Tag Archives: point

On VOD: Cloudy Satire and Helen Mirren’s Nude Debut

It’s a hard thing not to love: the fast, funny, adept digitally animated kids’ movie that actually, even secretly, comes packing double barrels of satiric subtext. Sure, you think of WALL -E , which for my money painted the most lacerating portrait anyone has seen this century of American consumerism run amok. Did those millions of happy Pixar consumers not get the point? More to the point, did the millions of chortling filmgoers absorbing Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs have any trouble last year shoveling the popcorn and Raisinets? As of today, it’s on demand…

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On VOD: Cloudy Satire and Helen Mirren’s Nude Debut

Sources: One Tree Hill and Life Unexpected "Looking Good" for Pickups

Looks like there will be more life for fan favorite bubble series One Tree Hill and Life Unexpected! Rumors are swirling that both series will get half seasons on the CW’s 2010-11 lineup, and…

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Sources: One Tree Hill and Life Unexpected "Looking Good" for Pickups

It Sucks to Be Lindsay Lohan, Miss USA and Survivor Villain Russell

Got a case of the Mondays? Think of it this way, you could be these folks: Lindsay Lohan: It’s getting to the point where she should just take on Allegedly as her surname. This time,…

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It Sucks to Be Lindsay Lohan, Miss USA and Survivor Villain Russell

When Will This Betty White Thing End, Already?

Has this Betty White fad finally jumped the shark? Will it ever? —WBex, via the Answer B!tch inbox She may appear unquashable at this point, but if you’re sick of the…

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When Will This Betty White Thing End, Already?

Limp Bizkit’s Fred Durst: The Chocolate Starfish Gets Humble

The singer we met this week was worlds away from his former self, in Bigger Than the Sound. By James Montgomery Fred Durst Photo: Jeff Vespa/ WireImage Think back, if you can, to the nightmarish state of rock and roll in the late ’90s. Recall the thudding riffs, the macho posturing, the turntablists. Shudder at the memory of Woodstock ’99, the Family Values Tour, and moshpits filled with red-faced, shirtless frat guys all looking to abuse and/or murder you. Recoil from the terror. The dread. The Puddle of Mudd. It was a tough time, indeed. Now, think even harder … what’s the first image that comes to your with mind? Chances are, it’s a dude. He is probably wearing a blood-red Yankees cap, turned backwards on his skull. He is probably crouched, wildly gesturing, the crotch of his baggy sweats nearly scraping the floor. He is probably angry at seemingly nothing — and everything — all at once. He is almost definitely Fred Durst. Because, more than anyone (or anything), fairly or unfairly, Durst represented most of the above. He was misogynistic, mean-spirited and egotistical. He picked fights, burned bridges, and stomped on anyone who got in his way. He rhymed “Nookie” with “Cookie,” and did it loudly and proudly. Basically, he was “rap-rock” personified, an outwardly lunk-headed, ham-fisted dude who elbowed his way to the top of the mountain. And when the genre that he embodied dropped off, Durst was left in the lurch. And here’s the thing: Fred Durst knows all of this. Or, at least, I think he does. Because when I met him (and his Limp Bizkit mates) Recently, he was none of the things I mentioned above. Instead, he was soft-spoken. Slightly goofy. Strangely Zen. And most of all, incredibly humble. Time and reality seem to have tamed him. Of course, this is all based on the 45 minutes I spent talking to him, and everything he told me about Limp Bizkit’s new album, the rather excellently titled Gold Cobra (which, strangely, still does not have a release date), but I don’t think I’m that off-base. It’s the first album to feature the band’s full lineup in more than a decade, one that Durst calls their “full circle” affair. Making it meant mending the bridges he had so roughly busted up during his heyday, apologizing to his bandmates, and realizing — probably for the first time ever — that the world does not revolve solely around him. And sure, the first song we’ve heard off the album — “Why Try,” currently streaming on the band’s official site — is very much a Limp Bizkit-y affair (one in which Durst refers to himself as “the pirate pimp”), and yes, the presumed first single is called “Douchebag,” but those are merely superficial details. Durst admits that the former was born out of in-studio collaborations and the latter is actually a song about bullies. It would seem the shoe is on the other foot. But that’s not all. Durst spoke at length about the “unspoken language” that he and his bandmates share, a “magical” connection that he couldn’t have with anyone else. He mentioned the pure intent behind Cobra, a renewed focus the band had lost in their later years (“It’s controlled chaos now … there’s an intent behind it”). He heaped praise on guitarist Wes Borland’s work on “Douchebag,” and beamed about the “melodic stuff” on the album. But most of all, he repeatedly talked about the fun he’s having these days, about the energy the band is receiving from the crowds they’re playing for. Make no mistake about it, Durst is amazed — and a bit flattered — that his fans have stuck with him through all of this. He is taking nothing for granted. And, at the end of our interview, he made a point of showing me the (then-unreleased) artwork for Cobra on his iPhone. You’ve probably seen it by now. It’s a painting, done by Borland, of a giant cobra, rearing up in a cave, with a bikini-clad babe nestled in its coils. As Durst was dialing it up, he couldn’t help but laugh, mostly because he was so excited by the artwork (and, of course, the sheer WTF-ness of titling an album Gold Cobra ). It was an oddly telling moment, not to mention a really genuine one; the kind of thing I’d never expect from a guy with his reputation. But it only further illustrates my point: Fred Durst, the former Enfant terrible of rap rock, is actually a pretty humble guy these days. He laughed. He smiled. He even wore his ballcap forward the whole time. His image may not be what it was, and perhaps that’s beside the point. Fred Durst isn’t the monster you probably think he is, at least not anymore. He’s been through the ringer, he’s heard all the jokes, and he’s better for all of it. And while he still may do it all for the nookie, he no longer derives satisfaction in instructing you to stick it up your (yeah).

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Limp Bizkit’s Fred Durst: The Chocolate Starfish Gets Humble

Alexis Neiers picture

“I didn#39;t do anything wrong,” Alexis Neiers, 18, tells E! News. “I thought we were going to trial and we had a great shot at this. I had been so confident because I had thought up until this point that I didn#39;t do anything wrong.” She#39;s officially a convicted felon for her role in a 2009 heist at Orlando Bloom#39;s home, but Pretty Wild star Alexis Neiers wants to clear her name. In a last-minute plea bargain Monday, Neiers accepted a six-month jail term and three years probation for

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Alexis Neiers picture

Sandy’s Like a Ford: Strong and American!

OK, maybe comparing Oscar winner Sandra Bullock to a truck isn’t the best way to get our point across, but she is one cool mother. And we don’t just mean in the calm, cool, collected kind…

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Sandy’s Like a Ford: Strong and American!

Gorillaz To Tour U.S. This Year, Without The Holograms

‘You can’t, at this point, do holograms,’ lead singer Damon Albarn explained. By James Montgomery Photo: MTV News For just about as long as they’ve been a (not real) band, Gorillaz have toyed with the idea of launching a full-blown, hologram-enhanced tour . After all, it seemed like the most logical way of bringing the group to life. The only problem? Well, as you can imagine, lugging all that 3-D equipment around gets to be a tad bit expensive. Oh, and then there’s the fact that, no matter how hard they try, Gorillaz masterminds Damon Albarn and Jamie Hewlett just can’t seem to get the hologram thing to work the way they want it to. So, while, yes, Gorillaz will be touring the U.S. later this year, if we’ll have them (“We’re coming back, going to play all around America, if they want us, of course,” Albarn smiled), they won’t be bringing the holograms with them. It seems they’ve officially closed that chapter of the band’s history … and they’ve got Madonna, with whom they “performed” at the 48th annual Grammy Awards in 2006 , to thank for that. “You can’t, at this point, do holograms. … This is what happened at the Grammys. We opened the Grammys — on television it looked great — but we had an invisible film pulled across our stage, and you project onto that, and put smoke behind it — it’s a Victorian technology, actually,” Albarn told MTV News. “So Madonna manages to come and sort of gate-crash our idea, as people like Madonna do, because that’s why they’re so deep. … She gate-crashed our idea, so we couldn’t play with any bass or any sound, because it would vibrate [the film] so it was really quiet. “So we open the Grammys, but no one could hear us, in this huge, great arena, and we were crestfallen at that moment. And I’m trying to get Bono to move, because his huge, great Stetson is obscuring my view,” he continued. “And then, our song stops, and she appears on the other side of the stage, with her inflated-ABBA riff, at full volume, and the place goes insane. And at [that] point, I just thought, ‘You know what? Sometimes, just keep it simple.’ ” Which means that fans can expect more performances like their guest-heavy Sunday night set at Coachella , with appearances by the likes of Brit rappers Kano and Bashy, De La Soul and the Hypnotic Brass Ensemble. There’s no word on just when their U.S. tour will kick off. E-mails to the band’s label, Capitol, were not returned by press time, but with all that hologram business now behind them, Gorillaz can focus on putting on a booming, in-your-face set. Which is all fans really want, anyway. “We want it to be powerful, and for people to feel good about it,” Albarn said. “No pun intended.” Will you check out Gorillaz in concert? Let us know in the comments below! Related Artists Gorillaz

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Gorillaz To Tour U.S. This Year, Without The Holograms

Can Crystal Bowersox Lose ‘American Idol’?

‘Idol’ experts say two weaknesses could be her downfall. By James Montgomery Crystal Bowersox Photo: Kevin Winter/ Getty Images Conventional wisdom seems to hold that Crystal Bowersox — the dreadlocked dynamo who has more or less dominated the ninth season of “American Idol” since day one — is the clear-cut front-runner and that the competition is hers to lose at this point. Based on talent alone, you’d be hard-pressed to find many who would disagree with that assessment. But no matter how many times Simon Cowell repeats it, we all know that “Idol” isn’t merely “a singing competition.” More often than not, it’s the intangibles — stuff like likability, marketability and, uh, hunk-ability — that actually determine the winner of this thing. For that reason alone, it’s entirely possible that Bowersox might not win “American Idol” this season. Or, at least, that’s what those who know the show best are telling us. “She should win, but she might not,” said MJ Santilli, who operates “Idol” site MJsBigBlog.com . “She’s been the front-runner for a while now, and usually, the front-runners tend to fade away. … Plus, she’s hardly the traditional ‘front-runner.’ It’s not an open-and-shut case.” “She’s been the front-runner almost since the beginning of the season; it’s just that the problem with ‘Idol’ is that it’s not a show where you can vote people off. You vote for who you want to say,” said Maura Johnston, who covers “Idol” for Fancast.com , added. “So it will come down to fans who are passionate, and since everyone assumes Crystal is the best, it will mean people might not vote for her, since there’s a sense that the five other contestants are fighting for votes.” Aside from the fact that Bowersox has basically been declared the de facto champion since the early weeks of the competition, there seem to be two main reasons why she might not actually win — both of which are completely beyond her control. The first is the guy who most “Idol” fans see her facing off against in the finale: lovable underdog Lee Dewyze. “She’s got Lee Dewyze behind her, who hasn’t peaked yet but who’s the kind of guy ‘Idol’ voters seem to like,” Santilli said. “If he comes up with a really unbelievable performance in the next couple of weeks, he may snatch the crown from her.” “I think the final two is going to be Lee and Crystal, and I think Lee’s going to win,” Johnston said. “Lee’s fans are super motivated. He has this weird quality about him. … I think he has a definite appeal. He’s the good-looking, cute underdog, and that’s all a certain demographic of ‘Idol’ viewers seem to want. Also, it seems fans of the male contestants are just more motivated to vote, for whatever reason.” While a late-charging Dewyze might pose the most serious threat to knock off Bowersox, it’s the second thing that might actually end up doing her in: the very real sense that she’s this year’s Adam Lambert, a supremely talented competitor who just doesn’t quite fit in the “American Idol” mold. “There’s a couple of things going on with her. She’s a sort-of hippie, she has bad teeth, people don’t like the dreads. … She represents a segment of the pop that people don’t like: the left-wing hippie vibe,” Santilli said. “And there’s definitely a segment of viewers that won’t vote for her because of that. … She’s a little bit polarizing. Sort of like [Lambert] last season, but on a much lesser scale.” “Every contestant this season has their Achilles’ heel. And hers is how she looks,” Johnston agreed. “That’s really all you can say about her.” Though, to be honest, all of this seems sort of like nitpicking. Santilli and Johnston don’t foresee Bowersox slipping any time soon — if at all. Most of that has to do with the fact that the, uh, “talent” she’s up against pales in comparison to that of previous “Idol” seasons. “It’s such a weird season, and I think a lot of people are frustrated by what they’re seeing on the show,” Johnston said. “If the people [Bowersox] is up against this season were as strong as even, say, a Brooke White or Michael Johns, this wouldn’t even be close It’s a totally weak season, to the point where people who finished, like, sixth in previous years would’ve totally won this year.” Does Crystal have it in the bag? Or will she have to settle for second place? Let us know in the comments! Get your “Idol” fix on MTV News’ “American Idol” page , where you’ll find all the latest news, interviews and opinions. Related Videos ‘American Idol’ In 60 Seconds Related Photos Crystal Bowersox’s ‘American Idol’ Experience ‘American Idol’ Season Nine Performances

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Can Crystal Bowersox Lose ‘American Idol’?

Sam Ronson: Lindsay’s ‘An Angry Human Being’

Filed under: Lindsay Lohan , Samantha Ronson Samantha Ronson was short, sweet, and to the point last night when we asked her why Lindsay Lohan allegedly threw a bottle at her. Read more

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Sam Ronson: Lindsay’s ‘An Angry Human Being’