Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jul 3, 2011 11:17:50 GMT -5
Wonderful performance of Hair.
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AP
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Post by AP on Jul 3, 2011 12:19:34 GMT -5
Album discounted to $12.99 on iTunes. Thank God. That's just what it needed for an iTunes boost. It's #12 on the album chart now, it could creep in the top 10 for today & tomorrow before the new releases flood the chart on Tuesday.
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Post by Love Plastic Love on Jul 3, 2011 12:56:00 GMT -5
12.99 discounted still feels kinda pricey. I thought Itunes releases were typically 9.99 or 11.99 not on sale? Maybe I just buy during the "door buster" deals and didn't even know it!
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AP
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Post by AP on Jul 3, 2011 13:13:06 GMT -5
Well the standard 14 track album is $9.99. The $12.99 is the 23 track deluxe.
If they really wanted to slash prices they could price the standard at $6.99 and deluxe at $9.99.
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Post by onefrayedrepublic on Jul 4, 2011 21:19:38 GMT -5
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Black Jesus
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Post by Black Jesus on Jul 4, 2011 23:30:46 GMT -5
Taiwan really loved her. They treated her like royalty!
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Post by Love Plastic Love on Jul 4, 2011 23:45:56 GMT -5
It was really cute seeing her over there with all of her fans.
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Kishi KCM
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Post by Kishi KCM on Jul 5, 2011 8:46:37 GMT -5
I love that strut she's doing on the airport runway. She's a bad bi*ch!
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Black Jesus
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Post by Black Jesus on Jul 5, 2011 9:43:27 GMT -5
I love that strut she's doing on the airport runway. She's a bad bi*ch! #werk
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jazzyskye10²
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Post by jazzyskye10² on Jul 5, 2011 16:05:23 GMT -5
By Jeremy KinserLady Gaga has just touched down in Los Angeles after a red-eye flight from New York City, following a meet-and-greet with fans at a Best Buy store—a crowded event that lasted until 2 a.m. The 25-year-old musician, who since the release of her debut studio album, The Fame, in 2008 has seen her celebrity rocket to stratospheric heights, is riding in a car on her way to rehearse for a performance she’ll give the next evening on American Idol. Most entertainers with her schedule would be exhausted. Gaga feels euphoric. “I’m so, so happy,” she tells me. “I got to spend all night with the fans last night, and it was so much fun.” She sounds genuine. The inflection in her voice when she says the word “fans” is saturated with affection. Gaga is a very busy lady, and consequently our interview has been postponed four times. Her wildly hyped, hugely anticipated album Born This Way was released the day before. First-week sales of the album have defied even the most optimistic estimates by her record label, and everyone from David Letterman to The Wall Street Journal wants a piece of her. I just want her to describe what she’s wearing. An enormous part of Gaga’s appeal comes from her avant-garde fashion sense—from her surreal Alexander McQueen footwear to the facial spurs she sports in the Born This Way artwork. I tell her that I don’t want to sound like a pervert, but I want the details on today’s ensemble. Gaga laughs at this. “That’s OK, pervy is fine,” she says before describing her entire outfit down to her bra and panties (Calvin Klein), the dance tights, and the leather jacket with the new album artwork hand-drawn on the back. The jacket is a gift from one of the fans she met the previous night. “My love for my gay fans is just pure, authentic love for them as supporters of me from the beginning, and me feeling connected to their struggles as someone who is a part of their fight,” she says. The mutual love affair between Gaga and her intensely devoted — and largely gay — disciples has come into the conversation a second time within a few minutes. She has declared numerous times that, like many of her “little monsters,” she was bullied. In one instance, as a young girl in Manhattan, she was literally tossed into a trash can by classmates. It’s not just sympathy she feels, though. Her connection to her fans goes deeper, to the point of identification. She says she is one of them. Though she’s recently ended an on-off relationship with musician Luc Carl, Gaga has discussed her attraction to other women in the past. As to whether she also considers herself an actual member of the LGBT community — “yes” is her response after a brief pause. Gaga draws the word out, perhaps steeling herself for the follow-up question, wondering if she’ll be forced to address the rumor that she has a penis. “The b letter,” Gaga answers, and lets out a giggle. She really is in good spirits today. Is this declared affinity for LGBTs, the championing of equality, just pandering, so much lip service to an album-buying public, all in the service of promoting a new release? It would be easy to be skeptical of her enthusiasm, of her rainbow flag–waving. She’s been accused of not being gay enough to claim a letter in the acronym, and it’s been said that her activism for marriage equality, against the “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy, and for AIDS awareness (she once appeared on Good Morning America dressed as a condom) is as superficial as her outré fashion. “To say that I would use the gay community to sell records is probably one of the most ridiculous statements anyone can make about me as a person,” Gaga states. The timbre of her voice changes, deepening with frustration. “I would say the top thing I think about every single day of my life, other than my fans, loving the music, and my family being healthy, is social justice and equality.” Her conviction is convincing. Why do Gaga’s fans hang on her every move? Are they drawn to her nonconformity, hypnotized by the sheer force of her personality, or do they just really like the damn catchy songs she records? “I don’t know exactly,” she says simply. For a woman so frequently called upon to explain her looks, her videos, her sensibilities, her response is surprisingly unselfconscious. But a flair for the dramatic takes over. Rather than answer, she tells a story about a 20-something gay serviceman she met at Best Buy last night. “He was afraid that he would be discharged and that he would be judged or found out. [He said] that the fight in America against ‘don’t ask, don’t tell’ and the fight for equality made him feel stronger and made him feel safe, and he gave me his service jacket.” Gaga is silent for a moment. “And we just held each other and cried. Anyone who says that I’m not genuine is not interested in overcoming this fight. That was such a pure and wonderful moment that we shared, and I remember thinking, There’s no album sale, no number 1, that could compete with this moment. That is what the fuck it’s all about. What the fuck it’s all about is if I can write one song that could change one person’s life.” “Born This Way,” the single she released in February, plainly desires to be that kind of song. It’s a pulsating dance track with a message meant to empower the lonely, the disaffected, the discriminated against. No less than Elton John predicted it would surpass “I Will Survive” as the great gay anthem. The song immediately shot to the top of the charts, where it remained for six weeks, making it the first number 1 with a shout-out to transgender people. The single also received a fair amount of criticism. It was maligned in some quarters for borrowing too heavily from Madonna, and in other quarters for the lyric “Don’t be a drag / Just be a queen,” which some said alienated gay people who don’t do drag or consider themselves queens. The first signs of another b word — backlash — began to surface. To have become this powerful so quickly, Gaga has surely insulated herself with an invisible armor. Her friend Mario Lavandeira (a.k.a. blogger Perez Hilton) says the criticism still gets to her, but she still chooses to face it. “She likes to be two steps ahead of everyone else,” he says. “The only way to do that is to be plugged in and aware of what everyone else is doing and what people are thinking and what they’re responding to.” Makeup artist Billy Brasfield, a member of Gaga’s glam squad, says she reads everything written about her, no matter how mean-spirited. He suggests that this ultimately serves to strengthen Gaga’s resolve to succeed for her fans, to show them that if she can, so can they. “By facing your haters, you educate yourself about what people are saying,” Billy B says. “You take what you can learn from it, and fuck the rest of it.” While it would be impossible for any record to live up to the hyperbole and sheer anticipation that attended Born This Way — Gaga herself described it as “the greatest album of the decade” — reviews were mostly respectable, and sales were spectacular. The album is loud, huge, meticulously produced, an eclectic auditory assault. The lyrics are filled with metaphors, messages about acceptance and empowerment, and there’s an abundance of references to religious figures as well as dead presidents and their mistresses. Yet, for such a progressive artist, the sound is surprisingly retro — equally rooted in mid-’80s Bruce Springsteen and late-’80s techno. Like its creator, it’s all over the place. “I would say that’s precisely what Born This Way is all about. It’s not about just being born in one moment; it’s about being reborn over and over again until you find and become that unique and special person inside of you that is the most brave and the most sure and the most ready to take on the world,” she says. “And I was born this way. And that’s who I am. Some people weren’t born to wear masks, but I was. I was born to wear masks and wigs and fashion. To express myself through my clothing and my performance art, and that’s who I am. And the song is meant to be liberating not only from an individual perspective but from a creative perspective.”
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jazzyskye10²
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Post by jazzyskye10² on Jul 5, 2011 16:06:01 GMT -5
She knows that with her outrageous fame come slings and arrows from cynics. Her pulpit makes her an easy target, and as a rite of passage and badge of honor for the musician, she’s been dissed in a song by Eminem, and the antigay Westboro Baptist Church picketed her St. Louis concert in July 2010. She addresses all the skeptics in “Bloody Mary,” one of several songs on the new album that references Jesus, in which Gaga sings, “I’m ready for their stones.” But is she really? “The nature of what I create is very polarizing. Public perception of me is the least important thing on my list,” she says. “Rumors, shots at me as a human being, that’s what comes with the territory of being a musician and being someone who is a public figure. I care only about what I can change. What can I push forward? How can I be a part of the fight for modern social issues? How can I change young people’s lives? How can I create a show and an album that is a portal to surreality, to free ourselves of all of our insecurities and to be proud of who we are? I’m a fucking hippie in that way, and that’s just who I am.” In the actions-speak-louder-than-words category, one could solidly place Lady Gaga’s dealings with retailer Target. Many people expressed indignation this past February when it was announced that a special edition of Gaga’s album would be sold exclusively by the company after Target had come under fire by LGBT activists. The company’s corporate political action committee made campaign contributions to support antigay candidate Tom Emmer in his failed 2010 run for governor of Minnesota. The company apologized and promised to look more closely at its donations, but it later emerged that three fourths of the PAC’s money had gone to anti–gay rights politicians. There were calls for a boycott of the retail giant. Over these concerns Gaga met with “the entire executive staff,” and soon afterward, she canceled the deal. “You’re either going to try and change or you’re not,” Gaga recalls of the meeting, in which she had insisted that Target ally itself with LGBT charities and organizations. While the details were not made public, the terms did not satisfy the singer. “Taking an ambiguous stance is not what I’m about, obviously. I like to go right for the ass-kicker. You’re either in or you’re out. I’m from New York. I know bullshit. I can smell it from a mile away.”She wants to make it clear that stepping away from the potentially lucrative partnership was in no way a concession to score points with her intended audience. “I was very unhappy with the ambiguity and the way Target was holding their position,” she says. “I believe that monopolies, in terms of the music industry and artists having guns held to their heads for where they have to sell their albums, I think it’s unfair. It’s unfair to us, it’s unfair to the public, it’s unfair to the communities that are affected by it. And I wanted to take a stand.” The stand Gaga has already taken is undeniable. She’s taped PSAs against DADT and been escorted by a group of gay servicemen to awards shows. In 2009 she delivered a rousing speech before throngs assembled at the National Equality March in Washington, D.C. Is energizing a political crowd a different sensation from performing? “Yes, it’s electrifying in a completely different way,” she says. “As much as I love the fantasy of the Monster Ball, it is a fantasy; it’s a place to escape to. Whereas when I’m working as a political activist, we’re rooted in reality. We’re rooted in the reality of the fight.” While Gaga was being interviewed for a February segment on 60 Minutes, she took control of the lighting and camera setup. Anderson Cooper remarked that he’d never seen anyone do that before, but he’d heard Barbra Streisand and Madonna had done the same. Gaga laughed and called the two performers her “sisters.” More so than any of the female entertainers in her peer group (it’s doubtful Gaga will ever need a conservatorship), she merits comparison to these decades-older “sisters.” All have legendary iron wills, legions of devout gay followers since their earliest public performances, and folklore surrounding their prefame existences, and all have been defiant, outspoken advocates for equality. Also like the other two, Gaga has transcended unconventional, ethnic looks to redefine a new standard of beauty. Sex appeal sells, but longevity requires passion and chutzpah. Gaga understands that. “There’s no drama, there’s no jealousy, there’s no competition,” she says about the females she admires. “They’re just happy to see other women winning.” “I just feel so connected to Madonna in a lot of ways, and I feel connected to Barbra, and I feel connected to Cher and Blondie and all of the women who came before me,” Gaga adds. “I worshipped them my whole life, and I would never be where I am today without all of them to inspire me. I feel so grateful that I have such strong women to look up to.”Considering the flair for comedy she demonstrated during her two guest appearances on Saturday Night Live, perhaps Gaga is ready to follow the lead of her “sisters” and launch an acting career. She shrugs off the suggestion. “I don’t know,” she tells me. “Maybe someday. Right now I’m just really focused on this record. I really love making music. I know that sounds crazy, but I’m obsessed…obsessed with music. I’m just really enjoying making albums right now.” Gaga doesn’t take the accompanying fame for granted. She knows that with it comes an equal measure of responsibility. “I believe I was destined to be an artist,” she says. “At the end of the day I could be rolling around in Rolls-Royces, buying mansions for myself, making records, and dancing around in my underwear. But to be honest, I’m not interested in doing that at all. I’d rather be at rallies with the fans, being a part of their voice, helping to mobilize and enforce change. If people don’t believe me, they don’t have to be a part of it.”Credit:
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Mack
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Post by Mack on Jul 5, 2011 17:39:56 GMT -5
I think it's funny that she no longer mentions Britney as an inspiration. When she first started out, she was so far up Britney's ass that she could probably see out Britney's eyes ("Britney's the queen of pop!1", "Britney doesnt need ne pointers from me! She's the best!!", "I'm a huge Britney fan! I used to go to TRL to see her!1"). Now that she's a superstar in her own right, she never talks about Britney, unless it's to throw subtle shade. Hmmm...weird.
I'm really not trying to start any far wars or arguments; it's just an observation.
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nightshade
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Post by nightshade on Jul 5, 2011 17:41:46 GMT -5
That's probably because Britney was never as big of an inspiration as Madonna, Cyndi, Barbra, Whitney, etc. were to her. It doesn't matter.
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jazzyskye10²
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Post by jazzyskye10² on Jul 5, 2011 18:41:14 GMT -5
Basically. Britney was a pop tart who Gaga enjoyed during the height of the TRL days. To think that she would be as influential to her as Grace, Bowie et cetera is laughable.
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Drozeey
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Post by Drozeey on Jul 5, 2011 18:44:20 GMT -5
I think it's funny that she no longer mentions Britney as an inspiration. When she first started out, she was so far up Britney's ass that she could probably see out Britney's eyes ("Britney's the queen of pop!1", "Britney doesnt need ne pointers from me! She's the best!!", "I'm a huge Britney fan! I used to go to TRL to see her!1"). Now that she's a superstar in her own right, she never talks about Britney, unless it's to throw subtle shade. Hmmm...weird. I'm really not trying to start any far wars or arguments; it's just an observation.Maybe if Britney was a real artist with talent that can be compared to Madonna and Barbra, then maybe GaGa would mention her some more.
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Black Jesus
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Post by Black Jesus on Jul 5, 2011 19:34:05 GMT -5
Madonna, Barbara, etc... are all above Britney in this "legendary" pop women category and it's pretty obvious that that's where she wants to be compared to. I don't think she's meaning to diss Britney but she obviously just wants to be remembered with all the truly legendary names, and that's why she's taking so many influences from them.
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MikeCheck12
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Post by MikeCheck12 on Jul 5, 2011 19:34:30 GMT -5
I think it's funny that she no longer mentions Britney as an inspiration. When she first started out, she was so far up Britney's ass that she could probably see out Britney's eyes ("Britney's the queen of pop!1", "Britney doesnt need ne pointers from me! She's the best!!", "I'm a huge Britney fan! I used to go to TRL to see her!1"). Now that she's a superstar in her own right, she never talks about Britney, unless it's to throw subtle shade. Hmmm...weird. I'm really not trying to start any far wars or arguments; it's just an observation.Please tell me you're joking .....
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David
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Post by David on Jul 5, 2011 20:39:49 GMT -5
You truly are pressed about her music not appealing to you aren't you? Shit. Get the fuck over it. I'm tired of reading your hate in every GaGa thread. We get it. You used to be a fan, but this album isn't your thing. You don't need to continuously spew your hatred in every fucking thread. GaGa isn't going to come on Pulse see you're pissed and say "Oh, I should record a new album just for him". Get over your dislike for the album, and please get over yourself. I've been patient and let you speak your mind, but enough is enough darling. You're becoming increasingly annoying.
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darko95
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Post by darko95 on Jul 5, 2011 21:01:49 GMT -5
To predict somebody's downfall is just evil...We don't need to see another Britney-like breakdown from anybody in the entertainment business. Let's be positive...
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Black Jesus
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Post by Black Jesus on Jul 6, 2011 6:36:32 GMT -5
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nightshade
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Post by nightshade on Jul 6, 2011 10:15:30 GMT -5
I wonder if Y&I, HML, Scheiße, or Marry the Night will be the next single. Regardless, any single choice from here on out is not safe. Hell, nothing about this era was safe.
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Post by areyoureadytojump on Jul 6, 2011 10:54:44 GMT -5
#12 on the Billboard 200 this week with 38k sold...
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Post by areyoureadytojump on Jul 6, 2011 11:19:55 GMT -5
BTW is on sale at Best Buy this week for $9.99.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jul 6, 2011 12:19:40 GMT -5
#12 on the Billboard 200 this week with 38k sold... I expected her to be in the Top 10 still.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jul 6, 2011 12:22:33 GMT -5
I wonder if Y&I, HML, Scheiße, or Marry the Night will be the next single. Regardless, any single choice from here on out is not safe. Hell, nothing about this era was safe. Heavy Metal Lover is the song that I would completely unexpect, but would want sooo much.
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Post by when the pawn... on Jul 6, 2011 13:02:40 GMT -5
I want SO badly for it to be "Schiesse" but I think it will be "You And I".
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jul 6, 2011 13:37:40 GMT -5
Scheiße would be an amazing single, and it's sad to think that it might not even get a chance.
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Kurt
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Post by Kurt on Jul 6, 2011 14:40:32 GMT -5
This would lead me to believe it's You and I: twitter.com/#!/ladygaga/status/88535156209614848
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jul 6, 2011 14:45:24 GMT -5
Heavy Metal Lover is currently competing against other songs as MTV's song of the year. It currently has 50% of the votes and its only real competition is Britney's "Till The World Ends". Check the poll out here.
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Black Jesus
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Post by Black Jesus on Jul 6, 2011 15:22:00 GMT -5
Interesting that HML is the choice for MTV out of all the other singles
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