Me too :) That's when I logged onto ITunes and started buying his stuff.
Found an old pic of our boy, his eyes are fucking amazing...
So beautiful he glows...
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LeeLeeRaRa |
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Me too :) That's when I logged onto ITunes and started buying his stuff. Found an old pic of our boy, his eyes are fucking amazing...
So beautiful he glows...
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Hunterdonn |
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His eyes in that first pict look bloodshot
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eraserhead19 |
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LeeLee, hot picture! I love his hair like that and the soul patch? OMG YUMMY!
Hunter, he's probably a little drunk LOL.. maybe he'd just made out with that girl too...lucky bitch. |
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LeeLeeRaRa |
Epic Adam Interview | ||
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http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/americanidoltracker/2009/08/adam-lambert-the-ultimate-interview-part-1.html
August 04, 2009 Adam Lambert: The ultimate interview, Part One
06:24 PM PT, Aug 4 2009
"American Idol" runner-up Adam Lambert sat down with writer Fred Bronson for a wide-ranging interview. In Part One, Lambert talks about his early musical influences. We know from watching "American Idol" that you were raised in San Diego, but where were your parents living when you were born? I was born Jan. 29, 1982, in Indianapolis, Ind. I believe I was conceived on their honeymoon in Puerto Rico. I should have a little T-shirt that says, "Conceived in Puerto Rico." They had me about nine months after their wedding. My parents moved me out of Indianapolis when I was about a year old. My mom and dad said: "This isn't the right fit for us. We want to go somewhere else." So a job opportunity opened up for [my dad] in San Diego and we moved. Where in San Diego did you grow up? North County, mostly. When we first moved out there, it was Rancho Bernardo and then we ended up moving when I was 4, maybe 5. Right around the time my brother was born, [we moved] to Rancho Peñasquitos, which is just inland of Del Mar, and that's where we settled. What is your earliest memory of music? My dad was a college DJ, so he had a really huge record collection and he is very proud of it. There was always music playing in the house, all vinyl. He was a Deadhead, so there was some Grateful Dead, which I never really got into. There was a lot of classic rock. Bob Dylan. Bob Marley was playing a lot. My dad has really good taste in music. Do you remember playing his vinyl albums? At some point later in my life he would let me touch the records. That was a big deal though because I didn't know what I was doing. Where else did you hear music? Did you listen to the radio or shop at a local record store? I never was a big radio listener, probably because my dad listened to his records. As I got older, I had a stereo and I had tapes. I was more into playing the tapes than the radio. I remember going to the Wherehouse and buying the two-for-one CDs. The first tape I remember having was Paula Abdul's "Shut Up and Dance" remixes tape, which I was very into. I remember having an Elvis karaoke tape. And singing along to it? Oh, yeah. This karaoke machine was really cool. I also had Wilson Phillips, Mariah Carey's "Emotions." These are my first CDs. I remember them quite clearly. When did you realize you had musical talent? At 10 years old, I was put into a musical theater company, a children's theater company. I was really creative early on and I think my parents were trying to figure out what I wanted to do. I had a lot of energy. I was hyper and they put me in indoor soccer and T-Ball and I didn't really love it. I was in the Cub Scouts at one point. They tried everything -- swimming lessons and other activities -- but I was very creative at home and wanted to play dress-up and make believe and recite things, so they figured that theater was a natural fit. I got into all the musicals and the first time I realized [I had talent] I was doing a production of "Fiddler On the Roof" and there's this scene where this Russian guy has a featured solo in the "L'Chaim" number. It's like a bar scene. He's the big guy that holds the note forever. It's that big showoff moment, and I was playing that part. How old were you at that point? I was 12 or 13 and I really enjoyed singing it and all of a sudden, everybody was saying, "He's got a really great voice," and there was all this buzz. All the parents were saying, "He can really sing," and the director said, "You sound great. Do it again," and he was showing me off, having me do it for all the other kids. That was when I started taking voice lessons and knew this is something I really like. I'm good at it. And that was kind of my thing. I didn't like doing stuff unless I was good at it and I didn't like trying to get good at something. I wanted to just do what I was already good at. Like soccer, I was having to work at it so I didn't like it. I didn't like to practice piano, it was so foreign to me. But there was something about singing -- the idea of using my voice, I was very comfortable with that. A lot of my early singing was more mimicking. I copied things. That's how I learned how to sing at first, by copying. What were you copying? Songs from musicals? A lot of theater stuff. I listened to a lot of cast albums. I had "Les Miz" and "Miss Saigon." I was obsessed with "Phantom of the Opera." I remember when the revival of "Grease" came out, I had that CD. Right as I was going into high school, "Rent" came out. That was a big deal. The cool thing is that my dad had the concept recording of "Jesus Christ Superstar" and showed it to me, and "Tommy." That was really cool for us because it was his world and my world kind of coming together, the idea that they were musicals. He loved that we had something in common and we both loved the "Jesus Christ Superstar" recording and we sat and we listened to it a couple times. In 1994, there was a production of "Tommy" at the La Jolla Playhouse in San Diego, and that's how it became a Broadway show. We went together and he got really into it. Was "Tommy" the first Broadway show you ever saw? No, I remember seeing "Phantom of the Opera" in L.A. when I was a kid and it was very exciting and I think "Les Miz" came through the Civic Theater in San Diego. "West Side Story" was on tour. I remember seeing a couple national tours come through. When I was a kid, because I had gotten into theater, my younger brother started getting into it, too, and my mom got us head shots and an agent up here in L.A. So we would commute for auditions all the time. For theater? Hardly ever for theater. It was for commercials, TV, jobs like that. I did one commercial when I was a kid and you can hardly tell it was me. My brother got a ton of work. He was luckier than I was. What was the commercial? It was a Century 21 commercial. I must have been 11. I ran around with a dog in the front yard and they did a crane shot. I was out of school for the day and I thought it was the coolest thing. That was the first professional thing. Were you cast in any of your high school's musicals? Yes, back in San Diego, as an after-school activity. Plus I was in the Metropolitan Educational Theatre for eight years. It was run by a man named Alex Urban. Is that the theater group we saw you visit on "American Idol"? Yes. That was a highlight. I also worked with a woman named Lynne Broyles, who is my voice teacher. And she had a little community theater company and we did some performances with that. Then in high school, I was in chorus and I was also in the drama club and I sang with a jazz band, so I had a bunch of different outlets. And there was also a thing that they did in high school called Air Bands. It's a big deal in San Diego and it's almost like a staged music video. Everybody lip syncs but it's like a performance. It's hard to explain. It's like a choreographed staged costume concert. You know, if you look at Janet Jackson or Madonna or Michael Jackson, their concerts are really stylized. And it was like kids taking music and creating medleys and costuming and building sets and creating a storyline through them. It was this big competition in San Diego and I got really involved in that in high school and I look back now and realize there was so much that went into it and I got so passionate about it that I think that kind of mentality of putting together a show from start to finish is definitely going to come in handy in the future. It did on "Idol," [the idea that] I had to put a number together. What did you learn from taking voice lessons? I reconnected with my voice teacher because of "Idol" and I invited her to come to the show. I asked her, "What was it like when I first came in? What was going on?" And she said, "You had this seamless sound to your voice, but you wanted to understand it. You wanted me to explain physically how it worked all the time and when you couldn't hit a note, you wanted to know why and you wanted to fix it." She told me, "You were really intense about it," and that was very interesting to me. I remember [bringing her] the "Jesus Christ Superstar" recording and all those high screams that they do, and I said, "Teach me how to do this," and she replied, "You don't teach that sound. That's something you just make. I think you might have to get older to make that noise." So I waited. Aside from the commercial you did when you were a child, what other early professional work did you do? At about 16, I auditioned for the Starlight Theatre, which is an outdoor theater company down in Balboa Park. It's a semi-professional thing; we got paid a little bit but it wasn't union. We would literally have to freeze for planes going over because it's right in the path of the San Diego airport. So there were little stoplights in the orchestra pit and if a plane was coming, it would go yellow and red and you would freeze. It was crazy. I was in the ensemble for both "Hello, Dolly!" and "Camelot" and then the next summer, I did shows at Moonlight Amphitheatre, in Vista up in North County. I did "The Music Man" and "Grease" and I played Captain Hook in "Peter Pan." While you were doing this theater work, were you also listening to rock music? In high school I started watching MTV and listening to pop music. As random as it sounds, I was really into Missy Elliott and I remember that Britney and Christina had just come out and 'N Sync and Backstreet Boys. I liked all the dance remixes. You mentioned being in a jazz band during high school, so you were exposed to all kinds of music. When I was younger, I listened to a lot of musical theater and then as I got older, I wanted to hear cool pop music. The jazz band would have guest singers for their concerts and that was a really good educational experience too because that was the first time that I was singing with a full band. Even in the theater company, we didn't have an orchestra. It was all piano because it was cheap. But then at Starlight, there was an orchestra and all the school musicals had an orchestra, so I started finally getting experience working with a full band. But the jazz band was cool because it wasn't musical theater. It was swing standards, so that was a departure for me and I did some Sammy Davis Jr. You know, standards like "Paper Moon." Were those standards new to you? I had heard them here and there but a lot of them were new and I would have to learn them. We did some blues. It was very educational. And then in choir, we were like a classical choir. So we were doing a lot of Latin and various languages and it was all a cappella and very orchestral and complicated. That taught me a lot about using my ear and harmony. At this point, did you know what you wanted to do with your life? I wanted to perform. Even in high school, I was saying, "I want to be on Broadway. I want to go do theater." So I had this dream that I was going to go to New York and do Broadway and go to college first. My grades weren't ever amazing because I was so distracted with all the outside activities that I never really cared enough. I was like, "Eh, I don't want to do my homework. I don't want to study for the test." I just got by. I was a B student and so I didn't have good enough grades to get into the good schools for theater. I wanted to go to NYU. I wanted to go to Cincinnati. I applied to them and I didn't get into any of them. I did get into California State Fullerton. Were you a drama major? I went into the school as a musical theater major because they had a BFA program for musical theater and right as classes began, I had started rehearsals for "Grease" at Moonlight and it was my first time playing a part. I was Doody and I was so excited that I got to sing my own song and that I was going to be in the show and featured and I was so distracted that I didn't go to class at all. And so by the fifth week, I didn't really want to go to school. The show had closed and I wanted to learn on the job. I thought I could get more jobs, and it was kind of wishful thinking. It was a little idealistic. Youth, you know, but I thought, "How can I be in school anymore?" The last 18 years of my life, I've been learning and I want to live and I want to go and be in the real world. And I had sat through a couple classes and I thought, "I'm not going to learn anything here. They're saying stuff that I already know." I was being a little bit ridiculous, and I learned the hard way that it doesn't really work that way. I left school and my dad said, "I'm not paying your bills. You've got to get a job." So I got a job working at Macy's in Orange County at the Main Place mall right near Fullerton. I was doing retail and I stayed there for about six months and then I moved to North Hollywood. I had a couple friends that had moved up. I hung out with them and I was miserable. I couldn't find a job. I couldn't work. I was fat. I was a little lonely, and then I got my first job, which was on a cruise ship. I was 19. -- Fred Bronson |
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hootie60 |
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Adam's Twitter is BAAACCCKKK!!! He "bubble tweeted" Soooo cute!!
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LeeLeeRaRa |
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And as usual he was completely adorable ♥♥♥♥
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Blatantly Oblivious |
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I am bemoaning that I took last Friday off instead of this Friday - missing GMA and my 3 favorite <3<3<3<3<3 ever!
Morning dew <3<3<3,3 for Adam - Kris & David C. Now that is one hell of a sandwich - I would not mind at all being the bread on that one. |
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eraserhead19 |
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These two are so fucking adorable together!� and yes, Adam's bubble tweet (twat?) was so cute!�� I watched that thing a ridiculous amount of times just for the way he says "I want you all to start twattin" |
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eraserhead19 |
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LA Times Ultimate interview Part 2
In Part Two of this four-part interview with Adam Lambert, the "Idol" runner-up discusses his early experiences in show business and the
experience of hanging out with Val Kilmer when they appeared in "The Ten Commandments" together. Part One of the interview can be read here. Holland America. That was through Anita Mann Productions. Usually their leads were older guys, like leading men. And they had one guy they had to get rid of at the last minute. They needed somebody and I went in there and auditioned. I was so green. I had no idea what I was doing, but Anita really liked my voice. She said, "You can sing. You're going to play the lead part." Everybody else in the cast was looking at me like, "He's going to be the lead? He's 19." So it was a tough situation. We were rehearsing and I didn't know what was going on. It was totally over my head. She's saying, "Just imagine that person will be there, that person will be there and that person will be there." It was fast. It was overwhelming. It was the most information that I'd ever had to take in and I was not quite confident enough yet to own it. I felt a little intimidated by it. So I got out there on the ship and they weren't very nice to me and they were really catty. Finally we did the first night's performance and I kicked ass and they were like, "OK, we'll leave you alone." My career thus far has always been about proving myself in these weird moments, and then once I prove myself, people are like, "Oh, OK." So that was my first job, and I went around the world. I was on the ship for 10 months. What was it like being away for so long? Incredible. I saw the world when I was 19 and 20. I was in Russia and Scandinavia and the Mediterranean and then we did the East Coast and we pulled into New York on Sept. 7, [2001], right before Sept. 11. We were doing the tourism thing and when [the attacks] happened, we were up near Nova Scotia and we had to stay out on the water for three days because of security. It was pretty wild, pretty scary. Did that, then did the Caribbean, then went across the Pacific. Hawaii, down into Australia and New Zealand. It was amazing. You were working at night, so your days were free? Yes, I got to do a lot of sightseeing and tourist type activities. I really wanted to go live the culture. I wanted the nightlife. I wanted to be able to go and meet young people and go drink. After 10 months, did you leave the ship? I came back home and started auditioning again. Did some Civic Light Opera shows in Orange County and here. And home was Los Angeles at this point? I came back to L.A. and I was just auditioning for things. A couple Broadway auditions came through. I signed with a manager and she hooked me up with some jobs and then I was cast in a European production of "Hair." And so I was in Germany for six months, and that was a great experience because I was longing to go back to Europe and really live there. That was a huge turning point for me personally, because I finally got comfortable in my own skin - or started to. You were also at the right age to become your own person. Yes, I was about 21, 22, and it was a big eye opener for me. I think anyone who does "Hair" gets really invested in the meaning and the message and the whole community feel of it. I was really close with everybody and there was a lot of discovery and a lot of free-love mentality. I was discovering a lot about myself. Sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll, a lot of it. How long were you in Germany? Six months, and it was Berlin, mostly, but then Hamburg and Munich. We went to Italy for a week and performed there. I went to Amsterdam for a week. Were you performing "Hair" in English? Most of the time, and then midway through the production, the producer decided that he wanted us to do all the dialogue in German. No one spoke German, so they had a dialogue coach come in and teach us phonetically. No one knew what they were saying and so if someone dropped a line, we'd have to switch to English. It was an absolute disaster, but again, what an experience. I look back on it now and think, "That was crazy." Did you have to re-establish yourself every time you came back to California? I did. I was out of the loop, but it was good for me. I really liked traveling and I don't like routines. I'm not into the same-old. I like novelty, so I think it was really good for me and it helped me grow. So up to this point, you hadn't sung rock, just theatrical songs? It was mostly theater music at this point. There was one little thing -- there was a girl involved with the theater company and I knew her family. Her parents and my parents got along really well. They had similar views. They were really liberal and just wanted to have a good time. They would have parties and we would hang out and everybody would jam and it was all like our parents' music. That's how I got into the '60s and '70s stuff. Her dad was a classical guitarist and my dad plays the keyboard a little bit. So we would sing the Stones and Dylan and Joni Mitchell and Led Zeppelin and Jimi Hendrix and all that stuff. They really loved the Doors. So I was exposed to all that music. And then, it wasn't anything serious but we decided to form a band. It was like a little garage band with her dad and her and me and my dad and we wrote some original stuff together and recorded it on a six-track tape deck. We were called the Gutter Rats. Or Vicarious Lives. How far did you take it? We never performed. We just did it for ourselves, but it was cool because it was definitely not musical theater. It was definitely very '70s feeling because of our parents and they were showing us what to do. We had fun. What other work did you do before you were cast in "Wicked"? I auditioned for more TV and film projects. I was never fond of the auditioning process. I'd never really considered myself the strongest actor, so I never really went for it. I did a couple more theater things. Did something at Reprise over at UCLA. What was the Reprise production? "On the Twentieth Century" with David Lee as the director. He was great. I did a production of "Brigadoon" in Texas at Theatre Under the Stars, so I had my Equity card finally, which felt like I had arrived. I was a professional now. I was getting paid enough money to live on, to really pay my bills, and it was going to lead to more work. I did a production of "110 in the Shade" at the Pasadena Playhouse and then I got cast in "The Ten Commandments" at the Kodak Theatre with Val Kilmer and that was a big turning point for me professionally because I had my own song and I was a character. Who did you play in "The Ten Commandments"? Joshua. Everything was copacetic by the end, but in the beginning, I was doing all this promotion for them to get interest built for the show and singing the song everywhere. I was on the Chabad Telethon and I was in love with being a rock star and I was going to rehearsal with nail polish on and eyeliner from the night before, and the director came up to me and said, "Could you take all that off?" and I asked, "Why?" He told me, "The producers are a little uncomfortable with it. They don't really get it," and I said, "But we're not in costume yet. Why does it matter?" He said, "They feel like you're supposed to be the leader of the Hebrew army by the end of this and they're really uncomfortable with the way it looks." And I told him, "This is theater. This is a pop musical. What ... is your problem?" So I faced more opposition, like I did on the cruise ship. It was that same type of thing repeating itself where I felt like they just didn't believe in me, which was really hard for me. I found out later they had been seeing other people trying to replace me. When the show opened, I was one of the only people that got good reviews, so it was the best victory ever. You were worried about my nail polish and I'm getting better reviews than [others], so that was a big moment for me. It was interesting hanging out with Val Kilmer because he took a liking to me and a couple other people and we would always go and eat together and we would go hang out at his house and he just really wanted to have a group of friends during this experience. I've lost touch with him, but he's very cool. Eccentric but cool, and it was interesting being in the shadows with him in public. It was my first taste of what it must be like to be a celebrity and have people want your autograph and having people take pictures of you. It was a good eye opener for me, what it must be like to be a celebrity and to be famous. Fame has its positives and its negatives. It taught me a lot. I realized Val had to really watch what he said. Then I was kicking around Hollywood ... and going to clubs like Hyde and seeing famous people and getting photographed here and there. Right after "Ten Commandments," I did the Zodiac show, the first one at the Music Box, and I sang "A Change Is Gonna Come" in a full glam-feathered outfit. The same Sam Cooke song that Simon Fuller chose for you to sing on "American Idol." Did Simon know that you had performed the song earlier in your career? I don't know. We never talked about that, but what was interesting about that was I changed a lyric in it. Instead of "I'm afraid to die," I sang, "I don't see what's wrong with a little glitter around my eyes," because I wanted the song to be about what I was dealing with on "The Ten Commandments," this weird, ignorant, "Why are you wearing nail polish?" Like this weird discrimination because I was expressing myself and having people feel uncomfortable with that and then everything tying into my sexuality and just being alternative in any way and wanting the song to be about that. It's interesting that that came full circle with "Idol." Really weird and the same issues. Maybe more far-reaching this time and less personal. And then "Wicked" happened right after the Zodiac show. Toward the end of our run on "Ten Commandments,' there was an audition for the first national company and the casting director had heard of me because of the reviews for "Ten Commandments." That really set me up for that. I don't think I would have gotten hired if it hadn't been for that. I was hired as an understudy for Fiyero on the national tour and we rehearsed in New York and that was a blast. It was a great moment for me because I felt like I'd finally arrived. Even though it was the tour, it was a Broadway production. It was the highest caliber thing that I had been a part of. "Ten Commandments" wanted to be that and had all this money behind it, but it was a disaster. So this was a successful hit show that I was now a part of and it felt validating to get that job. You were in the ensemble, so you were on stage every night, even if you didn't go on as Fiyero. Oh, yeah. I was an onstage cover. And we rehearsed it in Toronto for about a month before we opened and we ran there for about 2½ months. So I spent time in Toronto and then we went to Chicago. Spent a couple of months there and then here in L.A. a couple months and then San Francisco. And at that point, it was about six months into it and I felt, "I think I'm done," and I got to this point where I thought, "This is what I've been working toward my whole high school career and my early 20s. This has been the goal, Broadway," and I knew that I could probably go into the New York production the minute a track opened up but I wasn't satisfied. Probably because I was in the ensemble. I'm not going to lie. It was probably a step down from "The Ten Commandments" situation. Bigger show but not as featured, not as much attention. Not doing what I felt I was supposed to be doing. How often did you get to play Fiyero? I went on as Fiyero a couple times and it was really fun. I thought I did well, but it was only a couple times. The guy hardly ever missed. So I dropped out. I thought, "I want to be a rock star." During "Ten Commandments," I had a friend who encouraged me to play around with Garage Band and come up with my own stuff, so it all happened at once. I started messing around with the idea of recording. I got really interested in that while I was on the road with "Wicked." -- Fred Bronson |
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riverheightsnancy |
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Great article! I love this, "I remember having an Elvis karaoke tape." I love that he mentions Elvis and Jesus Christ Superstar (one of my hands down
favs). I can certainly hear it in his voice, that old school screeching rock n' roll style. He really has been influenced by lots of different styles.
Daily Adam Devotion <3 |
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eraserhead19 |
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River...not sure if you've seen this but since you said Jesus Christ Superstar is a fav of yours' I thought I'd post it for you.� It's incredible. |
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Hunterdonn |
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His eyes are bloodshot! He seems to be happy, than and now, so that is great. It couldn't have been easy getting to where he is, and he deserves it.
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eraserhead19 |
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very cool interview with Adam.� Talks about a lot of stuff... they call him Lord Gaga |
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LeeLeeRaRa |
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Adam is living proof that if you want something bad enough, dedication and hard work and a willing to sacrifice will eventually get you there. I'm sure
along the way he had moments of "Why am I doing this?" and wondering if it was all worth it. I'm so happy for him (and for us! ;) ) that he
stuck with it.
Daily Adam ♥♥♥♥♥
Last Edited By: LeeLeeRaRa
08/06/09 10:55 AM.
Edited 1 times.
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hootie60 |
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eraserhead ~ thanks for posting that video. Watching Adam, so at ease with talking to the media, almost makes you forget that he is a STAR. He seems like such
a nice, polite, normal guy. Somebody you would love to have for a best friend. :) I hope the fame does not get to him. He is a great example of manners and
grace and HUGE talent!! You just can't help but love him!
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hootie60 |
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Anybody else watching the bubble tweets over and over? "about damn time!" haha.
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Suzy |
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LeeLeeRaRa wrote: What are you talking about - don't you know that people just step onto the American Idol stage and become "overnight" success stories?!? I need the rolling eye emoticon but it's not working for me :) P.S. - My sarcasm sometimes doesn't work in real life, or cyber space - so just to clarify: I'm kidding! :) |
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Peabud |
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Daily Adam lurve.....................
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VashterThanASpeedingBullet |
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Eight days until I see Adam in Hamilton <3 <3 <3
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eraserhead19 |
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ATTENTION ALL ADAMTARDS!!
Adam will be on GMA tomorrow morning and he's performing STARLIGHT by MUSE!! OMG that is off the fucking HOOK! set your recorders benches cuz you don't want to miss that shit for realz!! |
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