The Grammys are sort of like a combination of a circle jerk and a dreamless sleep. It's an opportunity for the Recording Industry Association of America to excessively congratulate itself, but it really, really doesn't matter at all or mean anything. Every year, they hand out entirely too many awards to musicians, songwriters, and engineers who've produced stuff that almost always falls somewhere between “Boring!” and “I So Don't Care.” on the empirical Quality-In-Music spectrum.
At last night's ceremony, there was a
bit of a head-scratching moment when Bon Iver collected the award for
“Best New Artist.” For those keeping score at home, that's Bon
Iver, the group who released their debut in 2008. (MGMT was nominated
for the same award in 2010, three years after they dropped their
first record.) If you read through lists of winners over the years,
you'll see the RIAA has a history of ineptitude when it comes to this
stuff. Check out these boners:
5) Creed's “With Arms Wide Open” –
Best Rock Song

This is what they sound like to me.
4) Milli Vanilli – Best New Artist

“I wanted to die.” Lolz!
3) Baha Men's “Who Let the Dogs Out?”
– Best Dance Recording
Ah, remember Baha Men? And their hit
“Who Let the Dogs Out?” Remember? It was nice, you know, for the
kids, so it made sense when they won a Nickelodeon Kids Choice Award
for it. But then they won a Grammy, too. You know when a sucky person
hits on you at the bar, and you kinda want to humor them to get a
free drink, but they're a really sucky person, and you're drunk but
you know better than to positively sanction their suckiness? Well,
the Grammys must be VERY drunk. And the fact that the song beat
Eiffel 65's “Blue (Da Ba Dee)” means that at some point, someone
had to intentionally choose between Baha Men and Eiffel 65, which
makes me substantially uncomfortable in my own skin.
Clearly a better song.
2) Black Eyed Peas – like, every
award

The less unbearable half of the band.
1) Talking Heads' Speaking in Tongues –
Best Recording Package

The Fear of Music LP had raised
diamond plate. Where were you on that one, RIAA?
Ok, well that's it, that's the end of the article. Check out this Colbert Report segment about the Grammys featuring The Black Keys and Vampire Weekend. I mean, if you have time, it's not really a big deal.
The Colbert Report | Mon - Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c | |||
MeTunes - Grammy Vote - Dan Auerbach, Patrick Carney & Ezra Koenig | ||||
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Dude that is muy hilarious. Go on with your bad self.