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‘American Idol’ Top 12: Crystal Bowersox, Siobhan Magnus Come Out On Top

Didi Benami and Casey James also get praise from the judges during big-stage debut. By Gil Kaufman Crystal Bowersox on “American Idol” on Tuesday Photo: Fox The “American Idol” season-nine top 12 made it to the big stage Tuesday night (March 16) to take on the songs of the Rolling Stones. And, in a wakeup call on the first night of mixed-gender competition, the women served notice that they really are the ones to beat this year as Siobhan Magnus drew more raves and Crystal Bowersox had yet another solid performance. Brawny football-player-turned-singer Michael Lynche was up first, singing the appropriately sexy “Miss You,” playing it like a Sam Cooke-style soul burner, complete with plenty of falsetto whoops and hollers and vigorous hand gestures. Randy Jackson and Ellen DeGeneres thought it continued Lynche’s winning ways and provided a nice kickoff to the night. Kara DioGuardi thought Michael delivered on the swagger inherent in the Stones’ live show, and Simon Cowell praised him for his confidence but thought the dancing was a bit “corny” at times. Knoxville, Tennessee, native Didi Benami went torchy with “Play With Fire,” singing the song as a dark jazz ballad while slinking across the big stage and emoting into the camera. Kara thought the eeriness of the song combined with the sweetness of Benami’s voice was a nice mixture. “For the first time for me in weeks, Didi, you’re on fire,” Randy said. Cowell thought the tune began to show what kind of artist Benami could be. Casey James rocked out “It’s All Over Now,” playing a Dixie-fried boogie take on the tune while occasionally strumming an electric guitar and tossing his golden locks at all the right moments. After telling him several weeks ago to stop trying to be a rock star, Kara said James finally was a rock star in his best performance yet. But Simon said, despite looking great and singing well, it felt more like an audition that didn’t really make use of the big stage. “You’ve got to push yourself,” he said. “Not just be a guy standing in the middle of the stage playing the guitar. It has to be more than that. … Just be a star.” Another Texas kid, Lacey Brown, went with an orchestral version of 1967’s “Ruby Tuesday” complete with a string quartet. She sang in her coquettish 1960s pixie pop voice, seated on the edge of the stage while tweaking the melody just enough to make it her own. Cowell said Brown’s vocals are strong but that she performs like an actress and overthinks it too much. Ellen didn’t like how she sat down during the most uptempo bits and felt it was a bit sleepy. Needing to get back into his early groove, Andrew Garcia let it bleed with “Gimme Shelter,” laying on some gritty Cee-Lo-like soul as he awkwardly paced across the front of the stage with the mic stand while hitting a series of big notes at the end. For Randy it was way pitchy, while Ellen dubbed it his best performance to date. Kara focused on the meaning of the lyrics again, saying the anti-Vietnam War intensity didn’t come through even as the vocal chops finally crept back. “I wanted to feel that from you, what you were talking about,” she said. “I felt it at times, but most of the times I didn’t.” Cowell mocked DioGuardi for taking the song too literally and said the vocals were good, if a bit weaker then they were in rehearsal. Teenager Katie Stevens needed to go big to stay in the game, which she did with the iconic ballad “Wild Horses.” Sitting on a stool under a harsh spotlight center stage, Stevens sang a big pop-diva version of the tune recently covered by Susan Boyle, struggling at first with the melody and then finding her big voice on the long final note. Randy and Paula thought, despite some pitch problems, it was a strong performance, and Simon said it was the first time she’s chosen a good song, even if the emotion drained out in the second half. Clawing back from the abyss, Tim Urban had a chance to solidify his place on the show with a Jason Mraz-y acoustic reggae run through “Under My Thumb.” The arrangement was lively and fun, though the vocals fell flat at points. Kara and Simon applauded him for going out on a limb and making it his own, but Cowell said it just didn’t work and probably offended Stones fans. “I think it was a crazy decision,” he said. Resident quirky girl Siobhan Magnus went with “Paint It Black.” Wearing a gothy dress, Magnus opened the tune as a turgid symphonic ballad, then rocked it out, unleashing another one of her Adam Lambert-esque rebel yells as the song built to a wild crescendo. “You rise above. … You’re like Snooki’s poof — you just stand out and I like it,” Ellen gushed. Cowell said it was the standout performance of the night because some people would love it while others would hate it. Former paint-store clerk Lee Dewyze took on “Beast of Burden,” transforming the sultry rock tune into a clap-along bro-down acoustic ditty with shades of Hootie and the Blowfish-meets-Dave Matthews. Simon said he likes Lee and his voice but that he again chose a safe, forgettable song. “Stamp your mark on the competition and stop thinking other people are better than you,” he said. Kara, meanwhile, said he’s growing more than any other contestant from week-to-week. Paige Miles just squeaked into the top 12 despite a rough week, so choosing the country swinging “Honky Tonk Women” was a bold move. The bump-and-grind urban-cowgirl arrangement suited her scratchy-soul vocal style. Randy liked it but wanted more energy, and both women and Simon applauded her for hitting big notes despite struggling with laryngitis, though Cowell thinks she still needs to find a way to connect. The other remaining teen in the competition, Pennsylvania native Aaron Kelly, took the sensitive route with a piano-ballad take on “Angie.” Though it was low-energy and a bit glum, Kelly’s urgent vocals were strong, and he brought his country twang to the soft-rock arrangement. “Your mom was right — you were born to sing,” Randy said, comparing Kelly to a young Justin Timberlake. After slamming him for not connecting with his song last week, Kara said the high-schooler set her straight with his emotional delivery. Cowell predicted disaster during Stones week but was pleasantly surprised by how Kelly sang the song well within his range. Closing the show was this year’s singer to beat, Crystal Bowersox, who couldn’t miss with “You Can’t Always Get What You Want.” Strumming her beat-up acoustic, Bowersox strolled out and laid her bluesy pipes on a funky soul reworking of the legendary ode to yearning. None of the judges thought it was her best performance, though Ellen started to see some personality for the first time in the competition as Crystal loosened up onstage. Despite coming out the clear favorite, Cowell said Magnus bested Crystal because her song had more of a dramatic flair. What did you think of Tuesday night’s performances? Who killed it? Who blew it? What was your favorite? Who should go home? Leave your comments below. Related Photos ‘American Idol’ Top 12 Party ‘American Idol’ Season Nine Performances

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‘American Idol’ Top 12: Crystal Bowersox, Siobhan Magnus Come Out On Top

Drake Introduces ‘Drake The Artist’ In ‘Over’ Video

‘I’ve shot a lot of videos before, but this is my first attempt to establish myself as Drake the artist,’ he tells MTV News on the clip’s set. By Shaheem Reid, with reporting by Kelly Marino Drake Photo: MTV News While filming a video for his song “Over” on Friday in Los Angeles, Drake stood in front of an all-white backdrop wearing a white tee and white sneakers. What does he do in the clip? He does him. “This is my first video,” the Young Money franchise player said, sitting in his trailer. “I’ve shot a lot of videos before, but this is my first attempt to establish myself as Drake the artist. Shooting the other videos I’ve done has been great. I really don’t care what other people think about them, they were great experiences for me. I’ve learned a lot from them. Today, I’m shooting with somebody I really look up to and respect. I’m shooting with Anthony Mandler.” Mandler, who has also made videos with Jay-Z and Rihanna, worked with Drake before on Mary J. Blige’s “The One.” “We talked colors, we talked epic, emotion-evoking visuals,” the 23-year-old Toronto native said of the collaborative “Over” video. “The story is actually interesting. The song is so aggressive, and it’s sort of a love story in the video. It has a lot to do with the album [ Thank Me Later ]. The album is about finding love, feeling ‘Have I sold my soul’ as far as ‘Will I ever be able to gain the trust of a woman? Will I only be able to be around the dark, evil women? Will I ever find that pure love?’ Those elements are in the video. I look strong, I feel great, my knee’s feeling great . I’m jumping around, doing all kinds of stuff.” The song “Over” touches on Drake reaction to fame and stardom. ” ‘Over’ was definitely a choice of mine,” he said of releasing it as a single. “I’ve got a lot of great songs on the album. A lot of songs that sound familiar but are brand-new. I still got the same emotions of the songs you love, whether it be ‘Say Something’ or ‘Best I Ever Had’ or ‘Bedrock.’ For people who enjoy what I’ve done in the past, I’ve got a lot of songs to cater to them. But ‘Over’ was a song I did for myself. “We took a trip to Jamaica, where I did a lot of work for my album,” he elaborated. “There was this calm before the storm, and ‘Over’ represented the storm to me. It’s the moment. I wanted to emerge at first from this album and just let people know ‘This is how I’m coming out in the public eye. I’m ready for anything.’ Then when you get the album, it’s like, ‘Oh, he’s still human. He’s still thinking the same way.’ I wanted people to understand I could have lost it. ‘Over’ could have been my entire album. Just ’cause that’s what this industry and game will do to you if you lose yourself.” Are you excited for Drake’s “Over” video? Let us know! Related Artists Drake

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Drake Introduces ‘Drake The Artist’ In ‘Over’ Video

Lady Gaga Tour Dates 2010: Full List

Lady GaGa performs live in concert at Glasgow's SECC as part of her Monster Ball Tour. (Pacific Coast News) more pics Continue reading

50 Cent Says His Black Magic Album Has ‘A Totally Different Vibe’

‘I won’t allow myself to be placed in a box,’ he says about ‘uptempo’ next project. By Shaheem Reid 50 Cent Photo: Stephen Lovekin/Getty Images 50 Cent is back in music mode. He’s been touring overseas with the G-Unit for about a month, and over the weekend, 50 revealed to a Norwegian news outlet that he had been back in the lab making songs for a new LP called Black Magic. Fif said he was inspired by listening to music in Bergen, Norway. “I went to a nightclub afterparty,” 50 told reporter Jonas Pettersen . “It’s a little different music going on before I got there. They play your music when you come. But the music they played before they started playing a lot of what I created was more uptempo, more dance. I wanted to make a song like that. So I went into the studio. Because I’m traveling with my live band, I took my band with me and sequenced it and recorded the actual record while I was out there. I did two other songs I had production for. I had been writing those songs for a while. So I finished them and recorded them while I was out.” Fif said his new album will not sound like his previous work. “New Black Magic project, I’m excited about it,” he said. “It has a totally different vibe. I won’t allow myself to be placed in a box when I can only do one style or one kind of music. They should expect the unexpected on this project. It’s good. If they can understand how I enjoy different genres of music and different styles; for the people who have various tastes in music, they’ll really like it.” While there isn’t a release date for Fif’s new work, G-Unit members Lloyd Banks and Tony Yayo say they’ll drop independently as early as June. “I’m aiming towards summer,” Banks recently told Mixtape Daily. “Mid-summer, late summer. I won’t drop an album until I feel the buzz — you know, as an artist, when you feel it. I’m working independent. Everything they’ve heard the past year has come out my basement, including ‘Beamer, Benz or Bentley.’ When you first come on as a new artist and you hot and you got a buzz, you could sell doo-doo on a stick. The label makes you feel like they did it, when they just called their boy and dropped the record off. “Now it boost my confidence when I know I can make a record in my crib, send it out and receive finances from it,” he added. “Whenever it’s through iTunes or whatever other outlet you have, I’m happy with it. I’m not gonna rush it, though. If it came out after this year, it wouldn’t matter to me, as long as it’s the product people expect.” “We gonna drop it independently,” Yayo told Mixtape Daily. “We not on Interscope anymore. I feel the stuff I went through on a major was nonsense. You make more money on an independent label.” Are you excited to hear new music from the G-Unit? Let us know below! Related Artists 50 Cent

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50 Cent Says His Black Magic Album Has ‘A Totally Different Vibe’

Glee Cast and Creators Dish on Neil Patrick Harris, "Puckleberry" and Lady Gaga!

Just when you thought Glee couldn’t get any better: Lady Gaga has agreed to let Glee cover one of her songs this season. Neil Patrick Harris and Matthew Morrison will share some seriously…

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Glee Cast and Creators Dish on Neil Patrick Harris, "Puckleberry" and Lady Gaga!

What Has Danny Gokey Been Up To Since ‘American Idol’?

Season-eight alum shows off his country makeover on ‘Idol’ results show with ‘My Best Days Are Ahead of Me.’ By James Montgomery, with additional reporting by Gil Kaufman Danny Gokey Photo: F. Michelotta/ Getty Images for Fox On Thursday night’s (March 4) “American Idol” results show, amid the carnage and the castaways, Danny Gokey performed “My Best Days Are Ahead of Me,” the first proper single from his just-released debut album, My Best Days. It was a pretty sage move by show producers, and not just because Gokey has a disc to promote. The newly departed “Idol” hopefuls could learn a thing or two from the song’s inspirational message. And from Gokey himself. Rocking a leather jacket, jeans, a burgundy shirt and his signature specs, Gokey’s gravelly soul voice was warmly received as he sang the peppy country pop tune about the power of positive thinking. “I can be whatever I want to be/ My best days are ahead of me,” he crooned over a twanging pedal-steel riff. “I’ve got sunsets to witness, dreams to dance with/ And beaches to walk on and lovers to kiss.” Asked why he went country for his first album, Gokey — who tried to get an invite from Ellen DeGeneres to dance on her show after his performance — said it was suggested by one of last year’s mentors, country icon Randy Travis. “When I did ‘Jesus Take the Wheel,’ he came up to me after … and he said, ‘Have you ever considered doing country?’ And I started telling him how country influenced me when I was younger … and he said, ‘Well, you need to do country. The amount of soul and passion you put into it, the fans would embrace you and love you.’ ” After spending most of his “Idol” run being tagged as “the guy with the tragedy” — a reference to the death of his young wife Sophia four weeks before his audition — Gokey said he wanted to come out with a first single that showed how much hope “Idol” gave him. “I just found out the writer of the song lost his wife too and he wrote this song a few months after she passed away. And without me knowing it, I picked it up, I recorded it and put it on radio. … It’s an anthem for me. I’m excited about life again.” Ever since he was eliminated from “Idol” last season , Gokey has been working tirelessly to make his dreams a reality. Over the summer, he began meeting with Nashville record execs and announced plans to reinvent himself as a country singer , telling MTV News that “country music kind of houses the message that I like … and it carries a lot of meaning for me. So I never thought about it before, but I could see myself doing it, if we could just get the twang right.” In September, he officially signed with RCA Nashville (he was the last of season eight’s final four to land a record deal) and began work on his debut album. In November, during a phone interview with hometown radio station FM 106.1, he unveiled the first song from the record, a ballad called “It’s Only,” which was written by Lady Antebellum’s Dave Haywood and Charles Kelley and produced by Mark Bright, who had previously worked with Gokey’s fellow “Idol” alum Carrie Underwood. Gokey described the song as his favorite off the album. “It has such a touching lyric. It’s so beautiful,” he said. “I love all the songs that appear on my CD, but this one … when I sing this song, a passion comes out of me. … I feel it when I sing it.” He performed at the venerable Grand Ole Opry and shot a video for “Best Days,” which replaced “It’s Only” as the first single from his record. The song began climbing country radio’s top 40 chart, and just last month, it was announced that Gokey would serve as the opening act on Sugarland’s spring tour. The country makeover, it would seem, is complete. In the meantime, he continues to work with Sophia’s Heart , the charitable organization he established in honor of his late wife. In addition to using funds to provide relief to the victims of January’s Haitian earthquake, the organization plans to launch a Nashville-based music and arts program this year. Get your “Idol” fix on MTV News’ “American Idol” page , where you’ll find all the latest news, interviews and opinions.

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What Has Danny Gokey Been Up To Since ‘American Idol’?

The-Dream And Christina Milian Welcome Baby Girl

Violet was born Friday, a source close to the couple confirms to MTV News. By Hillary Crosley The-Dream and Christina Milian Photo: Todd Williamson/ Getty Images Last week, R&B singer/songwriter The-Dream told MTV News that his baby with wife Christina Milian would be arriving over the weekend. He was almost right: Milian gave birth to daughter Violet on Friday, a source close to the couple confirmed. “It’s a girl,” The-Dream said excitedly last week. “Violet will be her first name. I’m not telling you the middle name; you’re gonna get me in trouble.” Still, The-Dream said it’s business as usual in their household. “I’ve been working like a regular person works in America. They have jobs whether someone’s pregnant or not,” he laughed. The singer said he’s finished recording his upcoming album, Love King (the title track of which recently leaked), and said the song isn’t about being a ladies’ man, like many believe. “On ‘Love King,’ I’m talking about those girls that like my music and how they’re everywhere,” he said. “They’re the girls in church, girls in the club, in Miami — my music’s everywhere. I don’t mean that I have girls everywhere; it’s not literal, but women do gravitate to my songs.” The-Dream is currently preparing to shoot two clips for his single: the original version, featuring Def Jam labelmate Young Jeezy, followed by a remix with Ludacris. “We’re shooting the videos in two weeks,” he said. “The remix to ‘Love King’ with Ludacris, which is crazy, it sounds like a ’90s Jodeci remix, with their type of big harmonies on the hook. You’ll get what I’m saying when you hear it. It’s the swing.” Related Photos Before They Got Hitched: The-Dream & Christina Milian Star Gazing: Christina Milian Related Artists Christina Milian The-Dream

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The-Dream And Christina Milian Welcome Baby Girl

Breakup Blues? Melanie Fiona Has the Cure

http://www.younghollywood.com Everyone can relate to a hurtful breakup and Melanie Fiona does her part to help you overcome it with music. We talk to the R&B singer at the ‘Cue The Music’ event during Grammy weekend about what her songs mean to her and how her great collaborations keep pushing the sound forward. Hosted by Michelle Marie. Distributed by Tubemogul. Ranked 3.06 / 5 | 132 views | 0 comments Click here to watch the video (03:11) Submitted By: YoungHollywood Tags: Alicia Keys

American Idol: The Lost Boys [Recaps]

Here come the men! Well, boys, I suppose. Young men? Whatever they were, they sang last night. And, after the fairly disastrous ladies , hopes were high. Were they satisfied? Ohhh. I don’t know. I don’t think so? Early this morning I got my favorite kind of recap-related email, egarding yesterday’s writeup of the Fabulous Ladies, who all sing beautifully and have winning personalities. If you hate the goddam show so much why do you watch it? Heh. This is a person who has emailed me in the past to bitch about an AI recap and another time to ask, breathlessly, why my recap wasn’t up yet. Basically this person is a having an abusive relationship with silly rundowns of American Idol and there’s nothing I can do to help that situation, except to say that, despite how it might read sometimes, I in no way hate this show. I hate parts of it. I hate big, huge aspects of it. But I like The Show in its entirety, find the thing entertaining if not always satisfying. Also, why do I watch it? Well, because I have a job that asks me to write about television shows. A job that pays me money, which I then use for goods and services like food and overly-priced apartments in the NYU Land section of Disneyworld. THAT’S WHY. If you hate the goddamn recaps so much, why do you read them? ANYWAY. That is far too much about me. It’s just that I hate that question, because it’s dumb and black & white. And if you’ve sincerely never enjoyed watching something that you like to later make fun of, then you are a weird square person with a weird square heart that I do not want to meet. You know who else I don’t want to meet? Kara Dioflamingo. Glory, isn’t she the worst? And I really don’t enjoy how they’re trying to make her A Character this season. Last year was all about her doing a sad little soft-shoe and trying to get us to like her, playing a humble game of hiding behind Paula’s formidable, blurry frame. But now Paula’s been hit with a shovel and buried out back under the apple orchard, so Kara can step front and center and be the reigning brown-haired lady who says dumb things. Only, the dumb things that Paula said were usually entertaining. “Heyyy…. Adamlambert? I think I like you and your moon shoes, because sometimes… Heyyy… Look, d’ya wanna go get some ice cream or… Heyyyy… Pants. We all like pants.” And then she’d meekly clap and the contestant, who wasn’t Adam Lambert, would nod and smile and say “Thank… you…” It was fun! But Kara. Kara just farts in a whining sort of way and then — in her sharp, nasal voice — articulates some dumb, trying-to-sound-smart point. I’m thinking in particular about the comment she gave a contestant last night, it was our beloved Egghead Latino, that had something to do with his slowed-down version of a Fall Out Boy song. She didn’t like it and said that the song wasn’t meant to be made acoustic in that way. But, ahem Expert Musicianlady Kara, as American Idol expert Maura Johnston pointed out last night , Fall Out Boy themselves have done an acoustic version of that very song. So, burrrrrrrrrrn, baby. OK, sure, their version isn’t as funk-jazzy as Egghead’s was, but still. She busted. Also, I’m sorry, but Ellen is completely useless. You can kind of see the regret in her eyes, can’t you? This is not as fun as she’d envisioned. You know why? Because it’s probably a lot nicer to make comments about the singers while sitting on your enormous couch in your enormous house while Portia opens a bottle of wine than it is to do it in that drafty chamber of lights they call a studio. Plus, Ellen, you had a public platform on which to discuss the show already! I mean, do you think I’d actually want to go on the Real Housewives show?? Never! It’d suck all the fun out of it. So I feel bad for Ellen. Flew a little too close to the sun on this one, or something. Or more like… got curious and touched the stove or something. Well, I hope you’ve learned your lesson, L’Ellen. Fire bad. Kara badder. OK! The Gents. I noticed yesterday that some of you didn’t like me using their names because you had no idea who they were. Neither did I! So I went to AmericanIdol.com and looked at their names and pictures while writing and thought you’d all be impressed that I knew their names. It won’t happen again! The Good Hahaha. Um… Oh! Yeah. I thought Shania Twain’s Korean Boyfriend did well. (John Park, for you Nerdy Namers out there.) I mean, I don’t get the judges. I never get the judges. They really didn’t like him for some reason? Maybe I wasn’t paying attention enough or something (heyyy Mary J., how you dern?) but I thought he was the Best Of the Evening. But what do I know. The judges were really mean and poor STKB looked really sad and I’m sure he wished he was back in Shania’s sweet Canadian embrace, singing songs together in the Swiss Alps, an angry Mutt Lang looking in the window, glowering. This is horrifying, but… I didn’t hate the Shirtless Wonder. I think I’m supposed to? I think we are all, as intelligent and God-flouting Americans, supposed to not like him? You know, because of his lumpy good looks and that hair that looks like one of the babies from the Heart Family . (My sister and I had a blonde Heart Family baby doll when we were growing up who we named Clementine. Poor Clementine never got treated very well.) But, as Simon said, there was something very refreshingly earnest and honest about his performance of Bryan Adams’ “Lonely Lady Lullaby” (that is what all of his songs are called), and that sort of frankness made it bizarrely not cheesy. This is sacrilege, I know, and I am going to go perform harakiri on the Idol Thunderdome stage out of shame for saying it, but he just didn’t not do a good job. Granted the whole horrid, eye-stabbingly awful Lusty Kara routine was just insanely miserable and embarrassing, and they’re all jerks for screwing with his big live-TV debut performance like that (thank you, L’Ellen, for apologizing about that), so that kind of marred the whole thing. Ugh. Kara. No one thinks this is funny or interesting, this whole “I have a likable personality, I swear!” game. The Bad Heh. Ev… ery… one? The dancer guy who went first did a good job of looking comfortable on stage, but he can’t really sing all that well and it’s sort of a mystery as to why he’s on the show at all. Who knows! That poor kid with the light brown helmet head, the one whose performance Simon called “the most awkward performance ever,” really was just terribly awkward. He was using his Impress Chicks singing voice, that kind of soulful-but-oh-so-casual wannabe growl that probably worked one time when he was visiting his friend at Fairfield but hasn’t worked since. Of course what he doesn’t realize is that you could literally blink at a Fairfield girl and get lucky. I just did, just by typing the word “Fairfield,” and I didn’t even want to do it. Some poor fellow came out dressed like a circus ringmaster or something and really, really tried to sell himself as The Performer of the show and it just fell embarrassingly flat on its face. This was the same guy who’d been a right diva to a guy in the band during Hollywood Week, a clip they showed several times and he presumably watched, and yet when Ryan was like “So did you and Dave make up?” Otto Ringling was all “Who?” So they dragged this poor guy up and he was like “Ohhhhh right, ha ha ha, laugh with me America, laugh… with… me” and it was so sad and desperate. Do we think he’ll go home tonight? (Yes, there is a third episode, on tonight.) I don’t know. It’s very hard to tell. Several other dudes failed to thrill. There’s that little gawky 16-year-old kid who just needs to go, like, sing at church or in some painfully awkward Christian rock band. What he’s doing on this show is beyond me. There’s Big Mike, the dude with the baby who sort of embarrassed himself, enormous arms cradling what looked like a ukulele but was a guitar, because his hands are the size of baseball plates. There was apparently someone named Joe Munoz who sang, but I could not tell you a single thing about him. Sorry! And of course Paula came out wearing a bowler hat and a fake mustache and tried to sing “Old Man River.” And she got away with it for a minute there! Finally Ryan realized what was going on and he grabbed his butterfly net, captured her, and carted her off stage. Pause, once again, for commercial break. Let’s Talk Surprises Egghead Latino, everyone’s favorite, including mine, going into this round, sorta whiffed it, didn’t he? I mean, like I said above, his song choice wasn’t actually the issue. He just didn’t sound nearly as good or exciting as he did during Hollywood Week. I’m sure nerves are playing a big role in that, and hopefully we’ll get to watch him ease back into his frontrunner status as he loosens up. But for now, I’m with Simon. I just was awfully disappointed with him last night. The other surprise was the young fellow who sang the Snow Patrol song. You know, the shorter, squatter David Cook guy? Yeah! He was kinda good! L’Ellen, Randall, and Kiki Fucknuts over there didn’t give him good notes, but Simon did and that’s all that matters. I thought he sounded contemporary and interesting and, considering we saw pretty much nothing of him during H. Week, pleasantly surprising. Good for him! He was also wise to cutely say “I never want to lose this feeling,” about pursuing his music career. Because the goils will vote for that. Oh how the goils will vote. Beautiful Disaster Speaking of the goils and their votes. Tim Urban. Ohhhhhh Jesus in Gethsemane what was going on with Tim Urban? Has anyone ever fallen so flat on their ass right out of the gate like that? Well, actually, this is American Idol , so yes, many times. The difference being here that most of the kids who come out and totally soil their slacks — your Sanjayas, your Chicken Littles, your Paula Dressed Up as a Dutch Schoolboys — you can kind of deal with it, because they look funny and you expect funny things. But ol’ Shagaroo there has such cute little dimpled applecheeks and that lovely Bonnie Franklin hair . He’s such a dopey All-American Cheesecake that watching him do ball-twisting falsetto and then get positively reamed by the judges is just extra mortifying. Here’s a kid who’s probably lucked into a lot because of how he looks, and who has a perfectly good singing voice as far as regular people go, just getting torn to shreds on live television. Especially because he wasn’t even supposed to be on the show. Ack! It was thrilling, in a terrible way. Worst of all, he’ll probably have to suffer through it all over again next week. Yeah, it seems pretty likely that he won’t get eliminated, because of the all-important Pity/Squeal Vote. Never discount the Pity/Squeal. Hip Threads, Man! Why is Greg Brady so weird and dumb? I just do not get his presence. Some respectable blogger I read recently called him the season’s potential heartthrob. Really? What teenage girl these days is thinking to herself “Man, I really want to date Jay Leno’s weird hippie nephew”? Probably one sad girl somewhere named Lois who isn’t really sure why she listens to Janis Ian at this point. One day “At Seventeen” went from being kind of funny and literal to just really resonating so now there’s not much she can do, is there? That said, I think Greg Brady will be back next go-around. He’s too much of a novelty for America to say goodbye to right now. But no, Kara, singing a Phoenix song is not going to help matters any. I can’t say anymore. I am spent. Another episode tonight. Send my widow (that Fairfield girl, I guess) a corsage.

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American Idol: The Lost Boys [Recaps]

All-Access with Mika Before His Show

http://www.younghollywood.com It’s 1955, you’re bored, so take a trip into space with Mika. The London-based musician leads us backstage before his concert where he explains the concept behind his performance and then he showcases his outer-worldly wardrobe and set designs. Hosted by Mika. Distributed by Tubemogul. Ranked 3.42 / 5 | 3869 views | 0 comments Click here to watch the video (06:23) Submitted By: YoungHollywood Tags: Mika