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Justin Bieber Talks Sex and Politics In Rolling Stone Cover Story

Justin Bieber , 16, is on the cover of Rolling Stone. Rolling Stone decided to give Justin a new hair style.  Justin’s usually styled do has been made to look like he stuck his finger in an electrical socket.  The cover was shot by Terry Richardson and it will certainly get the beliebers talking.  Even more shocking is the interview where the Biebs talks about politics, his take on sex and girls.  Below are a couple of highlights of the interview – for more visit Rolling Stone . Justin’s take on sex – I don’t think you should have sex with anyone unless you love them,” Bieber says. When asked if he believes in abstinence until marriage, Bieber – who is reportedly dating fellow teen star Selena Gomez – seems wary: “I think you should just wait for the person you’re…in love with.” Justin on his voice changing – Bieber’s voice began to change on his last tour. He’s now working with a vocal couch, which involves doing 20 push-ups before before a session to warm up his chest. “He’s got a nice tone tone to his voice now,” says his vocal coach Jan Smith. “It’s a good texture, but it doesn’t sound like what his fans think he sounds like. He’ll get four octaves eventually. He’s still young.” Justin on abortion –  ”I really don’t believe in abortion,” Bieber says. “It’s like killing a baby?” How about in cases of rape? “Um. Well, I think that’s really sad, but everything happens for a reason. I guess I haven’t been in that position, so I wouldn’t be able to judge that.” Tweet

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Justin Bieber Talks Sex and Politics In Rolling Stone Cover Story

Beavis And Butt-Head Return To Watch ‘Jersey Shore,’ Viral Videos

‘In the years since Mike [Judge] quit doing ‘Beavis and Butt-head,’ he realized that there was a lot to make fun of,’ writer tells Rolling Stone. By Kyle Anderson Beavis And Butt-Head Photo: MTV Two of MTV’s biggest icons are returning this summer, and according to executives at the network, they will pick up right where they left off. The launch date for the brand-new episodes of “Beavis and Butt-head” has not yet been made official, but longtime fans (as well as newcomers) can rest assured that the boys will be the same old bored, TV-obsessed, somewhat violent, anti-authoritarian unit they’ve always been. “They’ll have the same intelligence,” MTV President Van Toffler told Rolling Stone in an exclusive interview. “They’re the same boneheads sitting on the same couch, commenting on things through a really simple prism.” There will be a new element or two. While the boys used to obsessively watch old music videos, this time around, they’ll poke fun at UFC matches, YouTube clips and even segments from “Jersey Shore.” One thing that will be the same is creator Mike Judge, who is returning to the show to helm it a second time. His inspiration for reviving two of his most iconic characters (Judge also created “King of the Hill” and directed cult-favorite films “Office Space” and “Idiocracy”) centered on his ongoing obsession with pop culture. “In the years since Mike quit doing ‘Beavis and Butt-head,’ he realized that there was a lot to make fun of,” head writer John Altschuler told Rolling Stone. “We just kept coming up with ideas that Mike thought would have made good ‘Beavis and Butt-head’ episodes.” “Beavis and Butt-head” last appeared on MTV in 1997, and their return was announced earlier this month at MTV’s upfronts. Excited parties include Justin Bieber, who tweeted about the return of the show shortly after making an appearance at the event. What are your favorite “Beavis and Butt-head” memories? Let us know in the comments!

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Beavis And Butt-Head Return To Watch ‘Jersey Shore,’ Viral Videos

Justin Bieber Talks Sex and Love with ‘Rolling Stone’

Justin Beiber arrives on the red carpet for The BRIT Awards 2011 at the O2 Arena on February 15, 2011 in London, England. (Getty Images) more pics

Lil Wayne in Rolling Stone: Reflections on a Lil Time Behind Bars

The latest issue of Rolling Stone features Lil Wayne on the cover. Need we say more? This is a man who once let us in on a little secret regarding birth control. He’s as quotable as they come, so you know this will be good. The rapper and frequent dad opens up for the first time about the eight months he spent behind bars at Riker’s Island. Some excerpts from the interview: Out of jail. On the loose. Ready for strip clubs . On dominating at a card game so much, fellow inmates tried to cut him out of the game : “I’d bust a n***a’s ass at Uno. We gamble for phone time.” “I’d take n***a’s commissary. Lemme get them cookies, lemme get them chips, get that soup. They’d be like, ‘Oh, we thought you were asleep.’ Like you can’t look inside my cell and see that I’m right there! We ain’t got no doors n***a!” On his reading material in jail : [Anthony Kiedis’] Scar Tissue was really good. I also read the Bible in there for the first time. It was deep!” “I liked the parts where some character was once this, but ended up being that. Like he’d be dissing Jesus, then he ends up being a saint. That was cool.” On the dude who saved him from more time in solitary confinement by claiming a contraband MP3 player was his and not Weezy’s : “He was a solid n***a. Shout-out to Charles. Being in solitary was the worst. No TV. No radio. No commissary. Basically in there 23 hours a day.” As you can see, Wayne uses a light tone in describing jail, but he does note that the whole experience has really changed his outlook on quite a bit. Think he’ll come away from this a better person? If nothing else, the man needs to give more interviews like this one. He is sound bite gold.

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Lil Wayne in Rolling Stone: Reflections on a Lil Time Behind Bars

Was Justin Bieber’s “Pray” Really A Musical Disaster?

Not only did Rolling Stone magazine claim that Nick Jonas’ solo album with his band The Administration was a musical disaster this year, they have also stated that Justin Bieber’s single “Pray” was a disaster as well. Here’s what the publication had to say about Justin’s heartfelt song: “Just what you needed: Bieber decides to offer a little wisdom about how to solve the world’s problems, and it’s the same solution MC Hammer offered 20 years ago. (And look how well it worked out for him.) People praying got us into this mess, Biebz. And the live AMAs performance looked exactly like Russell Brand’s ‘African Child’ video in Get Him To The Greek — except that was supposed to be funny. Say it loud, Bieber: ‘I’m a white African Jesus from space!’” We honestly think that’s a bit harsh. Justin’s song has inspired a lot of his fans to do good deeds in their communities and for the world. Do you agree with Rolling Stone?

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Was Justin Bieber’s “Pray” Really A Musical Disaster?

Lil Wayne Thanks Fans With Preview Of Rolling Stone Shoot

‘Thank you for making ‘6 Foot 7 Foot’ #1 on iTunes,’ Weezy writes. By Paul Cantor Lil Wayne in Rolling Stone Photo: DJ Scoob Doo On the heels of his performance alongside Eminem on “Saturday Night Live” this past weekend, Lil Wayne took to his blog WeezyThanxYou.com to express appreciation to his fans as well as offer a glimpse of a recent shoot he did for his upcoming Rolling Stone cover story. “The shoot was in Miami two weeks ago, and just being able to do this type of stuff again is therapeutic,” he wrote. “Be sure to pick up the issue when it hits stands. Thank you to the people at Rolling Stone for the opportunity.” The behind the scenes photo was taken by DJ Scoob Doo and shows Wayne standing shirtless in a photo studio with a pair of fluorescent sun glasses on, presumably looking at the Rolling Stone photographer’s lens. Wayne also thanked fans for supporting the first single from Tha Carter IV “6 Foot 7 Foot.” The song, which samples elements of Jamaican folk song “Day-O (The Banana Boat Song),” rocketed up the iTunes charts and landed at #1 in less than a week. “Thank you for making ‘6 Foot 7 Foot’ #1 on iTunes,” he wrote, “you will continue to be #1 in my heart.” Wayne is just starting to reemerge in public after being released from prison in early November. His appearance on “SNL” was his first televised appearance since then. On the show, he performed Eminem’s single “No Love,” from Recovery. Em ceded the spotlight after performing “Won’t Back Down,” and Wayne went into an electric-guitar-laden take of “6 Foot 7 Foot.” Of the highly anticipated performance, DJ Scoob Doo said, “The energy in the building is historical, and it’s extra special to see everybody fight for position backstage to see Lil Wayne take over ‘SNL.’ ” Related Artists Lil Wayne

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Lil Wayne Thanks Fans With Preview Of Rolling Stone Shoot

Captain Beefheart Dead At 69

Avant-garde musician and visual artist battled multiple sclerosis since the ’90s. By James Montgomery “Captain Beefheart” Don Van Vliet Photo: Gijsbert Hanekroot/Redferns Don Van Vliet, the man known around the world as Captain Beefheart, died Friday (December 17), according to his manager . He was 69. The cause of Van Vliet’s death was not immediately known, though several outlets were reporting it was due to complications from multiple sclerosis, which he had battled since the 1990s. Van Vliet was an accomplished avant-garde musician and visual artist, who along with a constantly rotating crew of fellow oddballs — his handpicked “Magic Band” — bent the rules, melded genres and thoroughly weirded out much of mainstream America for nearly four decades. The origin of his famous Captain Beefheart stage name remains somewhat cloudy (some say it came from a script he wrote with childhood friend/ rival Frank Zappa), but the impact it would have on the worlds of music and art is not. Beginning in 1967, with the release of Beefheart and the Magic Band’s seminal Safe as Milk, and rolling on through other classic bizarre gems like 1969’s Trout Mask Replica (which melded elements of blues, jazz and avant-garde spoken word and was named by Rolling Stone as the 58th Greatest Album of All Time in 2003), ’72’s bar-friendly Clear Spot and ’78’s Shiny Beast (Bat Chain Puller), Beefheart forged a territory that was uniquely, unquestionably his — record sales (and the mainstream media) be damned. In the process, he earned a legion of loyal followers — including Sonic Youth’s Thurston Moore, Nirvana’s Kurt Cobain, the White Stripes’ Jack White (who, along with his band the Dead Weather, filmed their “Treat Me Like Your Mother” video near Van Vliet’s childhood home in Lancaster, California) and “The Simpsons” creator Matt Groening — and, along with a handful of other acts, is credited with ushering in the genre we now commonly refer to as “alternative rock.” After releasing Ice Cream for Crow in 1982, Van Vliet all but retired from the music industry (though the Magic Band would continue on without him), focusing instead on his other passion: painting. He would spend the remainder of his days living in Northern California with his wife, Jan, creating abstract, expressionist works, which showed often at New York’s Michael Werner Gallery. By the 1990s, he had largely disappeared from the public eye, save for a few appearances, most prominently in Anton Corbijn’s film “Some Yo Yo Stuff,” where he appeared to be frail and weakened. In a statement released to Rolling Stone, the Michael Werner Gallery called Van Vliet “a complex and influential figure in the visual and performing arts” and added that his music and art will live on as his lasting legacy. “After two decades in the spotlight as an avant-garde composer and performer, Van Vliet retired from performing to devote himself wholeheartedly to painting and drawing,” the statement read, in part. “Like his music, Van Vliet’s lush paintings are the product of a truly rare and unique vision.” Share your well-wishes for Van Vliet’s family in the comments.

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Captain Beefheart Dead At 69

Alice Cooper, Neil Diamond Among Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame Inductees

Tom Waits, Dr. John also made the list. By Gil Kaufman Alice Cooper Photo: Kevork Djansezian/ Getty Images This year’s list of Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductees offers a musical cornucopia of styles. From the New Orleans boogie woogie voodoo soul of Dr. John to Tom Waits’ boho preacher-poet performance art, Neil Diamond’s overwrought pop histrionics, Darlene Love’s girl-group R&B and Alice Cooper’s goth/glam rock theater of the macabre, the Hall of Fame class of 2011 is set to take the stage for their honors on March 14 at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in New York. With the exception of Waits, all of the inductees are first-time nominees. While all are probably popping corks now, that means, of course, that a number of younger acts didn’t make the list. These include multiple nominees the Beastie Boys and LL Cool J, first-time nominee Bon Jovi and veteran acts J. Geils Band, Donna Summer and Chic. Cooper, 62, whose onstage theatrics include macabre set pieces such as guillotines and gallows, told Billboard that he felt it was about time his band got a nod. “I’ve always felt the same way about this whole thing,” said Cooper, whose classic hits includes “I’m Eighteen” and “School’s Out,” teenage rebellion anthems for the ages recorded by a band he started 45 years ago in high school. “I kind of sat back and said, ‘It will happen eventually.’ ” Artists are eligible for induction 25 years after the release of their first single or album. Diamond told Rolling Stone that he was proud to join the institution. “I think it’s great. I’m happy that they recognized me and my work,” he said. “Any club that has Chuck Berry and Little Richard and the Everly Brothers is a club that I want to be a part of.” The 69-year-old crooner best known for hits such as “Cherry, Cherry,” “Sweet Caroline” and “Song Sung Blue” was not nearly as surprised by the honor as Love, who told the magazine that she was on her way to play a private Christmas party in Atlantic City when she found out. “I was just stunned for a minute. … I was laughing and crying at the same time. I’m still on cloud nine,” said Love, who is best known for her work with imprisoned “Wall of Sound” producer Phil Spector on such early 1960s hits as “He’s a Rebel” and “Christmas (Baby Please Come Home).” Related Artists Alice in Chains Neil Diamond

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Alice Cooper, Neil Diamond Among Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame Inductees

Alice Cooper, Neil Diamond Among Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame Inductees

Tom Waits, Dr. John also made the list. By Gil Kaufman Alice Cooper Photo: Kevork Djansezian/ Getty Images This year’s list of Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductees offers a musical cornucopia of styles. From the New Orleans boogie woogie voodoo soul of Dr. John to Tom Waits’ boho preacher-poet performance art, Neil Diamond’s overwrought pop histrionics, Darlene Love’s girl-group R&B and Alice Cooper’s goth/glam rock theater of the macabre, the Hall of Fame class of 2011 is set to take the stage for their honors on March 14 at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in New York. With the exception of Waits, all of the inductees are first-time nominees. While all are probably popping corks now, that means, of course, that a number of younger acts didn’t make the list. These include multiple nominees the Beastie Boys and LL Cool J, first-time nominee Bon Jovi and veteran acts J. Geils Band, Donna Summer and Chic. Cooper, 62, whose onstage theatrics include macabre set pieces such as guillotines and gallows, told Billboard that he felt it was about time his band got a nod. “I’ve always felt the same way about this whole thing,” said Cooper, whose classic hits includes “I’m Eighteen” and “School’s Out,” teenage rebellion anthems for the ages recorded by a band he started 45 years ago in high school. “I kind of sat back and said, ‘It will happen eventually.’ ” Artists are eligible for induction 25 years after the release of their first single or album. Diamond told Rolling Stone that he was proud to join the institution. “I think it’s great. I’m happy that they recognized me and my work,” he said. “Any club that has Chuck Berry and Little Richard and the Everly Brothers is a club that I want to be a part of.” The 69-year-old crooner best known for hits such as “Cherry, Cherry,” “Sweet Caroline” and “Song Sung Blue” was not nearly as surprised by the honor as Love, who told the magazine that she was on her way to play a private Christmas party in Atlantic City when she found out. “I was just stunned for a minute. … I was laughing and crying at the same time. I’m still on cloud nine,” said Love, who is best known for her work with imprisoned “Wall of Sound” producer Phil Spector on such early 1960s hits as “He’s a Rebel” and “Christmas (Baby Please Come Home).” Related Artists Alice in Chains Neil Diamond

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Alice Cooper, Neil Diamond Among Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame Inductees

True Blood‘s Rolling Stone Cover: Fangtastic or Too Racy?

Skin is definitely in for the cast of True Blood. The hit HBO show, which has never shied away from showing its vampires -– and werewolves and humans — baring almost all, has taken its raciness to a new level. Stripped down and splattered with blood, Alexander Skarsgard, Anna Paquin and Stephen Moyer pose in the nude for the September issue of Rolling Stone with the headline “True Blood: They’re Hot. They’re Sexy. They’re Undead.” Do you think this cover is to racy? http://tvwatch.people.com/2010/08/17/true-blood-rolling-stone-racy-naked-cover/ added by: Radical_Centrist