Buzz Multiplex: This Is It
This, indeed, is it. The Buzz Multiplex has been cleared of all wide releases, as Michael Jackson's posthumous concert film continues to gain momentum. The massive online attention supports predictions that "Michael Jackson's This Is It" will be the "highest-grossing music documentary" to date and may even have Oscar potential.
The Wednesday premiere drew in more than $20 million around the world, and the film title continues to be entrenched in the top 700 searches on Yahoo!.
While some observers think Halloween might dampen box-office numbers, holiday celebrants will be paying their tribute to the late singer in many ways: "michael jackson costumes" have topped October costume searches on Yahoo!. That's not all: Expect weekend parties to pass out "michael jackson pumpkin pattern" for carving, play "michael jackson games," and practice the "michael jackson moonwalk."
Below, the online preparations that have been underway for a Jackson tribute:
Top 10 Michael Jackson Searches of the Week, as ranked by Yahoo! searches
- Michael Jackson This Is It
- Michael Jackson Videos
- Michael Jackson Songs
- Michael Jackson Thriller
- Michael Jackson This Is It Song
- Jackson 5
- Michael Jackson Lyrics
- Michael Jackson Thriller Video
- Michael Jackson Billie Jean
- Michael Jackson Beat It
Filed under: Movies, Music, Holidays, Celebrities, Halloween, Dead Celebrities, Michael Jackson
Crossbows, a New Drill, and the Sisterhood: Buzz Week in Review
Outbursts, rebukes, and undercover videos made for a raucous week, but the Buzz sat up and took notice of some tough femmes going on the offensive this week.
Prey Tell
In their maiden alligator hunts, two females armed with crossbows bagged some mighty big prey.
New mom Arianne Prevost, 23, took a break from diaper duty and snagged an 11-footer in Florida. Over in South Carolina, 16-year-old Cammie Colin was better known for being a softball player and a junior varsity cheerleader, until she went out in the dead of night with her male kin and brought down a gator measuring 10' 5" and 353 pounds. Their beginner's luck have
made them Fox News darlings
for being straight shooters. Both Florida and South Carolina issue limited hunting permits for alligators as part of state programs to control their reptile populations.
Drill Major Drill
Teresa King—or Command Sgt. Maj. to you—will be the first female top honcho of the U.S. Army Drill Sergeant School in Fort Jackson. The daughter of a sharecropper, King learned about strict discipline from the get-go with her dad being a strict disciplinarian to his 12 kids. A 28-year army vet who has served in South Korea and Europe, she'll start her new job Sept. 22.
Telling West Where to Go
The celeb sisterhood rallied around singer Taylor Swift after Kanye West lost his mind and his manners at the MTV Video Music Awards. West, who has a long history of speaking out, interrupted the 19-year-old's acceptance speech for Best Female Video. His behavior got a chorus of boos and even two presidential vetos, but the firmest slap-downs came from Pink, Katie Perry, Kellie Pickler, and Kelly Clarkson, who used firm and decidedly unladylike language in angry tweets and blog posts. Since the Sunday outburst, West apologized on "Jay Leno," his website, and finally to Swift herself after she appeared on the ultimate sisterhood cocoon, "The View."
Also buzzing this week...
- A passing of three entertainment eras with the deaths of Henry Gibson; Mary Travers of Peter, Paul, and Mary; and Patrick Swayze...
- Dan Brown's instant bestseller's out, but don't forget Jane Austen's sea monsters...
- One year after Lehman Brothers falls, the recession's over...
Filed under: Music, Hunting, Military, Women, Week in Review, Scandals, Wrap Up
Number 9, Hot Bands, Birther Bickering: What's the Buzz
Our picks from the day's hottest searches.
- 09-09-09 (+2,347%). It's today. Live it up.
- Bee Gees Songs (+432%). Nostalgia spikes after news of a possible Bee Gees tour with the two surviving brothers.
- Dead by Sunrise (+314%). The new band, with Chester Bennington of Linkin Park, is getting notice with its hot debut song.
- Annie Leibovitz Photography (+296%). Back off, vultures. The celeb photographer's still negotiating her loan, even though the deadline was yesterday.
- Orly Taitz (+236%). The Russian immigrant/dentist/lawyer and a key voice in the so-called birther movement had her day in court, but not without bickering with fellow supporters.
Filed under: Music, Calendars, Law, Photographers
Buzz Multiplex: When the Music Fades
"Singin' in the Rain." "Saturday Night Live." "Star Wars." "Purple Rain." "Dirty Dancing."
If you are of a certain vintage, you know these titles aren't just generational films. The soundtracks provide the musical backdrop of their era. For this week's movie releases, the songs for "Bandslam" and "The Time Traveler's Wife" debuted in stores and online Tuesday. "District 9"—the most-searched movie of the week and the touted "stealth" summer hit—features some unusual music and an African-influenced score from Clinton Short. He's been called " composer to watch, but the deal for releasing his soundtrack didn't close until days before the premiere.
That might be a coincidence, but even in the digital download era, soundtracks just aren't the money-makers they used to be. Industry execs told The Wrap that studios think this hallowed tradition is "a waste of time." Universal Pictures hasn't bothered with a musical "Bruno" release. Likewise with Sony's stalker thriller "Obsessed," even with Beyonce as its star.
Plus, now that consumers are used to picking out a tune at a time, compilations from a film experience aren't doing that well, even when iTunes requires that folks buy the whole album. The Wrap gives examples of weak sales compared to past hits, such as "Transformers 2" versus the first, or "500 Days of Summer" vs. "Garden State." (Notable latter-day exceptions: Hannah Montana and, of course, "Twilight.")
One columnist from "The Wrap" spreads the blame around, and believes the soundtrack's downfall started in the 90s, when studios opted for cheap tunes rather than original music. Record companies also may have charged too much (and ended up selling the same song over and over).
But some people do. Weak sales or not, below's a Yahoo! Search playlist of popular movie soundtracks from the past 30 days. Incidentally, in the past 7 days, soundtrack demands have been high for films from the late John Hughes, who really knew the score for a generation. Could any of these below define the current one?
Filed under: Movies, Music, Soundtracks
The Buzz on Mary Ford
You know how they say behind a great man is a great woman? Well, meet the woman behind guitar legend Les Paul: Singer and songwriter Mary Ford.
Lookups on the singer and songwriter crescendoed on news of Les Paul's death. Queries on "mary ford singer," "les paul mary ford," and "les paul and mary ford" all hit high notes.
The couple made music together from the time they were introduced in the mid-1940s. Ford started out a country music singer, but once they married in 1949, the duo went on to record wildly popular jazz standards that sold millions of records — and hit number one with "How High the Moon" in 1951 and "Vaya Con Dios" in 1953. Although the hits are old, the sound is modern, thanks to Paul's technique of using layered musical tracks.
Yahoo! News quoted Paul explaining his overdubbing method this way: "I could take my Mary and make her three, six, nine, 12, as many voices as I wished." That seems obvious now, but it was ground-breaking when they were doing it.
The technique must have worked: The two earned a whopping 36 gold records and a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
But you're not really famous till you have your own TV show. Check out clips of the kitschy "Les Paul and Mary Ford at Home Show." Think "Donnie and Marie" set in "Leave It to Beaver" land. Amazingly, the show aired from 1953 to 1960.
Although the two were known for their musical and personal partnership, the advent of rock and roll put their relationship on the rocks. The Los Angeles Times blog notes that Ford couldn't make the transition to the rocker sound, putting an end to their music and their marriage. The couple divorced in 1964. Ford died in 1977. Their music lives on.
Filed under: Music
top movers
| Rank | Subject | 1-Day Move |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Nidal Malik Hasan | Breakout! |
| 2 | Fort Hood Shooting | Breakout! |
| 3 | Tyrannosaurus Rex | Breakout! |
| 4 | Fort Hood | 43518% |
| 5 | Tropical Storm Ida | 4377% |
| 6 | Willie Aames | 3325% |
| 7 | Shannon Dedrick | 3299% |
| 8 | Gretchen Rossi | 2702% |
| 9 | Epic Mickey | 2583% |
| 10 | Lee Harvey Oswald | 1907% |

top leaders
| Rank | Subject | Move | Score |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Danica Patrick | +194 | 207 |
| 2 | Fort Hood | +185 | 185 |
| 3 | Angelina Jolie | +114 | 164 |
| 4 | Rihanna | +39 | 157 |
| 5 | New York Yankees | +54 | 154 |
| 6 | Alicia Keys | +139 | 153 |
| 7 | +1 | 153 | |
| 8 | NFL | +6 | 138 |
what's the buzz?
A subject's buzz score is the percentage of Yahoo! users searching for that subject on a given day, multiplied by a constant to make the number easier to read. Weekly leaders are the subjects with the greatest average buzz score for a given week.
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