James Blunt and Gnarls Barkley are top winners at a tame MTV Video Music Awards (AP) Updated: 2006-09-02 13:59

Singer Shakira performs at the 2006 MTV Video Music Awards in New York,
August 31, 2006. [Reuters]
When a wooden politician delivers the best line of the MTV Music Video
Awards, you know the thrill is gone.
So was the decadence,
outrageousness and spontaneity that used to make the VMAs such a guilty
pleasure.
James Blunt and Gnarls Barkley each took home two awards
Thursday night. Pink's parody of bubble-headed pop tarts, "Stupid Girls," won
for best pop video, Beyonce took home the best R&B video trophy for her
booty-shaking "Check On It" and Fall Out Boy won the viewer's choice award for
"Dance, Dance."
But nobody except a video choreographer's mother watches
this show for the awards. Fans watch for the edgy skits, nearly naked starlets,
foul-mouthed speeches and those embarrassingly bad dance numbers.
They
do NOT watch for lectures from former Vice President Al Gore on global warming.
When does the phrase "here's a photo of a glacier melting" ever fit into an
awards show?
Gore did get a laugh, however, when he intoned, "I actually
was not intending to be here tonight, but then MTV explained that Justin
Timberlake was bringing sexy back." Somewhere along the way, the MTV Awards
seemed to have morphed into the Grammys. "This show has been lame farts for
the past 20 years," host Jack Black said before he took the stage for his
opening sketch. "And I'm going to light the match!" Instead, Black continued
a trend.
In the opening sequence, he had a promising bit that poked fun
at the show's increasingly staid reputation. Painting himself as the man to
inject life back into the VMAs, he took to the stage in a moonman outfit _ which
caught fire. But Black's shtick quickly got old. "You didn't bring the
thunder. You didn't bring anything," he said during one skit, looking at himself
in his dressing room mirror and unintentionally summing up the evening.
Even rapper Lil' Kim, who once appeared at the VMAs wearing a pasty on
one breast, failed to get the party started. Recently released from prison after
serving time for perjury, she stripped off an orange jail suit to reveal ...
something that resembled a funky business suit. Hillary Clinton has worn more
revealing outfits. The only unscripted moment of mayhem came when some
unidentified person crashed the acceptance speech of Panic! At the Disco, who
won video of the year for "I Write Sins Not Tragedies." Before any group member
got to say a word, the crasher took the mic, giving shout outs to rapper Remy Ma
and saying, "MTV never gave me my own show!" before making way for the winners.
But that still fell short of MTV's once trademark water-cooler moments,
like Eminem punching out a puppet.
Christina Aguilera, who previously
shocked our senses as the dirty Xtina, looked downright classy as she performed
a low-key ballad. There were no wardrobe malfunctions whatsoever during
Timberlake's perfunctory show kickoff. Shakira and Wyclef Jean performed a
colorful but rote performance of her smash "Hips Don't Lie." Ludacris and
Pharrell posed their way through "Showstopper." Not even Britney Spears and
Kevin Federline, who appeared via videotape, could strike a spark.
There
was just one profanity-laced acceptance speech, courtesy of the rock group All
American Rejects, whose frontman accepted the award for best group video by
saying: "We just won a moonman _ I am getting so trashed tonight!"
The
night's hottest couple, new recording partners 50 Cent and LL Cool J, introduced
one of the awards. But 50, perhaps with no more foes to beef with, was almost
Zen-like onstage and offered no fun disses to excite the crowd.
The lack
of outrageousness almost made you long for the days when Michael Jackson made
out with Lisa Marie Presley _ that was creepy, but at least it kept viewers
talking.
Beyonce got some points for at least trying to deliver a
show-stopper. Singing her call-to-arms, the anti-cheating single "Ring the
Alarm," she appeared wearing a sexy trench coat and a searing gaze.
While her voice was in perfect form, the performance was disjointed, and
the out-of-place dance number in the middle seemed to steal the choreography
from Janet Jackson's "Rhythm Nation" almost 20 years earlier.
At one
point, the crew from the MTV grossout show "Jackass" gave one of its members an
electric shock. If only they could have delivered a similar jolt to the whole
show.
|