The Hamilton Spectator

Kendrick Lamar, Pink and Katy Perry provide the VMA star power

But Susan Bro, mother of Heather Heyer, was heart of the show

- MIKAEL WOOD

It wasn’t Pink. It wasn’t Taylor Swift. It wasn’t even Katy Perry, who hosted the show and gave its closing performanc­e.

No, the person MTV clearly wanted to represent the 2017 edition of its annual Video Music Awards — to communicat­e its heart and soul — was Susan Bro, whose daughter Heather Heyer was killed this month as she protested the white-supremacis­t rally that erupted into violence in Charlottes­ville, Va.

Appearing near the end of Sunday’s production, broadcast live from the Forum in Inglewood, Bro was ostensibly at the VMAs to present the trophy for best fight against the system — a new category the network introduced this year to highlight work with a social conscience, including John Legend’s “Surefire” and “Immigrants (We Get the Job Done)” from “The Hamilton Mixtape.”

Really, though, Heyer’s mother, who spoke about a new foundation organized to “help make Heather’s death count,” had been enlisted to demonstrat­e that at a dark moment in American history, MTV stands squarely with those fighting for progressiv­e values — and should no longer be thought of as a place for mere entertainm­ent.

She was even introduced by Robert Lee IV — a descendant of Confederat­e Gen. Robert E. Lee — who said his ancestor has became of idol of white supremacy and hate. Lee went on to describe racism as America’s “original sin.”

Yet immediatel­y after Bro’s speech, the show transition­ed to a performanc­e by Rod Stewart, who’d somehow persuaded the young electro-funk group DNCE (featuring a mustachioe­d Joe Jonas) to join him for a remake of his disco trifle “Do Ya Think I’m Sexy.”

Obviously, MTV hasn’t abandoned its duty to titillate yet.

Indeed, in the week before the show aired, the network seemed to encourage rumours that the VMAs would offer a dramatic showdown between Perry and Swift, who’ve been locked in a feud for several years that began when ... oh, who cares?

In the end, the duel didn’t materializ­e, though Perry did sing her song “Swish Swish” (widely thought to be about her foe) and the VMAs premièred Swift’s video for her combative

new track, “Look What You Made Me Do” (albeit without a sign of the singer in the flesh).

Each highlighte­d the self-awareness that’s built into the experience of pop stardom in the internet age — how an artist must now be fluent in the criticisms against him or her and react to them almost instantane­ously with humour or sarcasm or, in the case of Swift’s video, a kind of scorched-earth disgust.

With its zombie imagery and its vivid depiction of Swift chainsawin­g a wing from a sleek private jet, the “Look What You Made Me Do” clip was an undeniable thrill. But it was also exhausting; it made you long for a time when pop songs didn’t require annotation.

Perhaps that’s why Pink’s performanc­e was so restorativ­e.

Appearing as this year’s recipient of the lifetime-achievemen­t Michael Jackson Vanguard Award, the singer ran through some of her biggest hits — from “Get the Party Started” to the just-released “What About Us” — in a tidy but dense medley that emphasized her powerful voice and her universal themes of love and acceptance.

Not that she was simplistic: Pink spoke movingly in her acceptance speech about her young daughter’s struggle with restrictiv­e beauty standards after she said, “Mama, I’m the ugliest girl I know.”

“I went home and made a PowerPoint presentati­on for her,” Pink said, “and in that presentati­on were androgynou­s rock stars and artists that live their truth, are probably made fun of every day of their lives and carry on and wave their flag, and inspire the rest of us.”

But the plainspoke­nness of her display was effective; it felt inclusive in a way that went beyond liberal platitudes.

Other artists aimed for a similarly earnest vibe, from the rapper Logic — who did his suicide-prevention anthem, “1-800-273-8255,” while surrounded by what MTV said were survivors of suicide attempts — to Alessia Cara, the young R&B singer who started her “Scars to Your Beautiful” dressed in a fancy gown before stripping down to a no-frills tank-top and black pants.

Then there was Kendrick Lamar, who opened the show and took video of the year with “Humble.” (Other winners included Fifth Harmony for pop video with “Down” and Ed Sheeran for artist of the year.)

You wouldn’t call Lamar’s performanc­e of two tracks from this year’s blockbuste­r “Damn” album strippeddo­wn; among other bits of spectacle, the bit had a dancing ninja covered in flames.

But as Lamar furiously spat out his rhymes — especially in “Humble,” about being “sick and tired” of the illusion of digital perfection — you could tell he was aiming to meet the same appetite for substance that Pink was.

MTV was no doubt pleased.

 ??  ?? Pink, centre, delivered a tidy but dense medley that emphasized her powerful voice and messages of love and acceptance.
Pink, centre, delivered a tidy but dense medley that emphasized her powerful voice and messages of love and acceptance.
 ??  ?? Rev. Robert Wright Lee IV, right, listens while Susan Bro speaks during the MTV Video Music Awards.
Rev. Robert Wright Lee IV, right, listens while Susan Bro speaks during the MTV Video Music Awards.
 ??  ?? Terrence J, left, and Katy Perry onstage at the MVAs Sunday.
Terrence J, left, and Katy Perry onstage at the MVAs Sunday.
 ??  ?? Logic, centre, performed his suicidepre­vention anthem, “1-800-273-8255.”
Logic, centre, performed his suicidepre­vention anthem, “1-800-273-8255.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada