Oh, she’s just being Miley December 19, 2009
Posted by Patrick in Muzak.Tags: black eyed peas, Dublin, leticia cyrus, miley cyrus, the o2 dublin, will.i.am
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When we’re not attempting to appear somewhat ‘hip’ here at Make and Deux, we occasionally do something tragically un-hip. And last Wednesday night, that thing was going to see Miley Cyrus play at The O2 in Dublin.
You mightn’t think that’s too bad, ya know, a bit of craic and all that, but the tickets in fact cost us €92.50 each. Yes, they were ridiculously overpriced and I can’t believe we even considered buying them, but we did, and we went along, AND WE HAD FUN.
We were both actually dreading the gig, considering that it would be full of children under the age of ten and the parents that they had bullied into buying the expensive tickets, but moreso because our seats were separate. Since we had booked them online on our own cards, we’d ended up miraculously in the same row but forty seats apart. However, by luck, there was a free seat beside me so Paula dashed over, thankfully evading The O2 security staff.
The whole thing was a very slick production, with every detail planned to within an inch of its life. During one song, she fell into a pit on the stage and then appeared on screen submerged in water, as if that was what she’d fallen into, when really she was just legging it backstage for a costume change.
The highlight had to be during Fly on the Wall, where she entered on some sort of tractor/cart with her dancers in tow. Ad, towards the end of the song, when she was lifted off stage by wires and suspended above the audience, flying around like a literal fly.
The setlist was a carbon copy of her previous gigs on the Wonder World tour, with all the expected hits like 7 Things, Party in the USA and See You Again included.
There were some odd touches to the show – most notably when Hoedown Throwdown segued into the Black Eyed Peas’ Boom Boom Pow for a dancer solo. A video message from will.i.am appeared on the main screen, Miley shouted “Hey everybody give it up for will.i.am from the Black Eyed Peas!” or something to that extent, and once again ran off into the ether. She also forgot the lyrics to Party in the USA at one point, stumbling at the “And the Britney song was on” line.
She doesn’t sound as good live as she does on her albums, but she certainly belts the tunes out and although it got a bit shouty at points, she hit all the right notes for the most part.
The encore consisted of two songs – a huge change in comparison to The Swell Season concert we attended the night before, which had about fifteen – See You Again and The Climb. It was, as encores have now become, completely staged, as if the teenybopper wails of “MILEY! MILEY! MILEY!” (which did drag on for what had to be close to five minutes) had anything to do with her return to the stage.
She had a bit of banter with the crowd, but it was all very predictable stuff like, “You’re the loudest crowd we’ve had all tour!” or “I’m loving Ireland so much, you guys are great!” and such. But that’s to be expected.
All in all, it was the most fun I’ve had in a while. It has to be said, Miley Cyrus puts on a good show, even if it is the product of a marketing machine gone mad.
Sadly, we don’t have any snaps of ourselves with Miley during her shopping spree on Grafton Street, due to us both being in work or elsewhere, but I did get a great picture of Paula with Miley’s mother, Leticia “Tish” Cyrus, on Grafton Street the next day. It did take us a good ten minutes of following her around the street to pluck up the courage to say something to her (Paula: “ARE YOU TISH??”), but she was lovely and is probably the closest we should ever be allowed get to the woman herself.
The Aw Factor December 11, 2009
Posted by Patrick in Cinematics.Tags: Babies, thomas balmes, trailer
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If you, like so many others, found yourself tearing up during March of the Penguins then expect to do the same when you see Babies.
The film, set to be released next year and directed by Thomas Balmes, follows the first year in the lives of four infants growing up in Mongolia, Namibia, San Francisco and Tokyo.
The trailer unleashes ridiculous amounts of cuteness on us, from the babies banging their rocks and getting into a fight over a bottle, to the Tokyo baby’s bath being invaded by a goat.
And it scores bonus points for using The Perpetual Self, Or ‘What Would Saul Alinsky Do?’ by Sufjan Stevens as its soundtrack.
Check out the trailer below.
Not such a misfit anymore… December 10, 2009
Posted by Patrick in Televisual.Tags: cherrybomb, e4, killing bono, misfits, nicolas cage, red riding, robert sheehan, rupert grint, season of the witch
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[Originally published in flashback's December 2009 issue]
It’s been a very good year for Robert Sheehan. First he was cast in Channel 4 drama Red Riding, swiftly followed by E4’s teen sci-fi series Misfits. Next year, his film Season of the Witch, co-starring Nicolas Cage and Christopher Lee, will hit cinemas.
Despite this rapid rise to fame, Robert isn’t letting it all go to his head.
“There are projects on the horizon and there are more than ever, which is great, and there are more offers and stuff, but I’m just kind of grateful that somebody would consider me for something. I’d kind of see it that way rather than ‘Do I want to do this?’ or ‘Do I want to do that?’,” he explains.
“It’s more ‘Oh you actually want me to do your film? Well it’d be a pleasure. Thank you for asking me, for considering me.’ I think I’m trying to retain a sense of humility through the whole thing, you know?”
In Misfits, Robert plays cocky and quick-witted Nathan, the only character yet to reveal a superpower from the storm that gave his fellow Community Service workers special abilities.
While his character finds this endlessly frustrating, Robert appreciates the twist his character was given.
Mik Pyro, Republic of Loose December 10, 2009
Posted by Paula in Muzak.Tags: Aaagh!, Comeback Girl, Johnny Pyro and the Dance of Evil, Mick Pyro, Mik Pyro, Republic of Loose, The Academy Dublin
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“I’ve fucked up a lot… I’ve made a lot of bad decisions.” Republic of Loose frontman Mik Pyro talks about his struggles in the music industry and in his personal life. Originally published in December issue of Flux.
I first saw Republic of Loose in concert about three years ago, when they toured Ireland to promote their 2006 album, Aaagh!. I remember being completely taken aback by the energy that the band exuded on stage. Their movement had all the force of a full-on rock band, but their music couldn’t be categorised so easily. Indeed, a reviewer of one of the gigs from that tour said of the band, “They are unsure whether they want to be gangbangers or cowboys or gospel singers”. Whatever they are aiming to be, a live Republic of Loose show is equal measures exhausting and thrilling.
I was expecting Mik Pyro, lead singer of the band, to be equally energetic offstage. That’s why I was surprised when he answered the phone at 4pm on a Wednesday afternoon sounding like he had just woken up. He had, in fact, just woken up. “I’ve had weird sleeping patterns lately, I’m like a vampire. I was up ‘til eight or nine this morning.” The interview continues, but I get the distinct feeling that Pyro is still horizontal, and will probably pass this phone call off as a dream when he wakes up again later.
The band’s third album, Vol. IV: Johnny Pyro and the Dance of Evil was released last year, but the band has been fairly quiet on the promotion front. “We’ve been gigging around over the last year. We did Oxegen and played with U2 in Croke Park. But we’ve been taking it easy enough. It’s been a really difficult year for the music industry. We can do some work in Ireland, but we don’t have the money to go touring around the UK.”
Personal finance is a huge factor in everything the band does, from recording to promotion to distribution. They have never had a record company, and finance all their efforts out of their own pocket. “We’ve been trying to keep our profile up in Ireland, to keep things afloat, but it’s difficult. We still do it though, because we love it.”
Vogue TwItalia December 10, 2009
Posted by Patrick in Misc, Trashion.Tags: agyness deyn, christy turlington, gisele bunchen, italy, naomi campbell, steven meisel, Trashion, Vogue
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I can’t count myself as a person who regularly reads Vogue Italia, or Vogue anywhere for that matter, but my interest was piqued when I heard that they had put together a spread, and indeed a cover, inspired by TwitPic. Yes, you read that correctly, a fashion spread made to look like the models took a couple of dodgy camera phone pictures and uploaded them to their personal Twitter accounts.
The pictures, shot by Steven Meisel (with TwitPic renamed MeiselPic) feature models like Agyness Deyn, Gisele Bundchen, Christy Turlington and Naomi Campbell. The results are quite varied, with some being positively meh-worthy and others actually quite interesting.
I’m sure the whole thing is supposed to be some sort of commentary on our ‘fast-moving’ society and how we’re more likely to look at these actual TwitPics then a true fashion spread. Food for thought.
Click ‘more‘ for a selection of pictures from the editorial.
Super Extra Miley Factor December 4, 2009
Posted by Paula in Muzak, Televisual.Tags: Danyl Johnson, Hannah Montana, miley cyrus, Olly Murs, Simon Cowell, The X Factor
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Simon Cowell has chosen the Miley Cyrus hit The Climb as this year’s X Factor winner’s song. Certainly a change in tempo from last year’s song, Leonard Cohen’s Hallelujah. Journey’s Don’t Stop Believing was reportedly also a contender, but I doubt anyone could beat the Glee cover of that song (or the original, I guess).
The Climb, which featured in the Hannah Montana movie earler this year, certainly fulfills all the criteria for an X Factor winner’s hit: poignant lyrics about making it/finding happiness/falling in love/defying the odds, a build up to a big final chorus, and a nice catchy melody. All Cowell needs to add is a key change, and it’ll be musical gold.
It’s an odd choice for a winner’s song, considering there’s only one female performer left in the competition. Apparently Olly and Danyl have been struggling with it in this week’s rehearsals. They’re too macho, perhaps?
Task for this week: Learn The Climb‘s lyrics by heart in time for Saturday night’s X Factor. Add key change if you wish.
The Climb – Miley Cyrus (download)
ZOMG December 3, 2009
Posted by Patrick in Cinematics, Misc.Tags: absolut vodka, cocktail, cosmo, kate beckinsale, zooey deschanel
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Wow. Hard to believe, but yes, that futuristic Barbie girl above is indie darling Zooey Deschanel, as photographed for the latest Absolut Vodka campaign.
Each photo, taken by fashion photographer Ellen Von Unwerth, is themed around a different vodka cocktail. Zooey’s, for example, is based on the Cosmopolitan cocktail:
In the ABSOLUT Cosmo ad, Deschanel adds a science-fiction flair to the traditional ABSOLUT® CITRON cocktail in a retro-hip yet modern lounge as she plays the role of a “cosmo”-naut.
Three other photos from the campaign feature Kate Beckinsale, focusing on cocktails Bloody Mary, Tonic Twist and Crush.
Personally I’d have liked to see Zooey in all four, but there ya go.
Click here to see the full version of Zooey’s ad as well as the other three.
[via The Huffington Post]
Tu est trés mignon December 2, 2009
Posted by Patrick in Webshite.Tags: google, paris, video, youtube
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Google has started a new strand of YouTube videos called “Search Stories“, in effect showing the impact of Google searching on our lives.
It’s a ridiculously simple advert for Google but it’s clever in that way, turning the mundane task of Googling something into a major life event.
For example, there’s one video imagining what a pre-Batman Bruce Wayne would have searched for, with a ‘dark’ soundtrack and search terms like “coping with loss” and “stitching your own wound”.
It should be ridiculously corny but my favourite has to be “Parisian Love” (below) – the story of boy meets (French) girl, told only through the medium of Google searches in 53 seconds. Beautiful. More of this please Google.











