Lawsuit over Jay-Z song going to trial
MTV names Katy Perry its 1st Artist of the Year
Jennifer Lopez Under Fire for Raunchy, Non-Commercial-Free AMAs Performance
Beyonce: It Was “Harder to Breathe” Performing While Pregnant
Kurt and Courtney's Daughter Reportedly Engaged... And Her Fiance Looks Like Teen Spirit
Justin Bieber Beats Lady Gaga's Record on YouTube
Lady Gaga may have her "Little Monsters," but Justin Bieber's "Beliebers" have her outnumbered on YouTube: The "Baby" singer who was first discovered on the video-sharing channel just hit a record 2 billion views, beating out Lady Gaga's 2010 record of 1 billion, YouTube confirmed.
According to the social media tracking site Famecount, the teen idol received a massive 94 million views on his channel last month, thanks in part to the huge popularity of the pop singer's new holiday-themed single "Mistletoe," which snagged over 28 million views so far.
The teen heartthrob first found fame on YouTube back in 2007, when his mom uploaded videos of the 12-year-old from Ontario, Canada. The videos quickly went viral and the singer became a social-media star.
The now 17-year-old also holds the world record for most popular single on YouTube, with a whopping 650 million views to date of his hit tune "Baby."
But don't count out Gaga. The diva still rules on Twitter, with 15 million followers (the Biebs has 13.9 million), and Facebook, where she rocks over 44 million fans (eclipsing the teen idol's 37 million). The "Bad Romance" hitmaker is no slouch on YouTube, either, with 1.8 billion views. For the record, R&B artist Rihanna comes in as third most viewed on YouTube, with an impressive 1.7 billion views.
Vedder Interesting!
Few people suspected that rock ‘n' roll--a music form that was born in the early ‘50s and seemed to have a potentially unlimited lifespan--would actually one day peak and never again be as good as it was!
Still, that seems to be precisely the case!
For it is this week when Eddie Vedder--lead vocalist with famous Seattle-based rockers Pearl Jam--has singlehandedly made an album that will likely never be topped by any rock ‘n' roll record ever to come!
A man! A voice! A ukulele!
And while it does seem a tad beholden to famous rapper Jay-Z--I mean, these days, what doesn't?--it still shows a streak of indisputable originality that is bound to be talked about for decades to come!
May 31, 2011: The week everyone stopped buying albums and enjoyed tasty ice cream sodas in their place!
Eddie Vedder: Ukulele Songs (Monkey Wrench) From its wrenching opening track, an energetic rendition of Tiny Tim's "Tiptoe Through The Tulips," to its heart-rending, mildly hallucinogenic closer, Don Ho's "Tiny Bubbles," Eddie Vedder's unexpected new solo album shows an artist at the peak of his powers! And that's just the cover photo! The Pearl Jam singer's unexpected instrumental dexterity--swinging from Bach and Handel here, Stomu Yamash'ta and Iannis Xenakis there--combined with his ultra-sophisticated taste for unexpected covers, including the themes from TV's Mr. Ed and The Mary Tyler Moore Show, make this an album of a lifetime! Ironically, the life in question belongs to Eldred Meek, a young Vermont boy who, in the early 1700's, fell into a well blindfolded and tragically perished! Even more ironic: He was deaf! Not like the rest of us! I can't wait for this guy's cookbook!
Death Cab For Cutie: Codes And Keys (Atlantic) While they've always seemed a bit overly bright, Death Cab For Cutie return here with an album that, frankly, might take a true genius to appreciate! Apparently taking its cue from the album cover photo, opening track "Home Is A Fire" features a repetitive busy signal as its music base over which various members select either X's or O's for an unexpected game of tic-tac-toe! Weird! Next, the title track blares a police or ambulance siren while a repetitive beeping signal spells out "I am really into McHale's Navy" in Morse code! Huh? Finally, closing track "Stay Young, Go Dancing" features the voice of Hugh "Lumpy" Brannum, TV's celebrated Mr. Green Jeans, mumbling inanities such as "I got the damn keys to the Treasure House right here, Fat Boy" and "It's just a frickin' puppet, man--what are you on?" I think it may be their best album ever!
You Are A Tourist - Death Cab For Cutie
My Morning Jacket: Circuital (ATO) The sixth studio album by music's marvelous My Morning Jacket simply couldn't be better: Great songs, fine musicianship, challenging themes, a complete disregard for all that is commercial--and, wouldn't you just know it?--all that much more commercial because of it! "I hate the phrase ‘going back to our roots,'" says the band's Jim Jones about this new set--tastefully side-stepping the group's controversial decision to do nothing but eat sweet potatoes and yams for the duration of this album's making! Luckily, the greatness of the end product--and, I mean, this is a fine album--render such points as their rationale for featuring the eye of Blinky The Traffic Light on the new album cover entirely moot! Still, it is odd!
Victory Dance - My Morning Jacket
Kate Bush: Director's Cut (Fish People/EMI) England's fascinating Kate Bush--an icon whose influence pervades all of contemporary music as we know it--well, except for a few Toby Keith records--returns here with a reworking of material she's released on her earlier The Sensual World and The Red Shoes albums, and it sounds great! Featuring completely new vocals and drums but retaining some of the original musical backing--and, one suspects, an inescapable fascination with Edward Lear's "The Dong With The Luminous Nose"--Bush has never sounded stronger, better, more convincing, or like a woman who's filthy rich and can do whatever the heck she wants just because she's Kate Bush! Sort of like Eddie Vedder, but she left the ukulele in her wine cellar! I'm completely into this!
Flower Of The Mountain (Director's Cut) - Kate Bush
Dave Matthews Band: Live At Wrigley Field (Bama Rags/RCA) If you like the Dave Matthews band, you're going to love this new 2-CD set, which features the band running through hits old and new in a venue that only a select few artists have ever played! Otherwise, Wrigley Field houses the Chicago Cubs, a baseball team of some repute! As the album cover hints, the band has been accused by the entire city of Chicago of selling out, and on the evidence of much of the between-song patter here--in which Matthews and company are solicited by several large corporations and defense interests to accept large sums of money for public sponsorship, the CEOs of McDonald's and Wendy's "battle it out" for Matthews' approval and signature, etc.--it is puzzling! I'd prefer to assume the shows themselves were sold out and leave it at that! Guess I'm dumb!
You Might Die Trying (Live At Wrigley Field) - Dave Matthews Band
Seapony: Go With Me (Hardly Art) In a cruel twist offering up an actual good album, Seattle's Seapony here may seem to be following up on the latest musical fad---heavily echoed female vocals over an excessively reverbed guitar and prominent drum mix--but to me seem to be playing music directly in the tradition of the Marine Girls, the Gist, maybe even the Young Marble Giants, which in 2011 means they are actually hip as heck! I like them very much! I suggest buying this album, playing it for all your friends, saying, ‘Yeah, I've always been into stuff like this, man," and then pretending you don't care what anyone else thinks at all! You're your own person, and no one is the boss of you!
Primal Scream: Screamadelica Live (Blu-Ray DVD) (Eagle) Anyone who's been paying attention to wacky Brit bands know that years ago Primal Scream started out sounding like a lot of those Byrdsy early Creation-era bands then suddenly shifted into a sort of magnificently psychedelic mode with their 1991 album Screamadelica! Well, here they are years after the fact, out touring the world performing that same album in its entirety, and as this fab DVD illustrates, it remains quite a good listen! Jam-packed with extras, oodles of charisma, and arguments that were it at all possible for contemporary society to travel in time back to 1991 and make "other" decisions, it would probably be wise, Screamadelica Live is entirely worthy of your purchase! Buy it, play it, and tell "haters" you thought it was a Funkadelic album! Don't forget to make quotation marks with your fingers!
The Vaccines: What Did You Expect From The Vaccines? (Columbia) Many are calling this Brit band the "band to watch" in 2011, especially if you have a lot of money in your wallet and they're walking behind you! Loud, lo-fi, energetic, charismatic and three more adjectives used to simply make a point, the band are quite good, not terribly trendy--in a good way--and likely to make a deep impression on people of a certain age and social sphere! I like them and, more importantly, like their album title even more! And even if I did ever rotate the album cover 90 degrees for kicks, I wouldn't feel guilty about it!
Wreckin' Bar (Ra Ra Ra) - The Vaccines
David Byrne: Ride, Rise, Roar (A Live Concert Film) (Blu-Ray DVD) (Eagle) A well done, impressive concert film documenting former Talking Head Byrne's 2008/2009 tour, this concert DVD is one of very few I've seen that--from the intelligence and pacing of its construction--would appear to be preferable to actually witnessing the concert firsthand! Especially since when I was watching it, I got two phone calls and would've felt odd yelling up onstage to David Byrne to hold it for a minute so I could answer my phone! It's usually not a problem at smaller gigs, but jeez, I really hate to make a scene! Great DVD!
Flogging Molly: Speed Of Darkness (SideOneDummy) Best known as a "Celtic punk ensemble"--but heck, we all love basketball--Flogging Molly have already noted that this "wasn't the album we set out to write. It became the album we had to write." Yeah, and maybe if they'd been nicer to Molly, she wouldn't be standing over them all with two black eyes and a submachine gun in her hands!
June 13-19: Christina Aguilera On Tumultuous Year
This week, your pals at That's Really Week became even bigger fans of Christina Aguilera. In a candid July 2011 "W" magazine cover story, the "Genie In A Bottle" singer addressed many of the dramas that haunted her last year -- divorce, flopped movie, national anthem lyric flub at the Super Bowl, slipping on stage at the Grammys, and drunk driving arrest. But we are pleased to report that there has been a happy ending.
As Christina was faced with the lukewarm response to last year's "Bionic" album which prompted accusations that she was copying Lady Gaga, her marriage was also falling apart.
Christina and Jordan Bratman had been married for five years and have a 3-year-old son. But as their marital problems ensued, a split was inevitable.
"It got to a point where our life at home was reminding me of my own childhood. I will not have my son grow up in a tension-filled home," Christina told "W," adding that she would not allow negative media coverage to dictate how she lived her life.
But she had also already met another man. Christina was seeing Matt Rutler, whom she met on the set of "Burlesque," her first movie. "I could depend on him for everything," she said about the 25-year-old musician and production assistant. "Matt was working on the movie, and he was so supportive. And he still is."
Despite "Burlesque" being the perfect theatrical vehicle for Christina, the movie did not live up to its hype. Christina confirms that the friction between the director and the head of the studio, who were dating, didn't help matters.
"It was very hard to be in the center of all that," Christina said. "A lot was riding on the film, and I bore the brunt. I was like, 'Hey, stop fighting -- this is my career.'"
Still, Christina had more demons to face. While the success of a new album and movie are measured by the reaction from a fickle public, singing the national anthem at the Super Bowl is arguably the one thing everyone expected Christina to conquer with ease.
But Christina forgot part of the lyrics of the song she has been singing since she was a child. "Everything on the field at the Super Bowl was vividly bright, and I was having a moment," she said. "I got lost in the emotion of being there, and I messed up the lyrics to the song."
A week later, Christina stumbled on stage at the Grammys during the Aretha Franklin tribute. "Note to self: Never wear a train onstage," she said. "My heel got caught in my train, and if it wasn't for Jennifer Hudson, who picked me up as I went down, I would have fallen to the floor."
Christina also dismisses the drunk driving arrest. One, she wasn't driving, or even drives at all. And two, her boyfriend, who was behind the wheel, was cleared of the charges. His blood alcohol level was below California's legal limit of 0.08.
"The police knew my recent history and wanted to jump on the bandwagon," she said. "I was a victim of celebrity."
After nearly a year of bad luck things finally turned around for Christina when she landed a role as a judge on the popular new televised talent competition "The Voice."
Christina wants to share her career experiences with the contestants to help prepare them for the pitfalls of the business. "I don't want to be tough with my singers," she said, "but I do want to tell them on 'The Voice' that if you really want this, you'll be kicked when you're down. You have to be willing to roll with those punches. You have to really want it."
Christina is living proof of such sound advice. Perseverance is absolutely key in the success stories of this week's other newsmakers. People laughed at Lady Gaga last year when she showed up at MTV's Video Music Awards in a dress made of meat. But the edible couture has found a home at the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame. Gaga "Edge Of Glory" collaborator and Bruce Springsteen saxophonist Clarence Clemons died Saturday from complications from a stroke. Congratulations are in order for Stevie Wonder, who was inducted into the Apollo's Hall Of Fame. And Justin Timberlake finally admitted what many of his music fans have been dreading. He has no immediate plans to record music. He is focusing on his acting. This feels like good news for Joe Jonas, who is embarking on a pop-dance solo career, and horrible news for Justin's N'SYNC bandmates, who may have been hoping for a reunion similar to that of New Kids On The Block and the Backstreet Boys.
Get all the details and more on these stories in the links below. Be sure to check back next week for another music news roundup.
THIS WEEK'S TOP 5 MUSIC NEWS STORIES
1) Can't Hold [Her] Down -- Christina Aguilera addresses recent hurdles.
2) Born To Run -- Bruce Springsteen saxophonist Clarence Clemons dies at 69.
3) Where's The Beef? -- Lady Gaga's meat dress heads to Hall Of Fame.
4) Bye Bye Bye -- Justin Timberlake focuses on acting, puts music on hold.
5) Living Legend -- Stevie Wonder is inducted into Apollo Hall Of Fame.
NBC sorry for cutting 'under God' from pledge
NBC sorry for cutting 'under God' from pledge
June 20, 2011, 1:06 PM EST
By Tim Molloy
TheWrap
NBC says it is sorry it cut "under God" from the Pledge of Allegiance during a montage at the start of the U.S. Open Golf Championship.
During the montage, which intercut footage of children and soldiers raising a flag, the children are seen reciting the pledge twice, but "Under God" was omitted both times.
Bing: NBC wins 'My Name Is Earl' lawsuit
Patriotic golf fans took to Twitter to object, and at least one person posted the Godless Pledge on YouTube.
Story continues after the video:
NBC said in an on-air apology that the two-word phrases was cut by accident.
"It was our intent to begin our coverage of this U.S. Open championship with a feature that captured the patriotism of our national championship being here in our nation's capital for the third time. Regrettably, a portion of the pledge of allegiance that was in that feature was edited out. It was not done to upset anyone and we'd like to apologize to those of you who were offended by it."
'Falling Skies' premieres to year's best cable debut ratings
'Falling Skies' premieres to year's best cable debut ratings
June 20, 2011, 1:39 PM EST
By Tim Kenneally
TheWrap
"Falling Skies" brought rising ratings to TNT with its debut episode on Sunday night.
The series, about the aftermath of an alien invasion, drew more than 5.9 million total viewers for its two-hour premiere at 9 p.m., making it the top-rated cable series launch so far this year, the cable outlet said Monday.
Bing: More on 'Falling Skies'
The viewership for the show, which is co-executive produced by Steven Spielberg and stars "ER" alum Noah Wyle as history-professor-turned-resistance-leader Tom Mason, included more than 2.6 million viewers in the adults 18-49 demographic.
Also: Noah Wyle and Moon Bloodgood Talk 'Falling Skies'
Michael Wright, executive vice president and head of programming for TNT, TBS and Turner Classic Movies, touted the "Falling Skies" numbers as an example of "what can happen when you partner with the best people in the business and give them what they need to do their very best work."
Following the debut, "Falling Skies" moves to its regular time slot of Sundays at 10/9 c.
'Perform This Way': Weird Al debuts Gaga parody video
© Eric Charbonneau/WireImage.com
Weird Al Yankovic
'Perform This Way': Weird Al debuts Gaga parody video
June 20, 2011, 1:58 PM EST
By Liz Kelly Nelson
Zap2it.com
One hasn't truly arrived on the pop culture landscape until he or she is the subject of a parody song by Weird Al Yankovic, who has managed to carve a career out of the genre.
Bing: Lady Gaga goes bald
His latest project is a take-off on Lady Gaga's "Born This Way," cleverly titled "Perform This Way." Much like his earlier songs that poked fun at Michael Jackson and Madonna, Yankovic uses the opportunity to comment on Lady Gaga's trademark trait -- her reputation as an utter oddball.
In the video, Yankovic's head is digitally subbed in on a dancer dressed as Gaga in a series of outlandish wigs and costumes. But does it work? On Sunday, Gaga herself performed at Canada's Much Music Awards sporting a blue merkin and blue armpit hair. We're not sure anyone can do a better job of making Gaga look ridiculous than Gaga herself.
Denis Leary developing new comedy for USA Network
© FX
Denis Leary in 'Rescue Me'
Denis Leary developing new comedy for USA Network
June 20, 2011, 11:10 AM EST
By John Sellers
TheWrap
Denis Leary isn't done rescuing people yet.
USA Network announced Monday that the "Rescue Me" actor will write and develop a half-hour adaptation of the British series "Sirens," a dark comedy about paramedics.
Bing: Final season of 'Rescue Me'
"Sirens" was a six-part Channel 4 series inspired by British paramedic Tom Reynolds' 2006 book, "Blood Sweat & Tea: Real-Life Adventures in an Inner-City Ambulance," and will sound familiar to fans of "Rescue Me."
"Swept along by an endless tide of bodily fluids rarely their own," writes USA Network in an official release, "the 'Sirens' trio bicker, fight and shag their way through the darkly funny maelstrom of their lives. Behind the uniforms, the sirens, and the incredibly fast driving, they are three ordinary blokes trying to make it through yet another shift. But once they've finished saving other people's lives, they need to salvage their own."
The seventh and final season of Leary's critically acclaimed FX series "Rescue Me" begins July 13.
Jackie Oh!
Hi! Just came back from one of the more exotic vacations of my lifetime--I can't believe humans can actually fly if they're willing to pay enough money!--and I couldn't be more excited about this week's new album releases!
Especially if I was barely conscious!
Well-known names, superstars, rising talents, obscure bands no one's ever heard of and likely never will--who could deny that this is music's all time peak and we're living through it?
Well, maybe my friend Larry--but that's just because he reads all the Best Buy circulars every Sunday since he's really into getting a new hard drive! What say we ignore his prejudiced opinion and simply drop down the cash to purchase this week's great new hot product? And if you can't make it a tax write-off, that's your problem!
Jackie Evancho: Dream With Me (SYCO/Columbia) I think we've all been a little taken aback by the spectacular talent displayed by young Jackie Evancho, the unbelievably cute 10-year-old who rose to fame via the best TV show ever--America's Got Talent--and can apparently sing anything ever written as if she were a hyper-sensitive 30-year-old divorcee out of therapy for less than a month and loving it! This new album--in which Evancho has imagined herself a cast member of the same Mary Tyler Moore show that brought both Valerie Harper and Cloris Leachman to their peaks of fame--is a comparative stunner, not least because of Jackie's intriguing fixation on a potential future in which silicon-based life forms have completely defeated the future growth of carbon-based beings--which is, like, us--all the while boosting the comparative relevance of many of the cast members of Sesame Street! It kind of blows my mind and makes me wish I never watched TV! That said, she's quite good and her album deserves to be in the home of millions! Frankly, this was never an issue for Lena Zavaroni!
Dream With Me - Jackie Evancho
Neil Young: A Treasure (Reprise) I think we can all agree that Neil Young is one of the most talented musicians in pop music and that sometime in the early ‘90s he stopped making records that some of us might consider "essential"--not that they weren't groovy, but, to be polite, their fabness quotient dwindled somewhat. But this new collection, featuring "countrified" tracks recorded between 1984-1985, definitively proves that Young was writing songs and making music that ranks among the best of his career during this period--and that it has been unreleased until now is something of a tragedy! For that matter, so is the fact that a so-called "compassionate" God would allow ugliness, starvation and personal cruelty to reach an all-time high during the past 20 years--but really, how relevant is that? Especially since reality TV is getting better than ever! In sum: A bold, strong album that could only be improved via the use of quotation marks around the word "treasure" in the album title! Quote marks are hipper than ever!
Get Back To The Country - Neil Young
Barry Manilow: 15 Minutes (Stiletto/Fontana) An unexpected, albeit longish updating of the Cure's classic Seventeen Seconds, this great new concept album by well-known crooner Barry Manilow is thought-provoking, melodic, highly literate (thanks to lyricist Enoch Anderson), and, like most of the singer's past work, directly inspired by Andy Warhol! Taking Warhol's classic "in the future everyone will be famous for 15 minutes" spiel into bold new territory, Manilow explores the unexpected, sometimes deadly price the quest for fame can often bring--with album closer "The Black Angel's Death Song" serving as a terrifying warning of what may come to those who lust after recognition! Continuing Manilow's ascent into complete hipness via association is his co-production here with the West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band's Michael Lloyd! Can "Mandy Had A Hard Day Sunday" be right around the corner? This dude writes the songs the whole world sings!
Pat Metheny: What's It All About (Nonesuch) An excellent showing for the ultra-skilled Metheny, whose jazz guitar prowess over the years continues to be more and more refined. Here he devotes an entire album to acoustic performances of well-known pop classics ranging from "The Sound Of Silence" and "Cherish" to "Pipeline" and "Betcha By Golly Wow," all of them tasteful, wonderfully played, and accessible to longtime fans, jazz neophytes and--perhaps most significantly--music fans who may have never purchased a jazz album in their lives. From some camps this might be seen as a sellout of sorts, but coming from Metheny, it seems a thoughtful diversion likely to bring him fans from entirely new quarters. Slick move, dude!
Garland Jeffreys: The King Of In Between (Luna Park) I confess to being one of many who perhaps let my memory lapse about just how inspiring NY-based singer-songwriter Garland Jeffreys can be. But his latest set, his first for a while, drives home the point and more--and in fact sent me back listening to every album the man ever made. An autobiographical piece, the disc is simply outstanding: Superbly written and sung tracks, one or two strangely reminiscent of Van Morrison circa latter-day Them, the collection is one of the more powerful albums I've ever heard from an artist this late in his career. Rocking, lots of fun, and a true return to form, The King Of In Between oozes with meaning and adult-oriented sentiment. Highly recommended!
Coney Island Winter - Garland Jeffreys
Depeche Mode: Remixes 2: 81-11 (Reprise) A follow-up to the band's previous Remixes 81-04, this collection--available as a single or triple CD set--takes material from as far back as 1981's Speak And Spell and puts it through remix hell; aside from a cast of hipsters including M83, UNKLE and Francois Kevorkian, the presence of former Depeche members Vince Clarke and Alan Wilder as guest remixers is likely to excite longtime fans, perhaps unpleasantly so. Though there's some repetition to be had here--true fans will likely have several of these remixes already, especially if they dropped the big bucks needed for that huge 12-inch box set some years back--the overall effect is still pleasant, and a strong testimonial to the band's long stretch as top-notch music creators.
Dream On (Bushwackas Tough Guy Mix) - Depeche Mode
Dean Martin: The Best Of The Dean Martin Variety Show: Collector's Edition (Time Life) Fans of Y! Music's second-best blog Framed who might wonder what esteemed writer John Kordosh does in his spare time--when he's not driving up and down the West Coast on his moped sampling Michelob Ultra--might find it interesting that once, long ago, he, I and a few others made the inevitable Las Vegas trip to witness the great Dean Martin in action, live, onstage, and almost unbearably funny. Here, packaged up in a variety of formats, comes a sampling of what Dean Martin was all about, taken from his sometimes surrealistic NBC variety broadcast during the late-‘60s and early-‘70s. With a guest cast including nearly everybody you'd ever imagine, music performances cornball or otherwise, and Martin's untouchably cool, drink-in-hand persona, you've got one of the finest slices of TV entertainment ever crafted. Check it out!
The Beau Brummels: Bradley's Barn (Rhino Handmade) Though it's not quite out yet but available for pre-order here, I couldn't resist making note of yet another aesthetic triumph coming courtesy of the crew at Rhino Handmade. In this case it's the spectacular royal treatment given the Beau Brummels' majestic 1968 set Bradley's Barn--which, though critically lauded, sold next to zilch but now, more than 40 years later, sounds like one of the ‘60s' best-ever pop albums. Now two discs, and loaded with previously unissued recordings, excellent liner notes and--the only down side--a horrendous 1968 radio interview that, thanks to the "period" DJ, is almost painful to hear--this is by far one of the year's best reissues, and a welcome supplement to the now out-of-print Magic Hollow collection that Handmade released in 2005. Buy this or live in shame!
Long Walking Down To Misery - The Beau Brummels
Smokey Robinson: The Solo Albums: Volume 5 (Hip-O Select) While we're talking about welcome reissues, let's not forget the excellent work methodically emanating from Universal's Hip-O Select imprint; in this instance, the label is especially appealing to those collectors out there who simply want everything by artists they admire. Here they can get a reissued version of Smokey Robinson's never-before-on-CD 1978 live set Smokin'. Recorded at LA's Roxy and packed with the hits that made him famous--with the Miracles and otherwise--the collection is a nice snapshot of the man during an interesting time in his career, and a welcome bolstering of his already impressive catalog. Keep it coming, Hip-O!
Tracks Of My Tears (Live) - Smokey Robinson
Vetiver: The Errant Charm (Sub Pop) I am completely into editing artist bios and sticking in surprise endings! Check this out: "Have you been sitting at that computer all day? You're overdue for a break. The new Vetiver album, The Errant Charm, is a superb soundtrack for an afternoon idyll. Take a moment to load the record on your mp3 player. Hell, if you still have a Walkman, the whole thing fits neatly on one side of a C-90 cassette tape. Select your favorite pair of headphones, and go for a stroll. But...for God's sake...look out for that bus!!" Next week: The Bible (Unpleasant Version)!
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Tracy Morgan apologizes for anti-gay comedy rant
© AP
Tina Fey, NBC apologize for Tracy Morgan's anti-gay rant
© Retna Ltd.
Tina Fey, NBC apologize for Tracy Morgan's anti-gay rant
June 10, 2011, 8:40 PM EST
By Wrap Staff
TheWrap
"30 Rock" creator Tina Fey and NBC chairman of entertainment Robert Greenblatt have issued statements censuring Tracy Morgan for anti-gay remarks during a recent stand-up performance.
Bing: Morgan's anti-gay rant
The statements followed a day of outcry after an anti-gay rant by the "30 Rock" star went viral on Facebook.
STATEMENT -- Bob Greenblatt, Chairman NBC Entertainment:
I speak for NBC and myself personally when I say we do not condone hate or violence of any kind and I am pleased to see Tracy Morgan apologizing for recent homophobic remarks in his standup appearance. We will always recognize an artist's freedom to express him or herself, but not when reckless things are said no matter what the context. Unfortunately, Tracy's comments reflect negatively on both "30 Rock" and NBC -- two very all-inclusive and diverse organizations -- and we have made it clear to him that this kind of behavior will not be tolerated.
STATEMENT -- Tina Fey, Executive Producer, "30 Rock"
I'm glad to hear that Tracy apologized for his comments. Stand-up comics may have the right to "work out" their material in its ugliest and rawest form in front of an audience, but the violent imagery of Tracy's rant was disturbing to me at a time when homophobic hate crimes continue to be a life-threatening issue for the GLBT Community.
It also doesn't line up with the Tracy Morgan I know, who is not a hateful man and is generally much too sleepy and self-centered to ever hurt another person.
I hope for his sake that Tracy's apology will be accepted as sincere by his gay and lesbian coworkers at "30 Rock", without whom Tracy would not have lines to say, clothes to wear, sets to stand on, scene partners to act with, or a printed-out paycheck from accounting to put in his pocket.
The other producers and I pride ourselves on "30 Rock" being a diverse, safe, and fair workplace.