Adam Levine

So you thought there wouldn’t be any mudslinging between “American Idol” and “The Voice” and the two singing competitions would co-exist in a weird sort of harmony? Well, you were mistaken.

“The Voice” judge Adam Levine has hit out at “Idol” in an interview with Out magazine, implying Fox’s hit singing competition keeps its gay contestants in the closet.

“What's always pissed me off about 'Idol' is wanting to mask that, for that to go unspoken," Levine told Out. "C'mon. You can't be publicly gay? At this point? On a singing competition? Give me a break. You can't hide basic components of these people's lives. The fact that 'The Voice' didn't have any qualms about being completely open about it is a great thing."

Levine does make a valid point. There were several openly gay contestants on “The Voice” this season and that fact was often celebrated and certainly not covered up. And yes, the two most prominent gay contestants to find fame on “Idol” – Clay Aiken and Adam Lambert – waited, for one reason or another, until after their tenure on the show to publicly declare their sexuality. But was that because they were forced to keep it under wraps by “Idol” producers?

(Levine also should be a little more careful when casting stones. After all, two of his three fellow “Voice” judges, Cee Lo Green and Blake Shelton, found themselves at the center of homophobia accusations in recent months. Just saying.)

So what do you think, dear readers? Does “American Idol” “mask” the sexuality of its contestants? Vote in our poll, after the jump. Read More...

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As we gear up for the 2011 MTV Video Music Awards, we’re looking back at all of the awesome VMA moments that remind us why this is the most exciting time of year, and we’re asking you to help us single out the best of the best.

It all goes down at the VMAs and here in the MTV Newsroom we’re right in the thick of it, so we have a hard time keeping things straight. That’s where you come in, beloved viewers.

We’ve asked you before, now we’re back to ask again: Help us single out the Best VMA Hip-Hop Performance ever by voting in our Newsroom poll. The polls are now open and the competition is getting intense – so get in there and help push your favorite artist to the top!

Get ready. Get set. Vote (after the jump). Read More...

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We asked and boy did you respond. On Friday, polls opened for our Ultimate VMA Showdown and the response has been extraordinary. Millions (that’s right, millions!) of votes have been cast in categories ranging from Most Iconic VMA Performance and Best Video of the 1990s to Most Outrageous VMA Outfit and Best VMA Hip-Hop Performance.

By far the most surprising development so far has been the enormous push from fans of classic MTV artists like Bon Jovi, Madonna and Michael Jackson and smaller acts like Panic! At The Disco and The Killers, all of whom are really giving our usual poll queens Lady Gaga and Britney Spears a run for their money in just about every category (well, except Most Outrageous Outfit – the dueling princesses of pop are battling it out hard for the title there).

Ever-fabulous “X Factor” judge Paula Abdul even gave us a little Twitter love (above). Thanks, girl!

We love it when everyone gets involved!

There’s still plenty of time to make your voice heard. You can find links to each category below, so vote now, vote often and spread the word all over Twitter and Facebook!

>>> Most Iconic VMA Performance

>>> Most Outrageous VMA Moment

>>> Best VMA Pop Performance

>>> Best VMA Hip-Hop Performance

>>> Best VMA Rock Performance

>>> Most Outrageous VMA Outfit

>>> Best Video of the 1980s

>>> Best Video of the 1990s

>>> Best Video of the 2000s

Polls close Wednesday, August 24 at noon! Results will be announced in the lead-up to the 2011 MTV Video Music Awards, which air live from Los Angeles on Sunday, August 28 at 9 PM on MTV. Don't forget to tune in!

Read on to check out some fan reaction from Twitter. Read More...

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Get ready. Get set. VOTE!

As we gear up for the 2011 MTV Video Music Awards, we’re looking back at all of the awesome VMA moments that remind us why this is the most exciting time of year, and we’re asking you to help us single out the best of the best.

You simply won’t see Britney Spears dancing with a python, Madonna rolling around in a wedding dress, a blood-soaked Lady Gaga dangling from the ceiling or Eminem rapping to hoards of imitators anywhere else. From iconic moments and outstanding music videos to career-defining performances and outrageous outfits, it all goes down at the VMAs.

Now it’s your turn to tell us which moments were the most shocking, which performances rocked the hardest and which videos have withstood the test of time. The polls are now open. You can find links to each category below, so vote now, vote often and spread the word!

>>> Most Iconic VMA Performance

>>> Most Outrageous VMA Moment

>>> Best VMA Pop Performance

>>> Best VMA Hip-Hop Performance

>>> Best VMA Rock Performance

>>> Most Outrageous VMA Outfit

>>> Best Video of the 1980s

>>> Best Video of the 1990s

>>> Best Video of the 2000s

Polls close Wednesday, August 24 at noon! Results will be announced in the lead-up to the 2011 MTV Video Music Awards, which air live from Los Angeles on Sunday, August 28 at 9 PM on MTV. Don't forget to tune in!

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When MTV was born on August 1, 1981, we had a singular mission in mind: to bring great music to the masses through the new-ish medium of music video.

Somewhere along the way, as is often the case with artists, things started to get competitive. Who’s video was cooler? Which video did people like the most? And who decides?

Well, we do. MTV decides. And in 1984, we started honoring the best and brightest in the world of music video with the annual MTV Video Music Awards. The first VMA broadcast was hosted by Dan Aykroyd and Bette Midler on Sept. 14, 1984. The show is mostly remembered for Madonna’s racy performance of “Like A Virgin,” but a Video of the Year Moonman was handed out that night too.

And the winner was: “You Might Think” by The Cars. Six Video of the Year Moonmen were handed out during the 1980s, but which video would prevail if the best of the best were forced to square off against each other. Don’t look at us … you do the work. Vote in our Best Video of the ‘80s poll after the jump. Read More...

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The popularity of different music genres tend to ebb and flow. Not so with rock and roll, which seems to be eternally popular. It’s a broad category of music, to be sure, but you sure do know it when you see it.

For example: Nirvana. Definitely a rock band, right? Grunge rock, but rock none the less. And what about Oasis? Nothing grunge about them. Brit rock, for sure. Metallica? Well, that’s the very definition of heavy metal rock.

Rock is the cornerstone of MTV, so our heart beats a little faster when the guitars come out to melt faces from the MTV Video Music Awards stage. It’s impossible to pick a favorite, though we were able to narrow it down to ten. You let us know who you think is the best of the best in our poll, after the jump. Read More...

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Hip-hop was born in New York City in the late 1970s as a way for inner city youth to express themselves. Since then, it has grown into one of the biggest and most commercially successful genres of music. Here at MTV, we like to think we had a little something to do with that.

From Run DMC’s “Walk This Way” in 1987 to Naughty By Nature’s “Hip Hop Hooray” in 1993, the MTV Video Music Awards have been ahead of the curve when it comes to bringing hip-hop acts into living rooms all over the world.

It’s a tradition that continues to the present: Last year, Kanye West tore up the VMAs with his performance of “Runaway,” and this year, Lil Wayne and Chris Brown will wow viewers live from Los Angeles on August 28.

With so many awesome hip-hop performances over the years, we’re at a loss for which one is the best of all. So hey, why don’t you go ahead and tell us by voting in our poll after the jump. Read More...

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Bolstered by the efforts of pioneering video artists like Michael Jackson, Madonna and Janet Jackson, the idea that a music video could be a piece of art really started to take shape in the 1990s. Videos were once considered something of an afterthought or a piece of promo material, but these vanguard artists made them part of the conversation.

Did you know that Pepsi severed its $5 million deal with Madonna because it didn’t want to get caught up in the controversy surrounding her (awesome) “Like a Prayer” video? Or that Martin Scorsese (!) directed MJ’s video for “Bad”?

To say that the ante had been upped by 1990 is an understatement, so it’s no surprise that videos just kept getting better and better, as reflected by the winners of the Video of the Year MTV Video Music Award. Music clips suddenly became a new way for artists to really hit home the message of a song. Who was most successful? Vote below. Read More...

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The ‘90s shattered the conventions of the music video. Suddenly every musician wanted their video to be the biggest and splashiest of all. Budgets roared to insane levels – Michael and Janet Jackson’s 1995 video for "Scream" is in the Guinness Book of World Records as the most expensive ever, costing around $7 million – and video directors became stars themselves (hello, Hype Williams, David Fincher and Mark Romanek).

So by the 00s, a video had to be on point to get much attention at the MTV Video Music Awards. The concept had to be solid, the costumes needed to be out of this world and the special effects had to be through the roof. You want a brothel featuring some of the biggest pop starlets in the world? You got it – Christina, Pink, Mya and Lil Kim are waiting. Care to see Rihanna control water with her bare hands? Just don’t forget your “Umbrella.”

It’s a lot to live up to. But so far eleven videos can call themselves the best videos of their respective years. Which one is the best of the decade? We’ll leave that one up to you guys. Vote in our poll, after the jump. Read More...

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Outrageous VMA Outfits

Award shows are all about fashion. We drool over the glamorous gowns actresses sport for the Oscars and the Golden Globes and scour the Internet to see who dressed like a fool at the Grammys. But what happens when the traditional rules of award show attire go out the window?

The MTV Video Music Awards, that’s what!

At the VMAs, sexy is key and anything goes. It's all about who can get the most ink for wearing the wildest outfit. Seriously, what other awards show can say someone wore a meat dress to their festivities?

From pacifiers and pasties to dresses that also serve as advertisements and men in pink pleather and roller skates, wild outfits are the norm at the VMAs. But who takes the cake for the most outrageous outfit ever. Vote in our poll below. Read More...

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