| Adam
Lambert – man-diva
Matt Thomas chats with emerging man-diva as he clears the
record on AMA controversy...
Listen to fab's interview with Adam Lambert:
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“I’m a sexual person. I am avant-garde, I like edgier things and I
like experimenting with that imagery,” says openly gay rocker and
former American Idol alumni Adam Lambert, who recently courted
controversy in his televised performance at the American Music
Awards (AMA).
He’s since received major flack for his theatrical face-to-crotch
grind with a backup dancer, which was edited out of the rebroadcast
on the east coast, and a man-on-man kiss he shared with his keyboard
player that the AMA director cut to a wide shot of the
rather than show it in close-up.
“Rock and roll is a prostitute and it has to be tarted up,” says
Lambert, quoting Todd Haynes’ Velvet
Goldmine, a film he
says heavily influenced his persona. “I just wanted to
do something unexpected and different and break out from the expectation
a little. You come off Idol and there’s this expectation
that you’re going be this mass appeal, mass marketed, family
friendly, granola, easy listening, easily digestible thing and
that’s definitely
not me as an artist.
According to AMA broadcaster ABC, more than1,500 complaints
were filed denouncing Lambert’s performance but that number is
tiny compared to program’s 14 million viewers. The morning after
the
AMA ABC cancelled Lambert’s scheduled appearance on Good
Morning America. CBS's The Early Show stepped in
and booked Lambert but he found himself the subject of further
censorship and controversy there.
“We gave this some real thought,” a representative of The
Early Show told the LA Times when asked why the network chose
to blur a clip of Lambert’s man-to-man kiss from the AMA but then
showed an uncensored version of the Madonna/Britney/Christina
three-way smooch from the 2003 MVA.
“The Madonna image is very familiar and has appeared countless times,
including many times on morning television,” said the CBS spokespersonTimes.
“The Adam Lambert image is a subject of great current controversy,
has not been nearly as widely disseminated and, for all we know,
may still lead to legal consequences.”
“That’s weak,” says Lambert. “Someone didn’t give it some real thought
when they did it.”
When Lambert, who used ABC censorship and the ensuing debate to
point out the double standards applied to expressions of straight
sexuality compared to those of gay sexuality, found out about CBS’s
homophobic censorship he says he “just laughed and went ‘Are you
kidding me? You guys just proved my point, thank you.”
“It’s one performance, I think it’ll blow over,” says Lambert. “Definitely
what I don’t want is people assuming that’s how I intended to
do every performance or that’s how I plan on conducting my career
as an artist. My album, track to track, is very diverse. It’s
an eclectic mix of music. ["For Your Entertainment"] is
the one song that is very seductive, kind of dark and sexual but
other songs on there explore other themes.”
Lambert says he’s not going to put people “in bondage fashion” for
every song he performs but that doesn’t mean he plans to apologize
for his performance.
“I’m not going to apologize, I promise,” says Lambert with conviction.
“I don’t think what I’ve done is wrong. I want to be myself and
I feel like that was what I was doing on stage the other night.”
Make sure to sign fab's petition to prove that ABC
offended more than 1,500 people by choosing to censor Adam Lambert's
performance.
petitiononline.com/FabAdamL/
– Matt Thomas |