- Assim Como Nicotina, Heroína, Morfina. De Repente, Eu Sou Um Viciado e Você É Tudo Que Preciso, TudoQue Preciso, Sim, Você É Tudo Que Preciso. 😭☀️🥺⁵
https://t.co/YG7HJdrr3X
A MAIOR! Adele continua
sendo a primeira e única artista
da história a vender, em 20
semanas diferentes, mais de 100 mil cópias no UK, com todos seus
trabalhos.
“21” — 12 SEMANAS
“25” — 5 SEMANAS
“30” — 3 SEMANAS
For many years, one of the world’s most famous singers returned each June 14th to the site of a tragedy that most people no longer remember.
On June 14, 2017, a faulty refrigerator on the fourth floor of a 24-story residential building in West London caught fire. The fire should have stayed contained within that single apartment, but it didn't.
Just two years earlier, the building had been covered in a cheap aluminum cladding during a renovation meant to save money. That cladding was highly flammable, and the fire tore through it like paper. Within 15 minutes, the flames reached the roof.
The fire burned for 60 hours, and 72 people lost their lives inside.
The building was called Grenfell Tower. It was a public housing complex filled with working-class families, immigrants, and children.
The youngest victim was a six-month-old baby, and the oldest was an 84-year-old grandmother.
Most were trapped above the 11th floor because the fire alarms failed and the only safety staircase was thick with smoke.
The next morning, while rescue teams were still working, a 29-year-old woman arrived at the scene. She wore sunglasses and a black hoodie and came with her husband.
She didn't bring the press or make an announcement. She simply walked through the ash, hugged strangers, and asked who needed help. Someone in the crowd recognized her, but no one made a scene. It was the global superstar Adele.
Adele grew up just a few miles away, raised by a single mother in public housing estates very similar to Grenfell. She knew exactly what those apartments looked like from the inside, and she knew what it felt like to live with faulty equipment in social housing.
She stayed for hours that day and returned the next.
A few days later, she knocked on the window of the Chelsea Fire Station with a tray of cakes, sat with the traumatized firefighters, and drank tea with them. She didn't post about it on social media, and she didn't bring cameras.
Over the years, the families of the victims slowly revealed what Adele did behind the scenes. She paid for funerals, covered hotel rooms for those who lost their homes, and organized a private movie screening for the surviving children to give them a moment of normalcy.
Her fans only found out she was involved when she briefly mentioned at a Wembley Stadium concert that she was donating money to the survivors.
Every single year on June 14, Adele shows up. On the first anniversary, she stood by the base of the tower and cried while singing with a choir. During the COVID-19 pandemic, when gatherings were banned, she sent a video message to the families.
On the fifth anniversary, she used her massive social media platform to support Grenfell United, the group demanding justice. By the eighth anniversary on June 14, 2025, she was still there, sitting with the families and hugging the children who are now growing up.
Most celebrities show up to a tragedy once, take photos for a press release, and leave when the cameras turn off. Adele has returned quietly for nearly a decade. She has never written a song about it, never done an interview about it, and never used it for publicity. While the news cycle moved on and the world forgot, she remembered.
The Grenfell community has a saying: "We are still here."
They say it because they are still waiting for justice. Despite a massive public inquiry, the corporate executives who manufactured and sold that flammable cladding to save a few dollars are still running their businesses.
No one has been criminally charged or sent to prison for the deaths of those 72 people.
We live in a world where a billionaire pop star feels more accountability toward working-class victims than the corporate systems and government authorities responsible for their safety.
Adele keeps showing up because she knows that if she hadn’t gotten famous, she could have been the one trapped on the 24th floor.
you seem pretty sad for a girl so in love, de Olivia Rodrigo, atingiu 1 BILHÃO de streams no Spotify e se tornou o álbum mais rápido da cantora a atingir o feito:
1. you seem pretty sad for a girl so in love (70 dias)
2. GUTS (90 dias)
3. SOUR (134 dias)
🚨 SERÁ? | De acordo com um Insider, Adele teria gravado um novo videoclipe em uma boate de Londres neste mês.
O veículo também afirmou, meses atrás, que o novo álbum da cantora seguiria uma sonoridade pop e mais animada.
Obrigado, Deus, por cada oportunidade, por essa vitória e pelo privilégio de jogar uma Copa do Mundo. O Senhor é maravilhoso! Toda honra e glória a Ti. 🇧🇷🤍💚💛🩵 @CBF_Futebol
álbuns femininos mais vendidos da década de 10s (EAS).
1. Adele — 21 com 56M de cópias
2. Taylor Swift — 1989 com 46M de cópias
3. Adele — 25 com 34M de cópias.
4. Katy Perry — Teenage Dream com 31M de cópias.