Tag Archives: jonnie-penn

Felix Cartal Builds On Miami Momentum With Different Faces

‘I want people to remember it,’ EDM up-and-comer tells MTV News of just-released album. By Nicholas Philippou Felix Cartal Photo: MTV News Felix Cartal is one of the most promising young stars of EDM, a fact that became even clearer at this year’s Miami Music Week , where he played multiple shows days before the release of his latest album. Cartal’s Different Faces was unleashed on iTunes on Tuesday (March 27) under Steve Aoki’s Dim Mak label. Fresh off of his second Ultra Music Festival appearance and the success of his latest single, “Don’t Turn on the Lights,” Cartal told MTV News he’s been eager for the album’s release. “It’s been the last year of my life kind of putting this thing together,” Cartal said. “The record’s basically all that’s going on in my life. I want people to remember it, and hopefully it means something to them.” MTV News was able to catch some of Cartal’s set at the National Hotel during Miami Music Week, and it was obvious that “Don’t Turn on the Lights,” featuring Polina, has become a certifiable breakthrough hit. But what was most surprising was how many of Cartal’s fans could be seen singing so many of his songs throughout the set. “I play all the singles every set, and everyone was singing along today,” Cartal said. “I don’t think you can ever get tired of that feeling.” He may not have to, because his new album is loaded with potential smashes, already finding tracks trickling into some sets of the biggest DJs in the world. The record will feature some collaborators that EDM fanatics have followed, like Miss Palmer, whom he works with on “Black to White”; Miss Palmer is best known to EDM fans for “No Beef,” one of the biggest tracks of 2011 by Afrojack and Steve Aoki. Cartal also combined with Sebastien Grainger, from Death From Above 1979, and his contribution on “H.U.N.T.” pushes the album’s boundaries beyond EDM. “I think that’s what moves music forward, because anytime genres are colliding, I think that’s what helps music become something new,” Cartal said. “I think a lot of people thought that electronic music was just going to be a passing phase, and I kind of compare it to rap music, where it kind of brought a whole culture with it, and I think that’s why it’s lasted and continued to grow.” Cartal told MTV News his next move will be a two-month tour through May, touring major cities and finishing up at the Sasquatch Festival in Washington. And since he’s part of the Dim Mak family, and because he’s such a nice guy, we asked if he even had it in him to cake someone ,

‘Buried Life’ Guys Aim For Best-Seller List With New Book

‘You can open any page and something can spark in you to do whatever you want to do,’ Ben Nemtin tells MTV News of ‘What Do You Want to Do Before You Die?’ By Uptin Saiidi The Buried Life’s book, “What Do You Want to Do Before You Die?” Photo: Artisan They’ve gone bull-riding, streaked across soccer stadiums and played ball with President Obama. Now the guys from MTV’s “The Buried Life” say it’s time to cross off the next item on their list: Write a New York Times best-seller. With their first book, “What Do You Want to Do Before You Die?” hitting book shelves on Tuesday (March 27), they’re hoping to make good on that goal. Since wrapping the second season of their docu series, the guys — Ben Nemtin, Jonnie Penn, Duncan Penn and Dave Lingwood — have traveled the country speaking on college campuses squeezing in time to assemble their book. When the crew stopped by MTV News recently, they told us they’ve basically been working on “Before You Die” for five years. “When we started [shooting] ‘Buried Life,’ we wish we had something like [this] book,” Penn recalled of their pre-MTV days. “We were all in college when this thing started and we wish there was somewhere to go to talk about doing crazy things that you want to do in your life. Now this [book], if you go to your friend’s house and this is sitting on the coffee table, you know you’re like-minded.” Over the past few years, thousands of fans submitted buried lists of the things they wanted to do before they died on “The Buried Life” Facebook page. From there, the guys picked their favorite 150 to include in the book. The pages are also filled with illustrations, quotes, lessons and never-been-told stories like how it felt to play basketball with the president. As the group prepares to tackle the next item on their list, Nemtin said he hopes the book will inspire others to believe they can accomplish their own goals and dreams. “We didn’t start this to make a TV show,” Nemtin said. “We started this because we felt like we needed to do something and we all got inspired by different things that made us believe we could do anything we wanted. We want this book to give that feeling to anyone who reads it. You can open any page and something can spark in you to do whatever you want to do.”

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‘Buried Life’ Guys Aim For Best-Seller List With New Book

‘Buried Life’ Stars Weigh In On Presidential Election ‘Chatter’

‘A lot of people on college campuses right now are over it,’ Jonnie Penn tells MTV News. By Uptin Saiidi Jonnie Penn, Ben Nemtin, Duncan Penn and Dave Lingwood of “The Buried Life” Photo: MTV News When they’re not checking off items on their bucket list , the four guys that make up “The Buried Life” have been busy touring the country to speak at colleges and universities. The MTV stars currently have a new show in development and a book due out later this month called “What Do You Want to Do Before You Die?” which they hope makes it onto the New York Times Best Sellers list — it’s #19 on their bucket list. They recently stopped by MTV News while in New York to speak at St. John’s College, where they weighed in on themes of the presidential election as they relate to young people. “A lot of people on college campuses right now are over it. They kind of want to move on, they want to work, they want to apply themselves and they’re just sick of all this kind of … chatter,” Jonnie Penn said. “So are we. All this chatter kind of buries you. You just want to push all that stuff away.” Disinterest among young people is already showing at the polls. On Super Tuesday, MTV News had teams dispatched in three states. In Massachusetts, correspondent Jacob Soboroff reported on the record-low turnout at Boston University — the state’s largest university. Meanwhile, students in Ohio offered various reasons for not voting, from having plans to “paint” to just not caring. When asked what the solution was to raising political awareness among college-age students, Ben Nemtin perked up. “If you have an inkling in what you feel you want to do, but you haven’t done it yet, find people around that you can collaborate with. That’s how this thing started. We weren’t best friends growing up or anything — we came together to start ‘Buried Life.’ ” One solution Jonnie ultimately offered was to actually do less talking. “Some advice someone gave me that I took to heart was, listening to the people you don’t agree with, take in the positions … learn from the people you don’t agree with. “See why they feel that way and then it will help you understand why you feel the way you do, and it will also help you say, ‘Well, maybe we can compromise to do this.’ Because if you don’t listen, you’re just adding to the chatter.” Related Videos Super Tuesday: MTV News Is On The Ground!

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‘Buried Life’ Stars Weigh In On Presidential Election ‘Chatter’

‘Buried Life’ Stars Tell Oprah About Shooting Hoops With Barack Obama

Talk-show host even reveals two things from her ‘bucket list’ to the MTV stars. By MTV News staff “The Buried Life” star Jonnie Penn on “The Oprah Winfrey Show” on Friday Photo: Harpo Productions Oprah Winfrey has two big entries on her so-called “bucket list,” that collection of goals to accomplish before her time on earth is done: visit the pyramids in Egypt and become a schoolteacher. Why did Oprah find herself making such a confession on Friday’s (April 9) talk show? Because the guys from “The Buried Life,” MTV’s reality show about four friends who hit the road to complete a list of “100 things to do before you die,” had stopped by for a chat. “It sounds very dark,” said co-star Jonnie Penn of their quest. “It’s really not a dark project at all. It’s the opposite.” Over the course of the series, the friends — Jonnie and Duncan Penn, Ben Nemtin and Dave Lingwood — ended up giving a toast at a stranger’s wedding, entering a dance contest, telling a joke on late-night TV and helping deliver a baby. And, at one point, during a trip to the White House basketball courts, they managed to shoot hoops with the commander-in-chief. “Barack Obama walks from the other side of the court — the president of the United States,” Lingwood said. “And he says: ‘Oh, hey guys. I heard you guys were in town. I’d love to shoot some hoops with you. I’m a pretty busy guy, but I can shoot some baskets.’ ” The idea for the project originated with a poem by the 19th century English poet Matthew Arnold. “It hit us so deep,” Jonnie Penn said. “You have things you’re almost told to do, but sometimes, those things and all the things that go on in your life can bury you. You can feel like the whole world is on top of you. We wanted to dig through that and live our buried lives.” In addition to checking off items from their bucket list, the guys have helped other folks fulfill their wishes. On the first season, they helped a girl, whose mother died during Hurricane Katrina, travel to Colorado to visit her grave for the first time. “Buried Life” has been picked up for a second season, so the crew will once again be hitting the road to help themselves and others. “Doing the things on our list is amazing and really cool, but it’s one thing to enter a stranger’s life,” Lingwood said. “It’s so lasting, because you create a relationship with them.” What would you ask the “Buried Life” guys to help you accomplish? Let us know in the comments!

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‘Buried Life’ Stars Tell Oprah About Shooting Hoops With Barack Obama