Tag Archives: toronto

Stop Signs Turned Into Giant Flowers!

Photo: Mark Jenkins And Now For Something on the Lighter Side… The urban landscape can be depressing… But that’s what guerilla artists are for! Our cities, where most of humanity now lives, should be vibrant and alive and colorful, not drab successions of near-identical streets. There should be limits to what can be done (safety, destruction of property), but some spaces should be left open to artistic expression if cities are to be more livable. Authorities should actually encourage it, like Toronto’s

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Stop Signs Turned Into Giant Flowers!

Honeywell Windtronics Turbine Is Giant Generator

Image credit Lloyd Alter It was hard to find anyone to speak to at Greenbuild about the odd looking Honeywell Windtronics turbine; it was a busy booth. But I got to see it again at the Cottage Life Show in Toronto and it is actually very interesting; instead of the usual design where the blades turn a shaft which is connected to a generator, here the whole thing is a generator, with magnets at the tips of the blade whizzing past stator coils in the ring on the perimeter. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Honeywell Windtronics Turbine Is Giant Generator

Nicki Minaj’s Pink Friday: A Cheat Sheet

Young Money mic-ripper’s hotly anticipated major-label debut is finally available for the Barbie army. By Mawuse Ziegbe Nicki Minaj Photo: WireImage Zealous shoppers may plan to shut down malls on Black Friday, but Nicki Minaj’s buzzed-about debut, Pink Friday, is expected to shut down the hip-hop game. The Young Money empress’ major-label effort is one of the most hotly anticipated debuts in recent rap history due to a perfect storm of blue-chip co-signs, jaw-dropping features, a high-profile femcee scuffle and Minaj’s status as one of the most unique characters in music. Within the span of a few short but super-packed years, Minaj rose from a sassy chick from Queens cluttering street mixtapes and viral videos with her “Ether”-worthy lyricism to a bewigged tour de force to be reckoned with. Her razor-sharp bars on “The Come Up” DVD series and the landmark Beam Me Up Scotty mixtape demonstrated her undeniable mic skills, but it was her alignment with both Atlanta sensation Gucci Mane and Young Money boss Lil Wayne that positioned her as a potential game-changer. “Wayne is my sensei. That’s what I call him. He calls me his ninja. ‘Ninja Nicki,’ ” Minaj told MTV News in 2009. It wasn’t long before she was getting the stamp of approval from another superstar Carter. The Jay-Z nod led to a collabo with crooner Robin Thicke, and soon she was playing dress-up with Mariah Carey in the “Up Out My Face” video and stealing the scene on posse cuts like Ludacris’ “My Chick Bad” . The femcee spent the better part of 2010 establishing herself as the collabo queen, adding an extra dose of kink to Usher’s “Lil’ Freak,” shaking up the remix of Diddy-Dirty Money’s “Hello Good Morning” and swinging around Trey Songz’s steamy “Bottoms Up” video . Rick Ross enthused that the raptress’ contribution to Kanye West’s “Monster” proved that “she’s one of the greatest.” But she didn’t neglect to further the Minaj movement with her hotly anticipated solo debut track “Massive Attack.” Minaj also didn’t shy away from the avant garde in her first visual either, cruising down a desert road in a pink Lamborghini with sheared siren Amber Rose in tow and writhing in a jungle with emerald-green locks to the synthy clicks of the Sean Garrett-assisted joint. “I kinda always like to do things in an unexpected fashion,” Minaj told MTV News on set. “I didn’t want to shoot the typical new-artist vision.” “Attack” set the precedent for Minaj’s staunchly atypical videos, like the #1 hit follow-up “Your Love,” in which the MC battles for the heart of her samurai lover in a stylized forest filled with billowing curtains. Like the Annie Lennox-sampling “Your Love,” Minaj’s joint “Check It Out” resurrected another pop jam, the Buggles’ “Video Killed the Radio Star,” and introduced fans to multiple futuristic copies of the MC and her Black Eyed Peas collaborator will.i.am. Although she was always seemingly game to hop on a feature, Minaj put the creation of her debut first, even dropping out of Rihanna’s Last Girl on Earth Tour in April to focus on the effort. Months before she pulled out of the trek, Minaj told MTV News that she didn’t want to throw together a slap-dash album with establishing her star power as a female rapper. “With the album, just like with my mixtape, I never like to rush it,” she said in February . “With the album, I think it’s more important that people get accustomed to seeing a female rapper again. Before I drop an album, people need to come out and see. People don’t even know what a female rapper does. We’re so not used to seeing it. It’s nonexistent in categories. We don’t get nominated. I need to work [the people] up to accepting a female rapper again and accepting my style and all of that — then the album will come.” And just as she wanted it, Minaj nabbed the accolades before releasing her debut. Even before the album hit shelves — or had a title — she racked up awards for her stacks of hit collabos, including an MTV Video Music Award nod for Best New Artist and an MTV News Hottest Breakthrough MC nomination and a BET Award . By early August, the lyricist maintained that “the album is progressing miraculously.” “It’s been very exciting to finally just make music that I love and not really having to incorporate myself on someone else’s record,” Minaj said . “I’ve been having a really great time.” Despite the major hype surrounding her forthcoming release, the pink-haired diva did admit to once being afraid to “put out an album for fear of failure.” However, an outright flop would be especially surprising in light of the chart-topping success of many of Minaj’s solo joints and the instant buzz that cropped up around Friday cuts like the Eminem team-up “Roman’s Revenge.” Minaj’s outsize fame is not the result of just her music. Her zany-yet-seductive persona and membership in the hitmaking Young Money camp are also factors in her ability to corral a hard-core Barbie army. There’s also the sometimes-flirtatious relationship with and short-lived e-marriage to Toronto heartthrob Drake , which has captivated fans. She’s carved out a signature fashion sense that swings from vampy to streetwise to loopy. And unlike most of her peers, she has skyrocketed to hip-hop fame as a woman; a journey that has its own unique set of challenges. Since the summer, Brooklyn lyricist Lil’ Kim has been accusing Minaj of jacking her style and refusing to lace the “Crush on You” spitter with the appropriate amount of props. The back-and-forth between the two has played out in interviews and on wax, with Minaj, who has still never directly addressed Kim by name, getting increasingly aggressive and suggesting that certain lyrics on “Revenge” could be aimed at the Queen Bee. Despite the drama, fans have been amped for the debut LP from the first female rapper to make MTV News’ Hottest MCs list . Fans will also get a chance to delve deeper into the star’s personal life in the forthcoming documentary “Nicki Minaj: My Time Now,” which follows the lyricist as she records her album and grapples with her newfound fame, which premieres Sunday, November 28, at 10 p.m. ET/PT, just days after Pink Friday finally lands in stores. What are you expecting from Pink Friday ? Let us know in the comments! Open the floodgates! It’s Mega-Release Week, with Kanye West, Nicki Minaj, Jay-Z, Ne-Yo, Ke$ha, My Chemical Romance and Lloyd Banks all dropping new albums. Stick with MTV News for everything you need to know about the brand-new music. Don’t miss the documentary “Nicki Minaj: My Time Now,” premiering Sunday, November 28, at 10 p.m. ET/PT on MTV! Related Videos ‘RapFix Live’ With Nicki Minaj Related Photos Nicki Minaj’s Wildest Looks

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Nicki Minaj’s Pink Friday: A Cheat Sheet

Baby Laments Lil Wayne Spending Birthday In Prison

‘If he would have went in like he was supposed to, he would be home already,’ he says of Weezy’s sentence being delayed. By Jayson Rodriguez Baby Photo: MTV News Cash Money CEO Bryan “Baby” Williams is used to celebrating Lil Wayne’s birthday alongside the multiplatinum MC. But this year, with Wayne in prison, Birdman can only count down the days until the rapper returns. During the lead-up to Wayne turning himself in to serve his sentence, there were several delays (from dental procedures to a fire ), and Baby lamented the fact that he and Weezy can’t celebrate together now as a result. “That f—ed with us,” he told MTV News about the delays in Lil Wayne turning himself in. “Mentally, we were ready to do it. And when they had the fire, it really f—ed up, ’cause we were like, ‘Get it crackin’.’ Really, if he would have went in like he was supposed to, he would be home already. We didn’t want to keep pushing that sh– back, but things were happening. We just had to live with it. But any time your loved ones are leaving you in any kind of way, it affects you, ’cause we human, you love what you love. … But he’s home in a minute. We ready. We went through the storm and weathered the storm, so we here.” While Wayne wasn’t able to celebrate his birthday with a party, he stayed active, phoning into MTV’s “The Seven” while his prot

VIDEO: Elijah Wood and RZA Showcase Karaoke Skills and Questionable Song Choice at Fantastic Fest

Of all the songs I could pick to hear RZA and Elijah Wood sing at karaoke, The Black Eyed Peas’ entire discography would be pretty low on the list. That said, this video still rules. and apparently blame (or credit) for the song selection goes to Timecrimes director Nacho Vigalondo. Anyway, as a counter-point to all the stuffy red carpet coverage of Toronto and Venice, I give you the karaoke party for Austin’s genre-centric Fantastic Fest featuring Wood, RZA, Vigalondo and others. Just watch the mayhem and try not to get pumped for the week. Happy Monday!

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VIDEO: Elijah Wood and RZA Showcase Karaoke Skills and Questionable Song Choice at Fantastic Fest

LED Lighting Has Become Almost Boring, and That’s A Good Thing

spacewalker by Dark, displayed by Eurolite all lousy images by Lloyd Alter We become so jaded and blase´. A few years ago, walking through the Light Canada Show (part of IIDEX and the Green Living Festival in Toronto) I was bug-eyed at all of the wonderful innovation in LED lighting. But in just a few years they have become mainstream and commodified, and I really found the pickings to be slim, mostly just another strip light or street light or ceiling. I know that this i… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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LED Lighting Has Become Almost Boring, and That’s A Good Thing

‘Wall Street 2’ Cheat Sheet: Everything You Need To Know

Put your money on our cheat sheet to give you lots of juicy details about ‘Money Never Sleeps.’ By Eric Ditzian Michael Douglas in “Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps” Photo: 20th Century Fox In the fall of 2008, a few weeks after Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy and Washington Mutual collapsed — and the tenor of the U.S. financial crisis turned from panicky to nearly apocalyptic — Fox gave the go-ahead for “Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps.” Hooray for capitalism! There’s always room for shareholders to profit from even the most dismal economic news. Two years later, with the country still shackled by high unemployment and out-of-control debt, “Wall Street 2” bullied its way into theaters Friday (September 24). The Oliver Stone-directed film arrives nearly 23 years after the Oscar-winning original. The first film also opened in the shadow of financial uncertainty, just a few months after the stock-market crash known as Black Monday. Now, as then, the timing is right for a story about greed. Michael Douglas returns as Wall Street mover-and-shaker Gordon Gekko, fresh off a jail sentence and determined, at least initially, to expose his industry’s borderline criminal excesses. Gekko is set, as well, on repairing his relationship with his daughter (Carey Mulligan), a quest that brings him into an alliance with a young trader named Jacob (Shia LaBeouf). Throughout the film, we get both MBA-level corporate discourse and you-abandoned-me familial hurt feelings. You needn’t know the first thing about a credit default swap, though, before you head to the cinema. MTV News has been betting big on this movie for years, and now we’re ready to collect — and share our profits with you: Enjoy our “Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps” cheat sheet. Returning to the “Street” Fox had been developing a “Wall Street” sequel since 2007, when the economy first began its downward spiral. A green light only came in October of ’08, amid those bankruptcies and bank failures. Allan Loeb (“21”) was tapped to pen the script, and Douglas was reportedly interested in reprising his iconic role. But in February, Stone told MTV News he had dropped out of the project. “I didn’t want to do another ‘Wall Street’ movie. I think everything I had to say came through,” he told us. “I’m just not interested because it’s so complex now. I don’t think people can understand security derivatives.” By April, however, Stone had changed his mind . He was said to be blown away by Loeb’s script and jumped at the chance to helm the sequel. It probably didn’t hurt, as well, that Douglas appeared likely to return and that LaBeouf was in negotiations to join up. Josh Brolin, Carey Mulligan , Susan Sarandon and Frank Langella eventually signed on as well. Getting Down to Business Shooting kicked off in fall 2009, and we got our first look at Douglas and LaBeouf on set in October: the elder statesman rocking a casual-Friday look, the young buck in some designer duds. Charlie Sheen, who starred in the original, agreed to appear in a cameo for the new flick . “He came in. It was fun for a day. It was good to see him again,” Douglas told us later. The trailer dropped in January, giving us a grizzled, post-jail Gekko, copious shots of the go-go-go Wall Street and the supposition that greed, once good, has become legal. The movie debuted in May at the Cannes Film Festival . Letting the Bulls Loose As the release date approached, we got an opportunity to chat with the cast in New York and at the Toronto International Film Festival. What convinced Stone to return for the sequel , he told us, was the chance to create “a completely new Gekko” and to dramatize an economic crisis he called “a heart attack, a real triple bypass to capitalism.” LaBeouf, meanwhile, was pulled in by the opportunity to work with Stone, whom he dubbed “the most dangerous filmmaker alive” in the 1980s and ’90s. Plus, the actor views Gekko as even more compelling than key characters in two of his other starring franchises: Optimus Prime of “Transformers” and Indiana Jones. “He’s got more bite, he’s more dangerous, he’s the most dangerous of the three,” LaBeouf said. “Also the most interesting, I think. There’s something in how tangible and visceral it is. Whereas the other films are fantasy films where the suspension of disbelief is necessary for you to get into the movie. This isn’t that. It’s a very tangible world, and you’re living in the midst of the twilight of American economic dominance.” Check out everything we’ve got on “Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Videos Shia LaBeouf Raves About ‘Wall Street’ Director Oliver Stone

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‘Wall Street 2’ Cheat Sheet: Everything You Need To Know

‘American Idol’ Experts Size Up Jennifer Lopez And Steven Tyler

‘J.Lo’s most likely to be the mean judge, because I don’t think Tyler is coherent enough,’ one ‘Idol’ watcher suggests. By Gil Kaufman Steven Tyler and Jennifer Lopez at Wednesday’s “American Idol” press conference Photo: Kevin Winter/ Getty Images Once the announcement was officially made Wednesday (September 22) after months of rumors, the real debate about the new panel of judges on “American Idol” could begin. In the most radical reboot in the show’s 10-year history, host Ryan Seacrest revealed the worst-kept secret in Hollywood: Jennifer Lopez and Aerosmith’s Steven Tyler would be joining the “AI” panel alongside sole remaining original judge Randy Jackson. Typically, this kind of wholesale deck shuffling 10 seasons into a show’s run is a sign of desperation, a bandage to stop the ratings hemorrhaging or a last-ditch effort to recapture some elusive magic. Despite the fact that neither Lopez nor Tyler have any significant TV experience and both are past their creative zenith, Los Angeles Times pop critic Ann Powers applauded the choices and held out hope. “I think they’re both great choices,” Powers said shortly after Wednesday’s announcement. “Jennifer Lopez is someone I’ve advocated for for a long time, ever since she mentored on the show. She had a really great way with the contestants, and she’s the kind of celebrity — never super great at anything, but pretty good at a lot of things — who can really advise the contestants.” With her experience as a performer, choreographer, fashion designer, actress and frequent subject of chatter in the celebrity press over her sometimes-daring sartorial choices, Powers said Lopez is well-equipped to offer “Idol” contestants advice on style, movement and elements of pop performance that haven’t traditionally been discussed on the show. In addition, she brings another intangible that might help the show’s sliding ratings: the ability to appeal to a Latin audience. “She could really open the show up to new viewers, and I think it will be good for pop in general to acknowledge that there are a lot of Latinos in music,” Powers said. As for Tyler, 62, Powers said in addition to being one of rock’s iconic figures and a classic frontman, Tyler can also uniquely advise contestants on style and performance, thanks to his flashy wardrobe and motor-mouth persona. Plus, with “Idol” leaning toward rock in the past few years, thanks to finalists such as Chris Daughtry, Adam Lambert and Crystal Bowersox and grunge-lite winners David Cook, Kris Allen and Lee DeWyze, Tyler might be the one to, as he promised, “bring some rock to this roller coaster.” Following the departures of original superstar judge Simon Cowell, one-and-done funnywoman Ellen DeGeneres and two-season veteran Kara DioGuardi, rumors circulated about everyone from Elton John and Justin Timberlake to Harry Connick Jr., Usher, former judge Paula Abdul and returning executive producer Nigel Lythgoe possibly taking seats at the table next to original castmember Jackson. The radical shake-up comes after a season in which DeGeneres struggled to fit into the panel, often appearing uncomfortable and falling flat with her signature comedic bits. It began with the news that Cowell would be leaving at season’s end to help launch an American version of his popular English reality singing show “The X Factor,” which will also air on Fox. DioGuardi, who struggled with poor notices in her first year in 2008, began to hit a bit of a stride in 2009 but was let go with no explanation earlier this summer. Lythgoe had stated that he wanted to bring the panel back down to its original three-member configuration, fearing that the four-judge arrangement had begun to take the focus off the contestants. Entertainment Weekly reporter and “Idol” expert Michael Slezak also thought the choices, while unconventional, just might work. “The reboot last season, at least on paper, was a good thing for ‘Idol,’ ” Slezak said of the addition of DeGeneres. “But I don’t think a panel of Ellen, Randy and Kara was going to get people super excited for season 10.” And whether or not Tyler and Lopez turn out to be good choices, Slezak gave the show’s producers credit for taking a radical chance and playing offense instead of defense. “It’s them saying, ‘Let’s try to do something different going into season 10,’ instead of saying, ‘Let’s sit on our hands and hope that we’re #9 next season and #18 the year after that.’ ” That said, Slezak suspects you have to be a TV star to be a good judge and, love him or hate him, Cowell was undoubtedly an electric TV personality because he was honest, funny and credible. “I don’t know if Tyler or J.Lo are good at it,” he said. “Because it’s a specific kind of TV where you have to be really good under the gun and get out of that celebrity comfort zone of wanting people to like you, and you have to be very quick.” While both new judges have logged countless hours in front of cameras and audiences, Slezak said coming up with pithy 30-second comments in the moment in front of 5,000 screaming (or booing) audience members is a very specific talent and, so far, nobody knows if either new judge has what it takes to do it. “Idol” continued to be the nation’s highest-rated show for the seventh year in a row as season nine ended in May, but like any program facing a decade on the air, its ratings have begun to dip and its audience has gradually aged, a prospect that makes it a less attractive target for advertisers, who covet a young adult audience for their products. The most important unknown for Slezak and Powers, though, is the pivotal question of who will replace Cowell as the “mean” judge, a slot every good reality-TV competition seems to need in order to succeed. “I think J.Lo’s most likely to be the mean judge, because I don’t think Tyler is coherent enough,” Slezak predicted. If not, though, it’s possible season-long guest mentor, Interscope boss Jimmy Iovine, could serve as the go-to baddie who has to break the harsh news to the contestants. Powers is holding out for Jackson to finally break out of his nine-season funk of empty go-to phrases but said we might just have to wait until the early weeks of the season to see who has the goods to tell it like it is. “If you’re too nice, it’s boring TV,” she said. Get your “Idol” fix on MTV News’ “American Idol” page , where you’ll find all the latest news, interviews and opinions. Related Videos Your New ‘American Idol’ Judges Are Jennifer Lopez And Steven Tyler Related Photos Before Steven Tyler Was An ‘American Idol’ Judge … Jennifer Lopez: From The Block To ‘American Idol’ ‘American Idol’ Announces Its Season 10 Judges! Related Artists Jennifer Lopez Aerosmith

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‘American Idol’ Experts Size Up Jennifer Lopez And Steven Tyler

Drake Says His Tour Is Inspired By Jimi Hendrix

Light Dreams and Nightmares stage show “very psychedelic,” MC says. By Jayson Rodriguez Drake performs in Miami on Monday Photo: Alexander Tamargo/ Getty Images MIAMI — Drake often cites Lil Wayne, Jay-Z and Kanye West as artists that inspired his career, from his sound to his stage presence. But for the Toronto star’s new tour, Light Dreams and Nightmares, which kicked off this week in Miami, he said he drew from outside of hip-hop. The unlikely source: One of Woodstock’s finest. “It’s a really stunning setup, heavily influenced by Jimi Hendrix,” Drake told MTV News. “Not necessarily in any set that he designed, but more so his music and his vibe. It’s called the Light Dreams and Nightmares Tour — it’s very psychedelic. It’s very much based on day and night, like times of day, and I carry you through a full day in the show. It’s really cool, and I’m enjoying it. It’s great to have those elements.” Drake recently visited the Hendrix grave site, he told Rolling Stone . In addition to the electric guitarist, the Young Money MC also said he’s turned to concert DVDs, including one by Eminem, to help inspire him on his headlining trek. The result is an “OMG”-like light show that’s more involved than Drake’s first solo outing, the Away From Home Tour earlier this year. He said the stage effects create a level of excitement comparable to a surprise cameo. “It’s almost like when you’re at a show and you know [Jay-Z’s] about to come out or [Eminem’s] about to come out,” Drake explained. “It’s the same thing, like I know there’s fireworks about to go off in the air or this light show is going to go off and people will love it. It’s a great experience for me as a performer. I still work just as hard, but it’s almost as if I’m performing with another element. I’m growing.” Related Photos Drake Ignites Miami Related Artists Drake

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Drake Says His Tour Is Inspired By Jimi Hendrix

‘X-Men: First Class’ Star James McAvoy Wants To ‘Bury’ Patrick Stewart’s Professor X

New film will reportedly reveal how character lost the ability to walk. By Eric Ditzian, with reporting by Josh Horowitz James McAvoy Photo: MTV News Over six years and three films, Patrick Stewart created an unforgettable representation of Professor X: austere, commanding, lacking a single hair on his head. Four years after Stewart’s appearance in “X-Men: The Last Stand,” a new film in the franchise — “X-Men: First Class” — is in production in England. James McAvoy faces the challenge of reinventing Professor X for a story that takes place before the character lost his hair or adopted his scholarly nickname. How is the 31-year-old actor approaching that challenge? “I’m basically going to try and bury Patrick’s performance,” McAvoy laughed during a conversation with MTV News at the Toronto Film Festival while promoting the historical drama “The Conspirator.” “I think the fun about these films, when you go back and you either reboot or do a prequel, is you get to see how people became who they are,” he continued. “That means that you have to do them differently and by the end of the movie you have to do them the same way. The interesting journey is what happens to them, what changes them, what makes them evolve — not just mutate, but emotionally and psychologically evolve.” Last month, producer Bryan Signer said that McAvoy’s version of the character — here still named simply Charles Xavier — will be , and McAvoy confirmed both those facts for us. “They wanted me to have hair,” he said. “They didn’t want me to go bald and I walk as well.” Apparently, however, “First Class” will tell the story of how Xavier lost the ability to walk. The film will also go a long way toward explaining how the shaggy-haired Xavier became the stern-faced Professor X. “I would suggest by the end of the movie and the start of the next movie, it’ll be more like what Patrick does,” said McAvoy, adding, “Or maybe not. Maybe it will still be in a period of flux, if there is a new movie.” For breaking news and previews of the latest comic book movies — updated around the clock — visit SplashPage.MTV.com . Related Photos Meet The Cast Of ‘X-Men: First Class’

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‘X-Men: First Class’ Star James McAvoy Wants To ‘Bury’ Patrick Stewart’s Professor X