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Gorillaz’s Plastic Beach: Human After All

New album proves that the cartoon band is also an actual band, in Bigger Than the Sound. By James Montgomery Gorillaz Photo: EMI Music / Jamie Hewlett In 1998, Damon Albarn and Jamie Hewlett cooked up Gorillaz as a knee-jerk reaction to the chiseled boy bands and mawkish mook-rock acts that paraded across the airwaves of MTV. The idea, it would seem, was to create a group that matched the substance of the ‘NSYNCs and the Creeds of the world — the joke being, of course, that unlike Justin Timberlake or Scott Stapp, the Gorillaz were actual cartoons. It was a pretty brilliant concept, but the thing is, it worked, perhaps even too well. Somewhere along the way — whether Albarn and Hewlett liked it or not — Gorillaz became a genuine phenomenon, with hit singles and multiplatinum albums and actual performances, including a sold-out stint at the Apollo Theater and a Grammy duet with Madonna. Here in the U.S., the band’s two albums (2001’s self-titled debut and 2005’s Demon Days ) outsold Albarn’s entire Blur catalog and did so by a large margin. It is not a stretch to say that Gorillaz is the most successful project either man has ever been involved in, at least when it comes to the bottom line. But throughout all the success, one question has remained unanswered: What are we supposed to make of Gorillaz? Were they a side project? A piss-take? Or — dare I say it — an actual band? Sometimes, it was difficult to tell, and with each collaborator Albarn wheeled into the studio, or each high-gloss video Hewlett unveiled, things became even muddier. But now, with their third album, Plastic Beach (which hits stores Tuesday), we finally have our answer: Gorillaz are very much an actual band, because only actual bands can make concept albums this half-baked, this hazy or this self-aggrandizing. It is what actual bands are supposed to do, especially after they’ve sold millions of albums and become international sensations. Plastic Beach is exactly the kind of album bands make when they feel they’ve earned the right to do so. There’s an air of entitlement to it, and entitlement is perhaps the most human quality of all. Loosely staged on a metaphorical island in the South Pacific (it’s made up entirely of “detritus, debris and [the] washed-up remnants of humanity,” according to an accompanying press release), loping along over the course of 16 tracks and ladled with more guest stars than a charity single, Beach is Gorillaz gone bananas. No idea is left unexplored, no beat unused. The thing is, they’ve done all this before — the concept, the length, the cameos — but this time around, they’re just doing more of it. All of it. For the first time, Albarn serves as the sole producer, something that’s readily apparent when you hear the trilling instrumentation of the National Orchestra for Arabic Music (on “White Flag”) or the walloping oomph of the Hypnotic Brass Ensemble (on a pair of tunes: “Welcome to the World of Plastic Beach” and “Sweepstakes,” both of which also feature cameos by Snoop Dogg and Mos Def, respectively, because, hey, why not?). Brevity has never exactly been his strong suit — check the running time of any Blur album for proof of that — but here, without someone like Danger Mouse or Dan the Automator to reel in his aspirations, things tend to get a bit, well, long-winded. While Albarn might be bursting with good ideas, Beach makes it pretty clear that even the best brains need a little editing every once in a while. This is not to say that there aren’t genuinely great moments on the album too. “White Flag” kicks off a terrific six-song run that includes the spacey “Rhinestone Eyes,” first single “Stylo,” the bumping “Superfast Jellyfish” and the electro-oddity “Glitter Freeze,” which gets an assist from the Fall’s Mark E. Smith. It’s just that, as the clanging electronics of “Freeze” fade away, there are still eight songs left on the album — darn near an eternity. So we get some filler, including a semi-spoken-word number from Lou Reed (“Some Kind of Nature”) and some standouts (“Melancholy Hill,” a pretty tune featuring — thankfully — just Albarn), and then the whole thing is over, and it’s not until you go back and listen again that you realize, “Whoa, I totally missed the song that features 50 percent of the Clash.” And that’s not an easy thing to do. Far be it from me to criticize an album for being too long, but that’s precisely the problem here. Too many guests, too many big ideas, too few strokes of the editor’s pen (or Pro Tool, or whatever). There are at least three records of varying quality within Plastic Beach, and Albarn decided to put them all out at once. Because, hey, he’s earned it. The Gorillaz have earned it. There’s a reason Josie and the Pussycats never released an album like this. And it bears mention here that my opinion of Beach is definitely in the minority, especially considering the luminous praise other critics have heaped on it already. But perhaps that’s just more proof that the Gorillaz really are an actual band: No cartoon could pull off something this ballsy, could convince so many to sift through so much. That’s ego, that’s swagger, that’s hubris — and all those things are pretty human qualities too. For better or worse. Questions? Concerns? Hit me up at BTTS@MTVStaff.com .

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Gorillaz’s Plastic Beach: Human After All

Knopf Editor Makes Great Case for Editors in Poorly Written Post About Needing Editors [Fuckups]

If you wrote a piece for the Huffington Post entitled Do You Really Need an Editor at a Publishing House? , you’d make a strong case, right? The answer, as evidenced by Knopf editor Carole Baron , is a resounding absolutely . Besides the fact that no good editor in their right mind would tell someone trying to make a coherent argument for their job to write a post so explicitly arguing for their job , they wouldn’t let them title it Do You Really Need an Editor at a Publishing House? nor would they let them publish it on the Huffington Post . Where content mostly goes to die. Unless someone else picks it up for being extraordinary in some way, which Baron’s post most certainly is . Clunky Prose: It starts in the lede. Do you really need an editor at a publishing house? I am really annoyed. All this talk about digital. Not to nitpick, but why not? Besides the fact that the text itself is pretty misshapen on the site —a good web editor would’ve taken care of that—the first sentence is also the title of the post (redundancy), the second sentence is a wooden declarative that could simply be spiced up by making a contraction out of “I” and “am,” and the third sentence is a jagged fragment that doesn’t explain what the “talk” is nor what kind of “digital” she’s referring to. Yet most of you are cognizant individuals, and you know she’s referring to digital media, and that the “talk” of which is some idle chatter we’re probably going to learn about. Assuming readers can make it past the first three sentences. Clunky Pronouns : The writer said: “Why not? There is no editing anymore.” Not only is that not true, but it certainly didn’t understand the complex role of the editor in a publishing house. First of all, what kind of braindead company is Baron keeping? Jesus. Also, I know editors often think of writers less as people and more like book-writing-creatures who cost money, but referring to one as “it” seems mildly unnecessary. That is, of course, unless Baron was talking about the writer’s statement, which can only “understand” something in the figurative or poetic sense. Which she already lost credit for in the first sentence, regardless of which, that intention just patently isn’t the case. Finally, who refers to their own job as complex ? Lady, you’re not a machinist. Misspellings and Title Form : Jonathon Gallassi’s: “There Is More to Publishing Than Meets the Screen” in the New York Times, January 2, 2010, expressed it logically and eloquently. “Jonathon Gallassi” has a name, and it isn’t spelled like that. It’s Jonathan Galassi . He’s not exactly a name you want to spell wrong, as he’s the the President and Publisher of Farrar, Straus and Giroux. Also, New York Times should be italicized, and from a later sentence in the piece, “short changed ” is one word. WTF? : “And I am happy to say that as many as there are who complain, there are just as many who acknowledge the good work that editors can and do for a writer.” As many what, exactly? People? Penguins? If they’re penguins, they don’t acknowledge what an editor “can and do for a writer” so much as they acknowledge what an editor can do for a writer. Credit where credit’s due: we cribbed this item from a tipster…who wrote “makes the care for” instead of “makes the case for” in their original tip. And please , like we don’t have our fair share of typos on this site even with an editor. There’s probably one in this post! The difference between Baron and I, though, is that I’m not trying to make a case for an editor. My life is a case for editors. Ryan Tate put it best earlier this evening via email: Who will edit the editors? And who will edit the people who call for editing of the editors? Everything must eventually be published via wiki, is my point. A wiki that no one is qualified to edit. Then again, she could just be playing with our heads, as this might be part of an elaborate “meta” campaign for her job, in which case: golden. But that probably isn’t the case. She’s probably just an editor who needs a good editor. Or a good writer.

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Knopf Editor Makes Great Case for Editors in Poorly Written Post About Needing Editors [Fuckups]

Andrew Koenig Remembered By ‘Growing Pains’ Stars Kirk Cameron, Tracey Gold, Others

Late ‘Growing Pains’ actor’s friends and colleagues react to the news of his death. By Josh Wigler Andrew Koenig Photo: IMDB The news that “Growing Pains” actor Andrew Koenig was found dead in Vancouver prompted a flurry of condolences last night from the actor’s friends and contemporaries, including fellow ’80s child star Alyssa Milano and “Star Trek” icons William Shatner, Wil Wheaton and LeVar Burton. On Friday (February 26), the outpouring of support continued from Koenig’s friends within the entertainment industry. “Today is a sad day,” Koenig’s “Growing Pains” co-star Tracey Gold told Us Weekly . “My heart is broken for Andrew’s family. I have such great memories of Andrew and our time together on ‘Growing Pains.’ ” On “Growing Pains,” Koenig played Richard “Boner” Stabone, the best friend of the self-assured Mike Seaver, played by actor Kirk Cameron, who talked with People.com about his friend’s death. “It is with great sorrow to hear about the final outcome of the search for my old friend Andrew. I hope everyone will be sensitive to the Koenigs and give the family some private time to reflect and to grieve the loss of their beloved son. At a time like this, we all are reminded of the briefness of life and the importance of being ready for our eternal destination. My prayers will continue to be with Andrew’s family.” Several comedians, including Sarah Silverman , also expressed their sadness over the news. “My heart is heavy for the Koenig family,” she wrote on Twitter. “I’m really sad about Andrew Koenig,” said comedian and former “Singled Out” host Chris Hardwick . “He was the sweetest, nicest guy. I feel kind of hollow on the inside at the moment.” Other actors, like Danny Masterson , recalled their memories of Koenig. “Terrible about Andrew Koenig,” he wrote. “Did a film [with] him in ’95 called Family Values. He was a great dude. Very smart. Very cool. Very funny.” Jimmy Pardo, the host of the popular comedy podcast Never Not Funny and brother-in-law to Koenig, issued the following statement on his Web site : “Andrew Koenig was our video producer, our cameraman and our editor. He was out collaborator on mic and off. He was also our brother and our friend. Just as he did with his work as an actor and an activist, he touched countless lives by gracing us with his presence on Never Not Funny, and now we all feel the weight of his absence. The Andrew we will remember and celebrate is the Andrew we saw every week at the studio: the kind and caring vegan, the videographic wizard, and most of all, the gifted performer with a passion for comedy who laughed at us and made us laugh. We will miss him always.”

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Andrew Koenig Remembered By ‘Growing Pains’ Stars Kirk Cameron, Tracey Gold, Others

Cornelia Street Crusader Speaks, Has Ice Statue Made of His Dog

Yesterday, we introduced you to successful eye surgeon Dr. Emil Chynn . You read the 2,7000 word email litany he wrote detailing his West Village neighbor’s sins. Today, we learn he once commissioned an ice sculpture of his Corgi, Hershey? Dr. Chynn ( “The only laser surgeon in NYC who is a certified Genius.*” ) loves his dog as much as he hates the brokedown building at 33 Cornelia St. he rants about in his email. In fact, one reason behind Chynn’s years-long cleanup crusade is that the place is full of rats “the size of cats” that he’s afraid will eat Hershey. (“And he is the block mascot, by the way, so people would go crazy if anything happened to him.”) Dr. Chynn loves his dog so much that this is what he brought to a 2008 Cornelia St. block party, according to a tipster: (Apparently, it was Hershey’s birthday! ) Tonight, Chynn added some context about Hershey’s role in the neighborhood in an email. “Many people (not primarily myself) refer to Hershey as the mascot of the block or even the “junior mayor.” Oh, and also his war on 33 Cornelia St. and its negligent owner, pharmaceutical heiress and philanthropist Kathe Sackler. He begin his very long email with an apology, of sorts: Dear Adrian, I am in Europe giving a lecture to some eye surgeons here on how to perform the more advanced, safer, non-cutting LASEK procedure that they do not perform here yet, since I have performed more LASEKs now than any other eye surgeon in NYC.  Therefore, I will not be available until next week for your phone interview. We made fun of the scary comprehensiveness and shouting capitalization of Chynn’s first email. But Chynn asks us to “put yourselves in my shoes for a minute.” Chynn argues that if we had “bought a house for over a million dollars,” we would not sit idly by while our bad neighbor let kids tag her building. If we walked down Cornelia St. in his shoes, writes Chynn, “your gawker posting would probably take a different tack; not ‘why is Dr. Chynn blowing a gasket?’ but ‘why would my neighbor worth hundreds of millions of dollars let her property fall apart…?’ We are indeed curious about why rich Kathe Sackler doesn’t give a crap about her expensive property. (Info? email us .) But, still. Chynn has a heartfelt message for the mysterious Dr. Kathe Sackler, since thus far he has only been able to communicate his complaints through her lawyers: I admire your family’s dedication and generosity to supporting the fine arts throughout the US, as yours is one of the major patrons in this field.  However… they say charity begins in the home, by which I think is meant one has as strong an obligation to one’s family and neighbors as to the larger community. (See: The Smithsonian’s Arthur M. Sackler Gallery of Asian art.) And he promises that after she removes the graffiti from her property, he will remove his hot tub from hers with the help of “a half-dozen of my nice neighbors.” But before we give you the impression that Chynn is too reasonable, consider his justification for the intense strain of crazy that ran through his infamous anti-neighbor rant: The more observant reader would probably figure out that it was indeed my intention to make my diatribe so over-the-top that some on-line media would pick it up, thus forcing Dr. Sackler to listen to her neighbors, and remove the graffiti.  Let’s see if my prediction comes true.  Thanks for your help in this process. Here is a tip for the future, Dr. Chynn. Nothing good comes of getting your “over-the-top” diatribe picked up by “on-line media”. Especially Gawker. Especially when you have an extensive history of acting crazy in front of people. They will start emailing in about your strange craigslist ads. Like one tipster who wrote “OMG, this is the guy who did the craziest Craigslist roommate posting I’ve ever seen. I did a screengrab of it so I could email it to friends after the post expired, it was THAT crazy.” Another tipster actually saved what appears to be one of these ads. And, well, it was one of those situations where a female might receive free rent in exchange for being a successful eye surgeon’s “personal assistant”—helping with dishes and cooking and is “into yoga or massage or some other stress-reducing thing i could partake in.” An ad that reads: ” I AM NOT LOOKING FOR A GIRLFRIEND OR SEXUAL FAVORS OR ANYTHING LIKE THAT. Actually, I am looking for a girlfriend, but not for this free rental person to be my girlfriend! :)” A number of other commenters share the opinion that Dr. Chynn is an excellent eye surgeon , but sort of a strange dude. Commenter skseim once interviewed Dr. Chynn for a “fun” article and “received multiple THREATENING EMAILS INSTRUCTING ME HOW TO WRITE THE STORY from him. Dude must go through ten Caps Locks keys per annum.” And Love Parade gets weird: “I’ve walked past [Chynn’s house] and seems real creepy to me. I heard from a friend that there’s a lot of suspicious late night activity in and out of the building. Some kind of secret society or something.” (Tips: email them !) We even got an email from Chaunce Hayden, the editor of the terrible Jersey nightlive magazine Steppin Out . Subject: “RE: Dr. Chynn is fucking insane.” Hayden says that after he arranged to barter advertising in his magazine for discounted eye surgery, Chynn told him “he wants me to bring 15 people to the surgery because he invited the press and he wanted it to look like a party.” Then, he demanded that Hayden “interview him every single week for several weeks” for his magazine. (Though, chances are, Hayden is making stuff up like he always does . So, everyone learned something tonight. Dr. Chynn learned not to use online media to settle his neighborhood disputes. We learned maybe Dr. Chynn isn’t as insane as he appears on email (…or, maybe he is?) And we learned about Hershey! One thing we didn’t learn: Who is the enigmatic owner of 33 Cornelia St.? Who is neighborhood-destroying Kathe Sackler, and why can’t she use her pharmaceutical money to take care of her property? For Hershey’s sake. (Sackler’s representative hasn’t responded to our emails.)

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Cornelia Street Crusader Speaks, Has Ice Statue Made of His Dog

TMZ Live: Smith, Murphy & Music Showdown

Filed under: TMZ Live Harvey and Mike took your questions on all this weekend’s top stories — including Kevin Smith’s fat feud with Southwest Airlines, the sketchy charity in Brittany Murphy’s name and Tila Tequila’s insane tweets.Plus, TMZ Editor/Music Pro Eric stopped … Permalink

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TMZ Live: Smith, Murphy & Music Showdown

Will Drake Make The Cut For XXL ‘Freshman 10’ Issue?

Editor in Chief Vanessa Satten talks about the upcoming issue, which highlights hip-hop’s next big stars. By Shaheem Reid Drake Photo: Kevin Winter/ Getty Images Last month, 10 up-and-coming MCs started getting fresh like it was their first day of school. They had to be camera-ready to shoot the annual “Freshman 10” issue of XXL magazine. The special edition of the publication has become a hip-hop tradition, as they give the nod to 10 mic masters they feel will be the next big stars. In 2008, names like Saigon, Lil Boosie and Plies made the cut, while last year, B.o.B, Charles Hamilton, Wale and Asher Roth graced the cover. Other members of the ’09 class were Kid Cudi, Ace Hood, Curren$y, Blu, Mickey Factz and Cory Gunz. XXL Editor in Chief Vanessa Satten said the editorial staff started deciding the 2010 class two months ago. Besides their own research, they also took recommendations from the magazine’s editors at large and freelance writers. “It’s always interesting to assemble the guys, because you don’t know what kind of vibe you’re gonna get,” Satten said about the photo shoot. “The first [class in 2008], they were kinda brooding. They were kind of boring on the actual shoot. The second one, they were exciting. This year, we didn’t know what to expect from them, because the first two [classes] were so opposite of each other. You never know what you can expect when you get those 10 rappers together. It could be pretty much anything. “You’re not dealing with divas like you normally do with a bigger cover,” she added. “But at the same time, you’re dealing with people who’ve got these insecurities, who are not used to the situation and not as recognizable. You gotta get them to be a bit more animated and be a little bit more interesting so the photos could be spectacular. It’s a little different when you put a bigger star on the cover.” Satten played it close to the vest when asked who some of the names were, but she did say the new set is different from ’09. “Last year, in general, the class was more Internet-driven,” she said. “It was kind of a different class. The office would make fun — it was more of a nerdy class. The rappers involved might get offended by that, but it was definitely to the direction of the Internet audience, the Internet rappers. This [new] class is a mix of that and a little bit more street. And more of hodgepodge.” A question Satten said she hears a lot is whether Drake will be on this year’s cover. Some fans where shocked that was omitted from the ’09 class. But as Satten pointed out, his So Far Gone mixtape came out just about the same time as the issue hit newsstands. “As of right now, he doesn’t have an album,” Satten said of Drake. “But he is technically a freshman to us. He might not think so or think he’s beyond that now.” The “Freshman 10” issues lands on stands in March. Satten said there will be a DJ Whoo Kid mixtape to promote the issue sometime in the near future, as well as a party and a tour with some of the artists. Related Artists Drake

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Will Drake Make The Cut For XXL ‘Freshman 10’ Issue?

The iPad Tweet That Enraged Steve Jobs?

There was inevitably some cultural friction when Apple’s secretive CEO took his new iPad around to New York’s professionally indiscreet media . Exhibit A is a single tweet from a Wall Street Journal editor, which purportedly made Steve Jobs go ballistic: The Journal ‘s online executive editor Alan Murray quickly deleted the Feb. 4 tweet, which, it is now obvious, was issued during Apple CEO Jobs’ show-and-tell with select Journal staff. A tipster told us the deletion ultimately traces back to a furious Jobs. We asked Murray for comment, and he wrote back “I would love to talk about this, but can’t.” In a later email, he added: I will say that Apple’s general paranoia about news coverage is truly extraordinary— but that’s not telling you anything you didn’t already know. Indeed, Apple is a notoriously tight-lipped company, particularly under Jobs, and is constantly trying to control the flow of news about its product. Apple sued a teenaged blogger who published scoops about unreleased products; it lied about Jobs’ health problems; Jobs called a New York Times columnist a ” slime bucket ” for writing about said health problems; and an employee of key Apple contractor Foxconn had his apartment illegally searched after losing an iPhone prototype (he later committed suicide amid intense pressure from his employer). If Jobs did give Murray a tongue lashing — his withering verbal abuse is infamous — the editor can console himself with the knowledge that this is is an especially touchy time of year for the paranoiac. And not just because of the pressures of shepherding and unveiling a new product. At Jobs’ meeting at the Times , the CEO was mostly on point, painting a utopian picture of happy future world awash in iPads. But at one juncture in the meeting, we hear, he took a detour, telling assembled newspaper staff that he gets tons of hate mail from people whenever he launches a new product — people who have never even used it, including angry Apple “fans.” Jobs reportedly described the mail as “really nasty stuff… [things] like ‘Fuck you and your family.'” It sounds like Jobs has been fighting this sort of backlash his whole career, judging from this 1994 Rolling Stone interview: “I’ve always been attracted to the more revolutionary changes. I don’t know why. Because they’re harder. They’re much more stressful emotionally. And you usually go through a period where everybody tells you that you’ve completely failed.” Of course, “fuck you and your family” sound less like fanboys than regretful stock speculators. That’s the sort of e-note to go ballistic over. (Updates: Added background on Apple secrecy, R olling Stone quote.)

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The iPad Tweet That Enraged Steve Jobs?

The Consiglieri of the Magazine World

This morning, New York editor Adam Moss lost deputy editor Hugo Lindgren to Bloomberg BusinessWeek . He’s certainly not the only magazine-world EIC to have a trusted confidante on staff.

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The Consiglieri of the Magazine World

When Ross Douthat was ‘That Guy’ at Harvard

You know, That Guy : The conservative dude who ranged the quad like a pro-life Socrates, challenging Liberals to another insufferable partial-birth abortion fight? The guy who ruined all your parties; the guy with the..

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When Ross Douthat was ‘That Guy’ at Harvard

Ninjas Unboxing the Nexus One

This unboxing video for Google's Nexus One is the best you'll ever see. It has ninjas.

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Ninjas Unboxing the Nexus One