond in the ITV house.

However, Katie, who was previously linked to the former Love Island man, 32, in a texting scandal, has criticised the pair’s behaviour. Speaking on The Katie Price Show podcast alongside her sister this week, Katie said: “Maybe JoJo did fall in love with Chris, dunno, they were very close in there. I felt sorry for the girlfriend.”

It comes after JoJo sensationally dumped fiance Kath Ebbs at the after party of the show. The Australian had flown in to be at the final episode to greet JoJo on her exit.

Jojo and Chris enjoying a meal
JoJo Siwa and Chris Hughes struck up a close friendship in CBB(Image: Instagram)

Kath said they were in “complete shock” over JoJo’s decision. They claimed the Dance Moms star told them there “are confused feelings there”.

Meanwhile, Chris and JoJo were spotted enjoying their time out of the house together, but continue to call their relationship “platonic”.

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Katie had previously been caught in a situation where Chris allegedly sent her “flirty texts” while dating Olivia Attwood in 2017. At the time, Olivia remained fiercely loyal to her then-boyfriend with Chris also publicly slamming the rumours.

Katie chatted with Olivia on her So Right It’s Wrong podcast last year and Olivia said: “I was dating Chris off the back of the show and I went on Loose Women.”

Katie then added: “Chris Hughes was messaging me and he was with you [Olivia], and we were at the NTA Awards and I remember seeing you. And because I’m such an honest person and a girls girl, I was like ‘I’m going to have to tell her and it’s true’.

“I was like ‘there’s so much to tell you’, and I was showing you them. I said ‘if you don’t want to believe me, don’t, but I’ve got no reason to lie to you at all’.”

Katie went on: “I remember we were at some different awards and him and Kem were on stage and I put my hand up and was like ‘show us all the texts then Chris’.”

Chris and JoJo
Chris and JoJo shared a number of close moments on the show(Image: ITV)

Reflecting on the drama, Olivia shared why she had chosen to believe Chris over Katie at the time, as she said: “You know when you confront someone about something, and they put on such a big reaction? His reaction was so hysterical.”

“I was so taken back by the reaction that I was like, ‘Surely if it was true, he couldn’t be getting this upset.’ I always had a question mark on it, and as the weeks went on, I kind of thought – other things happened – we weren’t meant to be together.”

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