Kamis, 2009 Juli 16

MTV News

MTV News


Drake's <i>So Far Gone</i> Is The Hottest Mixtape Of 2009 (So Far)

Posted: 16 Jul 2009 03:51 AM PDT

The breakthrough tape 'was an important moment for me,' Drizzy tells Mixtape Daily.
By Shaheem Reid


Drake
Photo: Kevin Winter/ Getty Images

Midseason Salute: Drake's So Far Gone

What can we say about So Far Gone that hasn't already been written in this very section? The mixtape was artistically dope and had out-of-control buzz, and we are stamping it as the mixtape of 2009 so far based on the impact and quality. Let the debates begin, but you'll have a difficult time saying what other tape reached the 'hood, the 'burbs and the industry. A universal thumbs-up. Let's hope the album lives up to the hype.

"I am honored by the accolade given to me by Mixtape Daily and just by all the stuff that's going on," Drake said about getting the nod. "I feel like I just spent a lot of years so in tune with music that I really love. Whether it be R&B, whether it be jazz, whether it be rap, whatever. I think So Far Gone was me finding myself as a person and then finding a way to balance all these things that I love and figuring out truly what it is that I'm good at. I think once you find a rhythm or a formula as an artist, it starts to connect with people. You know, people are like, 'OK, he's doing his thing.' That's important to do your thing. You can't be doing what so-and-so is doing or do something that doesn't fit you. ... The best part about finding that rhythm was just being honest. Honesty, you know, rapping about my life and things that occur on a daily basis. So when I draw inspiration, I really can draw from my life, not go make something up or hear someone else's story.

"I can just live and then write," he continued. "And so that really makes my musical process very easy and gratifying. It's been dope. So for people to respond to that mixtape was a great thing."

With all the accolades he's raked in from the mixtape, has Drizzy ever had second thoughts about giving the tape out for free instead of selling it?

"I think that's what we're working on right now," he said. " 'Best I Ever Had' is doing amazing on iTunes. But [the mixtape] was an important moment for me. So no, I don't ever look at it and say, 'I wish that was an album.' It was important that it was a mixtape, 'cause if it was an album, I don't know if it would've had the same impact. I think the fact that I gave that for free, it was kind of brazen, like, 'What? What do you have in your collection, in your catalog, to be able to throw this out there?' And just while we were creating it, it was all of us, you know? Me, 40, Oliver and everyone else involved. It was us, just having fun in a stress-free environment, because we knew we were going to give it away. So I am hoping to bring that same energy to the album. It's harder, because you know that it's your album. You know people have to go buy it and they have to support it or else you're not going to live up to the expectations, but hopefully we can channel that same energy into this project."

The Mixtape Daily famliy sat down and discussed not just Drake's effort, but the street projects by a slew of other artists. Come back Friday for our entire list.

For other artists featured in Mixtape Daily, check out Mixtape Daily Headlines.

Related Videos

Kristin Cavallari Didn't Watch 'The Hills' Before Joining Cast

Posted: 16 Jul 2009 03:51 AM PDT

'When I decided to do it, I watched three episodes to see what I was getting myself into,' she says.
By Jocelyn Vena


Kristin Cavallari
Photo: Jean Baptiste Lacroix/ Getty Images

Kristin Cavallari has a little inside information about the next season of "The Hills." Brace yourselves: Stacie the bartender will be back for more action — and possibly some fights with Heidi and Spencer — when the show returns later this year.

"It's everyone, except for Lauren, who's on it," Cavallari told MTV News. "Stacie is in it too. I didn't really watch 'The Hills' before, so I don't know if she was on it."

Cavallari was unfamiliar with the show, so after joining the cast she caught up with a few episodes and found it as entertaining as the rest of the fans. "When I decided to do it, I watched three episodes to see what I was getting myself into," she said, adding, "I thought it was good."

Fans have been mourning the departure of Lauren Conrad, who left to pursue other interests — but that's fine by Cavallari, since Lauren's exit made room for her entrance. "They've been asking me to join for a few years, and I just thought, 'What was the point,' because I thought it was just like 'Laguna Beach.'

"So with her leaving, I thought it was a good time. No, they've been asking me for, like, four years," she said. "I've been offered my own show, but I've turned it down. I just really wanted to pursue my acting career, which I've done for the past four years ... I've been working, I have a few movies coming out in the summer, and this is a way for my fans to catch up with me."

Related Videos

Kevin Jonas On Engagement: 'It's Going Great'

Posted: 16 Jul 2009 03:51 AM PDT

'We're having a good time,' Jonas says of time with his fiancée.
By Jocelyn Vena


Jonas Brothers
Photo: MTV News

As millions of girls around the world shed a tear over the news of Kevin Jonas' engagement to longtime girlfriend Danielle Deleasa, Kevin's brothers expressed their excitement about adding a sister to the Jonas family.

"It's going great," Kevin told MTV News about the engagement, as his brothers excitedly gave him a hug. "No date yet — me and Dani are just working everything out and figuring everything out. We're having a good time."

"We're happy for him," Joe added. In a tweet posted by the brothers just hours after the pair's engagement news broke, Joe and Nick wrote, "Congrats big brother ... Dani welcome to the family. We can't wait to have you join us on the road! Love Joe and Nick."

Kevin, being the romantic that he is, showed up to Deleasa's New Jersey doorstep after flying overnight from a show in Toronto. He got down on one knee and asked his girlfriend of two years to marry him with a three-carat solitaire cushion-cut diamond surrounded by 210 round, brilliant-cut pavé diamonds. Kevin designed the ring himself, with help from Jacob the Jeweler.

"She said yes, yes, yes, like 500 times super fast in a row," he recalled. "It was tough performing [the night before], knowing that I was going to ask the biggest question in my life to the most amazing girl in the world," Kevin said.

"It is such a blessing that she will be joining our family. ... Family is very dear to us, and we hope we have raised Kevin to be a wonderful man and husband. Please join us in our family's celebration and in congratulating Kevin and Danielle. Thank you for all of your support," Kevin's parents, Kevin Sr. and Denise, said in a statement.

Related Photos

Michael Jackson Dominates Charts For Third Week

Posted: 15 Jul 2009 06:10 AM PDT

Fans buy more than 1.1 million Jackson albums in week of memorial.
By Gil Kaufman


Photo: Sam Yeh/ AFP/ Getty Image

Michael Jackson fans still can't get enough. In addition to tuning in to last Tuesday's all-star memorial to the late King of Pop by the tens of millions, they also hit record stores to buy 1.1 million Jackson albums in the week ending on Sunday (July 12).

According to figures provided by Nielsen SoundScan, that represents the third straight week of double- and triple-digit gains for Jackson's catalog since his death on June 25, with sales moving up 37 percent over last week, when the singer's catalog moved nearly 800,000 units. Billboard reported that in the past two and a half weeks, U.S. record buyers have snapped up more than 2.3 million Jackson albums.

As stores continue to stock up on physical copies of the singer's catalog, the album that remains the best seller is the Number Ones collection, which, according to preliminary numbers, sold 349,000 copies on the Top Pop Catalog Albums chart. None of the Jackson compilations on the charts are eligible for the Top 200 chart because they've been out for more than 18 months and do not currently have a single at radio.

In fact, Jackson occupied the top 12 spots on the Catalog chart, with a combination of solo and Jackson 5 albums, with his seminal Thriller sliding in at #2 on sales of 264,000, an increase of 41 percent over the previous week, followed by the Essential Michael Jackson comp with 149,000 (up 18 percent) and his breakthrough solo album Off the Wall, which moved 107,000 copies (a 108 percent jump).

At #5 is Bad (97,000, up 332 percent), followed by Dangerous (67,000, up 157 percent) and the Jackson 5's Ultimate Collection at #7 (34,000, up 239 percent). The Jackson 5 Millennium Collection is at #8 (17,000, up 280 percent), with the solo Vol. 1 — Greatest Hits HIStory at #9 (15,000, up 98 percent) and HIStory: Past, Present and Future, Book 1 rounding out the top 10 (14,000, up 153 percent).

Jackson also holds down the #11 and #12 spots with, respectively, his final official solo album Invincible (14,000, up 61 percent) and a solo Ultimate Collection (7,000), the only title to lose a bit of ground, shedding 26 percent of its previous week's business.

As they did last week, the top three Jackson catalog albums easily bested the top four discs on the contemporary chart, including Maxwell's #1 debut with his comeback bid, BLACKsummers'night, which moved 316,000 copies, the Hannah Montana 3 soundtrack (137,000), the Now 31 compilation (100,000) and the chart debut of the latest from Maryland pop punkers All Time Low (62,000).

And though his digital sales have cooled over the past week, Jackson still had 17 digital tracks in the top 40 of the Hot Digital Tracks chart, led by his de facto theme song in death, "Man in the Mirror," which held steady at #3 on sales of 130,000. In total, Billboard reported that Jackson sold 2.5 million digital tracks in North America, Europe, Australia and New Zealand over the past week.

For complete coverage of the life, career and passing of the legendary entertainer, visit "Michael Jackson Remembered."

Share your Michael Jackson memories by uploading video and comments to Your.MTV.com or joining the discussion below.

Related Videos Related Photos Related Artists

Jonas Brothers Go From The Stage To The Softball Diamond

Posted: 15 Jul 2009 03:02 AM PDT

Kevin, Joe and Nick squeeze in a pickup game with the Road Dogs before their New Jersey concert.
By Jocelyn Vena


Jonas Brothers
Photo: MTV News

NEWARK, New Jersey — When the Jonas Brothers get some free time, they like to spend it playing softball. So, on Wednesday (July 15), the boys and their team, the Road Dogs, comprised of their road crew and dad Kevin Jonas Sr., decided to play some ball at the Riverfront Stadium just hours before their sold-out concert at the nearby Izod Center.

The boys — Nick plays shortstop, Kevin is right-fielder and Joe is short center — all gathered before the big game to talk to MTV News. Kevin, who was donning a pair of white loafers, swore that he'd change into cleats before the game.

The guys, who played another softball game for charity earlier this week, explained why they chose to name their team the Road Dogs. "We're on the road a lot, and that's what we said about ourselves in the past before we had a softball team," Nick said.

Before they formed a team, their experience on the diamond was limited to, as Joe explained, some games on the Fourth of July. "Pickup games here and there," Kevin added. "Definitely been a part of softball growing up."

So if the guys were professional players, who would they be? Nick chose Derek Jeter, Joe would be Babe Ruth, and the brothers helped Kevin out with his pick. Nick suggested Jorge Posada. "Cool, I'm into that," Kevin said. But it was Joe's suggestion of Manny Ramirez that got a mixed reaction. "Manny, I don't know about Manny," Kevin said. "I think that'd be awesome."

Related Videos Related Photos Related Artists

PS22 Chorus Becomes Famous, Focused Through Pop-Song Covers

Posted: 16 Jul 2009 03:51 AM PDT

'We met Rihanna,' one young singer marvels. 'How many kids like us, our age, got to meet her?'
By Steven Roberts, with reporting by Sway Calloway


PS22 Chorus and Sway
Photo: MTV News

The young singers of Staten Island, New York's PS22 Chorus have been part of the feel-good story of the year.

Internet videos of the fourth- and fifth-graders performing covers of Lady Gaga's "Just Dance," Coldplay's "Viva la Vida," Journey's "Don't Stop Believing" and other pop songs have propelled them into the national spotlight. The chorus has been featured on "Good Morning America" and within the pages of The New York Times.

It might not have been possible without the foresight of chorus director Gregg Breinberg, who the kids affectionately call "Mr. B." Breinberg posted videos of the chorus covering Tori Amos songs, which caught the attention of the singer's fans, including Perez Hilton.

"Perez Hilton has been a huge fan," Breinberg said. "He's really supported us from the beginning. He's the one who really got these kids on the map."

The New York school system has been in a budget crunch, and many schools have been forced to eliminate music programs. The singers' online fame has helped keep the chorus intact.

"These kids need to know that there are other options for them aside from being a reader or a mathematician," he said. "Some people — children, adults — are not meant to be wonderful readers, wonderful mathematicians. Does that mean they have nothing else to contribute to our society? Absolutely not."

Breinberg said learning music can also lend itself to learning other subjects. Breinberg incorporated math into the music curriculum using rhythm equations.

One of his students, Alexandra Stein, said it helped a lot. "Math has just gotten easier for me," she said. "Mr. B is always telling us to focus, and ... when we get into class, we focus some more."

Fifth-grader Justin Restrepo also said his newfound focus is paying off. "He motivates us, because after we do everything, all the work, we always get rewarded at the end," he said. "We met Rihanna. How many kids like us, our age, got to meet her?"

Related Videos

Tokio Hotel Drummer Injured In Bar Fight In Germany

Posted: 15 Jul 2009 01:56 AM PDT

Gustav Schaefer was hit on the head with beer bottles, manager says.
By Jocelyn Vena


Tokio Hotel's drummer, Gustav Schaefer
Photo: David Jost/umusic.com

Tokio Hotel drummer Gustav Schaefer was reportedly injured in a fight at a nightclub in Germany on Sunday.

According to the band's manager, Schaefer, 20, was injured at The Club in Magdeburg, his hometown. Police also confirmed the incident to German news site Bild.de.

"In one of Magdeburg's night clubs, a stranger smashed two beer bottles on the head of Gustav," the band's manager and producer, David Jost, said in a statement. "Gustav had to be treated in the hospital with 36 stitches. The police [are investigating] aggravated assault."

Jost's statement goes on to explain what happened between Schaefer and a group of guys after he began talking to a girl in the club. "All of a sudden some guys surrounded Gustav," he said. "One of them, who had a bald shaved head, started to aggressively pick on him. Suddenly another guy appeared; he hit Gustav straight in his face without warning.

"This started a physical argument between Gustav and the man who had hit him. Other guests of the club allegedly helped to pull the two apart from each other. The rowdy [man] took off and Gustav thought that that was it," the manager continued, "But the guy with the shaved head continued to insult him. Then the vicious attack happened. The second guy approached Gustav from behind on the right side and without warning smashed a beer bottle on Gustav's head from the side. The guy with the shaved head pushed Gustav back really hard."

Jost added that "while he was falling, a second beer bottle got smashed on Gustav's head. Gustav went right to the ground and the attackers fled. The guests in the night club became anxious. Gustav was bleeding insanely from his head and a bunch of people got him to the washrooms. Shortly after, the police and ambulance arrived and took the bleeding Gustav to the hospital."

In photos taken after the incident, it appears that Schaefer had received multiple stitches to several cuts on his forehead area.

"Despite his Tokio Hotel career, Gustav always tried his very best to keep as much as possible from his 'normal' life," Jost said. "Up to now, he has put a strong emphasis on not being accompanied by security personnel while privately going out in his hometown Magdeburg. Gustav is very much attached to his old friends and also to the overall life in his hometown."

Related Artists

Exclusive: Ryan Ross Talks New Music, Moving On From Panic! At The Disco

Posted: 15 Jul 2009 01:26 AM PDT

Guitarist is working out label issues, thinking up a name for his band with former Panic! bassist Jon Walker.
By James Montgomery


Ryan Ross
Photo: Michelly Rall / WireImage

Over the past week, Ryan Ross has talked about splitting from Panic! at the Disco and answered questions about that now-infamous cocaine photo. But all he wants to discuss is his new music.

Because, really, the songs he's written with former Panic! bassist Jon Walker were the reason he decided to leave the band in the first place. They were a departure from the glossy pop tunes Brendon Urie and Spencer Smith were working on — they looked backward as opposed to forward, focusing instead on the crackling punch of old Stax Records 45s and the jangly pop of the Kinks — and the difference in musical direction was great enough to send him packing.

That should really tell you all you need to know about Ross' new tunes: He believes in them so much that he's willing to stake his career on them.

"I think the songs are a lot more focused than what you might have heard on Pretty. Odd. I don't think we're going to do any orchestration. ... They just sound like a band," Ross said. "They're more, uh, I wouldn't want to say 'heavy,' but I guess I would have to, in the sense of, like, early garage music and Kinks and stuff. The songs are shorter and faster, and I guess they're more rock and roll than flowery stuff.

"We were really into a lot of the Motown and Stax Records stuff when we first started. ... I don't know if you'll really hear that, but that's what got us into the idea of writing songs that are fun and short and have a good groove that you can dance to and mixed with the Ray Davies and the Kinks stuff," Ross continued. "It's a lot more groove-oriented, and we realized that maybe that was one thing we were lacking on Pretty. Odd., was that some of the stuff was really long and kind of slower — which is fine — but this time we wanted to write stuff that was gonna be fun live and sound like a band."

If there is a hint from his Panic! past as to what the new stuff might sound like, Ross points to "It's Almost Halloween," the punchy, go-go garage track he wrote with his former bandmates last year. Soon, you'll be able to judge for yourself, because Ross and Walker are preparing to release their first-ever single, a tune they're tentatively calling "Change."

Of course, how they'll release it remains to be seen, because, at the moment, they are a band without a label, caught in a very special (yet not all that uncommon) sort of legal limbo.

"We're not sure how this will all play out, because Jon never signed to Fueled by Ramen, and I am still under contract, so we're trying to figure out whether or not they're gonna kind of end the contract or not," Ross said. "Because it doesn't seem like it's going to be the right place for this stuff, and I think everybody knows that, on both sides, [FBR President] John Janick included. It's just been taking some time to get worked out."

Regardless, Ross said "Change" will be heard soon. And he and Walker are hard at work on their debut album, logging time with Pretty. Odd. producer Rob Mathes and getting help from their musical friends, including Phantom Planet frontman Alex Greenwald and former Panic! touring keyboardist Eric Ronick. The goal, he said, is to have the album out this year, put together a backing band and hit the road. And while he's confident the legal issues will be cleared up, there's still one hurdle standing in Ross' way: His band needs a name.

"Right now, we don't have a name at all," he laughed. "If you've got any good band names, send 'em to me."

Do you have a name for Ryan Ross' new band? Let us know on the Newsroom blog!

Delicious hotlist

Delicious hotlist


Disorderly genius: How chaos drives the brain - life - 29 June 2009 - New Scientist

Posted: 16 Jul 2009 05:14 AM PDT

ウノウラボ Unoh Labs: iモードブラウザ 2.0まとめ

Posted: 16 Jul 2009 05:14 AM PDT

The Typography Manual - For the iPhone and iPod Touch

Posted: 16 Jul 2009 05:14 AM PDT

We Make Stories

Posted: 16 Jul 2009 05:14 AM PDT

Rands In Repose: The Words You Wear

Posted: 16 Jul 2009 05:14 AM PDT

Create Your Own Sun Jar: Lifehacker Edition

Posted: 16 Jul 2009 05:14 AM PDT

Kibardindesign

Posted: 16 Jul 2009 05:14 AM PDT

5 Pet Peeves Designers Have With Developers (and How to Avoid Them) | Webdesigner Depot

Posted: 16 Jul 2009 05:14 AM PDT

101 Killer Wordpress Plugins to Meet Anyone’s Needs - Webitect

Posted: 16 Jul 2009 05:14 AM PDT

mPDF

Posted: 16 Jul 2009 05:14 AM PDT

Why I Hate Social Media - Advertising Age - DigitalNext

Posted: 16 Jul 2009 05:14 AM PDT

10 Websites For Free Mobile Phone Ringtones & Other Mobile Downloads

Posted: 16 Jul 2009 05:14 AM PDT

100 Geeky Places to Take Your Kids This Summer | GeekDad | Wired.com

Posted: 16 Jul 2009 05:14 AM PDT

Remembering Apollo 11 - The Big Picture - Boston.com

Posted: 16 Jul 2009 05:14 AM PDT

Legistalker

Posted: 16 Jul 2009 05:14 AM PDT

Rabu, 2009 Juli 15

MTV News

MTV News


Drake Recalls Family Turmoil, Making 'Successful'

Posted: 15 Jul 2009 03:51 AM PDT

Plus: We list 25 essential songs midway through 2009, in Mixtape Daily.
By Shaheem Reid


Drake
Photo: Young Money

Man — 2009 is halfway over already? The years go by so quick. As always, though, we're here to document everything. All this week, in addition to our regular coverage, we're going to be highlighting all the impact players in the mixtape circuit so far this year. Who had the biggest mixtape? What MC was the most consistent? What albums have we kept in rotation? Rappers, DJs, producers, shows — we've got the best of the best of this year thus far. Today, we take a look at the making of "Successful," as well as listing other essentially dope records of the year (up to this point.). Stay with us all week.

Mid-Season Salute: Drake's "Successful"

Drake's "Successful" is one of our favorite songs of the year thus far. Guest Trey Songz's hook expresses the dreams of a young black male coming from nothing to something, and Drake's raps put the hip-hop nation on notice, while conveying his own desperation and hope and revealing family struggles. Let's not forget Lil Wayne's magnificent at bat as cleanup hitter: "Tired of hearing bullsh--/ Bring on the cow sh--/ Haven't met a smell that's stankier than our sh--." It's not a record that will kill the clubs, but when you just want to listen to superb lyricism and enthralling harmony, it's a must have.

"I remember hearing the record and the drums coming together, and they were just so rocking," Drake recalled. "It has this pocket, and there was no melody yet. I remember [producer Noah '40' Shebib] kind of making the joint, and then he hit this sound, which is the chords that are in there. It was so eerie. Like it was haunting, almost. I was like, 'Yo, that's it. You need to use that.' He started playing this patch, and just every note that he played fell into place. I had this beat sitting here that I love so much, and I didn't know what to do with it. I loved it. Sometimes, as an artist, you find a musical piece that you love so much, you want to do it justice. It's a very overwhelming feeling at times. I actually turned to Trey Songz, and I was like, 'Yo, I got this joint, and I know how it makes me feel. I just don't know how to say it the right way.' "

"Drake told me back in January he was gonna do another mixtape," Songz told us. "At first, he was calling me about interludes and trying to segue his singing into his rapping. That didn't work out, because we couldn't come to terms about what records I was going to be on. Then he sent me this track one night. I was in the studio when he sent it. He said, 'Let me know what you think about it.' It was simplistic, but it knocks. It's eerie, it's dark. The first thing I laid down was the gothic, reverb-driven harmony: 'arrrgh, arrrgh, arrrgh.' I couldn't think of what I wanted to hear on it, so I did a whole bunch of harmonies."

Trey then called Drake to see what direction Drizzy wanted to go in. Unable to come up with a concrete game plan, Trey took things into his own hands.

"The first thing that came to mind was 'I want the money, money and the cars/ Cars and the clothes/ The ho's/ I suppose I just wanna be, I just wanna be successful,' " Trey remembered. "When I'm saying all that, conceptually for me, the deepest part of the record was when I say, 'I suppose.' I supposed that's what success is about. That's what [we're] led to believe."

"I opened it up in my e-mail, and I heard this hook, and it was so powerful to me, because he says all these things: 'I want the money, money and the cars,' " Drake thought back. "And it's like, it's almost like it made me feel like it may not be right what I want, you know? All these things, it's like it made me feel young. It kind of made me feel ignorant to the game. But it was an exciting record even though the tempo is slow. That's what I want. That's what I've been told is success: 'The money, the cars, the clothes and the ho's. I suppose.' The 'I suppose' moment in there is like, it's almost like you're doubting yourself for a second. But at the end of the day, I just want to be successful. So that's what the record meant to me."

One of the record's most endearing and revealing points comes when Drake speaks about his relationship with his mother. "My mother tried to run away from home, but I left something in the car, so I caught her in the driveway," he raps. "And she cried to me, so I cried too/ And my stomach was soaking wet, she's only 5'2."

"When I was going through the creative process for So Far Gone, I was actually at a pretty dark place in my life," Drake explained. "It was a frustrating time for my family, because my grandmother — who is now in her mid- to late 90s — was just losing it. It was hard for my mother to watch. And it was just, it was really at a point where it was like, 'Is this rap thing going to work?' Like, 'Is this my choice? Is this what I am committing to?' Money was an issue. 'Degrassi' [which Drake starred on as a teen] had ended years ago, and we were just all kind of trying to figure stuff out.

"So my mother was going through a rough time," he continued. "And yeah, man, one night she just broke down and tried to actually run away from the house, tried to leave it all behind. It was just a lot going on, and she never would have really left. She would've always come back, but it was just a frustrating moment for her. So I had forgot something in my car, and I came outside and I saw bags sitting by her car. I saw her out there, and she just started crying right away when she saw me. Anyway, I don't wanna get too emotional, but I had to hug her. My father doesn't stay with us, so I had to be security for her and just let her know that everything is going to be all right."

25 Essential Records Midway Through 2009

» Kanye West (featuring Young Jeezy) - "Amazing"
» Drake - "Best I Ever Had"
» Jamie Foxx (featuring T-Pain) - "Blame It"
» Gucci Mane - "Bricks"
» Jay-Z - "Brooklyn Go Hard"
» DJ Webstar (featuring Jim Jones and Juelz Santana) - "Dancing on Me"
» Jay-Z - "D.O.A."
» Lil Wayne and Young Money - "Every Girl"
» Cam'ron - "Get It in Ohio"
» Hurricane Chris (featuring Superstarr) - "Halle Berry (She's Fine)"
» Red Cafe - "Hottest in the Hood"
» Jadakiss (featuring Faith Evans) - "Letter to B.I.G."
» OJ Da Juiceman (featuring Gucci Mane) - "Make the Trap Say Aye"
» Rick Ross (featuring John Legend) - "Magnificent"
» Young Jeezy (featuring Jay-Z) - "My President" remix
» 50 Cent - "OK, You're Right"
» Jadakiss (featuring Styles P) - "One More Step"
» Plies - "Plenty Money"
» Busta Rhymes (featuring Jadakiss and Young Jeezy) - "Respect My Conglomerate"
» The-Dream (featuring Juelz Santana, Ludacris, Rick Ross and Fabolous) - "Rockin' That Sh--" remix
» Rick Ross (featuring Avery Storm) - "Rich Off Cocaine"
» F.L.Y. - "Swag Surfin' "
» GS Boyz - "Stanky Leg"
» Fabolous (featuring The-Dream) - "Throw It in the Bag"
» Soulja Boy Tell'em - "Turn My Swag On"

For other artists featured in Mixtape Daily, check out Mixtape Daily Headlines.

Related Videos

Taylor Swift Promises 'Theatrics' For 2009 VMA Performance

Posted: 14 Jul 2009 08:04 AM PDT

Country crossover star set to perform a new version of 'You Belong With Me.'
By Jocelyn Vena


Taylor Swift
Photo: Candice Lawler

Last year, when Taylor Swift attended her first VMAs, she did double duty as a Best New Artist nominee and the fashion correspondent for MTV News' red-carpet preshow. At the 2009 VMAs, to be hosted again by Russell Brand on September 13, Swift will be one of the night's big performers.

"I'm so excited that MTV and the VMAs have invited me to perform, because I think this year's show will be unlike anything they've ever done!" she said of her debut on the VMA stage with an updated version of her new single, "You Belong With Me."

Although Swift lost her Moonman last year to Tokio Hotel, she'll be pulling out all the stops to dazzle the audience this year. "I love incorporating theatrics into my performances, and the VMAs have always allowed artists to run with that," she said. "MTV has been so good to me. And I could not be more excited about this year's VMAs."

Last year, when Swift's song "Teardrops on My Guitar" was nominated for a Moonman, she spoke to MTV News about how excited she was to have her country music being embraced by a pop audience.

"I didn't think it was possible," she said, recalling her reaction to the nomination. "I was so shocked. I started screaming, 'I get to go to the VMAs!' I didn't think I'd get to go to the VMAs. I'm not that cool. As a country artist, I've been pretty unapologetic about it. [But] it's cool to be included."

Related Artists

Kristin Cavallari Reveals Who She <i>Isn't</i> Dating On 'The Hills'

Posted: 15 Jul 2009 03:51 AM PDT

'Just me coming on the show has created a little drama,' she says of cast friction.
By Jocelyn Vena


Kristin Cavallari
Photo: MTV News

Since it was announced that Kristin Cavallari would be the newest face on "The Hills," everyone has been wondering just what kind of trouble the former "Laguna Beach" star has up her sleeve. With Lauren Conrad no longer on the show, it means Cavallari could be the new queen bee of "The Hills."

Cavallari isn't sure what "Hills" fans should expect from her, because she just started filming the new season recently, but she is sure there will be enough drama to go around for everyone.

"We've only been filming for a couple weeks," she told MTV News. "But I can tell you that just me coming on the show has created a little drama, because I think a few people aren't too excited about it."

There have been rumors that Cavallari and "Hills" vet Audrina Patridge aren't getting along so well, which might have something to do with reports that Kristin has her sights set on Audrina's ex-boyfriend, Justin Bobby.

"I'm not dating Justin Bobby," she said, laughing. The aspiring actress promised that she isn't dating any of the guys on the show. "I dated Brody [Jenner] four years ago. He's like a brother to me. There's nothing going on there."

With those guys out of the way as potential love matches for Cavallari when she makes her big return, would she dare make a play for Heidi Montag's hubby, Spencer Pratt? "No!" she said. "He's married, God!"

Related Videos

No Custody Deal Between Debbie Rowe And Jackson Family, Lawyers Say

Posted: 14 Jul 2009 12:20 AM PDT

Reports claimed that Rowe was to accept multimillion-dollar payment.
By Gil Kaufman


Debbie Rowe (file)
Photo: Pool Photographer/WireImage

Despite multiple reports that Michael Jackson's ex-wife, Debbie Rowe, had accepted a multi-million payment to settle a potential custody battle over the two children she had with the singer, lawyers for both Rowe and the Jackson family said on Tuesday (July 14) that no deal has been reached.

Anonymous sources told the New York Post that Rowe, who relinquished custody of the children, Paris, 11, and Prince Michael, 12, in 1999 after the couple divorced, had agreed to take a $4 million payment in exchange for not fighting Jackson's mother, Katherine, over custody of the kids. That report is "completely false," according to CNN, citing an open letter to the New York tabloid from Eric George, Rowe's lawyer.

"There has been no agreement reached between Ms. Rowe and the Jacksons," George wrote in the letter, in which he demanded an immediate retraction of the story. "Ms. Rowe has not and will not give up her parental rights. No determination has been reached concerning custody or visitation. And Ms. Rowe has not accepted and will not accept any additional financial consideration beyond the spousal support she and Michael personally agreed to several years ago."

George did not return MTV News' calls for comment, but he's expected to be at a Los Angeles family court on Monday, along with Rowe, when a guardianship hearing has been set. The hearing was originally slated for July 13, but was reportedly pushed back at the request of lawyers for Jackson and Rowe, a court official told CNN. Katherine Jackson was granted temporary guardianship of the children following Michael's death on June 25, and while Rowe is not believed to have played an active role in their upbringing since the couple's divorce, her lawyer told CNN two weeks ago that "Debbie has not reached a final decision concerning the pending custody proceedings."

Radar also reported on Tuesday that Rowe had not reached a monetary deal in the custody case, citing Katherine Jackson's attorney, L. Londell McMillan, who said "the reports are false." McMillan could not be reached for comment at press time, but, citing multiple anonymous sources close to the situation, the site reported that "there is no deal that has been reached."

Further fueling the fire of the potential custody battle between Rowe, the biological mother of the two children, and Katherine Jackson, the person Michael Jackson appointed in his will to take care of his three offspring, is a report from Extra in which Rebecca White, who interviewed Rowe for MTV News in 2008, said that the former nurse is conflicted about reuniting with her kids.

"I know she's seeking custody of the children," White told the entertainment news show. "I think she wants the best for the children." However, White supplied an e-mail from Rowe dated July 2, 2009 in which her friend appears unsure about seeking custody, allegedly writing, "I'm not going after custody ... These kids are not mine. They were never mine. They were always Michael's. I was Michael's best friend."

In another e-mail, reportedly sent on July 5, Rowe wrote to White that, "My lawyer is telling me I have to take some responsibility about the welfare of the children ... Do I want the kids? Hell no. Does it look good for me to ask for them? Absolutely. I don't want to look like the woman who gave away her kids and just forgot about them. Would Michael want Joe [Joseph Jackson, the family patriarch] to have them? I think it would be the last thing that he would ever have wanted."

White told Extra that Rowe, who received a multi-million payment in her divorce settlement from Jackson, is motivated to seek custody for financial reasons. "The motivation is money," White said. "I really have to be honest ... If the children aren't the ones she wants, what else will she gain from it?" While the two sides are not due back in court until Monday, White said a secret custody deal is in the works and hinted that a text message from Rowe predicted the matter would be solved on Tuesday.

For complete coverage of the life, career and passing of the legendary entertainer, visit "Michael Jackson Remembered."

Share your Michael Jackson memories by uploading video and comments to Your.MTV.com or joining the discussion below.

Related Videos Related Photos Related Artists

The Best Albums Of 2009 (So Far)

Posted: 15 Jul 2009 03:51 AM PDT

Lily Allen, Mos Def and Kelly Clarkson make the mid-year list, in Bigger Than the Sound.
By James Montgomery


MTV News Picks For Best Albums of the Year (So Far)
Photo: MTV News

The actual midway point of 2009 occurred on July 2, one week after the death of arguably the greatest entertainer of our generation. It was a pretty somber way to cap off the first 182.5 days of the year and, obviously, pretty much everyone's attention was turned to eulogizing the King of Pop (myself included ... twice over).

One piece I had intended on writing was my annual mid-year "Best Of" list, taking a look at my favorite albums released so far. And, well, here it is. There's lots of ground to cover, and I used a lot of words to do it (more than 2,000?! Jeez ... ), so let's get right to it. Here are my picks — some honorable mentions and a straightforward Top 10 — for the Best Albums of 2009 (So Far).

Honorable Mentions

Bat for Lashes, Two Suns
Multiple-personality music from schoolteacher-turned-songsmith Natasha Khan, Suns envisions pop music much in the same way M83's Saturdays=Youth did: through a John Hughes-ian filter. An album filled with gauzy vintage synths and odes to teenage love, as told by Khan and her alter ego Pearl, it's bravely backward-looking and weirdly prescient at the same time. If only all pop could be this good.

Dan Auerbach, Keep It Hid
Black Keys' main man goes solo, makes the best (or at least most somber, rousing, dusty, creaky, pretty, dank, horny, focused, swampy, sweaty, spooky, funky) Black Keys album yet. "I Want More" is a herky-jerky haunted-house ride, "When the Night Comes" is a plaintive, plucky ballad, and "Goin' Home" sounds like a Beatles B-side. There's a lot here, and it's all good.

The Decemberists, The Hazards of Love
The Pacific Northwest's reigning poets laureate ditch the diction and make a batsh-- prog-rock album (OK, it's still plenty wordy — the title track is broken into three sections, with handles like "The Prettiest Whistles Won't Wrestle the Thistles Undone"). They unveiled it with a big, booming show at South By Southwest, and frontman Colin McCoy unveiled some burly sideburns for the occasion. Not surprisingly, this one runs a bit long, but there are hooks for days. Bookworms shouldn't be able to rock this hard, but the Decemberists do.

The Dirty Projectors, Bitte Orca
Grating, overly cutesy choir exercise, or daring, artfully arranged vocal experiment? To be honest, I can't really seem to decide, though given that this album has received near-universal acclaim, it seems to be the latter, which is why I keep giving it second (and third, and fourth) listens. There's something here; I'm just not sure I've got the patience to find it.

Ida Maria, Fortress Round My Heart, and the Dead Weather, Horehound
Both are currently stuck in the six-disc changer of my friend Monty's car, so I will grade them both as incompletes for the time being. But Ida rocks and rambles like the female Craig Finn, and the Weather recalls the rattling, ethereal darkness of the Jesus and Mary Chain, so, you know, based on what I've heard, both are plenty good.

Green Day, 21st Century Breakdown
The album that drew the unenviable task of following the decade's biggest rock spectacle, Breakdown might not be a better album than Green Day's revelatory American Idiot, but it's certainly a more accomplished one. A difficult album about a difficult topic (because, really, how do you encompass this upside-down decade?), it's proven divisive among GD fans and rock critics alike, though, according to my pal Christopher Weingarten, this is the best album of the year. And really, who am I to disagree?

The Pains of Being Pure at Heart, The Pains of Being Pure at Heart
Swoony, gossamer-thin nu-gaze (get it?!?) from a bunch of Brooklyn kids too young to remember My Bloody Valentine or Sarah Records. Somehow, nothing gets lost in translation. Pure, unadulterated joy — whirringly, blurringly so.

Silversun Pickups, Swoon
The year's most unlikely rock-radio success story, the Pickups proved they weren't just flashes in the pan thanks to "Panic Switch," a very angsty track on their very angsty album. Frontman Brian Aubert told us the song is about a nervous breakdown, which is fitting, because it probably gave a few program directors shakes when they realized they had to fit the track next to Shinedown's latest. It's just one song, but at this point, we'll take all the small victories we can get.

UGK, UGK 4 Life
The real King of the South (his highness Bun B) leads a funeral procession for his partner (the late Pimp C) and a victory lap for the beloved Underground Kingz. In keeping with tradition, the beats are smooth like a wood-grain grip, the production is plush like velour seat-covers, and B emits vocal sparks like a dragging muffler. It's hardly a somber affair — more like a joyous celebration, which is probably why Bun included the ode to hirsute ladies. You know, for old time's sake.

The Top 10

10. Mos Def, The Ecstatic
Fun, funky and free — not to mention rambling, shambling and downright terrifying at points. And partially sung in Spanish. Mos Def is pretty much everything at this point (actor, rapper, poet, rocker, dodgy interview subject), and this album perfectly captures his free-wheeling, wide-ranging personae. It leaps through time (and time signatures), genres and generations with glee, gets political and doomy at points, is biting and smart and also a genuine thrill to listen to. Throw in cameos by Slick Rick (as a soldier in Iraq on "Auditorium") and Mos' Black Star partner Talib Kweli (on the J Dilla-produced "History"), and you've got the album his fans have been waiting for since 1999's milestone Black on Both Sides. Welcome back to earth, Ford Prefect.

9. Lily Allen, It's Not Me, It's You
Super-smart pop from a woman who makes no bones about being anything but, It's Not Me details the breakups, makeups, booze-ups and punch-ups of Allen's recent years, only, thanks to her growing strength as a songwriter, it's never alienating or off-putting. Lily's a very normal girl, unsatisfied by her lover (the great "Not Fair"), let down by life ("The Fear," "22") and just looking for a little tenderness ("Chinese") or forgiveness ("Back to the Start"). She's also brave enough to admit that she feels all those things, which puts her head-and-shoulders above everyone else in her field. She's the perfectly (im)perfect pop star, which is just what we need in these imperfect times.

8. Amadou & Mariam, Welcome to Mali
A married musical couple from Mali who just so happen to both be blind? Sounds like a music journo's wet dream (and it probably is). Still, on A&M's Welcome to Mali, the duo make breathtakingly beautiful, undeniably inspired music, blending rock guitars with Syrian violins, Egyptian flutes and Dogon percussion — to name just a few. Sometimes little more than Mariam's achingly pretty voice, others a whirling, rousing boogie powered by Amadou's ax, it's music for all seasons and all people. Released overseas last year, it saw the light of the day here in the States back in March, and I'm thankful to have gotten the chance to hear it. You should too.

7. Wilco, Wilco (The Album)
Am I a 30-something white dude who lives in Park Slope, Brooklyn? Pssht, no. I'm a 30-something white dude who lives in Williamsburg, Brooklyn (there's a difference), and yet I still like the strummy, somber, decidedly NPR-ified version of Wilco. Jeff Tweedy and company appear to be aging gracefully here — except on the unwieldy "Bull Black Nova," of course, which seems to be about murdering someone in a car — and, in the process, they've created the summertime anthem for anyone who owns a battered Volvo wagon and spends their Saturdays playing kickball in McCarren Park. But don't hold that against them.

6. Grizzly Bear, Veckatimest
Beautiful, aural indie-rock from the gentlest band in Brooklyn (or the world, for that matter), Veckatimest — named after a small island in Massachusetts, just in case you were wondering — is full of carefully strummed guitars, hushed drums and, most notably, otherwordly harmonies, the musical equivalent of a million New England summer sunsets. A stunning, gorgeous album, featuring songs like "Cheerleader" and "Two Weeks," which are among the finest you'll hear this year. It leaked super early, but that didn't matter: Grizz fans are loyal, so when the album improbably bowed inside the Billboard top 10 (#8!), Grizzly Bear acted like any muted, genuinely nice indie band would — they Twittered a "thank you" note to their fans. Sometimes nice guys do finish first ... or eighth.

5. Kelly Clarkson, All I Ever Wanted
Yes, seriously. The finest pop album you'll hear this year, full of perfectly crafted, big-budget tunes, All I Ever Wanted is sort of like some high-powered musical F-14, with Clarkson as the pilot. Some might say that the album is her peace offering to Clive Davis (after the whole My December debacle), but I like to see it as her finally realizing her full potential as a pop megastar. We get big, bold tunes like "My Life Would Suck Without You" and "I Do Not Hook Up" mingling with weepers like "If No One Will Listen" and "Cry" (duh). She is empowered yet vulnerable, everything you could ask for in a star of her caliber ... pop perfection, delivered by the best voice in the business. Kelly is back. It's almost like she never went away.

4. Dinosaur Jr, Farm
In 2005, alt-rock elders Dino Jr surprised pretty much everyone by setting aside their differences and reuniting for a European tour. In 2007, they surprised pretty much everyone by recording a new album that was actually pretty awesome. And now they're back with Farm, an album that's even awesomer than their last one. So, I guess the question is: At what point do we stop being surprised? Held up by a couple of epic, solo-laden tracks ("Plans" and "Said the People"), Farm is shiftless, stoner rock that sounds exactly like the dudes playing it look, if that makes any sense. But don't let the glasses, paunches and poor posture fool you — as evidenced by the songs here, these dudes can kick your ass ... once they get up off the couch, that is.

3. Dan Deacon, Bromst
Massive-yet-molecular, full of never-ending builds that head heavenward and deep burrowing lows that strike limestone, Deacon has always made electronic music unlike anyone else ... and on Bromst, he's gone orchestral. Sure, this is still very much music crafted on laptops, but he's added a multitude of instruments to the madness here, which gives songs extra sonic wallop, and moves the album into the space of really, truly great art. This is communal stuff, hands-on and hippified, the kind of music that ascribes to a higher quality. It's also maddening, beautiful, ear-splitting and pin-drop quiet ... a cacophonous spazzer one second, churchly hushed the next. It's carefully crafted and composed chaos, with Deacon holding the conductor's baton. One bone to pick, however: If he really is our Mozart, perhaps he should stop wearing cutoffs.

2. Phoenix, Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix
Retro pop hyper-focused on a futuristic re-imagination of post-modernism and neo-classicism as proletarian touchstones? That you can dance to? Why, of course they're French — but don't let the book-speak fool you. Phoenix are, at their very bourgeois heart, a pure pop band, and on Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix, they've crafted the year's most unabashed ode to the power of pop music. It's an album of undeniable melodies, joyous choruses and razor-sharp hooks — one that you wish would go on for eons (but sadly, is over in just 10 too-short tracks). Sure, conceptually they may be aiming for the stars, but with songs like "Lisztomania," "1901" and "Rome," they're also gunning for your heart, your hips and your lips. History can be awesome sometimes.

1. Animal Collective, Merriweather Post Pavilion
The blogs were right. Proclaimed to be "The Album of the Year" all the way back in January, and it's turned out to be about the only thing I can remember that has actually lived up to the hype ... if not exceeded it. A massive, hugely important record, one that represents one of this decade's most impressive groups operating at the absolute peak of their powers, MPP is the one people are gonna remember for a long, long time. Immaculately produced (Those highs! Those lows!) and full of bizarre, undeniable art-pop ("My Girls," "Lion in a Coma," "Summertime Clothes"), it shows what's possible if you stick to your guns and never, ever sacrifice your ideals. Amazing, breathtaking, undeniable — this time the hype machine got it right: The year really was over in January.

If there's something I've missed — or if you've got a list of your own — you can let me know in the comments below ... or e-mail me at BTTS@MTVStaff.com.

Related Videos

Ashley Tisdale Gets 'Love Drunk' With Boys Like Girls

Posted: 15 Jul 2009 03:51 AM PDT

'I love their music. It's super exciting,' Tisdale says about starring in the band's new video.
By Jocelyn Vena


Ashley Tisdale
Photo: MTV News

It seems Ashley Tisdale likes Boys Like Girls. Tisdale, whose new album Guilty Pleasure hits stores later this month, jumped at the chance to work with the pop-rockers when they asked her to be in the their new video for "Love Drunk," off their album of the same name, out September 8.

"Actually, I'm a really big fan of Boys Like Girls," Tisdale told MTV News on the video's set. "I love their music. It's super exciting. I've always dreamt about being in it."

Tisdale did explain that she had to make one adjustment before signing on for the role — she had to tone down her style for the video. "I think it's very the cute-girl, jeans-shorts kind of beachy-casual, but nice. Those are the things we went through," she explained. "I used to smoke out my eyes and be rocker, so for this I toned it down."

The love that Tisdale feels for the band isn't one-sided. "When we were thinking about girls for the video, it seemed like it would be a great idea to bring her in," frontman Martin Johnson said.

"I think she's going to kill the role," he added, hinting that "she's in a bunch of different scenarios, a couple of different dudes. We're super stoked to have her a part of it. It's cool to have a fan of the band that's an actress come in and want to be a part of it."

And if any of you might be thinking that the guys of Boys Like Girls will be drunk with desire for Tisdale in the video, think again. The song isn't exactly about falling in love. "It's obviously not about being in love," Johnson said. "It's about giving the F.U. to a relationship and a situation.

"It's fun. It's kind of celebrating — skipping your way out gracefully with a nice flip of the bird rather than crying your way home to mommy. It's cool, 'cause the song has a twist to it. It's about having been love-drunk and then saying goodbye."

Related Videos

Britney Spears Shows 'Classy Side' In 'Radar' Video, Director Says

Posted: 14 Jul 2009 09:59 AM PDT

'Videos are a chance for her to vocalize a sense of herself,' Dave Meyers tells MTV News.
By Jocelyn Vena


Britney Spears
Photo: James Devaney/ Getty Images

For Britney Spears' "Radar" video, the pop star ditched the writhing dance moves to explore what the video's director calls "the romance of high-end society and the guys that circulate around there."

The video, inspired in part by Madonna's 1994 "Take a Bow" video, was directed by Britney's longtime video collaborator Dave Meyers, who worked with Britney on her videos for "Lucky" and "Boys" as well as the commercial for her Curious fragrance. The new video centers on Britney being torn between two love interests: a rich guy and a polo player. (Spoiler alert: She picks the polo player.)

"She was in a really good headspace and open to trying new things, and I wanted to try some new things with her too," Meyers told MTV News. "It kind of was a great celebration of trusting one another. ... Now we're sort of both seasoned in our own rights, so it's like two people coming back together, trying to do something fresh and new ... seeking out an actual different technique and stylistic choices and trying to find a form to celebrate them in."

Meyers said when he met up with Spears in May in Santa Barbara, California, he had a specific vision: to show the world Britney's "classy side," instead of the images of a sexed-up Spears that we're all used to seeing. It's the kind of Britney we saw in her video for "Lucky," except more grown-up.

"I thought, 'It's not the first single [from Circus]. Let's be a little experimental and push to not have her around dancers,' " Meyers said. "I feel, I guess, that the videos are a chance for her to vocalize a sense of herself. The media tends to attack her, so I thought, 'Let's show the classy side of Britney and focus on a classy experience, very European-inspired.' And she's at the point in her career where I think this would be a nice step."

Meyers thinks Britney's career mirrors Madonna's career in some ways. Much like with Madonna, when Britney does something, "Everyone seems to watch."

"She kind of filled [Madonna's] shoes," Meyers said. "[But] everything is done in a Britney way. She's not Madonna, and Madonna is not Britney. It seems like Madonna made the same choices that were right for her at the time, to class her up when she had just done a sexpot video. She was riding that image train too. She was leading that image train, and I think that Britney has done that as well."

Related Artists

Cam'ron And Mase Reunion Part Of A 'Bigger Project'

Posted: 14 Jul 2009 04:27 AM PDT

Miss Info sits down with our hip-hop experts to talk about the duo's new track 'Get It,' in Off the Dome.
By Shaheem Reid


Cam'ron
Photo: Johnny Nunez/ Getty Images

Give us some warning after making us wait for almost 10 years!

Mase and Cam'ron dropped the collaborative effort "Get It" over the weekend and caught everyone, including New York radio personality Miss Info, off guard. Info, one of my longtime homies, had the exclusive record on her Web site late Friday. According to her, there are more songs to come between the childhood friends and former members of the underground rap group Children of the Corn, with Big L.

Info sat down with me and my partner Rahman Dukes to discuss how the record came about, the impact of the song and what this means for Mase's impending comeback.

" 'This is part of a bigger project' is what I was told," Info said of Mase.

Last we heard, Killa and Jim Jones were busting on Mase during a Hot 97 radio show Info was hosting.

"What was so shocking is that no one's really seen them together or anything like that," Info said. "Nobody knew they squashed some of their old disputes. But behind the scenes, they had resolved their issues, and they've been friends for a little while now. Last year, they got together, they played ball, in Jersey or somewhere like that, from what I understand. The friendship has already been in the works, which is what I like about how this record came outta nowhere. It's not a fabricated publicity stunt, which is what some people were thinking it was. They didn't get together only for a record. They were already friends."

And that's how I loved these guys best: together as Murda Mase and Killa Cam.

"We grew up listening to Murda Mase, Children of the Corn," I said. "That was our introduction to them."

Are you happy Cam and Mase are back together? What else are you expecting from the duo? Sound off below.

Related Artists

'Twilight' Fans Rejoice: Muse To Perform At The Video Music Awards

Posted: 14 Jul 2009 02:03 AM PDT

Stephenie Meyer's favorite band is scheduled to take the stage on September 13.
By James Montgomery


Muse
Photo: Dave Hogan/ Getty Images

On September 13, the MTV Video Music Awards will return home to New York City, taking over spots all around the Big Apple, including the iconic Radio City Music Hall. Outrageous Brit Russell Brand will once again be serving as the emcee, and the show will feature high-powered performances from the likes of Taylor Swift and Muse.

It will be the British art rockers' first U.S. TV appearance, and they'll be unveiling "Uprising," the first single off their much-anticipated album, The Resistance. And while they might not be a household name in the States just yet, we're betting that's going to change real soon, thanks in no small part to a little series of books called "Twilight."

Any member of Team Edward (or Team Jacob) can surely tell you that Muse are Stephenie Meyer's favorite band — she thanked them for their inspiration and called them "rock gods" in "New Moon" and "Eclipse," and then decided to dedicate "Eclipse" to the band for providing "a saga's worth of inspiration." Their "Supermassive Black Hole" also appeared on the soundtrack for the "Twilight" film.

But, perhaps not everyone who's read the books is aware of the full impact the band had on Meyer ... their music even influenced key scenes in the series, as she told MTV News last year.

"I was in Forks [Washington, the city where 'Twilight' is based] with my sister — before any of the books had come out, just sort of scoping it out," Meyer said. "I was working on 'Eclipse' at the time, and I had [Muse's album] Absolution in, and 'Hysteria' came on and, in my mind, the kiss scene between [Bella] and Jacob just choreographed itself, down to how many steps he took toward her. So whenever I read that now, I always hear the song in my mind."

And you thought they were just another English band.

The 2009 MTV Video Music Awards will take place on September 13 at 9 p.m. ET. Nominees, celebrity presenters and additional performers will be announced in the coming weeks. To be the first to find out the inside scoop, follow the official Inside MTV Twitter account at Twitter.com/insidemtv.

Related Artists

Exclusive: Ryan Ross Talks About Cocaine Picture

Posted: 13 Jul 2009 10:33 PM PDT

'I didn't even really know [the cocaine] was there,' ex-Panic! at the Disco frontman says.
By James Montgomery


Ryan Ross
Photo: Ethan Miller/ Getty Images

Last week, just days after Panic! at the Disco announced that Ryan Ross and Jon Walker were leaving the band, a certain photo began making the rounds on message boards and gossip sites ... one that seemed to confirm most Panic! fans' suspicions about why Ross had split in the first place.

The picture shows the guitarist reclining on a couch, with three very young girls around him. In the foreground, there is a table cluttered with bottles of liquor, cigarettes and one very prominently placed bowl of what appears to be cocaine, chopped into little lines and ready to be snorted.

In a lot of ways, the photo looks like it could've been taken backstage at a Led Zeppelin show, circa 1970 ... which is what bothered most Panic! fans, still angered by news of the split. To them, the picture was proof that Ross was more concerned with partying and chasing women — with being a rock star — than he was in continuing with Panic! at the Disco, which made him the bad guy in the whole situation.

To his credit, Ross remained silent about the photo and the backlash it created — until Monday, that is, when MTV News spoke to him about parting ways with Panic!, a conversation that also saw him addressing the rumors of his hard-partying ways, his reputation in the Panic! fanscape and, of course, that now-infamous picture.

"I'm usually the bad guy. That's how it always seems to be," Ross laughed. "I've tried not to read a lot of the comments our fans have been making about this, because I really hope they don't think it was me who caused the split. We were all just going in different directions, musically. That's it."

And so, about that picture — well, Ross said it was taken the day after a party at a friend's house, and that he had no idea the cocaine was on the table. It wasn't his, and he didn't partake in it the previous night. Oh, and he also denies the rumors that he somehow leaked the photo himself, to build buzz for his and Walker's upcoming project.

"I planned the whole thing!" he laughed. "No, [the photo was taken] a couple of weeks ago — I do remember, believe it or not. I'm not gonna tell you whose house it was at, but yeah, there was a party the night before, and I slept on the couch, and we took a picture. I didn't even really know [the cocaine] was there."

And those girls in the photo? Turns out they're not underage, or groupies, or anything salacious, really. They're just Ross' friends, and one of them accidentally caused the photo to be leaked.

"Oh, I definitely [know them] — it's my friend Zee and a couple of her friends. And actually, they're all older than me," he laughed. "I think one of the girls put the picture on her Facebook, and was like, 'Oh my God, I didn't even know it was on the table,' and then I don't know what happened. But I think they got in more trouble than I did."

Related Artists

Delicious hotlist

Delicious hotlist


Advanced jQuery

Posted: 15 Jul 2009 05:03 AM PDT

10 Rare and Cool jQuery Plugins | Queness

Posted: 15 Jul 2009 05:03 AM PDT

25 High Quality Free Fonts for Professional Designs

Posted: 15 Jul 2009 05:03 AM PDT

5 Useful And Creative Ways To Use WordPress Widgets | Developer's Toolbox | Smashing Magazine

Posted: 15 Jul 2009 05:03 AM PDT

10 Interesting lightweight jQuery plugins for web developers

Posted: 15 Jul 2009 05:03 AM PDT

5 Business Models for Social Media Startups

Posted: 15 Jul 2009 05:03 AM PDT

Creating Thumbnails Using the CSS Clip Property

Posted: 15 Jul 2009 05:03 AM PDT

The Importance Of Wireframes In Web Design And 9 Tools To Create Wireframes | Onextrapixel - Showcasing Web Treats Without Hitch

Posted: 15 Jul 2009 05:03 AM PDT

Create a Content Rich Tooltip with JSON and jQuery | Web Resources | WebAppers

Posted: 15 Jul 2009 05:03 AM PDT

SOS Classroom

Posted: 15 Jul 2009 05:03 AM PDT

Pasta with Roasted Cauliflower and Prosciutto Recipe | Simply Recipes

Posted: 15 Jul 2009 05:03 AM PDT

Open Web Tools Directory

Posted: 15 Jul 2009 05:03 AM PDT

25 Examples Of Light Effects In Web Design | Design Shard

Posted: 15 Jul 2009 05:03 AM PDT

jQuery Sliding Tab Menu for Sidebar Tutorial | Queness

Posted: 15 Jul 2009 05:03 AM PDT

Why Non-Profits Are So Good at Social Media - Conversation Starter - HarvardBusiness.org

Posted: 15 Jul 2009 05:03 AM PDT

Selasa, 2009 Juli 14

Delicious hotlist

Delicious hotlist


SlickMap CSS Demo

Posted: 14 Jul 2009 05:31 AM PDT

best birthday cake | smitten kitchen

Posted: 14 Jul 2009 05:31 AM PDT

Carsonified » Get Started with DNS

Posted: 14 Jul 2009 05:31 AM PDT

30+ More Ways to Create Twitter Groups

Posted: 14 Jul 2009 05:31 AM PDT

Fluent: The Razorfish Social Influence Marketing Report Fluent: The Razorfish Social Influence Marketing Report

Posted: 14 Jul 2009 05:31 AM PDT

Create a Vertical, Horizontal and Diagonal Sliding Content Website with jQuery | Queness

Posted: 14 Jul 2009 05:31 AM PDT

25 sitios para ver películas gratis online, en español y subtituladas » Dotpod

Posted: 14 Jul 2009 05:31 AM PDT

iPhone App Reviews by the Experts at Macworld | Macworld

Posted: 14 Jul 2009 05:31 AM PDT

Spicy, Citrusy Black Beans Recipe | Simply Recipes

Posted: 14 Jul 2009 05:31 AM PDT

PingWire

Posted: 14 Jul 2009 05:31 AM PDT

Newegg - Power Supply Calculator

Posted: 14 Jul 2009 05:31 AM PDT

CSS 3 Cheat Sheet (PDF) | CSS, Freebies | Smashing Magazine

Posted: 14 Jul 2009 05:31 AM PDT

45 Sets of Seamless Vector Patterns | Creative Nerds

Posted: 14 Jul 2009 05:31 AM PDT

15+ techniques and tools for cross browser CSS coding

Posted: 14 Jul 2009 05:31 AM PDT

Exit Strategy NYC for iPhone, iPod Touch, Blackberry, Android(G1), and Kindle

Posted: 14 Jul 2009 05:31 AM PDT

MTV News

MTV News


T.I. Sends Message From Prison In 'Remember Me' Video

Posted: 14 Jul 2009 03:51 AM PDT

Video, featuring Mary J. Blige, premiered Tuesday.
By James Montgomery


T.I. in 'Remember Me' video
Photo: MTV

On May 26, T.I. arrived at the Forrest City Federal Correctional Complex to begin serving a 366-day sentence stemming from his 2007 arrest on felony weapons charges. And while at least two mixtapes (one featuring Kanye West and Chris Brown) have hit the streets in recent weeks, we've heard nothing official from the man.

On Tuesday (July 14), Tip premiered the video for his duet with Mary J. Blige, "Remember Me," a song that leaked a couple of weeks before he went behind bars. The track is the first single from the re-release of his Paper Trail album, scheduled to hit stores next month (although those plans could change, according to a rep for Atlantic Records). But either way, the video is here, and it represents T.I.'s first official message from behind bars.

Of course, he recorded the song and taped the video before he began serving his prison sentence. But the video and the song were both made with the express purpose of letting T.I.'s fans (and detractors) know that the King may be gone, but he's not gone for good. And one day, in the very near future (like around May 30, 2010), he'll be back to reclaim his throne.

And to that end, the video (directed by Jesse Terrero, who's helmed clips for G-Unit, Don Omar and Daddy Yankee) opens with T.I. — clad in an orange Department of Corrections jumpsuit, hands cuffed behind his back — walking the halls of a dark penitentiary, being escorted to his cell by a prison guard. As he walks, he begins a somber soliloquy, telling the viewer that "it matters not how many times you fall down; what matters most is how many times you rise."

Then Mary J. Blige comes in to sing the hook, and the song kicks in the same way all of T.I.'s great tracks do — anthemic, rattling, ticking low end, with his sing-song cadence ducking and weaving between notes — and we're off and running. T.I. spits verses aimed at those who may have forgotten him (or anyone else in his position) while he was behind bars, or might be lining up to kick him while he's down: former friends, lovers, business associates, parents. We see scenes of various inmates' outside lives happening without them — friends laughing, wives cheating, mothers grieving — and we get a sense of the helplessness that they must feel. It's powerful stuff.

But the message is clear: All things must pass, and every obstacle will be overcome. The naysayers will be proven wrong, the King will reclaim the throne. If it sounds biblical, well, it sort of is.

T.I. returns at the end of the video to drive the point home. In a second soliloquy, he serves notice to all those who doubt him or have forgotten his place in the game. "Just a friendly message for everybody who thought I was gone forever: It's a year and day and counting, understand that?" he sneers. "By the time you hear this, I'll probably be halfway home. Now remember that, suckers."

Related Videos Related Artists

Kristin Cavallari Compares 'The Hills' To Filming A Movie

Posted: 14 Jul 2009 03:51 AM PDT

MTV show is 'more like hanging out with people you know rather than acting and memorizing lines and stuff,' she says.
By Jocelyn Vena


Kristin Cavallari
Photo: MTV News

Kristin Cavallari doesn't care what you think about her. For years, she made trouble and brought the drama as the resident mean girl of "Laguna Beach," and she was Lauren Conrad's foe long before Speidi came into the picture.

Now she's ready to come back to reality television and in an interesting turn of events, she will take Lauren Conrad's place on "The Hills." So while LC is busy being a best-selling author, Cavallari will be stirring the pot with the remaining cast of the show. And if you think now that she's an actress she'll be acting on the show, think again.

"It's not [scripted]," she told MTV News about the longstanding rumors that the show is not as real as it seems. "Everyone's going to have an opinion," the "Van Wilder: Freshman Year" star added. "And everyone's going to think what they want. You can't really change that."

Cavallari is quick to point out that life on set is completely different than life in the real world with cameras filming your every move. "It's definitely different," she said. "I love being on set and being in a movie. I think it's so much fun. And 'The Hills' or 'Laguna Beach,' it's more like hanging out with people you know rather than acting and memorizing lines and stuff."

"Van Wilder: Freshman Year," also starring "Mean Girls" actor Jonathan Bennett, comes out on DVD on Tuesday (July 14).

Related Videos

Jay-Z Talks About Paris Jackson's 'Heartbreaking' Words At MJ Memorial

Posted: 13 Jul 2009 09:48 AM PDT

Hov also explains reason for cancellation of his Atlanta show on Sunday.
By Shaheem Reid


Jay-Z
Photo: Jerritt Clark/WireImage

It takes a big personality to stop a Jay-Z concert, and they don't get much bigger than the one who stopped Hov's show in Atlanta on Sunday night: Mother Nature. Jay's stop off at ATL's Chastain Park Amphitheater was cancelled due to poor weather.

"I pulled up to the venue, they said the rain was gonna continue for another three or four hours," Hov explained during a call to DJ Drama at Atlanta's Hot 107.9 radio station Sunday night. "I said, 'Well, I seen Diana Ross at Central Park in the rain [in 1983].' They said, 'Nah, it's a thunderstorm, you can't do that.' "

While on the radio, Jay joked that he was upset with Drama, Young Jeezy and Jermaine Dupri because they allowed the weather stop his show.

"I would never let in rain in my city. I got control over things like that," Hov laughed. Although the show was cancelled, Jay said he was hoping to make the date up when he gets a break in his schedule — he said he's looking at August 13 for a make-up date.

Jay also said he was prepared to give the fans in ATL a tribute to Michael Jackson during his set, as he did at previous stops on the tour.

"He's the greatest entertainer of all time," Jigga added. He said he did not see all of the Jackson memorial last week, but saw some the clips and was moved by Paris Jackson's words for her dad.

"I saw bits and pieces of it on the news," Jay said. "It's heartbreaking when you see his daughter. You realize he was their protective system. They were always with him and he always shielded them from the media. You realize they don't really know anything else. It's heartbreaking."

Related Videos Related Photos Related Artists

Jessica Simpson And Tony Romo Break Up

Posted: 12 Jul 2009 11:29 PM PDT

Pair split up before Simpson's birthday last week, according to online reports.
By Jocelyn Vena


Tony Romo and Jessica Simpson in February 2009
Photo: Splash News

According to several online reports, Jessica Simpson and Dallas Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo have split up. Sources said the split happened on Thursday, a day before Simpson's 29th birthday.

"She is heartbroken," a source told People.com. "She loves Tony. But it's been difficult lately. He's busy with his career and she's getting ready to shoot her show ['The Price of Beauty,' for VH1]. They decided to part ways."

When asked for confirmation by MTV News, a rep for Simpson would neither confirm nor deny the reports, saying, "We don't comment on our clients' personal lives."

People.com also reported that on Simpson's birthday, Romo was seen partying at Los Angeles nightclub My House. "He had quite a few girls stop by his dance floor table," another source told the site. "Romo was sipping Grey Goose and having a fun time with the boys."

UsMagazine.com also reported that the couple have split, citing a source as saying, "It's been a long time coming." An additional source told the site that the couple could reunite at any time. "They go from one fight right into another, without a second's break. It's always something with Jessica."

The first source added that Simpson canceled her birthday party because of the split, but is doing "OK."

In the wake of the split, Simpson has been hitting up her Twitter account, relaying news that she canceled her birthday party but revealing little else that would seem to suggest a split. "Barbie party didn't happen, but I turned 29 and feel like I am on top of the world yelling I love getting older."

She later tweeted, "The beat of a heart can make you realize the special rhythm of a person ... just listen. I like the irregular beat; it send me to another place ... Everyone needs to know that hope floats ... grab the strings and pull it back to you."

The singer, 29, and Romo began dating in November 2007.

Recently, Simpson's ex-husband, Nick Lachey and his longtime girlfriend, Vanessa Minnillo, also broke up.

Related Photos Related Artists

Joe Jackson Says Michael Was Not Well Enough For London Shows

Posted: 13 Jul 2009 12:05 AM PDT

MJ's father and AEG Live trade barbs in press over O2 Arena concerts.
By Gil Kaufman


Joe Jackson
Photo: Frank Micelotta/Getty Images

If everything had gone according to plan, Michael Jackson would have kicked off his This Is It concerts, a spectacular, career-reviving series of greatest-hits shows at the O2 Arena in London on Monday (July 13). Instead, Jackson's family and concert promoter AEG Live are trading barbs in the press over whether the 50-year-old King of Pop was even healthy enough to perform any of the scheduled shows, to say nothing of 50.

"The comeback tour was a good idea, but the wrong idea about it," family patriarch Joseph Jackson said in an interview with ABC News. "Michael told me himself that he agreed to 10 shows. But they went and added all these other shows.   "I was worried about his health," Joe added. "No artist can do those many shows back to back like that, and so I knew Michael couldn't do all those shows without some rest in between them."

Michael's father and sister LaToya Jackson have proclaimed in recent interviews that they believe the singer might have been the victim of foul play. "I do believe it was foul play," Joe told ABC. "I do believe that. Yes."

LaToya told England's Mail on Sunday that she believes her brother was murdered by shadowy group of advisors who encouraged him to abuse drugs.

Another Jackson associate, former financial advisor Leonard Rowe (who is not related to Jackson's ex-wife Debbie Rowe) told "Good Morning America" that even though the singer appeared full of energy in a brief rehearsal clip release by AEG following Jackson's death, the star was not well and physically unprepared for the grueling concert series.   "Michael Jackson was not ready," Rowe said. "He was not fit. If you can call weighing 110, 115 pounds fit ... no."

Jackson family representatives did not respond to calls for comment at press time. In a statement released to MTV News, AEG Live President and CEO Randy Phillips on Monday claimed Jackson had informed them that "he had no formal, informal or business agreements with Leonard Rowe."   Phillips said AEG was informed that Jackson had given "specific instructions not to involve [Rowe] with any matters concerning Michael Jackson or our relationship with him." Rowe told ABC that he never received the May 20 letter from Jackson severing their business association, adding that he was so concerned about Jackson's alleged addiction to prescription drugs that he called several Jackson family members in the days before the singer's death in an effort to set up an intervention.

"We planned to bring everyone together as soon as possible to get everyone onboard," Rowe said. "But we were just a little bit too late." He also rebutted Phillips' claims that the rehearsal clip filmed the night before Jackson's death was proof that the singer was in fine performance shape.

"Every move you see Michael Jackson doing on the rehearsal stage is a move I can do," Rowe claimed, noting the lack of some of Jackson's signature spins and more athletic steps.

Phillips told ABC that Jackson would have averaged just over two shows a week during the run of This Is It gigs, which were scheduled to wrap in March 2010, and that "if that was too many, then one would have been too many." In a statement, Phillips said that it was Jackson's request that the run of O2 gigs top out at 50.

"Our original agreement with Michael Jackson called for 31 shows," Phillips wrote in the statement. "It was our option as the promoter to only announce the first 10 concerts knowing that based on the response to the pre-sale, we could and would add the additional 21 shows to the initial on-sale. The pre-sale response was so overwhelming that we went back to Michael's representative at the time, Dr. Tohme Tohme, to inquire whether Michael would be willing to increase the number of shows. He reported that Michael was willing to increase the number of performances to 50."

Phillips said AEG did receive word from Tohme and Jackson that it was important to space the additional shows out over an extended period of time and that the company rent a nearby estate for the singer and his family so that they would not be "trapped" in a hotel suite while in London. "He told us he was also motivated by the opportunity to establish a record to be entered into the 'Guinness Book of World Records' for the run he was about to embark on," Phillips wrote.

Phillips also said in the statement that when he tried to change Jackson's mind about the length of the residency, "He told me to shove off."

Jackson's manager, Frank DiLeo, told ABC that the singer, whose age, gaunt appearance and long history of medical issues caused some to question whether he had the wherewithal to complete such a long engagement, was not being pushed in the lead-up to the O2 shows. "He built up his stamina," DiLeo said of Jackson, who was training with former bodybuilder and original "Incredible Hulk" star Lou Ferrigno. "There would have been no problems, I don't think, with him doing this tour. Nobody was pushing him into it. Nobody was overworking him. You know, all those reports are false."

For complete coverage of the life, career and passing of the legendary entertainer, visit "Michael Jackson Remembered."

Share your Michael Jackson memories by uploading video and comments to Your.MTV.com or joining the discussion below.

Related Videos Related Photos Related Artists

Does Gucci Mane Belong On Our 2009 Hottest MCs List?

Posted: 14 Jul 2009 03:51 AM PDT

Plus: Lil Boosie and Hurricane Chris 'clique up'; Rich Boy wants people to 'party instead of get violent,' in Mixtape Daily.
By Shaheem Reid


Gucci Mane
Photo: MTV News

His fans are yelling for Gucci Mane. "Goocheee!," to be exact. He's been doing it this year. Man — 2009 is halfway over already? The years go by so quick. As always, though, we're here to document everything. All this week, in addition to our regular coverage, we're going to be highlighting all the impact players in the mixtape circuit so far this year. Who had the biggest mixtape? What MC was the most consistent? What albums have we kept in rotation? Rappers, DJs, producers, shows — we've got the best of the best of this year thus far. Stay with us all week.

Don't Sleep: Necessary Notables

Mixtape: Bad Azz Hurricane

Headliners: Lil Boosie and Hurricane Chris

Key Collaborations: The entire tape is a joint effort, but listen for "Chest Wide Open," "Deebo" (word to Tiny "Zeus" Lester) and "Hate to Hear Our Name" (if only for the intro to the record alone — LOL!)

Essential Info: We know how popular Lil Boosie and Webbie are down bottom, but Mr. Bad Azz is coming with a different connect this time around: Hurricane Chris.

"All of us was doing our thing in Louisiana, [me and Boosie] came to the point where we said we got to lock up and smash," Hurricane said. "We started smashing our area, and it started going nationwide. We got real unity. Louisiana been doing it. We had to clique up and connect. The mixtape was the first one. The mixtape is like an album, though.

"We're like family," HC added of Boosie. "He's a real dude, and he's like a man of his word. He knows my people, and I know his people. I know his mama. When we go in the studio, it's like peanut butter and jelly. We go right in, and it's fun. It's not even work to us. The life we live is a whole album. A day with me and Boosie is like a DVD. We go in the studio, it's easy. It's cake work. We work, baby."

Hurricane said he wants to work with Webbie one day as well. "I ain't never got on nothing with him," he said. "I'm looking forward to getting on something with him whenever he's ready, I'm ready."

Boosie and Hurricane are going to drop more mixtapes and eventually do a group LP. "It's finnin' to get real drastic," Hurricane forecasted. "There's a lot of people that thinking they're running it with the mixtape game. We finnin' to lock in. We got a million more. Get ready for that, and get mad about it. Boosie and Hurricane.

Hurricane's solo LP, Unleashed, comes out August 18. "I got some bangers on there. Boosie on there, Busta Rhymes on there, Beenie Man on there twice, Ludacris, Plies, Mario — it's jamming. The whole nine."

Hurricane's follow-up to "Halle Berry" is a club track called "Roc-A-Late" and a song with Sean Kingston for the ladies called "So Excited."

Mixtape: Kool-Aid, Kush & Convertibles

Headliner: Rich Boy

Songs We Can't Stop Playing: "Put Me in the Game," "Convertible Status" and "Send For Me"

Essential Info: Rich Boy said he stopped sipping on syrup and went back to Kool-Aid. Real talk. Of course, he had his herbal stimulant handy as well. "In the recession, people still wanna have fun," Rich Boy said about his mixtape title. "They can't have big-boy fun. I said I'mma keep it simple."

Rich and his producer Super Villain built songs in a Mississippi studio and sent them out to DJ Scream. Scream and Rich have been connected longer than they originally knew. "We didn't know each other, but we both went to the same college, Tuskegee," Rich recalled. It wasn't until years later that they would link up at a 2008 party at an ATL club and decide to knock out a tape. Rich and Super Villain would record in Mississippi and send the tape out to Scream in GA via e-mail.

"I like the records that make you wanna party instead of get violent," Rich said. "That's what I was trying to do with the mixtape — calm violence down a little bit. We're cooking it up. I wanna show people I'm stepping up my game."

Part two is coming out with Scream later this summer, and Rich also has a mixtape with Bigga Rankin dropping soon as well. If he doesn't make a fourth-quarter release date, Rich said to look for his album Buried Alive in February.

Other Heat This Week

» Alchemist - Chemical Warfare (independent album)
» Drake - Heartbreak Drake 2

Mid-Season Salute: Gucci Mane

Brrrr! The hustle is cold. This year, Gucci Mane has been on the most-active-MC list. There's a bunch of Gucci mixtapes in the streets, and now his sound has translated from the trap to the pop charts. Mariah Carey, Mario and Black Eyed Peas all know the deal. They've called in the Gucc for guest appearances.

Like it or not, with the 'hood and 'burbs jockin' this Atlanta native, we had to call him out here in Mixtape Daily for being one of the impact players in 2009 thus far.

So only two questions are left surrounding Gucci's rise: Can he deliver a classic album, and is he hot enough to land on our Hottest MCs in the Game list this year?

"I watch it, you know what I'm saying?" Gucci said in Atlanta of the infamous list. "I be wishing I was on there. I would love to be on there [this year]. If I don't [make it], I respect them. Most of the time they have them [lists] down to a science. You have to earn that."

List or no list, Gucci said he's going to stick to his high-output work ethic.

"I won't say I'm the best rapper in the game," he admitted. "I'm not even my favorite rapper in the game. But I say I am probably one of the hardest-working people in the music business. That's what I pride myself on [and blame] having success on, just being consistent."

For other artists featured in Mixtape Daily, check out Mixtape Daily Headlines.

Related Videos

Exclusive: Ryan Ross Talks About Leaving Panic! At The Disco

Posted: 13 Jul 2009 04:06 AM PDT

'It got to the point where there might have been too many cooks in the kitchen,' the guitarist tells MTV News.
By James Montgomery


Ryan Ross
Photo: Gary Wolstenholme / Redferns / Getty Images

Last week, fans were shocked when news broke that Panic! at the Disco were parting ways with guitarist Ryan Ross and bassist Jon Walker, who left the band to "embark on a musical excursion of their own."

But according to Ross, the split had been in the cards for sometime now. It just took everyone a while to realize it.

"It's been a little while, a few months since we started thinking that this might be the best thing to do," Ross told MTV News late Monday (July 13). "Jon and I had been writing a bunch of stuff on the road, and it just got to a point when we were off tour, when we were talking about getting together and working on this stuff, that it became pretty apparent that we all weren't wanting to go in the same direction. There was a period where we weren't really talking to each other all that much, and Jon and I were just living at my house and continuing to write. And we kind of realized we needed to get over not speaking and figure out what was actually going on. So we all sat down and pretty much came to the conclusion that the best thing for everyone was to do what we did."

Ross said the split was largely due to creative differences between him and Panic! frontman Brendon Urie. Seems Urie wanted the band to explore a more polished pop sound (like the demo they posted on their Web site last week), while Ross — and, by extension, Walker — was interested in making retro-inspired rock.

Or, as he put it: "Brendon's more of a Peter Gabriel fan, and I'm more of a Ray Davies fan."

"Brendon has always been a fan of pop music, but that's such a broad term, because I guess I would say I would be too, but in a different way. Jon and I are still very much influenced by the Beatles and Beach Boys stuff and the Kinks and stuff like that," Ross said. "And so that's the stuff we were writing at my house ... that's the stuff we're going to make now. I haven't heard any of Brendon and [drummer] Spencer [Smith]'s stuff, to be honest."

And eventually, those differences — coupled with the lack of communication between both camps — came to a head. So late last month, Ross had lunch with Smith, and the two cleared the air, both realizing that perhaps the best thing for all parties involved was to just head their separate ways.

"Spencer and I had lunch and caught up for a while, and then the big question came up, like, 'Well, what do you want to do?' and I said, 'Well, I think it might be best if we kind of do our own think for a while,' and he said, 'I'm glad you said that, because I was going to say the same thing,' " Ross recalled. "And there was really no argument, which is really the best way that could've worked out. ... I think really everybody will be happy doing what we're doing. Me and Jon are really excited about what we're working on, and those guys are happy too. I guess it got to the point where there might have been too many cooks in the kitchen."

Ross made it clear that the split was very much an amicable one. He said that while he hasn't heard any of the new Panic! stuff, he wishes Urie and Smith well and still considers them both to be his friends (they spoke over the Fourth of July weekend). The same cannot be said, however, about his former boss — Decaydance Records honcho/ Fall Out Boy bassist Pete Wentz — who seems to have clearly aligned himself with the Urie/Smith camp following the split.

"I haven't spoken to him in a while, since this happened. I guess I've been meaning to call him back. He called me, but I've missed a lot of phone calls this week," Ross said. "We're not sure [whether Ross' and Walker's new band will be on Wentz's Decaydance Records]. I'll have to talk to him, but obviously from what's happening online, I think he's ... he's written a lot about them. I don't know if they're working together on their stuff. I'm not really sure, but it's been awhile since we've spoken. It's strange. It's kind of weird."

At press time, Wentz hadn't responded to MTV News' request for comment.

And though his relationship with Wentz might be finished, Ross still considers the split from Panic! to be a "good, healthy" thing. He said he and Walker are writing and recording songs (with Pretty. Odd. producer Rob Mathes) at a lightning-quick pace, and they'll soon be revealing the fruits of their labor. The only thing that bothers him, he said, is the way many Panic! fans have treated him since the split. It seems that he's become the bad guy in the whole scenario, and he doesn't think that's fair.

"That was probably the worst part, at least for us, knowing people were going to be upset," he said. "I hope nobody blames anybody. It seems like, because those guys are sticking with the name, that it looked like it's mine and Jon's fault. I think a lot of people blamed us for quitting or ruining the band, and that part didn't really seem fair, because it wasn't the case. ... Musically, it got to a roadblock, and we were going one way and they were going the other. But fans will be able to hear it soon enough. And then maybe they'll change their minds."

Related Artists

Did Game Go Too Far With Jay-Z Dis?

Posted: 13 Jul 2009 04:51 AM PDT

Our hip-hop experts wonder if Jay will fire back at the Compton MC, in Off the Dome.
By Shaheem Reid


The Game
Photo: Annette Brown/Getty Images

If you've been keeping up with hip-hop for the past week and change, Game didn't surprise you when he dropped the Jay-Z dis record "I'm So Wavy" this weekend. (Well, maybe Game's references to Kanye West's girlfriend, Amber Rose, caught you off guard.)

Game has never been shy about throwing darts. From his quarrels with the G-Unit to the Compton MC calling out video vixens, Game spits. This time, though, he's going against somebody he's cited as one of his influences. It's going to be interesting how things pan out.

Rather than just report the news, I decided to team up with my partner Rahman Dukes to do what we do every day: talk about what's going on in hip-hop. Now, we're letting you inside the inner realm of MTV News' hip-hop team.

"Jay's been a huge influence on him, as Jay has the entire hip-hop game," I told Rahman. "I guess this is a case where you're Kobe Bryant and you want to go up against Jordan."

My P.I.C. Mr. Dukes wasn't sure if Young Hov would respond. We both appreciate what Game and Jigga bring to the table, but Rahman felt that Game playing Jay because of his age isn't a strong point in the dis song.

"My thing was like, 'Jay ain't gonna respond to him,' because he wasn't talking nothing new," Rahman argued. "But you keep throwing all that Beyoncé talk in, I think homie might jump in there. I think Jay probably should just fall back from it. One thing I will say that I'm not appreciative of, and I don't think that anybody — especially a rapper, somebody that's responsible for pushing the culture along — it doesn't make sense to dis somebody because of their age. We should be celebrating how old Jay is and he's still in the position he's in. Same thing with LL. Rap is the only genre where you run into these issues."

"You have to keep moving the culture along," I told him. "How you gonna tell somebody 38, 39, even 40 years old you have to retire? ... Jay is one of the, if not the, nicest on the mic right now. You can't fault him for wanting to make music. But I just heard an interview with Jay and DJ Drama. [Jay] says he's closing the Blueprint 3 out right now. ... I'm thinking we're gonna hear a response."

Now you know what we think — what are your thoughts? Do you think Jay will fire back at the Game? Post your comments below.

Related Artists

Exclusive: Debbie Rowe In Her Own Words

Posted: 12 Jul 2009 10:11 PM PDT

Read MTV News' complete interview with Michael Jackson's ex-wife, mother of Paris and Prince.
By James Montgomery, with reporting by Rebecca White


Debbie Rowe
Photo: MTV News

In early 2008, MTV News received a pitch from a writer named Rebecca White, who said she was good friends with Debbie Rowe, the mother of Michael Jackson's first two children (Michael Joseph Jr., a.k.a. Prince Michael, and Paris and his wife for more than three years. White said she had been invited to Rowe's horse ranch near Palmdale, California, and that Rowe was interested in doing an on-camera interview.

Obviously, we were interested in making it happen.

So, on April 6, we sent White and a crew to Rowe's ranch. To be honest, we didn't know what we'd find when we got there. Since divorcing from Jackson in 1999, Rowe had retreated to the dusty hills, having granted custody of the children to Jackson (a decision she has said she may contest in the wake of Michael's death, since Michael's mother was recently appointed their temporary guardian) and returned to her first passion: raising and training horses.

So when White sat down with Rowe, she was (rather understandably) reluctant to speak about her marriage to Jackson and her relationship with their two children. When pressed about either subject, she changed the topic or — in a couple of instances — declined to answer the question.

Instead, Rowe spent the majority of the interview reminiscing about the time before she became an unwilling popular-culture figure — back when she was Debbie Rowe, dermatologist's assistant. She spoke about her lonely childhood and her early love of animals, and about her strained relationship with her mother. She spoke about working with Arnold Klein, the dermatologist who has been rumored to be the biological father of Prince and Paris (a charge he has essentially denied). And she also spoke briefly about the first time she met Michael Jackson.

She talked at length about her horses, about raising them and caring for them and finding solace in them. When read in full, the interview is a rather fascinating glimpse at a woman who could never truly escape the media, no matter how hard she tried.

So, in the interest of giving you a rarely seen glimpse behind the curtain, we're presenting the interview in its entirety. It's Debbie Rowe, as you've never heard her before: on her own terms and in her own words.

MTV: Tell me about your life before "Debbie Rowe" and after "Debbie Rowe."
Debbie Rowe:  I've always been Debbie Rowe. It started in Washington. My dad was in the service. We lived in Alaska and Nebraska and Riverside and Los Angeles, and then I moved to the Valley when I was 18  — "OHMIGOD!" — and lived there until I was ...

MTV: Were you a Valley girl?
Rowe: [Only] because I lived there.

MTV: Did you do the "likes" and "you know"?
Rowe: No, never did that.

MTV: Did you have high hair?
Rowe: No. You can look at my high school picture, it's the same hair. It's sad, I'm not one for change. I'm good with routine. I'm consistent, which is what I am doing with riding. I told my trainers I want consistent cadence, and then I think I can do Rookie of the Year. That's the big goal. I'm going to be 50 at the end of this year. When the Futurity happens in November, I will be 50 still and I want to be Rookie of the Year if I can, for reining.

MTV: Alright, 18 years old.
Rowe: Went to Valley College, decided I didn't want to do that.

MTV: What was your family like? You were always moving?
Rowe: We moved every two and a half years because my dad was with the Air Force.

MTV: Brothers and sisters?
Rowe: Older sister, younger brother, older half sister.

MTV: All lived in the same house?
Rowe: No. Didn't know I had a half sister until I was 12 or 13. So that was interesting.

MTV: What does your mom do?
Rowe: Am I supposed to be nice?

MTV: You're supposed to be truthful. Rowe: She was breathing. Let's just leave it at that. Like I said, I [had] 11 dogs, 32 horses, a Go Away sign above my bed — I have no issues.

MTV: Now with Michael Jackson and the tabloids. We'll get to that.
Rowe: No we won't. I came out here to get away from everything, to do the horses.

MTV: And you want to leave that in the past?
Rowe: It is the past. So I just let it go.

MTV: Do you regret anything?
Rowe: No. If you regret anything in your life, then you haven't learned any lessons. Not that I had to learn any lessons from anything, but, no, there isn't anything that I would do differently. Maybe [there were] a couple of horses I would [have] bought when I had the chance, but no.

MTV: Could you talk to us about meeting him?
Rowe: I don't want to.

MTV: First impression?
Rowe: Well, I had his poster on my walls as a child. We're not going there ... move on, honey.

MTV: Cut to moving up to Palmdale.
Rowe: Cortile, beautiful, windy Cortile. Moved here because I had five horses and was driving all day to different trainers to work them out.

MTV: And you were still living in Beverly Hills?
Rowe: Yep, and I decided I need my horses here. And Carmen, who is my people, she had a daughter that lived up here and said let's move up here, and fortunately I had some friends that bought my house so I could move up here. This house came on the market, I saw it, and the way it was set up was perfect for the horses I had. And Christine and Steve were all over it, and they said OK, and they hadn't even put their house up for sale.

MTV: Was moving up here the way to get away, to be with the horses, to start a new chapter?
Rowe: I don't think I have segments in my life, it runs all together. I think everybody does. You do different things at different ages, but everybody goes through the exact same thing whether you ... if I were 16, "Daddy, I want a pony." Everybody goes through the same things at different points of their lives, and it's my time to be up here. And I like being by myself.

MTV: Do you get bothered up here?
Rowe: No. I do miss the social part of working, but that's about it.

MTV: But I mean, I would think, with the horses, you're up first thing in the morning and you do it all yourself.
Rowe: I have two people that help me, and when the vet's here, the vet's here, and when the shoer's here, the shoer's here. ... And I am starting to take one of the horses here to Fort Tejon to ride three times a week, so it's going to be a lot busier. But it's all a means to an end.

MTV: What's the end?
Rowe: Rookie of the Year. And to have a horse that I have bred that does something, be it my very first thoroughbred which, yay, it's a boy ... not that boys are better than girls, but you see more of them on the track in a winning situation, or as a reiner or a cow horse.

MTV: What would be your proudest moment?
Rowe: I think it depends on what ... I think everything. I'm proud of everything I do. I don't mean to be prideful. I'm not prideful. I'm not arrogant.

MTV: No, you're not arrogant at all.
Rowe: Good, thanks. But I don't think there's anything I'm not proud of. I'm happy with pretty much everything I've done.

MTV: And the new babies ...
Rowe: Yes, two on the ground, three to go. Breeding four more this week.

MTV: Prepping these guys to be something great? This is a business you're running. ...
Rowe: Yep. I have all foundation-based mares, which means their bloodlines go back. They're solid. I'm introducing new bloodlines and hoping that I get that right ... baby that not only is pretty but ... Pretty is as pretty does, any way you look at it. But hopefully just pretty will do.

MTV: If you could be remembered for one thing, or there's something that someone might think about you, what would it be, Debbie Rowe? Horses?
Rowe: Yeah. I was Debbie Rowe, Dr. Klein's nurse, for 20-some-odd years.

MTV: Do you still talk to him?
Rowe: Yeah.

MTV: Is he still in business?
Rowe: Yeah. Still there. Sharp as a tack. Amazing. You're nobody unless you're a patient with him. I've always felt that way with him, and I've always told him that. I said, "Unless someone has a file in your office ... they haven't gotten there yet." Then again you have to try and get an appointment there with him.

MTV: Could you get an appointment with him?
Rowe: Probably not. [She laughs.] That's OK.

MTV: You don't need it.
Rowe: Not yet.

MTV: In one word, your life, definitely "normal."
Rowe: Thank you.

MTV: There's not much about you that you hide. I would go away from here saying that you're real.
Rowe: Thanks. I don't know that I even want to be remembered. I mean, I do and I don't. I don't know ... let's see ... Rookie of the Year. Right now that's all I want to do. I want to focus on that. I want to lose the weight. I want to not have my horse tremble when I bring the saddle towards him. I want to do the work and be an accomplished horsewoman.

MTV: You mentioned to me that you thought it was not going to be such a big deal, the choices that were made.
Rowe: It's not my big deal. This is a big deal. These are two very big deals. [She gestures toward the horses.]

MTV: The other stuff not so much.
Rowe: To some people, for whatever reason, but not to me.

MTV: Was it tough on you? Was it harder than ...
Rowe: Are you going back to those things? Oh my God ...

MTV: I'm talking about you! I've seen it happen to people. I've been through it a little bit. It's a little bit more eye-opening. ... The people around you tend to change. The people that you thought you could trust tend not to be so trustworthy.
Rowe: Ya think?

MTV: I would go and do exactly what you did — be like, "I'm good on my own. ..." Was that the toughest part?
Rowe: I still clean house emotionally probably every six months to see what's up. There's less to clean up now than there was. I'm still very naive about stuff. Obviously, you are here. Let's see how this comes back to bite me in the ass. I want to think that ... I truly want to think that people are good. So far, I'm having ... I'm still looking. So I don't know.

MTV: Do you think people think things of you before they know you?
Rowe: Everybody does.

MTV: They read and then they think — it's a backwards way about things.
Rowe: Yeah. But it's kind of cool when [someone says], "Oh, I didn't know that was you." That means I haven't changed. People who have known me for a long time say I haven't changed. This is back to where I was.

MTV: People who know you the best, would they say that you're constant?
Rowe: Yeah. Throughout the whole thing, I've been pretty constant.

MTV: Have you ever wanted to shut the doors?
Rowe: I did that for years.

MTV: Really? You don't seem like the type to back down from ...
Rowe: It's intimidating. It's scary if it's something you didn't bargain for and something you don't want. I don't understand people who want that kind of attention. I don't get it.

MTV: And sometimes they ask for it. I can think of a couple people out there in the spotlight that really want that attention and go for it, and that was something really new to you.
Rowe: Yeah.

MTV: Didn't want it.
Rowe: No. Still don't want it. Except ... I guess I'm using you. I am using you to further my horsemanship.

MTV: That's OK.
Rowe: Do you feel used? [She turns to the camera.] Do you feel used?

MTV: Yes, but I like it.
Rowe: It's a good use. You just want a ride. You just want a ride. My horse is over there getting fat. Matika, you don't need it. It's like, "Have another Ho-Ho!" Jeez!

MTV: Well, I don't want to beat a dead horse. ...
Rowe: Shhh! There are no dead horses!

MTV: Is there such a thing as a glue factory?
Rowe: I think there is. People actually eat horse meat. They just closed ... I don't know all the details. I could be wrong. My understanding is they just closed the last horse-meat factory in California. And now there's a huge thing to export horses to Arizona, places like that. I have some friends from Belgium who told me they eat horse meat. It was like, "Dude." You have a floppy string and it's doing this [She waves her arms.]. I told you not to wear the hoodie.

MTV: I like the hoodie, Mom!
Rowe: Just wrap it around your ta-ta and call it a day. I'm bleeding. Where am I bleeding from? Blood, anyone?

[Someone off camera says, "From inside one of your index fingers, we think."]

Rowe: You're right. You know what? I have been washing horses and I'm allergic to water. Tourniquet! Please, a tourniquet! Ambulance? Little attention here? Little help? Better now. What about you, Rebecca White?

MTV: It's not about me. It's about you, Debbie Rowe.
Rowe: No, it's about the horses. It's about Painted Desert Ranch. It's about Rookie of the Year. It's about the trainers.

MTV: Can we come back after Rookie of the Year?
Rowe: You need to come back before Rookie of the Year. It's a process. You haven't seen anything very cool until you've seen someone practically Velcroed to a saddle.

MTV: What does it take to become Rookie of the Year?
Rowe: Lots of riding. Lots of trainers telling you things repeatedly, daily. Like within a 60-minute period, repeatedly.

MTV: You're up for it?
Rowe: Yeah.

MTV: It there a particular horse you have in mind?
Rowe: His name is the Rock in Hollywood. He is a 10-year-old black buckskin. ... He's a Hollywood Dunnit. He's right now in Burbank. We're bringing him up here so I can do more riding. Then I'll be looking for another horse. He's a little too old. He's my school horse. I'm just learning how to do reining. It's difficult. It's coordinating, and I'm not ... I took ballet, I think, just to learn to fall gracefully.

MTV: Have you ever gotten hurt?
Rowe: My pride. Getting dumped and you feel stupid. No, you can get hurt, but ... I don't do everything by the book. I'm sure I open myself up to getting hurt a lot more because I treat my babies like dogs.

MTV: They are your babies.
Rowe: I literally treat the baby horses like they're golden retrievers, and then when they're off their moms ... no discipline. "What happened? You were so sweet. Then you grew up."

MTV: Just like any kid, right?
Rowe: I'm gonna assume.

MTV: I won't go there. You just might smack me. I'm not going to go into the stuff you don't want to talk about. I think we've done the horses. Anything else you want to talk about?
Rowe: Well, no. I don't know. This is like a test. This is like being in school and it's a test. Like a pop quiz.

MTV: Name the president of the United States.
Rowe: Now? Bush. I saw that on the news today. I'm good. [She laughs.]

MTV: Who are you going to vote for?
Rowe: I don't vote for federal. I only vote local.

MTV: Why?
Rowe: I know it's stupid and people would fight me on this, but I don't think my vote in the grand scheme of things makes a huge difference. And I'm more concerned with what affects me here than later on. That's why I elect the local people, so they do what I supposedly want.

MTV: Do the locals leave you alone?
Rowe: Yeah. There are great people up here. Really great people up here.

MTV: They don't care?
Rowe: No. Everyone's got their own life up here, so it's cool. It's very cool.

MTV: Is it true that one of your dogs almost killed a paparazzo?
Rowe: [She nods.] Trespassing.

MTV: Word to the wise.
Rowe: Word to the wise: I have dogs. Ask Yasmine [from MTV News, who was bitten by one of the dogs]. She met one. Her calf met one. Her calf is now mooing. This will be good in court.

MTV: All right, boys.

[Debbie interacts with the guys off-camera.]

MTV: Pop culture. Let's go there. What's your favorite TV show?
Rowe: It was "Grey's Anatomy." Then the writers went on strike. Kinda dwindled. "Men in Trees" is pretty good. Now they're changing that story line. "Dancing With the Stars"!

MTV: Who's your favorite?
Rowe: No one this year. Kristi Yamaguchi is going to win, hands down. She's the athlete, she's the dancer on ice.

MTV: "American Idol" fan?
Rowe: Uncle Bob comes up. We watch it in New York time so we can go out and have dinner. We are by the TV at 5:00 so Uncle Bob can watch "American Idol." He says, "I don't care. I just want to see who gets kicked off." Why are we sitting here for 90 minutes? It's Tuesday. If we don't care until tomorrow and it's Tuesday, why are we on the couch?

MTV: Because they can get you on the couch.
Rowe: Having a glass of wine, the dogs and "American Idol."

MTV: Is that your perfect night?
Rowe: No.

MTV: What's your perfect night?
Rowe: Perfect night is not staying up to wait for a baby to come. A perfect night is going to bed by 8:00, watching an hour of the news, checking the TiVo to see if there's anything I missed that's worth watching. If I'm not really tired, I'll read. Because I have to wear glasses now. I am over 40. Once you hit 40, you have to wear glasses.

MTV: You're hitting 50 this year.
Rowe: Fifty, the big 5-0. So I'll have to wear two pairs of glasses. And then getting up at 5:30.

MTV: Do you listen to music?
Rowe: Yes, I listen to everything except rap or heavy metal.

MTV: What's on your iPod?
Rowe: Right now I'm listening to "The Narrows" by Michael Connelly. It's endless. No offense, Mr. Connelly, but this book is just endless.

MTV: Books on tape?
Rowe: Yes, unabridged. When I drive to Arizona, I can get through a book. Usually there and back.

MTV: Favorite movie?
Rowe: I just got — and it's in the truck — I just got "Sweeney Todd." I'm looking forward to seeing that. I don't go to the movies. I'm one of those people that, unless someone says, "You have to see this on a huge screen because it's going to lose something at home." Then you might be able to talk me into going. The last movie I saw was the remake of "The Omen." Oh no, worse than that! I went to Oklahoma City for the Futurity and Travis Percy was with me. And Travis was exhausted. The Percys live up here. They're wonderful people. I met them through my vet. One of my horses had to have surgery. It was an emergency. They came at 10:30 at night, not even knowing me, with a huge trailer. And they said, "Let's go to Moorpark," which is about 90 miles from here. So Travis, he's a cowboy. Nicest, nicest kid. The whole family is wonderful. So I said, "Travis, I'm going to Futurity and I don't want to go alone. Do you want to go with me?" Talk about an accent. He is so cute. He's about as tall as you. They have property there. Amazing family. So Travis and I go, and it was the movie with Vince Vaughn where he's like Santa's brother ["Fred Claus"]. Not only do I pay for the movie, and there are only two other people other than us in this huge movie theater in Oklahoma City. I'm tired. This is the last movie I want to see. I don't even think I'd watch this when it came on Starz. Travis is asleep right after the credits, and I'm like, 'I'm being courteous. Travis wanted to see this. I'm dying. I'm watching it.' Finally I look over and I go, 'Dude! Get up. We're leaving. If you're going to sleep, I'm going back to the hotel.'

MTV: Did you watch the movie?
Rowe: No! We left. Pretty predictable.

MTV: What's your favorite movie then?
Rowe: That I could watch over and over again? It's about a seven-minute film of Mercedes at the classic.

MTV: Horse show?
Rowe: Horse show. That's my most recent favorite. But probably my most favorite of all time — it scares me even now. You're too young. Steven Spielberg's first film out of film school: "Duel" with Dennis Weaver. O-M-G. That movie will scare you because it's possible and it's terrifying. This guy — you never see his face — he drives a diesel and stalks this guy. You've never seen it? You have to!

MTV: Who's your favorite actor? Or actress?
Rowe: Actor, actress, alive or dead?

MTV: Either.
Rowe: I like the black-and-white movies. I like the Humphrey Bogart, John Wayne, even though he was color, too. Barbara Stanwyck is probably my favorite actress because she reminds me of my grandmother. They looked exactly the same.

MTV: Does your family live in the area?
Rowe: My dad lives in France, near the Basque area. He's remarried to a lovely English woman, Magda, who, we've told my dad that if he ever gets divorced, we'll keep Magda and he can find a new family. We're moving on. We're all becoming English. My mother is in Los Angeles. We don't have a relationship. My sister is in Prescott, Arizona, in a beautiful area. When I was there she said, "Let's go look at property for you." So we went looking. Where she is, it's limited — you can only have so many horses per acre. I would want to live next door to her. We were always friends growing up.

MTV: Are you still close?
Rowe: Yeah, I adore her. I try to go out there every three weeks. Pack up a horse and, "I'm coming out!" The last show we went to, we got there at 2:00 in the afternoon. My horse didn't go till 8:30 at night. She stayed there the whole time. And my friend Casey has a place out there. The thought of moving horses — I just put these stalls up last year, so I'm just now getting comfortable here, so the thought of just taking everything there ... I can't do it. And Carmen wouldn't come. I'd have to get Carmen's whole family to go. Pack up the whole clan!

MTV: Let's back up. "Celebrity Apprentice," fan?
Rowe: That is my favorite show, reality-wise.

MTV: Why?
Rowe: I don't have the business gene. I just think it's amazing they have so little time to make something happen, and business just runs so fast, I don't know how these people keep up. I truly don't.

MTV: Do you not have the business mind or do you not have the cutthroat business sense?
Rowe: Both. Horses, this is the most expensive hobby next to sailing, so no I have none.

MTV: How much does a day in a life up here cost, just to keep running?
Rowe: The horses and stuff?

MTV: Everything.
Rowe: It's seasonal, because we have the breeding season and the babies. That happens, there's two big shows the beginning of the year in Arizona that we go to. Then we start having babies, then breed back within eight days what we call a full heat, so depending on the stallion, I'm still at the lower end, I pay anywhere between $2,000 and $3,000 for a breeding fee.

MTV: For one?
Rowe: For one. Because I don't know that some of the horses that are for $7,000, $10,000 are necessarily worth that. However, you go to the thoroughbred and it's 40, 50, $60,000 and that was just too scary for me. I thought about doing that and I got scared, so that's why I only have the one thoroughbred, and that horse was a gift from my vet. He got her, she ran on the track, she placed second twice, I believe, and then she didn't — she was fourth or fifth or something, and she had a metabolic issue where she couldn't race, she tied up. So he sold her, his wife wanted her so he had to buy her back, then he was going to get rid of her again, so I said why don't you just let me have her. I said you can't just discard an animal. Just because she's not gonna race does not mean she's not gonna produce well. Well, he's from Oklahoma. ... "I don't have the time to wait for that." [But] I do. Let me have her and she will always be your horse and she is his horse, and this baby that was born, if he decides that he wants to race this horse, that's his baby.

MTV: So on a typical day, what are we talking, or a week, a month?
Rowe: A month, on my place, or are we talking everything?

MTV: Everything.
Rowe: I have horses that are in Temecula, I have horses that are in Tejon, I have horses that are in Bakersfield.

MTV: Everything, the whole ball of wax in a month.
Rowe: Probably close to 25, $30,000 a month.

MTV: So you keep this up every day, just yourself, and you turn around ...
Rowe: No, I have two people and I have Carmen. If it wasn't for my trainers, if it wasn't for my vet, especially my vet. My vet has pointed me in the right direction. I mean, it was a lot more before I met Michael Sanders. And I met him because his card was on the refrigerator when I moved in and I had a sick horse, and I said call that vet that's on the refrigerator. He is probably one of the smartest people — and I know smart people, I love smart people — and that's ... I miss that part of L.A. Not that the people up here aren't intelligent, they are, but there aren't a lot of academic people up here, so I miss that part of L.A. But Michael Sanders is brilliant, I went to the Barrett Auction, which is the big thoroughbred auction. Alex Trebek was liquidating his barn and he had paint thoroughbreds — I had never seen a paint thoroughbred before — but I went with Dr. Sanders. I call him Dr. Sanders ... everybody calls him Mike, it's like no, you went to school, you're Dr. Sanders. A baby would walk out and he says, Tell me what's wrong with that baby." It's for sale, why does there have to be something wrong? "No, tell me what's wrong with that baby, look at those legs." He wants you to know what he knows.

MTV: So you learn from him, you're still learning from him every day?
Rowe: Every day, yeah, every day.

MTV: So you could do "Celebrity Apprentice," you've got the business sense, the ...
Rowe: No, I don't. I'm on a allowance, and they say please don't go over this. Like Oscar's horse needed a pretty halter.

MTV: Do you go over your allowance a lot?
Rowe: Yes, I do, but I'm getting better. The thing is that with the horse business, especially with breeding, you don't sell the babies right away, you don't see a profit even if you do. Now there are a ton of places that do turn a huge profit, but they've got stallions standing and whatever. If I broke even, I would be happy. I'm not doing it for the money.

MTV: Do you ever get nervous?
Rowe: Scared every ... all the time.

MTV: Are you financially safe up here?
Rowe: I think so. I hope so. If I'm not, I'm pretty screwed at this point if I'm not. In which case, Mr. Trump, can I answer phones? "Donald Trump's office, how can I help you?"

MTV: What about "American Idol"?
Rowe: Like I said, Uncle Bob's favorite show.

MTV: OK, who's your pick?
Rowe: I think the Australian guy.

MTV: Michael Johns.
Rowe: Yes. I think he has a good stage presence. Anybody that can do, in my opinion, cover tunes, cover songs, is a huge advantage. Because if you write your own music, those are your own interpretations, but to interpret someone else is difficult, I think.

MTV: Do you think he's an entertainer?
Rowe: I don't know that they allow them to entertain, because from what I've seen and when the camera's pulled back, you see the little X's on the floor. So they're only allowed to go from here to there, so I think they're really restricted. But the ones that have gone on, like Carrie Underwood, I think she is very talented. I don't know that she is, she's country music so I don't know how much of a performance it is. I guess we have to define what [is] performance versus entertaining, because there are so many different ... they're different things. I mean, you go to the Stones. Even if you hate the Rolling Stones, you have to go see them. If you hate the Grateful Dead, when Jerry Garcia was still alive, you had to go see them. Just for the experience of the people, cuz it's not just going to the concert and seeing them. I don't like concerts — I love Fleetwood Mac, but I would never go see them in concert.

MTV: Did you ever see Michael in concert?
Rowe: Yeah.

MTV: How many times?
Rowe: Lots of times.

MTV: Did you go on tour, did you see that life?
Rowe: Yes, and it was amazing. Could I do it, no.

MTV: Is it scary, is it suffocating?
Rowe: I think it depends if you choose it or not. If you choose it, it's not, because it comes with the territory. From the outside looking in, it's overwhelming and you wonder how people can deal with it but it's nothing I want to do.

MTV: Yeah, you have to be thick-skinned for that.
Rowe: Yeah, you have to be thick-skinned for anything you do, which is why I'm scared to actually ... saying out loud that I want to do something, because I'm harder on myself than anyone else is. Because I do know what I can do and what I'm capable of doing and I'm afraid of disappointing myself. I'm not afraid of disappointing anybody else, just myself.

MTV: When Michael's onstage, there's just thousands of people screaming at him, did you ever ...
Rowe: That, I think, with anybody who's been in that situation it's, I can understand where you can get the rush, even in a studio situation. Like "American Idol," where they don't have, they've gotta have like maybe 50 people in that studio the way they've got it set up. It might be bigger, I don't know. But the soundstage is not huge, huge, huge. And you figure the stage takes up half of it, but even for them to play to an intimate [audience], to have those people that want to hear you that badly, that to me, you got it. But you've got to put out, and what if you don't put out? Look who you're going to disappoint, and then you are going to feel so crummy. "I could have done better."

MTV: Would you ever want that?
Rowe: No. That's the rub with the horse competition. In theory it's you and the horse. But the fact is that you've got all these other competitors, trainers and people watching so I need to get over that. I told my one trainer, Donny Bricker, who wears pink when he rides my pink horse — I think he thinks I'm insane. I said, "Donny this is what I want to do. I want to take Booker and I want to ride him to the end of the year and then I want to get a new horse that is more horse than that but something I can handle to go to Oklahoma City." And he said, "OK, where do you want to show?" "I want to show at the shows nobody watches." He started laughing and said, "How are you going to do that?" Fortunately his wife is on my side and she said there's Green Grass or green something where they show show then reining at the end when everyone's gone. The class that I'm in is at the end of the show, when everyone's tired and has already gone home.

MTV: So you've got the competition with nobody watching?
Rowe: I'm hoping. A girl can dream.

MTV: How many competitions have you been in?
Rowe: Right now, none. I haven't competed as an adult. I competed as a kid on barrels and stuff but not as an adult.

MTV: Are you going to?

Rowe: Yeah. My one trainer wanted me to. It's so pathetic, I can't have just one trainer, I have to have three. But I take everyone's opinion into account because people know, but they know different things for different reasons. One trainer won't take one horse, but another trainer can make that horse into something. So they move around. Literally, I have a posse.

MTV: You have an entourage, you are somebody, Debbie Rowe.
Rowe: I'm Debbie Rowe. I'm a horse breeder. I'm painted desert ranch. Matika, get your face out of the bucket! Look pretty! Matika [She whistles.]! Yeah, she's so into this, she started this whole nightmare. What was your question?

MTV: I think it was competiton, but... Rowe: I was supposed to be in a competition at the end of this month. It was supposed to be my first competition, but with the babies I haven't been able to. October.

For complete coverage of the life, career and passing of the legendary entertainer, visit "Michael Jackson Remembered."

Share your Michael Jackson memories by uploading video and comments to Your.MTV.com or joining the discussion below.

Related Videos Related Photos Related Artists

Comic-Con 2009 Preview: 'New Moon,' 'Iron Man 2' And More

Posted: 13 Jul 2009 03:39 AM PDT

We give you a rundown of what to expect at the year's biggest and best pop-culture fest!
By Larry Carroll


Robert Pattinson at the 2008 San Diego Comic-Con
Photo: Albert L. Ortega/ WireImage

Every summer, the Hollywood Santa leaves the North Pole for San Diego. He slips down the Convention Center chimney for four very special days, leaving good geeks exclusive treats, never-before-seen footage and movie-star encounters. They call it Comic-Con, and it is Christmas for movie lovers.

Once again, your MTV Movies team is getting ready to cover the Con like no one else can. From preview night until the last stormtrooper turns out the light, we'll be providing extensive coverage across our Web site and blogs. To give you a peek inside our planning, here are the top 10 panels we're eager to see — be sure to keep it here July 23-26 for the latest news. (Keep in mind that all times are PT, and if you see MTV there be sure to give us a Vulcan salute, OK?)

"New Moon" (Thursday at 1:45 p.m., Hall H) — As anyone who owns the DVD has seen in the bonus features, "Twilight" mania erupted last year at Comic-Con, as the seemingly little-known film inspired die-hards to line up in record numbers. Now, San Diego is ready for "New Moon" mania, and our own Hollywood Crush will even be embedding a reporter to camp out with the Twilighters, providing up-to-the-minute experiences while waiting in line. As your home for all things "Twilight," you can trust MTV to be all over this panel like Jasper Hale on Bella's bloody finger. The cast of "Astro Boy" and "Sorority Row" will also be participating in the panel, answering such probing questions as "When will Robert Pattinson walk onstage?"

"Disney: 3D Panel" (Thursday at 11:00 a.m., Hall H) — The first-ever 3-D presentation to be held at the Con, this panel features Robert Zemeckis presenting footage from "A Christmas Carol," Tim Burton bringing us goodies from "Alice in Wonderland" and the "Tron" sequel returning triumphantly to the place where it made such an impact last summer. As if all that isn't enough, funnyman/ movie buff Patton Oswalt will moderate.

"Avatar" (Thursday at 3:00 p.m., Hall H) — The single most-anticipated panel at Comic-Con not including Robert Pattinson has legendary filmmaker James Cameron finally presenting footage from the top-secret December flick that marks his first proper film since 1997's "Titanic." Joined by his producer and castmembers likely to include Sigourney Weaver, Zoe Saldana and others, geeks will finally get a peek at the developing technology Cameron has been touting for more than a decade.

"Sony Pictures" (Saturday at 2:45 p.m., Hall H) — "2012" is promising to end civilization as we know it. "Zombieland" has, well, zombies. What more do you need?

"Iron Man 2" (Saturday at 4:00 p.m., Hall H) — Director Jon Favreau loves Comic-Con so much that he cut a spellbinding clip reel together for the San Diego geeks, ran it multiple times to rapturous applause and built a buzz that led to more than $300 million at the box office for last year's "Iron Man." Now, Favs is hard at work on the sequel and will be bringing the cast back to the Con. Geeks will be betting their limited-edition phaser guns that he'll show a lot more than a promotional still. Be sure to keep an eye on our Splash Page blog, where we'll be posting up-to-the-minute updates on such comic-based flicks as this one, "Kick-Ass," "Scott Pilgrim vs. the World" and "Dead of Night."

"Boondock Saints II: All Saints Day" (Saturday at 3:30 p.m., Room 6DE) — You haven't seen a die-hard fan until you've met the loyalists who kneel at the feet of this 1999 cult classic. Now, the Saints are back — and unpredictable writer/director Troy Duffy is sure to have some choice words for Hollywood.

"Warner Bros." (Friday at 10:00 a.m., Hall H) — WB has a strong slate of upcoming films including "Where the Wild Things Are," "Jonah Hex," "Sherlock Holmes" and "A Nightmare on Elm Street." Oh, and did I mention that Megan Fox might get the geeks' attention by dressing up like slave-girl Princess Leia?

"9" (Friday at 2:30 p.m., Hall H) — Produced by Tim Burton and "Wanted" director Timur Bekmambetov — and from the studio that brought us the eye-dazzling "Coraline" earlier this year — this 9.9.09 movie could be something special. Stars Elijah Wood and Jennifer Connelly will be at the panel, along with a ton of new footage.

"Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs" (Thursday at 2:00 p.m., Room 6BCF) — It's a movie aimed primarily at kids, but the trailer looks cool in a Pixar sort of way. And with Anna Faris, Bill Hader and Andy Samberg appearing in person, something tells us that the panel will become riotously R-rated very quickly.

"The Visionaries" (Friday at 6:30 p.m., Hall H) — They see the cinematic world unlike anyone else, and in this geek-tastic discussion sponsored by Entertainment Weekly magazine, Peter Jackson and James Cameron will give us a sneak peek at the future of film. The directing duo behind the "Lord of the Rings" and "Terminator" franchises — as well as so many other classics — will engage in a rare conversation about the cutting-edge technology, narrative breakthroughs and home-entertainment options that will transform Hollywood in the years to come. Believe it or not, it's the first time Jackson has ever attended the world's greatest Con.

For breaking news and previews of the latest comic book movies — updated around the clock — visit SplashPage.MTV.c om.

Related Photos

Senin, 2009 Juli 13

Delicious hotlist

Delicious hotlist


How to Photograph a Sunset: 6 steps (with pictures) - wikiHow

Posted: 13 Jul 2009 05:31 AM PDT

A Farewell to Harms - WSJ.com

Posted: 13 Jul 2009 05:31 AM PDT

Nw1AS.jpg (JPEG Image, 950x848 pixels)

Posted: 13 Jul 2009 05:31 AM PDT

We Choose the Moon: Pre-launch

Posted: 13 Jul 2009 05:31 AM PDT

Google's Microsoft Moment - Anil Dash

Posted: 13 Jul 2009 05:31 AM PDT

boedesign – ottawa based web dabbler » Blog Archive » Gritter for jQuery (Growl)

Posted: 13 Jul 2009 05:31 AM PDT

To Run Better, Start by Ditching Your Nikes | Wired Science | Wired.com

Posted: 13 Jul 2009 05:31 AM PDT

Ten Simple Rules for Choosing the Perfect CMS + Excellent Options | Noupe

Posted: 13 Jul 2009 05:31 AM PDT

Detexify LaTeX handwritten symbol recognition

Posted: 13 Jul 2009 05:31 AM PDT

Screen Capture Tools: 40+ Free Tools and Techniques | Tools

Posted: 13 Jul 2009 05:31 AM PDT

30 Light and Sleek Web Designs for Inspiration

Posted: 13 Jul 2009 05:31 AM PDT

savil_mik: "Книга о Хаусе"

Posted: 13 Jul 2009 05:31 AM PDT

Lifehacker - Make Cold-Brewed Iced Coffee - Coffee

Posted: 13 Jul 2009 05:31 AM PDT

Cocoon - Cocoon

Posted: 13 Jul 2009 05:31 AM PDT

Stephen Marsland

Posted: 13 Jul 2009 05:31 AM PDT