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What Else? M.I.A., Sister Sledge, Sony Music, Madonna, Tiesto, Spotify, Facebook...

Saturday, February 04, 2012
by  paul

You can't bring M.I.A. anywhere! NBC and the NFL are now furiously apologizing after M.I.A. flipped the bird and apparently sang an expletive to more than 110 million Super Bowl viewers.

Add disco queens Sister Sledge to the list of legacy artists suing their major labels.  Sledge is filing suit against Warner Music Group to re-categorize digital sales as licenses, a not-so-subtle difference that could mean millions in extra royalties. 

Sony Music sales dropped 11.7 percent during the third quarter to $1.582 billion, while profits slipped 21.7 percent to $196 million.  The music stats were shared in a broader financial review by Sony Corp. 

I'm worth it, goddamit.  Think that $300 is a lot for a Madonna show?  "Start saving your pennies now," Madonna told Newsweek. "People spend $300 on crazy things all the time, things like handbags. So work all year, scrape the money together, and come to my show. I'm worth it." 

Two, three years, max?  It may just be a matter of time before a DJ rocks halftime at the Super Bowl...

On that note, it's unconfirmed, but rumors now surround a DJ-focused iteration of Spotify.  The sketch version would feature multiple 'decks,' fades, cues, and of course, a great selection of tracks, according to a pair or sources.  

Who else was at the most blown-out game of the year (at least in the US)?  That'd be Shazam, which incorporated its identification technology into a substantial number of advertisements.  That includes unlocking features for Toyota, Cars.com, and Pepsi, who featured X-Factor winner Melanie Amaro.  As part of that ad, viewers could unlock an exclusive Amaro video.

MegaUpload claimed to serve 4 percent of the entire internet, though Facebook probably eclipses that.  According to a stat just released by Hitwise, Facebook.com accounts for 1 in 5 of every US-based internet view.

Looks like Bon Iver is bailing on his Grammy performance.  "We kind of said 'fuck you' a little bit, and they sort of acted like they wanted us to play, but I don't think they wanted us to play," Justin Vernon told Billboard. 

 



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