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Mariah Carey snubbed at another awards show
11/22/2006 12:00 AM, Reuters Dean Goodman
Pop diva Mariah Carey, whose
commercial success has not translated into awards show acclaim,
was snubbed at the American Music Awards on Tuesday, despite
scoring three nominations.
The big winners this year were the Los Angeles funk band
Black Eyed Peas, who won all three categories in which they
were nominated. Veteran funk-rock combo the Red Hot Chili
Peppers won two awards. Canadian rock band Nickelback, another
three-time nominee, won a single award.
Carey, 36, who was nominated for four awards last year and
won one, was a no-show. She went zero for six in 1997.
No-show winners are a tradition at this event. The Peas and
the Peppers sent in acceptance speeches from Costa Rica and
London, respectively. Other MIA acts included rapper Eminem
(favorite male rap/hip-hop artist), husband-and-wife country
stars Faith Hill (female country artist) and Tim McGraw
(country album), Toby Keith (male country artist), and
Colombian bombshell Shakira (Latin artist).
Country trio Rascal Flatts, soul diva Mary J. Blige, and
former "American Idol" champion Kelly Clarkson also won two
awards apiece. Rascal Flatts and Blige attended, Clarkson did
not.
The American Music Awards are a more populist version of
the Grammys, which are determined by music industry insiders
and will take place in February.
The Black Eyed Peas won for favorite group in both the
rap/hip-hop and soul/R&B categories, and favorite rap/hip-hop
album for "Monkey Business." The Red Hot Chili Peppers won for
favorite pop/rock group and alternative music artist.
Nickelback won for favorite pop/rock album with "All the
Right Reasons," a chart-topping effort that was released just
over a year ago. Frontman Chad Kroeger said he thought the
Chili Peppers were going "to clean the house tonight."
Rascal Flatts were named favorite country group, and also
won the Text-In Award, determined by text messages sent by the
show's viewers. Blige won for favorite female artist and
favorite album ("The Breakthrough"), both in the soul/R&B
categories. Clarkson won for favorite female pop/rock artist
and favorite adult contemporary artist.
Actor Jamie Foxx picked up a statuette -- for favorite
soul/R&B male artist -- to add to the Academy Award he won last
year for his role as Ray Charles in "Ray."
"This means a lot more than you think," said Foxx,
accompanied by his biological mother, whom he said he had not
seen in years.
Another "American Idol" victor, Carrie Underwood, won the
prize for breakthrough artist.
Performers included Gwen Stefani, who yodeled her way
through a brand new song, "Wind It Up"; and country music
outcasts the Dixie Chicks, who received loud applause for their
socially conscious tune "Easy Silence." Veteran pop artist
Lionel Richie brought the Shrine Auditorium crowd to its feet
when he dusted off his '80s hit "All Night Long."
The event at the Shrine Auditorium was hosted by comedian
Jimmy Kimmel. Nominees are drawn from top acts determined by
retail sales and radio airplay, while winners are voted on by a
random poll of about 20,000 record-buyers.
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