Everything posted by Angela
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Whitney Houston dead at 48!
TMZ must have more people bugged than Piers Morgan did! NY Post
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Whitney Houston dead at 48!
Yeah, I've been going back and forth between Oprah and the Celebrity Apprentice. The interview with the sister-in-law is excellent. Still about 40 minutes to go. SIL tugged at my heart. [ETA: Oh, I guess this is 90-minute program. Ended with Whitney's bro breaking down after very, very meaningfully singing "I Look to You" ...] The interview with the daughter is what it should be at this stage. Oprah just asking her how she's doing. Madonna's first public comments on Whitney Houston's passing... http://www.thesun.co...th-The-Sun.html
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The Madonna Thread
Never heard that one before. When my niece was 2-3 (she was born in 1995), this was her jam. I had bought the CD single and she'd use my CD player and play this over and over. (She ruined that CD). In her pampers, she'd just hum and spin, hum and spin. Too cute. If only YouTube was around back then she'd have been immortalized and embarassed. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y6B418iJw5Q She was sort of like the boy here but with more balance and passion (and just the pamper), lol.
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Whitney Houston dead at 48!
Sunday indeed. The SIL is talking about how pissed [sIL] was the night before Whitney passed. She didn't want Whitney to go to that party. SIL/Whitney are in the pictures outside the club where Whitney looks drunk and SIL looks agitated at the whole situation. So Oprah goes there and asks her what really happened in the club that night. SIL liked/likes Bobby Brown. Hopefully this is not just a case of great editing to make something look more interesting than it is. I wasn't initially planning a date night with this special until those clips dropped.
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Whitney Houston dead at 48!
Michael Buble (or some dude) did a nice remake tribute of Exhale (Shoop, Shoop) today on Ellen. ETA: It was Robin Thicke, not Michael. Extra: Whitney's sister-in-law tells Oprah she can't say she believes Bobby introduced Whitney to drugs. That the worlds "reality" and the reality are two very different things. I thought this was going to be all fluff, especially due to "Mother Theresa" SIL, but I guess not.
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The Madonna Thread
The leather suit and bondage (chains represent bondage, correct?) takes me back to one of Madonna's other responses to the Sex (Erotica/JML/BoE) controversy. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GS6FCoq349o ETA: Looks like there was a listening party in Los Angeles yesterday. So these are the statewide reviews and they're still rather good... Billboard: http://www.billboard...006416552.story Examiner: http://m.examiner.co...ght-on-steroids MTV: http://www.mtv.com/n...onna-mdna.jhtml LA Times: http://latimesblogs....aline-rush.html
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The Madonna Thread
Thanks for the links. We're going to need q back in here to embed 30 minutes in. Great stuff. I was going to say this is back when VH1 used to focus on music but saw they were doing a C. Aguilera BTM edition earlier tonite - from 2010, but all the same.
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The Madonna Thread
Yeah, I guess I do agree with that to a point. I am not. I become disillusioned when I see a famous person naked too much. So, yeah I've seen more than enough of naked Madonna I'm looking at the singles list from Erotica. From video play: I did like Deeper and Deeper. I liked the different sound of the single Erotica. I also enjoyed Bad Girl, Rain and the remake of Fever (the Fever video was pretty ne...cool).
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The Madonna Thread
Color me a little bit surprised, Gang Bang (really? really?? really??? lol) has been the only single/snippet to win me over almost instantly so far. The beats are not drowning her voice out as much. The music is a little bit less generic. I look forward to hearing how the longer version of this one sounds. This song should have been titled Bang Bang from the sound of it but I guess Gang Bang is more interesting a title choice.
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The Barbra Streisand Thread
Back when MTV aired videos beyond the hours of 4 am to 6 am... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wB_vjpRhLxM
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The Barbra Streisand Thread
Woman In Love is pretty dang fantastic. As is Memories.
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The Madonna Thread
Or much any library, hee. See, the thing about sex tapes is they all lie and use "oops, somebody else leaked it." Save lying, it's almost equivalent to Madonna's Penthouse and Playboy spreads - she admittingly did take nude pictures before her career got started but she didn't do it for the purpose of them being spread in the worlds two largest soft-porn magazines when she was famous. There's a victim element to it. To this day, if a young female or male person who was a hit with young women (and men) - teenagers - was openly and willingly exposing everything on the street and in a book about sex I STILL think it would still be an issue. Madonna opened the door for hot, sexy & controversial videos but nobody could open the door for bringing that much blatent nudity and soft core porn to the mainstream. Yes, you can push the envelope pretty dang far with intelligent craftsmanship but opening it is another story. There's no denying the book and the video (Justify My Love) sold well but eh. I've never seen the book and I didn't even think about buying the Erotica album so I can't really judge the album. Circa Sex, since childhood I've seen a picture or two and I did see Madonna "hitch-hiking" nude via the news way back in the early 1990s. For some reason I only have left the plastic cover and accompanying material for Bedtime Stories out of the three Madonna albums, Eric.
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The Madonna Thread
I was just looking through my old tapes (not video tapes). First I was sad that I have not one cassette player in my life anymore lol. I have the Like A Prayer album, I have the Immaculate Collection album and I have the Bedtime Stories album (all on cassette). I'm not sure why I bought that last album, I liked Bedtime Story (lets get unconscious baby) but I only loved Take a Bow from that set. I also have the "One Sweet Day" single (Mariah), hee. Cyndi, Bette and Celine round out my collection (all greatest hits type albums).
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The Madonna Thread
In more ways than one. I don't blame the press. She was being a (rebelling) exhibitionist past a functional degree. The more the press was on her the more she wanted to say f-u, f-u, f-u, instead of "you may have a point." Reminds me of parents and a child. The transition was quite brilliant though from Erotica/Justify My Love/Sex to Bedtime Stories (45 to 90 degrees) to strong ballads and Evita (90 to 135 degrees) then to ultimately motherhood and Ray of Light (135 degrees, she'll never do a 180, lol).
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The Madonna Thread
Highest rated non-sporting event ever for HBO at that time. She still has the same back-up singers? I was watching a clip from I think S&S Tour and they looked like the same back-up singers. I was reading some old articles the other day. Before "Sex" and After "Sex." The bolded part is so accurate. I'm not sure why she tries to make that about men and women even though she may have a point. The fact is along with gay men, young girls and teenagers made up her fanbase and she had a very public frickin naked, sex-ed up times infinity period. I was 12ish at this time and that's not what i wanted to see...because I was 12. Then lets add in the parents she upset greatly, lol. I fit in the latter group but she's really lucky she was able to climb out of that somewhat successfully, very successfully. It wasn't all luck at all, it was business savvy and that's why I got respect for her. She could have not gotten back up from the beating she took for that period. That was a big ass hole she digged to jump into.
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The Madonna Thread
Thanks, q I think that's probably my favorite clip due to the genuine surprise and shock. That, and because it was an epic grouping and Coffee Talk was funny s--t. Eric, yeah I watched Forbidden Love (CT) way back when I was looking at old concert footage. It's pretty good... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aUGaBEKpfnw I know she'll probably never work with her brother again (for good reason) but the BA tour was so tight. Excellent. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FD7abnTQBzk
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The Madonna Thread
The lists. This one obviously has a british lean. Yeah, it's not the easiest thing to mesh the different genres and the different elements each artist brings. Ontop of that it's kind of a WTF to include the younger kids with, so far, much shorter spans like Gaga and Adele (both who are IMO very talented) so high up (more like VH1 did) when you're doing 30-40 year lists but I get that to a point. I've always been more of a ballad lover with every singer except maybe Eminem, Missy Elliot and Jay-Z. I am that music fan, lol. I loved Mariah Carey when she was doing ballads and couldn't stand her behind when she started with hip-hop. I love pop friendly dance music though. Madonna is obviously a great pop dance hit singer and I enjoyed all of her dance singles pre-dating the Erotica album (and after - Ray of Light, Music, Don't Tell Me, Sorry are all good quality, catchy songs) but I've always gotten more hyped about the ballads. Also, from the first two singles from this next album I don't feel she is exactly putting much effort in her dance music. Sort of weak lyrics, the beats overriding the singing. Maybe my mind will change on that, maybe it won't. I haven't really given any mind to a Madonna album since Ray of Light or Music. Since I will be listening to this album due to it being attached to my concert ticket and due to her most likely singing at least several singles from it during her concert, I'm looking at this one with a more critical eye.
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The Madonna Thread
Being it's a UK paper, I'd say this is a less biased to the positive side review, heh. The critic is Neil McCormick from The Daily Telegraph. I'm looking forward to hearing Falling Free. I've always liked Madonna's ballad side just a little bit more than the dance side: http://www.telegraph...ack-review.html I see the paper also recently did a Pop's 20 Greatest Female Artist of the Rock & Pop Era list: http://www.telegraph...le-artists.html 10. Patti Smith 9. Lady Gaga 8. Adele 7. Amy Winehouse 6. Aretha Franklin 5. The ABBA Girls (For realz?) 4. Debbie Harry 3. Kate Bush 2. Tina Turner 1. Madonna ETA: PopJustice Review: http://www.popjustice.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=6074&Itemid=9
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The Madonna Thread
The Saturday Night Live Edition... 1986: An apology of sorts... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tYEHX1l5NX0 1991: Madonna Justifies Her Love to Wayne and Garth.... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uKuqCcrL6oU Link to a clearer version of the same clip: http://www.dailymoti...0-featuring_fun 1992: The Mike Myers & Dana Carvey years of SNL, sigh. This is a great clip - Mike, Madonna, Roseanne and a surprise appearance by Barbara Streisand. This one is a link. I have no idea how to embed from Hulu: http://www.hulu.com/stand_alone/1e955a55038a0f4028dee01826d18cac?lcname=ESEABidkZWZhdWx0Q2FwdGlvblN0eWxlBgMxBi1pc1RyYWlsZXJTZWxlY3RvclZpZGVvAgYXcG9wb3V0U3RhcnQEAAYhc2l0ZUxvY2F0aW9uUGF0aAEGFWluUGxheWxpc3QCBh1kZWZhdWx0UXVhbGl0eQQBBh9kZWZhdWx0TGFuZ3VhZ2UGCW5vbmUGIWFkU2VsZWN0b3JPcHRpb24BBhVwb3BvdXRUaW1lBUJzXnFmQZAABjl2aWRlb1RyYWlsZXJTZWxlY3RvckFkVW5pdElkBP////8GI3BsYXlsaXN0QWRVbml0SWRzCQMBBIXGEQYTY29udGVudElEBIGXmF0GFWN1cnJlbnRQb2QEAAYtc2VsZWN0b3JWaWRlb0NvbXBsZXRlZAIGEWF1dG9wbGF5AwYXY3VycmVudFNsb3QEAA==&continuous_play_mode=4&continuous_play=on&continuous_play_sort=#in-playlist 1993: Madonna has a special invitation for a member of the Clinton family... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ssGuKaHv9-g 2010: The Live Clip AND The Rehearsal Clip of Lady Gaga and Madonna... Madonna: What the hell is a disco stick? Lada Gaga: I think you know. Priceless. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FqzM0wpWMUo
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The Madonna Thread
You never know. Sometimes love makes you really stupid. Well, she does have at least 100 million good reasons not to forget one the next time (if there is a next time). Thanks for the heads up on biased critics. So, I'll definitely wait to hear what Billboard, Entertainment Weekly and the Daily News says before I get my hopes up for at least a couple of good songs on the album. GGW, single No. 2, sounds like something a music company could have gotten out of a drunk and high B. Spears after connecting her to a few machines.
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The Madonna Thread
So Madonna's cute 24-year old boy-toy/boyfriend has proposed, supposedly. I'm of the opinion of do whatever the bleep ya want but don't forget to get a pre-nup before each and every future marriage. Heh.
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Whitney Houston dead at 48!
It's kind of early in the process but it's not like Oprah's forcing the kid to do an interview. Nor do I think Oprah would pay for an interview although OWN is a sinking ship. Can't fault any news personality for wanting these types of interviews as soon as they can get it either.
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The Madonna Thread
Not loving either single released so far. Nothing memorable so far. A review from the UK from a magazine that got their hands on the album: http://www.attitude....VER+MDNA+REVIEW Late-night You-tubeing again. I had never seen the Pepsi commerical before for obvious reasons (detailed write-up on the controversy: http://eightiesclub....d.com/id135.htm). I hadn't seen Whitney's Coke one either. I'd seen Michael Jackson's Pepsi ones. Madonna: The original: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h8qtsUaoVak Love the music in the remix (posted by the Pepsi company on YouTube, ironically): Michael: Whitney: George: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ysTNEGu0FCg I love Coca-Cola taste waste over Pepsi, but Pepsi definitely puts more effort into their commercials.
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Whitney Houston dead at 48!
Oprah Scores (an interview with Whitney's daughter that is)... http://losangeles.cb...ughter-for-own/
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Whitney Houston dead at 48!
The following is an excerpt of the Whitney Houston cover story in the March 15th, 2012 issue of Rolling Stone, on stands March 2nd. Diligent professional one moment, wild child the next: Those were the opposing sides of Houston in her last days – and, it turns out, much of her life. Blessed with a peerless combination of bravura lung power, model-perfect looks, and an image that was both warm and regal, Houston was that pop rarity: a genuine crossover star, juggling music and film, audiences young and old, black and white. "Because of her cousin Dionne [Warwick], she understood all those pretty-ass melodies from Burt Bacharach," says Narada Michael Walden, one of Houston's many producers. "But because she was young and from the era of Michael Jackson, Prince and Madonna, she had soul in her too – those rhythms. She had both sides. Plus, she was so damn gorgeous. You couldn't say no to her." But after she peaked with her 1991 version of "The Star-Spangled Banner" and 1992's The Bodyguard, her fans watched as, year by year, Houston's demons were revealed to the world: Her voice grew huskier, her looks hardened. Her records, when they appeared, didn't sell as well as they once had; her live performances revealed a performer physically and vocally rusty. People who worked with her still find it hard to comprehend her dark side. "A lot of us talked about that, and no one could come up with an answer," says Gerry Griffith, the A&R man who brought Houston to Clive Davis' attention around 1982. "Where is that rebellion coming from? It didn't come out for a while." When it did, it came out in force, nearly destroying her personal life, career and music. From the start, Whitney Houston was a child of both the church and the charts. Her mother, Cissy, was a Newark, New Jersey-born soprano powerhouse who sang backup on classic records by Franklin ("Ain't No Way," "Chain of Fools") and Van Morrison ("Brown Eyed Girl"), and toured with Elvis Presley (when she was a member of the Sweet Inspirations). Her cousin Warwick had crossed over to pop in the Sixties and Seventies with hits like "Walk On By" and "Do You Know the Way to San Jose?" Whitney, born in 1963, inherited her voice from her mother, and her elegant good looks and strong will from her father, John Houston, who worked variously as a truck driver and for the city of Newark, and who would later manage his daughter's career. When Whitney was four, her parents moved her and her two brothers to suburban East Orange, New Jersey, where many black families relocated after the Newark riots. Houston was a shy kid; her grade-school principal recalls Houston standing in line, tightly holding her classmates' hands, her head down. When Houston's godmother, singer Darlene Love, would stay at the family's home while on tour, she shared a bed with "Nippy," as Whitney was called. "I was pregnant at the time and she'd go, 'What do you want, what do you want?' " Love recalls. "There was a store on the corner where she'd run down the street and buy fruit for me. So charming from Day One." To read the rest of this cover story, pick up the March 15th, 2012 issue of Rolling Stone, available on stands and in Rolling Stone All Access March 2nd. http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/cover-story-excerpt-whitney-houston-20120229