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Are The Arcade Fire Prepping A New Album?

Rep for the band calls a listing in the U.K.’s Music Week ‘just a rumor.’ By James Montgomery Arcade Fire’s Win Butler Photo: Scott Legato/ FilmMagic In the current issue of U.K. trade mag Music Week, between listings for All Time Low’s Dirty Work album and Asa’s Beautiful Imperfection, there exists a line that reads, simply: “Arcade Fire ‘TBC.’ ” It’s not exactly clear what it’s referring to, but that hardly matters to the band’s fans. Given that it’s published alongside other upcoming albums, they’ve taken it to mean just one thing: Sometime this year, the Arcade Fire are putting out an album. But will it be an entirely new album? A live disc? A collection of outtakes from their Grammy-nominated, chart-topping The Suburbs ? Well, as it turns out, none of that may even matter. Because according to a rep for the band, at the moment, all that talk is speculative, at best. “[It’s] just a rumor,” the spokesperson wrote in an e-mail to MTV News. “Nothing [is] confirmed yet.” A rep for Music Week could not be reached for comment about the listing. So while there’s nothing to report about a new album (at least not yet), Arcade Fire fanatics aren’t exactly hurting for headlines these days. Earlier this week, the band were announced as headliners at both the upcoming Coachella and New Orleans Jazz & Heritage festivals, and they’re also on tap to perform at the 53rd annual Grammy Awards on February 13, alongside Eminem, Lady Gaga and Justin Bieber. They’ll also head into the show up for three awards, including Album of the Year. Are you hoping the Arcade Fire already have a new album on the way? Let us know in the comments! Related Artists Arcade Fire

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Are The Arcade Fire Prepping A New Album?

Taylor Swift Breaks A Heart In Her ‘Back To December’ Video

Swift ends relationship with hunky lead in the Yoann Lemoine-directed clip. By Jocelyn Vena Taylor Swift in the “Back to December” music video Photo: Big Machine Records What happens when you break the heart of a hunky-looking dude who resembles a “Twilight” character and you regret it? Well, if you’re Taylor Swift, it snows in your straight-out-of-an-Anthropologie-catalog bedroom as you write a breakup letter for your ex-beau. That’s the basic plot for Taylor Swift’s just-released “Back to December” video . In Swift’s clip for “Mine,” her lead single off her massive album Speak Now , the singer proved that she was no longer that girl who sang about proms and cheerleaders. Instead, she sang about finding love, getting married and having a family. Here, in her darker, more somber clip (despite all the early morning sun) for “Back to December,” Swift is breaking up with someone, an image we don’t usually associate with the singer. Looking almost sultry in bedhead hair, cozy sweater and a boyfriend T-shirt, Swift looks morose as she contemplates breaking it off with her good-looking boyfriend. Shots of the singer sitting in a bathtub clothed, sitting on her kitchen counter (perhaps a nod to the “Mine” video fight scene) and sitting on her bed singing the song are intercut with those of the actor who plays Swift’s love interest driving in his car, presumably away from Swift’s suburban mansion, and sitting alone on a football field, perhaps regretting letting Swift get away so easily. The video was directed by Yoann Lemoine, who did Katy Perry’s equally dreamy, equally girly clip for “Teenage Dream.” The video ends with Swift in her snowy home while the ex-boyfriend finds her breakup letter in his coat pocket as he sits alone in the bleachers. The song is rumored to be about the demise of Swift’s relationship with “Twilight” heartthrob Taylor Lautner . It’s to be noted that the video was released on January 13 — as Swift fans know, 13 is the singer’s lucky number. Snow has also been the theme in Swift’s live performances of this song, a natural fit given that the song is about December. What do you think of Taylor Swift’s new video for “Back to December”? Tell us in the comments. Related Photos Taylor Swift’s Dating History Related Artists Taylor Swift

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Taylor Swift Breaks A Heart In Her ‘Back To December’ Video

Lady Gaga, Cee Lo, Katy Perry To Perform At Grammys

Eminem and Arcade Fire previously announced as performers on February 13 show. By Gil Kaufman Lady Gaga Photo: Kevin Winter/Getty Images The first slate of performers for the 53rd annual Grammy Awards were revealed Thursday morning (January 13), and the roster reads like a pop-music all-star lineup. MTV already broke the news on Wednesday that Eminem will cement one of the best professional years of his career by taking the stage on February 13 at the Staples Center, where he’s also up for 10 awards. And he’ll have plenty of chart-smashing company. Among the other nominees on the list to perform are Lady Gaga , Katy Perry, Cee Lo Green, Arcade Fire and Miranda Lambert. It will be the first Grammy performance ever for Lambert and Arcade Fire, while Cee Lo, Eminem, Gaga and Perry are making return engagements. For Eminem, the performance is the latest in a line of accomplishments tied to his career-renaissance album, Recovery, which is nominated for Album of the Year. The Detroit lyricist scored a pair of #1 singles from the album with “Not Afraid” and “Love the Way You Lie,” featuring Rihanna. With the most nominations for the night, he’s also likely to go home with a few more awards than he did at the 2009 Grammys, when his tepidly received Relapse snagged Best Rap Album. Eminem has already been featured in the show’s promotional campaign. A touching 30-second spot showcases Em’s musical legacy , from the loss of his friend Proof to his struggles through drug dependency and his rise back to the top of the hip-hop game. Joining him in the Grammy promo campaign on Wednesday were indie upstarts Arcade Fire, who are up for three awards for their album The Suburbs . Their “Music Is Life Is Music” ad was revealed on Wednesday, showing singer Win Butler singing passionately amid a collage of images that include a casket, a barn, roses, wedding rings and dripping chocolate bars. While 11-time Grammy winner Eminem leads the pack in nominations this year, Gaga is not far behind with six nods for The Fame Monster , while Perry and Green are each up for four, and Arcade Fire and Lambert are vying for three awards. Additional performers and presenters will be announced soon. Which Grammy performance are you most looking forward to? Talk about it in the comments! Related Artists Lady Gaga Katy Perry Cee Lo Green

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Lady Gaga, Cee Lo, Katy Perry To Perform At Grammys

Jesus Take The Wheel: Omaha Kid Who Shot Up His School Left A Warning On Facebook

And we thought it could never be “one of us.” The Omaha student who went on a shooting rampage at his high school Wednesday posted a chilling message on Facebook warning of the attack and blaming the school for driving him to violence. Robert Butler Jr., 17, burst into an office at Millard South High School in Omaha during school hours and fired four to five shots, striking the assistant principal and the principal before fleeing in his car and eventually committing suicide about a mile from the school, Omaha police said. Assistant Principal Vicki Kaspar, 58, died at a hospital hours later. The principal, Curtis Case, 45, was reported in serious but stable condition. No students were injured in the shooting. Butler’s friends and family were left dumbfounded by the attack and struggled to explain what drove the boy, described as fun-loving and energetic, to his gruesome end. “It’s just unreal,” Robert Uribe, Butler’s stepgrandfather, told The Associated Press. “I don’t know what would possess him to do that.” But a rambling message Butler posted to Facebook just hours before the shooting has left some clues. In the expletive-laced rant, Butler, who had been at the school for only two months after moving from Lincoln, Neb., wrote that the new city and the new school had changed him. According to several media reports, the post read: “Everybody that used to know me I’m [sorry] but Omaha changed me and [expletive] me up. and the school I attend is even worse ur gonna here about the evil [expletive] I did but that [expletive] school drove me to this. I wont u guys to remember me for who I was b4 this ik. I greatly affected the lives of the families ruined but I’m sorry.” Butler signed off the post with an ominous “goodbye.” Local police did not say what kind of gun Butler used or how he obtained it. Butler’s father is a detective for the Omaha Police Department, and investigators were interviewing him to learn more about what may have led to the shooting. Students and friends described Butler as a fun-loving prankster who was occasionally scolded by teachers for cutting up in class, but didn’t seem angry. “He didn’t seem like a kid who would go out and do this,” Butler’s buddy Jacob Rinke told The AP. “When I first heard about this in school, I didn’t believe it. I was pretty much in denial about it.” SMH. We have got to do better a better job of teaching these kids how to deal. Source

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Jesus Take The Wheel: Omaha Kid Who Shot Up His School Left A Warning On Facebook

The Arcade Fire: Rock And Roll Champions Of The World

Their #1 album and Lollapalooza-closing set solidified their position atop the rock heap, in Bigger Than the Sound. By James Montgomery Win Butler of The Arcade Fire performs at Lollapalooza Photo: Tim Mosenfelder/ Getty Images On Wednesday morning (August 11), the long-vacated Rock and Roll Championship belt finally found a new home: around the waists of multi-hyphenate Montreal rockers the Arcade Fire (it’s a pretty big belt). With the rather startling #1 debut of their sublime third album The Suburbs here in the U.S. (and its slightly less startling #1 debut in the U.K. ), they are now, officially, the heavyweight champions of the rock world. At least until Radiohead put something out. Of course, this doesn’t mean they’re the biggest band in the world (because they’re not), or the best (because that’s purely subjective). It merely means they’re the standard-bearers for “important” rock, for globe-uniting, stadium-packing sentiment, for the betterment of mankind. They are the band that magazine editors slap on the cover along with the headline “Can _____ Save the World?” And while a #1 debut certainly helps, being champion of the rock world is less about album sales (because then, like, Nickelback would be the champs) than it is about mystique, about power, about intangibles. It is not easily definable, but you definitely know the Rock and Roll Champions when you see them. And for me, that moment occurred this past weekend, during the Arcade Fire’s festival-closing set at Lollapalooza . Pitted opposite the reunited Soundgarden (themselves former holders of the belt), AF blew me away — along with the 50,000-something folks who packed in with me — with a set that was as hard-fought and far-reaching as it was grandiose. Sure, their older stuff packed a wallop, but the soaring choruses of songs like “Neighborhood #2 (Laika)” and “Wake Up” are tailor-made for huge crowds and even huger expanses. What impressed me the most was the way the band — and the husband/wife tandem of Win Butler and Regine Chassagne — translated the quieter, more personal sentiments of the songs from The Suburbs into universal, crowd-uniting statements. Songs like “Ready to Start,” “Rococo” and especially the title track are all deeply muted, winsome tragedies (the kind of uniquely suburban angst that plays out in most of our hearts and minds), and yet, on Sunday night, in Chicago’s Grant Park, they too became life-affirming, chill-inducing sing-alongs. It was cathartic: 50,000 people releasing their inner demons. And during all that, I realized that the Arcade Fire had ascended to the heights of former champions like Radiohead and prime-era U2 and probably even Coldplay. Their shows had become events. Spiritual things. And yet, much like Radiohead (and unlike U2 or Coldplay), there was still an aura to them, a well-cultivated mystique. They emerged in silhouette at the beginning of their set, spoke very little during it and departed with a series of simple waves and bows. You don’t know very much about them, and they prefer to keep it that way. They seem genuinely unnerved by the attention they receive. This is the crucial part of any championship band: the mystery remains intact. And it’s from that mystery that the magic emerges. That is why the Arcade Fire picked up the belt vacated by Radiohead sometime in 2007 (post- In Rainbows ). They have the mystique of a champion. And while, using the WWE scale, the Rock and Roll Championship is sort of comparable to the Intercontinental belt these days (the Pop Championship would probably be the heavyweight division, which makes Lady Gaga Kane , and the Hip Hop Championship — currently held by Eminem or maybe Rick Ross — would be the WWE title), it’s nice to have a champion again. How long they hold the belt is anybody’s guess, but for now, it’s theirs to run with. Rock and roll is important again. And who knows? Maybe the Arcade Fire will be the band that finally figures out how to save the world. Long may they reign. Do you agree, or would you give the Rock and Roll Championship belt to a different band? Share your thoughts in the comments! Related Artists Arcade Fire

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The Arcade Fire: Rock And Roll Champions Of The World

Michelle Obama Kicks It Euro-style While Americans, and Barack Obama, Watch

The press won’t go there because, well, they love President Barack Obama and this story, accurately reported, is painful. I haven’t gone there because I don’t really care what’s going on between President Obama and his wife. President Clinton defiling the Oval office concerned me because his actions were a big f-u to the American people and showed blatant disrespect to the office and the country. Michelle being pissed off at Barack Obama? Eh, who isn’t? Also, Michelle being a petty, selfish woman? Also not news. If reports are to be believed, Michelle Obama is the reason America has the shining tower of intelligence Joe Biden instead of Hillary Clinton. Petty. They’re two of a kind. Still and all, this story has become more newsworthy as the scope and cost of Michelle’s trip to Europe has dribbled out.  Mickey Kaus says: So Michelle Obama vacations in Spain with her daughter and a huge posse, leaving her husband  alone on his birthday  and undermining his party’s political chances ( bad recession ‘optics’ ). This is the sort of story on which I suspect there are three levels of perception: 1. Unsophisticated : Jeez, they must have had some kind of fight. She’s pissed! This is a big ‘screw you.’ 2. Sophisticated and well informed:  At their level everyone is too smart and experienced to let any kind of spat affect state affairs. These things get planned out well ahead of time by staff. Only the unsophisticated jump to conclusions on the basis of crude external appearances. 3. Real Insider:  Jeez, they must have had some kind of fight. She’s pissed! This is a big ‘screw you.’ Ha! Well, though no one would say it, this was a big “screw you” to the president. Turns out, it was a big screw you to the American Taxpayer, too. From the  Seattle Times  that emphasizes (of course!) the private nature of the trip and that Michelle Obama will pay back some of the cost: The opulence of the European trip also has drawn scrutiny. Michelle Obama is staying at the Hotel Villa Padierna, a Ritz-Carlton resort in the mountains outside Marbella. The resort has two golf courses, a posh spa with Turkish baths, views of the Mediterranean Sea and a high-end restaurant specializing in avant-garde fare. Room rates start at $400 and rise to $6,500 for a two-bedroom villa with a private pool and 24-hour butler service. While her friends arrived in Spain on their own, Michelle Obama flew in on a type of aircraft also used by Vice President Joseph Biden. It costs the government $11,555 an hour to operate the plane, according to the Air Force. Assuming a nearly eight-hour flight to nearby Málaga, the total round-trip cost of the flight is about  $178,000 . Anita McBride, who was chief of staff to former first lady Laura Bush, was not surprised the trip has its critics. “When you are a public figure, it can be difficult to lead a private life. Despite the fact that much of this trip is paid for personally, the American people know that there are costs borne by the taxpayers and it’s to be expected that the more expensive the trip, the greater the risk of criticism,” McBride said. The optics are so bad, even Democrat (and Journolista?)  Kirsten Powers calls this a “Foolish Trip” : Some argue that Michelle should be able to travel wherever she wants if she’s paying for it herself. This is naive. She is the first lady at a time when Americans are experiencing great economic pain. There are endless great locations here at home that she could put on the map with a visit – American hotels and restaurants that would be grateful for the business generated by such a high-profile visitor. If it’s a huge sacrifice for her, so be it. Sacrifice is actually a noble trait, last I checked. Plus, if she keeps this up, she will be able to vacation anywhere she wants in about two years. The choices regarding this story are unpleasant for Democrats: 1. Barack and Michelle are fighting and she is so selfish she doesn’t care how it looks. (Actually the best scenario.) 2. Barack and Michelle are just self-indulgent and don’t care about the American people or how they might feel. Michelle feels entitled to a vacation, and dammit, she’s going to have one. 3. Barack and Michelle know how this will look and have no interest in Democrats getting re-elected in November. I happen to believe all three are true. It’s really not in President Obama’s best interest to have the Democrats in charge after November. So, President and Michelle Obama just push on doing whatever they want to do. There is also an element here that the President hasn’t quite grasped his responsibility as president-to represent the people. And the American people suffer while DC is rolling in it gangster style. Forget spats, optics, elections: The Obamas display contempt for the American people. Living like Kings while people are jobless and losing their homes is not just gauche, it stirs Americans at a primal level. Most Americans left another country so that average people could have a chance and not be lorded over by faux-aristocrats. Crossposted at Liberty Pundits

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Michelle Obama Kicks It Euro-style While Americans, and Barack Obama, Watch

The Arcade Fire Go Big, Soundgarden Get Heavy: Sunday At Lollapalooza

Arcade Fire and Soundgarden go head-to-head with powerful Sunday night sets By James Montgomery and Kyle Anderson Soundgarden’s Chris Cornell performs at Lollapalooza on Sunday Photo: Rich Sancho/ MTV News CHICAGO — Over the past three days, there’s been no shortage of power from the big stages at Lollapalooza, though usually, it was coming from one side of Grant Park or the other. On Friday, it was Lady Gaga who provided the surge , and on Saturday, it was Green Day . But on Sunday (August 8), during the final night of Lolla 2010, we finally got dueling dynamos, as the Arcade Fire and the reunited Soundgarden squared off across the park with sets that packed a wallop, not just sonically, but physically, and emotionally, too. This wasn’t showmanship –neither band really brought out the big lights (or the even bigger explosions) like Gaga or Green Day did–this was old-fashioned, roll-up-your-sleeves, sweat-on-the-stage rock and roll, the kind that makes the genre so intoxicatingly compelling, and yet, is sadly, in shot supply these days. The Arcade Fire–who just celebrated the release of their The Suburbs album with a pair of sold-out shows at New York’s Madison Square Garden –took the stage in stately silhouette, while the orchestral strains of the title track swirled around them, and quickly proved that they had learned a thing or two from their recent gigs: namely, that their big, bawling new anthems sound best while played at very loud volume. “Ready To Start” rolled along theatrically, getting bigger and bigger with each passing bar. “Rococo” started ominous and hushed, then built with each repetition of the chorus, husband/wife team of Win Butler and Regine Chassagne letting their voices become progressively more entwined, while the crowd chanted along in unison. And “The Suburbs” was jaunty and strong-limbed, stretching and expanding with Butler seated behind a piano and Chassagne on a second drum kit for added oomph. They sprinkled their older stuff throughout, and it was just as life-affirming as it ever was, in particular “Neighborhood #2 (Laika),” which was even huge during the lilting verses, “No Cars Go,” which had the crowd chanting “Let’s Go!” while the band broke into an extended jam, and a swooning, smashing take on “Crown Of Love,” which crescendo-ed until it toppled over on itself, all melodramatic and overwrought, and left the tens of thousands in the audience waving their hands back and forth. But in a set where so much was so massive, there were a pair of moments that stood out as not only the hugest of the night, but probably of the entire weekend. And they came within minutes of one another. The first occurred towards the end of their 90-minute set, when the band let “Neighborhood 3 (Power Out)” come crashing directly into “Rebellion (Lies),” a wave of sound that got downright spiritual, at least judging by the amount of arms thrust skyward, and then tore through “Month of May” a fiery burner off the new album. At the conclusion, with feedback still drenching the air, fans pressed against the barrier could be seen bowing to the band. They deserved it. And then, for the encore, the (of course) did “Wake Up,” which has become their defacto anthem, and the band didn’t even have to provide the “Woah-Oh-Oh-Ohs!” (it was probably the only moment of the show where they weren’t working overtime). Instead, Butler instructed the crowd to sing so loudly that they could “hear it on the space station.” And they probably could. That’s the power of old-fashioned rock and roll, after all. And while all of this was happening at the north end of the park, Soundgarden were providing the power down on the south side, though they preferred to do so with brute force and maximum sludge. Playing only their third show in 12 years, the Seattle quartet rolled through a similar set to their Thursday night (August 5) show at the tiny Vic Theater just a few miles away in Chicago. But while that performance was compact and internal (matching the intimate nature of the venue), the Soundgarden that showed up to play the main stage at the close of the festival was the stadium-sized monster that most people remember from the “Black Hole Sun” days. By far the most low key band to headline their particular stage all weekend (especially considering Lady Gaga’s bombastic theatrics and Green Day’s penchant for crowd-friendly spectacle), Soundgarden did what they do best: Grind out vicious, sludgy anthems designed to hit the listener square in the gut. Just as they did a few nights prior, the band opened with the Badmotorfinger dirge “Searching With My Good Eye Closed,” which set the tone for a truly harrowing night of pounding, aggressive rock. While recognizable hits like “Black Hole Sun” and “Rusty Cage” got the biggest reactions, the crowd was appreciative of grinders like “4th of July” and “Let Me Drown,” which captured the same kind of energy the band kept in reserve back when they last headlined Lollapalooza (they played the main stage on the touring version in 1996). “This is the millionth time we’ve played Lollapalooza,” frontman Chris Cornell announced to the crowd. Really, it might as well have been ’96, as the group have not lost a step, nor have they forgotten their friends (former Pearl Jam and Red Hot Chili Peppers drummer Jack Irons showed up for the show-closing “Slaves and Bulldozers”). Soundgarden are about the closest thing Lollapalooza has to an institution, and though no songs played during their festival-closing set were written after ’96, there’s something to be said for tradition — really, really loud tradition. Soundgarden capped off a busy Sunday at Lollapalooza, which saw schizophrenic jumps from the over-the-top theatrics of X Japan to the grooviness of Erykah Badu to the stout riffage of Wolfmother to the gardening-friendly hip-hop vibe of Cypress Hill. An eclectic, sometimes wholly disjointed lineup, to be sure, but one that will live on in Lollapalooza history — and founder Perry Farrell wouldn’t have it any other way. Related Videos Lollapalooza 2010 Heats Up Chicago! Related Photos Lady Gaga, Soundgarden, Green Day Heat Up Lollapalooza 2010 Related Artists Soundgarden Arcade Fire

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The Arcade Fire Go Big, Soundgarden Get Heavy: Sunday At Lollapalooza

Terry Gilliam Talks ‘Liberating’ Arcade Fire Webcast

‘I’m just a really old groupie,’ the director jokes. By Eric Ditzian Terry Gilliam Photo: MTV News Terry Gilliam had been gearing up this summer for pre-production on “The Man Who Killed Don Quixote” — a famously troubled film the director first started shooting a decade ago only to see it collapse — when what Gilliam calls a financial “hiccup” again interrupted work. That’s when he got a call from the Arcade Fire , asking if he’d like to join the band on tour and direct a webcast of their concert at Madison Square Garden. “I have to thank them for liberating me from weeks of depression,” Gilliam laughed. And so since late last week, Gilliam has been riding on the band’s tour bus, checking out shows in support of their new album, The Suburbs, and figuring out exactly how he’s going to capture their epic sound for computer screens. The effort is part of American Express’ “Unstaged,” a series of concerts by artists like Alicia Keys and John Legend streamed over the Web. As he readies plans to film the Arcade show on Thursday (August 5), Gilliam gave MTV News a call to chat about his existential connection with the band, the difference between making movies and making music and why he’s hoping not to inflict “too much Terry Gilliam” on the webcast. MTV : It was surprising, in a very good way, to hear about an Arcade Fire/ Terry Gilliam collaboration. How’d the whole thing come together? Gilliam : Less than two weeks ago, I got contacted by their manager asking if I’d be interested. There just happened to be a little gap in my life, and it’s something I’ve never done, and I’ve been a fan of the band since Funeral. I thought, “Why not? Just leap off the edge of the cliff and see what happens.” MTV : Did they know that you were a fan or something? Terry Gilliam : I don’t know. It turned out that they like my stuff, and maybe the band and I will develop a relationship, so this really has become a meeting as opposed to anything else. I hate the fact that this word “directing” is being slammed all over the place. I’m not directing. I’m just hanging out with them. I’m just a really old groupie. MTV : So if you wouldn’t call it directing, what are you doing in preparation and then on the day of the show? Will you be in the control room calling for cameras? Terry Gilliam : I’m still working it out, which is what is so wonderful. I’ve been with the band since Montreal on Friday night. I’ve seen three shows already. I’m just trying to work out what we’re doing. The reason I’m so relaxed about it is that the show is so good that I don’t have to do anything. You just point some cameras at it and it’ll be great. The cameras and the team that does that are already in place. All I’m trying to do is make sure what they capture is true to what the band is doing. The band has got guys mixing their own cameras up on the screen and pulling in material that they’ve already assembled. When I saw that, I realized, “I don’t have anything to do!” which is good, because they’ve got great stuff, and anything I might do is just unnecessary and may end up being too much Terry Gilliam. MTV : There can never be too much Terry Gilliam! Terry Gilliam : Oh, I’ve read the reviews. Come on! MTV : So what have your conversations been like with Win Butler and the band as you hang out and get closer to the live stream? Terry Gilliam : It’s all about knowing who they are and how they see things. They come from the suburbs and I come from the suburbs. The music resonated as much with me as it does with contemporary suburban kids or kids trying to get out of the suburbs. There are those that stay behind in this kind of Middle Earth that is neither country nor city, neither good nor bad, but a place that if you’re creative, you just need to get away from. You want to get where it’s painful. MTV : So are you just going to be kicking back having a beer on show night? Terry Gilliam : I’m in the middle of it! I don’t know what will happen! They said, “Just come along and we’ll see what happens.” In many ways, if we get on well, there’s something in the future that can be more thought-out. When Win and I first talked on the phone, I said, “Win, when I make a movie, I’m a couple years in preparation so that when I get to shooting, it’s so much a part of my being that I’m not even thinking about it. It’s not like we’re playing music and I’m at the piano and you come in with a guitar and we make a song.” The whole thing is very relaxed and we’ll see what else it leads to if I don’t make too many mistakes. MTV : Are you guys thinking about a more in-depth documentary? Terry Gilliam : Those conversations are floating around with other people and I’m staying out of them and seeing where this leads. It’s exploratory for us and for the band. MTV : Have you gone back and looked at some classic concert documentaries? Terry Gilliam : Nope! I don’t watch concerts very often. I’ve been in a couple. I was in the “Concert for George.” [Monty] Python was a big part of that. That was such a great night. The atmosphere was astonishing. When you see the DVD, it’s fine for people that weren’t there, but it was not what we experienced. That’s the problem with DVDs and webcasts — it’s just a fraction of the experience of being in the room. It’s always difficult to capture that. That’s why theater is theater. It’s that moment and no other moment. MTV : You sound so chilled out! I think it’s great that you’re just going with the flow on this whole thing. Terry Gilliam : It’s been so much fun. We’ve had a documentary camera running around following me when I’m talking to the band. I have no idea what that will end up being. When I work on a film, everything is so controlled. So the idea of someone with a camera, wiggling it around at us when we’re talking, I’m hoping it might be liberating. Because I don’t care! For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com .

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Terry Gilliam Talks ‘Liberating’ Arcade Fire Webcast

Britney Spears Covers Cosmopolitan, Forbids Kids From Entertainment Careers

Don’t expect Britney Spears’ kids to follow in her footsteps. If the pop star has her way, she tells Cosmopolitan while showing off pelvic tattoos, her midriff and some cleavage, they’ll live a much more low-key life. It’s hard to blame her for wanting to protect Sean Preston, 4, and Jayden James, 3, who she was recently accused of abusing , after all she’s been through. “I’m on the cover of Cosmo ‘s August issue. So excited! What do you all think? – Brit” Tweeted Spears, who recently brought back the crazy in a big way. Below are some excerpts from her interview: THE HOT ISSUE : Britney Spears certainly makes it so . On her children seeking fame of their own: “If my sons told me they wanted to be in the entertainment business, I’d lock them in their rooms until they turned 30.” On having the dreaded sex chat with Sean Preston and Jayden James Federline: “I’m dreading the moment when my sons ask me how babies are made.” On life as a mom: “Things are pretty quiet. I’ve been spending a lot of time at home with my boys. They just started karate class, which is super cute!” Sounds like the most super boring interview ever, but perhaps that’s a good thing as opposed to sparking controversy. Hey, she could be Lindsay Lohan .

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Jessica Simpson’s New Boyfriend Eric Johnson: The Nicest, Smartest Guy

Tony Romo he’s not. But Eric Johnson isn’t too shabby himself. “He’s one of the nicest guys around,” says an NFL insider who has worked with the ex-San Francisco 49ers player and current Jessica Simpson plaything. The source notes, later stating the obvious a bit by adding, “I’m surprised he is dating Jessica Simpson . She is such a big star and he is so reserved.” The guy also went to Yale … go figure! Johnson, who also played briefly for the New Orleans Saints, definitely has experience with the limelight, however, having excelled in sports all his life. Former NFL star Eric Johnson couldn’t catch on with a pro team for that long … but he’s got quite a catch in Jessica Simpson. Here’s hoping he doesn’t fumble it away. The 6′ 3″ Needham, Mass., native broke 11 school records while playing wide receiver for Yale University. He’s also a former academic All-American. Called “The Big Nerd” by Yale friends, according to the San Francisco Chronicle , “He’s very smart, and one of the most down-to-earth athletes I know.” Simpson began dating Johnson in May after friends introduced them. He’s currently separated from his wife, Keri, who filed for divorce earlier this year. “He is the polar opposite of what you think of when you say ‘player,’ ” says the source who knows him well. “When I met him, he was driving a Prius.”

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Jessica Simpson’s New Boyfriend Eric Johnson: The Nicest, Smartest Guy