A Halloween 2002 moment so iconic, the pop universe is still orbiting around it.

Flashback Friday cannot get any more legendary or star‑studded than this. On October 31, 2002, three of the biggest forces in pop and R&B — Shakira, Mary J. Blige, and Britney Spears — came together for a single, unforgettable moment: a joint Rolling Stone magazine cover shoot that instantly became part of early‑2000s pop mythology. The shoot was captured by Albert Watson, the photographer behind some of Rolling Stone’s most iconic celebrity portraits.
It was a collision of eras, genres, and global fanbases. Shakira was in her crossover explosion, Mary J. Blige was deep in her reigning queen era, and Britney was the face of millennial pop dominance. Seeing them share a frame felt like witnessing three galaxies align.
And listen — we also need to talk about Mary J. Blige in those stilettos. Sis was fighting for her life on that Rolling Stone set, shifting her weight, adjusting her balance, and serving face the entire time. We were dying then, and we’re still dying now watching her try to survive those skyscraper heels. A queen in peril, but a queen nonetheless.




The shoot captured everything that made the early 2000s electric — bold styling, superstar confidence, and that glossy, larger‑than‑life energy only Rolling Stone covers of that era could deliver. It wasn’t just a photoshoot; it was a cultural timestamp.
More than two decades later, the image still circulates as one of the most unexpected and powerful cross‑genre moments in pop history — a reminder of when music’s biggest women stepped into the same room and made time stop.
Scroll down and relive the magic.
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Tell us: Who commanded the shot — and was it Mary J. even while fighting those stilettos?







