Anyone hear Ashlee Simpson during the halftime of the USC/Oklahome game?
#51
DVD Talk Hall of Fame
Joined: Jan 2000
Posts: 8,407
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
From: I was here but I disappear
Today's NY Daily News cover:
Article:
http://nydailynews.com/front/story/268448p-229875c.html
Article:
http://nydailynews.com/front/story/268448p-229875c.html
Ashlee's biggest fumble
On MTV, she bored us. On 'SNL,' she conned us.
Tuesday night, football fans struck back. 'Bout time.
By ISAAC GUZMAN
Ashlee Simpson performing during the halftime show Tuesday night at the Orange Bowl.
'SNL,' Oct. 23, 2004: Simpson (with Jude Law) blames band for snafu.
In the pop world, Ashlee Simpson always seemed like an inevitability. Riding the coattails of her infamously dense sister, Jessica, she parlayed her own MTV reality show into a No. 1 debut on the Billboard charts.
But during Tuesday night's Orange Bowl halftime show, a stadium filled with 75,000 rowdy football fans gave Ashlee something that was probably equally inevitable: a thorough booing.
After a performance of "La La" in which she couldn't even sing in tune with her "guide track," Simpson finally got the reception she has deserved for a while.
Outside of television studios controlled by producers and beyond the reach of deejays dictated to by radio programmers are ordinary Americans. And when a highly paid star like Ashlee Simpson chokes, they're not about to give her some courtesy applause.
That's because Simpson has flouted one of the founding principles of showbiz: Never let 'em see you sweat. In being so ill prepared for the national stage, she has become the Wizard without his curtain, the Emperor in his brand-new suit.
Live at the MTV Video Music Awards pre-show in August, Simpson's odd, ear-grating performance left people talking. During her first lip-sync snafu on "Saturday Night Live" in October, she actually had the gall to walk off the stage and blame her bandmates for the miscue. Any performer worth her salt would have turned the sticky situation into a success.
Just think of Melissa Etheridge, who struggled with a faulty microphone and detuned guitar during the sold-out, nationally broadcast Concert for New York at Madison Square Garden in 2001. Where Simpson would have smashed the guitar and stormed out, Etheridge persevered and the audience loved her for it.
"What you want is a final product that's fun," says Sasha Frere-Jones, music critic for The New Yorker. "Everybody uses guide tracks. But being a bad sport, walking off stage and being a bad performer - that's her fault."
As an audience, we enjoy being beguiled. It was true 100 years ago for Houdini-heads, and it's true now, even with the dubious offerings of David Blaine and the debunkings of Penn & Teller. It's such a pleasurable experience that we'll fork over our hard-earned cash for the pleasure of being bedazzled.
But when performers botch the spectacle or reveal how they duped us, we get angry. That's what made rotten produce the bane of 19th-century performers and it's what drove Milli Vanilli into the annals of shame.
Lately, we've been besieged by public shams, from Jason Giambi's alleged steroid use to never-realized assurances about Iraq's weapons of mass destruction. But it's hard to voice our dissatisfaction.
Ashlee made it easy. She took the stage. She sounded bad. We booed.
Yet the Simpson juggernaut charges on. Six months after its release, her debut album, "Autobiography," is still in Billboard's Top 40 and is closing in on the 3 million sales mark. Ashlee, meanwhile, is unfazed by her detractors.
In the upcoming March edition of Teen People, she tells music editor Zena Burns that those who complain about her "are just old people who watch the news and don't know anything about me."
She has a point there, since the teen viewers of MTV's "The Ashlee Simpson Show" got to see and hear her struggle with off-key warbling throughout the recording of her album.
"They see her on the show and she's scrappy and she's a real girl, and that's someone they can relate to," Burns says. "'Here's a real girl who makes real mistakes just like me. But she also makes this kick-ass music.'"
While she might not actually live up to the level of "kick-ass," Simpson does sound competent on record. But until she figures out how to take a stage with a modicum of grace, all we can ask is that she stop exposing us to her wailing - and herself to our ridicule.
"She needs to get on the road and perform live and get her feet wet," says Barry Jeckell, managing editor of Billboard.com. "Otherwise, I would say she has two strikes against her."
On MTV, she bored us. On 'SNL,' she conned us.
Tuesday night, football fans struck back. 'Bout time.
By ISAAC GUZMAN
Ashlee Simpson performing during the halftime show Tuesday night at the Orange Bowl.
'SNL,' Oct. 23, 2004: Simpson (with Jude Law) blames band for snafu.
In the pop world, Ashlee Simpson always seemed like an inevitability. Riding the coattails of her infamously dense sister, Jessica, she parlayed her own MTV reality show into a No. 1 debut on the Billboard charts.
But during Tuesday night's Orange Bowl halftime show, a stadium filled with 75,000 rowdy football fans gave Ashlee something that was probably equally inevitable: a thorough booing.
After a performance of "La La" in which she couldn't even sing in tune with her "guide track," Simpson finally got the reception she has deserved for a while.
Outside of television studios controlled by producers and beyond the reach of deejays dictated to by radio programmers are ordinary Americans. And when a highly paid star like Ashlee Simpson chokes, they're not about to give her some courtesy applause.
That's because Simpson has flouted one of the founding principles of showbiz: Never let 'em see you sweat. In being so ill prepared for the national stage, she has become the Wizard without his curtain, the Emperor in his brand-new suit.
Live at the MTV Video Music Awards pre-show in August, Simpson's odd, ear-grating performance left people talking. During her first lip-sync snafu on "Saturday Night Live" in October, she actually had the gall to walk off the stage and blame her bandmates for the miscue. Any performer worth her salt would have turned the sticky situation into a success.
Just think of Melissa Etheridge, who struggled with a faulty microphone and detuned guitar during the sold-out, nationally broadcast Concert for New York at Madison Square Garden in 2001. Where Simpson would have smashed the guitar and stormed out, Etheridge persevered and the audience loved her for it.
"What you want is a final product that's fun," says Sasha Frere-Jones, music critic for The New Yorker. "Everybody uses guide tracks. But being a bad sport, walking off stage and being a bad performer - that's her fault."
As an audience, we enjoy being beguiled. It was true 100 years ago for Houdini-heads, and it's true now, even with the dubious offerings of David Blaine and the debunkings of Penn & Teller. It's such a pleasurable experience that we'll fork over our hard-earned cash for the pleasure of being bedazzled.
But when performers botch the spectacle or reveal how they duped us, we get angry. That's what made rotten produce the bane of 19th-century performers and it's what drove Milli Vanilli into the annals of shame.
Lately, we've been besieged by public shams, from Jason Giambi's alleged steroid use to never-realized assurances about Iraq's weapons of mass destruction. But it's hard to voice our dissatisfaction.
Ashlee made it easy. She took the stage. She sounded bad. We booed.
Yet the Simpson juggernaut charges on. Six months after its release, her debut album, "Autobiography," is still in Billboard's Top 40 and is closing in on the 3 million sales mark. Ashlee, meanwhile, is unfazed by her detractors.
In the upcoming March edition of Teen People, she tells music editor Zena Burns that those who complain about her "are just old people who watch the news and don't know anything about me."
She has a point there, since the teen viewers of MTV's "The Ashlee Simpson Show" got to see and hear her struggle with off-key warbling throughout the recording of her album.
"They see her on the show and she's scrappy and she's a real girl, and that's someone they can relate to," Burns says. "'Here's a real girl who makes real mistakes just like me. But she also makes this kick-ass music.'"
While she might not actually live up to the level of "kick-ass," Simpson does sound competent on record. But until she figures out how to take a stage with a modicum of grace, all we can ask is that she stop exposing us to her wailing - and herself to our ridicule.
"She needs to get on the road and perform live and get her feet wet," says Barry Jeckell, managing editor of Billboard.com. "Otherwise, I would say she has two strikes against her."
#52
DVD Talk Platinum Edition
Joined: Mar 2001
Posts: 3,764
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
From: the South
Originally Posted by LiquidSky
I just found out this no-talent corporate product is going to be performing at the Ryman Auditorium here in Nashville.
The Ryman is the home of the original Grand Ol' Opry and all the greats have performed on that stage: Hank Williams Sr., Johnny Cash, The Carter Family, Loretta Lynn, Patsy Cline, Emmylou Harris....more recently Annie Lenox, Sting, Pete Yorn, The Pixies, The Pretenders, R.E.M.
Ashlee Simpson does not even deserve to sweep that stage!
The Ryman is the home of the original Grand Ol' Opry and all the greats have performed on that stage: Hank Williams Sr., Johnny Cash, The Carter Family, Loretta Lynn, Patsy Cline, Emmylou Harris....more recently Annie Lenox, Sting, Pete Yorn, The Pixies, The Pretenders, R.E.M. Ashlee Simpson does not even deserve to sweep that stage!

#53
DVD Talk Hero
Originally Posted by Marco1
Is her band any good? Are they a rockin band that has to back up this sometimes cute hack?
#54
DVD Talk Hall of Fame
Originally Posted by Penny Lane
Now this sucks! How dare they let her perform on that stage?!
#55
DVD Talk Hero
I get so pissed when I think of all the truly talented musicians I know that never get a break, not to mention all the ones I don't know and then to see how a talentless hack like this getting all the breaks in the world, blowing every single one, and still getting huge record sales. Meanwhile there are some truly gifted musicians out there who will never get any exposure because they can't be properly marketed as a product...
Die record industry, die!
Die record industry, die!
#56
DVD Talk Legend
Outside of television studios controlled by producers and beyond the reach of deejays dictated to by radio programmers are ordinary Americans
#59
DVD Talk Limited Edition
Originally Posted by LiquidSky
It beats me! I don't care if she played anywhere else...but The Ryman has a rich history and tradition.....until now. 

#60
DVD Talk Limited Edition
I won't front, I liked her lead single as it was catchy, but I have no sympathy for this broad. She really has no talent (as far as singing, acting, or dancing goes). I think what's really insulting is that she went with this pop "punk" persona because she thought that genre of music could cover for her lack of singing ability. I will be happy when the Simpson's collective (especially the Father who gives me the willies. Always commenting on how big Jessica's knockers are and that haircut. Willies!) is gone out of the spotlight for good. And to think we were so close...if MTV didn't have that damn show.
#63
Originally Posted by boredsilly
(especially the Father who gives me the willies. Always commenting on how big Jessica's knockers are and that haircut. Willies!)
#66
Senior Member
Joined: Feb 2004
Posts: 339
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
From: NYC/NJ
Here's a link to the video http://www.ifilm.com/ifilmdetail/2662083?htv=12
#67
Senior Member
Joined: Sep 2003
Posts: 536
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
From: Ga
Last time her excuse for sucking was acid reflux. With the screeching and feet stomping (dancing?) I'm guessing now she's trying to get over a severe case of irritable bowel syndrome. Or maybe she thinks singing out of tune and constantly screaming makes her seem more edgy and punk
Even that porcupine head she's dating has more talent.
Even that porcupine head she's dating has more talent.
#69
DVD Talk Godfather
Now she is saying that the boos were for Clarkson and Adkins, everyone was just holding their boos until the end of the whole show.
What a fuckin bitch.
What a fuckin bitch.
#70
DVD Talk Hall of Fame
Joined: Jan 2000
Posts: 8,407
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
From: I was here but I disappear
Originally Posted by Joe1086
Here's a link to the video http://www.ifilm.com/ifilmdetail/2662083?htv=12
#71
DVD Talk Legend
Music
Due to a Scheduling Conflict Gwen Stefani Will Be Unable to Perform at This Year's Orange Bowl
SANTA MONICA, Calif., Dec. 24 /PRNewswire/ -- Due to a scheduling conflict
Gwen Stefani will be unable to perform at this year's Orange Bowl.
Due to a Scheduling Conflict Gwen Stefani Will Be Unable to Perform at This Year's Orange Bowl
SANTA MONICA, Calif., Dec. 24 /PRNewswire/ -- Due to a scheduling conflict
Gwen Stefani will be unable to perform at this year's Orange Bowl.
"Scheduling conflict" must be show business slang for "my asshat manager didn't bother to notice that I would have to appear on the same stage as Ashlee Simpson".
#72
DVD Talk Hall of Fame
Originally Posted by Michael Corvin
Now she is saying that the boos were for Clarkson and Adkins, everyone was just holding their boos until the end of the whole show.
What a fuckin bitch.
What a fuckin bitch.

Although I don't care for their music, at least Clarkson and Adkins can sing. Next Simpson will be blaming the hotdog vendors. Too bad one didn't shove a weenie in her mouth
#73
DVD Talk Legend
Joined: Mar 2003
Posts: 10,795
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
From: Lyon Estates
Originally Posted by Michael Corvin
Now she is saying that the boos were for Clarkson and Adkins, everyone was just holding their boos until the end of the whole show.
What a fuckin bitch.
What a fuckin bitch.
#75
DVD Talk Legend
Originally Posted by LiquidSky
Next Simpson will be blaming the hotdog vendors.

http://www.lipsync.us/download.php?f...MadTV-Skit.wmv



