Archive for September, 2012

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‘X Factor’ Season 2, Episode 2 recap: Britney Spears keeps her distance from obsessive fan

 

The highlight of Thursday night’s episode of “The X Factor” was an unnervingly dedicated Britney Spears fan who presented the judge with flowers before a screeching rendition of one of her own songs.

Spears visibly grimaces as 20-year-old Patrick Ford — who earlier exposed his inner fanboy when he wondered aloud if the two could be siblings — brought a literal meaning to her song, “Circus.”

“It was like you had an argument with Britney Spears, got drunk, and decided to scream the song at her,” says Simon Cowell.

The flowers Ford brought onstage to give to Spears are hand-delivered by Cowell, who in this situation seems like the chivalrous guy trying to keep Spears at arms’ length from a potential stalker.

Ford was one of many contestants appearing on the second night of season two of “The X Factor,” which is beginning to clarify its guiding forces. The judges continued developing their own particular niches, while the auditions became more polarized, alternating between towering successes and embarrassing failures.

From the start, the producers seem intent on developing Spears as a force to be reckoned with; the opening recap of last night’s action showcased mixed reactions from the other judges, but quickly gave way to a montage of Spears cruelly rejecting several contestants. Spears, to her credit, has remained critical but fair, but the show is clearly singling her out-playing dramatic music as she arrives at the San Francisco venue, detached and celebrated differently from her peers at the judges’ table.

 

As the episode begins, small talk by the masses waiting on line for auditions quickly gives way to the story of Johnny Maxwell, a 16-year-old student from Castro Valley, California.

“There’s hecka people here, mom,” says Maxwell, as he arrives with his mother to the venue. And though snippets of those people are visible though out the show’s beginning moments, the camera stays largely trained on Maxwell.

He makes an excellent showing once he’s on his own. He strides confidently to the center of the stage, raising his arms and asking “X Factor, how y’all doin’?” and performs his own original song, “All These People,” to an initially skeptical but eventually impressed panel of judges.

By the final chorus of a song that’s evenly split between rapping and sung choruses, L.A. Reid is singing the titular lyrics along with Maxwell, and Demi Lovato and Spears share the same grin with Maxwell’s mother, who is frequently shown beaming throughout his performance.

“You have swag,” Lovato declares. “You are so driven and passionate when you perform, it’s amazing to watch.” The rest of the judges agree, with Cowell accurately pronouncing him a better rapper than singer. He leaves the stage with four “yes” votes, and Cowell mutters “That’s what we’re looking for,” as he goes.

Lexa Berman, a 22-year-old from Boca Raton, goes next. She is pompous, and that fact has been teased throughout the episode thus far; she is pictured explaining to a younger performer how difficult the competition is, and how she’s seemingly able to handle it.

Much is made of her appearance once she hits the stage–even Reid asks if she’s single or married–but her performance doesn’t measure up to her personality. Her voice has a nicely full body to it, but she doesn’t bring any feeling. Cowell throws her a “yes” vote, perhaps acknowledging an arrogant, if kindred, spirit, but she is flatly denied by the other three and leaves the stage dejected.

 

The next montage of performers could easily be titled the “But you’re hot,” segment. A parade of men with steely eyes and six-pack abs cross the stage, drawing mild flirtation from Lovato and Spears, but the two are immediately left feeling cold once the performers open their mouths to sing. A few obvious testosterone-inspired jokes are thrown out by Cowell (“This is why I love this show,” Cowell says, when a modestly-sized girl group takes the stage), but all acts have one thing in common; their singing is terrible. Off-key and off-tempo singing scores the march of the eye candy, which could have ended halfway through on Reid’s sage advice.

“You know what we need?” he asks backstage. “Someone with great looks and talent.”

After a commercial break, we return to follow the story of Jason Brock. A San Francisco resident who resembles a stockier, more hilariously personable Adam Lambert, he is nothing if not an accurate judge of his own character.

“When my voice comes out, it’s unbelievable,” the tech support employee says of others’ reactions to his voice. “It stops them in their tracks.”

He has a similar effect on the judges. The first thing to give them pause, though, is his entrance. Cordial hellos quickly give way to him describing a fantasy concert in which he is surrounded by backup dancers, smoky white light and dismissed with a “confetti explosion,” and the judges’ patience begins to wear thin. But when he begins his rendition of Billy Joel’s “New York State of Mind,” jaws drop and remain in that position for most of the performance.

“You sparkle and you ooze of joy while you’re singing,” Lovato says, and his expressive voice–which sounds at times like Cee-Lo Green’s full-bore crooning–breathes enough life into the song to make Joel’s original vocals seem tame by comparison.

“Your voice is a song’s best friend,” Reid adds, explaining how songwriters adore a voice as flexible as Brock’s. He receives four “yes”.

Presumably saving the rest for later shows, there is only one performer shown to round out the end of the hour-long episode, as the show departs for Providence, Rhode Island. But she is a knockout. At 13, Carly Rose Sonenclar (born in New York City and no stranger to Broadway, having performed in several musicals) is obviously precocious. Initial reactions to her adorable appearance give way to skepticism from the judges when she announces she will attempt Nina Simone’s “Feeling Good,” a soulful number seemingly impossible to replicate as powerfully as Simone sings it after 13 short years on this planet.

“Honey, you may be 13, but your soul is old!” raves Reid after a performance that saw this season’s first standing ovation from all four judges.

Her pitch was the most accurate of the night, but the emotion and grit in her voice overshadows that, allowing her to add tasteful accents and expressive movements to the performance. Lovato admits being “obsessed” with her, and the judges send her back to her parents with four “yes” votes.

“Remember this day, everybody,” Reid says as he casts his vote. “A star is born.”

“The X Factor” seems to be approaching a formula. The show remains heavily focused on the judges, who have already begun to mature beyond the expectations placed on them before the season started. But the show is beginning to shoot for the extremes in order to give us more of what we expect; at least one conceited character whose personality will be their undoing, and a brief series of train-wreck acts each episode. But the show’s high points make it worth paying attention to, at least at this early stage, because they are surprising, organic and fresh.

 

http://www.nydailynews.com/blogs/channel-surfer/2012/09/%E2%80%98x-factor%E2%80%99-season-2-episode-2-recap-britney-spears-keeps-her-distance-from-ob

 

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2012 MTV Video Music Awards!! Who Stole The Night??

Los Angeles (CNN) – The MTV Video Music Awards competed with Vice President Joe Biden’s convention speech Thursday night, offering Olympic gold medal gymnast Gabby Douglas doing flips and rapper Lil’ Wayne stage diving.

MTV moved the East Coast broadcast of the Los Angeles show up an hour when programmers realized they would be up against President Barack Obama’s acceptance speech unless they ended the two-hour show by 10 p.m.

One Direction claimed the most screen time, winning three “Moon Man” trophies and performing their pop hit “One Thing” in the show. The UK boy band won for best new artist, best pop video and the “most shareworthy” video.

Rihanna takes top honors at the VMAs

The 2012 version of MTV’s big show passed without a major faux pas, such as happened three years ago when Kanye West interrupted Taylor Swift’s acceptance of the best female video award to say it should have gone to Beyonce.

Rapper Psy teaches ‘Gangnam Style’ dance

Who were the big winners?

Beyonce lost again, this time to Nicki Minaj for her “Starships” video, but Kanye was not in the house to object this year, choosing to be in New York with girlfriend Kim Kardashian instead.

Rihanna, who also lost to Minaj, took the night’s biggest honor later in the show, winning video of the year for “We Found Love.” Rihanna opened the show performing a “Cockiness/We Found Love” medley with A$AP Rocky.

While Swift was left out of the trophy handouts, she did close the show by dancing and singing “We Are Never Getting Back Together,” and ending with a stage dive into the crowd.

Rihanna’s ex-boyfriend Chris Brown looked all business in a dress suit as he took the stage to accept the best male video award for “Turn Up The Music.” In winning, he beat hip hop rival Drake, who was also on the other side of an infamous bar fight earlier this year.

Host Kevin Hart joked about the Brown-Drake nightclub clash, telling both artists “Nip it in the bud, guys. I’m tired of it. Fix it tonight.”

Drake got his own “Moon Man” statue when his “HYFR” won for best hip hop video. That video “is about being me being black and Jewish,” Drake said in his acceptance. It was dedicated “to any kid that’s ever had a long walk home by yourself.”

Drake’s recording partners 2 Chainz and Lil’ Wayne got the Staples Center crowd on their feet with a rap performance that the television audience did not get to completely hear. The censor cut frequent expletives in their lyrics, leaving viewers to hear a song punctuated with frequent silent gaps. Lil’ Wayne, who entered on a skateboard, ended with a dive off the stage.

In contrast, singer Frank Ocean delivered the most subtle performance of the night with a rendition of his “Thinkin’ About You.”

Other performances included P!nk doing aerial acrobatics as she sang and Green Day, who set a record for the most VMA performances with “Let Yourself Go.”

The “Fierce Five” U.S. women’s gymnastics team took the stage to introduce Alicia Keys, who performed her newest song, “Girl On Fire,” with Minaj. Gold medalist Gabby Douglas did flips while Keys sang.

MTV gave the Twilight film franchise cast — minus Kristen Stewart — the stage to introduce a 90-second clip from “The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 2.”

As the show ended — and presumably as most viewers prepared to change channels to see Obama’s speech — Hart put in a plug for them to take the time to vote in the election. “It’s in our hands,” Hart said.

 

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