Tag Archives: popular-culture

Music Exec. Pens Open Letter to Protest Beiber, Eminem Grammy Snub

*Ad man, brand manager and occasional consigliere to many of hip-hop’s most powerful stars, marketing mogul Steve Stoute took out a full page ad in Sunday’s New York Times Style Section blasting the Grammy Awards, its parent organizational, The National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences (NARAS), and its president, Neil Portnow, for what he feels is both increasing irrelevance and possible malfeasance. “Over the course of my 20-year history as an executive in the music business and as the owner of a firm that specializes in in-culture advertising, I have come to the conclusion that the Grammy Awards have clearly lost touch with contemporary popular culture,” he wrote in the ad, which took the form of an open letter. “The awards show has become a series of hypocrisies and contradictions, leaving me to question why any contemporary popular artist would even participate.” In particular, Stoute (pictured) focused on the relatively recent snubs of Eminem, Kayne West, and Justin Bieber, all musicians he believes have been unfairly beaten for awards by inferior artistic and commercial acts. “We must acknowledge the massive cultural impact of Eminem and Kanye West and how their music is shaping, influencing and defining the voice of a generation,” Stoute wrote of the two hip-hop superstars, adding of Bieber, “How is it that Justin Bieber, an artist that defines what it means to be a modern artist, did not win Best New Artist?” Read MORE of this story at MTV News .

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Music Exec. Pens Open Letter to Protest Beiber, Eminem Grammy Snub

Music Exec. Pens Open Letter to Protest Beiber, Eminem Grammy Snub

*Ad man, brand manager and occasional consigliere to many of hip-hop’s most powerful stars, marketing mogul Steve Stoute took out a full page ad in Sunday’s New York Times Style Section blasting the Grammy Awards, its parent organizational, The National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences (NARAS), and its president, Neil Portnow, for what he feels is both increasing irrelevance and possible malfeasance. “Over the course of my 20-year history as an executive in the music business and as the owner of a firm that specializes in in-culture advertising, I have come to the conclusion that the Grammy Awards have clearly lost touch with contemporary popular culture,” he wrote in the ad, which took the form of an open letter. “The awards show has become a series of hypocrisies and contradictions, leaving me to question why any contemporary popular artist would even participate.” In particular, Stoute (pictured) focused on the relatively recent snubs of Eminem, Kayne West, and Justin Bieber, all musicians he believes have been unfairly beaten for awards by inferior artistic and commercial acts. “We must acknowledge the massive cultural impact of Eminem and Kanye West and how their music is shaping, influencing and defining the voice of a generation,” Stoute wrote of the two hip-hop superstars, adding of Bieber, “How is it that Justin Bieber, an artist that defines what it means to be a modern artist, did not win Best New Artist?” Read MORE of this story at MTV News .

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Music Exec. Pens Open Letter to Protest Beiber, Eminem Grammy Snub

Justin Bieber, Eminem Grammy Snubs Prompt Open Letter From Hip-Hop Brand Manager

“The awards show has become a series of hypocrisies and contradictions,” writes Steve Stoute in full page ad. By Shawn Adler Steve Stoute Photo: Theo Wargo/WireImage Ad man, brand manager and occasional consigliere to many of hip-hop’s most powerful stars, marketing mogul Steve Stoute took out a full page ad in Sunday’s New York Times Style Section blasting the Grammy Awards, its parent organizational, The National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences (NARAS), and its president, Neil Portnow, for what he feels is both increasing irrelevance and possible malfeasance. “Over the course of my 20-year history as an executive in the music business and as the owner of a firm that specializes in in-culture advertising, I have come to the conclusion that the Grammy Awards have clearly lost touch with contemporary popular culture,” he wrote in the ad, which took the form of an open letter. “The awards show has become a series of hypocrisies and contradictions, leaving me to question why any contemporary popular artist would even participate.” In particular, Stoute focused on the relatively recent snubs of Eminem, Kayne West , and Justin Bieber , all musicians he believes have been unfairly beaten for awards by inferior artistic and commercial acts. “We must acknowledge the massive cultural impact of Eminem and Kanye West and how their music is shaping, influencing and defining the voice of a generation,” Stoute wrote of the two hip-hop superstars, adding of Bieber, “How is it that Justin Bieber, an artist that defines what it means to be a modern artist, did not win Best New Artist?” While acknowledging in his letter that the most popular acts aren’t always deserving of awards simply on the basis of their commercial success, of particular focus for Stoute is the seeming dichotomy between musicians the award ceremony chooses to honor and musicians the ceremony asks to perform. “While these very artists that the public acknowledges as being worthy of their money and fandom are snubbed year after year at the Grammys, the awards show has absolutely no qualms in inviting these same artists to perform,” he wrote. “Interesting that the Grammys understands cultural relevance when it comes to using Eminem’s, Kayne West’s or Justin Bieber’s name in the billing [but not when handing out trophies].” Not content to simply attribute these gaps to the general irrelevance or ignorance of the NARAS voters, Stoute goes on to suggest that performances are scheduled much more cynically and crassly, citing this year’s Best Album winner Arcade Fire as an example of an act too serendipitous to be coincidental. “What truly inspired the writing of this letter was that this most recent show fed my suspicions. As the show was coming to a close and just prior to presenting the award for Album of the Year, Arcade Fire performed ‘Month of May’ only to, surprise, win the category and, in a moment of sheer coincidence, happened to be prepared to perform ‘Ready to Start’,” he wrote. “Does the Grammys intentionally use artists for their celebrity, popularity and cultural appeal when they already know the winners and then program a show against this expectation?” According to the official website of the Grammys , it would be impossible for anyone to know the winners of the various awards before the show, as they are delivered in sealed envelopes to the presenters by Deloitte Accounting. The winners themselves are determined by several rounds of submission and voting, starting with a screening process where 150 “experts” ensure “that each entry is placed in its proper category.” From there, nomination ballots are sent out. Voters are encouraged to vote only in their area of expertise in addition to the four general categories, incidentally the same categories Stoute has the most problems with: Record Of The Year, Album Of The Year, Song Of The Year and Best New Artist. The top five vote getters from this process are listed as the official nominees. Finally, ballots are sent out with the new, limited choices to determine a winner. Not good enough, Stoute says, believing this system is possibly ripe for being corrupted. “The National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences hides behind the ‘peer’ voting system to escape culpability for not even rethinking this approach,” he writes. “You are being called to task at this very moment, NARAS.” Representatives from NARAS have not responded to MTV’s request for comment by press time. Related Photos The 2011 Grammy Awards Show Related Artists Justin Bieber Eminem

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Justin Bieber, Eminem Grammy Snubs Prompt Open Letter From Hip-Hop Brand Manager

Patton Oswalt: Response To Geek Column Has ‘Proven The Point’

‘Zombie Spaceship Wasteland’ author talks to MTV News about reaction to his controversial Wired article. By Rick Marshall Patton Oswalt Photo: MTV News Late last year, Patton Oswalt created quite a stir in the online world when he wrote a column for Wired calling for the annihilation of the nerd world as we know it. Just a few weeks and no small amount of controversy later, the actor/comedian says he feels vindicated by the discussion the column generated. Titled “Wake Up, Geek Culture. Time to Die,” the column was published just days before the release of Oswalt’s “Zombie Spaceship Wasteland,” a collection of essays that collectively form the newly minted author’s memoir. In the Wired piece, Oswalt lamented the mainstreaming and growing accessibility of all of the things that once defined “nerd culture.” With all manner of geekery now providing the fuel for popular culture, he pushed for readers to accelerate the burn, eventually forcing society to find new obsessions and exotica once everything else has been cataloged, ranked and quoted into oblivion. “In order to save pop culture future, we’ve got to make the present pop culture suck, at least for a little while,” he wrote. Not surprisingly, the column prompted no small amount of online debate, and when Oswalt dropped by MTV News to discuss his new book, he offered up some thoughts on the intense back-and-forth his missive created. “I feel like I said what I wanted to say but, if I might add, the fact that the Internet blew up the way it did might have partially proven the point that I had in the essay,” he told us. Along with calling for a pop-culture apocalypse, the actor also coined a brand-new term: Etewaf. It stands for “Everything That Ever Was — Available Forever,” and according to Oswalt, making everything we loved about the past available will do no more harm than good, and reduce the desire for more of the nostalgia-filled elements of our youth that made today’s “Star Wars” muscle shirts and tributes to “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” on “Glee” cool in the first place. Of course, whether he’s correct is the stuff of continued debate both on the Net and offline — and that’s the just the way he wants it. “I don’t want to get too deep into it, I’d rather have people try to interpret it,” he continued. “Some of the arguments against it have been really eloquent and brilliant, so I’m just glad that it inspired people way smarter than me to write stuff.” What’s your take on Oswalt’s Etewaf theory? Tell us in the comments!

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Patton Oswalt: Response To Geek Column Has ‘Proven The Point’

Patton Oswalt: Response To Geek Column Has ‘Proven The Point’

‘Zombie Spaceship Wasteland’ author talks to MTV News about reaction to his controversial Wired article. By Rick Marshall Patton Oswalt Photo: MTV News Late last year, Patton Oswalt created quite a stir in the online world when he wrote a column for Wired calling for the annihilation of the nerd world as we know it. Just a few weeks and no small amount of controversy later, the actor/comedian says he feels vindicated by the discussion the column generated. Titled “Wake Up, Geek Culture. Time to Die,” the column was published just days before the release of Oswalt’s “Zombie Spaceship Wasteland,” a collection of essays that collectively form the newly minted author’s memoir. In the Wired piece, Oswalt lamented the mainstreaming and growing accessibility of all of the things that once defined “nerd culture.” With all manner of geekery now providing the fuel for popular culture, he pushed for readers to accelerate the burn, eventually forcing society to find new obsessions and exotica once everything else has been cataloged, ranked and quoted into oblivion. “In order to save pop culture future, we’ve got to make the present pop culture suck, at least for a little while,” he wrote. Not surprisingly, the column prompted no small amount of online debate, and when Oswalt dropped by MTV News to discuss his new book, he offered up some thoughts on the intense back-and-forth his missive created. “I feel like I said what I wanted to say but, if I might add, the fact that the Internet blew up the way it did might have partially proven the point that I had in the essay,” he told us. Along with calling for a pop-culture apocalypse, the actor also coined a brand-new term: Etewaf. It stands for “Everything That Ever Was — Available Forever,” and according to Oswalt, making everything we loved about the past available will do no more harm than good, and reduce the desire for more of the nostalgia-filled elements of our youth that made today’s “Star Wars” muscle shirts and tributes to “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” on “Glee” cool in the first place. Of course, whether he’s correct is the stuff of continued debate both on the Net and offline — and that’s the just the way he wants it. “I don’t want to get too deep into it, I’d rather have people try to interpret it,” he continued. “Some of the arguments against it have been really eloquent and brilliant, so I’m just glad that it inspired people way smarter than me to write stuff.” What’s your take on Oswalt’s Etewaf theory? Tell us in the comments!

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Patton Oswalt: Response To Geek Column Has ‘Proven The Point’

There is No Way Paula Abdul’s Live to Dance Can Be Good

I mean, watch the premiere tonight on CBS with your breakdancing friends, if you must — but Paula Abdul’s new reality show Live to Dance is set to be a lukewarm medley of disappointments, backflips and septuagenarian hoofers.

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There is No Way Paula Abdul’s Live to Dance Can Be Good

Remembering Bill Erwin, the ‘Old Man’ from Seinfeld

Admittedly, when I’m flipping through channels and come across the episode of Seinfeld titled “The Old Man,” I never even considered the possibility that the old man in question in this episode, played by Bill Erwin, was still alive. This episode aired in 1993! And Erwin wasn’t someone who just looked old like Wilford Brimley (fun fact: This year, Tom Cruise, the guy filming a new Mission: Impossible movie, will be as old as Brimley was when he filmed Cocoon ) — Erwin was almost 80 when he filmed his role. Sadly, Erwin passed away this past week at the age of 96, but he leaves a treasure trove of popular culture appearances behind.

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Remembering Bill Erwin, the ‘Old Man’ from Seinfeld

Celebrity of the Year Finalist #4: The Jersey Shore Cast!

With 2010 drawing to a close, it is with much pride that THG unveils its 10 finalists for its prestigious, Fourth Annual Celebrity of the Year award. These stars all gave us their best, their worst, their nude pics (sometimes) and their scandals (often). This month, THG honors that greatness. After the Kardashians kame in at #5, we present an even more useless group as our Celebrity of the Year finalist #4 … the Jersey Shore cast! Love ’em or hate ’em, they left their mark in 2010 . We know. They are idiots. You can spare the “what a bunch of losers with no future and bad values” bit, because we f*%king know. Maybe that’s the appeal. You can argue how undeserving they are of fame and fortune all day long, and you won’t be wrong. But doesn’t that apply to many “celebrities” nowadays? In terms of raw impact on popular culture, few have had the impact of this gang of guidos and guidettes, who rose from obscurity to household names. Say what you will about this talentless, attention-starved crew – and, Lord knows, we will until they finally go away – but Jersey Shore ‘s success can’t be denied. Like the Kardashians, Snooki, JWoww and The Situation embody the celebrity gossip culture of the 2000s. And to top it off, they can actually be pretty funny. More Jersey Shore quotes have become part of the lexicon this year than we can even count (or like to admit). Snooki was the year’s top Halloween costume. You may hate them, but it’s a love-to-hate kind of hate. At least to some degree, they are in on the joke at this point. They are getting paid to party and sleep around, which they would do anyway, and loving life. Hilarious, depressing and astounding at the same time, five million people tune in to watch their over-the-top antics because, deep down, we can all relate. Maybe not to cat fights, stints behind bars or the constant threat of STDs, but to crashing with our friends, cracking jokes, and living it up as young adults. With a new season kicking off next month (check out the Season 3 trailer ), here’s a tribute to some of the year’s top moments provided by these characters:

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Celebrity of the Year Finalist #4: The Jersey Shore Cast!

Lady Gaga’s ‘Alejandro’ Video Mixes ‘The Spiritual And The Sexual,’ Expert Says

Religion professor Josef Sorett says Gaga’s themes have long tradition in pop music. By James Montgomery Lady Gaga in “Alejandro” Photo: Interscope Lady Gaga’s “Alejandro” video is so rife with religious imagery that you practically need a Ph.D. to understand it all. And luckily enough, we found somebody with one: Josef Sorett, a professor of religion and African-American studies at Columbia University. With everyone from director Steven Klein and Gaga’s fans to Perez Hilton and Katy Perry weighing in on the clip’s use of religious (mostly Catholic) images, we decided to ask Sorett for a scholar’s opinion on the “Alejandro” video, to find out just what, exactly, all those crosses and rosary beads mean. “To me, this video is very much about the wedding of the spiritual and the sexual, which, to be quite honest, has been a longstanding theme in popular music, whether it be someone like Madonna or, you know, Marvin Gaye,” Sorett told MTV News. “But there’s also a tradition of this — using the notions of love or loss to explain the relationship between humanity and divinity — in the Catholic church that goes back much further, obviously.” Sorett pointed to a key scene at the beginning of the “Alejandro” video, in which Gaga, holding a bejeweled heart on a pillow, leads a funeral procession, as an example of this, pointing out both the divine and the human symbolism of it all. “You have her holding the Sacred Heart, the bleeding heart of God for humanity, and at the same time, the funeral also reminds me of Eva Per

Courtney Love Says She ‘Might Be A Bitch’

But she’s neither skinny, nor little, she says of her inspiration for lead single ‘Skinny Little Bitch.’ By James Montgomery Courtney Love Photo: MTV News The greatest thing (or, alternately, the saddest) about Hole ‘s “Skinny Little Bitch” — the growling, guttural first single off their Nobody’s Daughter album — is that it could have been written yesterday. Or five years ago. Or, as Courtney Love puts it: “I could’ve written it tomorrow.” That’s because, over the past few years, there’s been no shortage of skinny celebutantes parading through popular culture, and regretfully, the trend doesn’t show any signs of ebbing. Which is part of the reason Love (together with Hole guitarist Micko Larkin) wrote it in the first place. For better or worse, the subject matter appears to be timeless. “It just felt zeitgeist. It just felt right,” Love laughed during an interview with MTV News. “There are so many skinny little bitches doing so many bad things. It was like, remember when Paris Hilton used to say ‘That’s hot?’ … It was just the right phrase for the right time.” Not surprisingly, “Bitch” has already become a staple on modern rock radio, though that probably has as much to do with its sentiment as it does with its snarl &#8212 a buzz-saw wall of guitars, courtesy of Larkin, and Love’s unearthly wailing on the chorus. Quite frankly, though, it comes down to the current single itself. It’s a song that would have sounded equally at home on Hole’s 1999 album Celebrity Skin. And while, in recent years, Love has feuded with more than her fair share of skinny little things, she maintains that the titular “Bitch” she’s screaming about doesn’t actually exist. Not yet, anyway. “We haven’t found her yet,” Love said, with a laugh. “A lot of reviews have focused on whether the ‘Skinny Little Bitch’ is me, except I’ve only become skinny [in my 40s]. I only figured out how &#8212 when I’m stressed, instead of overeating, under-eating &#8212 in my 40s. And I’ve never been little. I’m 5’11”; there’s a lot of me. So I’m not really skinny, nor am I little. I might be a bitch though.” What are your thoughts on the first single from the Hole album? Tell us in the comments! Related Artists Hole Courtney Love

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Courtney Love Says She ‘Might Be A Bitch’