Tag Archives: Culture

Lohan’s New Marketing Campaign of the Day

She’s an actor. Maybe she’s not a very good actor, but an actor nonetheless. Actors lie. That’s what they are trained to do. They are also very image conscious and aware and every move they make is totally scripted, especially for someone who isn’t getting any work and who’s only opportunity to act is in their everyday life…. I am convinced she like the attention she’s getting. She probably finds it funny and found an angle. You know one of those don’t fight it, join it, cuz as more and more people talk about her dying or her fake feud with her father, who is just going along with the whole thing, the more people are saying the name “Lohan”…. I am a fan of her. I think she’s amazing. I would be friends with her if she ever dropped that deadweight cunt Samantha Ronson, and I think this is probably her best role yet, if I was the Academy Awards, she’d get best Oscar for her role in life. Pics via PacificCoastNews

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Lohan’s New Marketing Campaign of the Day

Rape Play Video Game of the Day

You geek gamers probably already know about Rape Play, you’ve probably already got all the cheat codes and have finished the shit, but I love this shit, I’ve heard about it the last month and the concept is genius but not as genius as this Fox Report with a psychologist trying to ruin our fucking fun by saying that Raping our boss who fired us is gonna taint us, and my expert opinion is that the bitch needs to get raped, seriously she’s so uptight and serious with all her theories about how this shit is going to turn us into school shooters, when really the worst I see happening is that you end up teaching your boss a fucking lesson for not following traditional gender roles, where we’re the fucking boss….here’s a better video with some more footage of it that I hope sells you on the shit and gets you downloading it…. All I gotta say is let Japan be fuckign Japanese, what the fuck do we know about their culture to say shit is wrong according to our Christian bullshit philosophy…Fuck off America.

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Rape Play Video Game of the Day

Audrina’s Stalker in Court of the Day

So a dude got busted dropping off letters at Audrina’s house and he must be crazy cuz everyone knows Audrina can’t read. Some stalker…. He was in court and he got frustrated I couldn’t hear a word of what he was saying but apparently it is funny…but not as funny as admitting to the world that you stalk Audrina Patridge, who is fucking useless and barely celebrity….almost as bad as getting arrested for stalking the bitch who works at Starbucks cuz she smiles at me and a smile means she is my wife in my culture that I invented for the sake of justifying why my dick is exposed and I’m asking for a Latte, if you know what I mean… But in more interesting news, you can use online dating to make tons of money….from lonely, desperate women looking for love….a hero who with a strategy that makes sense….

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Audrina’s Stalker in Court of the Day

Corey Haim’s Life Mirrored Pop Culture

‘There’s nothing I can say except a person’s got to go through what they’ve got to go through,’ Haim said of his ups and downs. By James Montgomery Corey Haim Photo: Ron Galella/ Getty Images Early Wednesday morning (March 10), actor Corey Haim was pronounced dead at Providence St. Joseph’s Medical Center in Burbank, California, as a result of an apparent drug overdose. He was 38 years old. Without making light of the tragedy, in a lot of ways his death mirrored the last three decades of popular culture. His meteoric rise to fame, his struggles with substance abuse that led to his downfall, his newfound sobriety that sparked an attempted comeback (which was, of course, captured for a reality TV show), and finally, the sad events of Wednesday morning are symbolic of the era. He lived his life both in and out of the spotlight, dealt with the pressures of fame, and, in death, may even serve as a cautionary tale about both. Here’s a look back at a career that had just as many highs as it did lows, a career that reflects our culture a whole lot more than you’d probably care to imagine. Like many of today’s teen stars, Haim’s first brush with fame came on the small screen, in a Canadian TV program called “The Edison Twins,” followed by a role in the 1984 Sarah Jessica Parker/ Robert Downey Jr. vehicle “Firstborn.” He continued to work in both film and TV and landed the title role in 1986’s “Lucas,” which earned him raves and thrust him directly under the glare of the spotlight. The following year, he starred in Joel Schumacher’s “The Lost Boys,” a vampire flick that, through repeated VHS viewings, would go on to become a Gen X favorite. The movie also teamed him with Corey Feldman, and the two began a partnership — and friendship — that would thrill teenage girls and delight tabloid editors for years to come. Dubbed “the Coreys,” the duo were the latest in string of A-list Hollywood tandems that had run the town for decades (and continues to do so today), and stoked their newfound fame — and heartthrob status — in a series of buddy pictures, including “License to Drive” and “Dream a Little Dream.” They became a commodity, a way for studios to sell pictures to international distributors even before they were shot … something on-par with the phenomenon currently surrounding the cast of the “Twilight” series. “In many ways, they’re analogous to the ‘Twilight’ thing, to the success of a movie not being driven by great acting, but rather, driven by teen love for these characters,” David Poland, editor of MovieCityNews.com , told MTV News. “They ended up in the Tiger Beat world, which we can see today in what’s happening to the Robert Pattinsons and the Taylor Lautners of the world. The Coreys had success and something people envied, but at the same time it was empty. … It was a phenomenon where the industry could use them as bait and try to create a culture around them.” Offscreen, their hard-partying ways made them mainstays in the tabloids. They were Paris and Nicole nearly a decade before the Internet even existed. “The Coreys were BFFs before the term had even been coined. They were inseparable in the way we’ve seen the Parises and Nicoles, ‘The Hills,’ or even the Kardashian sisters,” Bonnie Fuller, former editor of Us Weekly and current president and editor-in-chief of HollywoodLife.com , told MTV News. “They had adventures together, both onscreen and off. You never thought of one without the other. … They were like the toast of the town, they were riding high. They were kids making money, they were celebrated and they could get into every club, every party in town.” The good times began to end as the ’80s drew to a close, as both Haim and Feldman struggled with drug addiction — Feldman was arrested in 1990 when, after a traffic stop, police found heroin in his possession — and both men underwent very public stints in rehabilitation facilities. The treatments didn’t work because, as Haim told MTV News in 2007 , “I was doing it for everyone else … everyone but me.” As Haim’s career began to stall, he started a precipitous — and very public — fall from grace, including a 1993 arrest for wielding a replica handgun during a dispute with a business manager. In 1996, he was sued for $375,000 for pulling out of the film “Paradise Bar,” and, in 1997, at the age of 25, he was forced to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. These days, we’re well-versed in such tumbles (everyone from Britney Spears to Lindsay Lohan has clocked a stint in rehab), but back then, this was huge news: Stars rarely melted down to this degree, or at least they didn’t do it while the rest of the world watched. “He disappeared off the radar, because he was having so many drug issues, he was in and out of rehab, and I think that was emblematic of what can happen in Hollywood, and particularly to child stars,” Fuller said. “Most people are not equipped to cope with that amount of fame, period, but to be young and have that much fame, and then to have it go away, most people can’t recover from that. They weren’t trained in any other profession, they didn’t go to school, and they have nothing to fall back on.” As stories of his drug use continued to spread, Haim’s movie roles began to dry up. He starred in a series of direct-to-video films, including “Blown Away” (alongside Feldman), and “Oh ,What a Night,” and was in and out of rehab — according to some reports, he logged more than 15 stints in drug-treatment facilities. In 2001, he was rushed to the UCLA Medical Center in Santa Monica after reportedly suffering a drug-induced stroke. He eventually moved back to his native Toronto, got sober and in 2007, signed on to do “The Two Coreys,” an A&E reality show that detailed his personal struggles, his relationship with Feldman, and the trials and tribulations the two endured during the making of “Lost Boys: The Tribe,” a sequel to the 1987 film. It appeared that a comeback was in the works, though, as it turned out, Haim was only briefly featured in the movie, and “Coreys” was canceled midway through its second season. “Apparently, he was fired during [production of the film], was doing drugs and didn’t show up. This town can be extremely cold, and you lose your friends easily. And when you’re a drug addict, no one wants anything to do with you,” Poland said. “Couple that with the fact that, on some level, every actor does what he or she does because they want the attention, which is why, when he decided to get better, he did it on TV, which is almost impossible to do.” Haim did continue to work, however, and at the time of his death, he had several films in production. And while his films of the 1980s have certainly earned him a permanent place in pop-culture lore, it’s everything that happened to him since — his fall, his struggles, his comeback — that resonates most clearly these days. Because we have seen (and still are seeing) the stars of today battle with the same demons, take the same tumbles, and attempt the same comebacks. But these issues aren’t played out over the course of years or even months, rather, they unfold with each passing second. Even Haim realized this and took great sorrow in his inability to control his situation. “It’s like seeing a young male me, or a female me … I feel for them. There’s nothing I can say except a person’s got to go through what they’ve got to go through,” Haim said in 2007 of current teen stars’ issues. “When you’re young and you have money, you become the CEO, automatically, of life, of your family. … I don’t have much advice [for them] except to take it very slow. It’s not even day-to-day anymore, it’s emotion-to-emotion, second-by-second. Just take it real slow. This is a tedious process. And it’s an expensive mistake to make.” Related Videos Remembering Corey Haim MTV Rough Cut: Corey Haim Related Photos Corey Haim: A Life In Photos

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Corey Haim’s Life Mirrored Pop Culture

Jay Electronica Disguised His Voice To Avoid Hip-Hop Prejudice

‘I was embarrassed from being from the South,’ he tells Mixtape Daily. By Shaheem Reid Jay Electronica Photo: MTV News The O.D.: A Mixtape Daily Exclusive Hearing the commanding voice of Jay Electronica on the microphone, one probably couldn’t detect his New Orleans roots. Years ago, like many MCs from the South, Electronica experienced some hip-hop prejudice when people heard the Southern twang in his voice — so he started disguising it. “I would go somewhere — I would go to an open mic and when they heard my accent and not understand what I’m saying, it would just be a door-closer,” Jay told MTV UK on a recent trip to Europe. “I made a point in being able to speak in a certain way that I wouldn’t get the door closed on me. All of these things make me who I am now, you know. “I have to admit, you know, a few years ago, I wouldn’t have admitted this — or maybe I wouldn’t have been conscious of it in a way to admit or be embarrassed — but in my earlier years from when I first left home, I was embarrassed from being from the South,” he added. “Not in general, but as a rapper because all of the negative things that people in the States put on the South. Like, ‘The South, they’re slow. They move slow, they think slow, they’re less intelligent. They’re less exposed, they’re underexposed, they’re more sheltered.’ So as a rapper — I’ve been rapping since I was 10 years old — I always had a feeling of ‘I’m gonna show you’ because we down here doing it. Not that I was embarrassed necessarily — I don’t know if that’s the correct word — but I know that when I left home, if someone had heard my accent and heard where I was from, the door was immediately closed.” Electronica said he had to adapt and become a chameleon on the mic. While trying to break into the music industry, he moved between different cities such as New York, Atlanta and Chicago. “I kind of stiff-armed my roots for a couple of years,” the Brooklyn transplant continued of his journey. “Then my sister told me one day, ‘You know, you act like you’re ashamed of being from home.’ It was like a reality check. I checked myself. I mean, this is years ago, but now I’m at a place where I understand where I’m from. I understand my culture and I’m more proud to be from there than associate with somewhere else.” Despite trying to hide his roots early on, Jay thinks back to the early days of New Orleans hip-hop with a smile. “I’m from New Orleans and there’s a certain type of music,” he explained. “I come from a bounce culture — bounce music. You been to New Orleans a couple times, you probably heard of the bounce music. It’s a part of me; I grew up with bounce music. It’s call-and-response, it’s trance, it’s tribal, it’s communal, it’s African, it’s based in Africa … the energy of it.” For other artists featured in Mixtape Daily, check out Mixtape Daily Headlines . Related Videos Mixtape Daily: Notorious, B.I.G., Tyga

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Jay Electronica Disguised His Voice To Avoid Hip-Hop Prejudice

Lil Wayne’s Jail Time Is An ‘Eye-Opener,’ Young Jeezy Says

‘It’s evident that nobody’s safe,’ Lloyd Banks says about rappers not being above the law. By Shaheem Reid Lil Wayne at court Monday Photo: Ray Tamarra/ Getty Images Now that Lil Wayne has been sentenced to one year in prison following several delays, the reality is setting in for his fans and friends. No one in the hip-hop community wants to see Weezy leave, and rappers also realize they need to run tighter ships in Wayne’s absence. Young Jeezy said he’ll not only miss Wayne’s work ethic and music, but also his friend’s rebellious attitude. “Wayne, like I like to call myself, is a trap-aholic,” Young Jeezy told MTV News last week in New York, hours before he brought Weezy onstage at Madison Square Garden as a surprise guest during Jay-Z’s Blueprint 3 Tour. That performance — which also included Nicki Minaj and Drake — would be Wayne’s last before he went to jail. “He stays in the studio, he stays working,” the Snowman added. “We’ll definitely miss that. At the same time, we’ll definitely miss what he brings to the game as far as him just being Wayne and doing what the f— he wanna do. We definitely gonna miss that. But it’s just an eye-opener to all of us. Instead of targeting the hustlers and the people trying to make it in the streets, now that the streets is dried up, now [the police] are targeting the entertainers and the athletes, what have you. Real talk, not trying to preach to the choir, we gotta be careful out here. What I mean to my culture is more than me proving a point.” Diddy echoed Jeezy’s sentiment that police are keeping a very close eye on the hip-hop community. “I think we gonna miss a certain energy that Wayne has,” Diddy said. “The beauty about it is, he’ll be back, and hopefully he’ll come back a better person. Whenever we get in trouble, we’re in the public spotlight. So hopefully there’s a lot of kids out there who could learn from any mistakes that we may have put ourselves in, even if we’re not guilty of the crime sometimes. We are human. People have to learn: ‘Make sure you know where you’re going, who you riding with, what the situation is.’ We’re targets. I’m just happy he doesn’t have to do a lot of time and that he’ll be out, and hopefully he’ll use the time wisely and use it in a positive way.” “It’s evident that nobody’s safe. That’s reality,” Lloyd Banks added about rappers not being above the law, with Lil Wayne going to jail on the heels of T.I. and Gucci Mane. Banks himself has an assault case pending in Canada. “People make mistakes, have poor judgments sometimes, and things happen. Hopefully, all those artists can bounce back from it stronger and use that time [in jail] to be more creative. Come back home and get right back to where they was at. It’s something that’s always been around. We been talking about [rappers going to jail] since Tupac.” Related Videos Wayne Goes To Jail: Celebs React Related Photos Lil Wayne’s Battle With His Gun Possession Case Related Artists Young Jeezy Lil Wayne

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Lil Wayne’s Jail Time Is An ‘Eye-Opener,’ Young Jeezy Says

New Apostolic Reformation, Sarah Palin, and the Prayer Warriors who are waging a spiritual war on America.

NAR’s (New Apostolic Reformation) videos, according to researcher Rachel Tabachnick, “demonstrate the taking control of communities and nations through large networks of ‘prayer warriors’ whose spiritual warfare is used to expel and destroy the demons that cause societal ills. Once the territorial demons, witches, and generational curses are removed, the ‘born-again’ Christians in the videos take control of society.” The movement’s notion of “spiritual warfare” has spread from the California suburbs to an East-Coast inner city, and has impacted policy decisions in the developing world. Movement operatives are well-connected enough to have testified before Congress and to have received millions of dollars in government abstinence-only sex-education grants, and bizarre enough to maintain that in its prototype communities, the movement has healed AIDS, purified polluted streams and even grown huge vegetables. Leaders in the NAR movement refer to themselves as “apostles.” In the days leading up to the historic vote on health-care reform in the Senate, Apostle Lou Engle led the Family Research Council’s “Prayercast” against health-care reform, a Webcast featuring Republican Senators Jim DeMint (S.C.) and Sam Brownback (Kans.), and Rep. Michele Bachmann (Minn.). Earlier in the year, Engle, who leads the group TheCall, prayed over Newt Gingrich at a Virginia event called Rediscovering God in America. In 2008, Engle, at an event he staged at San Diego’s Qualcomm Stadium, advocated acts of Christian martyrdom to end abortion and same-sex marriage. This “apostle” claims LGBT people are possessed by demons. And Engle is not the only NAR apostle with political connections. Presidential campaign watchers got their first taste of the New Apostolic Reformation when it was revealed that Sarah Palin, while mayor of Wasilla, had been prayed over in a laying-on-of-hands by Rev. Thomas Muthee of Kenya, director of the NAR East Africa Spiritual Warfare Network, in a ceremony designed to protect Palin from witches and demons. Muthee, it turns out, is famous in his native land for driving out of town a woman he deemed a witch, a charge that had her neighbors calling for her stoning. Palin, according to Alaskan Apostle Mary Glazier, became part of her prayer network at the age of 24. Wasilla is no stranger to wandering NAR leaders. Last June, Apostle Lance Wallnau stopped through in the course of his world travels, promoting the movement’s Reclaiming the Seven Mountains of Culture campaign at Wasilla Alaska Assembly of God Church — the very church at which Muthee laid hands on Palin. (The “seven mountains” are the realms of business, government, media, arts and entertainment, education, the family and religion.) Other NAR luminaries dropping by Wasilla last year include leading international Apostles Naomi Dowdy and Dutch Sheets. Sarah Palin’s threat to our country is not due to her burgeoning intellect, oratory skills, or leadership ability. It is that she is malleable enough, and with enough natural charisma, to be a perfect figurehead for marginalized groups to use in an effort to further their agenda. Because of this chameleon like ability to reflect the philosophy’s of these disaffected Americans she has been supported by groups as politically disparate as the AIP , the Republican party, and the Teabaggers. However Palin’s connection to the Evangelical movement since the day she was baptized in Little Beaver Lake has been the one connection that has not been just for show or to further her ambitions. In fact it may be the catalyst behind Sarah’s political aspirations and desire to front a powerful political movement. While many see Sarah’s naked ambitions as fulfilling an emptiness inside of her, I think that she is actually completely convinced that she is a vessel through which God is working to bring this nation closer to Him. In other words Sarah believes she has already filled that emptiness with her faith, and is now willing to do anything to fulfill what she sees as her destiny. (Of course those of us carefully observing Palin realize that she is only barely holding things together and that the emptiness within is in danger of consuming her in the not too distant future.) Palin’s ability to attract these angry frustrated people makes her especially dangerous. She demonstrated that threat while on the campaign trail with McCain. She was able to plant a few conspiratorial seeds about Barack Obama back then that have matured into fully realized and well established conspiracy theories. Sarah’s wider influence has diminished greatly, but it has only hardened among a certain population. Every time anybody, myself included, dare to make a joke or reveal some flaw about Sarah Palin the attacks come fast and furious. She plays the victim and they rise to protect her, from the talking heads at Fox News, to political pundits like Pat Buchanan, to Palin supporting bloggers, they receive their marching orders and they charge into battle on her behalf. But while many of them (especially Fox News) believe they are using her to further their agenda, she is also using them to further hers.

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New Apostolic Reformation, Sarah Palin, and the Prayer Warriors who are waging a spiritual war on America.

Liz Hurley’s Nipples Do India Proper of the Day

I always laugh when I see Indian women walking down the street in their pajamas. Maybe I am ignorant towards other culture, or maybe these bitches just look funny in their silk oversized outfits….don’t get me wrong, I fingered myself to Slum Dog Millionaire as much as the next guy, because despite the smell of curry, Indian woman can tend to be very beautiful if they are not overly hairy, as many of them are, but I think everyone’s opinion on sitting next to one of them on the bus would change pretty fast if they dressed the way Liz Hurley has decided they should, and that’s tits first, nipples out, amazingness, but unfortunately if they did do that, their husbands would probably murder them, since they have other wifes to fall back on and don’t need that disgraceful behavior…not that I know what I am talking about…I just know all this is to say more girls with great tits need to take on different cultures and slut the shit up. I think it will do amazing things for bridging the gap of their weirdness by turning shit into a more tolerant experience…..

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Liz Hurley’s Nipples Do India Proper of the Day

Marc Jacobs Is the Best Thing Ever to Happen for Gay Liberation

The power gays are always trying to whitewash the gay world to convince mainstream culture we’re “normal.” What they really need is a poster boy like Marc Jacobs . He is attractive, successful, talented, and gayer than a lube-stained bathhouse. Yes, gay men and women are still second class citizens in this country, and to try to get our marriage rights, the Human Rights Campaign and the other gay organizations are always trying to make America comfortable with people of the same gender getting married and raising a test-tube baby. They think that if middle America sees that all gays are as boring as Uncle Boyd going to a church pancake breakfast that they will accept the culture at large and embrace our issues. This is wrong. The problem isn’t getting everyone to like the Uncle Boyds, it’s trying to get them to love the glitter-throwing, thong-wearing, show-tune lisping fabulousness of Aunt Martin. How are we going to do this? With Marc Jacobs. Everyone loves his clothes and his handbags, and we know this because fat ladies from Florida buy up his knock-offs in Chinatown. They love him so much that they put up with all of his crazy tomfoolery. Sure, he may be wrong about banning celebrities from his fashion show but he is totally right about running around in a skirt , posing like a pretty princess on vacation, and standing by his husbear when he poses naked and talks about his penis size in a smutty gay magazine. The latest dust up is over a picture of a naked male go-go boy dancing at the afterparty for Jacob’s fashion week presentation. Robert Duffy , the CEO of Marc Jacobs (the company, not the man) tweeted it to the world and then had to take it down. It wasn’t because he was worried that everyone would find out Marc was chillin’ with strippers, but because the dancer’s wife wasn’t happy about it. That’s because no one cares that gay ass Marc Jacobs got teabagged after showing the world his latest batch of gorgeous frocks. The great sham of the gay movement is that it is trying to convince the hetero society that we are just like them. Sure, there are many gay men and women living boring lives in the suburbs trying to raise some babies, but still, we are not like them. We will never be like them, and trying to hide it is only going to make them suspect us and hate us even more. So, instead of putting on a stuffed suit, let’s all grab one of Jacobs’ skirts and head out on the town. When the world gets used to the faggiest of the tribe, getting them to vote for the rights of Uncle Boyd down the street is going to be a snap.

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Marc Jacobs Is the Best Thing Ever to Happen for Gay Liberation

Tebow’s Folly: Better a Superfreak Than a Jesus Freak

Divine Florida Gators quarterback and bona-fide Christian soldier Tim Tebow has everyone riled up about his upcoming anti-abortion Super Bowl ad . The arguing’s unnecessary.

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Tebow’s Folly: Better a Superfreak Than a Jesus Freak