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October 3, 2010

Everything I don't know about TV, this guy does...and more! fourfour.typepad.com

Antm15_2_tyra_blinkAntm15_1_tyra_italiaKanye_vmas

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I have nothing to say about last night's Jersey Chore/Snore/Bore. After last week's gleeful declaration of sexist double standards, I figured I was pretty much done with it and this week, I found I was pretty much right. (Really, even Pauly's squandering his likability with enough nonsense hollering to make him unwatchably obnoxious at this point?) When Snooki and Angelina took part in two (two!) rounds of a physical altercation, I felt like I was watching my mommies fight. I don't know what I wanted more: for them to stop or for them to kill each other so I could get the TV back.

I'm going to stick out the viewing till the end of this season (and next season's return to Jersey is tantalizing, for sure), but the recapping may be over. One of the worst things you can do (outside of the realm of human atrocity) is speak when you have nothing to say. It would be helpful if the cast of Jersey Shore knew this, but no matter: I'm transcending anyway.

 

Just what you need: Trash Humpers gifs

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If annoying is an art, Harmony Korine's Trash Humpers is a masterpiece. It's full of high-pitched cackles, nonsense songs ("A doodle all day," goes a line in the most often repeated one, "Three Little Devils") and a group of people intent on devising new ways to be as simultaneously stupid, disgusting and solitary as possible. The things that they come up with are amazing as innovations in inanity.

Korine creates what really feels like its own world, slowly revealing its malevolence. It's all fun and trash-humping until we see a dead body lying in a field...and then catch evidence of another murder performed by this group of people who are maybe in masks or maybe just melted (the murder reveal is preceded by some banter about a pet dog, folding an act of atrociousness into banal domesticity as a matter of course). And that's not all, as far as crimes go. So many questions arise, if the movie holds your attention and its seemingly plotless and free-form structure doesn't turn you off. Why's that toilet in a field? What's in the bags? Where do these people live? Why are others hanging out with them? What's the point? Are they really as free as they think they are?

It may feel like a frustrating cocktail of idiotic and lofty (as a great fan of absurdity, I really enjoy the movie, but by the end of both of my viewings, I was ready for it to be over -- and its running time is less than 80 minutes). But that cocktail can also be hysterical. This movie is as trashy as that which is humped, and its old-VHS aesthetic only helps reinforce the seediness (I don't understand, though, why, if it's supposed to be edited from tape, its aspect ratio is 16x9 instead of 4x3). Some select, NSFW-ish absurdity is included in the gif wall below. It is mostly inspired by the humpers' advice: make it, don't fake it!

Continue reading "Just what you need: Trash Humpers gifs" »

Blondes have less blonde

Like I said last week, the fact that I was into a blonde so early on did not bode well for Sara.

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Also something that didn’t bode well for Sara: not being blonde anymore.

Continue reading "Blondes have less blonde" »

Sorry!

Antm15_3_tyra_bounce

I'm in Miami for work and not only is it a lot of work it's also...Miami. There comes a time when you have to choose between having a blog and having a life. I often choose the former; since I'm in Miami (I will not say "bitch!") and haven't ever been before, I'm choosing the latter. I'll have a recap up, but probably not till it's late enough to be irrelevant. Whatever! It's coming. In the meantime, enjoy watching Tyra going ba-ta-ta-tuh-ta with these nice ta-tas. What size are they again?

The lesson of Jersey Shore: Season 2, Episode 9

That's right, lesson. There's only one this week:

Js2_9_angelina

These people are gross. And not gross ha-ha.

Continue reading "The lesson of Jersey Shore: Season 2, Episode 9" »

Aretha Franklin is amazing

 

Aretha Franklin and her muumuu recently took to PBS to fund-raise apparently out of an extremely deep-seated love for the network. Guys, she really, really loves it. Her love of PBS programming is not to be believed -- believe me and I'm serious. I clipped and cut up the weirder points of her shilling, including her open scratching and possible crotch-grabbing, her tributes to cheese steaks and roller-skating and her unexpected modesty when confronted with a compliment.

This at least must be better than Devil

 

The clip above is a bit of so-bad-it's-fantastic transcendence from a Christian propaganda VHS called Demons: True Life Evil Forces. In it, a woman who apparently is disgusted by Buddhism recounts a story she once heard about a "demon" in the apartment that she manages. Reenactments of hearsay are obviously the best reenactments of them all. Anyway, I hate to spoil it for you (no I don't), but it turns out that all it takes to rid the apartment of the demon is telling it, "Jesus...In the name of Jesus, leave!" and then drawing a cross in crayon on a piece of paper and taping it face down on the portal the demon came out of. Yes, it's true: ridding your home of demons is easier than ridding your home of vermin and relatives. It kind of makes me want to get a demon -- if they're that easy to get rid of, I might as well keep one around for a few hours just for the cultural experience. It would, at the very least, make a good blog post, you know?

Into thin air

It wasn't Annamaria's constant bragging or the camera's lingering on her supposedly unhealthy body that let me know she was going home. It was her attempt to defend herself from Tyra's criticism and the death blink that followed.

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At this point, I knew it was all over for her.

Continue reading "Into thin air" »

Catfish/bullshit

Catfish

Below is a possible explanation (based on inisder knowledge!) for the air of bullshit that arrives with the new "documentary" Catfish. Also, I spoil the entire film. Ha.

Continue reading "Catfish/bullshit" »

Sometimes camp just ain't enough


Above is basically contraband footage from a live interview/signing John Waters did last Friday that was put on by the Word bookstore in Brooklyn (though it took place at an actual venue, Coco 66). We weren't supposed to take any pictures or video, but I couldn't resist having my boyfriend capture footage while I asked John about reality TV. His immediate response struck me as disagreeing for the sake of disagreeing because he's said plenty disparaging words about reality TV (John Waters saying that something ruined bad taste is about as big as an insult can get). All night he was like that with the weirdly bashful L.A. Times reporter Carolyn Kellogg, who interviewed him, while regularly turning and covering her face when he said anything mildly racy. She called him kind to his subjects in his recent book Role Models and he was like, "OF COURSE, I'M NOT GOING TO INSULT THEM!!!" She said it was interesting that he didn't out Johnny Mathis in the chapter about him and John was all, "IT'S NOT LIKE IT WOULD HAVE BEEN A GREAT JOURNALISTIC COUP OR ANYTHING!!!" I'm paraphrasing, but all mean to say is that he was oddly combative. I guess when you're John Waters and your ass is now raw from all the kissing it's experienced, you get to be abrupt and dismissive.

The lessons of Jersey Shore: Season 2, Episode 8

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Js2_8_42 

The only sweeter sentiment we've seen all season came in the form of a Fossil watch.

(Obviously, this is coming at you way late, but completism impels me.)

 

Continue reading "The lessons of Jersey Shore: Season 2, Episode 8" »

A new take on an old joke

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Are you cracking up yet?

Continue reading "A new take on an old joke" »

A toast for the douchebags

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If you take Kanye West's "Runaway" at face value, it's a song about the narrator's emotional cheating and flaws and how they are destroying a romantic relationship. But the context of "Runaway"'s world premiere suggested that this was no simple love song for us to behold. It came during the moment we were all supposedly waiting for, saved till the end of last night's MTV Video Music Awards and teased throughout the show. At long last, Kanye was returning to the VMAs after interrupting Taylor Swift's acceptance speech (never mind that his would-be comeback took place just one show later, meaning he spent no time away in VMAs time). Adding to the necessity of his voice was that by the time he hit the stage, Swift already had commented on the controversy in a performance that attempted to paint her as a Christlike boon of wisdom: "You're still an innocent" was her forgiving, condescending message to Kanye, who is 33-years-old, not that innocent and at any rate, doesn't need a 20-year-old telling him about himself. He would reveal in his performance that he's plenty self-conscious as it is.

After all that, how could we read the admission of wrongdoing in "Runaway" as anything but a metaphor of his last, least enthusiastically received public act of wrongdoing? And so, when Kanye told the world, which he knew was tuned in, that we should collectively, "Run away from me baby," it was disingenuous. He didn't actually want us to do so, and he knew that we wouldn't, at any rate. Not when there was water-cooler juiciness to be had. Not when it was anchored to a gentle-but-firm beat tailored for the hip-hop heads and more delicate listeners, alike (it recalls the downtempo '90s just before Primitive Radio Gods showed moms just how nice breaks could be). Not with that that ear-worm melody, which Rob Sheffield smartly compared to Natalie Imbruglia's "Torn" on Twitter. Not with that consciously arty, undeniably beautiful and entertainingly silly background of lights and fabrics and ballet dancers he performed in front of. He put the ball in our court, making "Runaway" as much about as as it is him.

The lessons of Jersey Shore: Season 2, Episode 7

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This is the concept of "save me from myself" defined visually.

 

Continue reading " The lessons of Jersey Shore: Season 2, Episode 7" »

For now, I'm all...

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Jersey Shore recap won't be up for a while, but it will be up...eventually.

Everything I don't know about TV, this guy does...and more! fourfour.typepad.com

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✞Fée-bri-le☾School rumble▲Féebrile▲feebrilenovember☾K-©hrome

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SID VICIOUS ROCKZZ!! posted on "Sex Pistols-Sid Vicious Tour 'SEX'"

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Kim Jong-il sets up son (animation)

http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/upload/news/101003_p01_photos.jpg

Recently-released images of North Korean heir apparent Kim Jong-un, which reveal his boyish looks, may be raising doubt among citizens in the North over his ability to succeed his father, defectors here said Sunday.

The North’s state media released last week the first verifiable images of an adult Kim, the youngest son of North Korean leader Kim Jong-il, during a rare party meeting that elevated him to high posts, paving the way for his eventual succession. Believed to be 27 years old, the junior Kim appeared portly, with a youthful face.

“They’re not complaining about it openly, but in truth, North Koreans have little faith in Kim Jong-un after seeing the photographs because he still appears too young and because he lacks experience,” Seo Jae-pyong, head of Seoul-based activist group North Korea Intellectuals Solidarity, told The Korea Times, citing contacts there.

The North Korean defector estimated that only 20 percent of the population supports the heir apparent, compared to a much higher level enjoyed by Kim Jong-il when he took the reins from his own father, country founder Kim Il-sung, who died in 1994.

Experts say Kim Il-sung was well-loved among the people, and that Kim Jong-il’s popularity fell as the North’s centralized economy crumbled in the 1990s.

Kim Seung-min, a representative of Free North Korea Radio, said defectors here generally believe that those in the North will view Kim Jong-un as too young and that his weight could be a turn-off as well.

“I think it was a mistake to show the pictures, because he looks too well fed and well off. This may make some North Koreans uncomfortable, as they have been suffering for many years from starvation and poverty,” he said.

The economy promises to be one of the main challenges for Jong-un if he manages to succeed his father. Though the details of the succession process remain veiled, analysts expect a gradual shift of responsibility from father to son, with Kim Jong-il remaining in control until he dies.

But a lack of popularity among the populace could prove to be a stumbling block for the process, said Brian Myers, an expert at Busan’s Dongseo University.

“This (Jong-un’s appearance) is going to add to the propaganda apparatus’ main problem, which is countering the perception among North Koreans that Kim Jong-un was born with a silver spoon in his mouth,” he said.

Kim Jong-il faced a similar problem, the expert said, but 20 years of apprenticeship allowed time for a personality cult to be built around him. Jong-un is not expected to have nearly as much time, with leader Kim’s health faltering after a reported stroke in 2008.

Myers said if the regime loses popular support, it would have difficulty maintaining a stable population, saying it could lead to a greater number of defections through a porous border with China. “So far the North has lost virtually none of its elite or even the middle class to defections, but if this changes, there could be a snowball effect,” he said.

An increase in propaganda extolling Kim Jong-un’s work ethic and how well he has taken care of his father, should be expected, he said, though he doubts whether it will be sufficient and expects to see a “general increase in disillusionment with the regime.”

At least one defector, however, assessed the images in a light more favorable to the regime. Kim Heung-kwang of the intellectuals group, who in the North was a professor at a communist party university, said video footage of Jong-un shows he has successfully adopted the manners of the North Korean leadership, including how to applaud properly.

Public support for the new leadership now depends on the regime’s ability to “market” Jong-un, defector Seo said, adding that Kim Jong-il will have to implement positive policy changes to prove the family can manage the country properly.

The problems of succession are at least problems we can recognize. It's a narrative that can be understood. Succession has been one of the dominant themes of Western storytelling for millennia – the major question behind Shakespeare's history dramas, for example. To a strangely precise degree, the succession of Kim Jong-un follows the pattern of Prince Hal in the Henry IV plays.

Shakespeare wrote the Henry IV tetralogy of plays against the political backdrop of another cult of personality. Queen Elizabeth I was in the middle of turning herself into Gloriana, the Virgin Queen – compensating for her failure to marry and produce an heir with an iconography of her own permanence and power. In the 1570s, the threat of civil war from religious differences in England and from political faction at court were so significant that the Queen appointed specific homilies to be read by law in every church in England every Sunday (and church attendance was mandatory). One of the major themes of the homilies was how, no matter how unjust the leadership of the sovereign, no man could stretch a hand “against the Lord's Anointed,” a phrase that might have been culled from North Korean propaganda.

The Wars of the Roses, which Queen Elizabeth's grandfather, Henry VII, had ended, made natural material for Shakespeare. The greatest character in these plays is Prince Hal, later Henry V, whose succession consumes the bulk of the action in Henry IV, Parts One and Two. Prince Hal employs a succession strategy that was entirely Shakespeare's invention. He avoids court and consciously leads a wild youth so as to surprise his subjects when he does emerge.

So, when this loose behaviour I throw off,

And pay the debt I never promised,

By how much better than my word I am,

By so much shall I falsify men's hopes.

Hal's elaborate plan – to hide himself, to appear outside the law so that he can more fully represent the law – is also the plan of the North Koreans in choosing Kim Jong-un. His elder brother, Kim Jong-nam, was the heir apparent until he was caught travelling to Japan under a fake passport to see Tokyo Disneyland. Not only was that journey embarrassing, but it also provided too much information.

Like Hal, Kim Jong-un is a perfect blank. Nobody even knows how old he is. Also like Hal, he represents exactly the opposite of what one might expect of a next “Dear Leader.” We know so little about him that every scrap of knowledge rings with significance. We know that he is young. We know that he was educated outside North Korea, in Bern, Switzerland. And we know that the state is promoting his computer knowledge, sometimes addressing him as CNC, or Computer Numerical Control.

All three descriptions represent the antithesis of the North Korean system. Alongside its Stalinism, North Korea has preserved a strong Confucian streak, with its inherent respect for age. (When Kim Jong-il took over the country, he refrained from using his own name for three years, following Confucian practice.) The country's official policy is juche, self-reliance. And it does not permit access to the Internet for any but the top party officials. In other words, Kim Jong-un, the pre-Leader – young, educated abroad and computer-savvy – represents exactly the forces that he will repress as Leader.

Hal became Henry V, one of England's greatest kings, the man who led his people to victory at Agincourt. Kim Jong-un will inherit a country so steeped in ruin and starvation that its inmates experience Chinese prison camps as liberation. Both have to handle succession the same way, by standing outside the system they will some day inherit.

Stephen Marche is a novelist and the culture columnist for Esquire magazine.

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Young People Fucking: Theatrical Trailer

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Happy Birthday, Sting!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Date of Birth
2 October 1951, Wallsend, Newcastle upon Tyne, England, UK

Birth Name
Gordon Matthew Thomas Sumner

Height
6' (1.83 m)

Mini Biography

Born Gordon Matthew Sumner in Wallsend, Northumberland. His mother was Audrey, and his father was Ernest. He received his name Sting from his striped sweater in which Gordon Solomon said that he looked like a bee.

Primarily a musician, he worked in the band The Police until 1984, when he went solo. Before his music career he was a ditch digger, a schoolteacher who taught English and a soccer coach. He received an honorary Doctorate of Music degree from Northumbria University in October 1992, and from Berklee College of Music in May 1994. He plays guitar, bass guitar, mandolin, piano, harmonica, saxophone and pan-flute, and he gave a name to his bass (Brian). Along with his wife Trudie Styler and a Brazilian Indian, he started the Rainforest Foundation in 1989 to help save the rainforests.

IMDb Mini Biography By: Kornel Osvart

Mini Biography

Born in Newcastle, England in 1951, the son of a milkman, Gordon Matthew Sumner, grew up in the turmoil of the ship-building industry and wanted to become a musician very early. He played cruise ships, backing strippers in cabarets, and developed a love for the bass guitar. Having played in jazz/rock bands like "Last Exit" and other various groups, including a dixieland jazz group, where he got the name "Sting" from a yellow/black striped shirt, he settled down with Stewart Copeland and Andy Summers for a decade-long tenure with the smashing rock trio, The Police. He then went on to record solo albums and holds a reputation as one of the most literate songwriters and talented musicians in the world. He has also delved into acting, having starred in such films as Quadrophenia (1979), Radio On (1980), Plenty (1985), Julia and Julia (1987) (aka Julia and Julia), Dune (1984), Bring on the Night (1985) (a documentary about the formation of his Blue Turtles jazz group), most recently, Gentlemen Don't Eat Poets (1995), where he plays a bisexual, conniving butler.

Sting is married to film producer Trudie Styler, and has six children with Trudie and ex-wife, actress Frances Tomelty. Sting owns a Jacobian castle in Wiltshire, which he calls "Lake House", where he records his albums, a place in London, an apartment in New York, and a place on the beach in Malibu, California. He has been called pretentious and is accused of intellectual arrogance for stepping into territory not usually covered by "pop stars".

IMDb Mini Biography By: Dan Fineberg

Spouse
Trudie Styler (20 August 1992 - present) 4 children
Frances Tomelty (1 May 1976 - 1 March 1984) (divorced) 2 children

Trade Mark

High-pitched, raspy voice, blonde, spiky hair.

Fender Precision bass guitar


Trivia

He has 6 children, two from his first wife Frances Tomelty, four from Trudie Styler.

Lived with Trudie Styler for about 10 years before marrying her.

Bass player and lead singer for influential 70s-80s new wave group The Police.

His favorite music is actually jazz.

Was a certified primary school teacher in England. He also taught English in a secondary school in Cramlington near Newcastle.

Got his nickname "Sting" from the black and gold rugby shirts he used to wear, which made him look like a hornet.

Sting appeared in Threepenny Opera in Washington, D.C. in the 1980s.

Attended Warwick University in Coventry, England but never graduated.

Son, Joseph, is a singer in a band and bears a striking resemblance to Sting. Joe's singing sounds similar to his father's as well.

Is the godfather of Madonna's new born, Rocco.

The comic book character John Constantine from DC's Hellblazer was designed to look like Sting.

Inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame (as a member of The Police) on 10 March 2003.

Album "Nothing Like the Sun" is dedicated to his mother, Audrey.

Children: Joseph Sumner (b. 23 November 1976) and Fuschia Sumner (b. 17 April 1982) by Frances Tomelty; Mickey Sumner (b. 19 January 1984), Jake Sumner (b. 24 May 1985), Coco Sumner (b. 30 July 1990) and Giacomo Sumner (b. 17 December 1995) by Trudie Styler.

Filmed his son Jake's birth and put in his movie, Bring on the Night (1985)

He was a member of Band Aid (1984).

He was awarded the CBE (Commander of the Order of the British Empire) in the 2003 Queen's Birthday Honours List for his services to Music.

Now resides in a Malibu house formerly owned by actor Larry Hagman.

Sting takes in an average of $2000.00 per day in royalties for this now 20 year old song "Every Breath You Take." The song is officially the most requested radio song of all time.

His song "Roxanne" was covered by George Michael on the album "Songs from the Last Century".

Performed for the BBC's annual Children in Need charity event. [21 November 2003]

Is a big fan of "Richard Laymer, the Copy Guy," a popular character created by Rob Schneider for "Saturday Night Live" (1975). Sting was the first SNL host/musical guest to appear in a "Copy Guy" sketch; he later wrote the cast and crew a letter from "Sting. The Stingster. Der Stinglehoffer. Sting-a-ling-a-ding-dong. Sting-o. The Stingman."

The Police were voted the 70th Greatest Rock 'n' Roll Artists of all time by Rolling Stone.

The comic book character of John Constantine (Hellblazer), eventually featured in the Keanu Reeves movie, was designed to look like Sting, and, in fact, was created solely for the purpose of including a character who looks like Sting in the Swamp Thing comic. In one Swamp Thing issue, there's a boat called the USS Gordon Sumner.

Wrote "Every Breath You Take" after waking up in the middle of the night from a dream.

The Police ended their last tour in early 1984 and only regrouped to play a few benefit dates in 1986. Their last performance to date was March 10, 2003 at their Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame induction. They have never announced an official breakup.

His song "Roxanne" is one of the top 50 bar/jukebox songs of all time, according to VH-1.

His album with The Police, "Synchronicity", was the album that finally knocked Michael Jackson's "Thriller", the best selling album of all time, out of the number one spot it held for most of 1983.

Along with Trudie Styler, he introduced Madonna to her second husband Guy Ritchie

Former son-in-law of actor-writer Joseph Tomelty

He is an avid Newcastle United supporter.

Attended St. Cuthbert's Catholic High School in Newcastle, although at the time he went it was a Catholic grammar school. Other students have included TV presenter Declan Donnelly, Pet Shop Boys lead singer Neil Tennant, British Prisoner of War and journalist John Nichol as well as renowned architect Terry Farrell who designed the MI6 building overlooking the River Thames in London.

One of his children suffers from dyspraxia - a developmental disorder of the brain in childhood affecting movement and coordination

In an interview in the late 90s, said he liked some American Country music, mentioning Hank Williams and "Gentleman" Jim Reeves as two of his favorites.

Winner of several Grammy Awards beginning with: "Reggatta De Blanc" (Best Rock Instrumental Performance / The Police) (1980); "Behind My Camel" (Best Rock Instrumental Performance / The Police) (1981); "Don't Stand So Close to Me" (Best Rock Performance By A Duo Or Group With Vocal / The Police) (1981); "Brimstone and Treacle" (Best Rock Instrumental Performance / solo) (1983); "Synchronicity" (Best Rock Performance By A Duo Or Group With Vocal / The Police) (1983); "Every Breath You Take" (Best Pop Performance By A Duo Or Group With Vocal / Song of the Year / The Police) (1983); "Bring On the Night" (Best Pop Vocal Performance, Male / solo) (1987); "Soul Cages" (Best Rock Song / solo) (1991); "Ten Summoner's Tales" (Best Music Video-Long Form / solo) (1993); "If I Ever Lose My Faith in You" (Best Pop Vocal Performance, Male / solo) (1993); "Brand New Day" (Best Pop Album / Best Male Pop Vocal Performance / solo) (1999); "She Walks This Earth (Soberana Rosa)" (Best Male Pop Vocal Performance / solo) (2000); "Whenever I Say Your Name" (Best Pop Collaboration With Vocals / with Mary J. Blige) (2003)

His eldest daughter is actress Fuschia Sumner.

He is a vegetarian.

The Police won the British Phonographic Industry Award for Outstanding Contribution in 1985.

His album "Nothing Like The Sun" won the British Phonographic Industry Award for British Album in 1988.

Winner of the 2002 Ivor Novello Award for International Achievement.

Winner of the 1994 Brit Award for British Male Solo Artist.

Winner of the 2002 Brit Award for Outstanding Contribution. Only Paul McCartney, John Lennon and Freddie Mercury have also won the award as a member of a band and as an individual.

The 2005 winning horse of the Kentucky Derby, Giacomo, is named after Sting and Trudie's son of the same name. The owner of the horse, Jerry Moss, is good friends with Sting and recorded him on A&M Records.

Reunited with his former band-mates and performed at the 2007 Grammy Awards. The next day, The Police announced a worldwide tour in 2007, the first tour since 1986.

Two of the songs he sang with The Police are also the titles of films starring Sandra Bullock: Demolition Man (1993) and Murder by Numbers (2002).

Ranked #9 on VH1's 100 Sexiest Artists.

Ranked #63 on VH1's 100 Greatest Artists of Rock & Roll.

Inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2002.

Sting and his wife, Trudie Styler, founded the Rainforest Foundation in 1988.

Former bus conductor and tax officer.

He was awarded a Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for Recording at 6834 Hollywood Boulevard in Hollywood, California.

The 2009 Sunday Times List estimated his net worth at $295 million.

Lives in London, Lake Wilshire, United Kingdom, Malibu, California and Figline Valdarno, Italy.


Personal Quotes

My job is being a musician [...] I just make films for fun, really.

I'm bored with music between 1955 and 1980. I'm completely bored. I can't listen to a rock and roll record. I can't do it. I would rather listen to hogs screwing.

"It was quite something. My wife saw it, too. At first I thought it was her with one of the kids until I reached over and I realised that she was still in bed with me" - on seeing the ghosts of a woman and a child in his bedroom

The geniuses of music, like Bach (Johann Sebastian Bach) and Miles Davis, used silence beautifully; they were not about using as many notes as possible. They knew that playing almost nothing can be the most elegant and eloquent thing to do.

I'm so glad I have this way of expressing, in a veiled and artistic way, my most intimate feelings. A lot of people have the same feelings, but in others it must get bottled up. I'm proud of my being able to make it into artifacts that some people find beautiful or engaging.

I don't belong to a church or political party or a group of any kind. I feel that Amnesty International is the most civilized organization in history. Its currency is the written word. Its weapon is the letter; that's why I am a member. I believe in its non-violence; I believe in its effectiveness. Its dignity and its sense of commitment. Its focus on individuals and the concentration and tenacity with which they defend those imprisoned for their ideas has earned it the cautious respect of repressive governments throughout the world.

If anyone described me as a genius I would laugh. I have my moments - I just have to join them together.

I am very proud of the legacy of The Police. We are a damn good band and it still holds up. (On the induction of The Police into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame)

You can't get better than Otis Redding.

You can scratch the surface of my songs pretty lightly and you'll find someone who wanted to be James Taylor at the age of 14. He's also a brilliant and ridiculously underrated guitar player and blessed with a voice that could melt ice caps.

One of my favorite songs that I never wrote was "Tempted" and I did actually cover it. It's a great song, and Chris Difford and Glenn Tilbrook are great songwriters. Squeeze were always a great band, and it was nice to cover it.

I loved the band Traffic for their way of creating a musical universe without these boundaries, because whether it's country, pop, gospel, heavy metal or classical music, it's all a single language, a code.

I first met Youssou (Youssou N'Dour) with Peter (Peter Gabriel) several years ago when we worked together on an Amnesty tour. Both of them have such extraordinary voices and Peter has done a lot to promote world music in general and that should be acknowledged as it's been a one man crusade on his part.

The great thing about Bruce is that he's exactly as he seems. A great man. (On Bruce Springsteen)

He's a great artist and he really inspired me. (On Bob Dylan)

For me they are pop songs. Beautiful melodies, fantastic lyrics, great accompaniments. I feel that my job as a pop artist is to develop as a musician, and to bring into my sphere elements that aren't necessarily pop, more complex intervals, complex time signatures. (On performing the music of John Dowland on his album "Songs From The Labyrinth")

[on his being made a CBE] Being a Commander of the British Empire isn't really what it's cracked up to be, since I can't command anybody. Everyone always ignores me.

Everybody in the business knows in his heart of hearts what it takes to be successful. Whether you've got the guts to go through with that or not is another matter.

I watched it the other night for the first time, I've never seen it before. I was appalled. I wouldn't get on "The X Factor" (2004) because I don't sound like anyone they're after, I sound like myself. I think they are basically aping pre-existing stereotypes of what singers should do and they're not being themselves. There's no X Factor there. The music industry is a multi-million dollar business and the shop floor is not "The X Factor" (2004). It's pubs and clubs up and down the country or you get in your van and you go up and down the M1 and you build an audience that way. That's how you build a backbone.

I've lived in Europe for about 15 years, I live in Italy. So I feel very European. I think it's an inevitable thing that our future in the British Isles will be with Europe. We'll be part of Europe, we'll be better for it. (On the Lisbon Treaty in 2009)

I am sorry but none of those kids are going to go anywhere, and I say that sadly. How appalling for a young person to feel that rejection. It is a soap opera which has nothing to do with music. In fact, it has put music back decades. Television is very cynical. They are either Mariah Carey or Whitney Houston or Boyzone and are not encouraged to create any real unique signature or fingerprint. That cannot come from TV. "The X Factor" (2004) is a preposterous show and you have judges who have no recognisable talent apart from self-promotion, advising them what to wear and how to look. It is appalling. The real shop floor for musical talent is pubs and clubs, that is where the original work is. But they are being closed down on a daily basis. It is impossible to put an act on in a pub. The music industry has been hugely important to England, bringing in millions. If anyone thinks "The X Factor" (2004) is going to do that, they are wrong.

There's no pussyfooting in our group. We don't skirt around each other; we go straight for the jugular. We know each other very well, and we know where it hurts. [Rolling Stone, February 19, 1981 issue]

I think what we provide is functional entertainment. It has a use. I just try to write as good a song as possible; it's a craft. [Rolling Stone, February 1981]

Peter Gabriel and I are not tapping each other's phones! We've both grown in the same kind of creative arc. We're both led by curiosity. (On comparisons made between him and Peter Gabriel)

I am a gambler and I think I've always been rewarded for my risk-taking. My ambition is to be allowed to do anything that I want to do again, and to reach a standard where people will at least say: 'That was OK.' I think the whole idea of being 'successful' in music is to have a unique signature or sonic fingerprint, and - no matter what context you sing in - people recognize it as you. Whether they like it is another matter.

There's this whole universe of music that is simply limitless. When you think you know everything about music, you discover you can't get to the end. I'm on this lifelong journey, and orchestral music is where it's now taken me.

We [wife Trudie Styler and himself] keep getting begged for our "secret" - why ours has lasted so much longer than most Hollywood marriages put together. More than anything else, the same ounce-of-prevention that works against sibling rivalry also works against separation and divorce: Trudie and I not only love but actually like each other.


Where Are They Now

(February 2007) Reuniting with his former band mates of The Police and embarking on a worldwide tour.

(September 2007) Amstel Hotel - Amsterdam - The Netherlands for two shows in the Amsterdam Arena.

(October 2007) Release of his book, "Lyrics".

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