> Maybe if you saw the Grammys, you'd understand. Leaving the pyro behind > would have been in good taste and would not have created any additional work > for the show or the artists. More importantly, that move is NOT censorship > of the music or content. But the pyro combined with the absence of even a > remark about the tragic incidents in those clubs just illustrated how > oblivious the Grammy board is to events outside their ceremony. > > I'll let Bruce defend his comments about Nelly the artist; my opinion is > just focused on the ceremony (to me the artist is irrelevant). Well, I could not have said it better, mate.......what was a drag, as Bill mentioned, was that the music industry, represented by the Grammys to not only the nation but many parts of the world, made no mention fo the lives lost. Of fans. The ones who make the industry move forward. The contempt of the industry has for its fans, one would argue, was (non)communicated however unintentionally. I was saying nothing about censorship, at all. Not sure where that came from. Did you listen tot he lyrics being sung? Connect them up to the imagery in the backdrop? It was tasteless. And 'show' inside the song was taken to the hilt. No one tried(the producers or the artists' managers or artists themselves), it was clear, to work a bit of toning down in there. Let alone, God forbid, to work up another number. Sure, it was two days notice. But these are pros, the dancers, the singer. Supposedly. Did you hear Nelly, uh, 'sing'? Anyway, trying something different would have communicated a message of simple decency, empathy inside two tragedies in a matter of days of each other, tragedies that were very much part of the music industry. As represented in the press and in the conversations of music fans all over. This was the Grammys.....the night for the music industry to shine. And it burned, instead. So censorship? That's a big leap for political correct adherents touting free speech. Sorry, no. that's not what happened here. We have the freedom to decent human beings. Or be callous ones, in such moments. And when yr the later in the name of laziness or selling yr latest single, I'll take my right to tout strongly "whoa, Nelly!" Just a shame, that not one single moment of reflection, empathy or a passing comment came out of the mouths one single personality that was on the tube that night. And that is just, well, lame. The industry had the freedom to ignore the two event s of that past week, that night. And they did it very well. Its this arrogance and lack of concern for who's buying music, that leaves much of the industry now shackled beyond belief or historical precedence with declining sales worldwide. I repeat: Whoa, Nelly. Peace, Bruce @ Not Lame