September 14,2009
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Taylor
Swift was relishing her unlikely win of best female video
at the MTV Video Music Awards. The 19-year-old knew that the
network doesn't exactly make a habit out of giving their moonman
trophies to country music stars.
"I was standing on the stage and I
was really excited because I had just won the award,"
Swift said after Sunday's show at Radio City Music Hall. "And
then I was really excited because Kanye West was on the stage.
And then I wasn't so excited anymore after that." Taking
the microphone, the rapper protested Swift's selection and
announced that Beyonce, also nominated, should have won because
her "Single Ladies (Put a Ring on it)" was "one
of the best videos of all time." As he had numerous times
before, West made sure an awards show spotlight shone on him.
A stunned Swift staggered and didn't get
to finish her acceptance speech. The crowd booed West, who
shortly after was asked to leave the show and left the building.
But Swift got a chance to recapture her
time in the spotlight. Toward the end of the evening, when
Beyonce won video of the year for "Single Ladies,"
the pop star promptly invited Swift out on stage to properly
"have her moment." "They
told me to stand by the side of the stage," Swift said.
"I didn't really know what was going to go down, but
I thought it was so wonderful and gracious of her to do what
she's always done. "I thought that I couldn't love Beyonce
more and then tonight happened." West later apologized
on his blog to Swift, her fans and her mother.
In a rare conciliatory moment, West took
to his blog to apologize. In a standard all-caps message,
West said: "I'M SOOOOO SORRY TO TAYLOR SWIFT AND HER
FANS AND HER MOM. I SPOKE TO HER MOTHER RIGHT AFTER AND SHE
SAID THE SAME THING MY MOTHER WOULD'VE SAID. SHE IS VERY TALENTED!"
Watching all this was host Russell Brand,
who is no stranger to controversy, himself. As host last year,
the British comedian made headlines for his jokes about the
Jonas Brothers and their purity rings. "You don't like
to see people upset," Brand said backstage. "But
I think it just gets exciting, live television, live events.
People get worked up and things happen."
And that might as well be the VMA mission
statement. MTV always seeks a combustible mix for their flagship
award show, hoping for just the kind of attention West attracted.
It was a very VMA happening, at a VMAs that
began on a more somber note. In remarks lengthy for the rapid-cutting
MTV, Madonna introduced a tribute to Michael Jackson. The
singer hailed Jackson as a hero who was "abandoned"
by a public "busy passing judgment."
What followed was a medley of Jackson-esque
dancers performing a thunderous foot-stomping and hand-clapping
tribute to the tune of "Bad," ''Thriller" and
"Smooth Criminal." In what was the most anticipated
appearance at the award show, Janet Jackson emerged to honor
her late brother, resolutely dancing to their duet "Scream."
She didn't address the crowd, but nodded afterward, the dance
sufficiently cathartic.
While the memory of Jackson made a distinct
imprint on the VMAs, the show was - as ever - a pop culture
circus with as many rings as possible jammed under one tent.
This year, MTV returned its most prominent
spectacle to New York, its first time here since 2006. Setting
up camp at Radio City, it looked as if a teenybopper atom
bomb had been exploded in midtown Manhattan, leaving a crater
10 blocks in diameter of the young, the hip and the wannabe
young and hip.
An elaborate red carpet was rolled out on
Avenue of the Americas, where Lady Gaga (who tied for the
most nominations with Beyonce) appeared with her face shrouded
by a mask and with Kermit the Frog by her side. Hundreds of
teenage girls were fenced in all around Rockefeller Center
- all decked out in their finest neon colors - hoping for
a seat.
Backstage, the atmosphere was just as chaotic.
Serena Williams, whose outburst with a line judge at the U.S.
Open on Saturday provoked a Kanye-sized reaction of its own,
mingled with the celebrities. Her request for gum was met
quickly by stagehands - perhaps even quicker considering her
profanity-laced, finger-pointing tirade at a linesperson for
penalizing her for a foot fault that helped her lose the match.
Jack Black sat contentedly awaiting his turn to present. The
comedian relaxed with a giant ax and a muscle suit on under
his T-shirt. (The props looked natural enough, but were deployed
to comedic effect in his presentation: a metal fan's prayer
to Satan.)
Before the show, executive producer Dave
Sirulnick summarized the ethos of the VMAs saying they're
a chance for someone to tune in and see "what's hot right
now." Such viewers would have likely discovered that
currently "in" is "Twilight," ''Twilight"
and "Twilight."
The teenage vampire romance - if you didn't
know - is a sensation. The movie sequel ("New Moon")
is due out this fall and the film's three stars - Robert Pattinson,
Kristen Stewart and Taylor Lautner - made a scream-inducing
appearance to hype unreleased footage from the film.
While vampires, of course, avoid sunlight,
the cast of "Twilight" avoided the stuffy backstage
green room, showing that they also prefer not to sweat too
much. Many celebrities shuffled around backstage quietly following
their handlers. Not Tracy Morgan.
Though the comedian had an early call-time
Monday for "30 Rock," he was in constant motion.
He sang Cyndi Lauper's "Time After Time" walking
up and down the halls. Criticized for not smiling in a photo,
he replied that he couldn't always be smiling: "I got
to be casual in some."
These moments are the stuff of the VMAs.
It's certainly not the awards, a few of which were handed
out Sunday night. Besides Beyonce and Swift, winners included
Lady Gaga for best new artist; T.I. featuring Rihanna in "Live
Your Life" for best male video; Eminem's "We Made
You" for best hip-hop video; Britney Spears' "Womanizer"
for best pop video.
The winners of one of what will surely be
one of the most-talked about MTV Video Music Awards shows
ever were:
Breakthrough Video - Lessons Learned by
Matt & Kim
Best Female Video - You Belong With Me by Taylor Swift
Best Rock Video - 21 Guns by Green Day
Best Pop Video - Womanizer by Britney Spears
Best Male Video - Live Your Life by T.I.
Best Hip Hop Video - We Made You by Eminem
Best New Artist - Lady Gaga
Video of The Year - Single Ladies (Put A Ring On It) by Beyonce
Best Art Direction - Paparazzi by Lady GaGa
Best Choreography - Single Ladies (Put A Ring On It) by Beyonce
Best Cinematography - 21 Guns by Green Day
Best Direction - 21 Guns by Green Day
Best Editing - Single Ladies (Put A Ring On It) by Beyonce
Best Special Effects - Paparazzi by Lady GaGa