Tag Archives: think-the-idea

Rihanna’s Rockin’ Nipple of the Day

The biggest issue with Rihanna is now that when I promise girls who get naked on the internet for me…that I will make them the next Rihanna…cuz fame hungry girls love the idea of being the next Rihanna….and I love false promises for the spread asshole pics….is that I have to explain to them that I don’t mean I’ll beat the fuck out of them…not that any of these girls mind…the new generation is not like the old generation and it seems like 25 and under..even 30 and under think the idea of throwing down with a dude…even if it means getting fucked up with a broken nose and shit…is either funny or erotic…I don’t know how many times I get asked to mistreat a girl and I’m talking normal fucking girls…cuz it turns them on….but being the gentlemen that I am…limit my S&M to a mild spanking and spitting in their whore faces….I don’t fuck with any of that punching, slapping or chokin’ out…it just makes me feel awkward….something I don’t feel while staring at pics of Rihanna’s nipple on set of a photoshoot…but probably cuz I am lookin at it on my couch and not in the kids section of the library….while babysitting my neighbor’s kid…in efforts to score married chicks who are unhappy at home primarily in the bedroom at home….using me to remind them that their husband isn’t all that bad…. TO SEE THE REST OF THE PICS FOLLOW THIS LINK

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Rihanna’s Rockin’ Nipple of the Day

Incubus Explore ‘Stark Simplicity’ In ‘Promises, Promises’ Video

Band’s new clip is an artfully subtle affair, much like their new album, If Not Now, When? By James Montgomery Incubus’ Brandon Boyd in the “Promises, Promises” video Photo: Sony Music Entertainment Incubus ‘ brand-new “Promises, Promises” video is a thing of beautiful simplicity — little more than the band performing in and around projected images, dancing lights and slowly undulating colors. To say it’s a departure from the rocket-launcher guitars and skittering electro frippery of their past is a bit of an understatement; then again, pretty much everything about Incubus these days — especially their upcoming If Not Now, When? album — is a departure. An intentional one, of course. Which is part of the reason they chose “Promises” as the proper first single from When?, which is due July 12. It represents everything they hoped to achieve with the new album. “It’s about whittling down the process to really simple forms, finding real beauty in stark simplicity, allowing for space to be as big a part of the music as the notes,” guitarist Mike Einziger told MTV News. “This album feels spacious to me, there’s a lot air in the album. In our previous albums, we’ve tried to fit as many notes as humanly possible into the music and I think the idea of writing something that can stand on its own was a core theme of the album.” And those ideals extended to frontman Brandon Boyd’s lyrics too. In “Promises,” he tells the story of a woman who shields herself from the world through barriers, both real and imagined. In the video, they’re represented in the form of projections that envelop the band — but in the song itself, well, they’re mostly alluded to. Which was Boyd’s goal all along. “I realized that the greatest challenge was in saying more in less space, with less notes, less lyrics. Can you create a thought that can shatter something, or shake somebody up, without having to spell the whole thing out for them?” he said. “You introduce these ideas and then create gaps, so there’s a lot of space on this record. And, this is just my humble opinion, but I think there is a grace to this album, that we’ve never really stumbled onto before, and I think I’m the most excited because of that.” What do you think of the “Promises, Promises” video? Share your reviews in the comments! Related Artists Incubus

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Incubus Explore ‘Stark Simplicity’ In ‘Promises, Promises’ Video

MTV’s New Awards Show Will Honor Digital Music, Media

‘Expect to see something that you wouldn’t typically see,’ MTV rep says. By James Montgomery Photo: MTV When it comes to awards shows, MTV has spent the past three decades breaking the mold. Come spring, they’ll try to invent a new mold altogether. On Wednesday, the network revealed it is planning an entirely new awards show, one aimed at honoring digital music and media. And unlike the long-running Video Music Awards and Movie Awards — which lampoon traditionally stodgy fetes like the Grammys and the Oscars — this time out, there’s no pre-existing blueprint to go up against. This will be an entirely new undertaking. “I think the idea we’re trying to convey is: We have the current heavyweight champions of music and movie awards shows, and we love them — they’re a great place for celebrating music and movies — but we also think something new is going on,” Dermot McCormack, head of digital for MTV Music and Logo Group, told MTV News on Thursday (January 20). “The industry has evolved into a digital medium, and fans have evolved right along with it. So we figured it was time to re-examine how we reward achievement in these new mediums.” McCormack said the still-untitled show will premiere in the spring, and will air live on the Internet, on social media sites and mobile devices — but will not be broadcast. “This is a tent pole born from the digital medium, so the rules of television don’t really apply here,” he said. “We’re a multi-screen company, and everything we do should take advantage of all our screens. This show may air, but it definitely will not be something live from 8 to 10 p.m. on MTV. One of the great opportunities with digital is that we remove constraints. And when we do, we think great creativity will show up.” And while the awards categories are still being determined, McCormack said fans can expect to see their favorite music apps and blogs honored in a way that’s befitting of MTV’s awards-show legacy. “Expect to see something that you wouldn’t typically see,” he said. “The idea here is to create a response to this great renaissance that’s happening, the activity and revolution in the music business. It’s not only about where music is today, but where it’s going too. We want to stake a claim in that while still dipping into our heritage. When the first VMAs happened [in 1984], you had Dan Aykroyd coming out smoking a cigarette. That’s the same spirit we’d like to capture here.” What ideas do you have for MTV’s new digital awards show? Tell us in the comments below!

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MTV’s New Awards Show Will Honor Digital Music, Media

Aubrey O’Day Thought Sex Was ‘Disgusting’ In High School, On ‘When I Was 17’

‘When I was 17, contrary to popular opinion, I was a virgin,’ former Danity Kane singer says. By Jocelyn Vena Aubrey O’day Photo: MTV News These days, Aubrey O’Day is known as a sexy pop singer who, among other things, has appeared in a Vegas stage show nearly nude. But back in high school, the Playboy model thought sex was kind of gross. On this week’s episode of “When I Was 17,” O’Day admits that having sex was not her number-one goal in life. “When I was 17, contrary to popular opinion, I was a virgin,” the onetime Danity Kane singer confesses on the show, which also features former baseball captain Donald Trump and Nick Cannon. “I was very scared of boys. I was very insecure about my body and I thought anything sexual was disgusting.” While it may be hard for fans to believe that O’Day, who regularly poses wearing very little in photo shoots and very openly discusses her bisexual love life, was a prude in high school, her friend Melissa confirms that she was in fact kind of a sexual wallflower, explaining, “I think the idea of sex just kind of freaked her out.” O’Day was apparently so scared of boys that her friends weren’t even sure if she liked them at all. And forget about having a discussion with O’Day about sex — that was even weirder for her. “I’d get, like, creeped out if I even heard my friends talking about it, and all my friends were having sex,” she explained. “And I was just the one that didn’t ever have a boyfriend. People probably thought I was a lesbian.” “When I Was 17” — this week featuring Donald Trump, Nick Cannon and Aubrey O’Day — airs Saturday at 11 a.m. on MTV. Related Photos When I Was 17 | Ep. 7 | Celebrity Photo Flashback

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Aubrey O’Day Thought Sex Was ‘Disgusting’ In High School, On ‘When I Was 17’