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#kanye west 2005
thesnobbyartsyblog · 1 year
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2005
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surra-de-bunda · 1 year
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Jha Jha with Dipset photographed by Ray Tamarra & John Ricard on set of the music video "Down and Out" by Cam'Ron & Kanye West in the Meat Packing Distict in New York (April 2005).
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hit-song-showdown · 10 months
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Year-End Poll #56: 2005
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[Image description: a collage of photos of the 10 musicians and musical groups featured in this poll. In order from left to right, top to bottom: Mariah Carey, Gwen Stefani, Mario, Kelly Clarkson, Ciara, Kanye West, Green Day, 50 Cent, The Pussycat Dolls, Kelly Clarkson. End description]
More information about this blog here
2005 time. With Kelly Clarkson, we're seeing the first example of an artist jumpstarting their career off of the reality TV boom of the early 2000's. Simon Fuller, the manager for a number of UK acts including Spice Girls (until he wasn't) and S Club 7, created the show Pop Idol in 2001. In 2002, Pop Idol was brought overseas under a new name, American Idol. Kelly Clarkson won the first season of American Idol, and we'll see at least two more winners featured on these polls as we continue on.
Also notable is Hollaback Girl, specifically for the production behind the scenes. Songwriting and production duo, The Neptunes, was created in 1992 by Pharrell Williams and Chad Hugo. In addition to Timbaland (who we will cover in more detail on the next poll), The Neptunes would become a production powerhouse in the 2000's and beyond, helping to carve out what pop music sounds like this decade while also allowing their sound to evolve. For more information (because music production techniques aren't really my strong suit), I found two videos that go into more depth about their work and history. (1) (2)
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auxgod · 7 months
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On this day in 2005, Kanye West dropped his 2nd album “Late Registration”
Ye was in rare form on “We Major”, “Crack Music”, “Gone” and “Drive Slow”, helping this sell 860,000 copies the first week with many saying this is his best album
What’s the most slept on beat to you?
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bestofmidi · 1 year
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She take my money when I'm in need Yeah, she's a triflin' friend indeed Oh, she's a gold digger Way over town that digs on me (Uh)
original midi at https://freemidi.org/getter-27706
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music-moon · 27 days
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My most played albums released in the year 2005:
Mariah Carey - The Emancipation of Mimi
Kanye West - Late Registration
Jason Mraz - Mr. A-Z
Gorillaz - Demon Days
Sufjan Stevens - Illinois
Bright Eyes - I'm Wide Awake, It's Morning
Jack Johnson - In Between Dreams
Coldplay - X&Y
Justice - Justice
Black Eyed Peas - Monkey Business
Data from last.fm + pythfm.
2000 / 2001 / 2002 / 2003 / 2004 / 2005 / 2006 / 2007 / 2008 / 2009 / 2010 / 2011 / 2012 / 2013 / 2014 / 2015 / 2016 / 2017 / 2018 / 2019 / 2020 / 2021 / 2022 / 2023 / 2024
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buddhisttrueist · 1 year
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fuckjose69 · 7 months
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Kanye West’s Late Registration turns 18 years old today having debuted at #1 as it garnered 860,000 copies in it's first week back in 2005.
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quitecontraryy · 1 year
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You work late nights just to keep on the lights
Mommy got me training wheels, so I could keep on my bike
And you would give me anything in this world
Michael Jackson leather and a glove, but didn't give me a curl
And you never put no man over me
And I love you for that, mommy, can't you see?
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stepfordgoth · 1 year
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A M E R I C A
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damiandallorso · 3 months
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xx-key-xx · 2 years
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musichubs · 18 years
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catgirlpetur · 1 year
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From my magazine article collection, Pete Wentz for Out. (Long post, full articles under the cut.)
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Pete Wentz Out Magazine cover, August 2008
This Charming Man by Shana Naomi Krochmal for Out.com, June 29th 2008
[Article Begins]
"I feel like the drink of choice at this hour really changes people’s perspective on you,” Pete Wentz says, settling in for lunch at a swank Hollywood hotel. “I like to give a piece a good intro: ‘And then he had a beer.’ ” His prefab opening anecdote fits particularly well with the sweatpants he’s wearing. “Oops,” he jokes, predicting my editor’s reaction to his straight-dude shtick before settling on an iced vanilla latte.
Wentz also suggests two sidebars for this article (“a thermostat of my gayness” and a quiz with real and fake quotes about his sexuality) and asks if him being in Out is akin to the Beastie Boys doing Vibe. “Will you get flak for having someone like me on the cover?” he asks, sounding more concerned for the magazine’s reputation than his own.
Like a line he wrote in “Sugar, We’re Goin’ Down,” the band’s 2005 breakout hit -- I’ve been dying to tell you anything you want to hear -- Wentz seems all too aware of how his words and actions will play on the page, not to mention the entertainment TV shows and blogs that eagerly mine his confessional, sensationalist tendencies. But he draws the line at painting a self-portrait that’s easier for his more narrow-minded detractors -- or even fans -- to swallow.
What Wentz wants us to see is a complex, sometimes contradictory image. “I’m like the boy next door,” he quips, “but just a little bit off.”
But while he may have a bulldog’s attitude and more than a dozen tattoos, Wentz isn’t intimidating enough to stop the hate parade. “When I’m going down the street I get called a fag all the time,” he says. Instead of bothering to deny it, he shifts deftly to mocking the bullies’ Neanderthal mentality: “We have iPhones, and I’m still getting called the same names as when I was 13.” It’s a 10-second sound bite so succinct in its disdain he’ll use variations for months in blog posts and other interviews.
He readily cops to having appropriated queer culture, just as early white rock and roll artists ripped off black music and went mainstream. “If I was gay,” he says, “and I saw people playing with it, being ambiguous, I don’t really know how I would feel. I look back at Elvis and I’m like, Was Elvis a dick?”
Even with 6 million Fall Out Boy albums sold worldwide, another 5 million by bands signed to his own label, a pop princess on his arm, a baby on the way, and a new deal to sell his clothing line at Nordstrom stores, Wentz remains impulsive and profane. He’s also transparently annoyed at friends who warned that whatever sexually suggestive comments he makes will feed tabloid headlines for a year. “There’s part of me that’s like, Fuck you, I do what I want,” he says with a curled lip. “ ‘Don’t do that’? Now I’m just going to do that 10 times in a row.”
Like his friend Kanye West, he’s found that “whenever you say that homophobia is stupid, you just get called gay.” Lucky for us, he sees his ever-growing audience as an opportunity to fuck with the minds of anyone who thinks there’s something wrong with that. “Homophobia is the last acceptable hatred,” he says and writes, frequently and wearily.
“People treat sexuality the same way that [during] Jim Crow [white] people treated African-Americans,” he tells me. “It’s totally dehumanized.” It could be his view from the stage -- Fall Out Boy audiences skew toward teenage girls, and dudes who like mosh pits and teenage girls -- but Wentz shrugs off the idea that whatever bias remains will survive another generation. “The actual acceptance of gay marriage is inevitable,” he says. “It’s just like how the next generation of kids are going to all have tattoos.”
Before Wentz, 29, covered his skin with an inked collar of thorns and portraits from Tim Burton cartoons, he was just the oldest of three children growing up in the wealthy northern suburbs of Chicago. He says his liberal parents never shoved any particular politics down his throat, “except, like, Kenyan food.” A star soccer player in high school but also an intensely unhappy and angry kid, he did time in a teenage disciplinary boot camp, bounced from one punk band to another, and eventually left DePaul University a semester shy of a political science degree to play bass full-time.
His new career was Fall Out Boy, a pop-punk band that left the local hardcore scene for more melodic rock pastures, in part because the homophobic violence they witnessed at shows pissed them off. After hauling ass cross-country in a beat-up van to play tiny, shitty venues, their indie-produced album, 2003’s Take This to Your Grave, landed them a deal with Island Records. From Under the Cork Tree sold 3 million copies in the U.S., and last year’s Infinity on High topped the Billboard chart, spawning two top-10 pop singles.
Wentz doesn’t sing on stage. (He occasionally screams into the mike between spinning around in crazed circles, caroming off amps like the stage is a skate park.) But it’s his lyrics, mid-show demands of their faithful audience, and thousands of interviews as the band’s front man that have shaped Fall Out Boy’s image. Even in radio-friendly major-label land they’ve hewn close to their do-it-yourself punk roots, routinely exposing the man behind the curtain by explaining contract details or backstage drama that most bands are too intimidated by record company power to bring to light.
Wentz’s quest to cut out the middleman seems inspired as much by innate business savvy as impatience. Totally in love with a band no one else wants to sign? Start your own label. Harassed by kids at shows who want to wear the shirt you made in your parents’ basement? Start a clothing line. Sick of getting elbowed by VIPs at clubs you think suck? Open a bar with your friends.
And if people are confused about Wentz’s sexuality, he deserves at least half the credit for that too. Onstage he’ll lick a stripe up the neck of his bass or his bandmates’ guitars. He hooks his chin over singer Patrick Stump’s shoulder, mouthing his own words against Stump’s cheek. When they covered the Killers’ “Mr. Brightside” on a recent tour, he would punctuate the line “it was only a kiss” by aiming with varying success somewhere in the vicinity of Stump’s mouth. In “Sugar” he boasts of “always sleeping in and sleeping for the wrong team”; the line “He tastes like you, only sweeter” in “Thnks Fr Th Mmrs” paraphrases what’s spoken by a female character in the play and (by Julia Roberts) in the movie Closer. It loses any jealous, alpha-male edge when repeated over and over as the song’s key emotional refrain. Eventually, I point out to him, it just sounds, well, gay.
“It is pretty gay,” Wentz easily agrees, grinning as we discuss how the crowd still sings right along. “A big portion of our fan base are these white-hat jock dudes who maybe actually have some kind of homoerotic behaviors,” he says. “They’re so violent -- but they feel pretty free at Fall Out Boy shows.” So does he: “It’s all because I know I’m going to get a reaction -- but it’s all things that I believe anyway. I don’t get on stage and give a social diatribe. I am a performer and an entertainer.”
It’s a convincing performance. Even his longtime manager, Bob McLynn, says he spent at least a year wondering. “I thought maybe Pete was actually gay,” McLynn says. “I know guys who are gay who would sleep with girls. I wouldn’t have been that surprised.” Asking Wentz did nothing to clear things up: “He would try to act like he was to push my buttons.”
Then there are the interviews in which Wentz refers to himself as “half gay,” says “anything above the waist is fair game,” and boasts of making out with boys, even when corporate sponsors or fans’ parents balked or boycotted. The more uncomfortable or conservative his audience, the less likely he is to give them an easy out. Plus, few reporters ask for further clarification when confronted with an ambiguous, moody rock star, so single sentences wind up as stand-ins for self-defining declarations.
He doesn’t seem to think he has much to prove to Out, and I ask a lot of follow-up questions. Wentz answers them all, even when he’s not sure I’ll like the answers. “When I said that I make out with dudes, there was a slight sense of sexual rebellion in that,” he admits. “And I probably even made it a bigger deal than it was.” He thinks the first time he kissed a guy was when he was 16 or 17, probably on a dare at a party: “Like, ‘You make out with this dude and we’ll make out.’ ” And of later experiments, at 18 or 19, he says it was more like, “I’m going to try this thing.” And most recently? He actually apologizes before responding. “A long time ago,” he says with a slight wince. “Probably when I was 22?”
Asked to describe his sexuality in his own words, he shrugs and says, “I’ve always felt this relentless heterosexual drive.” There’s a heavy, ambivalent weight to the statement, like maybe he would have been happier without the painful series of dysfunctional relationships that fueled lyrics for three hit albums but also scores of lonely, sad blog entries posted in the middle of the night. He told National Public Radio last year that a part of him wished he were gay. “I have a bit of a consummate victim in my head,” he says now. “That’s who I identify with throughout history. When I was 10 I would draw black eyes on myself because I thought it was cool. You’re so into people who are tragic. You want to be that so badly. But you probably aren’t really the tragic genius that you think you are.”
He has no qualms talking about his attraction to men (including a big, stupid crush on John Mayer), which still puts him on a very short list of famous young male musicians and actors who haven’t been convinced that confession is in and of itself a career killer. But as he said in The Advocate in 2007, the stopping point truly does come when the action strays below the belt. “It’s really about the equipment,” he tells me, gesturing at his crotch with a grimace. (Decide for yourself: The first unfiltered hit for an image search on Wentz’s name still yields the shots he took of his equipment in hand, which leaked from his Sidekick in 2006.) “I really don’t think it’s an attractive quality. That’s what it comes down to. I don’t even like my own. Like, I really don’t like it. I don’t like anything about it.”
Maybe you’re a lesbian, I suggest, and he punches the air in triumph. “Yes!” he crows. “I’ve still got the cover!”
But even Wentz can’t make too much of a joke on this point. “Our culture bombards us with this idea that you’re not that, and if you are that, there’s something wrong with you, and then we’re going to call you that, and then it’s an insult,” he says. “There is a sense of self-empowerment or recapturing who you are by people calling you ‘fag,’ and being like, ‘Yeah, I am a fag.’ Even though you’re not. What does somebody respond? That dude has nothing to say about that again.” He stops, and this time he is at least a little worried for his own rep. “Am I going to catch flak for saying ‘fag’ in a magazine?” (Only when we put it on the cover, Pete.)
“Catching flak” is a nice way of saying that now -- especially as his relationship with singer Ashlee Simpson quickly escalated from rumor to engagement to marriage -- Wentz can’t leave the house without being trailed by paparazzi or bombarded by his fans or hers.
It hasn’t always been easy to adjust to the added level of attention. He approaches interviews with a shifting set of emotional and professional boundaries, and starts more than a few stories with a publicist’s worst nightmare: “I probably shouldn’t tell you this, but...”
Even a man who never seems to consider the potential business blowback of his quick-trigger tongue worries what his in-laws think, though, and Simpson’s parents are not only her managers but religious and conservative. One seemingly believable rumor that made the tabloid rounds last winter: Her father, Joe, had told Ashlee not to bring Wentz home for the holidays after an interview in Blender discussed Wentz’s “possible bisexuality.”
“That one was such bullshit,” Wentz says, and tells me eventually he and Joe even joked about it. “He was like, ‘We should take a picture in front of the Christmas tree holding hands.’ ” Joe, an ordained Baptist minister, even officiated at their May wedding. Still, Wentz concedes, “There are definitely ramifications for what you say.”
Every joke Wentz makes about, say, running around his house in Jessica Simpson’s line of high heels gets printed verbatim -- with a humorless warning (from gossips) to Ashlee to watch out for her man’s other possible deviant tendencies. “Ambiguity makes you a lightning rod for people to hate you,” he says. “Some days I wake up and I couldn’t be bothered at all. Some days you Google yourself and you can’t eat.”
Of course, no matter how many kids Wentz has with Ashlee, he knows plenty of people think it’s all a big lie. “Yeah, ‘She’s his beard,’ ” he anticipates, rolling his eyes.
But then he gets quiet, staring out over the hotel pool, and his voice is full of empathy. “I couldn’t imagine living a double life for this long,” he says. “(A) you would just get caught so bad. And (B), I would be in a car in that swimming pool right now. How do you not just do drugs and live in South America? It would make you crazy.”
That’s if all the is-he-or-isn’t-he rumors don’t drive you nuts first. “There’s a little bit of a gay witch hunt,” he says, pointing particularly at gay bloggers such as his sometime ally Perez Hilton. “I don’t know if it’s to bust homophobia wide open or get more attention. It’s like, ‘This person’s gay, this person’s gay, this person’s gay.’ I get it -- we’re, like, all gay. Kind of. There’s a little bit of it that’s probably deserved.”
The impact, especially on young fans, is ultimately worth the circular, reductive debates. “Being ambiguously flamboyant really does help,” he says. “I’ve had so many people come up to me and be like, ‘I felt OK to come out of the closet after you said this.’ And I’m like...” He looks shocked, even overwhelmed. “When someone says that to me -- it’s not an event I’ve ever been through, so I don’t know what to compare it to. I don’t think I even understand how important that is to someone’s life.”
A dude in a band who dares to dream a little bigger than sold-out tours gets compared, on a good day, to a hip-hop impresario such as Jay-Z. Wentz would rather take his cues from the queer king of mass-marketed pop culture: Andy Warhol.
“Warhol impacted you in the ’80s whether you wanted or not,” he says, but after seeing Piero Manzoni’s Merda d’artista (literally, cans allegedly filled with “artist’s shit”) as a kid, he followed the theme to Warhol. Tributes to his hero fittingly run the gamut, from T-shirts -- one has Warhol’s name across the chest of a baseball-style jersey; another is a set of cartoon monster portraits with “Warholier than thou” as tagline -- to a new bar with an underground space modeled after Warhol’s less glamorous hangout, Max’s Kansas City.
Wentz says he most admires how Warhol gave shallow, timeless quotes without ever really answering whatever question he’d been asked. His favorite: “Being famous isn’t all that important. If I weren’t famous, I wouldn’t have been shot for being Andy Warhol.”
“It’s the most contradictory statement on the planet: that Andy Warhol didn’t want to be famous,” he says, laughing. Wentz definitely wants to be famous -- he often declares, not jokingly, that Fall Out Boy will one day be the biggest band on the planet -- but he’d rather get there with a gang of collaborators. In one video posted online, he and Gym Class Heroes’ Travis McCoy holed up in Wentz’s Los Angeles home, churning out paintings as McCoy joked he’s playing Warhol to Wentz’s Basquiat. “ ’Cause I’m black,” McCoy deadpanned.
The ideas that have worked best over the last five years have given Wentz the industry cachet to be taken seriously. His eclectic record label, Decaydance (an imprint of indie Fueled by Ramen), signed the theatrical young band Panic at the Disco, whose first album was made for $10,000 and sold 2.5 million copies worldwide. Their Beatlesque follow-up debuted at number two. On what would be the other end of the radio dial for any other A&R; guy are the hip-hop rockers Gym Class Heroes, whose “Cupid’s Chokehold” was a top-five hit last year.
Wentz’s dive-chic bar in New York City’s East Village, Angels & Kings, has spawned a spin-off in Chicago, with outposts in Las Vegas, Miami, and Los Angeles planned. And after three years as an online-only enterprise, Clandestine Industries -- a media and clothing company -- opened a flagship store in Chicago and signed a major deal to sell its apparel at Nordstrom; Clandestine has outsold expectations and proved a crossover success. “Even Nordstrom has been surprised how many dudes are going into the [juniors] section and rocking the hoodies,” says Stephen Westman, Wentz’s gay business partner.
All of these enterprises have brought together a group of artists who seem equally excited to embrace a Wentzian brand of ambiguity. When the ’80s-inspired dance-rock band Cobra Starship got heckled by kids at one show, singer Gabe Saporta yelled back, “I may be a fag, but I do the fucking around here. Come on up, dude.” Like Wentz, he’s as comfortable talking sexual politics as trash. “We use language and tags to make things fit into boxes,” he says. “Something like sexuality isn’t so easily defined.”
Asked by reporters what rumors the members of Panic at the Disco have heard about themselves, they cite the frequent speculation they’re all dating each other. “What’s the problem if Ryan [Ross] and Brendon [Urie] were actually dating, you know?” the band’s bassist, Jon Walker, told Out last year in reference to the band’s guitarist and singer, who on one tour acted out a love story on stage. Drummer Spencer Smith jumped in to say, “Because they might be.”
“They’re more gay in a totally other way,” Wentz says cryptically, with a proud parent’s smile.
Unlike the usual runaround music execs give when asked -- even hypothetically -- what’s keeping a band with out gay musicians from major crossover success, Wentz says Decaydance could easily handle the challenge. “Fourteen-year-old girls are really into just about anything that’s earnest,” he says. “I’m sure that if it was the right song, they’d be into it.”
He’s also unfazed by potential hurdles if one of the acts he’s already signed came to him wanting to go public in more defiant, unambiguous terms. “I think that I do have, maybe people on the label, but [also] definitely friends who are gay and don’t know they are,” he says. “I’ve never had someone be like, ‘Just so you know, I’m gay.’ I’ve never had that. I don’t think people really need me to care about it, because they know I don’t really care.”
Bob McLynn, whose Crush Management reps most of the Decaydance stable, doesn’t hesitate when asked how the company would react: “We’d support them 100%. If he wanted to speak out in the press, we would, and if he didn’t, we wouldn’t.” Then he shrugs. “I don’t know if anyone offhand [on the label] is out. But it’d be a lot easier in our scene than it was for Rob Halford and Judas Priest.”
Like Warhol, Wentz has already achieved one major pop culture milestone: He’s made himself impossible to avoid, and he’s all but guaranteed every move he makes turns into a headline. “People hate grand ideas,” he says, ready and waiting for the critics. “They love when they fall apart. Everyone likes to see the Titanic go down -- especially if it’s in front of [paparazzi haven] Hyde.”
Even so, Clandestine plans to expand its menswear collections in 2009 with more high-end, less dude-like apparel, though even Wentz admits, “I don’t know that men want to wear clothes inspired by someone who only inspires a legion of 14-year-old girls.” Fall Out Boy’s CD/DVD of a live show in Phoenix, called **** (Warhol made a 25-hour movie called Four Stars too), spawned the most audacious and unlikely of hits: a cover of Michael Jackson’s “Beat It.”
“Like, who says you shouldn’t do that?” he asks, of whatever “that” is on a given day. “Everyone on the Internet, of course. But all those people would do it if they could. Nobody ever gives a good reason why you shouldn’t, other than ‘People will laugh at you.’ ”
Pete Wentz doesn’t care -- today, at least -- if you laugh at him, if you call him a fag, or that other f word: a failure. So maybe it’s time for a little fuck-you of our own, at least to the idea that a guy can’t be a good queer role model unless he actually has sex with men. Wentz could be the world’s best spokesman to a generation of kids who grew up with gay-straight alliances but haven’t all made the leap to full acceptance. No matter how much older or famous he’s gotten, he hasn’t stopped speaking their language. And he certainly isn’t going to shut up anytime soon.
[Article Ends]
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Cover photo and additional pictures taken for the web article by David Roemer.
I Heart My Cage, July 1st 2008
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"Inspired by his hero Andy Warhol's cutting quotes about our celebrity culture, Pete Wentz created this exclusive, extremely limited edition T-shirt for Out: BORN & RAISED IN CAPTIVITY EVERY MOMENT DOCUMENTED I HEART MY CAGE Now you can land one for yourself or your favorite Warhol lover. E-mail all of the following to [email protected] to qualify: 1. Pete suggested a sidebar to his Out cover story that we want you to help write: a quiz with real and fake statements about his sexuality. Send us your favorite quote Pete has supposedly said -- along with a link to where you read it. 2. Be sure to include your full name, mailing address (US only) and T-shirt size. The first 25 people to respond will win the shirt for free! Entries missing any information will be disqualified. (Out.com)"
Krochmal, S. N. (2008). This Charming Man. Out.com.
Out.com Editors. (2008) I Heart My Cage. Out.com.
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leclerc-s · 6 months
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honest series timeline
(white events indicate an official date, blue events indicate no official date, red indicates which events have corresponding parts)
1989
july first: daniel ricciardo's birth december thirteenth: daphne jones' birth
1994
september first: carlos sainz's birth
1996
february seventh: pierre gasly's birth
1997
march second: penelope trevino's birth september thirtieth: max verstappen's birth october sixteenth: charles leclerc's birth december eleventh: rowan todd's birth
1998
june sixteenth: natalia ruiz's birth
1999
may eleventh: mae jones' birth march twenty-second: mick schumacher's birth november thirteenth: lando norris' birth
2000
october fourteenth: arthur leclerc's birth november twenty-first: freya vettel's birth december thirty-first: logan sargeant's birth
2001
april sixth: oscar piastri's birth july tenth: dulce perez's birth september seventh: bailey winter's birth
2002
january twentieth: isabella perez's birth february twentieth: zoya torres' birth trevino family moves to madridspain first meeting between penelope and carlos
2003
first meeting between natalia and charles
2004
2005
freya's adoption
2006
october twenty-fourth: daphne's debut album release
2007
2008
november eleventh: fearless release
2009
september thirteenth: daphne gets interrupted by kanye west at the vma's
2010
twenty-fifth: speak now release
2011
july tenth: daniel ricciardo's debut grand prix
2012
october twenty-second: red release
2013
2014
june twenty-seventh: mae's debut in girl meets world october twenty-seventh: nineteen eighty-nine release
2015
march fifteenth: max verstappen and carlos sainz's debut grand prix april fifteenth: eyes wide open release mae and max begin dating first meeting between daniel and daphne
2016
february twelfth: kanye west releases famous february fifteenth: daphne seemingly shades kanye west at an award show july sixteenth: kim kardashian releases video footage of kanye's phone call with daphne, daphne issues a statement defending herself after the leaked call september twenty-eight: daphne and daniel begin secretly dating october fourteenth: evolution release october twenty-third: daphne performs after the us grand prix mae and max break-up
2017
daphne disappears for a year august twenty-third: daphne announces reputation october first: pierre gasly's debut grand prix november tenth: reputation release
2018
march twenty-first charles leclerc's debut grand prix november ninth: singular act i release natalia and charles' friends with benefits relationship begins
2019
pierre and rowan's situationship begins march sixteenth: lando norris' debut grand prix june thirteenth: scooter braun purchases daphne's masters july first: lover release july nineteenth: singular act ii release september thirtieth: seven release (see seven for further info) november twelfth: zoya's debut on high school musical: the musical: the series
2020
january thirty-first: miss americana release march twenty: the entire phone call between daphne and kanye get leaked july twenty-fourth: folklore release december eleventh: evermore release daniel and joshua reunite mae and max
2021
lando and bailey's fake relationship begins april ninth: fearless (daphne's version) release march twenty-eighth: mick schumacher's debut grand prix may twenty-first: sour release september: filming for daisy jones and the six beginsnovember twelfth: red (daphne's version) release mae and max begin dating again
2022
march: filming for daisy jones and the six wraps natalia becomes pregnant july fifteenth: emails i can't send release september twenty-eighth: daphne and daniel get married october twenty-first: midnights release pierre and rowan accidentally get married in vegas september twenty-eighth: daniel and daphne get married november twentieth: sebastian vettel's final race
2023
january seventeenth: baby leclerc is born rumors of daphne and fernando dating begin (see the daphlonso scandal for further info)lando accidentally leaks daphne and daniel's secret relationship during a livestream march fifth: logan sargeant and oscar piastri's debut grand prix march seventeenth: daphne's eras tour kicks off and emails i can't send fwd release mae and max get secretly marriedthe first meeting between logan and zoya july seventh: speak now (daphne's version) release july eleventh: daniel replaces nyck de vries at alphatauri august twenty-third: mae and max's familial wedding party september eighth: guts release october twenty-seventh: nineteen eighty-nine (daphne's version) release november 11th: daphne's famous line change, "karma is the guy on the track" (see karma is the guy on the track for further info) november fifteenth: mae and max's vegas wedding party (see what happens in vegas never stays in vegas for further info)
2024
january 25th: charles leclerc extends his contract with ferrari for a disclosed amount of time (see divorcegate for further info) january 26th: lando norris extends his contract with mclaren for a disclosed amount of time (see divorcegate for further info) february 1st: lewis hamilton announces his departure from mercedes, and announces his multi-year contract with ferrari. (see divorcegate for further info) february 4th: the 66th annual grammys, daphne announces her new album, the tortured poets department ( see let him be a trophy husband! for further info) march 2nd: the 75th formula one season begins. april 19th: the tortured poets department release
… more events to be added
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Rihanna
Robyn Rihanna Fenty (Saint Michael, Barbados; 20 de febrero de 1988), conocida simplemente como Rihanna, es una cantante, actriz, diseñadora y empresaria barbadense. Es conocida por fusionar algunos géneros caribeños con música pop y por reinventar su imagen a través de los años. Su impacto en la cultura popular la ha llevado a convertirse en un icono de la música y de la moda, por lo que se refieren a ella como la «Princesa del R&B» y «Reina de la Moda».3​4​
Nacida en Saint Michael y criada en Bridgetown, Barbados, Rihanna hizo una audición para el productor de discos estadounidense Evan Rogers en 2003, quien la invitó a los Estados Unidos para grabar cintas de demostración. Después de firmar con Def Jam en 2005, pronto obtuvo reconocimiento con el lanzamiento de sus dos primeros álbumes de estudio, Music of the Sun (2005) y A Girl Like Me (2006), ambos influenciados por la música caribeña y alcanzaron su punto máximo dentro de los diez primeros puestos de la lista Billboard 200 de Estados Unidos.
El tercer álbum de Rihanna, Good Girl Gone Bad (2007), incorporó elementos de dance pop y estableció su estatus como símbolo sexual en la industria de la música. El sencillo «Umbrella», que encabezó las listas de éxitos, le valió a Rihanna su primer premio Grammy y la catapultó al estrellato mundial. Continuó mezclando géneros pop, dance y R&B en sus siguientes álbumes de estudio, Rated R (2009), Loud (2010), Talk That Talk (2011) y Unapologetic (2012), el último de los cuales se convirtió en su primer número uno en Billboard 200. Los álbumes generaron una serie de sencillos que encabezaron las listas de éxitos, incluidos «Rude Boy», «Only Girl (In the World)», «What's My Name?», «S&M», «We Found Love», «Where Have You Been» y «Diamonds». Su octavo álbum, Anti (2016), mostró un nuevo control creativo tras su salida de Def Jam. Se convirtió en su segundo álbum número uno en los Estados Unidos y contó con el sencillo «Work» que encabezó las listas de éxitos. Durante su carrera musical, Rihanna ha colaborado con muchos artistas, como Drake, Britney Spears, Eminem, Jay-Z, Kanye West, Adam Levine, Paul McCartney, Ne-Yo y Shakira.
Con ventas de más de 250 millones de discos en todo el mundo, Rihanna es la segunda artista musical femenina con mayores ventas de todos los tiempos. Ha obtenido 14 números uno y 31 sencillos entre los diez primeros en los Estados Unidos y 30 entradas entre los diez primeros en el Reino Unido. Sus elogios incluyen nueve premios Grammy, 13 American Music Awards (incluido el Icon Award, por su trayectoria y contribución al mundo de la música), 12 Billboard Music Awards, siete MTV Video Music Awards (incluido el Michael Jackson Video Vanguard Award, un reconocimiento entregado a músicos que han tenido un profundo impacto en la denominada «cultura MTV», a través de su discografía y videografía5​) seis Guinness World Records y el premio del presidente de la NAACP. Spotify le otorgó el título de la artista femenina más escuchada de todos los tiempos.6​7​8​ La revista Billboard la nombró «artista digital» de la década de 2000, «artista Hot 100» de la década de 2010 y «artista mainstream» más importante de los últimos 20 años.9​10​11​12​ En 2023, fue incluida en el puesto número 68 de la lista «Los 200 mejores cantantes de todos los tiempos» de la revista Rolling Stone.13​ Es considerada por dos medios de comunicación estadounidense como la artista musical más influyente y exitosa del siglo xxi.14​15​ Time la nombró una de las 100 personas más influyentes del mundo en 2012 y 2018. Forbes la ubicó entre las diez celebridades mejor pagadas en 2012 y 2014.16​17​18​19​ A partir de 2022, es la música femenina más rica, con un patrimonio neto estimado de $1.4 mil millones.20​21​
Aparte de la música, Rihanna es conocida por su participación en causas humanitarias, proyectos empresariales y la industria de la moda. Es la fundadora de la organización sin fines de lucro Clara Lionel Foundation, la marca de cosméticos Fenty Beauty y la casa de moda Fenty bajo LVMH; ella es la primera mujer negra en encabezar una marca de lujo para LVMH.22​ Rihanna también se ha aventurado en la actuación, apareciendo en papeles importantes en Battleship (2012), Home (2015), Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets (2017) y Ocean's 8 (2018). Fue nombrada embajadora de educación, turismo e inversión por el Gobierno de Barbados en 2018, y fue declarada Héroe Nacional de Barbados el primer día de la república parlamentaria del país en 2021, lo que le da derecho al estilo de «The Right Excelente» de por vida.23​ Rihanna encabezó el espectáculo de medio tiempo del Super Bowl LVII el 12 de febrero de 2023.
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