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Archive for Friday, January 4, 2002

Squabbles add interest to music awards show

January 4, 2002

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— Britney Spears, Kid Rock, Usher, Mick Jagger and Cher will all perform on next week's American Music Awards, while Sean "P. Diddy" Combs tries his hand at being a television host.

But none of that promises to be quite as fun as the backstage bickering that has consumed music's two big awards shows.

The bad feelings burst into the open last month when Dick Clark, executive producer of the American Music Awards, accused the Grammy Awards of essentially blacklisting artists who appear on Clark's show.

Clark said in a lawsuit that Michael Greene, head of National Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences, strong-armed Michael Jackson into breaking a promise to appear on the AMAs. The AMAs air Wednesday, and the Grammys are Feb. 27.

Greene has denied wrongdoing, and Clark said Jackson has subsequently agreed to appear on the American Music Awards.

Yet Billboard reported that in 1995, Greene told the music industry publication that "artists who perform on the AMAs might as well buy a ticket to the Grammys, because it's unlikely they'll be performing on our stage."

The Recording Academy argues that with a limited amount of airtime, it makes no sense to have artists on the Grammys who performed at another awards show a month earlier.

"This is a situation where, in all honesty, I got fed up," Clark said. "I don't take kindly to being pushed around."

A week or so after the spat became public, Clark said Jackson phoned him to say he will appear on the AMAs, to accept the organization's Artist of the Century award. Clark is going forward with his lawsuit, however.

Jackson won't perform at the AMAs. But due to a delicious bit of television gamesmanship, viewers will be able to see him sing by clicking their remotes.

CBS the network that also televises the Grammys scheduled a rerun of the Jackson tribute concert that unexpectedly drew 30 million viewers last November to air directly opposite the American Music Awards on ABC.

Clark's show, with winners chosen on the basis of record sales, has faded in the TV ratings recently in comparison with the Grammys.

Clark pins his show's slippage to ABC's troubles over the last several years.

"It's a more competitive atmosphere," he said.

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