Los Angeles Times

Minaj and West supply signature moments

- By Mikael Wood

Turns out it wasn’t Miley we needed to worry about.

Virtually all the chatter heading into Sunday’s MTV Video Music Awards had to do with what kind of ruckus Miley Cyrus might raise as the show’s host. Two years ago, remember, it was Cyrus — the Disney Channel star turned twerk-happy enfant terrible — who scandalize­d a nation with her super-raunchy performanc­e alongside Robin Thicke on the VMAs. Then, in 2014, Cyrus didn’t perform, and viewership dropped 18%.

So MTV spared no opportunit­y hyping Cyrus’ gig as emcee for this year’s event, broadcast live from the Microsoft Theater in downtown Los Angeles.

But apart from her flummoxed response to a showstoppi­ng accusation by Nicki Minaj, it wasn’t Cyrus who provided Sunday’s thrills. Indeed, compared to Minaj’s vitriol toward the host and a mercurial speech by Kanye West, the host seemed downright tame as she introduced performers and acted in a series of painfully unfunny sketches lampooning her reputation as a pop-culture troublemak­er.

“This show hasn’t had a host for the last two years,” she said in her opening monologue, before bragging that the network will

probably return to that setup next year. Yeah, probably. MTV prides itself on the VMAs’ air of unpredicta­bility — the special sauce that distinguis­hes the show from more buttoned-up affairs like the Grammys — and Sunday its first taste came when Minaj accepted her award for best hiphop video. (Other winners, which matter here even less than they do on other performanc­e-heavy awards shows, included Taylor Swift for video of the year with “Bad Blood,” Fetty Wap for artist to watch, and Big Sean for video with a social message for “One Man Can Change the World.”)

After thanking her pastor, Minaj turned her laser-like gaze to Cyrus and basically asked her if she cared to repeat the disparagin­g comments she’d made about Minaj last week in an interview. Cyrus replied that her words had been twisted but seemed genuinely rattled.

Was it all an act? Perhaps. (OK, almost definitely.) But the moment provided the undeniable charge we’d tuned in for.

The VMAs’ other jolt was also an acceptance speech, this one by West, recipient of the Video Vanguard lifetime achievemen­t award. Recent winners of that prize, including Justin Timberlake and Beyoncé, have given elaborate performanc­es as part of their coronation­s.

West didn’t sing or rap, but his long, evidently improvised speech — which followed a tribute from Swift, whom he famously interrupte­d at the 2009 VMAs — felt like a performanc­e anyway as he held forth on his checkered history with Swift and his conviction that “art ain’t always gonna be polite.”

Then he announced that he planned to run for president in 2020, a declaratio­n that feels just right in the age of Donald Trump.

Actual performanc­es? Oh, yeah — the VMAs had a few of those too, most notably from the Weeknd, who oozed new-superstar charisma in his summer smash “Can’t Feel My Face,” and Justin Bieber, who used MTV’s stage to continue his comeback campaign with a take on his new single “What Do You Mean?”

Tori Kelly flexed the night’s most impressive vocal chops in a deeply felt rendition of her song “Should’ve Been Us.” And Minaj was reliably dynamic in “Trini Dem Girls” and “The Night Is Still Young,” the latter of which featured a hatchet-burying appearance by Swift, with whom she clashed in the run-up to the VMAs. (The less said about shaky, unfocused performanc­es by Demi Lovato, Macklemore & Ryan Lewis and Pharrell Williams, the better.)

Cyrus also closed the show with a new song about how she smokes pot and loves peace but isn’t a hippie. Like the rest of her disappoint­ing antics though, the tune felt like an empty provocatio­n.

Here’s to President West as host in 2020.

 ?? Frazer Harrison Getty Images ?? NICKI MINAJ makes her grand entrance in a head-turning sheer gold beaded LaBourjois­ie gown cut to below the navel.
Frazer Harrison Getty Images NICKI MINAJ makes her grand entrance in a head-turning sheer gold beaded LaBourjois­ie gown cut to below the navel.
 ?? Matt Sayles Invision / Associated Press ?? MILEY CYRUS, performing at the show at Microsoft Theater, seemed downright tame as host.
Matt Sayles Invision / Associated Press MILEY CYRUS, performing at the show at Microsoft Theater, seemed downright tame as host.

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