Tag Archives: clouds

B.o.B And Prodigy To Hold Down ‘RapFix Live’

Plus, log on to MTV.com Wednesday at 4 p.m. to get an exclusive look at the latest videos from DJ Khaled and Nas. By Rob Markman B.o.B Photo: MTV News You may want to grab an umbrella for this week’s “RapFix Live,” because there will be some strange clouds in the forecast when B.o.B hits MTV News’ weekly hip-hop talk show. On Tuesday (May 1), Bobby Ray released his sophomore LP, Strange Clouds, and on Wednesday, he will appear on “RFL” to talk about his journey thus far. “This next album is like a culmination of everything combined, and I feel like that’s really why I’m so excited about it and eager to put it out because I’m just ready to get back on the court with it,” B.o.B told MTV News of his second album months before it dropped. It was the Lil Wayne-assisted title track that served as the first single from Strange Clouds, but before he released his Adventures of Bobby Ray follow-up, Bob dropped another single, the sing-songy “So Good.” The catchy love song has already cracked the top 20 on the Billboard Hot 100. The album, which was released on T.I.’s Grand Hustle record label, features not only Tip, but also Chris Brown, Taylor Swift and Nicki Minaj. Bobby Ray isn’t the only rap star who will be holding court on “RapFix” this week: Mobb Deep ‘s Prodigy will be making his way to the red couch to give Sway the latest Mobb updates and to debut his brand-new single live on the show. Things got a little rocky for Mobb Deep after reports of a rift between the group surfaced thanks to some pretty harsh tweets sent from Havoc’s account. All the drama has since been cleared up; the troubling tweets were sent after Hav lost his phone at a gas station and a prankster gained access to his social-networking passwords. Rather than run from the drama, Prodigy said he plans to use the negative publicity to his advantage. So, with a new project in the works, the H.N.I.C. is ready to take the next step in his infamous career. If that isn’t enough, host Sway will take you behind the scenes on two major hip-hop videos. First, we have an exclusive sneak peek of DJ Khaled ‘s “Take It to the Head” video featuring Rick Ross, Lil Wayne, Nicki Minaj and Chris Brown. Then we will also roll out clips detailing the making of Nas’ latest video “The Don.” You’re not going to want to miss this. Catch B.o.B, Prodigy and DJ Khaled on “RapFix Live” on Wednesday at 4 p.m. ET on MTV.com, and be sure to join the Twitter conversation using the hashtag #RapFixLive. Send your questions for the artists @MTVRapFix! Related Artists Prodigy of Mobb Deep Mobb Deep B.o.B

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B.o.B And Prodigy To Hold Down ‘RapFix Live’

My name is Maria Helena. I am 14 years old, I’m a…

My name is Maria Helena. I am 14 years old, I’m a Brazilian belieber and my Bieber Experience happened on October 5th at Justin’s first concert here in Brazil. First I must say it was the best day of my life! I received the email stating that I had won the meet & greet the day before and I went wild! I hardly slept, thinking about how it would be, to see the person that I loved for so long, see his beautiful smile, those eyes…what a dream! As soon as I entered the room and I saw him looking at me, I freaked out. I stopped not knowing what to do. He smiled, so I said to my sister who was with me, “MY GOD IS IT! YOU BELIEVE? IS REAL, IT’S JUSTIN!” I started crying and cried non-stop. I did not know what to do! Then they called us into the picture so I went to his side and I gave him a hug. It was the best hug of my life. He smiled at me, my God, that beautiful smile, looked into my eyes. I was still crying and then we took the photo. I was walking away but I came quickly went back and I gave him another hug and I said, “I LOVE YOU, EU TE AMO” hugging him and crying, so he replied with, “EU TE AMO”! My heart raced, I went to the clouds, it was so perfect. Never give up on your dreams because they only become reality if you believe them, and “Never Say Never” to anything. #BELIEVE. We have a big example in our lives and this example is JUSTIN DREW BIEBER. -@helleenaa/ @IJustNeedYouJDB See more here: My name is Maria Helena. I am 14 years old, I’m a…

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My name is Maria Helena. I am 14 years old, I’m a…

My name is Maria Helena. I am 14 years old, I’m a…

My name is Maria Helena. I am 14 years old, I’m a Brazilian belieber and my Bieber Experience happened on October 5th at Justin’s first concert here in Brazil. First I must say it was the best day of my life! I received the email stating that I had won the meet & greet the day before and I went wild! I hardly slept, thinking about how it would be, to see the person that I loved for so long, see his beautiful smile, those eyes…what a dream! As soon as I entered the room and I saw him looking at me, I freaked out. I stopped not knowing what to do. He smiled, so I said to my sister who was with me, “MY GOD IS IT! YOU BELIEVE? IS REAL, IT’S JUSTIN!” I started crying and cried non-stop. I did not know what to do! Then they called us into the picture so I went to his side and I gave him a hug. It was the best hug of my life. He smiled at me, my God, that beautiful smile, looked into my eyes. I was still crying and then we took the photo. I was walking away but I came quickly went back and I gave him another hug and I said, “I LOVE YOU, EU TE AMO” hugging him and crying, so he replied with, “EU TE AMO”! My heart raced, I went to the clouds, it was so perfect. Never give up on your dreams because they only become reality if you believe them, and “Never Say Never” to anything. #BELIEVE. We have a big example in our lives and this example is JUSTIN DREW BIEBER. -@helleenaa/ @IJustNeedYouJDB See more here: My name is Maria Helena. I am 14 years old, I’m a…

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My name is Maria Helena. I am 14 years old, I’m a…

Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter Trailer: History Lessen

Here’s a trailer for Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter , the forthcoming Timur Bekmambetov film featuring our 16th president as an axe-wielding killer of the undead. There’s not much more to say that you can’t derive from the super slo-mo, mega-loud hyperviolence promised herein. America’s youth has got to get its history from somewhere, I guess. The film opens June 22.

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Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter Trailer: History Lessen

Berlinale Dispatch: Do Monks and Nuns Have More Fun? Metéora Ponders the Question

Nothing says “international film festival” like a 9 a.m. goat flaying, as I was reminded at Sunday morning’s screening of Spiros Stathoulopoulos’s Metéora , which is being shown here in competition. Though I wasn’t too happy about the onscreen animal suffering — the actual slaughter of the poor beast may have been simulated, but I’m not sure — I did find the picture bewitching in other ways. I seem to be in the minority on that: Metéora has met with a lot of derisive snorting from many of my colleagues. But I think Stathoulopoulos — a young Greek filmmaker who has made only one previous feature, a real-time picture called PVC-1 — is on to something in this tale of a Russian Orthodox nun and a Greek monk who fall in love and endure the pangs of intertwined passion and guilt. If it’s true that human beings most want what they cannot have, a pretty good-looking nun and a not-so-shabby monk, housed in side-by-side towers of asceticism, have the cards stacked against them. What could be sexier, in a Brother Sun, Sister Moon kind of way? The movie takes its title from the medieval monastery complex Metéora, in Thessaly, a series of structures built on natural sandstone pillars that stretch practically into the clouds. Stathoulopoulos takes some liberties with these structures as they exist in real life: In the movie’s opening moments, he shows them to us as part of a sepia-toned triptych – in his vision, they’re mile-high his-and-hers towers, with a much stubbier stone mountain, topped by a leafy tree, nestled between. The Monk (Theo Alexander), and the Nun (Tamila Koulieva-Karantinaki), have come down from their respective retreats for a meeting in the countryside below: We see them in wide shot — they’re gifting each other with necklaces, or strings of flowers, or something — and hear them exchange austere blessings amid the grass and wildflowers. Then they part: Monk begins climbing the 652 — or something like that — stone steps to the top of the monastery, while Nun must huddle into a little net, which is then raised via a pulley to the treehouse-style convent above. (Later, we see a few hardy sisters working the crank on the contraption — nothing comes easy in the hardscrabble world of religious devotion.) Nun and Monk alternately avoid each other and rush into each other’s company. Like resourceful teenagers, they send signals to each other from their respective cells by bouncing sunlight off the surface of framed devotional pictures. They take delight in a picnic of goat meat (at least we know that poor goat didn’t die in vain), which Monk has prepared with care for his inamorata. Unable to resist her during this lunchtime idyll, he makes his move: She struggles when he first kisses her and then nudges his hand between her thighs, but resistance, as you can imagine, is futile. Hot monk-on-nun action is inevitable, but Stathoulopoulos approaches it delicately, as if it were an ascent to grace instead of a fall from it. Maybe Metéora is, all in all, a little too tasteful. The filmmaking is restrained and austere — a colleague of mine called it “too artisanal,” and I know what he means. But the film doesn’t seem arid — it’s as if Stathoulopoulos is trying to work a kind of divine sublimation, perhaps only semi-successfully, but at times his picture does achieve a kind of burnished gold glow, like the halo on one of the stiffly painted medieval saints. In fact, Stathoulopoulos shows a strong attraction to all that strange, flat religious art. Even though Metéora is set in the present day, we don’t know it until we see the nuns hauling their foodstuffs in plastic milk crates. Stathoulopoulos is going for the full-on medieval vibe here, but he modernizes it with a charming touch: Here and there he illustrates the story of our Nun and Monk with animated Byzantine icons — they move stiffly, like paper cutouts, but the effect only underscores the characters’ all-too-human frailty and uncertainty. In one of these animated segments, Monk, with Nun’s assistance, approaches Christ on the crucifix and drives nails into his palms; the sea of blood that flows from the wounds spreads into a sea of stylized curlicues that overwhelms our two already overwhelmed protagonists. The symbolism is obvious, but its over-the-top quality is what’s glorious about it. Stathoulopoulos doesn’t always go for broke in Metéora : He’s feeling his way toward the sweet spot between secular and sacred passion, and maybe, in the end, he doesn’t quite find it. But if you’ve ever felt a vaguely naughty thrill while looking at religious art – if, say, you’ve ever had an “I’ll have what she’s having” moment while looking at Bernini’s Ecstasy of St. Teresa — you don’t have a dirty mind. You’re simply seeing what’s clearly there. Religious fervor plus guilt can be a pretty hot equation. And if your Monk can cook, you’re golden. Follow Stephanie Zacharek on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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Berlinale Dispatch: Do Monks and Nuns Have More Fun? Metéora Ponders the Question

3 (Justin Bieber Video) With Lyrics

A video I made for Justin Bieber using the song 3 by Britney Spears. Thanks to the sites that i got the videos and pics from! Lyrics: 1, 2, 3 Not only you and me Got one eighty degrees And Im caught in between Countin 1, 2, 3 Peter, Paul & Mary Gettin down with 3P Everybody loves *** Countin Babe, pick a night To come out and play If its alright What do you say? Merrier the more Triple fun that way Twister on the floor What do you say? Are you in Livin in sin is the new thing (yeah) Are you in I am countin! 1, 2, 3 Not only you and me Got one eighty degrees And Im caught in between Countin 1, 2, 3 Peter, Paul & Mary Gettin down with 3P Everybody loves *** Countin Three is a charm Two is not the same I dont see the harm So are you game? Lets make a team Make em say my name Lovin the extreme Now are you game? Are you in Livin in sin is the new thing Are you in I am countin! 1, 2, 3 Not only you and me Got one eighty degrees And Im caught in between Countin 1, 2, 3 Peter, Paul & Mary Gettin down with 3P Everybody loves *** What we do is innocent Just for fun and nothin meant If you dont like the company Lets just do it you and me You and me Or three. Or four. – On the floor! 1, 2, 3 Not only you and me Got one eighty degrees And Im caught in between Countin 1, 2, 3 Peter, Paul & Mary Gettin down with 3P Everybody loves *** http://www.youtube.com/v/kfvOgEMffZA?version=3&f=videos&app=youtube_gdata Excerpt from: 3 (Justin Bieber Video) With Lyrics

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3 (Justin Bieber Video) With Lyrics

The 5 Films Likeliest to Ignite a Sundance 2012 Bidding War

No matter how many gifting suites, D-list “celebrities” and/or head-splitting parties the malevolent forces of modern commerce may stuff into the wintry idyll of Park City over the next week, we’ll always have the movies. And as usual, “we” also means studios and distributors with money to burn and release slates to fill. Let the Sundance bidding wars begin! “This year’s Sundance Film Festival will be the biggest buyer’s market ever,” writes Steve Pond at TheWrap, and whether or not his prediction checks out, tires will be kicked and deals will be made — perhaps as soon as the credits roll on tonight’s openers The Queen of Versailles, Hello I Must Be Going , Wish You Were Here and Searching for Sugar Man . But with apologies to those films and other buzzy titles like Spike Lee’s Red Hook Summer , Stephen Frears’s Lay the Favorite , Julie Delpy’s 2 Days in New York and the hip anti-rom-com Save the Date — and in grand Movieline tradition — here are five others likeliest to have buyers fanning themselves with their checkbooks. [Plot descriptions reprinted from the Sundance 2012 Festival Guide ]

REVIEW: Red Tails Blunders Through a Potentially Great Story, with Action and Derring-do to Spare

There are instances when reviewing intentions would be so much easier than reviewing actual movies, and Red Tails, which was directed by first-timer Anthony Hemingway but conceived, shaped and willed into being by George Lucas, is one of them. Red Tails is – or is intended to be – a rousing comic-book adventure based loosely on real-life events: The picture follows a group of Tuskegee Airmen as they shoot down German fighter planes and blow munitions transport trains to smithereens. In between missions, they fight more personal battles, against insidious racism and bigotry. It’s a great idea to make a movie, in 2012, about the Tuskegee Airmen, who broke ground as the U.S. military’s first African American aviators: They represent a chapter in history that’s been underexplored, certainly in the world of movies. But it’s a shame the idea had to come from George Lucas, whose enthusiasm for his subject translates mostly into a peculiar strain of inept awkwardness. Even if Red Tails becomes a hit – and it just might – it still represents a missed opportunity for greatness. Red Tails focuses chiefly on two fictional pilots, Marty “Easy” Julian (Nate Parker) and Joe “Lightning” Little (David Oyelowo), both members of the Air Corp.’s 332 nd Fighter Group stationed in Italy, guys with very different styles but bound by years of friendship. Easy follows all the rules, rarely straying from the straight-and-narrow (though he does, as it turns out, have his own demons to fight); Lightning is the hotdogger who’ll go out of his way to shoot down that random Nazi, even when it means going against orders. He also has the kind of confident swagger that earns him the love of a pretty Italian girl, Sofia (Daniela Ruah); he’s so charming and well-mannered that even Sofia’s old-world mama approves of him. The cast of characters milling, and flying, around Lightning and Easy include Ray “Junior” Gannon (Tristan Wilds), who wants nothing more than to be a fighter pilot even after an injury compromises him, and David “Deke” Watkins (Marcus T. Paulk), the only truly religious pilot in the gang, who keeps a holy card emblazoned with the figure of the deity he refers to as “Black Jesus” close by at all times. In the air, these pilots show a desire to fight hard for their country, and they’ve got the skills to do so. But military brass doesn’t get it – in their eyes, the Tuskegee pilots are inferior and are thus relegated to routine assignments, flying in rickety old junkers. But Colonel A.J. Bullard (Terrence Howard) pulls off a minor miracle, getting a plum assignment for his boys. That pleases pipe-smoking Major Emanuelle Stance (Cuba Gooding Jr.) to no end – his men have been champing at the bit for a chance like this, and at last they’ll have the chance to prove what they’re made of. The problem isn’t that Red Tails paints its story, and its characters, in brilliant, admittedly corny comic-book colors. (The script, filled with dialogue along the lines of “Germans! Let’s get ’em!”, is by John Ridley and Aaron McGruder.)  The approach could have worked, particularly when you’ve got a cast of actors as charismatic as these. Gooding and Howard, both known quantities, are perfectly serviceable here – Howard, in particular, makes even the most stilted dialogue sing, thanks to his silky purr. But even the lesser-known performers here, like the British actor Oyelowo, have some astonishing moments of grace – it’s frustrating to watch them working so hard in a picture that can’t, in the end, do them justice. Because there’s just no way around it: Red Tails is, for the most part, simply a clumsy piece of work, one that revels in ’40s comic-book style without managing to capture any of the emotional resonance of comic-book style. There’s no dramatic rhythm or flow to Red Tails . A terrible thing might happen to a character, only to be rapidly erased by this or that handy distraction. It’s as if Lucas were simply afraid of human feeling, any kind of human feeling, even the kind you often find in comic books. The movie has touches of comedy that, for reasons that are almost impossible to fathom, don’t come off as comic. At one point a white character tells one of the pilots that under cover of night, he’ll be safe from the Nazis: “At least they won’t see you in the dark.” The line should be a joke – it is, in fact, a marvelous if obvious joke – but it falls flat, almost as if Lucas and/or Hemingway (it’s hard to tell who’s at the steering wheel here, though we can safely put most of our money on the former) suffered from a failure of nerve and decided to neutralize it. The picture is full of clunker moments like that, instances where the initial impulse may have been good but the execution is nothing but blundering and inelegant. This is Hemingway’s first film, though he has previously directed episodes of Treme, The Wire, and CSI: NY . If he has a distinctive style, it’s impossible to identify it in Red Tails. The handprints all over the movie clearly belong to Lucas. That’s especially true in the technically impressive dogfighting sequences, which are the best reason to see Red Tails . Watching those planes swoop and skim through the air, sometimes flying in ballet-like formation, at others approximating a chaotic streetfight, is the greatest pleasure the movie offers. That’s not surprising when you consider that Lucas, the eternal, wide-eyed naïf among his generation of filmmakers, presented an early cut of Star Wars with old-movie dogfight footage substituting for the space-combat effects he’d fill in later. Yet not even these glorious, effusive sequences are nearly enough to carry the picture, and in some ways, they do it a disservice. Red Tails is a project that has been dear to Lucas’ heart for years. According to a profile of Lucas in the New York Times Magazine , the filmmaker first commissioned the script in the early 1990s, and although 20th Century Fox is distributing the picture, Lucas is footing all the bills himself. Lucas has admitted that with Red Tails he’s using the comic-book approach to lure a younger audience; he wants them to engage with the story of the Tuskegee Airmen, and his intentions are noble. If only his passion had translated into a more graceful movie, one that didn’t squander the considerable gifts of its cast. In the end Red Tails is mostly about the coolness of flying. Its heart is in the clouds, instead of with the men at the controls. Follow Stephanie Zacharek on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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REVIEW: Red Tails Blunders Through a Potentially Great Story, with Action and Derring-do to Spare

Thirsty Hoes: Leann “Homewreckin” Rimes Is Flossin’ Her Emaciated Racks And Backs In A ‘Kini Again

Does this itchbay do anything BESIDES go on vacation??? Leann Rimes was snapped attention sloring in a ‘kini on yet another beach. This time she’s in Hawaii to perform for the PGA tournament. What do you think about Leann and her friends’ cakes???? SplashNews More On Bossip! Tie The Knot: The Top 10 Engaged Couples We Can’t Wait To See Get Hitched New Couple???: 106 And Park’s Rocsi Diaz Rocks A ‘Kini And Looks Cozy With Raphael Saadiq On The Beach In Miami!! That’s Gotta Hurt: The Most Embarrassing Break-Ups Of All Time Some Afternoon Preciousness: Look At Lauryn Hill’s Daughter Selah Marley Stuntin’ Like Her Mama

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Thirsty Hoes: Leann “Homewreckin” Rimes Is Flossin’ Her Emaciated Racks And Backs In A ‘Kini Again

Attention Slores: Amber Rose ‘Explains’ Kimmy Cakes Diss And How Her ‘Perfect’ Love With Wiz Almost Didn’t Happen

Another day, another quote from the clouds Amber Rose lives on. Following the “surprising” amount of hoopla and fanfare that met her comments about Kim Kardashian being a homewrecker , Amber took to Twitter and her WhoSay blog to explain to her “rosebuds” why Kim had to get thrown under the bus. I know there has been a lot of rumors circulating the internet today. After being asked the same questions over and over in every interview for so long i had to be honest and get this off my chest … I don’t lie, i don’t embellish I’m not trying to hurt anyone just setting the record straight. #FAME is a Crazy thing But I’m so thankful I have a AMAZING husband that Loves and supports me to the fullest he’s my Angel and soulmate. Thank u Rosebuds and Rosestuds for understanding me Muva loves y’all so much Ooooor, you could have kept that to yourself and just stop doing interviews altogether. But letting go of this “crazy” #FAME would be too much like right, right? And so we offer you a first look and more chit chatter from the same Star Magazine interview that gave us the Kimmy Cakes and Yeezy talk.

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Attention Slores: Amber Rose ‘Explains’ Kimmy Cakes Diss And How Her ‘Perfect’ Love With Wiz Almost Didn’t Happen