Posts Tagged ‘billboard’

Lindsay Lohan

Thursday, September 11th, 2008

Lindsay LohanLindsay Morgan Lohan was born on the 2nd of July, 1986 in New York City and raised in Long Island. She is the eldest of four with two brothers and a sister. Lindsay’s career started at a very young age. At just three she was the first redheaded child to be signed by the Ford Modeling Agency. She appeared in print ads for companies like Toys “R” Us and modelled for Calvin Klein Kids (usually with siblings Michael and Ali) and Abercrombie Kids.

Lindsay was talented but after auditioning for some T.V. commercials she was unsuccessful. Just before she was about to give up she was awarded the role in a Duncan Hines commercial. Over sixty commercials followed including a Jell-O commercial with Bill Cosby. Lohan began appearing in soap operas, and in 1996 she landed a role in NBC’s soup opera, Another World.

Lohan was ready for the big screen. She left Another World when Nancy Meyers cast her in the Parent Trap. She played twins who attempt to bring their divorced parents together. The movie pulled in $92 million worldwide with critics praising Lohan’s performance. Disney signed her onto a three picture deal after the movie’s success. Her next two movies, Life- Size andGet a Clue, were made for T.V. Just before Get a Clue she shot a pilot for a new sitcom called Bette but left when production moved to Los Angeles. The show was cut after sixteen episodes.

After Get a Clue Lohan took time off from her movie career to focus on music. In September 2002 she signed a five-album deal with Estefan Enterprises. But Lohan was soon cast in her next Disney film, Freaky Friday. The remake of the classic had her starring alongside Jamie Lee Curtis. The movie pulled in over $160 million and allowed her to show off her singing abilities. The soundtrack ended up in the Billboard’s Top 20 in less than three weeks.

Lindsay Lohan

But her movie success didn’t follow into Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen (2004). Lohan’s first movie which was not a remake only grossed $30 million and was a failure according to critics. “Though still a promising star, Lohan will have to do a little penance before she’s forgiven for Confessions,” Robert K. Elder wrote. Later that year Mean Girls was released to critical acclaim and $128 million worldwide. It was her first non-Disney film. Steve Rhodes said, “Lohan dazzles us once more.”

Lohan was asked to host Saturday Night Live three times, in 2004, 2005, and 2006, after her Mean Girls success. In 2005, she released her debut album, Speak, followed by A Little More Personal the next year. In the same year Lohan became the first living person to have a My Scene Goes Hollywood doll released by Mattel. She also voiced her doll in their straight to DVD movie.

Lohan was back on the Disney set in the 2005 Herbie: Fully Loaded film. Fully Loaded earned $144 million worldwide. She followed Herbie with Just My Luck. The movie received poor reviews and only $38 million worldwide. Lohan was in three limited release films leading up to 2007, the films made very little leaving critics unimpressed.

Lindsay LohanLohan began a troubled 2007, admitting herself into rehab in February. On the 11th of May Georgia Rule was released. Lohan was seen alongside Felicity Huffman and Jane Fonda. The film received mostly negative reviews and grossed $22 million worldwide. Things got worse from there. Lohan was arrested and her latest movie, I know who killed me, opened to a shocking $3.5 million dollars. Lohan was cast in Dare to Love Me after leaving rehab in 2007; the movie is due in 2009

In February 2008 Lohan re-created Marilyn Monroe’s final photo shoot, known as the Last Sitting, including nudity. Lohan continues to search for a more adult identity but is searching in all the wrong places. She turned down a few roles in 2008 but is due to star in Labor Pains. At the time of writing the film is in post-production. Lohan will play a young woman who pretends to be pregnant to avoid being fired.

Lohan, who already guest starred in the season 2 finale of ABC’s Ugly Betty, will be back in the next season for a rumoured five episodes. She also has a new album due soon.

Kelly Clarkson My December

Saturday, January 12th, 2008

Kelly Klarkson My DecemberAfter the tremendous success of 2004′s Breakaway, which sold 6 million in the U.S. and 11 million worldwide on the strength of such #1 hits as “Since U Been Gone,” the title track, “Behind These Hazel Eyes,” “Because of You” and “Walk Away,” Kelly Clarkson earned the right to make the kind of album she wanted to make for her third RCA Records effort, My December.

“The biggest difference is how intimate it is,” she says of the album, co-produced by David Kahne [Bangles, Sublime, McCartney, the Strokes] and touring band members Jimmy Messer and Jason Halbert. Kelly either wrote or co-wrote every song on the album, just as she has on such hits as “Because of You,” Behind these Hazel Eyes,” “Walk Away” and “Miss Independent.” Legendary L.A. punk bassist Mike Watt, who has played with Iggy and the Stooges as well as his own band the Minuteman, guests on three songs.

“Regardless of whether it’s a happy or sad song, the album’s very in-your-face,” she says of the full throttle rock & roll aggression on songs like the first single, “Never Again,” and “Hole.” “There was no filter…just four very different individuals who joined together to come up with a really cool record. There’s a little bit of something for everyone on this album.” My December unfolds like a diary of the last two years in the life of Kelly Clarkson, which saw her take home a pair of 2006 Grammy Awards at L.A.’s Staples Centre and perform a show-stopping version of “Because of You”; nab four American Music Awards, three MTV Video Music Awards, a People’s Choice Award and a staggering 11 Billboard Music Awards.

KellyKlarkson3But all that acclaim took its toll on her personal relationships, captured on the dance-floor funk-soul of “One Minute,” which she describes as “about the craziness of everything,” the Edge-styled guitars in the blues-rocking “Hole,” the betrayal of “Judas” and the playful No Doubt-inspired rhythmic pulse of “How I Feel.” Songs like “Sober,” “Be Still,” “Maybe” and “Irvine” are vocal showcases that reflect her singer-songwriter roots.

“The record is about me, why I make the decisions I do,” she says. “Most of my songs are about what’s happening in my life. For me, it’s like free therapy. Whether it’s me growing, or helping someone else get through similar circumstances.”

Clarkson wrote almost 60 songs for the new record, eventually paring it down to 26, then 14.  ”Each song was picked carefully,” she says. “I learned we should do what makes us happy and tell our stories without worrying about being #1 all the time and selling millions of albums. I just want to be me, but it’s really hard to do that when everybody’s breathing down your neck trying to make you somebody else.” Clarkson describes My December as an album that completes one era and opens up another, starting with the emotionally charged “Never Again,” in which she writes about a relationship gone sour, but it’s not what you think. “It’s not really a boyfriend-girlfriend thing,” explains Kelly.

“It’s more about trusting and putting your faith in someone and getting let down.” ”Sober” is about survival, knowing what to do when something goes wrong. “It’s not easy getting over whatever your addiction may be,” she says. “The whole point of that song is, the temptation is there, but I’m not going to give in to it.” ”Judas” is also a song about betrayal, a reference to the biblical character. “You think people are normal and good, then all of a sudden, you get blindsided,” says Kelly. ”Haunted” is an eerie song Kelly wrote four or five years ago about someone she grew up with that committed suicide, in which she cries out, “Where are you?/I need you/Don’t leave me here on my own.”

Kelly Klarkson“I was expressing my anger at how someone could do that,” she says. “Why would you leave all these people behind feeling guilty and wondering what they could have done to prevent it? I really believe that God puts us through these situations to help others.” ”Be Still” is a folk-blues number that Kelly compares to Sarah McLachlan, Norah Jones and Bonnie Raitt, with a dash of vintage Christine McVie, explaining how the title comes from one of her favourite Bible verses: “Be still and know that I am here.” “It’s all about stopping things, slowing down to appreciate life,” she says. “Everything just goes so fast, especially in this business. There’s just no time to be alone for a moment of quiet.  That’s why I don’t live in L.A. and have always lived in Texas. It’s about getting away from the rat race and carving out a space for yourself.”

The hypnotic guitar at the start of “Maybe” gives the song a country feel, which Kelly describes as “closer to Ryan Adams or Patty Griffin than traditional country.”

The psychedelic funk of “Yeah” has an upbeat sexy, Prince-meets-Sly & the Family Stone vibe. “The song is about this guy I was dating, who was so cool, but wasn’t able to put up with me being in the public eye all the time,” she relates. “I want a real man, not someone who’s going to walk around on eggshells and be a ‘yes’ person. I want someone to let me know if they’re happy, mad or sad.” Clarkson says the tongue-in-cheek “Can I Have a Kiss” is actually about two different people in the verse and the chorus. “That’s the first time I ever did that,” she says. “The lyrics are about something very true to me. You know how you want someone, but can’t have them because they’re off-limits? In the chorus, I sing that, even if you had ‘em, you know you’d screw it up. You always want what you can’t have. It’s a funny, ironic song.”

Kelly describes “Irvine,” which she wrote in the bathroom of her dressing room while performing at the Irvine Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre, as “the saddest song I’ve ever written.” “The song is a prayer from the lowest point in my life,” she says. “There comes a time when you feel like, if He’s up there, God, Allah or whatever you want to call Him, is the only one that can help me out. After that night, I know there’s someone or something out there looking out for me.” On the bluesy acoustic twang of “Chivas,” the rollicking hidden bonus track, Clarkson channels the late Janis Joplin’s “Mercedes Benz” on a cheeky kiss-off drinking song with lines like “You’re not worth it, babe/All the trouble you bring…I’m so sick of you, babe/I can’t stand the sight of your face… You should keep your eyes on your new girlfriend.” It’s a sense of humour she demonstrates throughout the album. ”At the end of the day, life is too short,” says Kelly. “You can’t take things too seriously. I wanted to end the album on a light note. There are obviously moments you think you’ll never get over, but you do. We need that kind of sarcasm.” My December marks a major turning point for Kelly Clarkson, a third album that defies expectations and introduces an artist coming into her own and growing into her powerfully, distinctive vocals.

“It’s the end of something and the beginning of a new era, a fresh start,” she says. “My December album is like a movie about me, it’s my story.