Tag Archives: michigan

Is Stupak a yes vote on Health Care bill? Dem Chariman says yes, Stupak office will not commit. Update: MSNBC says YES!

A Democratic chairman says a leading abortion foe will back President Barack Obama’s health care bill. But the office of Democratic Rep. Bart Stupak of Michigan says no decision has been made. Rep. Henry Waxman of California says party leaders have been able to secure the support of Stupak. (Read more here ) Well I wish somebody would light a fire under Stupak and get him to stop playing coy and give it up for the President. I just hate a tease. Besides what Democrat could possibly still resist after Obama’s speech yesterday? On the other side of the aisle it looks like the Republicans are making excuses for the vicious outbursts from the Teabaggers.

MTV’s Musical March Madness: Band Bracketology

We pit the top 65 rock bands in the business against one another, in Bigger Than the Sound. By James Montgomery Kings of Leon Photo: RCA/Getty Images Look, I love college. I love basketball. And I love gambling. So March Madness is sort of like Christmas, Thanksgiving and my 21st birthday all rolled into one. For one glorious month, I am overjoyed, overstuffed and frequently make bad decisions (like picking Baylor to go to the Final Four this year). And on Sunday, as I sat on my couch watching ESPN’s apoplectic coverage of the 2010 NCAA basketball tournament bracket, I had a thought: What if I combined my love of those things with my other true passion, music? (Oh, and making superfluous lists too.) Inspired, I spent the next few days compiling a list of the top 65 rock bands in the business — a task that was considerably (and sadly) much tougher than I had previously imagined (because, well, I don’t know if you’ve noticed or not, but rock is sort of going through a rough patch at the moment). Frustrated, I checked the Billboard rock charts, listened to the radio and even read a blog or two, and finally, I had my field of 65. These are the bands that — in my best estimation — people actually care about, the ones who sell out arenas, lodge songs on the charts and manage to move units. Some of them I love, others I know nothing about, but they’re all here. MTV News’ Band Bracketology Next, I ranked them, based on my own personal foibles and some actual data too. I moved a few teams around based on geography (because no one wants to travel all that far during the tournament); weighed questions like “Would 3OH!3 be the second-place team in the WAC?” and “Do All Time Low belong in the ACC or the Atlantic Sun?” (strength of schedule matters, after all); stared at my list for about a day; and then set my field. I was determined. I was a selection committee of one. I am probably going crazy. So here, after much consternation, is my Musical March Madness — my Band Bracketology (alliteration!). How do teams advance? I have no idea. What do they get for winning the championship? You got me. All I know is that I had to do this, and so it is done. You can see my entire bracket here , and I’ve broken down each region to highlight key matchups and whatnot. Oh, and maybe we can turn this into some sort of contest or something. If you want to print out my bracket, fill out your picks, scan ’em in, then e-mail the bracket back to me. I’ll select the most creative (and logical … no 16 seed is gonna win it all) entry, which will win a prize of some indeterminate value. Maybe you could write some of this column one week — who knows? Anyway, if you’ve got an insane amount of free time (like me) and are insane (again, like me), then you can send your brackets to BTTS@MTVStaff.com . And, without further ado, let’s let the (largely arbitrary) madness begin. Oh, and P.S., I spent waaay more time on this than I probably should have. The #1 Seeds Nickelback :The Canadian rockers landed the #1 seed in the Midwest region, if only because that’s where their music is played the most (broad generalizations are essential when you’re the sole member of the selection committee). Also, though their Dark Horse album came out in late 2008, it continues to dominate to this day, having sold more than 2.5 million copies. Someone you know owns it. You may not like them, but you’ve got to admire their consistency. Sort of like Duke. Blink-182 : The committee gave them the #1 spot in the West region based on the strength of their comeback tour and the never-ending hype surrounding their still-in-the-works sixth album, which could come out in time for them to grab a #1 in next year’s tournament (but probably won’t). Also, Mark Hoppus is a nice dude. That goes a long way with the committee. A band with a storied history and a solid track record. So … Kansas? Coldplay : Still one of the hugest bands in the world, despite not releasing a new album last year, Coldplay are #1 in the East region (it’s closest to their native England, and geography always plays a part in seeding). The debate rages if they’ll play in their home uniforms (tattered military jackets, epaulets and ribbons) or their away (tattered military jackets, epaulets and ribbons). A classic finesse team, Coldplay won’t beat you into submission, but they find a way to win. They are Kentucky. Brian Eno is their Adolph Rupp. Kings of Leon : #1 in the South — and practically everywhere else — the Kings enter the tournament as my top-ranked team, based largely on their massive 2009. They finally broke through to U.S. audiences, after years of scrumming and slumming. The committee loved their strength of schedule, unyielding work ethic and grinding style of play. In other words, they are Syracuse. Midwest The so-called “flyover states” get a bracket positively brimming with appropriate bands, including fifth-seeded Slipknot, 10th-seeded Breaking Benjamin and 11th-seeded Shinedown (once again, broad generalizations are the rule of the day come tourney time). Muse is the surprise #2 seed, since they keep hanging around on modern-rock radio. Not sure why Cobra Starship ended up out here, but Saporta and company better bring their A-game for their opening-round matchup against Shinedown. The Foo Fighters and Red Hot Chili Peppers are name picks, making the field despite all evidence to the contrary (sort of like Michigan State). The Pete Wentz/ Patrick Stump tussle should be a barn-burner. The Hold Steady grabbed the automatic bid as champions of the Mid-American Conference and because something like 90 percent of their songs are set in the Midwest. Possible sleeper? OK Go at #12, still riding high on the success of their “This Too Shall Pass” video . (1) Nickelback vs. (16) The Hold Steady (2) Muse vs. (15) Red Hot Chili Peppers (3) Foo Fighters vs. (14) AFI (4) The White Stripes vs. (13) Rise Against (5) Slipknot vs. (12) OK Go (6) Cobra Starship vs. (11) Shinedown (7) 3OH!3 vs. (10) Breaking Benjamin (8) Pete Wentz vs. (9) Patrick Stump West A bracket loaded with talent (probably the second-toughest field in the tournament), nostalgia (the reunited Sublime and Soundgarden, both former tournament champions looking to reclaim past glories) and good vibes (thanks mostly to fourth-seeded Jack Johnson), the West region is solid from top to bottom. Key first-round matchups include the top-seeded Blink taking on feisty 16 seed Angels & Airwaves (these two have a history), a battle for Pacific Northwest supremacy between Death Cab for Cutie and Soundgarden (upset alert) and a tough draw for fifth-seeded (yet scuffling) My Chemical Romance, who take on the upstart Gorillaz. Panic! at the Disco and the Young Veins are co-champions of the Mountain West Conference, in case you were wondering. (1) Blink-182 vs. (16) Angels & Airwaves (2) Green Day vs. (15) Panic! at the Disco (3) Jack Johnson vs. (14) The Young Veins (4) Pearl Jam vs. (13) Hollywood Undead (5) My Chemical Romance vs. (12) Gorillaz (6) Weezer vs. (11) Sublime (7) Death Cab for Cutie vs. (10) Soundgarden (8) Modest Mouse vs. (9) 30 Seconds to Mars East The self-proclaimed “intellectual enclave” (OK, I just made that up, but I bet someone from the Upper West Side has said this at some point) gets the “blog bracket,” packed with buzz bands, aging indie acts and, well, U2 (I had to put them somewhere). Animal Collective are the #2 seed in the East, something that will come as a surprise to 99 percent of the U.S. but not the blogging elite, who probably wanted them as the #1 (or, deciding that they like Panda Bear’s solo stuff better, not have them in the tournament at all). Also making appearances are finesse bands like Owl City, Vampire Weekend, Grizzly Bear and Phoenix. The Radiohead/Spoon matchup should have the thin-and-pasty set glued to their seats, and fifth-seeded Phoenix faces a tough test from #12 seed the National. Also, inexplicably in as the #15 seed, Faith No More could bully their way past AnCo then terrify the winner of the MGMT/ Arcade Fire matchup and wind up in the Sweet 16. But, really, this bracket is Coldplay’s to lose. Oh, and Tokio Hotel are the #16 seed on the basis of their last album, so deal with it. The committee cannot overlook cold, hard facts. (1) Coldplay vs. (16) Tokio Hotel (2) Animal Collective vs. (15) Faith No More (3) Owl City vs. (14) The Gaslight Anthem (4) Vampire Weekend vs. (13) Pavement (5) Phoenix vs. (12) The National (6) Grizzly Bear vs. (11) U2 (7) MGMT vs. (10) Arcade Fire (8) Radiohead vs. (9) Spoon South The bracket of death. Huge talent will go head-to-head down South, where the field is so stacked that Nick Jonas only got in as a #12 seed. But the real wild card here is Lil Wayne, who nabbed a #4 seed despite only sorta being a rock act. If he shows up (and showing up isn’t exactly his strong suit), he could run the table here. I probably should have flipped Paramore and the Dave Matthews Band, but I already filled out the official bracket in ink, so, too late. Huge first-round tilts include the 8/9 game, which pits Kris Allen against Adam Lambert in a rematch of last season’s “American Idol” finale, John Mayer versus Nick Jonas (an old-fashioned “heartthrob-off”) and Phish vs. My Morning Jacket, which could possibly make the jam-band universe explode. The top-seeded Kings get the winner of the Against Me!/ Creed play-in game, an all-Florida matchup of good versus evil. I’ve just decided that Phish grabbed the automatic bid as champions of the super-stony America East Conference, btw. (1) Kings of Leon vs. (16) Against Me!/ Creed (2) Paramore vs. (15) Coheed and Cambria (3) Dave Matthews Band vs. (14) Them Crooked Vultures (4) Lil Wayne vs. (13) Alice in Chains (5) John Mayer vs. (12) Nick Jonas & the Administration (6) Phish vs. (11) My Morning Jacket (7) All-Time Low vs. (10) Mastodon (8) Kris Allen vs. (9) Adam Lambert Questions? Concerns? Brackets? Hit me up at BTTS@MTVStaff.com . Or, let us know some your picks in the comments below. Related Photos MTV News’ Band Bracketology

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MTV’s Musical March Madness: Band Bracketology

Shutter Shy

Leonardo DiCaprio uses his University of Michigan baseball cap to duck from cameras while hitting the talk show circuit in New York. We wish he would take the hat off… But not just because we’re Michigan State fans. To see his beautiful face, of course!

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Shutter Shy

John Mayer Moves On From Playboy Interview At Detroit Show

Singer talks to the crowd a lot during two-hour concert, but makes no mention of his recent controversial comments. By Adam Graham John Mayer (file) Photo: Paul Bergen/Redferns AUBURN HILLS, Michigan — Those who feared John Mayer would zip his lip and let his guitar do the talking in the wake of Playboy -gate needn’t have worried. During Mayer’s Battle Studies Tour stop Friday night (February 12) at the Palace of Auburn Hills in suburban Detroit, the embattled singer talked — and talked and talked — from the stage, but not about Jessica “Sexual Napalm” Simpson, his affinity for pornography or the racist and homosexual slurs in the Playboy interview that landed him in hot water earlier this week. Instead, Mayer mused about VH1 Classic, the 1970s and Sylvester Stallone — namely “Over the Top,” 1987’s Stallone-starring arm-wrestling epic. “Me taking off my jacket, you understand, is sort of like Sylvester Stallone turning his hat around in ‘Over the Top,’ ” Mayer told the crowd of 12,000, after removing the black jacket he wore during the first couple of songs of Friday’s show. “You know, like Sylvester Stallone says in ‘Over the Top,’ one movie in a giant string of arm-wrestling movies. That’s when you know Hollywood was flush with cash. Somebody walked in and said, ‘I got an idea, you take Stallone … ‘ they’re like, ‘Sold. Wait, hold on, what’s he doing?’ ‘He’s arm wrestling.’ ‘Double sold. Let’s do it.’ ” The off-the-cuff riff felt like Mayer trying out new stand-up material, as he wondered aloud if anyone actually uttered the words “Over the Top” in the film. Basically, he seemed like he was back to his jokey, irreverent self, and he let his onstage apology in Nashville on Wednesday — and his tweeted apologies the same day — speak for themselves. Mayer, backed by his five-piece band and two backup singers, opened the two-hour concert with “Heartbreak Warfare,” his current single, and continued through a host of material from Battle Studies and his previous efforts. Covers of Peter Gabriel’s “Sledgehammer” and the Police’s “Message in a Bottle” were added into the mix, and a mid-show run-through of his very first single, “No Such Thing,” was performed acoustically: “How I used to play it at coffee shops,” he said. If so desired, plenty could be read into the video screens behind Mayer that projected a blazing wall of fire or lyrics such as “I’ll come through, like I do when the world keeps testing me, testing me, testing me” (from “Vultures”). But through his lighthearted stage banter and sincere thank-yous to the crowd for spending their Friday evening with him, he seemed doggedly determined to move forward from the controversy. Kara Dubay of Rochester Hills, Michigan, didn’t mind spending her Friday with Mayer and wasn’t concerned about his comments from the Playboy interview. “I don’t care what he does in his personal life, really,” the 19-year-old college student said. “I like him for his music, so I don’t think [his personal life] is anyone’s business.” David Trierweiler of Grand Rapids, Michigan, said he thought Mayer’s comments in the Playboy article were lost in translation. “I think he meant well, it just came across wrong,” said Trierweiler, 22. “By no means did he mean to say anything against anyone else.” Katelyn Van Slyke, a graduate student at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, agreed. “I think that everyone takes what he says way too seriously. Everything he says is like a joke with himself. He’s a funny guy.” She said Friday’s concert and the warm reception he received from the 80 percent capacity crowd proved he can move past the negativity caused by the racy interview. “He can move on from it. He’s a weird guy, and his personality goes into his music, that’s what makes him so unique,” she said. “He apologized, and I don’t think he’s a bad guy. He’s just taken way too seriously.” Related Artists John Mayer

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John Mayer Moves On From Playboy Interview At Detroit Show

Arianna Huffington’s Journalism Charity Helps Nobody but Herself

When the Huffington Post Investigative Fund was announced last March, Arianna Huffington modestly described its mission as ” to save investigative journalism .” Ten months later, it’s safe to say the fund’s chief accomplishment is providing free scoops to the Huffington Post. (And burnishing Huffington’s reputation and monstrous ego, but that goes without saying.) The fund is supposed act as a sort of disembodied newspaper i-team, with experienced reporters and editors bankrolled by tax-exempt donations from the Atlantic Philanthropies and the Schumann Center for Media and Democracy doing the time-consuming and expensive investigative work that strapped newspapers are increasingly abandoning. It is axiomatic that investigative reporting is the most precious casualty of the demise of print journalism, and the fund has been heralded as one of many “new models” of funding real journalism in an increasingly blog-eat-blog world

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Arianna Huffington’s Journalism Charity Helps Nobody but Herself

Do Famous People Die Younger Than Other People?

Why this spate of Young Hollywood people dying?

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Do Famous People Die Younger Than Other People?

Really Offensive Class Of 2011 T-Shirt

9 high school students in Michigan are in trouble for wearing these twin tower shirts. WHERE WERE THEIR PARENTS?!?! Contribute: Add an image, link, video or comment

Explosive device set off aboard airliner

A passenger on a flight Friday from Amsterdam, Netherlands, to Detroit, Michigan, ignited a small explosive device shortly before landing and the White House is considering the incident an attempted terrorist attack, a senior administration official said. The Northwest passenger, identified as a Nigerian national “claiming to have extremist affiliation,” was placed in custody and is being treated for burns suffered in the explosion, according to a federal government bulletin obtained by CNN from a source familiar with the investigation. The explosive device “was acquired in Yemen along with instructions as to when it should be used,” the bulletin said.

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Explosive device set off aboard airliner

AP: Possible Al Qaeda Terror Attack on Transatlantic Flights

There were reports that ‘firecrackers’ had gone off on a flight from Holland to Detroit on Friday. Several people were slightly hurt

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AP: Possible Al Qaeda Terror Attack on Transatlantic Flights

AP: Possible Al Qaeda Terror Attack on Transatlantic Flight

There were reports that ‘firecrackers’ had gone off on a flight from Holland to Detroit on Friday. Several people were slightly hurt

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AP: Possible Al Qaeda Terror Attack on Transatlantic Flight