T-Pain, Lil Wayne, Barack Obama rule the BET Awards
(L-R) Rapper Nelly, host D.L. Hughley, Big Tigger, and singer Chris Brown attend the 2008 BET Awards Post Show taping held at the Shrine Auditorium on June 24, 2008 in Los Angeles, California. (Getty Images)
LOS ANGELES - T-Pain and Lil Wayne have owned the music
scene over the past year: It seems as if T-Pain's voice has
accented half the hits on urban radio, while Lil Wayne, another
ubiquitous collaborator, has appeared on the rest.
In addition, Lil Wayne just this month scored the year's
best-selling album sales debut with 1 million copies sold of his
new CD, "Tha Carter III."
So it was appropriate that both artists dominated Tuesday's BET
Awards with not only their energetic performances but their
presence, despite winning just one trophy each.
"We're blessed to be in this man's presence," Kanye West, one
of music's biggest self-promoters, said of T-Pain when the pair
accepted their award for best collaboration for "The Good Life,"
going on to call T-Pain a "genius."
"I'll let y'all know because I'm one of the kings of this game.
My opinion counts." West also paid homage to Lil Wayne, calling
him "my fiercest competition."
"You scared me man," West said, bringing Lil Wayne onstage
when West won the trophy for best hip-hop male. "Congratulations
on selling over a million records. And they say hip hop is dead."
Other highlights from the three-hour ceremony included a girl
group reunion; a stirring tribute to the Rev. (and soul legend) Al
Green; and topless performance by ripped rapper Nelly.
T-Pain, who led the nominees with five nods for his many
collaborations -- not his own hits -- performed with his fellow
nominees twice during the three-hour ceremony. He transformed the
Shrine Auditorium into a circus with a multi-artist medley that
showed his wide-ranging influence during his first appearance.
Wearing a spangled top hat, the rapper-singer shared the stage
with fellow nominees Flo Rida, Rick Ross, Ludacris and Big Boi,
along with a bevy of big-top freaks, including fire eaters and
acrobats.
"This industry is my circus," said T-Pain. "Ride with the
ringleader."
Then T-Pain gave a sample of his musical assists over the past
year. Double nominee Flo Rida performed his hit with T-Pain,
"Low"; a bare-chested Ross flaunted his gut while singing his
song with T-Pain, "Boss"; and all joined in on the collaborative
"I'm So Hood."
He also joined Lil Wayne for the evening's final and much
anticipated performance -- a show-closing medley of Lil Wayne's hits
including "A Milli" and his No. 1 smash "Lollipop." Lil Wayne
showed off his vocal dexterity as he feverishly rapped and sang;
though censors muted some of his curses, it let his sexually
explicit "Lollipop" fly virtually untouched.
Another name heard frequently throughout the night was that of
Barack Obama. Diddy, Alicia Keys and other nominees used their time
onstage to urge viewers to vote, and clearly showed their support
for the Democratic presumptive presidential nominee, who could
become the nation's first black president.
The night's most memorable moments came in performance form.
Keys, who was named best female R&B artist, invited SWV, En Vogue
and TLC to join her onstage for a medley of their biggest hits. By
the time they closed with TLC's "Waterfalls," the crowd was on
its feet. Even West was singing along.
After tributes by John Legend, Jill Scott and Maxwell, Lifetime
Achievement Award winner Al Green delivered a smash performance of
his own, hitting all the high notes on his hits "Let's Stay
Together" and "Love and Happiness," as Diddy, Ludacris and the
rest of the awards-show audience sang along.
"I'm sorry I didn't sing as well as I could. I got scared," a
modest Green, 62, confessed backstage.
Queen Latifah introduced Humanitarian Award recipient Quincy
Jones, calling him "an international artist" and "a leader."
"He showed us black entertainment is more than just a hustle,"
she said. "It's more than just selling albums. It's about
inspiration."
The night's most somber moment came when UGK was named best
group. Bun B honored his fallen bandmate, Pimp C, who died in
December at age 33 from complications of sleep apnea.
"It's hard to do this with my brother not being here," Bun B
said, while joined onstage with Pimp C's wife. "We want to thank
y'all for supporting UGK all these years. It's still UGK for
life... Long live Pimp C."
Usher opened the show pyrotechnics-filled performance as he sang
"Love in this Club." Singer (and BET reality star) Keyshia Cole
gave a glamorous performance of her ballad "Heaven Sent,"
descending from the ceiling while wearing a long flowing gown,
before a dancer ripped it off, revealing a white top and shorts as
she sang her hit "Let It Go" with Lil Kim.
West rapped alongside Young Jeezy in performance that was marked
by its omissions -- censors omitted so much of their performance
that at times there was stretches of silence. Chris Brown, who was
seated next to rumored girlfriend Rihanna, won the night's first
award: best male R&B artist. Brown was later joined onstage by
Ciara for a sizzling performance that showed off each artist's
dance skills. A shirtless Nelly unveiled a new song, then was
joined by Fergie for their track, "Party People."
Kobe Bryant and Missy Elliott were early winners, but the best
male athlete and female hip-hop artist weren't there to collect
their awards, nor was the evening's best new artist winner,
The-Dream. Other awards were given off camera.
Copyright © 2008, Newsday Inc.
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