Tag Archives: digital

Facebook Founder Mark Zuckerberg Named Time’s ‘Person of the Year’

Magazine praises Zuckerberg for wiring ‘a twelfth of humanity’ into single network. By Gil Kaufman Mark Zuckerberg Photo: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images Yes, being the youngest self-made billionaire at 26 is impressive. And having an award-nominated movie about your company’s origins become a big-screen hit is not to shabby either. But one of the reasons Time magazine chose Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg as its “Person of the Year” is this little fact: “In less than seven years, Zuckerberg wired together a twelfth of humanity in a single network.” Praising the Facebook boss for creating a universal living room that has brought the planet that much closer together, the magazine wrote that “we have entered the Facebook age, and Mark Zuckerberg is the man who brought us here.” In a year in which Zuckerberg’s American tale was brought to life by director David Fincher in the hit “The Social Network” — which didn’t always paint a flattering portrait of the billionaire boss — and Zuck joined an initiative among the mega-wealthy to donate the majority of his fortune to charity, the bottom line for Time was the way in which Facebook has fundamentally altered the way we communicate, spend our time and organize our social lives. Born in 1984, the same year the first Macintosh computer from Apple was introduced, Time said that Zuckerberg is both a product of his wired generation and an architect of our digital world. “The social-networking platform he invented is closing in on 600 million users. In a single day, about a billion new pieces of content are posted on Facebook. It is the connective tissue for nearly a tenth of the planet,” the magazine wrote about the platform created by the T-shirt-wearing Harvard dropout. “Facebook is now the third-largest country on earth and surely has more information about its citizens than any government does.” Zuckerberg beat out the year’s runners-up, WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange — who launched a nefarious digital revolution of his own — and the upstart Tea Party political movement, whose impact was felt in the 2010 midterm elections that swept Democrats out of the majority in the House of Representatives while narrowing the gap in the Senate. Like those two rogue movements, “Zuckerberg doesn’t have a whole lot of veneration for traditional authority,” the magazine wrote. “In a sense, Zuckerberg and Assange are two sides of the same coin. Both express a desire for openness and transparency. While Assange attacks big institutions and governments through involuntary transparency with the goal of disempowering them, Zuckerberg enables individuals to voluntarily share information with the idea of empowering them. Assange sees the world as filled with real and imagined enemies; Zuckerberg sees the world as filled with potential friends.” While his youth and relatively modest life experience might make the designation seem premature, Time noted that “Person of the Year” is not and never has been intended as an honor. Case in point, along with such winners as John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr., other designees have included dictators Adolf Hitler and Joseph Stalin and disgraced U.S. President Richard Nixon. “It is a recognition of the power of individuals to shape our world,” the magazine explained. “For connecting more than half a billion people and mapping the social relations among them (something that has never been done before); for creating a new system of exchanging information that has become both indispensable and sometimes a little scary; and finally, for changing how we all live our lives in ways that are innovative and even optimistic, Mark Elliot Zuckerberg is Time ‘s 2010 Person of the Year.” While they weren’t in the running for “Person of the Year,” among the other notable deemed “People Who Mattered” by the magazine were Justin Bieber, Sandra Bullock, Lady Gaga, the cast of “Glee,” Lebron James, the cast of “Jersey Shore,” Conan O’Brien, Kanye West and Betty White. Do you think Mark Zuckerberg was the right choice for Time ‘s Person of the Year? Sound off in the comments. Related Videos ‘The Social Network’ Clips

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Facebook Founder Mark Zuckerberg Named Time’s ‘Person of the Year’

Stephen Colbert, Drake, Lil Wayne Have 2010’s Top Retweeted Tweets

Gulf oil spill, World Cup, VMAs and Justin Bieber among the top trends of the year on Twitter and Facebook. By Gil Kaufman Stephen Colbert Photo: Scott Wintrow/ Getty Images Not only were people riveted by the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico this year; they also couldn’t resist sharing some wry humor on the matter. That’s why Stephen Colbert’s 140-character comment about the matter was Twitter’s Top Retweeted Tweet of 2010 . “In honor of oil-soaked birds, ‘tweets’ are now ‘gurgles,’ ” read the post, that earned the comedian a Golden Tweet award on “The Colbert Report” Tuesday night. Much of the top 10 Retweeted Tweets were from musicians: Drake (#2), Lil Wayne (#3), Justin Bieber (#4), Joe Jonas (#6), Lady Gaga (#7), Kanye West (#8) and Rihanna (#9). A post from spoof account @alqueda was #5, and an ironically uplifting piece of advice from @sh–mydadsays made the list at #10. Earlier this week, Twitter and Facebook released their respective lists of the top trends on their sites over the past 12 months. Each is a fascination look at the obsessions and globally unifying events, people, pop culture fixations and bizarre crazes that grabbed our digital attention this year. While there’s some crossover on the Twitter and Facebook lists, the more interesting parts are where they diverge. For instance, the #1 item on Facebook’s “Memology 2010” global list of top status trends was “HMU,” a shorthand status update that translates to “hit me up,” meaning someone wants you to call or text them. The rest of the list featured a mixture of more predictable/generic trends, including: World Cup (#2), Movies (#3), iPad and iPhone (#4), Haiti (#5), Justin Bieber (#6), Games on Facebook (#7), Mineros/Miners (referring to the trapped Chilean miners) (#8), the B.o.B. song “Airplanes” (#9) and 2011. Over on Twitter , the #Hindsight2010 list of top trends featured a few of the same items, but users dug a bit deeper into specific movies, events and fads. Topping the list was the disastrous Gulf oil spill, followed by the mania over the FIFA World Cup, then the mind-bending thriller “Inception,” the Haiti Earthquake, vuvuzela (the ubiquitous buzzing sound of the World Cup) and the Apple iPad. Rounding out the list were the Google Android phone (#7), Justin Bieber (#8), “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows” (#9) and the late eight-tentacled World Cup prognosticator, Pulpo Paul. MTV has reason to celebrate the list, as our own Video Music Awards came in at # 1 on the list of top TV trends, and the MTV Movie Awards were #9. “Pretty Little Liars” was #2 on the list, followed by “True Blood,” “Walking Dead” and the Grammy Awards. The men and women of “Glee” came in at #6, just ahead of “Family Guy” and “CSI.” The American Music Awards rounded out the top 10. Related Artists Drake Lil Wayne

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Stephen Colbert, Drake, Lil Wayne Have 2010’s Top Retweeted Tweets

Jay Electronica Is Our Fire Starter Of The Year

Nomadic MC spit heat in 2010, conjuring the ‘Ghost of Christopher Wallace’ with Diddy, earning a nod from Nas and a deal with Jay-Z’s Roc Nation. By Jayson Rodriguez Jay Electronica Photo: Gus Stewart/ Redferns/ MTV News Jay Electronica is an MC shrouded in as much mystery as his densely packed rhymes. Raised in New Orleans, with stops in Detroit, Philadelphia and Brooklyn, which the rapper now calls home, the literary-leaning rapper arrived on the scene as a fully formed adult. His lyrics prove the point with references to everything from the JFK assassination (“My World (Nas Salute)”) to Kurt Vonnegut (“Exhibit A (Transformations)”). But with few details in terms of backstory beyond his hard-to-find rhymes, his narrative is being scripted in real time for the hip-hop community. The start of that tale was officially birthed this year with Jay’s breakout hit, the Just Blaze-backed “Exhibit C.” With an elaborate rhyme pattern and illustrious production, Jay Elect announced his arrival with a boom bap harder than a DJ Premier drum snare. “You either build or destroy, where you come from?” he spits over the sweeping number. “The Magnolia Projects in the 3rd Ward slum, hmm/ It’s quite amazing that you rhyme how you do/ And how you shine like you grew up in a shrine in Peru.” The underground anthem resonated beyond the blogs, rattling mainstream radio to the point that DJ Enuff penned a blog on his site about wanting to play the record on New York’s Hot 97 in spite of the track’s ethereal backpack appeal. From then on, the MC — with his esoteric storytelling and heart-stinging lines — was hailed as the second coming of Nas. Diddy co-signed his appeal by riding shotgun on Jay’s “The Ghost of Christopher Wallace.” And Electronica also joined forces with Talib Kweli, Mos Def and J.Cole for the thumping “Just Begun.” While fellow 2010 breakouts like Wiz Khalifa may have a bigger online base, and 25-year-old J. Cole may have the benefit of even more years ahead to develop and build a career, it’s Jay Electronica who has the presence, sculpted pedigree and once-in-a-generation skill set to make an impact — right now. That was never more evident then last month when the Erykah Badu-loving MC (he has a child with the singer) spurned offers from Diddy and several labels to ink a deal with Jay-Z’s Roc Nation . “It’s obvious that he really genuinely loves it and is a student of rap and the game,” Jay-Z told MTV News of his latest signee . “You can’t write those sort of songs or come to that sort of conclusion without having a deep love for what you’re doing and a deep understanding and a deep drive.” The nomadic MC has now plugged himself into the matrix of the music industry, where expectations for him will be tracked by bottoms lines, SoundScan sheets and Grammy voters. The wild child has grown-man responsibilities to contend with when it comes to music. The future remains uncertain, but the past 12 months have been nothing short of riveting and make Jay Electronica our 2010 Fire Starter of the Year. For more on our Mixtape Daily year-end award winners, be sure to check out a special edition of “RapFix Live,” when this week’s guest will be Joe Budden. “RapFix Live” airs on Thursday at 4 p.m. ET on MTV.com. For other artists featured in Mixtape Daily, check out Mixtape Daily Headlines . Related Videos 2010 Mixtape Daily Year End Awards

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Jay Electronica Is Our Fire Starter Of The Year

Kanye West, Robyn And More: 20 Best Albums Of 2010

In a truly great year for music, Bigger Than the Sound narrows it down to records by Vampire Weekend, Rick Ross and more. By James Montgomery Bigger Than The Sound’s Best Albums of 2010 Photo: MTV News As we close the book on 2010, one thing becomes apparent: It may very well have been the best year for music in a long, long time. Major-label artists went insane, indie-rock acts topped the Billboard albums chart, and Kanye just kept being Kanye. The end result was 12 months positively brimming with excellent albums, to the point where making a list of the 20 best was darn-near impossible. Still, I tried. It’s my job, after all. So here are my picks for the 20 Best Albums of 2010. Rock, hip-hop, pop and electro records — from artists big and small — that managed to stick with me through the entire year, which was no small feat. Looking at it now, there are at least a half-dozen other albums I could’ve included. It really was that good of a year. That said, I’m sure I left a few off my list, so I’m counting on you to remind me of anything I might have missed. Let me know in the comments below, and here’s to a truly great 2010. 20. Linkin Park, A Thousand Suns The year’s most ambitious major-label rock album was also the most controversial, an icy, chilling listen that alternately thrilled and thinned LP’s substantial fanbase with its vast swaths of sonic sprawl (and overall lack of guitar solos). A Thousand Suns may be Linkin Park’s Kid A or it may just be a colossal misstep, but either way, there’s no denying the dense, dark power it packs. 19. Villagers, Becoming a Jackal The similarities between Conor O’Brien and Conor Oberst go a lot deeper than just a few letters, a pair of dewdrop eyes and a general lack of height. For proof, I present Becoming a Jackal, an expansive, haunting and largely self-produced debut that rivals Oberst’s Lifted … in terms of ambition, scope and sonic palette. The potential on display here is truly staggering, and I can’t wait to hear what he does next. So long as it’s not Digital Ash in a Digital Urn. 18. The Black Keys, Brothers An unlikely — though well-deserved — breakout for Akron, Ohio’s hardest-working blues hammers, Brothers bears the fruit of everything that came before it (the team-ups with Danger Mouse and Dame Dash, frontman Dan Auerbach’s solo album) and boils it down into a staggering, swaggering mash. The tunes are raw and ribbed, and there’s a snarling — dare I say sexual — streak that runs through them all. Required nocturnal listening, even during the day. 17. My Chemical Romance, Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys It’s not a concept album; rather, it’s an “allegory” for the sad state of the music industry, a heat-seeking “missile” aimed at the barely fluttering heart of rock and roll. In short: It’s a positively vital album. On Danger Days, MCR are out to save the world, and they do it by ditching the theatrics (and Liza Minnelli cameos), reinventing themselves as dusty, DayGlo outlaws and harnessing the sheer power of rock. It may seem silly, but it’s also a battle someone needs to fight. 16. Beach House, Teen Dream Forget Katy Perry; Baltimore’s Beach House wrote 2010’s best soundtrack to teenage melodrama. Teen Dream is full of gauzy harmonies, sun-dappled guitars, swoony histrionics and songs like “Zebra” and “Walk in the Park” that just keep opening up, until they gently burn out and fade away. I’d like to hear them take on “California Gurls” next. 15. Eminem, Recovery Three million Eminem fans can’t be wrong. There’s a reason Recovery is the best-selling album released in 2010, one that has as much to do with our love of comeback stories as it does the undiluted strength of Eminem himself, who, clean and sober for the first time in years, lets it rip, tackling subjects both old (celebs) and new (himself) with a renewed vigor and venom. Shoot, at one point he even manages to work “antidisestablishmentarianism” into the mix. When he raps “I am the American Dream,” he’s not boasting; he’s just telling the truth. After all, he’s been to the bottom, and with Recovery, he’s pulled himself back up to the top by his bootstraps. 14. Deerhunter, Halcyon Digest A haunting (and haunted) recollection of the claustrophobic past and the agoraphobic present, Halcyon Digest is Deerhunter at their most woozy, weary and wispy, which is to say it’s also them operating at the absolute peak of their abilities. An album brimming with ideas and gauzy expanses, vespertine ghosts and floating embers, Halcyon Digest is the musical equivalent of prying open the attic and feeling the warm gust of dusty breath that greets you. Sometimes it comforts, but most of the time it just gives you chills. 13. Rick Ross, Teflon Don Big Meech. Larry Hoover. And about a million other characters, both real and imagined. Teflon Don is Ross’ most thrilling listen, alternating between blunt-force braggadocio ( “B.M.F.” ) and silk-suited swagger (the flossy, glossy “Super High” ) with a deftness that belies his general ginormitude. You can debate the authenticity of his words, but you cannot challenge his storytelling abilities. Hollywood doesn’t make movies this big, let alone Miami. 12. Sleigh Bells, Treats Sounds like: cheerleader camp, power tools f—ing, the “level-up” music on any NES game (circa 1988), a really sh—y Sanyo boom box, double Dutch, hyperspace, hellfire, hurricanes, a more polite Mot

Misa Digital Kitara

Misa Digital Kitara By engadget Tags : digital , guitar , kitara , misa

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Misa Digital Kitara

‘Tron Legacy ‘ Star Garrett Hedlund Calls Movie ‘Incredible Experience’

‘It’s such a high-tech adventure,’ actor tells MTV News on the film’s blue carpet. By Mawuse Ziegbe, with reporting by Ryan Downey Garrett Hedlund Photo: MTV News “Tron” was an eye-popping technological extravaganza when it first hurtled into theaters in 1982 with its speeding light cycles and gaming imagery. The film eventually proved to be so influential — spawning video games and a whole “Tron”-obsessed subculture in its wake — that Disney circled back to the project for the 2010 sequel “Tron Legacy.” For Garrett Hedlund, who plays Sam Flynn, the son of software engineer Kevin (portrayed in both movies by Jeff Bridges), the latest take on the project is still an impressive spectacle that ramps up the potently mind-scrambling imagery. Hedlund revealed his thoughts to MTV News about the seeing the final product for the first time on the blue carpet at the elaborate “Tron Legacy” premiere Saturday. “I saw it couple weeks ago when I was in Montreal, but only with a couple pals and on a smaller Technicolor screen. But even then it was an incredible experience. It’s such a high-tech adventure,” Hedlund said. “It’s undoubtedly like anything I’ve ever seen before, and I think the loss for words on it is the best part of it and I can’t wait to see it again.” Even though Hedlund has a role in bringing the digital wizardry of the franchise to a new generation — in addition to getting a high-profile, career-boosting gig from the project — he said he was most excited to see “Tron” filmmaker Steven Lisberger revel in the enduring influence of his groundbreaking movie nearly three decades later. “That’s where I’m so happy for Steven Lisberger. Something he created around 28 years ago and this wild maniacal story has come to fruition 28 years later in such an unbelievable way,” he said. “To see him walking with his family and enjoying this with all of us and being there when we’re filming with all of us and sort of being the godfather on set, I’m more proud of him in this very moment.” What are you looking forward to seeing in “Tron”? Let us know in the comments! Check out everything we’ve got on “Tron Legacy.” Related Videos ‘Tron Legacy’ Clips Related Photos Images From The New ‘Tron Legacy’ Trailer ‘Tron Legacy’ Official Images

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‘Tron Legacy ‘ Star Garrett Hedlund Calls Movie ‘Incredible Experience’

Paul McCartney, Paul Rudd Buddy Up On ‘Saturday Night Live’

Beatles legend and ‘How Do You Know’ star team up for a digital short on NBC hit. By Mawuse Ziegbe Paul McCartney and Paul Rudd on “SNL” on Dec. 11, 2010 Photo: NBC “Saturday Night Live” was packed with Pauls, from a rock icon to a newbie comedian. Second time host Paul Rudd played up the plethora of fellas with the name during his opening monologue, claiming credit for the fan mania that was clearly the result of rock legend Paul McCartney’s on-set presence as musical guest. Rudd smugly remarked about a woman crying and people chanting “Yesterday,” until the Beatles icon appeared onstage to clear up the brouhaha. Featured “SNL” player Paul Brittain also briefly joined the Paul-fest. For the most part, the two stuck to what they’re each known for, with Rudd dishing out the laughs and McCartney serving up the music. In one sketch, Rudd brings his girlfriend home for the holidays to meet his super affectionate family who make out and grope each other to the horror of his gal pal. Rudd also turns up as a gay man who heads to a relationship expert’s talk show for advice, only to get ridiculed by her stodgy, ignorant producer who had to fill in because she was sick. The “How Do You Know” star also competed in the faux game show “What’s That Name,” handily identifying pop culture figures like Subway spokesman Jared Fogel and fumbling when faced with naming his doorman of four years. Rudd also flexed his comedic chops as a nerdy math teacher tasked with mounting a holiday party for students and ends up geekifying the whole affair by dropping zingers like “off the hoof” and “elf esteem.” Rudd and McCartney did cross paths once again in the digital short “Stumblin’ ” in which Andy Samberg and Rudd play buddies who tagger through life, always seconds away from falling over outright. McCartney inexplicably pops up mid-segment in a ruffled blouse and velvet blazer to croon ’80s ballad “Take My Breath Away” by Berlin. Then he whips out a miniscule harmonica, dons cowboy gear and goes to town with Rudd and Samberg cheering him on. McCartney confined the goofiness to the Samberg skit, taking the stage first with “Jet” from Wings’ 1973 Band on the Run LP. The rock luminary strummed the straightforward jam, bopping along in a purple blazer, and adding a flourish of a boogie-woogie dance at the end. McCartney followed up with another Wings hit, “Band on the Run,” for his second performance, ditching the blazer for skinny red suspenders and punctuating the set with guttural howls. What did you think of “SNL” this week? Let us know in the comments! Related Artists Paul McCartney

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Paul McCartney, Paul Rudd Buddy Up On ‘Saturday Night Live’

Paul McCartney, Paul Rudd Buddy Up On ‘Saturday Night Live’

Beatles legend and ‘How Do You Know’ star team up for a digital short on NBC hit. By Mawuse Ziegbe Paul McCartney and Paul Rudd on “SNL” on Dec. 11, 2010 Photo: NBC “Saturday Night Live” was packed with Pauls, from a rock icon to a newbie comedian. Second time host Paul Rudd played up the plethora of fellas with the name during his opening monologue, claiming credit for the fan mania that was clearly the result of rock legend Paul McCartney’s on-set presence as musical guest. Rudd smugly remarked about a woman crying and people chanting “Yesterday,” until the Beatles icon appeared onstage to clear up the brouhaha. Featured “SNL” player Paul Brittain also briefly joined the Paul-fest. For the most part, the two stuck to what they’re each known for, with Rudd dishing out the laughs and McCartney serving up the music. In one sketch, Rudd brings his girlfriend home for the holidays to meet his super affectionate family who make out and grope each other to the horror of his gal pal. Rudd also turns up as a gay man who heads to a relationship expert’s talk show for advice, only to get ridiculed by her stodgy, ignorant producer who had to fill in because she was sick. The “How Do You Know” star also competed in the faux game show “What’s That Name,” handily identifying pop culture figures like Subway spokesman Jared Fogel and fumbling when faced with naming his doorman of four years. Rudd also flexed his comedic chops as a nerdy math teacher tasked with mounting a holiday party for students and ends up geekifying the whole affair by dropping zingers like “off the hoof” and “elf esteem.” Rudd and McCartney did cross paths once again in the digital short “Stumblin’ ” in which Andy Samberg and Rudd play buddies who tagger through life, always seconds away from falling over outright. McCartney inexplicably pops up mid-segment in a ruffled blouse and velvet blazer to croon ’80s ballad “Take My Breath Away” by Berlin. Then he whips out a miniscule harmonica, dons cowboy gear and goes to town with Rudd and Samberg cheering him on. McCartney confined the goofiness to the Samberg skit, taking the stage first with “Jet” from Wings’ 1973 Band on the Run LP. The rock luminary strummed the straightforward jam, bopping along in a purple blazer, and adding a flourish of a boogie-woogie dance at the end. McCartney followed up with another Wings hit, “Band on the Run,” for his second performance, ditching the blazer for skinny red suspenders and punctuating the set with guttural howls. What did you think of “SNL” this week? Let us know in the comments! Related Artists Paul McCartney

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Paul McCartney, Paul Rudd Buddy Up On ‘Saturday Night Live’

Johnny Depp Mourns His Sexiest Man Alive Loss To Ryan Reynolds

‘I feel emasculated,’ the ‘Tourist’ actor jokes. By Jocelyn Vena, with reporting by Josh Horowitz Johnny Depp Photo: MTV News In 2009, Johnny Deep ruled the world of hotness by being named People magazine’s Sexiest Man Alive. It’s an honor he also held six years prior, in 2003. But in 2010, he no longer ruled the roost. The magazine named Ryan Reynolds this year’s Sexiest Man Alive , something the “Tourist” star was a bit upset about when MTV News caught up with him last week. “I feel emasculated,” he joked about Reynolds taking over the title. “I feel I’ve been beaten down like some horrible … you know, like some pathetic harp seal. But, I mean, that’s how it goes, isn’t it?” Depp shouldn’t feel too upset about the whole thing: He does have a new movie with Angelina Jolie opening this month and he just wrapped up work on another “Pirates of the Caribbean” flick, so he definitely has a lot to look forward to. But he does still feel the sting of losing his title. “I think I can work my way forward, but will I try for it again? No! … I worked so hard to gain that title.” Like Depp, onetime Sexiest Man Alive and Oscar winner George Clooney has also had some good-natured fun after Reynolds assumed the throne. Last month, the actor joked that he was fine with Reynolds being crowned Sexiest because it meant his pal didn’t get the title. “I’m very happy for him,” Clooney told People. “I’m also happy that it’s not Brad [Pitt].” Check out everything we’ve got on “The Tourist.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Videos MTV Rough Cut: ‘The Tourist’ Related Photos Ryan Reynolds Is ‘People’s’ Sexiest Man Alive ‘The Tourist’

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Johnny Depp Mourns His Sexiest Man Alive Loss To Ryan Reynolds

Alicia Keys’ Digital Death Campaign Reaches $1 Million Goal

Lady Gaga, Kim Kardashian, Justin Timberlake and more celebs have been ‘resurrected’ on Twitter and Facebook by fans’ donations. By Kelley L. Carter Alicia Keys Photo: Samir Hussein/Getty Images It’s time to welcome some of your favorite celebrity tweeters back to the land of the living. Last week, several celebs temporarily signed off their Twitter accounts and Facebook pages to help raise $1 million for Alicia Keys’ Keep a Child Alive organization. They proclaimed their own Digital Deaths last Wednesday on World AIDS Day and met their goal Monday (December 6). Some stars began tweeting immediately. The idea was hatched by Keys, and she and other celebs urged their fans to buy back their online lives by texting the first name of the celebrity they miss on social media the most to contribute to the cause. “From the bottom of my heart, thank you to all of the fans, friends and artists who joined this cause,” Keys said in a statement. “I’m incredibly inspired by all of the donations that have been made to help us achieve our goal and so humbled by the outpour of support from everyone.” Now that the tweeting ban has been lifted, celebrities including Keys, Lady Gaga, Kim Kardashian, Ryan Seacrest, Justin Timberlake, Usher, Jennifer Hudson, Khlo