segunda-feira, 14 de setembro de 2009

MTV Awards Marred by Performer’s Comments

Christopher Polk/Getty Images Kayne West drew scorn from the audience over his comments after Taylor Swift won the Best Female Video award.
A few days ago the country was starkly reminded that there are
rules of decorum in the United States Congress. And on Sunday night, it became apparent that even the MTV Video Music Awards has little tolerance for outlandish behavior.
The annual presentation of the MTV awards began at Radio City Music Hall seeking to strike a mood both somber and celebratory, opening with a tender speech by Madonna about her memories of Michael Jackson, followed by a spirited dance tribute to the King of Pop that featured his sister Janet Jackson.
But that reverential tone was quickly broken when the night’s first award was presented, for best female video. The nominees in that category included Beyoncé, for her dance anthem “Single Ladies (Put a Ring On It)” and Taylor Swift, for her ballad “You Belong With Me.” Ms. Swift, the 19-year-old country singer, was named the winner, and as she received her trophy, she began to tell the audience that she “always dreamed about what it would be like to maybe win one of these someday.”
Her reverie was interrupted by Kanye West, the hip-hop performer and provocateur, who followed Ms. Swift on stage and appeared to take her microphone. “I’m really happy for you,” he told her. “I’m going to let you finish. But Beyoncé had one of the best videos of all time.”
Mr. West left the stage to boos, while Ms. Swift stood silently displaying her award. The television broadcast cut away to a wide shot of the stage, and then to a taped segment featuring the comedian Tracy Morgan.
Inside Radio City Music Hall, the audience’s outrage at Mr. West’s actions continued for several more minutes. On the theater’s first mezzanine, cries of “I think he’s out of his mind!” and “He just threw his whole career away!” could be heard. Though MTV has a reputation for stoking the flames of controversy at its award shows – an apparent fight between the rapper Eminem and the comedian Sacha Baron Cohen at the MTV Movie Awards in June was quickly revealed as a hoax – most audience members seemed to believe the interaction between Ms. Swift and Mr. West was genuine.
During a commercial break, the hip-hop performer Wale, who was leading the house band at the Video Music Awards, tried to quell the crowd. Addressing the audience, he cracked a joke about Serena Williams, saying that her match-ending tantrum at the United States Open on Saturday was the result of “roid rage.” Returning to the subject of Mr. West, Wale said, “You can’t fault a man for speaking his mind,” and he was roundly booed.
Mr. West remained the evening’s villain in absentia, and each mention of his name was jeered for all the subsequent categories in which he was nominated. (Luckily for MTV and various presenters, Mr. West won no awards on Sunday night.)
Beyoncé, however, won the evening’s biggest prize, the Video of the Year award, for “Single Ladies,” and when she came on stage to accept it, she invited Ms. Swift to come back and finish her interrupted speech.
“Do you want me to try this again?” Ms. Swift asked the audience, which cheered its approval. She then thanked various professional colleagues and the high school of her younger brother, Austin, for allowing her to film the video there.
On his personal blog , Mr. West apologized for his behavior at the awards show. In an all-caps message, he wrote: “I’M SOOOOO SORRY TO TAYLOR SWIFT AND HER FANS AND HER MOM. I SPOKE TO HER MOTHER RIGHT AFTER AND SHE SAID THE SAME THING MY MOTHER WOULD’VE SAID. SHE IS VERY TALENTED!” He also reiterated his assertion that Beyonce’s video was “THE BEST OF THIS DECADE!!!!”
It was unclear if Mr. West would pay any further penance for his behavior. But he is scheduled to perform on Monday on the debut of “The Jay Leno Show,” along with the rapper Jay-Z, who is Beyoncé’s husband.

sexta-feira, 28 de agosto de 2009

Playoffs Start, but Someone Forgot to Tell the Course

JERSEY CITY — The tees were moved up, the scores went down and the PGA Tour playoffs for the FedEx Cup had a soft opening at the Barclays at the Liberty National golf club on Thursday. Overnight rains took just enough fire out of the small, undulating greens to allow opportunistic golfers to take dead aim, and some lower-ranked golfers happily obliged.

Leading the charge at six-under-par 65 were Sergio García, Steve Marino and Paul Goydos, none of whom were among the top 25 in the point standings going into the week. Trailing by one stroke at 66 were Charley Hoffman, Webb Simpson, Fredrik Jacobson of Sweden and Heath Slocum, a foursome in which only Hoffman, at No. 28, was ranked above 85th.
And at 67, two strokes off the lead, were 66th-ranked
Padraig Harrington of Ireland; Ian Poulter of England, who was 34th; and David Toms, at 12th the highest-ranked player among the top 10 Thursday.
“Yeah, they were nice to us today,” said Marino, at No. 30 the highest ranked of the three leaders. “They could make this place play extremely difficult. And, you know, if we get some winds from that tropical storm that supposedly are going to come this weekend, you are going to see some carnage out there, that’s for sure.”
The reference was to Tropical Storm Danny, which is projected to brush Cape Cod late Saturday or early Sunday. As for golf carnage, there was very little Thursday. The course, which has the Manhattan skyline and the Statue of Liberty as a backdrop, played to a stroke average of 71.9, with 56 players in the field of 124 at par or better.
Among the top five players on the points list, No. 2-ranked Steve Stricker shot the lowest score of 69 and is in a tie for 21st. No. 1-ranked
Tiger Woods shot a one-under-par 70, as did No. 3 Zach Johnson. Kenny Perry, No. 4, shot 71 and No. 5 Lucas Glover shot four-over 75.
The No. 6-ranked player,
Phil Mickelson, who had five birdies and four bogeys in his round of 70, was fairly pleased with his day.
“I’ll tell you why I think this is a great course to hold this event is because the hard holes are ridiculously hard and the easy holes are pretty easy,” Mickelson said. “Because of that we are going to see lots of birdies and bogeys, which is exactly what happened in my round.
“I think it’s going to be exciting. That’s why we have rounds of 66 and 76, 78. It’s the way the course is set up. I think that’s going to make for exciting finishes on the weekend.”
Among the three players tied for the lead, the 89th-ranked García has the most ground to make up. His confident, aggressive play indicated he would just as soon pick up where he left off at the Wyndham Championship last week, where he finished fourth and moved up 26 spots to his current ranking.
Playing the back nine first, García went out in 31 and reached seven under par with three more birdies on the front nine, nearly holing his approach shots at No. 7 and No. 8 and birdieing each before a bogey at the last hole slowed him down. He did not see either of the shots land because the hole locations were obscured behind bunkers.
“You always try to make it,” García said, smiling. “Unfortunately, sometimes it doesn’t go as close as you want it. But that is the main goal, put it in the hole with the least amount of shots.”
With one round down and 15 remaining before a FedEx Cup champion is crowned at the end of next month in Atlanta, the picture will be murky for a little while. But what did come into focus on a partly cloudy day was that the golfers with the most to gain were setting a fast early pace on a course that can play much harder than it did Thursday.
Goydos,
who has battled through a difficult year on the golf course and at home, appears to be in a good frame of mind as he tries to move deep into the playoffs. After making his first birdie of the day at the par-five 13th, he reeled off five birdies in six holes. He birdied the 16th and 17th, and, after a par at No. 18, he birdied No. 1, No. 2 and No. 3.
Combining his deadpan delivery with a little self-deprecation, Goydos strolled from the media center and said over his shoulder: “I’ll tell you how surprised they are about me leading. I’m being drug tested.”
In-competition testing for performance-enhancing drugs is done randomly on the PGA Tour, and Goydos’s testing number just happened to come up on the same day he hung a low number up on the scoreboard. It was surprising, but not as surprising as what is likely to happen when the playoffs really start to heat up.

quarta-feira, 11 de fevereiro de 2009

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Playoffs Start, but Someone Forgot to Tell the Course

Sergio García, Steve Marino and Paul Goydos were in a three-way tie for the lead after the opening round at the Barclays at the Liberty National golf club.

JERSEY CITY — The tees were moved up, the scores went down and the PGA Tour playoffs for the FedEx Cup had a soft opening at the Barclays at the Liberty National golf club on Thursday. Overnight rains took just enough fire out of the small, undulating greens to allow opportunistic golfers to take dead aim, and some lower-ranked golfers happily obliged.

Leading the charge at six-under-par 65 were Sergio García, Steve Marino and Paul Goydos, none of whom were among the top 25 in the point standings going into the week. Trailing by one stroke at 66 were Charley Hoffman, Webb Simpson, Fredrik Jacobson of Sweden and Heath Slocum, a foursome in which only Hoffman, at No. 28, was ranked above 85th.
And at 67, two strokes off the lead, were 66th-ranked
Padraig Harrington of Ireland; Ian Poulter of England, who was 34th; and David Toms, at 12th the highest-ranked player among the top 10 Thursday.
“Yeah, they were nice to us today,” said Marino, at No. 30 the highest ranked of the three leaders. “They could make this place play extremely difficult. And, you know, if we get some winds from that tropical storm that supposedly are going to come this weekend, you are going to see some carnage out there, that’s for sure.”
The reference was to Tropical Storm Danny, which is projected to brush Cape Cod late Saturday or early Sunday. As for golf carnage, there was very little Thursday. The course, which has the Manhattan skyline and the Statue of Liberty as a backdrop, played to a stroke average of 71.9, with 56 players in the field of 124 at par or better.
Among the top five players on the points list, No. 2-ranked Steve Stricker shot the lowest score of 69 and is in a tie for 21st. No. 1-ranked
Tiger Woods shot a one-under-par 70, as did No. 3 Zach Johnson. Kenny Perry, No. 4, shot 71 and No. 5 Lucas Glover shot four-over 75.
The No. 6-ranked player,
Phil Mickelson, who had five birdies and four bogeys in his round of 70, was fairly pleased with his day.
“I’ll tell you why I think this is a great course to hold this event is because the hard holes are ridiculously hard and the easy holes are pretty easy,” Mickelson said. “Because of that we are going to see lots of birdies and bogeys, which is exactly what happened in my round.
“I think it’s going to be exciting. That’s why we have rounds of 66 and 76, 78. It’s the way the course is set up. I think that’s going to make for exciting finishes on the weekend.”
Among the three players tied for the lead, the 89th-ranked García has the most ground to make up. His confident, aggressive play indicated he would just as soon pick up where he left off at the Wyndham Championship last week, where he finished fourth and moved up 26 spots to his current ranking.
Playing the back nine first, García went out in 31 and reached seven under par with three more birdies on the front nine, nearly holing his approach shots at No. 7 and No. 8 and birdieing each before a bogey at the last hole slowed him down. He did not see either of the shots land because the hole locations were obscured behind bunkers.
“You always try to make it,” García said, smiling. “Unfortunately, sometimes it doesn’t go as close as you want it. But that is the main goal, put it in the hole with the least amount of shots.”
With one round down and 15 remaining before a FedEx Cup champion is crowned at the end of next month in Atlanta, the picture will be murky for a little while. But what did come into focus on a partly cloudy day was that the golfers with the most to gain were setting a fast early pace on a course that can play much harder than it did Thursday.
Goydos,
who has battled through a difficult year on the golf course and at home, appears to be in a good frame of mind as he tries to move deep into the playoffs. After making his first birdie of the day at the par-five 13th, he reeled off five birdies in six holes. He birdied the 16th and 17th, and, after a par at No. 18, he birdied No. 1, No. 2 and No. 3.
Combining his deadpan delivery with a little self-deprecation, Goydos strolled from the media center and said over his shoulder: “I’ll tell you how surprised they are about me leading. I’m being drug tested.”
In-competition testing for performance-enhancing drugs is done randomly on the PGA Tour, and Goydos’s testing number just happened to come up on the same day he hung a low number up on the scoreboard. It was surprising, but not as surprising as what is likely to happen when the playoffs really start to heat up.