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Stone Sour’s Audio Secrecy Is ‘Loaded With Melody,’ Corey Taylor Says

‘It’s probably the best thing I’ve done in a long time,’ says the singer, who also fronts Slipknot. By James Montgomery Corey Taylor Photo: MTV News Corey Taylor isn’t mincing words when it comes to the new Stone Sour album — and yes, he realizes this might offend fans of his other band, Slipknot. “It’s so good, man. Every song has a catchy hook — even the heavy stuff — every song is loaded with melody. It’s still got the attitude, but it’s there. It’s probably the best thing I’ve done in a long time,” he told MTV News. “I mean [Slipknot’s 2008 effort] All Hope Is Gone was a great album, and I worked really hard on it, but on this album … coming in with the amount of material — we recorded 18 songs — and knowing that every tune not only has its own identity but is damn good, I’m very, very proud of that.” Yes, Taylor is willing to talk at great length about Audio Secrecy, the follow-up to Stone Sour’s breakthrough 2006 album, Come What(ever) May. Recorded at Nashville’s iconic Blackbird Studios — the first time he’s made an album outside of Los Angeles or his native Iowa — it’s a record positively brimming with ideas, one that, as he put it, represents “everything that we’ve been threatening to do,” even if that means exploring far quieter, more refined sonic territories. “I finished my last song two days ago, and it’s all killer; there’s no filler. It’s so good. I mean, there’s so many vibes and so many styles, but it’s all cohesive. The continuity is there,” he said. “It doesn’t sound like a comp album, it doesn’t sound like 12 bands coming in going, ‘We’re going to record a song!’ It sounds like a band exploring, which, to me, is [a] really old-school tradition. “You never used to go in and just kind of chop out a bunch of songs and throw it out there. The old guard would go in, and they would just record what they had. They would record the songs that they wrote, because they wrote them. It didn’t have to sound a certain way, didn’t have to be a certain way, it didn’t all have to sound the same,” he continued. “It had life, and that’s what we did with this. … We just said, ‘You know what? We wrote this. So what if this is heavier than that? So what if this is in a major key and these are in minor keys? … We feel this, so let’s go for it.’ ” The funny thing is, though he’ll seemingly never run out of good things to say about the album, there’s plenty he’s mum about. Perhaps in keeping with its title, there’s still no firm release date for Secrecy, and Taylor wouldn’t reveal if all 18 songs would make the final track list (“There’s a plan hatching … that’s all I’m gonna say”). And when asked about his favorite song on the album, he would only say, “They’re all killer,” before singling out a piano-laden track called “Miracles” as a standout. “I play piano on a bunch of songs. One of them is called ‘Miracles,’ which is really dark but kind of crescendos into this huge chorus at the end,” he said. “There’s so much more, though. We have an overabundance of writers in this band. We all write, so it’s not a case of one guy writing all the songs or no one writing the songs. It’s a complete thing.” While Taylor is playing things close to the vest with Stone Sour, things aren’t quite the same with Slipknot. After wrapping a world tour in support of All Hope Is Gone in late 2009, the band went on a rather informal break — and, from the sound of things, not much has changed since then. For the immediate future, Taylor is 100 percent focused on Stone Sour. “There’s nothing really happening [with Slipknot],” he said. “There’s a DVD coming out, apparently, that I will be informed of so I can promote it. Nobody talks to me about these things. I get a complimentary copy. I mean, I still don’t have a copy of [the band’s 2002 DVD] ‘Disasterpieces.’ What the f—?” Are you looking forward to new music from Stone Sour? Let us know in the comments. Related Artists Corey Taylor Stone Sour Slipknot

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Stone Sour’s Audio Secrecy Is ‘Loaded With Melody,’ Corey Taylor Says

You Decide: Should Oliver Stone Keep the ‘Stache?

As the 63rd Cannes Film Festival hits its stride this weekend, the international film culture is grappling with some of the most serious issues it has faced in decades. Money is tight, piracy is rampant, a 3-D future looms, and Oliver Stone has a mustache. It’s true: Oliver Stone has a mustache . But should he?

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You Decide: Should Oliver Stone Keep the ‘Stache?

The Fallout From the South Park Death Threat

Over the past two weeks, Trey Parker and Matt Stone have been riding out the 200th episode celebration from hell. What started out as a milestone for the Comedy Central series led to death threats from a radical Islamic website. On top of that, their most recent episode , which included a lengthy response to the hype via a brave speech about fear, was completely bleeped out in a defensive effort by Comedy Central . In effect, Parker and Stone found themselves the subject of the very censorship they ridiculed earlier this season. So now what happens?

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The Fallout From the South Park Death Threat

‘South Park’ Creators Say Muhammad Episode Was Censored Without Their Approval

Trey Parker and Matt Stone claim Comedy Central censored the controversial episode after they submitted it. By Gil Kaufman Trey Parker and Matt Stone Photo: Maury Phillips/ WireImage Over the years, “South Park” creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone have tried to be equal-opportunity offenders on their gleefully trash-talking cartoon, taking on everything from the Catholic church to Scientology, the mentally challenged and just about every other interest group in between with a wildly irreverent, bleep-tastic bent. But when their comic depiction of the Muslim prophet Muhammad drew strong threats for the pair this week, they said their network, Comedy Central, stepped in and took evasive action. The episode in question showed Muhammad — whose depiction in print many Muslim’s consider forbidden — dressed as a bear. A radical Muslim Web site posted a threat against the two if the material aired, which included a reference to the Dutch filmmaker Theo Van Gogh, who was brutally murdered in 2004 by Muslim extremists over his documentary about violence against Islamic women. “We have to warn Matt and Trey that what they are doing is stupid and they will probably wind up like Theo van Gogh for airing this show,” read the post. “This is not a threat, but a warning of the reality of what will likely happen to them.” The post was accompanied by a graphic picture of Van Gogh as well as the addresses of the Comedy Central offices in New York and the “South Park” production company in Los Angeles. An accompanying montage featuring photos of Parker and Stone and Van Gogh over audio from a radical Islamic preacher ends with the words “the dust will never settle down.” In the end, all references to Muhammad, including long stretches of dialogue and the offending image — which was covered up by a large black “censored” bar — were bleeped from the show by Comedy Central in the second of a two-part episode. On Thursday night, the duo posted a statement about the controversy on their Web site, writing, “In the 14 years we’ve been doing South Park we have never done a show that we couldn’t stand behind. We delivered our version of the show to Comedy Central and they made a determination to alter the episode. It wasn’t some meta-joke on our part. Comedy Central added the bleeps. In fact, Kyle’s customary final speech was about intimidation and fear. It didn’t mention Muhammad at all but it got bleeped too. We’ll be back next week with a whole new show about something completely different and we’ll see what happens to it.” A spokesperson for Comedy Central (which is owned by MTV Networks) had no comment. The offending episode was set up last week in a show in which some of the hundreds of celebrities who’ve been skewered by “South Park” over the years threaten to file a class-action lawsuit against the titular Colorado town if South Park didn’t fly in the prophet, who they believe has the power to save them from ridicule. In the second part, which aired this week, Muhammad does arrive, dressed in a bear costume. The “South Park” site notes that the pair do not have the approval to stream their original version of the episode online, so it’s unclear which bleeps were theirs and which were inserted by Comedy Central. This is not the first time Parker and Stone have walked this fine line. In a two-part 2006 episode about censorship, they tried to depict Muhammad but were censored by the network, though the prophet did make an appearance in a 2001 episode as part of the Super Best Friends, a superhero-like gathering of religious icons. The network’s decision was likely inspired not just by the Van Gogh murder and threat, but by the international uproar in 2005 over cartoons in a Danish newspaper that showed various images of Muhammad, including one in which the prophet wore a bomb as a turban.

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‘South Park’ Creators Say Muhammad Episode Was Censored Without Their Approval

South Park Casualty Count: When Muhammad Met Blackface, Censorship and Mecha-Streisand

Last week, South Park creators Matt Stone and Trey Parker celebrated their 200th episode by inviting back every celebrity ever ridiculed in the series’ 14 seasons — and by taking the Prophet Muhammad hostage in a bear costume. Needless to say, the gag did not go over well with radical Muslims , who “warned” Stone and Parker that they could face a Theo van Gogh-style assassination for depicting Muhammad in such an insulting light. Little did the radical Muslims know, the show’s anniversary episode was actually a two-parter that continued with last night’s episode, “201.”

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South Park Casualty Count: When Muhammad Met Blackface, Censorship and Mecha-Streisand

The Verge: Emma Stone

The trajectory of Emma Stone’s young career is a steep one, spiking from her screen debut as Jonah Hill’s dream girl in Superbad (2007) to her iron-willed Wichita in last year’s Zombieland — both films that opened No. 1 at the box office. A couple of Stone’s films in between — The House Bunny and Ghosts of Girlfriends Past didn’t fare too poorly either. So the 21-year-old’s new film Paper Man arrives next week as a bit of a surprise (and not just because of its half-decade in development hell): A quirky, conscientious indie dramedy about writer Richard Dunn (Jeff Daniels) and the superhero imaginary friend (Ryan Reynolds) who exasperatedly shepherds him through the mid-life crisis blocking more than just Richard’s second novel. Stone plays Abby, a sardonic teenage loner with a suspicious pal of her own (Kieran Culkin) and an instant kind of psychic appeal to the struggling author. It may not be her biggest film role to date, but in the folds of her small-town inertia and the haunted past rolling across her face like cloud shadows, it’s inarguably her most dynamic. In addition to teasing the raunchy work her costars Hugh Jackman and Kate Winslet performed in Untitled Comedy , Stone recently spoke with Movieline about falling in love with her role, hypothermia, catharsis, and why she’s not as intense an actor as you might think.

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The Verge: Emma Stone

Taylor Swift Has ‘A Sick Sense of Humor,’ Pal Emma Stone Says

‘Superbad’ actress also reveals how she became friends with the country cutie. By Jocelyn Vena, with reporting by Josh Horowitz Emma Stone Photo: MTV News Whether she’s poking fun at her clean-cut image in a rap with T-Pain or spoofing Taylor Lautner’s soapy drama “Twilight” on “Saturday Night Live,” Taylor Swift has certainly showed off her comedy chops. But “Superbad” star Emma Stone , a friend of Swift’s, revealed that the country cutie’s humor is much more wicked than anyone could imagine. “She’s so great! We’re very different, but she has such a sick sense of humor,” Stone told MTV News. “Nobody knows that. She’s so great. People know … how hilarious she is. They’ve seen her on ‘SNL.’ People are seeing it more now, and she’s so funny and she’s exactly who you think she is, and I love that.” How did Swift and Stone end up becoming friends in the first place? “We met at the Young Hollywood Awards for Hollywood Life magazine,” Stone explained. “We met there three years ago, and then I listened to some of her music, and I wrote her an e-mail saying I liked her music, I swear. And then we started talking and hanging out.” Stone also praised Swift for how well she handled the infamous Kanye West VMA rant , noting that the whole fiasco was quite “ridiculous.” She said Swift was “so awesome and so gracious and fine” after the incident. What do you think of Emma and Taylor’s friendship? Do you want to see more of Taylor’s “sick sense of humor”? Let us know in the comments below! Related Artists Taylor Swift

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Taylor Swift Has ‘A Sick Sense of Humor,’ Pal Emma Stone Says

Sharon Stone Shoots ‘SVU’

Look who’s shooting a guest spot on Law And Order: SVU ! Sharon Stone channeled her Basic Instincts for the crime solving series opposite Mariska Hargitay and Chris Meloni in Tribeca, NYC.

Tiger Woods Joins Letterman, Clinton in South Park Battle Against Alien Sex Fiends

In a very special South Park, Trey Parker and Matt Stone’s topical toon returns for its 14th season to pose the question: What could be causing rich, successful men to seek…

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Tiger Woods Joins Letterman, Clinton in South Park Battle Against Alien Sex Fiends

Presidential Reunion: Bush Sr. vs. Bush Jr.

Link: http://www.funnyordie.com/videos/0a14… Oliver Stone was totally right about those Daddy issues. Also, there's a naked lady in that painting. Read