The clock on the wall says the day is almost over, and the "365 Cute Kitties" page-a-day calendar next to the phone says that 2010 has just about come to a close, so it's time to wrap up and decide where to spent the last few hours of the year (and the first few hours of the new year, of course). Hopefully your holiday week has been restful and happy, and be sure to stay safe while you are having fun over the next couple of days before getting back into the grind next week. So party on, but before you do, be sure to check out any of the big stories you may have missed this week on the MTV Newsroom Blog. We'll see you next year!

» We did a lot of looking back this week (and next week, we'll be doing a ton of looking forward). Though it may not have been as dominant a year as 2002 was for him, Eminem still had a pretty amazing 12 months.

» Despite Eminem's dominance, the readers decided that Kanye West had the best year of any member of the hip-hop community.

» We also took a look back at who MTV News' biggest newsmakers were this year, and it turns out Lady Gaga and her meat dress-wearing, world touring, DADT-protesting self was our biggest icon.

» Did you miss the year's biggest pictures, including Lindsay Lohan's mug shots and the assembled "We Are the World" cast? Now you haven't.

» The music world lost a great icon this week, as everybody mourned the passing of phenomenal singer and songwriter Teena Marie.

» What will Lady Gaga announce on New Year's Eve? We'll know soon enough, but here are some guesses that are not entirely unreasonable.
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The most difficult thing to do in the music world is to score success with your second album, especially after your debut has made it extra big. The reasons are obvious, as artists tend to have less time and way more pressure to produce the second album than they did they debut, which is why they often sound strained, forced and otherwise tuneless. But in 2010, it seemed like everybody was giving the sophomore slump the finger. Last year, Lady Gaga proved that the second album can be just as big (if not bigger) than the first, and this year, Katy Perry lead a class of artists who took the success of their debut albums and kicked it up a notch.

(Click here for photos of Katy Perry's big year!)

In addition to Perry, a number of other artists scored big with their second albums. Justin Bieber's My World 2.0 was a gigantic success, taking the pop groundwork laid on the first My World and expanding it in a dozen different directions that lead to his biggest hits yet (including "Baby" and "U Smile"). Ke$ha also saw her debut album Animal blow up on the back of some big singles (including "Tik Tok" and "Blah Blah Blah"), but her recently-released Cannibal promises to be even bigger (its first single "We R Who We R" has already been to number one and isn't going anywhere any time soon). And yes, even Susan Boyle managed to transcend the novelty quality of her rise to fame to produce another chart-topping album in The Gift.

Of course, there were also artists who weren't releasing true second albums but were following up smash hits with even bigger releases. Though Taylor Swift's Speak Now is actually her third album, it should probably be considered a release that beat the sophomore slump considering that her second record Fearless was an absolute commercial juggernaut. How do you follow up an album that was the biggest-selling piece of music in 2009? You sell a million copies in your opening week.

(Click here for photos of Katy Perry's big year!)

Who was your favorite sophomore slump-busting artist in 2010? Let us know in the comments!

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It looks like 2011 will be starting on something of an explosive note. After a three week run at the top of the Billboard Hot 100, Katy Perry's "Firework" (which would have been an appropriate New Year's Eve single) has stepped aside to let Bruno Mars' "Grenade" slide into the number one position. It's Mars' second straight single to find its way to the pinnacle of the Hot 100, and it's the first time a male solo artist has taken his first two singles to the top in 13 years (Diddy was the last to do it with the one-two punch of "Can't Nobody Hold Me Down" and "I'll Be Missing You").

Of course, Mars' debut single "Just the Way You Are" also spent some quality time at the top of the heap, having spent four weeks at number one in the fall. (Ironically, Mars displaced a Katy Perry song — "Teenage Dream" — that time as well.) If you count B.o.B's "Nothin' on You," it's Mars' third trip to the number one spot this year, an incredible accomplishment for such a young artist.

Elsewhere on the Hot 100, the rest of the top five songs are all former number ones: Perry's "Firework," Ke$ha's "We R Who We R," Rihanna's "What's My Name?" and Pink's "Raise Your Glass." Wiz Khalifa's "Black and Yellow" continues to climb up the charts, as it currently sits at number six (and if the Pittsburgh Steelers make a run through the upcoming NFL playoffs, expect that track to flirt with the top spot in January). And in the week's most satisfying twist, the biggest debut of the week belongs to the Lonely Island and Akon, whose gut-busting "I Just Had Sex" managed to worm its way into the number 30 spot on the chart.

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Isabelle Caro, a French actress and model, has died at the age of 28. Caro was best known for appearing in a shocking Italian billboard ad in 2007 to promote awareness of anorexia. In the ad, the rail-thin Caro, who weighed less than 60 pounds at the time, was shown peering over her shoulder with the words "No. Anorexia" across the top of the image.

Caro herself suffered from severe anorexia nervosa since the age of 13. The model told CBS News in 2007 that she agreed to pose for the campaign because "I said if I can put my years of suffering to good use then it will not have been pointless. ... I know it's a shocking photo, and I want it to shock. It's really a warning that it is a serious illness."

Caro also worried that some anorexia sufferers might misunderstand the message of the ad. "I hope not. To see my tailbone like an open wound, I show myself as I am. I'm not beautiful, my hair is ruined and I know I will never have long hair again. I've lost several teeth," she said of her looks on the billboard. "My skin is dry. My breasts have fallen. No young girl wants to look like a skeleton. ... You couldn't believe anyone would want to look like that. I don't think there's any question about it."

Click here for more photos of Isabella Caro.

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He is one of the richest athletes in sports, one of the most powerful media icons in the country and one of the greatest basketball players to ever lace up a pair of shoes in an NBA game. And as of today, he's still only 26 years old. LeBron James is celebrating a birthday today, and he got an early gift last night with a victory over the Houston Rockets (that's 10 wins in a row on the road for James' Miami Heat, marking the first time in league history that a team has won 10 straight road games in a single calendar month).

James has had quite a year, as he stirred up an incredible amount of chatter and controversy following his signing with the Heat. In the lead-up to the announcement (which was broadcast live on ESPN in a special called "The Decision"), the speculation about where James (who was a free agent) would sign a new contract. Would he stay with the Cleveland Cavaliers, the franchise that built themselves up around him and was essentially James' hometown? Would he go to the New York Knicks and attempt to save a once-proud franchise in the most high-profile sports city on Earth? Or would he end up in Miami playing with friends Dwayne Wade and Chris Bosh, creating a trio that would instantly make that team the most elite in the Eastern Conference?

In the end, James of course chose the latter. While the team got off to a sluggish start (through their first 17 games, they were an anemic 9-8), lately they've been indestructible. The most recent feather in their cap was a win over the defending champion Los Angeles Lakers on Christmas Day in Los Angeles (a game that the Lakers were never really in). Can the Heat make a run through the rest of the Eastern Conference's elite teams (including Boston and Orlando) and conquer the NBA Finals (where the Lakers, San Antonio or Oklahoma City likely await)? That will be one of the great sports stories of 2011.

In honor of James' birthday, we present him with Jay-Z's "Run This Town" (which features Jigga and Kanye West, both of whom James counts as friends).


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For all his unknowable aloofness, Prince's raison d'etre boils down to the three word refrain of one of his signature songs: "Let's go crazy." No matter what genre he is bending (rock, funk, R&B, jazz, hip-hop) or what his current lyrical fixations are, Prince's music always has been about letting go of inhibitions. On Wednesday night (December 29), the 52-year-old music legend spent a little over two hours on stage at New York City's Madison Square Garden strutting, dancing and shredding through the most manic moments of his massive back catalog, unburdened by anything other than the need to move some hips and shake some asses.

Prince's current "Welcome 2 America" tour (which only has one more date — a final MSG show in January) has featured an ever-evolving set list that hits many of the artist's signature 1999 and Purple Rain high notes with a healthy dose of more recent work (and the occasional deep cut) mixed in. Maybe it was the fact that much of New York was still frozen (and thus needed a little heat), or perhaps Prince just wanted to get a jump on New Year's Eve celebrations early, but Wednesday night's show did not set foot in this century (the "newest" song Prince busted out was "Cream," which is a single from 1991), nor did it take much time to catch its breath (despite a pair of ballads and a solo piano medley, Prince stuck mostly to uptempo jams).

Following stout sets by opening acts Mint Condition and Janelle Monae (the latter proving to be an especially adroit performer on an extra-lively rendition of "Sincerely, Jane"), Prince opened the show on a moody note, taking a seat behind a grand piano for a run through "The Beautiful Ones" (from Purple Rain). Accompanied by a ballet dancer who glided across the giant, glowing, glyph-shaped stage, it began the featured part of the evening on an intense, sensual note. But once Prince stood up, he rarely slowed down again, launching into an extra-jumpy version of "Let's Go Crazy" that gave way to an adrenalized "Delirious." Before anybody could grab a breath, "1999" was already washing over the sold-out Garden, inspiring manic dance moves and shouts of pure jubilation.

Prince continued on that breakneck pace, constantly dancing around the stage, playing to all areas of the crowd, pausing to whip off guitar solos and regularly stepping away from the microphone to let the fans shout along the choruses to "Little Red Corvette," "Raspberry Beret" and "Kiss." When Prince did deviate from the all-singles-all-the-time route, he was clearly playing to the hardcores, dropping in "Uptown" (from Dirty Mind), a cover of the Time's "Cool" and the little-loved Graffiti Bridge track "The Question of U." The latter was especially impressive, as Prince took the song's pedestrian groove and added a healthy dose of rocked-up sexual danger. For a song that rarely sees the light of day, it was fantastically compelling.

Following a triumphant run through "If I Was Your Girlfriend" (with an assist from Monae), Prince re-emerged from a set break for another sit behind the piano. This time, he pounded his way through a medley of tracks both signature ("I Wanna Be Your Lover," "How Come U Don't Call Me Anymore") and obscure ("Condition of the Heart," from 1985's Around the World in a Day, is as deep as deep cuts get). When he stood up again for the final song (a cover of the Time's "Jungle Love," he invited a number of people on stage to dance and share the microphone (including Cyndi Lauper, whose otherworldly wail matched the song's rhythmic intensity perfectly). When the lights came up, the guests were still dancing even though Prince had already been whisked backstage. Such is the power of Prince: With songs as funky and fresh as that, the party doesn't ever stop.

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A particular branch of the music world is in mourning today, as news came out of Russia that Boney M frontman Bobby Farrell was found dead in a hotel room in St. Petersburg on Thursday (December 30). He was 61 years old. The dance pop superstar — who rose to prominence on the back of singles like "Ma Baker," "Rivers of Babylon" and "Hooray! Hooray! It's a Holi-Holiday" that were massive and beloved in Europe — had just performed a concert the night before in the Russian city, where Boney M were still quite popular (mostly due to the success of their single "Rasputin").

Though they were never a big deal in the United States, German dance pop act achieved a level of stardom in Europe that kept them popular long after they first dropped their debut album Take the Heat Off Me in 1976. But if you have ever heard a Boney M song, it was probably "Rasputin," as it gained cult status not only as a catchy dance-pop single about a famous Russian icon (nicknamed "The Mad Monk") but also because it was more or less historically accurate (the narrative explains how Grigori Rasputin came to power and all the effort that went into killing him).

In a strange twist, the song "Rasputin" isn't the only connection Farrell will have to the Mad Monk. On this day in 1916, Rasputin was finally killed after having survived multiple attempts on his life throughout the year (including what should have been a mortal stab wound and several poisonings). Rasputin was short four times, beaten horrifically and wrapped up in a carpet before being thrown in a river. Remarkably, he was able to free himself from the carpet but ultimately drowned to death. There is no word yet on Farrell's cause of death, but it was far more peaceful than Rasputin's.

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Today is December 30, which means there are less than 48 hours left in 2010. On Friday night (December 31), the big sparkly ball will descend in Times Square in New York City, signifying not only the end of the old year but also the beginning of the new one. Since New Year's Eve is always something of a lost day, that means that today is your last chance to accomplish the things you promised yourself you would do in 2010. Have a resolution left over that you never got around to? Time to put it to bed. Need to square accounts with friends or family before the calendar changes? Today is the day. There are all manner of things that you could have let slip, but the road to keeping those things in 2010 begins and ends here.

All this month, the MTV Newsroom Blog (and the entire MTV News organization, really) has been looking back at some of the greatest moments from the past year. There were incredible albums (Kanye West's My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy, Eminem's Recovery, Taylor Swift's Speak Now and others), killer concerts (Lady Gaga, Em and Jay-Z, Kings of Leon, Pavement, the whole of Lollapalooza), controversial moments (Lil Wayne's adventures behind bars, Lindsay Lohan's struggles with addiction and the law) and strange sights (just about everything Katy Perry did, come to think of it). But in looking back on the year, it turns out that, somehow, the MTV Newsroom Blog never once featured the video for the Flaming Lips' "Bad Days." So to rectify that, enjoy said video below, and feel free to use it as your personal anthem if you're particularly happy to see 2010 come to an end.


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A few weeks ago, the posthumous Michael Jackson single "Hold My Hand" premiered, arriving with an accompanying video that featured a great deal of file footage of the late singer and some new performance shots of Akon (who provides a vocal assist on the track and also co-wrote and co-produced it). Though it doesn't hold a candle to many of Jackson's legendary singles, it remains a catchy tune that has one particular contemporary twist that made it extra-endearing: It opened with Akon crooning "Akon and MJ," announcing exactly who would be singing on the following track.

Though throwing your own name onto the lyric sheet in the vocal mix is certainly not new (remember when Janet Jackson reminded you that her name was "Miss Jackson — if you're nasty"?), but it seems to have become a much bigger deal over the past 12 months. Some of the biggest singles of the past year — including Lady Gaga's "Bad Romance" and Nicki Minaj's "Right Thru Me" — featured the artists intoning their own names in the middle of the songs (and in the case of "Bad Romance," Gaga's name is essentially a key part of the chorus).

However, among the contemporary musicians, nobody does it better than Jason Derulo. The 21-year-old singer not only croons his name at the top of his smash single "In My Head" and most of the songs on his debut self-titled album, but he also likes to remind you who you are listening to when he is the guest on another artist's song. It sounds jarring at first, but eventually it becomes a pretty key signature, and you wouldn't have it any other way.

As you can see, the list of artists who sing their own name is pretty massive. In addition to Derulo, Gaga, Jackson, Minaj and Akon, there's Kanye West, Ciara, Ludcris, Busta Rhymes, Backstreet Boys, New Kids on the Block, Beastie Boys, 50 Cent, M.I.A. and, of course, Britney Spears. And that's merely the tip of the iceberg. It may seem strange (at least initially) to repeat one's own name in a song, but when you're talking about carving out a brand for yourself, every little bit counts.

What's your favorite song on which an artist sings his or her own name? Let us know in the comments!

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"For many years we have talked about fulfilling one of our greatest wishes by becoming parents. And now this wish has been granted to us, we feel so blessed and lucky."

-Legendary songwriter, performer and new father Elton John, declaring his state of mind following the birth of his son. John celebrated the arrival of Zachary Jackson Levon Furnish-John with husband David Furnish over the weekend, and spoke to Us about his excitement. "Zachary is healthy and doing well," the couple said in a statement. "[We are] overwhelmed with happiness and joy at this very special moment."

The arrival of Zachary (via an unnamed surrogate mother) marks the end of a long road to fatherhood for John and Furnish. Last year, the pair attempted to adopt an HIV-positive 14-month-old from the Ukraine named Lev, but the stars did not align for them. "David always wanted to adopt a child and I always said 'no' because I am 62 and I think because of the traveling I do and the life I have, maybe it wouldn't be fair for the child," John told reporters at the time. "But having seen Lev today, I would love to adopt him. I don't know how we do that but he has stolen my heart. And he has stolen David's heart and it would be wonderful if we can have a home [together]."

Though Zachary is the couple's first child, they certainly have experience with kids, as they have six godchildren between them, including John Lennon's son Sean and David and Victoria Beckham's two sons Brooklyn and Romeo.

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